T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
612.1 | More constructive elements? | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool | Tue Jan 03 1989 10:26 | 6 |
| Are there other quotes in this paper which would lead the reader
to perceive some compromise or 'workable' alternatives?
Curiously yours,
Chris
|
612.2 | Hamas plays Likud to PLO's Labor | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Tue Jan 03 1989 11:55 | 8 |
| Just so we know whom we're talking about,
Hamas is the "extremist" Moslem resistance group. They have benefited
from the intifadah, and oppose the Arafat "moderate" faction of
the PLO.
It has been claimed that the Israeli right is aiding Hamas, since
they contribute to a "no compromise" mentality.
|
612.3 | bad analogy | TAZRAT::CHERSON | same as it ever was | Tue Jan 03 1989 13:17 | 8 |
| re: .2
An analogy between Likud and Hamas is absurd, and shows a total
misunderstanding of it's political make-up. How can you compare
Likud to an anti-Jewish (Arabs can never be anti-semitic) group
such as Hamas?
David
|
612.4 | Semites can be "anti-Semitic" | GRECO::FRYDMAN | wherever you go...you're there | Tue Jan 03 1989 14:43 | 13 |
| "Anti-Semite n. A person hostile toward Jews."
American Heritage Dictionary
"Anti-Semitism n. dislike or hatred for Jews; prejudice against
Jews."
Thorndike-Barnhart Dictionary
THERE ARE NO SECOND DEFINITIONS---LOOK IT UP YOURSELF!!
The term "anti-Semitism" was a word which was coined to mean and has
always meant Jew hatred. It is semantic revisionism to make it mean
hatred of "semites". I guess an Arab can be anti-Semetic as the
base note certainly indicates!
|
612.5 | I know it's nitpicking, but... | TAZRAT::CHERSON | same as it ever was | Tue Jan 03 1989 17:11 | 7 |
| re: .4
The Arabs are as much a Semitic people as we are, therefore it seems
incorrect for one to be an "anti-semitic semite", dictionary or
no dictionary.
David
|
612.6 | Arabs are semitic | MDRLEG::RUBEN | El arcoiris no es tu escalera | Wed Jan 04 1989 03:57 | 11 |
| In fact, David is supported by every ethnographic study.
The Arabs are semitic.
But I also guess those who first coined the term Anti-semite
thinking of Jew hatred were those illiterate we all know...
From each and every scientific standpoint, the above equation
only shows ignorance, as it is derived from the facts that
History showed us 60 years ago.
Rub�n.
|
612.7 | real anti-semitism | TAZRAT::CHERSON | same as it ever was | Wed Jan 04 1989 09:20 | 5 |
| If any people is truly anti-semitic, it is the French. They hate
Jews and Arabs, despite their decalrations of support for the Arab
cause (just keep those oil tankers coming, thank you).
David
|
612.8 | Franco-phobia? | LDYBUG::ALLISTER | Alex DTN 223-3154 MLO21-3/E87 | Wed Jan 04 1989 10:40 | 5 |
| re .7
I understand that the intent of your reply was to illustrate
the term anti-semitism, but there is hardly an excuse for
such sweeping and insensitive generalization.
|
612.9 | | GRECO::FRYDMAN | wherever you go...you're there | Wed Jan 04 1989 11:13 | 17 |
| It doesn't matter what you WANT it to mean...
Anti-Semitism means only Jew Hatred!
If you want to develop a new definition, please understand that
it is NEW. I have NEVER heard of someone who dislikes Arabs being
called an "anti-semite"!
This mis-statement of the meaning of "anti-semitism" usually has
been used by Arabs in the following sentence:
"I am not anti-semitic, I'm a Semite myself. What I am is
Anti-ZIONIST"
Read "Why the Jews" By Telushkin and Praeger to better understand
the disinformation and semantic revisionism of the "new" definition.
|
612.10 | irridentists are on both sides | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Wed Jan 04 1989 11:56 | 24 |
| re:.3
The analogy is thus: Labor is the "moderate" wing of Israeli political
thought, willing to negotiate with the Arabs over land. Likud is
the irridentist wing, unwilling to give an inch. Arafat's PLO-Fatah
is now playing the "moderate" wing of the Palestinian resistance,
now willing to negotiate with the Israelis over land. (Obviously,
their starting position is rather far from Labor's. But that's
how negotiation begins. You should see some of the contracts I
helped negotiate, and how the first drafts looked!) Hamas is the
irridentist wing, unwilling to concede an inch.
It follows (and has been reported) that Hamas is being encouraged
by some Israeli irridentists, since their ascendancy reduces the
likelihood of Israel's being able to negotiate a peaceful settlement.
It's a rather cynical form of support, sort of picking your enemies
for a future fight.
This digression over the semantic of "anti-semitism" is rather off
the topic, though. While the etymology of the term would imply
that it includes Arabs, it was apparently coined by a political
faction in 19th centry Austria, who were looking for a more erudite
sounding term for Jew-hatred, which was their program. If one accepts
that the coiner of a term can define it, then an Arab can be just
as much an Anti-Semite as an Aryan.
|
612.11 | enough etymology | TAZRAT::CHERSON | same as it ever was | Wed Jan 04 1989 12:21 | 19 |
| re: .8
Ok maybe I did get a bit extreme, but try living in France for a
while and see what it's like or ask an expatriate Algerian what
it's like for a "semite" in France.
I think it has been a little counter-productive to continue on with
this etymological discussion so maybe we should call it quits now.
re: .10
There's more than meets the eye or rather the western media's
impression of Likud. There are many in Likud who, despite their
bellicose announcements of not one inch, etc., would actually swallow
the "bitter pill" of compromise. Whereas a mainstream member of
Hamas would not be satisfied until there wasn't one Jew living in
eretz.
David
|
612.12 | I've seen worse | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool | Mon Jan 09 1989 09:38 | 26 |
| re .11:
If you think that the French are "anti-semitic", have a try and expose
yourself as a Jew in an average German (especially Bavarian)
countryside pub. Well, no, I'd suggest you'd rather NOT do it. Things
are getting similar in Austria, these days, by the way (they have
a new, young polemicising politician who navigates through all possible
means to activate xenophobe feelings).
You can still do this in any French pub. Sometimes, some (not all)
persons might turn away from you (this could happen to you in some
Southern US States as well, no?), but you will not be in a physical
danger.
Should you refer to the "Le Pen wave", let me inform you that a poll
during last week showed that he will encounter disaster during the town
elections in March.
The overtly expressed xenophobic opinions usually generate more uproar.
However, due to previous experiences, I would say that it is the
rampant, hidden, slimy, silent racism which is more dangerous: if the
latter explodes, the results are unpredictable, generally very violent.
Empirically yours,
Chris
|
612.13 | the groundswell for peace... | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Mon Jan 09 1989 10:36 | 36 |
| Militant Palestinians Form Anti-PLO Alliance
[reprinted without permission from
Boston Globe, 7 Jan., 1989]
JERUSALEM (AP)- Arab radicals announced yesterday the formation of an
alliance against the Palestine Liberation Organization in the occupied
territories that includes Moslem fundamentalists and pro-Syrian
extremists opposed to Yasser Arafat's recent peace overtures.
Also yesterday, police said that they suspected that Palestinian
nationalists were responsible for the killing of an Israeli taxi
driver, Shmuel Edri, who was found shot to death in the occupied West
Bank the night before.
In a leaflet issued yesterday, the Palestinian radicals accused
Arafat, the PLO's chairman, of "selling out Palestine to imperialism
and Zionism" by announcing that he recognized Israel and renounced
terrorism at a news conference in Geneva last month.
"We demand the establishment of a militant leadership to replace
the diminishing leadership of Yasser Arafat," said the leaflet, which
was signed by the United National Front in Occupied Palestine.
The group is an alliance of Islamic extremists and pro-Syrian
radicals, including members of Ahmed Jamal's Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine-General Command and Abu Moussa's breakaway
faction of Arafat's mainstream Fatah.
The leaflet also called for the formation of a new Palestine
national council led by militants who advocate armed struggle.
The present council, the Palestine Liberation Organization's
parliament in exile, adoped a declaration of independence in November
that implicitly recognized Israel's right to exist.
|
612.14 | The unthinkable could be thought... | SUTRA::LEHKY | I'm phlegmatic, and that's cool | Tue Jan 10 1989 09:14 | 8 |
| "The enemy of my enemy is my friend", says an old proverb.
Maybe it isn't that much unconceivable to start discussions with
Arafat?
Stirringly yours,
Chris
|
612.15 | The groundswell for peace continues... | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Thu Jan 12 1989 23:24 | 50 |
| Reprinted without permission from the Jewish Press
6 January, 1989
"Arafat Warns Against Ending Uprising"
A. S. Lewin
Jerusalem -- In a declaration commemorating the 24th anniversary of
the Palestinian armed struggle, Yasser Arafat said that the Arab
uprising in the territories will continue until the Israeli forces
will withdraw from the occupied territories.
"No one can stop the "intifada" and we'll murder any Palestinian
leader who will try," he said. Arafat was responding to an earlier
proposal by Bethlehem's mayor Elias Freij, who called for a 'cease
fire' in the territories under U. N. auspices until democratic
elections are held in the territories.
Meanwhile, Egypt's Minister of State, Butros Ghali, blamed
Israel for the "cold peace" that exists between Egypt and Israel. He
said that Israel's refusal to respond to the outstretched hand of the
Palestinians creates an atmosphere of cold peace.
According to Ghali, the Palestinians want to make peace adn to
have mutual relations with Israel, but Israel is vaccilating between
war and peace and can't make up its mind.
At the same time, Egypt has resumed its virulent diatribe
against Israel in the past week. The ink in Egypt's "al-Akhbar"
editorial last Friday [30 December, 1988], accusing Israel of bombing
Pan Am, had barely dried when another semi-official Egyptian
governmental newspaper "Algomahariya" came out with an article
entitled "Kill Jews, But Not On Egyptian Territory." The article
describes Israel-Egypt relations saying:
"It is a mistake to say that 97 percent of Egyptian citizens
oppose normalization (with Israel). The fact is that 100
percent oppose normalization. Every Egyptian minister,
senior or junior official, hates Israel. But, as one who
serves in an official capacity, he is forced to negotiate
with Israel. Kill Jews, but not on Egyptian territory
because it will create an internal security problem in
Egypt."
The article was referring to an Egyptian soldier, described as a
hero, for killing, in cold blood, seven Israelis who were on tour in
Ras Burka (an area in Sinai that had been returned to the Egyptians
in 1982), two years ago. The Egyptian tribunal that tried the case
is expected to issue its verdict shortly on how much damage
compensation Egypt will have to pay to the victims' families.
|
612.16 | | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Feb 14 1989 13:59 | 14 |
| I picked up a news item last week.
It seems that in the recent infiltration from Lebanon in the
north, one of the captured commandos was carrying his
identification card. A photograph of it was reproduced
in one of the Israeli newspapers. It clearly showed that
that person was a Sergeant-Major in the PLO... I understand
also that the US is talking to the PLO about the incident.
(Does anyone from TAV-land have more details?)
Hmmm. "Read my lips: No new terrorism..."
/don feinberg
|
612.17 | "Roll over, Rushdie" | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Feb 21 1989 06:45 | 10 |
|
On the 11:00 news on NBC last evening, there were a few minutes
of a videotaped interview with Sirhan Sirhan.
Question: So, why _did_ you kill Robert Kennedy?
Answer: Well, Kennedy was my idol. But he supported Israel...
/don feinberg
|
612.18 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Thu Feb 23 1989 20:54 | 8 |
| Re: .16
The Palestinians (and Lebanese) were captured in Lebanon. Or have
I missed the announcement of Israel's annexation of south Lebanon?
Have they made it official now? Or are they just still diverting
the water resources to Israel's use and deporting the Lebanese
inhabitants of the area?
|
612.19 | Your preference? | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Fri Feb 24 1989 09:03 | 3 |
| re: 18
Would you have preferred for them to be captured in Israel?
|
612.20 | | IOSG::LEVY | QA Bloodhound | Fri Feb 24 1989 09:09 | 7 |
|
> Would you have preferred for them to be captured in Israel?
What makes you think that Karen would have liked them captured?
Didn't the Israelis have it coming to them?
Malcolm
|