"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour
Showing posts with label March of Return. Show all posts
Showing posts with label March of Return. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2018

Hamas Leader Paid Gaza Family to Say Israel Killed Girl

Hamas propaganda machine is relentless and totally untrue
By Susan McFarland 

Palestinians run from tear gas fired by Israeli troops during a protest near the Gaza-Israel border in Rafah on May 14. Thursday, a member of a Gaza family was charged with falsely claiming Israeli tear gas killed his 8-month-old niece that day. File Photo by Ismael Mohamad/UPI | License Photo

UPI -- An indictment filed Thursday accuses Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar of paying a Gaza family to falsely claim their baby died of a tear gas attack launched by Israeli troops.

The charges say the family was given $2,200 to blame Israel for the death of their 8-month-old girl last month.

The child died May 14 of a blood disorder, the same condition the family's 6-month-old son died of last year.

The girl's uncle, Mahmoud Omar, is named in the indictment. He was arrested last month during the "March of Return" riots after being caught trying to cross into Israel to set fire to an unmanned Israeli army position.

During interrogations, Omar told investigators about the payoff for his family to lie about his niece's death. He is also a member of the Palestinian al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades.

Israeli army officials had cast doubt on the story. About two weeks after the girl's death, the Hamas Health Ministry in Gaza removed her name from a list of those killed in border clashes with Israeli forces.



Friday, May 18, 2018

I Said Israel Should be Ashamed – Now I Am the One Who is Ashamed

Daniel Sugarman

On Tuesday Daniel Sugarman wrote an article on the clashes at the Gaza border.
Today he acknowledges that he was wrong.

Palestinian protestors at the Gaza border(Photo: Twitter @IDF)

It’s never easy to say you’re sorry.

To admit you’re wrong. To announce publicly, “I made a mistake”.

But to apologise when that apology comes bound up with what is, perhaps, the most intractable conflict on earth, makes it a thousand times harder. 

But that is what I am. Sorry.

A few days ago I wrote a column about the latest round of violence on the border with Gaza. 

It was a cry from the heart. I love Israel. I have always loved it, and cannot envision a time when I will not love it. 

But in my office, I sit near a television set. And on Monday, I saw the following, side by side.

On the left, in Jerusalem, I saw happy faces. Self-congratulatory faces. I saw the Prime Minister of Israel talking about how the opening of the US embassy in Jerusalem was a big step towards peace. 

And on the right, simultaneously, in Gaza, I saw tear gas, and smoke, and bullets. 

And it was in this context that I wrote my piece, which was an extremely personal one. I wrote it in anguish. I wrote it making clear that I despised Hamas and all it stood for. But I also wrote the following:

“Every bullet Israel fires, every life Israel takes, makes this situation worse. There are ways to disperse crowds which do not include live fire. But the IDF has made an active choice to fire live rounds and kill scores of people. You cannot tell me that Israel, a land of technological miracles which have to be seen to be truly believed, is incapable of coming up with a way of incapacitating protestors that does not include gunning dozens of them down. But no. In front of the entire world, Israel keeps shooting, and protestors, including very young protestors, keep dying. You may tell me that Hamas wants these deaths, wants to create martyrs, wants to fill the hearts of the people of Gaza with rage against Israel because the alternative is for people to look at their lives in Gaza and rage against Hamas. But if you tell me that, why are you not asking yourselves why Israel is so willingly giving Hamas exactly what it wishes?”

I received a lot of praise for my piece, from people I admire greatly, as well as from a great many unexpected sources, including from within the Jewish community.

I also received a lot of criticism. I got called a traitor, and that most vile of all insults a Jew can bestow or receive, a “Kapo”. 

People also wrote pieces in response. I was told that, as a Jew not currently living in Israel, my greatest worry was whether Starbucks would have almond-soya milk for my latte.

But the criticism I paid more attention to was from people who pointed out that it was absurd to deal in hypotheticals. I’d said that surely there must be a way the protestors could be stopped without shooting live ammunition at them – that Israel, with its incredible technological capabilities, must be capable of developing a way. That was a cry of anguish, but it was not an argument. If no such technology currently exists, then it was absurd of me to blame the IDF for not magically willing it into existence. The traditional crowd stopping technology would not have worked effectively. Rubber bullets are only short range. The same with water cannons. And with tens of thousands of people rushing the border, this would have been extremely unlikely to work effectively. The border would have been broken through. And then, without much of a doubt, a lot of people in Israel would have died.  That was, after all, Hamas’s stated aim.

But what really affected me the most was yesterday, when a Hamas operative went on television and claimed that, of the 62 people killed in the last two days, fifty were Hamas operatives. Islamic Jihad claimed three more, meaning that over 80 percent of the people who were killed while trying to breach the border were members of terrorist organisations whose direct aim is to bring death and suffering into Israel. 

And I opened my eyes and saw what I had done.

I had fallen into the trap I had always been convinced I would not fall into. I had condemned Israel for defending itself. 

There are things one can write about how Israel could have acted differently in the run-up to these attempts to charge the border. But I did not write about those in my original piece. I wrote that, by killing the Palestinians running towards them, the IDF was giving Hamas exactly what it wished for – martyrs for the cause.

I failed to acknowledge that, either way, Israel would be giving Hamas what it wanted. Shoot at those charging at you and Hamas would have its martyrs. Fail to shoot and Hamas would break through the barrier and bring suffering and death – its stated aim - to Israelis living only a few hundred metres away from that barrier. The march may have originally been, as it was declared to be, about Palestinians returning to the homes they had to leave 70 years before. But Hamas’s aim was far more straightforward - “We will take down the border and we will tear out their hearts from their bodies.”

I wrote in my previous article that Israel was a regional powerhouse, and that it was strong enough to take criticism from Jews in the Diaspora. 

I still believe it is strong enough to do so. I just don’t believe that my criticism of it was valid. Given the circumstances, and the situation on the ground, I am at a loss in terms of coming up with a better solution. The choice was, quite literally, shoot at people running at you with the stated aim of killing you and your families, or fail to shoot and let them do it.

A few days ago I said I could not and would not defend Israel’s actions. Now, in the cold light of day, I could not and would not see how I would fail to defend them.

I said that Israel should be ashamed of its actions. But today I am the one ashamed. 

This is a perfect example of one of the serious flaws in modern-day reporting. It has become emotional to the point that there is little room for logic or truth. Daniel Sugarman was blessed with the ability to see that and with the opportunity to retract it and apologize for it. Far too many MSM reporters fail to recognize that emotions have replaced truth and integrity in the media and, for that matter, in too many governments.


Sunday, April 15, 2018

Israel: 'Longest and Deepest' Gaza Tunnel Destroyed

By Allen Cone

The "longest and deepest" a deepest tunnel from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory last detected
and destroyed last week, the Israeli Army said. Photo by Israel Defense Forces/Twitter

UPI -- Israel's Army said Sunday it detected and destroyed the "longest and deepest" built by Hamas from the Gaza Strip into Israeli territory this past weekend.

Israeli Defense Forces said the tunnel was "several kilometers long", passing under the border in an area where Palestinian protesters recently fought with security forces and close to the Israeli community of Nahal Oz.

IDF spokeman Brig.-Gen. Ronen Manelis described it as "significant tunnel" that was connected to other ones.

"Hamas has been working in recent months, and more intensively in recent weeks, to turn the border fence into a zone of terror and fighting," Manelis said. "The violent demonstrations are a cover for terrorist attempts both above and below ground.

It was constructed after the 2014 conflict between Israel and Hamas that lasted 50 days, according to the IDF.

"We open the week with an impressive intelligence and operational achievement, with the destruction of another terror tunnel, the longest and deepest discovered so far," Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman posted in Hebrew on Twitter.

"A tunnel in which millions of dollars were invested, money that instead of relieving the strain on residents, was buried in the sand. Residents of Gaza, Hamas is burning your money on tunnels to nowhere. We will get our hands on all of them."

Israel detected the tunnel with new technologies and methods, Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, an Army spokesman, said.

"This was clearly a terror tunnel that connected to other tunnels in the Gaza Strip," he said. "It extended into Israel and violated Israeli sovereignty."

This tunnel was the fifth tunnel the IDF has destroyed in recent months, he noted.

In February, the army destroyed a tunnel near Gaza's destroyed airport east of Rafah in the southern part of the Strip close to the Israeli border and one in the Zeitun neighborhood of Gaza City toward Israeli territory

They sealed the latest tunnel discovered rather then bombing it.

Conricus didn't say if any Palestinians were injured during the process to seal the tunnel.

"The IDF doesn't seek an escalation. We are defending our borders," Conricus said. "We will not tolerate or allow Hamas to turn the border area into an active combat zone."

More than 30 Palestinians have been killed over the past three weeks in clashes, according to Hamas-run health authorities.

On Friday, at least 10,000 Gazans participated in large-scale demonstrations. Israeli military said they hurled an explosive device and firebombs and made "several attempts" to damage the fence between Israel and Gaza. In the previous two weeks, estimated 30,000 participated each week.

Hamas said the protests are part of "March of Return" demonstrations in an attempt to remove border and liberate Palestine.