DO JEWISH LIVES MATTER ON CAMPUS?

From washingtonexaminer.com

Switzerland Israel Palestinians

For three weeks now, I’ve been approached by Jewish students seeking support, reassurance, and a sense of community in the aftermath of the worst act of aggression against the Jewish people since the Holocaust. Hamas’s acts of terror in Israel unleashed a global wave of antisemitism that has swept through American college and university campuses in particular.

At elite universities, such as Columbia , Cornell , Penn , and even my own Sarah Lawrence College — faculty and students are on the front lines, chanting antisemitic slogans and, in some cases, explicitly calling for Jewish genocide . Such actions breach conduct codes, but leadership at some revered institutions continue to look the other way and issue weak statements, as George Washington University did. Another example: at Indiana University, the president only made simple references to violence in the Middle East, prompting outrage, with the former student body presidentcalling the statement one of “cowardice.”

With little support, Jewish students do not know where to turn.

Jewish students are in shock and do not know who their allies are on campus. Professors, meant to be the voices of reason, are often the ones who support the destruction of Israel and, therefore, the Jewish people. Professors lead chants, protest, and engage in activism intended to harm Jews . One professor at Stanford asked Jewish and Israeli students to “identify themselves” before telling them to grab their belongings and stand in a corner, saying, “This is what Israel does to the Palestinians.”

Jewish students and their allies should be asking, “Do Jewish lives matter?” This is not a trick question, there are no caveats or qualifications for the question, and this should not require much thinking whatsoever.

Unfortunately, I suspect the answers will reveal truths that students may not want to see.

Rather than asking, “ Will you condemn terrorism ?” as UMass Amherst lecturer Rachel Weber was asked, students should ask if Jewish lives matter. Words matter, and this question cannot be easily dismissed or twisted. Weber was able to respond with deliberate doublespeak to obfuscate that she did not want to condemn Hamas’s behavior and argued that the question of terrorism is “not a yes or no question.” But asking directly about the sanctity of Jewish lives avoids the justification of terrorism. It also exposes Jewish hate.

Moreover, probing one’s belief of whether or not Jewish lives matter does not run into the many problems that emerged when Black Lives Matter (BLM) was in the news in 2020. Were Americans being asked to quite reasonably state that they supported the lives of persons of color — here “black” — or were they being asked to agree with the deeply controversial Black Lives Matter organization?

In contrast, there is no formal “Jewish Lives Matter” group; there is no history or baggage, as no one entity speaks for the Jewish community. Black Lives Matter was fraught with issues that, again, are avoided by simply asking others if Jewish lives matter.

“Jewish lives matter” is a statement asking people if they value the lives of Jews; it should not be upsetting or nuanced to the person being asked. I can think of no modern or legitimate religion, creed, moral or ethical code, or worldview that would not agree with the notion that all persons of all backgrounds matter.

Yet, given the incredible rise in Jewish hate and incidents in the past decade and over the past few weeks, I suspect sadly that there will be people who will say that Jewish lives do not matter.

A 2022 survey in Germany by the American Jewish Committee , for instance, found roughly a third of Germans hold at least some antisemitic views, with roughly half of Muslims in Germany holding similar views. Specifically, 18% of Germans and 45% of Muslims agree with the statement “Jews have too much power in politics.”

The 2024 Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression free speech survey found a clear imbalance on college campuses. Only 24% of Muslim students and 49% of all students support pro-Israel student groups on campus. This compares to 57% of Jewish students and 54% of all students who support pro-Palestinian student groups.

Being a Jewish student on college and university campuses today is frightening. Before the tragic act of terrorism that Israelis suffered from Hamas, hatred toward Jewish students was commonplace—albeit much more subtle. Diversity, equity, and inclusion offices did not value real diversity and promoted a disturbing view that the world can be divided into oppressors vs. the oppressed . This past month, it has become clear that our universities consider Jews to be oppressors and Israel a “genocidal, settler, colonialist state.”

To find allies, Jewish students should ask if “Jewish lives matter” to see who has been infected with hate and who may support them. The results will be sobering, but realities will emerge about the threats we face going forward.

I want to scream so loud that I might crack the sky!!

Foolish statement you say?  To me it is a gross understatement. 

I don’t think that I will ever stop sobbing for my people, Israel AND for America. Do you know why I cry for America?

              BECAUSE WE ARE NEXT

BIDEN WILL MAKE SURE OF THAT.

 

Russia backs Hamas terrorists, calls Israel ‘occupying power’ that ‘does not’ have right to self-defense

Oh Vlad – you have NO IDEA with whom you are dealing. Eventually, you will be crushed, and God will prepare you for your final destination – HELL.

From foxnews.com

Russia this week declared that Israel has no right to self-defense and labeled its would-be ally an “occupying power” in a move that undermines years of work from Jerusalem to improve its relationship with Moscow.

“The only thing [the West] can muster is continued pronouncements about Israel’s supposed right to self-defense. Although, as an occupying power, it does not have that power,” Russian Amb. Vasily Nebenzya said during his speech at the United Nations General Assembly session on the conflict. Nebenzya clarified that Israel can “fight terror,” but urged the country to “fight terrorists and not civilians.” 

Nebenzya also condemned Western “hypocrisy” over Palestinian deaths and compared it to the outcry over Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, according to The Moscow Times. 

“In other situations, [Western nations] call for the respect of humanitarian law, set up inquiry commissions and impose sanctions on those who use force as a last resort to stop years of violence,” Nebenzya said, but that on the “destruction in Gaza … they play mum.” 
 
Russian President Vladimir Putin remained muted in the days immediately followingthe Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, which The New York Times suggested spoke “volumes” about the state of relations between the two countries. To underscore the seeming shift in policy, Moscow hosted representatives from Hamas and Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Ali Bagheri Kani. 
 
Russian ambassador Nebenzya
Permanent Representative of the Russian Federation to the United Nations Vasily Nebenzya speaks during a meeting on the Israel-Hamas war at United Nations headquarters in New York City on Monday. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

The meeting aimed to determine ways to stop “Zionist crimes supported by the United States and the West,” The Times of Israel reported.  

With the Russian ambassador’s statement at the United Nations this week, that policy appears to have flown out the window, according to Rebekah Koffler, a strategic military intelligence analyst and the author of “Putin’s Playbook.” 

“Russia has unequivocally sided with the terrorists, which marks a reversal of Moscow’s 20-plus years of largely pro-Israel policy,” Koffler told Fox News Digital. 

Putin meets with Netanyahu
Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the Kremlin in Moscow on Jan. 30, 2020. (Maxim Shemetov/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

“Putin has been orienting Russia towards the East — China, India — and the Arab world, and will do anything to undermine the West or its allies, in this case Israel” and that Russia’s actions this week could “score points” with the Arab world and served as “payback” for Israel’s aid to Ukraine, she said.

Koffler noted that Putin’s decisions could work toward “undoing years of work suppressing radical Islamic extremism” and playing into the growing anti-Israel and antisemitic sentiments flooding the world. 

Russia, in particular, suffered a particularly embarrassing and horrifying incident last weekend as residents in the Russian region of Dagestan stormed an airport after hearing that a flight from Israel was inbound. Hundreds of men, some of them carrying banners with antisemitic slogans, even rushed the tarmac to find the plane. 

Russian forces outside airport
Russian National Guard (Rosgvardiya) vans are seen parked at the airport in Makhachkala on Monday. Russian police said they had arrested 60 people suspected of storming an airport in the Muslim-majority Caucasus Republic of Dagestan on Sunday seeking to attack Jewish passengers coming from Israel. (Stringer/AFP via Getty Images)

The men clashed with police officers as what may have started as a protest quickly devolved into a riot that injured 20 people — none of them Israeli — and resulted in 80 arrests. Russia opened a criminal probe into who organized the protest, but Putin attempted to blame Ukraine and Western spy agencies for inciting the incident. 

U.S. National Security Council spokesman John Kirby called Putin’s allegation that Western entities were behind the violence “classic Russian rhetoric,” and Koffler underscored the concern that Russia may be “returning to the time of pogroms.” 

“The growing antisemitism in Russia harkens back to Soviet times,” Koffler said. “If Russian officials encourage anti-Israel and anti-Jewish sentiment, this could be destabilizing for the Muslim-dominated regions in Russia and is very, very dangerous for the Jews,” which she stressed “would not only be terrifying for the Jews, but it would not be good for Russia, its people or Putin personally.” 

Israel, under its current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, has worked toward closer ties with Moscow, finding Putin a potentially vital ally in helping stave off belligerence from Iran proxies in Syria. 

Hamas terrorists in Gaza
Palestinian Hamas terrorists are seen during a military show in the Bani Suheila district in Gaza City, Gaza, on July 20, 2017. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Netanyahu provided a measured response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, voting along with Western allies for a U.N. resolution that condemned the invasion but resisting calls to provide military assistance to Ukraine, which drew heavy criticism from those same allies, according to a review by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

Israel finally caved to Western pressure and authorized the sale of defensive military equipment to Ukraine, which included electronic systems to defend against drone attacks.  SOURCE

At least Putin is showing his true colors and the monster that he is, and has always been.

You can take the man out of the KGB but you can NEVER take the KGB out of the man!!

HOW CAN I BE SAVED?

MARANATHA!