Monthly Archives: June 2017

WATCH: Sukkot is a Celebration For Every Nation!

There’s a party in Jerusalem and EVERYONE is invited! Watch this entertaining sneak preview into Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles, as celebrated in Jerusalem.


Sukkot is a holiday that was celebrated by all nations when the Holy Temple stood in Jerusalem.

Most of Israel takes part in this glorious, beautiful celebration.

The entire landscape changes color as people build Sukkot (huts), in which they live in throughout the holiday.

Nowhere is this celebration greater than in Jerusalem, the capital city of Israel!

Sign the Declaration to Keep Jerusalem United

Jerusalem Must Remain the United Capital of Israel

I declare that Jerusalem is the eternal capital of the Jewish People and support all efforts to maintain and strengthen a united Jerusalem as the undivided capital of the State of Israel.

WATCH: Religious Jew Attacked in Australia and Fights Back!

A man shouting “Allah” in Melbourne, Australia assaulted a visibly religious Jewish man, screaming at him before it became physical. The Jew fought back and won.


This assault took place outside a synagogue after the assailant apparently tried to steal a child’s scooter.

Seemingly inebriated, the man screams about “Allah” and tells the Jewish man to “go back to Israel”.

It is clear that the assailant has some serious issues with Jewish people, as do many others around the world.

Watch the video and how the Jewish man fights back. The assault didn’t work out quite as the assailant intended!

WATCH: Israeli Mothers Cry Out for an End to Palestinian Terror

A large group of people, many of them women and mothers, gathered at the Gush Etzion Junction to demand an end to the widespread Palestinian terror that Israel is struggling to contain.


Stabbing attacks, car attacks and shootings have become the daily reality in Israel amidst a renewed wave of Palestinian incitement and terrorism.

Protesters at this civil demonstration called for the IDF to increase its efforts to keep terrorists away from a road that is used by tens of thousands of Jews, daily.

There is also pressure being put on Prime Minister Netanyahu to take stronger steps against this terror that has been raging for over two months already.

What is it going to take in order to establish calm?

Note: The video blanks between 1:08 and 1:42. Keep watching!

Bring Chanukah Joy to Israeli Soldiers – Say Thank You!

We are honored to thank the young men and women of the IDF who risk their lives every day to protect and defend the citizens of Israel. Join us in sending winter care packages (and personal notes of support) to Israeli soldiers who are out in the cold all day long.

Warm up a soldier’s heart with essential winter wear including a fleece jacket, hat, gloves and neck warmer. Keep an entire unit warm by ordering 10 packages! The soldiers greatly appreciate your love and concern.

Send a gift and write your personal message to a soldier today!

WATCH: How Will Iran Spend Over $150 Billion?

The next time someone tells you that Iran will use the money from the nuclear deal to support its economy and improve the country, make sure you show them this video.

 


Prior to the nuclear deal, Iran was suffering from crippling economic sanctions imposed by the P5+1 powers aimed at getting the Islamic Republic to suspend its uranium enrichment program.

Still, Iran managed to allocate funds in order to promote terror around the world, and especially against Israel.

Can you imagine what Iran will do another $150 billion? Watch this video and see for yourselves.

 

Sign the Petition to Oppose the Nuclear Deal with Iran

The US Congress must reject the dangerous deal with Iran and ensure that sanctions remain in force until the nuclear threat is completely eliminated.

I strongly oppose any deal with Iran that allows for easing sanctions before the nuclear threat has been completely eliminated. Allowing Iran to enrich uranium without being subject to ‘anytime, anywhere’ inspections is extremely dangerous and unacceptable. This bad deal with Iran is far worse than no deal and must be rejected.

Wanted: New Grand Vizier for Turkey’s Sultan by Burak Bekdil

  • Erdogan could just well choose a computer or an advanced office machine to appoint as the new prime minister.
  • What many critics call a “Palace coup” illustrates that the Turkish constitution is, effectively, null and void.

Why would a prime minister, who only a few months ago won a general election with 49.5% of the vote, step down? Corruption allegations? A soaring opposition? Plummeting public approval for this or that reason? A scandalous affair that fell into the public domain? None of those applies to Turkey’s prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, who on May 5 announced that he would take the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) to an extraordinary general convention, where he would not run for chairman or prime minister. After barely 20 months in office, Davutoglu was abruptly quitting.

At the press conference where he announced his decision to stand down, Davutoglu said this was “not my choice but a necessity.” He then blamed the AKP’s central executive committee for not having exhibited the “comradeship” he would expect of them.

Turkey’s prime minister, Ahmet Davutoglu, publicly announced on May 5 that he would step down. (Image source: Al Jazeera video screenshot)

But why were the committee’s 50 members so mean to a super-popular (and successful, in his account) leader? Simply because he was not a leader, but just a Grand Vizier appointed 20 months ago by the Sultan who goes by the title President of Turkey, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Indeed, Davutoglu’s resignation was a “necessity,” not his choice. It was a necessity because the Sultan wanted a lower-profile, more obedient Grand Vizier, who would work in line with the Sultan’s priorities, and not his own. No doubt, Davutoglu has been loyal to Erdogan. Even as he announced his resignation he pledged full fidelity to the president and the party. And he meant it.

So, what was the problem? Simple: Erdogan wanted a Sultan-Grand Vizier partnership, whereas Davutoglu mistakenly thought that the two Islamist comrades were the President and Prime Minister.

Davutoglu, who became prime minister in August 2014 after Erdogan was elected president and had handpicked him to take the job under his dark shadow, thought that he really was the prime minister. Bidding farewell, he lamented that: “We agreed [with Erdogan in 2014] that the country needed a prime minister, not a caretaker prime minister.” Twenty months later, the Turkish Putin-Medvedev system collapsed, primarily because the Turkish Medvedev mistakenly thought that he was free to run the executive as the Turkish constitution dictates but was in fact expected to be a pawn — fully, not partly, controlled by the Turkish Putin.

At an extraordinary party congress on May 22, the AKP will elect its new “leader” who will automatically become the new Turkish prime minister. There will not be a race among several contenders. Instead, there will only be one nominee, the Sultan’s new choice for the Grand Vizier. There are a number of hopefuls, including Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus, Justice Minister Bekir Bozdag, Transport, Maritime and Communications Minister Binali Yildirim and Energy Minister Berat Albayrak, Erdogan’s son-in-law.

Naturally, everyone is curious about the new head of the Turkish executive. In reality, it matters little which of the hopefuls will take up the job. Erdogan could just well choose a computer, or an advanced office machine to appoint as the new prime minister, instead of a person, had technology allowed him to do so. Whoever takes the job he will be a rubber-stamp prime minister working as the Sultan’s appointed party commissar. As one senior AKP official said: “The new prime minister should be a low-profile figure.”

Can anyone instantly tell the name of the Chinese prime minister? Well, his Turkish counterpart may be a bit more well known to the rest of the world but much more than a ruling party secretary general controlled by the president who, according to the constitution, does not have authority over the executive, legislative and judicial branches of the state.

Davutoglu’s departure seals two more facts about Turkey:

  • What many critics call a “Palace coup” illustrates that the Turkish constitution is, effectively, null and void and,
  • The office of the prime minister, from now on, will be a secretariat of the president’s palace, whoever gets the job.

As Dexter Filkins reminded us in the New Yorker: “It’s an old story: the loyal satrap, who makes a career for himself by faithfully snarling at his master’s critics, finally gets thrown overboard himself.”

When Erdogan came to power in 2002, his most trusted political allies were Fethullah Gulen, a U.S.-based Muslim cleric running a (now ailing) global network of schools, enterprises, NGOs and charities; Abdullah Gul, Erdogan’s predecessor as president; and Bulent Arinc, former parliamentary speaker and deputy prime minister. In 2009, Davutoglu joined the court of the Sultan’s most favored men. Today, Erdogan is fighting to jail Gulen, with an extradition warrant on his head; Gul and Arinc have already been sent into the political wasteland; and Davutoglu has been the last victim of “comradeship.”

The next Sultan’s favorite will surely try to behave better. But he may not survive too long — only until the Sultan decides to choose another.

Burak Bekdil, based in Ankara, is a Turkish columnist for the Hürriyet Daily and a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.

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