Monday, October 26, 2009

Jews in the News

An interesting post from www.badeagle.com about events that occured this weedend in Jerusalem.

Jews in the News
by David Yeagley
ShareThis
Jewish people do not control the media. Certainly not the Associate Press wires. Look at this latest headline:
Israeli police storm Jerusalem’s holiest site
Immediately our hearts stop, as we wonder what those evil Israeli police could be doing, what sacrilege those wicked Jews could be up to. Invading the “holiest site” in Jerusalem! Just think of it.
“Palestinian” youth, wondrous devotees, noble defenders of the Islamic cult, elevated spiritual champions, throw rocks at the Israeli police whom they have intentionally provoked. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)
Then we find that the specific site in questioned isn’t a Jewish site, did not involve Jewish people, and is not a site considered holy by Jewish people.
You guessed it. It’s an Islamic mosque, a Muslim issue, again. It’s “Palestinians” at it again, making anti-Jewish headlines for an eager press, ever so anxious to malign and misrepresent the Jews.
Not until the fourth paragraph of the AP wire do we get something that might represent the truth.
Israel’s national police chief, David Cohen, accused a small group of Muslim extremists of trying to foment violence — echoing a charge made by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu two weeks ago.
“The police will act with a strong hand against anyone who disrupts order on the Temple Mount and against those incite to riot,” Cohen said.
So, the “Palestinians” created a ruckus, to provoke Israeli police, to get a headline against the Jews? That’s certainly what happened. The AP headline wants everyone to think that Jews are sacrilegious devils, quick and happy to commit blasphemy, to denigrate anything holy, to totally trash others. Look at the headline again.
Israeli police storm Jerusalem’s holiest site
This time, consider the author: Rawhi Razim. If knowing the headline was an AP wire wasn’t enough, we could have noted the fact that the author is a very carefully obscured personage, obviously Arab, and no doubt Muslim. We know that in 2001 or 2002, a “Rawhi Kazim” was working for the Islamic Association for Palestine, in Mississaugua, Ontario (Canada). Google identifies the IAP as an Islamic terrorist site on the web. There are even YouTube clips of some of their public meetings here in the United States. It’s all about killing the Jews.
So, I don’t think it is likely that the Associated Press would be controlled by the Jews, as anti-Zionists love to claim.
But, the important theological issue inherent here is the matter of the holy. “Jerusalem’s holiest site,” as “Palestinian” terrorist Rawhi Kazim calls it. It is clear he refers to the black-domed Al-Aqsa mosque on the Temple Mount (the site of the 2nd Temple of the Jews, razed to the ground by the Roman Titus, in 70 AD).
Obviously, there is nothing holy about any Islamic mosque. There is nothing holy about anything man declares holy. Man does not have power over the holy. People that make this claim have a totally false concept of what it holy. As man uses the term, it is an egotistical, sociological power grab, of one kind or another. Declare something holy, and you can control all logistics pertaining to it. You can control people, kill people, create war, etc. All because you say the person, place, or thing, is “holy.”
In the Bible, the Jewish account of the living Creator, only God Himself has power to make anything holy, or to declare anything holy. In this, the Jewish religion is distinct from all others. Even in concept, the holy is something “wholly other” than man, than man’s mind, than man’s power. Man cannot create the holy. Man simply cannot make anything holy, or declare it to be such. He can merely act like it is holy. He can only seek to control behavior–based on such a claim.
Wrong ideas of the holy create wrong social relationships, wrong centers of power, and wrong behavior. Wrong ideas of the holy create war, often. This is the Muslim hold on the world, in their minds. It is completely false, arrogant, and maniacal. It is a perversion of man’s natural intuition of the existence of something beyond himself, something greater than himself, something “holy.”
I have written a scholarly research book about the holy. I have studied the subject in detail. (In January, 2007, the first edition of my book, Altered States, appeared on Amazon.com. Unaccountably, it was not available, but a false advertisement. August, 2007, an available edition appeared. Unfortunately, this edition was sized incorrectly, and the pagination made the index irrelevant (i.e., incorrect). There were numerous typographical errors as well. In the near future, a third and final edition will be available.) The full title of the book is, Altered States: The State of the Dead, and the State of the Holy. I feel that the proper, objective understanding of the holy is critically important, especially at this time in history, when what is truly sacred and honorable is being blasphemed and denigrated on a daily basis, while that which is artificial, arrogant, and manipulative, is being coerced upon humanity by the power brokers of the world–Communists, Muslims, and global capitalists alike.
I say, beware the claim of holy. Find out what is holy, where the idea came from, what it means, and how it is to function in the world. Study, research, make the effort to know. The false claim of holy is the foundation for all ills in the world. It is a simply matter of priorities. It is a clear case of psychological hierarchies. More on this latter.
For now, just note that the “Palestinian” terrorist headline, by Mr. Rawhi Kazim, and the first four paragraphs of his story, are as false and intentionally misleading as a false concept of the holy could make them.
And, to be “fair” to the Associate Press, they do have a Jewish version of the story: Violent clashes erupt at Jerusalem’s holiest site, by Matti Friedman. At least Friedman’s account is objective–the major feat in reporting a “Palestinian” story.

No comments: