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Saturday, February 27, 2016

Pushing the Jews out of Europe

Michael L.

{Also published at the Elder of ZiyonJews Down Under and Vocal Europe.}

In a January 18 piece for the Guardian entitled EU adopts resolution criticising Israeli settlement activity by Peter Beaumont in Jerusalem and Jennifer Rankin in Brussels, we read:
leavingThe European Union has unanimously adopted a tough resolution criticising Israeli settlement activity in the occupied Palestinian territories, despite fierce efforts by Israel to persuade some EU members to block it. 
The resolution was agreed by the EU foreign affairs council on Monday after Greece, one of five countries Israel had hoped would block acceptance of the resolution, backed down following a weekend of wrangling and pressure from Palestinian officials and other European diplomats.
Europe seems intent upon making itself more and more irrelevant to the Jewish State of Israel, as well as to the Jewish people as a whole. The EU's open-door policy for Arab-Muslim migrants in the millions is contributing to the evacuation of many Jews throughout Britain and the continent. The reason for this is because of the amazingly high level of violently-inclined Arab-Muslim anti-Semitism as expressed in the streets of Malmö or Paris or any number of European cities today.

The problem is not that Europe is importing perhaps millions of Middle Easterners and North Africans onto the continent, but that huge percentages of these folk happen to despise the Jewish people and tend to have no desire to integrate into liberal European society. They also tend to have an outright hatred for Gay people and a belief in the inferiority, and servitude, of women. We all know this, of course, but few decision-makers in Europe honestly seem to care or find it in their political best interests to publicly acknowledge this cultural reality.

What makes it so much worse, of course, is the inclination among those European decision-makers to isolate and reprimand the Jewish state as a kind-of unique evil. Of all the countries in the world, it is little democratic Israel that gets singled out by the EU and various European governments for sanction and continual reprimand because Jews actually dare to live in Judea and Samaria, the land that Jewish people come from.
The resolution emphasised that EU agreements with Israel applied only to the State of Israel within the pre-1967 border, adding that the “EU must unequivocally and explicitly indicate their inapplicability to the territories occupied by Israel in 1967. This does not constitute a boycott of Israel, which the EU strongly opposes”.
This is a lie, of course.

Not only does the EU not strongly oppose the movement to boycott, divest from, and sanction the State of Israel (BDS) it absolutely encourages that political movement via efforts such as this one. What the EU is telling the world - much to the happiness of Islamists everywhere - is that Jewish people have no right to purchase housing on historically Jewish land..

There is an irony in the fact that while western Europe has flung open its doors for Arabs to come and live wherever they want, the western European elite wrinkle their noses at the whif of Jews building housing for themselves on the land that Jewish people have lived upon for something close to four-thousand years.

There is also considerable irony in the fact that while the EU opposes Jews who build housing for themselves and their children beyond the so-called "green line" within Israel it actively supports construction for Palestinian-Arabs within "area C" which is supposed to be fully controlled by Israel according to the Oslo Accords.

Furthermore, by sanctioning the Jews of Judea and Samaria - which Jordan dubbed "West Bank" for the purpose of erasing Jewish history and thereby undermining Jewish claims to their own homeland - the EU encourages violence toward European Jewry by those very same immigrants who often tend to despise Jews for religious reasons to begin with.

When the EU adopts resolutions such as the one above it sends a very clear message not only to the great Arab-Muslim majority in the Middle East, but to the Arab-Muslim minority in Europe, that it is open-season on Jews.
Hinting that further measures may be in the pipeline, it continued: “The EU will continue to closely monitor developments on the ground and their broader implications and will consider further action in order to protect the viability of the two-state solution, which is constantly eroded by new facts on the ground.”
The two-state solution is dead for the very simple reason that the Arab powers, including the Palestinian Authority, never wanted it to begin with. The tendency among Europeans to blame the Jews for Arab behavior is a measure of European dislike of Jews, in general.

It certainly has nothing to do with Israeli-Jewish intransigence on the question of a 23rd Arab state because the Jewish people have acknowledged their readiness to give away their heartland for peace since the Peel Commission of 1937. The reason that there is no peace between the Arab majority and the Jewish minority in that part of the world, despite the fact that Israel treats its Arab citizenry far better than does the rest of the Arab-Muslim societies, is because of Koranic forbiddance.

Yet Europe smacks around its Jews, so can you blame Jewish people for wanting to leave Europe?

Were I a European Jew I would be pondering every possibility for relocation to Israel, North America, or Australia.

2 comments:

  1. Maybe, Peter Beaumont in Jerusalem and Jennifer Rankin in Brussels, before having the chutzpah to criticise Israel, should take a look at the Regavim website http://regavim.org/ to see the illegal building the EU is doing in Judaea and Samaria.

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  2. Mike,
    The main reason European Jews are leaving - and are increasingly uncomfortable - is not specifically to do with immigration. It is the rising tide of anti-Semitism that has been happening in Europe over the last 10/15 years. Much of that has been cloaked behind "anti-Zionism." The migration crisis - and the very recent policy of Angela Merkel etc will, of course, be an important factor going forward. But it is vital to understand that most people are disturbed by the normalization of anti-Semitism that has become obvious in the host population. It is slightly different in different countries. For example, in France it is coming from all sides. In Scandinavia it is far more driven by the nature of "progressive" politics. People are actually *coming to* the UK rather than leaving it. For now. In the UK, the few people I am aware of who are considering leaving are doing so because of the relentless anti-Semitism coming from people on the Left. From the political Left, and from our media, and our universities. These institutions have been getting more and more overt in their Jew-hatred for some years.
    Of course, in very particular cities - Malmö being an example - Jews are under a particular threat. But it is absolutely necessary to understand that European anti-Semitism is just doing what it always has done; it is back on the rise. It is, like David Deutsch says, "the Pattern."
    I have been increasingly upset by the atmosphere in Britain. But that is almost entirely driven by what has become normal in the left-leaning media - BBC etc - and in the left-leaning political parties. The toxic anti-Semitism of the Labour party has been growing for years. It has been unchallenged. And the arrival of Jeremy Corbyn has cemented it and given it new levels of toxicity. If you want to understand European anti-Semitism it is necessary to see it as part of a cycle that has occurred over many centuries. Otherwise it becomes impossible to really grasp what is happening.
    European Union attitudes towards Israel certainly do nothing to help and a lot to make things worse. But they are a *product* of a wider comfortableness with anti-Semitism, not the other way round.
    Europe, it seems, cannot help itself when it comes to needed to turn on its Jewish populations.
    Sad, but true.

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