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Tuesday 7 December 2010

Israel: rabbis' ban on housing for non-Jews condemned (biased report by AI)

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Amnesty International's report is as always fundamentally biased against Israel and the Jewish people.  The report willfully ignores the tactics the many Arab House owners who refuse to sell or let properties to Jews, and the PA decision to imprison Palestinians who dare sells properties or land anywhere within East Jerusalem or surrounding Arab villages or in even the West bank , while outrageously accusing a small Israeli Rabbis for wanting to safeguard their communities.

In its criticism of these rabbis , Amnesty pays lip service to Israelis right to safeguarding their existence.  It makes the preposterous claim that "much of this issuing by Rabbis is common practice which is widespread in Israel. Amnesty  claims  that it was deliberate act of discrimination on grounds of race, ethnicity, and religion and…could not be justified on grounds of necessity."  The report downplays the fact that Israel made every effort to secure its civilians Jews or non-Jews live in harmony , and ignores the PA brutal tactics of retribution to anyone (Palestinian) who dares enter in an agreement re property or land with a Jew.

The Amnesty report Again ignores evidence, widely distributed by the Israeli and international media, clearly showing the deliberate attempts by the PA to embed FEAR within it's civilian population and by playing the victim act.These and other tactics are cynically used by PA and Fatah to sway international opinion against Israel and the Jewish people
Renaud Sarda




 07 December 2010 Amnesty International Logo
Israel: rabbis' ban on housing for non-Jews condemned
Amnesty International today condemned a religious ruling signed by dozens of Israel’s municipal chief rabbis that bans the renting or sale of homes to non-Jews.
While the ruling is not official government policy, the rabbis issuing it include the influential Shmuel Eliyahu, chief rabbi of Safed, and his counterparts in a number of other Israeli cities and municipalities, all of whom are essentially government employees.
In October, Rabbi Eliyahu had written a letter urging Jews not to sell or rent apartments to non-Jews, apparently in response to Arab students seeking accommodation in order to attend a local college. It was signed by 18 other rabbis.
Amnesty International Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director Philip Luther said:
“This ruling issued by religious leaders employed by the state of Israel, whose salaries are paid by public funds, clearly targets the Palestinian citizens who make up 20% of Israel’s population and highlights the continuing discrimination they face in housing and other areas.
“The message these calls send to Palestinian citizens throughout Israel could not be clearer - that discrimination against Palestinian citizens seeking housing is backed by the religious authorities.”
Rabbi Eliyahu’s October letter also called for action to be taken against Jews who rent or sell homes or apartments to Israel’s Palestinian citizens. The letter says:
“The neighbours and acquaintances [of a Jew who sells or rents to an Arab] must distance themselves from the Jew, refrain from doing business with him, deny him the right to read from the Torah, and similarly [ostracise] him until he goes back on this harmful deed.”
In November, the Israeli Minority Affairs Minister requested that the Justice Minister investigate Rabbi Eliyahu for incitement, with a view to suspending him from his post as municipal rabbi. As far as Amnesty is aware, the Justice Minister has yet to take action on the matter.
Philip Luther added:
“The Israeli government, as a party to international human rights treaties that prohibit discrimination on grounds of race, ethnicity, and religion, must repudiate this call by leading rabbis, take disciplinary measures against Rabbi Eliyahu and other state employees advocating racism, and work to facilitate access to housing and higher education for Palestinian citizens in Israel.”

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