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@woxihuanchijidan

pride month over but i aint | see pinned egg/bao | they/them | nonbinary & Chinese (this blog is 21+ just keep that in mind) | if you can't use critical thinking and have a strong foundation of media literacy fuck off
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reblogged

the pro palestine, pro irgc, pro houthis, pro hezbollah, pro hamas movement is just an excuse for non jews to be neo nazis without being called out as such.

because telling half the world’s jewish population to be eradicated and to leave our indigenous homeland to go back to places we were genocided, mass raped, and systemically oppressed because people there hated us for not being them is all the rage now.

telling jews you hope they kill themselves when they have already lost millions of their population due to mass murder is encouraged.

wishing harm and rape and death on jews is perfectly fine.

demonizing judaism is okay.

so is celebrating pogroms.

beating jews in the street is acceptable.

all because the new form of judeophobia, of antisemitism, of JEW HATE is antizionism.

about 80% of the time though, pro palestinian idiots are saying the quiet part out loud. they are actively spewing the same nazi rhetoric white supremacists do. (because that is what islamofascists are: supremacists.) but because most of the world feels the same way they do, hates and demonizes jews even if they say nothing outloud, it’s accepted and okay.

because to them: why not find a new way to eradicate the jews?

the nazis never went away. the world never learned from the crimes all of their populations committed against us or the thousands of years of shit they heaped on us for no reason other than cruelty and ignorance. they never changed.

it’s clear now: they never will.

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reblogged

it’s happened enough that it’s a pattern: someone will make a post about humanitarianism & social justice, jews will reblog it, then op will throw a tantrum about “zionists” agreeing with them, and lock reblogs about it.

and it would be one thing if the replies were saying anything hateful or clowning on them in any way. I’ve had posts break containment and take off in a corner of tumblr I don’t particularly like, and either turned off reblogs or notifications as a result… but in those instances people are actually saying awful things in the replies. in this case, all those nasty evil zionists are just… agreeing with op’s humanitarian position?

like obviously they hate any jews who don’t stick to the script and say all the right words and perform the adequate antizionist flagellation of the rest of the jewish community… but there’s more to it.

they’re mad you’re actively proving you aren’t the caricature that antizionists have made of you. you’re a “zionist” (whether you actually are a zionist, or just a non-zionist or antizionist who wasn’t ideologically “pure” enough) clearly demonstrating that you exist outside the proscribed role as evil reactionary jewish-supremacist fascist who wants a genocidal ethnostate to destroy the palestinians. the omnicause antizionist narrative is not only that zionism is wrong but that it’s the antithesis to humanitarianism, compassion, and social justice, etc—and the fact that you a) have never advocated for genocide or an ethnostate and b) keep agreeing with compassionate, humanitarian, social justice-oriented positions shows how flimsy that lie is.

and how dare you! didn’t you read your script, jew?

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iliothermia

Shana Tova!!! May your enemies, haters, and those who wish evil upon you be cut off. The blessing for the leek has always felt resonant but this year it's been on my mind a lot. For me at least, 5785 is a year of practicing healthy boundaries and taking care of myself - even if I have to run on spite. I hope everyone has a safe Rosh Hashanah ❤️

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reblogged

“As a Jew…” I don’t care if you are Jewish, if your personal sense of justice, morality, or ideology leads you to turn your back on half the world’s population of Jews & you’d rather they die than waver on your “deeply-held principles”, how tf are you part of the Jewish community? you want half of it to be destroyed!

If your idea of “Jewish values” leads you to actively seek the death of your siblings’ entire nation, culture, and way of life, why shouldn’t you be cut out of the community? you’ve already thrown the rest of your community to the wolves; how tf can you still expect to be treated as part of it? you are endangering us

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Okay, I'm going to go out on a limb here and make what is apparently a radical ethical statement.

If someone's response to hearing of the October 7th mass murder of Israelis was to celebrate or applaud or otherwise express joy, they're an antisemite. Period.

If someone's response to 10,000 dead Gazans was to celebrate or applaud or otherwise express joy, they're an Islamaphobe. Period.

In general, if you hear about thousands of people dying for being in the wrong place at the wrong time or being born to the 'wrong' group, and your reaction is "HUZZAH!", you are a horrible person.

I need to talk about these tags. and this is not about any specific person, this is a really widespread view. which is why i'm talking about it.

I did not know any of the following info before Oct 7th. Like, just to be clear, this was news to me too.

Hamas's attack, Hamas's history, Israeli history, Palestinian history, and Jewish history, became a sort of bulk combo special interest for me really quickly.

The short version is: Hamas is not Palestinians retaliating.

Hamas was created, almost 40 years ago, specifically to violently destroy Israel and take the land. Not because oppression. Because Jews are Bad.

After years of terrorism (mainly a LOT of suicide bombings in Israel), Hamas put a bunch of people up for political offices in what ended up being the last Palestinian election, ran a VERY smart campaign, and took over Parliament.

Two years later, in 2008, it staged a violent coup and kicked the Palestinian government out of Gaza by force.

Hamas has run Gaza as a dictatorship ever since.

No one in Gaza is allowed to speak out against them. Journalists have been imprisoned for mentioning criticism or protests against Hamas. People have been imprisoned for speaking against Hamas online.

This is a vivid description - by Hamza Howidy, an activist who used to organize "We Want To Live" protests against Hamas, who fled Gaza last August - of what life was like there.

There are many, many Palestinians who work directly with Israelis toward peace, against oppression, toward two free countries side by side. Like these folks, who Hamas imprisoned for it.

Or like Bassam Eid, who quit working with B'Tzelem (a Palestinian human rights org in Israel) because he was frustrated that they weren't paying enough attention to how Palestine treats Palestinians.

He founded the Palestine Human Rights Monitoring Group. I think it's now defunct, but his current writing can be found here:

The other reason that what Hamas did was not Understandable Violence In Response To Oppression, as its leaders like to characterize it, is... well. Graphic.

As in, what it did on Oct 7th -- what it planned for two years to do, what it did in just one day, across 22 towns and a music festival -- is nightmare-fodder, literally nauseating levels of graphic.

If anyone wants to just accept that at face value and not read on, I won't mind.

Anyone who thinks Hamas and its attack might be justified, however, should just fucking read on.

An addition... And one correction to @autismserenity it was the last election in Gaza, the Palestinian Authority still hold regular elections.

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One thing people should keep in mind is that there is no monolithic entity called Palestine.

Prior to the formation of the state of Israel there was the British Mandate for Palestine, which is the name of a British Administrative District. Before the British it was broken up into multiple districts under Ottoman rule and colloquially referred to collectively as Filistin.

Up until recently the areas of the West Bank and Gaza were occupied by Egypt and Jordan, until during the 6 Day War they were Captured by Israel along with the Sinai Peninsula. Israel offered to Return the Sinai and Administration of Gaza to Egypt, and Egypt refused Administration of Gaza but accepted return of the Sinai. Israel Offered to return Administration of the West Bank to the Kingdom of Jordan but this was refused. This left Gaza and the West Bank under the status quo of Israeli military administration.

Since then the creation of the Palestinian Authority with it's official armed wing the Palestinian National Security Services, and the PA sitting as an observer to the UN.... is the closest we have come to establishing an independent state for Palestinians ever in History.

The Palestinian Territories are those Administered by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank, and Gaza formerly administered by the PA and now administered by Hamas (since the 2007 Hamas PA War) who are a part of Iran's foreign Proxy Network and a radical excommunicate offshoot of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood.

But there is no distinct entity called Palestine, "Palestine" is a term that you need to specify your meaning.

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Also, this is the flag of the Palestinian Authority, and the Flag that represents the Palestinian National Security Services.

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This is the flag of Hamas, who despite attempts by the Palestinian Authority at political normalisation are not affiliated with the PA.

Repeating this extremely important fact:

Up until recently the areas of the West Bank and Gaza were occupied by Egypt and Jordan, until during the 6 Day War they were Captured by Israel along with the Sinai Peninsula. Israel offered to Return the Sinai and Administration of Gaza to Egypt, and Egypt refused Administration of Gaza but accepted return of the Sinai. Israel Offered to return Administration of the West Bank to the Kingdom of Jordan but this was refused. This left Gaza and the West Bank under the status quo of Israeli military administration.

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reblogged

antisemitism has always been the popular opinion

right now it has simply taken on the ussr rebrand of "antizionism."

when i was growing up, i was always the only jew in a classroom, and i remember the majority of my classmates telling me antisemitic shit like "hitler was right" or "jews love money."

guess because that was the MAJORITY of my classmates, they were right, right? lmao.

nearly all of my archaeological field school colleagues sat me down once to tell me pontius pilate was a jew, jews killed jesus, and jews are evil. 2 people sat it out and just watched. this was a diverse group of people from many backgrounds, btw.

guess because that was the majority, it was right and good, right?

what's popular is not always what's right. it has always been popular to hate and kill jews, and now it's popular to hate the most visibly jewish thing on this planet: israel.

pogroms happened because they were popular. expulsions happened because it was popular to hate us. genocide of jews happened because it was, yet again, popular to hate and dehumanize us.

also none of you would say that racism is right because a majority of white people perpetuate it. you only love to say this because your hateful trend is popular.

we see you.

just because you want to be a sheep doesn't mean the herd is doing the right thing.

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reblogged
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spale-vosver

For every person who, in their pursuit of Palestinian freedom, has become a virulent antisemite, I hope you know that there will be no forgiveness for you when you eventually drop this trend like you did with Ukraine.

You don't get to come up to Jews and go "oops! I'm so super duper sorry I accused you of raping Palestinians and drinking the blood of babies! So like, how about that new season of Good Omens?"

In Judaism, sins are forgiven not through the grace of G-d, but by the affected party.

And we will not forgive you.

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reblogged

I was thinking about a post I reblogged about how the impact of goyim trying to "cancel" (I guess?) zionists and how it ends up being antisemitic even if the intent is not.

And I just want to say. The intent *is* antisemitic. Zionism is a movement by Jews and for Jews and it should remain a discussion primarily had and led by Jews. This is an intracommunity issue and the attempt to isolate, cancel, destroy, remove, etc anything that could possibly be related to zionism is antisemitic to its core because it's saying "I get to decide what Jews have community. I get to decide what Jews have rights and safety." And that's fucking bullshit.

Goyim are not not understanding that their impact is larger than intended. Well, maybe they are. But the bigger issue is that they think they get to decide which Jews get to have community. Which Jews get to feel safe. Which Jews get to tentatively exist as Jews in public.

Another issue is that when we decide some category of Jew is okay to do that shit to, the goalposts will move. They always fucking move. Someone said the Shema is zionist! Hillel (the sometimes only Jewish resource on college and university campuses that students have) so that has to go. Jews speaking Hebrew are zionists so we need to stop speaking that, then Jews being visible in public are suspect like. It doesn't stop at the true definition of zionism.

Again, the intent is to isolate a group of Jews you view as undesirable. That intention is inherently antisemitic. And the impact is just as bad as the intention.

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reblogged

So, because I am incurably, morbidly curious, I watched Jessie Gender's four-hour-and-seventeen-minute-long video on . . . well, the title suggests "Zionism, Antisemitism, and the Left." To her credit, Gender does touch on all three of these topics, though not with the same degree of skill, graciousness, or understanding of the topics at hand. I've just had a very nice dinner, and I'm feeling generous, so let's see how this video stacks up. Strap in. This is going to get long.

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reblogged

Marvel Erases a Jewish-Israeli Superhero

Shame on Marvel.

The Superhero in question is Sabra, an Israeli Jewish woman. As of now she is a Russian spy.

This superhero was created by Stan Lee himself, he would be rolling in his grave now.

The worst part about this is what's on the final image:

Marvel has responded to Anti-Black, Anti-Asian, Anti-Muslim, and almost every other form of hatred by making their own superhero. But Marvel's response to antisemitism is to ERASE OUR CHARACTER. It’s as if marvel can excuse antisemitism, but nothing else.

Shame on Marvel

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reblogged
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hindahoney

Because I'm only seeing other Jews posting about this, non-Jews I need you to be aware that for the past month or two there has been a wave of bomb threats and swattings at synagogues all across the US. They usually do it when services are being livestreamed. I haven't seen a single non-Jew talking about this. High holidays are coming up in a few weeks, which is when most attacks happen against our communities. We're worried, and we need people to know what's happening to us.

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What gentiles imagine vs. what Jews actually are

Culturally Christian Gentiles: The Judeo-Christian concept of original sin

Jews: Huh?

Culturally Christian Gentiles: The Abrahamic religions’ belief in heaven and hell

Jews: Say what now?

Culturally Christian Gentiles: The Judeo-Christian religions emphasize obedience over asking questions and debating ideas.

Jews: *spit coffee laughing*

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jewishdragon

I’ve seen some people confused about this:

Judiasm has no concept of original sin, we have mitzvah and averah (good deeds and transgressions. You cannot be born with transgressions you must personally commit them, they are actions). No concept of heaven or hell, merely a world to come. “A” singular world to come. We do have a sort of, i guess “purgatory” the maximum time spent there before proceeding to the world to come is 11 months Judaism is founded on fist fighting G-D and debating every aspect of our scriptures (which we have been doing for millennia) 

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hachama

Also! The purgatory concept/world to come are not central to Jewish life in the way that wanting heaven and fearing hell appear to be central to christianity.

Judaism: the purpose of life is to live a good life and perform mitzvot

Christianity: the purpose of life is to go to heaven when you die

Biiiiig difference.

literally one time i saw someone say “christianity and judaism are both homophobic bc they say youll burn in hell for being gay” and when i informed them that jews do not believe in hell they didnt know what to say lol

realizing its a several thousand year argument with god is an important concept argument implies you have a say in it too, not that god yells at you and you just take it obediently without question this goes so far many modern jews questioning traditionally held statements now say that things like circumcision no longer have a place in today’s world as theyre a barbaric relic of the past, considering theyve long ago stopped animal sacrifices, and to be fair its not like combining meat and cheese on the same sandwich is an affront to god and god sayeth eat not the shellfish for they are icky and lo the jews did ask ‘why? what do you have against shrimp? you made them!’

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neophyte-no1

It differs from sect to sect, too. According to a lot of Orthodox Jews, the only reason why we don’t still make sacrifices is that we don’t have a halachically (religiously legal) appropriate temple to do so in. I don’t know why we’re not building one, but I’m in no hurry. 

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keshetchai

i mean none of us are making sacrifices because we don’t have a temple and we don’t have a temple because the al-aqsa compound is there currently 

which honestly saves us from the work of having to find a blemish free red heifer

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grimmtidings

So, let me get this straight… the entire religion is built around legal loopholes? Is that what I’m gathering here? (Feel free to correct me!)

 the religion is built around living in an ethical society per our contract with G-d. but you can’t just have a bunch of words without putting them to use, & understanding them in practice. You know? the contract is a living discussion.

it’s not legal loopholes, because a loophole is often an inadequacy in the law that gets taken advantage of, but these are all built-in, part of our understanding. In this case, we have a contract (covenant), and we’re going to put it to use in every way possible, explore every inch of it, turn it inside out, and apply it to real life examples, define the parameters, argue those definitions, and then survey the conclusions. 

I can say “you need to say the evening shema (a prayer) in the evening” but we can’t just say that, we need to explore a bunch of things, like: 

when in the evening does this happen? is there a difference between twilight and evening? if we say the evening prayer can be said from the time the priests partake of teruma, then when is that? if it’s the first watch of the evening, how many watches are there? if you were out all night for a wedding, but it’s not yet dawn, is it too late to recite the evening prayer - IN SEVERAL THOUSAND YEARS, KESHA WILL WRITE TIK TOK AND WE’LL NEED TO KNOW WHAT TO DO IN CASE OF PARTYING UNTIL YOU SEE SUNLIGHT. when do they (the priests) ritually bathe in preparation for this? what about when poor people who cannot afford extra candles - do we consider how early they eat an evening meal in order to make sure they can afford the light? 

why did we discuss evening prayer before morning prayer? why does torah give us night before day? when is bedtime for most people? can we say the evening prayer until dawn? if yes, people might put off the prayer until dawn, which could lead to laziness or mistakes. also, when is dawn? but more prudently at the moment, when is evening? evening is when the stars are visible, but…how many stars? also, if you are lying alone in a dark house and can’t see the sky, how do you determine if it is too early or too late for your evening shema?

and that is from Talmud, in its hyper-condensed form. That is what we do. It’s not a series of loopholes and ways to weasel out of doing something. nothing gets taken for granted, everything is questioned, debated, discussed until it is understood. and there may be lots of ways to understand. 

if someone sees this line of thinking and goes “ah, loopholes to get out of it/wiggle away from it,” you are mistaking lacework for loopholes. 

….and if Kesha sees sunlight it is too late for her to say her bedtime shema. she should recite morning shema instead. 

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matan4il

Judaism is a native religion and identity, so like all indigenous religions, it has ALWAYS sanctified the bond between the tribe and its ancestral land:

* Jews, no matter where around the world we are, pray in the direction of the Hebrew Temple in Jerusalem.

* Israel, Jerusalem, and Zion are mentioned in the Hebrew Bible hundreds of times, often in connection to the importance of the bond between the land and the Jewish people.

* The Hebrew calendar and Jewish holidays are based on the agricultural year as experienced in the Land of Israel. For example, we celebrate Shavu'ot, the Jewish festival of the harvest, during the Hebrew month of Sivan, which is roughly around the Gregorian month of June. In Australia, June is the rainiest month of the year, with severe temperature drops, absolutely not the right time for the harvest. But Australian Jews still celebrate Shavu'ot at the same time as all other Jews, around June. Because we ALL honor and preserve the agricultural cycle of our ancestors in Israel.

* Many Jewish prayers express a desire to return to Israel, for example with the phrase, "Next year in Jerusalem."

Here's a greeting card, drawn at Linz, a Nazi concentration camp in Austria, which was turned into a DP (displaced persons) camp at the end of the war. The card features the above three Hebrew words (you can see the freed prisoners of the camp on the left, heading towards a land with palm trees on the right, with one of the buildings having a Star of David on top):

* The holiest site for Jewish people in the entire world is the thousands of years old Temple Mount in Jerusalem, where the Jewish temple stood, in Israel.

* Several Jewish holidays explicitly celebrate the Zionist notion, meaning the importance of the bond between the Jews and the Land of Israel. Hanukkah is a celebration of the native Jews fighting off the Greek occupying forces, and re-establishing Jewish sovereignty in Israel, and the freedom from religious persecution this allowed Jews, by re-dedicating the Hebrew Temple in Jerusalem to Jewish worship, after it was defiled by the Greeks (including by re-lighting the Temple Menorah). Passover celebrates the deliverance of the Jews from Egypt, and the start of their journey back home, to their ancestral land in Israel, with the Passover meal ceremony including thanking God for bringing Jews back to Israel, and for building the Temple in Jerusalem for them.

* The language of the Jewish people is Hebrew, which is the last Canaanite language, the last of the languages spoken by the native peoples of Israel. Hebrew is specifically tied to the geography of Israel. For example, in the Bible, the Hebrew word for "west" is also the Hebrew word for "sea," because Israel's western border is the Mediterranean Sea. Similarly, the Hebrew word for "south" is also the Hebrew name of the desert that makes up the southern part of Israel, the Negev. Every Jewish language, which developed in the diaspora (such as Yiddish and Ladino), features words borrowed from Hebrew.

Here's an Israeli poster made in 1949, honoring "Sea Day" and featuring a part of a biblical verse (Genesis 28, verse 14): "And your seed shall be as the sand of the earth, and you will spread to the sea and to the east, to the north and to the Negev, and blessed in you and in your seed will be all the families of the Earth."

* Among the 613 Jewish mitzvahs, religious decrees that Jews must observe, one explicitly states that whenever possible, Jews should strive to live on their ancestral land in Israel. This is called in Hebrew, "mitzvat yishuv Eretz Yisrael."

* Among the 613 mitzvahs, there are 26 mitzvahs that can only be observed while living in the Land of Israel. These are called in Hebrew, "mitzvot ha'tluiot ba'aretz."

* Jewish homes have included for centuries a decorative piece hung on the eastern wall, and called "mizrach" (the Hebrew word for "east"), because that was the direction of Israel to most Jews. It usually included a biblical verse in Hebrew, often one that either mentions the east, Israel or Jerusalem, and also illustrations of Jerusalem or Israel.

Here's an 18th or 19th century mizrach from Germany:

* In Jewish synagogues, especially in Europe, the eastern wall was the most important one, because it was the one facing Israel. This wall was called, "kotel ha'mizrach" which means in Hebrew "the wall of the east."

* Oh, but the word "kotel" refers specifically to the walls of the Temple Mount. For example, the Western Wall, the only one of the Temple Mount's four walls accessible to Jews for centuries (and therefore the plaza in front of it became the second holiest place to Jews, after the Temple Mount itself) is called in Hebrew, "ha'kotel" (the wall). So why would a synagogue wall be referred to as "kotel" as well? Because every Jewish synagogue is called "mikdash me'at," a lesser temple. Every Jewish synagogue is a reminder and placeholder for the destroyed Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

* Accordingly, many Jewish synagogues feature reminders of the Beit Ha'Mikdash (the Hebrew Temple). For example, this holy ark, from a synagogue in Romania, which survived the Holocaust, and is today presented at Yad Vashem (Israel's national Holocaust museum), includes two pillars on its sides, a reminder of the Temple in Jerusalem's pillars believed to have been build by King Solomon. The holy ark's pillars are named exactly like the Temple's two pillars, Boaz and Yachin. This holy ark also features two hands, they're meant to be the high priest's, while he's performing the priestly blessing, an ancient Jewish ceremony that was conducted on the steps of the Temple in Jerusalem.

* In fact, over the centuries, one of the most prominent Jewish symbols is the menorah, which is a reflection of the candelabra eternally lit in the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem.

The Temple Menorah being stolen by the occupying Romans, as seen on the Titus Arch in Rome:

The menorah as incorporated into jewelery, as a Jewish symbol, goes back thousands of years:

* For centuries, Jews created Jewish art and culture, which expressed Zionist longing. For example, the Sephardi doctor, philosopher and poet Rabbi Yehuda Ha'Levi writes what is maybe the most famous of the "Zion poems" while living in Islamic-occupied Spain: "My heart is in the East, and I am at the end of west / How shall I taste what I eat, and how should it be an enjoyable taste? / How shall I repay my vows and commitments, while / Zion is in the ropes of Edom, and I am in the bonds of Arabia? / It would be easy for me to leave all of the good of Spain, just like / It would be precious to me to witness the ashes of a ruined temple."

* In 1140, Rabbi Yehuda Ha'Levi finally fulfilled his wish, and boarded a ship for the Land of Israel. We don't know what happened to him, but the phrasing in a Hebrew letter, written by Jews who knew him, and found in Egypt, implies that he was murdered. For almost 2,000 years, it was dangerous for Jews to try and return to Israel, and it certainly wasn't possible on the scale of a national movement. Jews knew it was dangerous. And yet for centuries, despite that, individual Jews like Rabbi Yehuda Ha'Levi persisted in attempting this return. This is a part of Jewish history. It's not just that there was a small number of Jews, who managed to remain in Israel despite the repeated expulsions and massacres of Jews from our land, it's also that there was a small number of Jews who dared attempt the return to Israel continuously, over centuries, and neither of these things would have happened had Judaism not been Zionist. Always.

* For centuries, every Jewish wedding includes a part, where the groom recites an oath of loyalty and longing for Jerusalem. The text itself is taken from the Bible, from the second part of Psalms 137: "If I forget you, Jerusalem, let my right hand forget itself, let my tongue be glued to the roof of my mouth if I do not remember you, if I do not raise Jerusalem at the height of my joy."

* For centuries, every Jewish wedding included a symbolic reminder of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, and our ancestors' following expulsion from the Land of Israel, by breaking a cup made of glass.

* For centuries, many Jewish homes featured an unfinished patch, as a similar reminder. I'm a secular Jew, but my real life bestie is religious, and her house has a hole in the eastern wall, intentionally left there.

* In fact, the destruction of the Temple, and the following expulsion of the Jewish people from Israel, is SUCH a traumatic and significant event for the Jewish faith, that there is a religious national day of mourning every year, on the ninth day of the Hebrew month of Av (the date when Jews believe the first Temple was destroyed in Jerusalem by the Babylonian occupiers, and the second one, re-built after an expulsion and return of the Jews from Babylon to their native land, was destroyed by the Roman occupiers), when Jews fast.

* Ethiopian Jews, who were probably the most disconnected Jewish community along the centuries, have a special holiday, called Sigd. This name is derived from the Hebrew word for worship or prostration, "sgida." It features asking God to return them to Israel. Since the state of Israel has helped the Ethiopian Jewish community to return to this land, starting in 1982, it has become a part of Sigd to celebrate it specifically in Jerusalem.

The Ethiopian Jewish community celebrating Sigd in Jerusalem:

* In fact, the three major Jewish holidays, other than Yom Kippur, are also called "the three pilgrimages" ("shloshet ha'regalim"), because while the Temple stood in Jerusalem, they included all Jews coming there to celebrate the holiday together. These three holidays are Sukkot, Pesach (Passover) and Shavu'ot.

Here's a piece of art depicting Jews in antiquity, coming from all over Israel to the Temple in Jerusalem for sholoshet ha'regalim:

* The Hebrew Bible itself expresses the Jewish Zionist longing, the desire of the Jews to return to their ancestral land no matter what, after they were expelled by the Babylonians from Israel, the same desire that drove their return from their first exile, as recorded in the Bible, and supported by historical documents and archaeological finds. Here's the first part of Psalms 137:

Upon the rivers of Babylon, there we sat, and we wept, as we remembered Zion. On willows there we hung our harps, because there our captors asked us for songs, and our tormentors for joy. "Sing to us from the song of Zion!" How shall we sing God's song on foreign soil?

and here's the craziest thing about this list: there's a good chance I forgot some stuff.

This is posted in honor of the first candle of Hanukkah tonight, and the many Tumblr antisemites, who distort Jewish identity and history by claiming Zionism is incompatible with or has nothing to do with Judaism, people who in the name of anti-Zionism celebrated the biggest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, who ignore Jews pointing out that anti-Zionism is inherently antisemitic, who prove it by going out of their way to deny Jewish native rights, and who think posting "Happy Hanukkah to my Jewish followers!" (as if Hanukkah isn't a Zionist holiday) covers up their antisemitism.

Happy Jewish sovereignty in Israel holiday to all who celebrate Hanukkah! I hope you really enjoy its foods! xoxox

(for all of my updates and ask replies regarding Israel, click here)

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Hey Jumblr, do yall know where that post of the screenshot of this rancid misinformation post breakdown/ debunking is:

I can't find it and I remember seeing a really good breakdown of this post but idk where it is anymore 😭😭😭 can someone help me find it or one similar?

For context on why I am asking for this post debunk specifically, it's because one of my friends is reposting this shit without knowing the full context.

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reblogged

What the anti-Israel student protestors in the US do not seem to understand is that, in the US, their actions and statements can absolutely be defined as, and are, antisemitic. The United States is a member of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, and since 2016, the federal government of the United States has adopted the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which includes, and I quote: "Denying the Jewish people their right to self-determination, e.g., by claiming that the existence of a State of Israel is a racist endeavor."

This is the attitude of the governing body of the country in which US Americans are citizens. Your country has adopted a progressive, internationally agreed upon definition of antisemitism, and its government and states will act accordingly to quell antisemitism in their jurisdictions. Over half of the States' governments have also specifically adopted the IHRA definition of antisemitism. A great number of the States in which these protests are taking place have individually adopted the IHRA definition.

From a strict legal and ethical standpoint, the campus protestors do not have a leg to stand on in their desire to avoid accusations or prosecution of antisemitism. If anyone in the US wants to take a campus protestor to court and accuse them of antisemitism, they would have a solid case.

The State of New York, for instance, has had several campus protests against Israel; the state government has adopted the IHRA definition of Antisemitism. The state is fully within its rights to use its resources to quell antisemitism on its campuses, at the request or not of university administrators. If a university is within the borders and jurisdiction of the State of New York, then this university must abide by the laws of the State of New York. The IHRA definition of antisemitism is not a legal document, but a government's adoption of it signals a government's views toward antisemitism, and influences how that government and its entities will react to antisemitism. Also, New York does have a Human Rights Law, and this has undoubtedly also influenced the state's reactions to antisemitism in its borders.

No university should be expected to abide terrorists and their sympathizers on its property. And the campus protestors are supporting a legally recognized terrorist group, and engaging in definitionally antisemitic acts and speech.

From a definitional standpoint, at least in the US, the campus protests and their organizers and participants are definitionally antisemitic. They are not "on the right side of history". They are wrong.

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