Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Arab MK: Patriarchs were Muslim, not Jewish

Why is this NAZI in the Knesset? ...because Israel allows him! 

Arab MK: Patriarchs were Muslim, not Jewish

Arab MK who called Jews ‘prophet killers’ strikes again with statement saying Biblical patriarchs were Muslim.
By Maayana Miskin

MK Sarsour (left)
MK Sarsour (left)
Flash 90
The Biblical patriarchs of the Jewish nation actually practiced Islam, MK Ibrahim Sarsour (Ra’am Ta’al) has claimed in a new statement.
Sarsour made headlines last week for declaring that Jews are “prophet murderers” in response to a joke in an Israeli paper about immaculate conception.

In his latest statement, Sarsour condemned remarks made by Ministers Naftali Bennett and Uri Ariel about Israel’s rights to Judea, Samaria and the Temple Mount, saying that there was proof in the Koran that there is no Jewish connection to these areas.
According to Sarsour, the Koran “proves without a doubt” that Abraham was a “Muslim” and that Isaac and Jacob were “hanifs” who “submitted” to Allah.

Hanif is an Islamic term for pre-Koranic figures who rejected idolatry in favor of monotheism. 


Support for Terror
This is not the first time Sarsour has courted controversy.
He has met with several Arab terrorists who are currently serving time in Israeli prisons for murder, including senior Hamas leader Abbas Al-Sayed. Al-Sayed was involved in several attacks, including the notorious Park Hotel massacre in which 30 Jews were murdered as they took part in a Passover seder.
Sarsour has also repeatedly met with senior members of Hamas, and has openly expressed support for Hezbollah in its war on Israel.
His comments come not long after Sarsour’s fellow party member MK Ahmed Tibi provoked public anger in Israel, after declaring that Jews have no right to visit the Temple Mount - the site of the First and Second Temples, and Judaism's holiest site.
“The Al-Aqsa mosque is a place of prayer for Muslims alone,” said Tibi, who also declared that Muslims must not allow Jews to “contaminate” the site.
Tibi also said that Jerusalem – Israel’s capital city, and the home of the Knesset he serves in – will become a Muslim city in the future, ending what he termed “the Israeli occupation.”
Other Arab MKs have been the focus of controversy as well. MK Jamal Zahalka of the Balad party has referred to Israeli policy as “apartheid,” and in April 2013 refused to condemn a terrorist’s slaying of an unarmed Jewish father-of-five, saying, “Settlers have no right to self-defense.”
MK Hanin Zoabi of Balad was briefly banned from running for the 19th Knesset due to her participation in an attempt to break Israel’s naval blockade on Hamas by force. The Supreme Court later overturned the decision and allowed Zoabi to run.
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Look what the Arabs did after this Knesset session that demands FREE worshipping everywhere in Israel!  - It will not end until Israel adopts my policy, in which Arab terrorists are NEVER released from jail because the Arabs demand such concession in order for them to arrive and talk with the Izraelis about peace talks. Until Arabs who do not behave in a democratic manner and disrespect Israel's Jewish nationalism are given a firm option, LEAVE or we make you LEAVE!
 

'Organized' Firebomb Attack on Bus Carrying Knesset Member

Five firebombs thrown at bus to Hevron carrying MK Orit Struk. 'This was not a spontaneous attack.'
MK Orit Struk
MK Orit Struk
By Tova Dvorin
First Publish: 11/5/2013, 9:40 AM

Arab Throwing Molotov Cocktail
Arab Throwing Molotov Cocktail
Flash 90
Five firebombs were thrown at an Egged bus on 160 line from Jerusalem to Hevron at midnight, Monday evening, as it passed the Judean Jewish community of Karmei Tzur. IDF troops immediately arrived at the scene to search the area for the perpetrators; forces found additional bottles ready to be thrown. No one was hurt.
Bayit Yehudi MK Orit Struk, who was returning home from a Knesset session on the bus, commented on the severity of the attack, saying that the ambush appeared to have been "planned in advance."
"The event was unusual in its extent. This was not a spontaneous action of a single strike, but the organized activity of a [terror] squad," she said.
Despite the apparent ferocity of the attack, no injuries were reported.
Meanwhile, last night, IDF forces in Judea and Samaria managed to arrest 7 wanted terrorists. One terrorist was arrested in the Arab settlement of Saida, near Jenin; two were arrested in the settlement of Zeita; 3 wanted men were apprehended in Shechem (Nablus); and one was arrested in the Samaria settlement of Azzun. All of the men were turned over to Israeli security forces for questioning.
The IDF has stepped up efforts to arrest Arab terrorists over the past few weeks, after an increasing wave of violence against Jews has swept across Judea and Samaria.
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Video: They are revolting, they are brain washed by their own fabrications and lies and they are traitors - Israeli MK: I am Proud to be Araffat's Friend - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kpZdF17cG30
What will you do to these Nazis if you were the prime minister of Israel?
The hugest mistake Israel has made is giving the Arabs control over Har Habayit-Temple Mount, which they FINALLY got back into their control!  
 
Video - This is so disgusting: Knesset Committee for the Interior debate on Jewish visitation rights to Temple Mount - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFks7vif2T4#t=0
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Insults, Threats as Arab MKs Disrupt Temple Mount Session

Debate over law to finally grant Jews the right to pray at their holiest site sparks angry response from Muslim MKs.
By Gil Ronen and Ari Soffer
First Publish: 11/4/2013, 3:10 PM
A Knesset debate on the implementation of equal Jewish prayer rights at Jerusalem's Temple Mount degenerated into a shouting match Monday, as Arab Knesset Members used threatening words and aggressive body language to disrupt the meeting.
Chairwoman of the Committee of Interior, MK Miri Regev (Likud), appeared largely helpless in the face of an angry onslaught by radical Arab MKs, who were eventually removed by orderlies after launching a string of angry invective towards Regev and another female MK.
According to a proposed law, tabled by MK Rabbi Eli Ben-Dahan (Bayit Yehudi/Jewish Home), daily prayer hours would be set for Jewish groups visiting the Temple Mount, which is Judaism's holiest site.
Despite its supreme significance to Jews throughout the world, Muslim pressure has resulted in a raft of discriminatory measures against Jewish visitors by Israeli Police, including a total ban on Jewish religious activity there. Violators of the ban are arrested immediately, and often slapped with a ban from ascending the Mount altogether.
The laws, if passed, would be a monumental upholding of Israel's official stance of religious freedom. While Israel officially liberated the Temple Mount from Arab occupation during the 1967 Six Day War, the government controversially handed back control of the Mount to the Islamic Waqf foundation, which has been accused of implementing a campaign of Islamization, including the systematic destruction of Jewish artifacts, aimed at erasing all traces of Jewish history at the site. 
During the stormy debate over the law, Regev explained the rationale behind it, saying that "We cannot have a situation in which a state cannot realize its sovereignty and people can't pray at sites holy to them."
Regev further stressed that "we don't want to go into Al Aqsa [mosque] or prevent you (Muslims) from praying there, but want to enable Jews to pray on the compound as well."
But MK Muhammad Barakeh (Hadash) warned that Arab MKs would physically prevent the implementation of equal prayer rights at the Temple Mount, shouting that "Whoever comes to defile the Al Aqsa Mosque will find us there!"
That remark prompted MK Regev to retort: "Is that a threat?”
MK Ahmed Tibi joined the fray, warning that: "The Second Intifada began because of Al Aqsa, and because of you it will erupt because of Al Aqsa... you are a pyromaniac."
"You say that as a friend of Yasser Arafat," said MK Orit Struk (Bayit Yehudi).
"I am proud to be Arafat's friend... his shoe is worth ten like you...", replied Tibi, who later called out at a female MK who was off-camera, possibly MK Struk, "You are a dangerous woman, a pyromaniac. You endanger your children, not just ours... You are a lowly settler.. on the land of others..."
In September, Tibi sparked controversy by declaring that the Temple Mount “is a place of prayer for Muslims alone," and accusing Jewish worshippers of "contaminating" it by visiting it.
MK Moshe Feiglin urged Regev to eject the unruly MKs for breaking Knesset protocol, after calling her a "pyromaniac" and accusing her of "chutzpah."
Obviously pleased with the way he had denigrated the Knesset, MK Tibi finally left the room as he said in Arabic: "Yalla, out, out, you... animals." It is not clear whom he was addressing.
The scene was typical of the way extremist Arab MKs have been behaving in the Knesset since the mid-1990s, when radical Arab leaders like Ahmed Tibi (Raam-Taal) and Azmi Bishara (Balad) entered the Jewish state's parliament. A decision by the Election Committee to disqualify the radical lists in 1997 was overturned by the High Court.
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Arab MKs denounce Jewish visitation to Temple Mount in Knesset hearing
 
By JEREMY SHARON
11/04/2013
“There is no Temple Mount,” shouts MK Zahalka at proposal to find solution to allow Jews to enter compound.
 
Extraordinary scenes unfolded in the Knesset Committee for the Interior on Monday afternoon, when Arab MKs objecting to Jewish visitation rights at the Temple Mount wildly and ferociously denounced Bayit Yehudi and Likud lawmakers before storming out of the hearing.
Committee chairwoman Miri Regev (Likud) called the session to discuss the continued problems Jewish visitors experience on the Temple Mount.
In addition, Deputy Religious Services Minister Eli Ben-Dahan (Bayit Yehudi) announced during the hearing he was seeking to reach an agreement with the Chief Rabbinate, which is opposed to Jewish visitation at the site, for approved and agreed procedures for Jews wishing to pray there.
The Chief Rabbinate has historically prohibited Jews from visiting the Temple Mount due to the concern that someone may walk into an area of the compound that should not be entered unless certain rituals have been performed.
Increasing numbers of devout Orthodox Jews, largely from the conservative wing of the national-religious movement, now visit the site, however, citing the opinions of senior rabbis who argue it is possible to visit the Temple Mount while avoiding the prohibited areas.
But MKs Ahmed Tibi (United Arab List-Ta’al), Jamal Zahalka (Balad) and other Arab lawmakers present at the hearing reacted furiously to the notion of standardizing procedures for less restricted Jewish access to the Temple Mount and shouted warnings of dire consequences, including a new intifada, should such proposals be advanced.
Tibi was ejected from the hearing but reappeared a short time later only to continue shouting, along with several other Arab MKs as they stormed out of the hearing.
“There is no Temple Mount,” shouted Zahalka. “There is only the Aksa Mosque, I don’t see a Temple Mount, it’s something virtual” he shouted, and continued to call out “al-Aksa” every time anyone in the hearing said the words “Temple Mount.”
Zahalka accused the Bayit Yehudi lawmakers present, along with Likud MK Moshe Feiglin, an ardent supporter of Jewish prayer rights on the Temple Mount, of being “pyromaniacs.”
“You’re playing with fire and you’re starting an inferno,” he yelled. “I’m not threatening anything, I’m just saying what will happen.”
Hadash MK Muhammad Barakei averred that “anyone who wants to desecrate al-Aksa [Mosque] will find us there, not here.”
Tibi said that the second intifada had broken out “because of al-Aksa, and because of you it [another intifada] will break out again, also because of al-Aksa.”
He accused Regev of being “irresponsible and dangerous, to yourself, to your children, and also to the public.”
Once the Arab MKs had left, the debate continued with Shas MKs David Azoulai and Yitzhak Cohen criticizing Ben-Dahan and the other Bayit Yehudi MKs for promoting Jewish visitation to the site, on the grounds that senior rabbis have ruled against it.
Azoulai argued that the issue was being advanced in the committee, as opposed to formulating legislation, because the proponents of such activities know that legislation would cause a far greater uproar and be less likely to succeed.
Feiglin responded, saying that renowned rabbi Moses Maimonides visited the Temple Mount when he was in the region in the 12th century and that rulings by rabbis in the years since the site came back under Israeli control were made only to prevent people from entering areas prohibited by Jewish law, and not because going to the Temple Mount was intrinsically forbidden.
Regev insisted that access to holy sites for members of all faiths should be upheld.
She added that a strong complaint would be lodged with the Knesset Ethics Committee against the behavior of the Arab MKs who disrupted the hearing.
Jewish visits to the Temple Mount are tightly restricted by the police and the Jordanian Wakf Islamic trust which administers the site.
Ben-Dahan said that he had spoken with the Chief Rabbinate on the issue of Jewish visitation and that he “hoped that it will accept the reality that [some] rabbis are telling individuals that they are permitted to go to the Temple Mount.”
He added that the Religious Services Ministry was preparing a proposal which will define when and how Jewish prayer will be permitted in the compound.
The deputy minister said it is the chief rabbis who define Halacha for the public, and that he hoped it would be possible to draw up proposals that the Chief Rabbinate would agree with.
Jewish and other non-Muslim visitors are only permitted to enter the compound during certain hours of the day and never on Fridays.
In addition, the police and officials of the Islamic trust prohibit Jews and non- Muslims from praying on the Temple Mount.
The increasing numbers of Jewish Israelis visiting the site has led to heightened tensions, and Jewish visitors have complained that they face greater police obstruction and restrictions in their efforts to go to the Temple Mount.

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