1. Civil War
Looms at Israel's Northern
Border
by Hana Levi Julian
With Hamas running Gaza on
Israel's south-west border,
Fatah attempting to take
over Judea and Samaria in
eastern Israel,
Iranian-backed Hizbullah
terrorists and allied
pro-Syrian forces are
fighting the Lebanese army -
and have taken over parts of
Beirut.
Lebanon has been
without a president since
November, when the
pro-Syrian minority, which
includes several Hizbullah
ministers, demanded more
representation in the
Cabinet. The Western-backed
government coalition has
been struggling for months
with the Hizbullah
terrorist-led faction to
retain control of the
country while other Arab
nations are eyeing the
situation with increasing
concern.
State-Run TV,
Beirut Under Hizbullah
Control
The Iranian and
Syrian-backed terrorist
organization seized large
parts of the Lebanese
capital and yanked the
state-run Future News
television station, owned by
coalition leader Sa’ad
al-Hariri, off the air.
“An army officer
accompanied by members of
Hizbullah walked into the
station and told us to
switch off transmission. We
are off the air,” said a
senior station official
quoted by Reuters News
Agency.
Royal Jordanian Airlines
suspended flights to the
embattled nation, joining
Middle East Airlines, the
Lebanese national carrier,
in ending traffic in and out
of Beirut indefinitely.
Anti-Syrian leaders have
charged that Hizbullah last
week set up surveillance
cameras on approaches the
airport to spy on government
officials.
Saudi Arabia called for a
meeting of Arab leaders on
the situation as the death
toll mounted. Security
sources said at least 10
people were dead, including
a mother and her son, and 20
others were wounded as
fighting continued Friday
for the third day in a row.
Terrified civilians
stayed indoors as Hizbullah
guerrillas fired assault
rifles, rocket-propelled
grenades (RPGs) and heavy
machine guns at government
forces. Plumes of heavy
smoke rose from cars and
shops in several mixed Sunni
and Shiite districts in the
capital where some of the
heaviest fighting took
place.
Nasrallah Warns
Against Disarming Hizbullah
Hizbullah chief terrorist
Hassan Nasrallah claimed the
Lebanese government had
declared war by outlawing
its telecommunications
network, which it called
“the most important part of
the weapons of the
resistance.”
The government deemed the
independent Hizbullah land
lines and private
communications system a
threat to national security.
After a marathon 11-hour
meeting that stretched from
Monday night into Tuesday
morning, the Cabinet also
decided to fire airport
security chief Brig.-Gen.
Wafiq Shoukair for alleged
ties to the terrorist group,
further enraging Hizbullah.
It also said Hizbullah has
been flying weapons from
Iran on a routine basis.
“The decision is
tantamount to a declaration
of war… on the resistance
and its weapons, in the
interest of America and
Israel,” Nasrallah said,
adding that he himself was
“not declaring war,” but was
“declaring a decision of
self-defense.
“Those who try to arrest
us, we will arrest them.
Those who shoot at us, we
will shoot at them. The hand
raised against us, we will
cut it off,” warned
Nasrallah in a speech
broadcast live on TV
Thursday by a videolink
hookup from a secret
hideout. Nasrallah almost
never appears in public due
to his fears of
assassination by Israeli
operatives.
Hizbullah Cut Off
Airport, Ties to Outside
World
The fighting began
Wednesday when Hizbullah
supporters blocked Beirut
streets on Wednesday with
burning barricades,
paralyzing the capital.
Activists claimed they were
enforcing a national strike,
forcing a showdown in the
ongoing government crisis.
Rioters torched vehicles,
smashed windows and blocked
the main road to Beirut
International Airport, the
nation’s only air link to
the outside world. Most main
arteries in and out of the
capital were cut off and by
the end of the day the
border with Syria had been
shut down as well.
Government officials
warned the economy would
crash within days due to the
inevitable drop in tourism
if the situation is not
resolved.
Comment on This Story
2. PM Olmert Suspected of Accepting Cash Bribes
by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
is under police
investigation for accepting
cash bribes from wealthy
cronies, including a
well-known American
businessman. The details of
the suspicions against the
Prime Minister were released
Thursday night when a Tel
Aviv District Court
partially lifted a gag order
on details of the case.

Some aspects of the case
will remain under wraps.

Earlier Thursday night,
police officials met with
Attorney General Menachem
Mazuz and agreed to a
partial lifting of the gag
order. Some aspects of the
case will remain under
wraps, officials said.
According to details of
the police probe released to
the media, Olmert is under
investigation for receiving
bribes from one or more
wealthy contributors during
his terms as mayor of
Jerusalem and as Minister of
Industry and Trade. One of
those suspected of giving
significant amounts of cash
to Olmert is Morris (Moshe)
Talansky, a 75-year-old
American Jewish businessman.
Talansky, who was questioned
during a recent visit to
Israel, is apparently the
central witness in the
investigation thus far,
although an Olmert staffer,
Shula Zaken, has also been
repeatedly questioned by
police in connection with
the latest corruption
investigation.
PM Olmert: 'If
Charges Are Pressed, I Will
Resign'
In response to the lifting
of the gag order, Prime
Minister Olmert told a press
conference Thursday night,
"If the Attorney General
decides to file charges
against me, I will resign."
Olmert gave his own
version of events connected
with the corruption
investigation, saying that
he met Talansky in 1993,
when Olmert was running for
mayor of Jerusalem.
"Talansky helped me raise
campaign funds for those and
other elections in which I
took part," the Prime
Minister said, adding that
Talansky also covered
deficits the Olmert
campaigns had created.
"There was nothing wrong
with raising funds," Olmert
said. "I never received any
bribes. I never took a cent
into my own pocket."
Details of the
Investigation Thus Far
Revealed
Details of the
latest corruption
investigation of Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert, as
presented to the media by
police officials and the
Attorney General's Office,
with court sanction, are as
follows:
The investigation, which
officially began ten days
ago, centers on suspicions
that Prime Minister Olmert
accepted monies illegally
while serving as mayor of
Jerusalem and as Minister of
Industry and Trade. The
sources of the suspect
funds, which are believed to
have been significant, were
one or more foreigners. The
monies were

Prime Minister Olmert was
questioned for about an hour
by police investigators
about the corruption
allegations.
allegedly
paid to Olmert over a
lengthy period of time, both
directly and indirectly.
One of the central witnesses
in the building case is a
foreign resident, identified
in the foreign media and by
Olmert himself as Talansky,
who was questioned by police
during his visit to Israel
over the Passover holiday.
Talansky's name came up in
connection with the
suspected bribes during a
police investigation into a
separate matter.
On May 2, following
testimony by Talansky and
other witnesses, Prime
Minister Olmert was
questioned for about an hour
by police investigators
about the corruption
allegations. He cooperated
with the detectives and
denied receiving any monies
illegally. The police agreed
to limit their initial
questioning of Olmert to an
hour due to his duties as
Prime Minister, but it was
made clear that further
testimony will be collected
from him at a later date.
Police said that, aside
from the Prime Minister and
Talansky, they have
questioned others involved
in the case. Among them, the
Prime Minister's former
Office Director Shula Zaken
and Attorney Uri Messer. The
investigation is still
underway, police officials
emphasized, and will
continue as long as
necessary.
Comment on This Story
3. Barak
Aides: Olmert Exit is a Matter
of Time -- Then What?
by Hana Levi Julian
Cabinet ministers and
coalition partners are
hurrying to get their ducks
in line as the storm clouds
gather in the latest
investigation against Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert.
Even
US President George W. Bush
has recognized the winds of
change.
Bush’s long-heralded trip
to Israel in which he hoped
to crown 60th Independence
Day celebrations with
significant progress toward
a final status agreement
between the Jewish State and
the Palestinian Authority
was
hastily reworked in
light of the allegations.
Defense Minister Ehud
Barak is convinced Olmert
will have no choice but to
leave office, according to
an aide quoted by the
Reuters news agency. The
source said Barak has
knowledge of details of the
current criminal
investigation and that the
case is serious enough that
the Prime Minister will be
forced to quit.
The chairman of the Labor
Party, who is not a member
of the Knesset at this time,
is reportedly weighing his
options carefully.
Publicly, the Defense
Minister is carrying out
business as usual and
declaring that the Prime
Minister is innocent until
proven guilty. But privately
Barak has been quietly
discussing the issue of when
to topple the government.
“Barak has little doubt
that Olmert is on his way
out, but the question is:
Elections now, or later?”
the source told Reuters.
If Labor, the second
largest party in the
coalition, pulls out of the
government and forces new
elections, Likud Party
chairman Binyamin Netanyahu
is likely to lead his party
to a victory. Such a
scenario would likely mean a
nationalist/religious
coalition, leaving Labor out
of the government.
If Labor remains, Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni, as
Acting Prime Minister, is
the
most likely candidate to
take over the reins should
Olmert be forced out. Labor
might negotiate a deal in
which it would rotate
leadership of the coalition
with Kadima – but Barak
would be unable to serve as
Prime Minister as long as he
is not an MK.
In either scenario, Barak
comes up empty on the
personal front: as matters
stand, he would be unable to
return to his former
position as Prime Minister.
Comment on This Story
4. Thousands at Homesh; Dozens Attempt to Rebuild
Sa-Nur
by Hillel Fendel
With army approval and
protection, thousands made
their way to the
Disengagement-destroyed
Shomron town of Homesh on
Independence Day - and then
another 150 continued
further north, in the middle
of the night, to establish a
presence at another
Disengagement-town, Sa-Nur.
[video:123196]
The
midnight pioneers say their
goal is to rebuild Sa-Nur.
Efforts to rebuild Homesh
have been underway for over
a year.
Among the 150 people who
made their way to Sa-Nur
around 4:30 AM were former
residents of the town, who
were expelled in the summer
of 2005 under then-Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon's
Disengagement/withdrawal
plan. The Disengagement
focused mainly on
withdrawing from Gush Katif
and expelling its 9,000
Jews, but four small towns
in the northern Shomron were
added as well, as a gesture
to the Palestinian
Authority. The four
included the
relatively-isolated Ganim
and Kadim near Jenin, and
Sa-Nur and Homesh, both
north of Shavei Shomron.
Singing About the
Joyous Return to Zion
The 150 when it was
still dark, affixed a
mezuzah to a wall that
remained standing and in
which some of them planned
to sleep, and danced and
sang, "G-d's redeemed people
will return to Zion with
joy."
As of late Friday
morning, they were still in
Sa-Nur, preparing to remain,
at least, for the Sabbath.
Army forces, caught
unawares, have arrived; they
have not received an order
to try to evict the
settlers, and are instead
standing watch over them as
police attempt to convince
them to leave on their own.
An Arutz-7 video of the
ascent, filmed by Kobi Sela,
can be seen here.
This is the Answer
to Olmert's Corruption
Yossi Dagan, a
spokesman for the efforts to
rebuild Sa-Nur and Homesh,
told Arutz-7 today, "Just as
we have succeeded in
establishing a permanent
presence in Homesh, we plan
to do the same in Sa-Nur...
With the corruption and loss
of values represented by
Olmert and his government,
this is the correct answer -
a pioneering spirit of
settlement and return to the
Land."
The IDF released a
statement reiterating the
ban on entering the area -
which, unlike Gush Katif,
was never handed over to
Palestinian Authority
control and effectively
remains no-man's land.
However, the Homesh First
campaign responded, "We are
not the criminals; if there
are criminals, they are
those who uprooted the
residents of Sa-Nur from
their homes, as well as Ehud
Olmert, the architect of the
expulsion and corruption."
Dagan said, "If the
soldiers evict us, fine -
but we will return, just
like we returned to Homesh."
Background and
History
Chomesh and Sa-Nur,
some 20 miles east of
Netanya, were situated
within a narrow
Israeli-controlled strip
only two miles wide, flanked
on both sides by territory
under total Arab control.
Though the two towns and
their residents had suffered
several terrorist-attack
murders, Land of Israel
supporters were very active
in strengthening them in the
hope of warding off the
withdrawal plans: Of the 17
families living in Sa-Nur
several months before the
end, nine of them were young
religious families who
arrived in the preceding
months, opening a new
kindergarten and nursery in
their wake. In Chomesh,
too, a new kindergarten was
opened in its last year; of
its 43 families, 11 were new
religious families that
arrived during the previous
two years.
Despite the efforts, the
government succeeded in
destroying the towns,
leaving barely a single
stone to mark where the
houses and synagogues had
stood (though the synagogue
in Sa-Nur was not razed, but
rather buried).
Efforts to rebuild Homesh
began at the end of 2006,
when a group snuck into the
former town and lit Chanukah
candles there. A few months
later, before Passover and
on Independence Day, larger
groups made their way up,
claiming they were on their
way to resettle the town.
The army originally said it
would block the Independence
Day march, but then backed
down and provided tacit
protection. However, the
day ended in a fiasco when
the army removed all
electricity, water supplies
and transportation, thus
leaving thousands of people,
including women and
children, stranded - hungry,
tired, and thirsty - atop
the mountain, forced to walk
several kilometers down the
mountains in the dark.
As if to make up for what
happened, the army announced
this year that it would
cooperate with the
organizers of the ascent -
though the organizers
themselves preferred to go
it alone. While some chose
to march up the hills in a
3-4 hour trek, thousands of
people made their way by bus
to nearby Shavei Shomron,
where shuttle buses were on
hand to take them up to
Homesh, and then back
down. The ruins of Homesh
were thus filled with people
of all ages, engaged in
traditional Independence Day
barbecues, studying Torah,
participating in a music
concert, playing on giant
inflatables, and walking
around the ruins.
For the above 150,
however, this was not enough
- and they now await either
the onset of a joyous
Sabbath in the hills of the
northern Shomron, or an army
eviction with the prospect
of additional ascents in the
future.
Comment on This Story
5.
Celebrating the Pioneering
Spirit on Israel's 60th Birthday
by Hana Levi Julian
Thousands of Israelis
celebrated Independence Day
by flocking to hilltop
communities in Judea and
Samaria for a day of song
and solidarity with the next
generation's pioneers.
At
least 2,000 people held
picnics, barbecues and hikes
at the budding community of
Migron, in the Binyamin
Regional Council area, one
of those threatened with
destruction to make way for
a Palestinian Authority
state within Israel's
current borders.
Residents of Judea and
Samaria as well as activists
from around the country
gathered at the mountaintop
site to express their
support for Israeli
sovereignty in the region.
Participants streamed to
the hilltop under the banner
of, “We stand up for what’s
ours – Migron!” According
to Ynet, the IDF and police
officially permitted the
event.
The celebration was part
of a broader initiative that
is being run by the
Loyalists for the Land of
Israel, Youth for the Land
of Israel, Women in Green
and Adamah Admati.(This Land
is My Land)
Mevaseret Adumim
(E-1)
By midday, hundreds
of Israelis had also reached
the Mevaseret Adumim (E-1)
area, among them Maaleh
Adumim Mayor Benny Kashriel.
The mayor moved his office
on Thursday to Mevaseret
Adumim, located between
Maaleh Adumim and Jerusalem,
as a show of support for
development in the area.
Kashriel and other
officials have warned that
the continuation of the
freeze on construction in
Mevaseret Adumim could cause
permanent harm to Maaleh
Adumim.
Those interested in
visiting the site can call
050-766-8857 for more
information.
Givat HaEitam
The main Land of
Israel event took place in
Givat HaEitam near the
Judean city of Efrat in the
Gush Etzion bloc, where
activists planned to start
construction on a new
synagogue. Many said they
planned to stay the night.
Picnics, music and
children’s activities kept
things lively on the stony
hillsides as the sound of
music, chatter and laughter
and the scent of roasting
meat wafted through the air.
Homesh
Activists were also
reportedly allowed by the
IDF to visit the ruins of
the former northern Samarian
town of Homesh which was
destroyed as part of Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon’s 2005
Disengagement from Gaza.
The visit, however, was
initially only permitted
within the confines of an
organized group; one
activist who arrived by foot
at an army checkpoint was
turned away. He allegedly
attacked a soldier, was
arrested and taken into
custody by police.
By evening, more than
10,000 people had reached
Homesh, with participants
calling for its revival as
well as the rebuilding of
its former neighboring
community, Sa-Nur as well.
Comment on This Story
6. What's So Special About Independence Day?
by Hillel Fendel
Israel's Independence Day
begins Wednesday night and
continues on Thursday. With
the holiness of the holiday
under attack from right and
left - the hareidi-religious
public, the secular public,
and even parts of the
Disengagement-stricken
religious-Zionist public -
celebrants of the day wish
to emphasize its basic
principles.
Rabbi Eliezer
Melamed - the rabbi of the
Shomron town of Har Brachah,
the Dean of the hesder
yeshiva there and a prolific
author on matters of Jewish
Law who is quickly gaining a
reputation as a leading
authority in the
religious-Zionist public -
has published a short work
explaining the historic and
religious significance of
the day.
The work, published as a
supplement to the B'Sheva
weekly, covers the following
points:
• The establishment of the
State of Israel facilitates,
for both individuals and the
nation as a whole, the
fulfillment of the Torah
commandment to settle the
Land of Israel.
• The establishment of the
State removed the shame of
Exile and the accompanying
desecration of G-d's Name,
as in Ezekiel 36, verses 4,
20, and others.
• The establishment of the
State, in the wake of
centuries of pogroms that
culminated with the
Holocaust, saved many Jewish
lives, and helped buttress
the Jewish People's
spiritual condition.
• It is a positive
commandment to thank G-d for
His miracles and favors, and
to enact holidays to this
end.
Excerpts from the work:
The Commandment
to Settle the Land
On the 5th day of
Iyar in 5708 [May 14,1948],
when the establishment of
the State of Israel was
declared, the Nation of
Israel merited to fulfill
the Torah's command to
settle the Land of Israel.
True, individual Jews who
lived in the Land prior to
this also fulfilled a
commandment, but the
commandment mainly applies
to the entire nation, which
is bidden to bring the Land
under Jewish sovereignty.
[See Numbers 33,53 and Deut.
11,31, and Nachmanides'
commentary]
Jewish Law, in fact,
rules that the obligation to
mourn destroyed cities in
the Land of Israel is
dependent on Jewish
sovereignty: Ruins of cities
that are ruled by non-Jews
must be mourned, even if
they are populated mostly by
Jews; and if they are ruled
by Jews, the ruins need not
be mourned, even if they are
populated mostly by
non-Jews.
The Beginning of
Redemption, and
Sanctification of G-d's Name
The establishment
of the State of Israel
removed the disgrace of
Exile. For generation after
generation, we wandered in
the Diaspora, we suffered
terrible humiliation and
pogroms, we were a subject
of mockery among the
nations, and we were subject
to mass slaughter.
Observers saw us and said
there was no hope for us.
This was a situation of
terrible 'desecration of
G-d's Name' - for "you
[Israel] are called by G-d's
Name" [Deut. 28].
G-d's word, as prophesied
in so many places in the
Bible, was that He would
return us to the Land. But
with the passing of so many
centuries in which this was
not fulfilled, the
desecration of G-d's Name
increased, and Israel's
enemies concluded that
Israel would never return.
And then the miracle
happened [in 1948], and
G-d's word was fulfilled.
This was a great
sanctification of G-d's
Name, and it became even
stronger during the Six Day
War when we liberated
Jerusalem and the holy
cities in Judea and Samaria.
This process of the
Ingathering of the Exiles
and the flowering of the
desert is the beginning of
the promised Redemption. As
the Talmud states, "There is
no clearer sign of the
Redemption than this, as is
written in the Book of
Ezekiel (36,8), 'You
mountains of Israel will
give forth branches and will
bear fruit for My people
Israel who are on their
way.'"
Yes, there is still much
to improve and put right;
unfortunately, we have not
all merited to do
teshuvah [return,
repentance] and move to the
Land of Israel. But our
Sages have taught that there
are two types of Redemption:
full repentance leading to
miraculous Redemption, and
the type that takes place
through natural processes,
accompanied by great
difficulties and hardships.
These will cause the Jewish
People to return home - and
thus we will progress, step
by step, until the Complete
Redemption.
Jewish Salvation
On Independence Day
1948, the Jewish Nation was
saved. It went from a state
of subservience to the
nations, to one of political
freedom. We also went from
a situation of potential
death, in that we were
unable to defend ourselves
from our mortal enemies, to
one of life, because since
that time we have fought our
enemies and, with G-d's
help, emerged victorious.
Some 21,000 Jews have
been killed in the 60 years
since the State was
established - but just a few
years before that, during
the Holocaust, six million
holy Jews were murdered over
the course of just five
years - a rate of nearly
3,500 times more.
This day was a salvation
even for Jews living in the
Diaspora, in that they now
had a country that would
always be able to take them
in, and even works on their
behalf in the international
arena. Even the Communist
regimes were forced to allow
Jews to leave - something
that would have been
inconceivable before the
State of Israel was
established.
Spiritual Relief
Spiritually, as
well, the Jewish People were
saved by the State of
Israel. For various reasons,
a great spiritual crisis
overtook the Jewish People
over the past 200 years, and
as countries modernized, the
Jews became more
assimilated. In the US, for
instance, most young Jews
marry non-Jews, and those
who marry Jews have
relatively few children.
The Jewish communities
abroad are thus getting
smaller and smaller.
Only in the State of Israel
is the Jewish population
growing, and assimilation is
relatively sparse.
Furthermore, the
percentage of Jews in Israel
who are connected to Torah
and an observant lifestyle
is larger than in any other
Jewish concentration in the
world. This spiritual
salvation was the result of
the establishment of the
State of Israel, which
enabled the Ingathering of
the Exiles and obviated the
lures of world-wide
assimilation.
Thus, Israel Independence
Day is thus decorated with
three layers of holiness:
the holiness of the
commandment of settling the
land; the holiness of the
Sanctification of G-d's
Name and the beginning of
the Redemption; and the
holiness of the physical and
spiritual salvation of the
Jewish People.
Comment on This Story
7. Galilee
Arabs in Anti-Israel Riot over
Independence Day Picnic
by Nissan Ratzlav-Katz
Having just completed an
anti-Israel rally near the
town of Tzipori, in the
Lower Galilee, hundreds of
Arabs clashed violently with
a group of Jews celebrating
Independence Day. In the
ensuing riot, five police
officers were injured

The Arabs demanded that the
Jews lower their flag, which
led to a heated exchange.

and
six rioters were arrested.
Two Arab Members of Knesset
who took part in the rally
and ensuing violence were
lightly injured, as well.
Both police and Arab MK
Mohammad Barakeh (Hadash)
confirmed that the violence
started when members of a
youth movement dedicated to
reviving Zionism raised the
Israeli flag at a
Independence Day picnic not
far from where the Arabs had
gathered for their
anti-Israel event. The Arabs
demanded that the Jews lower
their flag, which led to a
heated exchange of words
that eventually escalated to
rock throwing and
necessitated police
intervention.
The incident then turned
into a large-scale
anti-Israel riot, during
which police were forced to
close the adjacent Highway
79. The two Arab MKs who
were among the rioters,
Hadash's Barakeh and Wasil
Taha (Balad), both claim
they were lightly wounded by
police.
Police said that the
anti-Israel event, held on
Thursday in order to
parallel Israel's
Independence Day
celebrations, was rife with
extremist sloganeering,
expressions of support for
Hizbullah terrorism and wild
incitement against Jews.
They blame the organizers
for allowing the rally to
take the tone that it did,
which, police say,
contributed to the
subsequent events. Officials
added that the organizers of
the anti-Israel event would
be questioned about their
role.
Several weeks ago, Arab
activists had asked for a
police permit for a march
and rally at the abandoned
Arab village of Sfouri on
Independence Day. The
intention was to mark what
the Arabs call "the
Disaster" (Nakba in
Arabic) of Israel's founding
on the day Jews are busy
celebrating that event
according to the Hebrew
calendar. Police gave their
permission, they said, on
condition that there were no
manifestations of incitement
of extremist anti-Jewish
rhetoric.
Police and Border Guards
were out in force, however,
on the day of the event, due
to a large Independence Day
picnic held across the road
from the scene of the Arab
rally. The picnic was
organized by members of the
Im Tirzu youth movement and
the New Guards (haShomer
heHadash) organization,
apparently in protest over
the permit issued for the
anti-Israel rally by local
Arabs.
On Friday, the Islamic
Movement of Israel is slated
to hold its own procession
and mass rally in Kafr
Kanna,

The Islamic Movement of
Israel is slated to hold its
own procession and mass
rally in Kafr Kanna.
northeast
of Nazareth in the Galilee,
mourning Israel's creation.
The Nakba event
will be part of the Islamic
Movement's annual
celebration marking the
birth of Islam's founder,
Mohammad. After an appeal to
the Nazareth District Court,
the Islamist group last week
received permission to hold
the public gathering in the
town's soccer stadium.
Reacting to events near
Tzipori, MK Effie Eitam
(National Union-National
Religious Party) said,
"Today the Arab leadership
in Israel crossed a red
line, and a new stage began
in the Israeli Arabs'
rebellion against the state.
The Arab MKs have again
proven themselves to be a
cause of incitement that
leads the Arab community to
violent clashes with the
Jewish community and the
state of Israel."
Eitam called on police
and judges to harshly punish
anyone found of violating
the law during the riots,
including those who attacked
police officers, those
guilty of incitement and
disturbing the peace, and
rioters who chanted slogans
in support of Hizbullah and
called to attack Jews.
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8. Italy Honors Israel in Turin Book Fair, Ignores
Howls of Protest
by Gil Ronen
Italian President Giorgio
Napolitano opened the
prestigious
Turin book fair Thursday
amid opposition from Muslims
and the Italian Left over
the choice of Israel as the
event's guest of honor.
"No dialogue is possible if
there is a refusal to
recognize Israel,"
Napolitano said at Israel's
stand at the fair, the
European Jewish Press
reported. Napolitano added
that there can be no
"rejection of the reasons
for [Israel's] birth or of
its right to exist in peace
and security."
Like the Paris book fair in
March, the Turin fair is
honoring the modern state of
Israel on the 60th
anniversary of its creation.
Israel's stand was swamped
by hundreds of people, many
draped in the Israeli flag,
with one group holding a
banner that read: "I feel
Jewish today."
"A special thank-you,
with all my heart, goes to
President Napolitano for his
strong position this year,
after the calls over recent
months to boycott the Book
Fair because of Israel's
presence," Israel’s new
ambassador to Italy, Gideon
Meir, said at the fair's
opening. Meir said the calls
for a boycott were “an
attempt to undermine the
state of Israel.”

"No dialogue is possible if
there is a refusal to
recognize Israel," President
Napolitano said at Israel's
stand at the fair.

"The President's choice of
inaugurating the book fair
dedicated to Israel
represents a very important
moral position to left and
right wing extremists that
come to Turin to boycott the
fair and want to
de-legitimize Israel," Meir
told Italian daily La
Repubblica.
Islamic voices
mixed
Muslim academic
Tariq Ramadan said
Napolitano's decision to
open the fair would make it
"a political and not a
cultural event." Ramadan,
who is backing the boycott
calls, is the grandson of
Hassan El-Banna, the
Egyptian founder of the
Muslim Brotherhood.
Ahead of the five-day expo,
several Muslim writers,
intellectuals and artists as
well as the Free Palestine
Association staged a two-day
protest seminar at the
University of Turin titled
"Western Democracies and
Ethnic Cleansing in
Palestine."
But Yahya Pallavicini,
vice-president of the
Italian Islamic religious
community, expressed his
“complete solidarity” with
the Italian president’s
decision to inaugurate the
fair.
Rabbi cites 'great
courage'
Napolitano arrived
at the fair by helicopter,
along with Israeli novelist
A. B. Yehoshua, and cut the
inaugural ribbon. David
Grossman, Amos Oz, Aaron
Appelfeld and Meir Shalev
will be among the other
featured Israeli authors.
In a statement released
earlier this week,
Napolitano’s office said:
"Criticism of the policies
adopted by the Israeli
government is quite
legitimate, especially
within Israel. What is
inadmissible is any position
that tends to deny the
legitimacy of the State of
Israel, which was
established by the will of
the United Nations in 1948,
and its right to existence
in peace and security".
Turin's Chief Rabbi, Alberto
Moshe Somekh, said Wednesday
that the city had shown
"great courage" in deciding
to honor Israel. At a
special service in Turin's
main synagogue, he said the
tribute marked not only the
state of Israel's 60 years
but also "4,000 years of our
presence on the world stage
as the 'People of the
Book'."
Security has been tightened
for this year's event in
Turin, coming two months
after the Paris book fair
which was inaugurated by
Israeli President Shimon
Peres. A bomb threat to the
Paris fair forced an
hour-long evacuation of the
venue.
The Turin fair, which is now
in its 21st year, will be
attended by some 1,400
publishers this year.
EJP also reported that
Israel's current relations
with the European Union are
the warmest they have ever
been.
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9. Photo
Essay: Honoring Israel's Fallen
on Memorial Day
by Ezra HaLevi
The people of Israel, young
and old, make time for their
beloved fallen on Memorial
Day. A friend for some, a
sibling or parent for others
and a child for many
bereaved parents are visited
at the IDF military
graveyard on Mount Herzl.

At Mount
Herzl, the top
brass of
Israel's
security
establishment,
together with
elected
officials,
preside over the
official state
ceremony.
Representatives
of various IDF
units, along
with selected
veterans, are
invited to the
ceremony.
IDF
soldiers
from the
Kfir
Battalion
stand as
honor guard
during the
state
ceremony.
The
Prime
Minister,
President
and
other
officials
deliver
speeches
and the
Kadish
and El
Maleh
Rachamim
prayers
are
recited.

(L to
R)
Jerusalem
Mayor
Uri
Lupolianski,
Sephardi
Chief
Rabbi
Shlomo
Amar,
Supreme
Court
President
Dorit
Beinish
and her
husband
Yechezkel,
Knesset
Speaker
Dalia
Itzik,
two
unknowns,
Police
Commissioner
Dudi
Cohen
and
Jewish
Agency
Chairman
Ze'ev
Bielski.
A
memorial
card
on
Staff
Sgt.
Michael
Levin's
grave,
alongside
a
tower
of
flowers
placed
by
friends
and
strangers
who
were
inspired
by
his
story.
The
family
of
Erez
Turjeman,
who
fell
while
serving
near
Ramallah,
hands
out
cards
with
photos
and
the
web
site
commemorating
Erez
(http://www.erezt.com).
A
young
woman
recites
Psalms
at
Yehuda
Greenfeld's
grave.
Friends
of
Achikam
Amichai
speak
with
his
mother
as
she
sits
beside
his
grave.
A
photo
of
David
Rubin
and
Achikam
lies
on
Amichai's
grave.
Amichai,
an
aspiring
geologist
and
expert
on
caves,
has
the
most
unusual
rocks
and
gems
placed
on
his
grave
by
friends
and
colleagues.
A
photo
taken
of
David
Rubin
taken
a
very
short
while
before
the
terrorist
ambush.
The
grave
of
David
Papian
notes
the
date
of
his
Aliyah
from
Armenia
in
addition
to
the
dates
of
his
birth
and
death.
He
died
on
April
16
in a
battle
with
Gaza
terrorists
while
guarding
the
border.
A
mother
spends
Memorial
Day
reciting
Psalms
and
praying
by
the
grave
of
her
son.
The
grave
of
Ro'i
Klein,
who
died
in a
heroic
act
that
saved
his
fellow
soldiers
in
the
Second
Lebanon
War.
A
child's
message
on a
rock
placed
on
the
Mossad
agent's
grave
reads:
"Dad,
I
would
be
very
happy
if
you
would
be
alive."
The
grave
of
Shayetet
13
fighter
Raanan
Komemi,
who
died
in a
battle
with
a
Hamas
commander
in
Shechem
that
his
parents
and
fellow
soldiers
blame
on
the
Supreme
Court's
intervention
preventing
certain
IDF
tactics
of
preventing
ambushes.
A
guide
speak
to a
March
of
the
Living
group
that
just
arrived
from
Auschwitz
about
young
men
who
have
chosen
to
immigrate
to
Israel
and
join
the
IDF.
Fellow
soldiers,
friends
and
family
gather
around
the
grave
of
St.-Sgt.
Eran
Dan-Gur,
who
died
fighting
terrorists
in
Gaza's
Jabalya
region
two
months
ago.
See sidebar or
click here for complete
photo series, including the
grave of a recently fallen
Mossad agent.
(Photos: Ezra HaLevi)
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