This week,
Jewish and Muslim leaders from across Europe will meet in Paris to discuss
interreligious issues. The recent attack on a Berlin Rabbi is likely to feature
high on the agenda.
"If
there is an attack on a mosque or a synagogue, if a Muslim or a Jew is being
attacked, then it is our duty to stand up and make our protest heard."
Those are the words that Moshe Kantor, president of the European Jewish
Congress, will use to welcome the participants of the "Second Gathering of
Jewish and Muslim Leaders" in Paris.
Eighty
leading Muslim and Jewish figures from 18 different European countries plan to
discuss mutual issues of concern at their meeting on Tuesday and Wednesday (04.
- 05. 09 2012). The focus will not just be on the ongoing debate in Germany
about the religious circumcision of baby boys, and the ban that some countries
have implemented on kosher or halal butchering.
Many Jews in Berlin already hide their yarmulke under a hat |
The attack
on Rabbi Daniel Alter and his 6-year-old daughter in Berlin last week has added
another dimension to the meeting. As a consequence, the issues of
discrimination, anti-Semitism and Islamophobia will play a larger role in the
conference's agenda.
"Yesterday
it was the Jews, today it is the Muslims and tomorrow it might be the
Christians," Kantor said.
'We don't
need a lesson'
The social
circumstances surrounding the assault in Berlin are potentially explosive.
Although the attackers have not yet been caught, the police seem to be looking
for people described as "Arab." Should this be confirmed, it might
lead to heated debate among the Jewish and Muslim participants at the Paris
meeting.
A small
taste of the potential for conflict came via an exchange between the chairman
of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Dieter Graumann, and by Ali
Kizilkaya, head of the German Coordinating Council of Muslims. Graumann had in
response to the attacks called upon Muslims to engage more in the fight against
anti-Semitism. Kizilkaya rejected this in a newspaper interview saying that
"we don't need a lesson."
Berlin's new Synagogue. According to what's known so far, the attack on the Berlin Rabbi took place because he was wearing his yarmulke |
Anti-Semitism
in Germany
Should it
indeed be confirmed that the attackers were Muslim Germans with so-called
migrant backgrounds, the problem of German anti-Semitism would have yet another
facet of complexity: Violent anti-Semitism committed by Muslim perpetrators
with religious motives is culturally and historically not a genuinely German
phenomenon. But if the attackers indeed grew up in Germany, it'll beg the
question whether German education and society failed in raising these young
people.
"We have to make sure that a Jew can wear his yarmulke," says Wowereit |
According
to what's known so far, the attack on the Berlin Rabbi took place because Alter
was wearing his yarmulke and could therefore be singled out as a Jew. Berlin
Mayor Klaus Wowereit used the yarmulke as a metaphor after the attack.
"We
have to make sure that a Jew can wear his yarmulke and that others can wear
their turban," Wowereit said.
Many Jews
are already hiding their yarmulkes under a hat or don't wear them in public to
begin with as they fear they'll be recognized as Jews. But having to hide the
yarmulke is unacceptable, said Graumann of the Central Council of Jews in
Germany. "I will not permit, that we can only practice Judaism behind
closed doors."
(Subjects: Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Muhammad, Jesus, God, Jews, Arabs, EU, US, Israel, Iran, Russia, Africa, South America, Global Unity,..... etc.) (Text version)
"If an Arab and a Jew can look at one another and see the Akashic lineage and see the one family, there is hope. If they can see that their differences no longer require that they kill one another, then there is a beginning of a change in history. And that's what is happening now. All of humanity, no matter what the spiritual belief, has been guilty of falling into the historic trap of separating instead of unifying. Now it's starting to change. There's a shift happening."
9. It can be no other way—simply, this is the physics that governs life in this universe. As Earth continues apace into successively higher planes, nothing with low vibrations in any form—physical bodies, subversive plans, theft, dishonesty, unjust laws and imprisonment, bigotry, cruel customs and deeds—can survive.
10. Moving on, no, it will not be quite like religions being “totally discarded and replaced by universal laws in the Golden Age.” When the truths come forth that science and spirit are one and the same and that religious dogmas were originated by early leaders of church and state to control the masses, people whose consciousness has risen beyond the constraints of third density will adhere to the spiritual aspects of their respective religions and the devised, controlling aspects will fall by the wayside.
11. One of the truths to come forth is that Zionism, which by dark intent has been made synonymous with Judaism, actually is a bellicose political movement within the Illuminati, and its aim for more than six decades has been to create conflict and instability in the entire Middle East. Zionists, who have wielded powerful influence within and behind major governments and their military forces, do NOT represent the Jewish peoples in Israel or anywhere else. And, like all other Illuminati factions, they have been committed to that cabal’s goal of global domination.
12. Although Semites are of diverse national origins and religions, the Zionists have been successful in convincing many that “anti-Semitic” is exclusively prejudice against the Jewish peoples and opposition to Israel’s right to defend itself from its “enemies.” By means of that blatant distortion, they obtained not only world sympathy, but also massive defense funding from Israel’s allies, most especially the United States, all of which served to increase the Illuminati’s vast profits from their industrial-military machine.
13. In addition to controlling the masses through dogmatic teachings, religions have served the dark purpose of divisiveness to such an extent that it resulted in centuries of trauma and bloodshed. Witness the Crusades, wars between Catholics and Protestants, pogroms against Jews, executions of “blasphemous” individuals who refused to “recant.” (Read More …)
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