“French President Emmanuel Macron on Wednesday secured his cabinet’s blessing for a draft law targeting “radical Islamism” following a spate of terror attacks”

FRANCE 24
French government unveils new law tackling Islamist extremism
December 9, 2020

The text was originally titled the “anti-separatism” bill, a term Macron has used to refer to radical Islamists withdrawing from mainstream society. Following criticism of that term, it is now called a “draft law to strengthen republican values”, mostly secularism and freedom of expression. Defending the bill at a press conference on Wednesday, Prime Minister Jean Castex said the text does not target religious freedom but is aimed at “the nefarious ideology of radical Islamism”. Castex described the proposed bill as “a law of freedom, of protection and emancipation in the face of religious fundamentalism.” The law was in the pipeline before the murder in October of Samuel Paty, a junior high school teacher who was attacked in the street and beheaded after showing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed in a civics class. READ MORE

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“Israel brought its best face to GITEX and shined”

JERUSALEM POST
Unprecedented Israeli turnout for Dubai’s GITEX hi-tech confab
by Seth J. Frantzman
December 10, 2020

The sea of Israelis in Dubai this week was hard to miss. At Dubai International Airport, the men assigned to help guide people to the check-in area they should use were already saying “six” in Hebrew to send people to the right walkway. In Dubai mall, after passing the skating rink and massive toy store, Hebrew was common as people stood in awe at the immense shopping center…Israelis, for the first time publicly, were exhibiting in masses [at GITEX]. There were around 130 companies listed as part of a massive delegation that was supported by Israel’s Foreign Ministry, the Israel Export Institute and the Economy and Industry Ministry, in cooperation with Bank Hapoalim. READ MORE

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“The Jewish people’s long-standing resistance to both colonialism and assimilation, and the miracle that is the survival of the Jewish people for thousands of years, arguably started with Hanukkah”

ALGEMEINER
Hanukkah: A ‘Stiff Necked’ People — the Fight for Sovereignty and Against Assimilation
by Micha Danzig
Decrmber 4, 2020

…After Judea fell to Hellenist colonialism, as often occurs within societies and peoples conquered by large expanding empires, there was an internal struggle in Judea between traditional Jews and those who did not entirely dissent from the Hellenists’ prohibitions on Jewish worship and culture, and in fact wished to succumb to Hellenism. Many Jews back then became, in effect, self-hating Jews, and wished to adopt Hellenism entirely. Hanukkah, therefore, is as much a celebration of the Jewish people’s success in ridding Judea of the colonialists — who sought, like many colonialists that followed in their footsteps (be they Roman, Arab, Crusader, etc.), to impose their culture and/or faith on the people of Judea — as it is a celebration of the incredible perseverance of the Jewish people. READ MORE

NEW YORK POST Ari Lamm: Why the cultural elite truly despises Hanukkah Our cultural elites’ least ­favorite Jewish holiday has arrived: Hanukkah, of course. Why did Hanukkah irk everyone from the late Christopher Hitchens, who memorably ­derided it as a “celebration of tribal Jewish backwardness,” to author Sarah Prager, who took to the pages of The New York Times recently to explain that she won’t be teaching her kids about it? Well, because Hanukkah is about as out of step with the contemporary elite consensus as any religious tradition can be.

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The anti-Israel movement is capitalizing on anti-police sentiment to expand its campaign against the Jewish state

FREE BEACON
BDS’s Latest Tool: Anti-Cop Sentiment
by Chrissy Clark
December 9, 2020

The anti-Israel movement is capitalizing on anti-police sentiment to expand its boycott, divestment, and sanctions campaign against the state of Israel. Activists—including university professors—are arguing that the “anti-Black” sentiments in the American policing system stem from lessons learned in police officer exchange programs with Israel. Such activists claim that the only way to stop the alleged “militarization” of American law enforcement is for the country to divest entirely from the state of Israel…More than 200 U.S. federal, state, and local officers have traveled to Israel to discuss effective counterterrorism techniques. READ MORE

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John Daly: The amazing story of a Jewish ex-Naxi

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“The Democratic elites have learned nothing and forgotten everything”

THE SPECTATOR
Will Biden build on Trump’s foreign policy achievements — or destroy them?
by Domenic Green
December 9, 2020

Joe Biden talks a lot about restoring America’s standing in the world. But the truth is that if he now has the chance to reshape America’s relationships for a new era, it’s because Donald Trump has already done the awkward stuff. The question is: can Biden and his team swallow their collective pride and build on Trump’s legacy, or will vanity and partisanship send the American Atlas tumbling to his knees? Trump won the 2016 election by forcing the difficult questions on to the national agenda. In office, he developed an alternative to the spent consensus of the 1990s. Call it vulgar realism, the lowest common denominator of American interest. READ MORE

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“Hanukkah is a thoroughly Zionistic holiday. Not exactly a popular ideology in certain quarters these days”

NATIONAL REVIEW
The True Meaning of Hanukkah
by David Harsanyi
December 9, 2020

In a recent Parents magazine piece headlined, “How to Explain the Hanukkah Story to Kids,” we are informed that, “this year more than any other is a great opportunity to take extra time to teach your family about the Jewish holiday that celebrates the power of light and miracles.” Hanukkah, Parents goes on to explain, “means dedication in Hebrew, and the Jewish holiday, also known as The Festival of Lights, represents joy.” Joy? This kind of insufferably vacuous, anesthetized, consumerist celebration that American Jews have concocted to compete with Christmas is stripped of any genuine theological or cultural meaning. It’s a shame, because from a historical and cultural perspective, Hanukkah might be Judaism’s most fascinating holiday; a story about roiling political upheavals of the ancient world, nationalism, assimilation, civil war, religious zealotry, martyrdom, and corruption. READ MORE

JNS Jonathan Tobin: Jews of no religion and the war on Hanukkah Why should anyone care that a woman who describes herself as “not Jewish” doesn’t think it’s worth the bother to teach her children about Hanukkah? The answer is that to institutions that are inherently hostile to faith, shining a spotlight on the decision of those with some ties to Jewish identity to abandon the fraying connection to Judaism that the “Festival of Lights” provides is something worth celebrating. That’s the backstory to the kerfuffle about The New York Times choosing to celebrate the holiday season by once again publishing an article highlighting alienation from Jewish tradition.

ALGEMEINER The Myths of Hanukkah There are several myths about Hanukkah, such as that Judah Maccabee defeated the Seleucid Emperor Antiochus decisively and regained independence for the Judean state… They were written in Hebrew within a generation shortly after the events. But they were not accepted into the Jewish Biblical Canon (possibly for political reasons). Nevertheless, most scholars (there is no such thing as unanimity in academia) accept them as reliable.

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“The resulting ties appear to present the incoming U.S. administration with a robust new hub in the Middle East that links Israel, the UAE and Bahrain”

MIDDLE EAST FORUM
Israel and the Arab Gulf States, a New Strategic Corridor of Power
by Seth Frantzman
December 4, 2020

November became a turning point for Israel’s new ties with Gulf states…It’s difficult to keep track of all the visits taking place and the new academic partnerships, hi-tech initiatives and first flights plying their way between the UAE and Israel. This hive of activity comes despite the pandemic that has slowed down basically everything else. It is evidence of how quickly these countries want to move to cement their new relationship. This is in contrast to the usually cold peace that exists between Israel, Egypt and Jordan, where there are almost never major public visits or people-to-people meetings. READ MORE

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“James Jeffrey signed a 2016 letter warning Trump would put national security at risk, but after serving under him, longtime diplomat says president’s policies made the region safer”

TIMES OF ISRAEL
Ex-Syria envoy felt Trump was unqualified. Now he’s sad to see administration go
by Jacob Magid
December 5, 2020

Veteran US diplomat James Jeffrey has served at the pleasure of both Republican and Democratic presidents. He was envoy to Albania and Turkey under George W. Bush and the top diplomat in Iraq under Barack Obama. The two presidents had radically different foreign policy agendas, particularly on the Middle East, with Obama ending the Iraq war that Bush had launched…Donald Trump, though, was initially a step too far. This belief was what led Jeffrey to sign a letter prior to the 2016 election, along with dozens of other national security officials who served under Republican administrations, which declared that Trump was “not qualified to be president and commander-in-chief.” READ MORE

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“If victory in the Six-Day War was a mixed blessing, the Russian aliyah was just a blessing”

MOSAIC
What Israel Gained from Its Russian Citizens
by Matti Friedman
November 30, 2020

It seems to me that the single event that brought the most good to Israel since its founding was the Russian wave of the 1990s. There are other competitors for that title, like victory in the Six-Day War and the reunification of Jerusalem in June 1967—but along with that military triumph came negative consequences that have damaged Israel’s internal cohesion and continue to pose moral dilemmas. If victory in the Six-Day War was a mixed blessing, the Russian aliyah was just a blessing. The million people who came here after the Soviet breakup have changed Israel for the better, and their absorption in the space of 30 years is a striking success for the immigrants and for the state. READ MORE

MOSAIC Natan Sharansky and Gil Troy: The End of the New Jew Unlike earlier waves of immigrants, the million East Europeans who made their way to the Jewish state in the 1990s managed to escape the cultural strip-mining that awaited them.

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