This week, Alpher offers further comments on Netanyahu's UN General Assembly speech; whether ISIS and Hamas are both "fruits of the same poisonous tree", as Netanyahu stated; how, as Netanyahu mentioned, Israel improving relations with Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi (i.e., the United Arab Emirates) in order to counter Iran and ISIS could "eventually" benefit the two-state solution; were the East Jerusalem settlement announcements a deliberate provocation by Netanyahu to humiliate Obama, or yet another case of cognitive dissonance between the two sides?
--The words of Channel 2 anchorwoman, Yonit Levy, which were recorded during a commercial break from Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's UN speech and leaked to the media.**
Note: News Nosh will be on holiday Sunday, October 5th.
--Peace Now Secretary General Yariv Oppenheimer responds to Israeli Prime Minister Binaymin Netanyahu's anger.**
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had a rough meeting in the Oval Office yesterday.
President Obama chided him for Israel’s settlement activity in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. Right after the meeting, administration officials provided a glance into what Netanyahu probably heard from Obama. New settlement activity “will only draw condemnation from the international community, distance Israel from even its closest allies, poison the atmosphere not only with the Palestinians, but also with the very Arab governments with which Prime Minister Netanyahu said he wanted to build relations,” said State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki.
Netanyahu was fuming as he left the White House for New York, where he told Israeli reporters who he thinks is responsible for the rocky meeting with President Obama.
On 24 September, 2014 the Jerusalem local Planning and Construction Committee published an ad in a local Jerusalem
weekly announcing the validation of plan No. 14295 for the construction of 2,610 housing units in Givat Hamatos
(link to the ad). Following the harsh reactions of the Americans, Netanyahu tried to argue
that there was nothing to criticize him about. Here are a few facts following Netanyahu's claims:
It is time for the U.S. to act like a real friend to Israel, rather than an enabler of Israel's own worst
behaviors.
Today, an increasing number of governments around the world – including the EU and member states that are
strong supporters of Israel – are finally adopting policies of refusing to support settlements, occupation, and
the de facto annexation of territory occupied in 1967 by Israel. The U.S. should do the same.
--Official from the Elad settler organization on the recruitment of people to babysit the 25 homes taken over in the middle of the Silwan E. Jerusalem neighborhood until settler families move in.**
Americans for Peace Now (APN) joins its Israeli sister organization, Shalom Achshav (Peace Now) in sharply condemning Israel's final approval of a plan for the construction of a new settlement in East Jerusalem, which would severely complicate a future two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
APN calls on President Obama to take advantage of his meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu in the White House today to demand that the plan be cancelled.
--Head veterinarian of the Bisan Zoo in Gaza says lack of food and damaged cages also contributed to the decision to transfer a lion and lioness to a Jordanian zoo yesterday.**
Beginning this Friday evening and continuing through Saturday night, the holiday of Yom
Kippur, the Day of Atonement, will be observed by Jews throughout the world. This year, on Rosh
Hashana, ethicist Michael Walzer reminded us
that throughout the season leading up to Yom Kippur, Jews engage in the accounting of one's soul
-cheshbon nefesh: we examine our behavior, taking an honest measure of ourselves in the year that
has passed. This self-reflection reaches its pinnacle on Yom Kippur.
On the second day of Rosh Hashana, we read the Torah portion in which Abraham brings his son Isaac up to
Mount Moriah to sacrifice him. This story is part of cycle of readings that begins on the first day of Rosh
Hashana with the story of Hagar and Ishmael being cast out into the desert. Many commentaries note that the two
readings are connected - that the (near-) sacrifice of Isaac is a measure for measure punishment of Sarah and
Abraham for their treatment of Hagar and Ishmael - a "see how you feel" moment, as it were.