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Sunday, Nov 30 '08, Kislev 3, 5769
Today`s Email Stories:
'Bring Our Mumbai Martyrs Home'
Holtzberg Burials on Mon or Tues
Mayor: Olmert is Dividing J'lem
Gaza Terrorists Upgrade Mortars
Likud Runner: 'Annex Yesha'
High Court: Sakhnin Party Legal
  More Website News:
Israel Raises Security Worldwide
Likud MKs Defend Friedmann
Bittersweet Wedding Tune Launch
Arab Writer: Feiglin a Fascist
Joseph's Tomb: Prayers for India
  Video: "These are Men of Substance"
  MP3 Radio Website News Briefs:
Talk: What's Happening in Mumbai?
Sharon Wants YOU to Make Aliyah
Music: Israeli for Tu Bishvat
New Music for Shavuot


   


1. 'Rabbi Covered Wife with Tallit'
by Gil Ronen 'Rabbi Covered Wife with Tallit'

Details of the tragic aftermath of the terrorist massacre in Mumbai's Chabad House have become available.

WARNING: some readers may find the descriptions disturbing.

The bodies of Chabad-Lubavitch emissary, Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg, and kashrus inspector Aryeh Leibish Teitelbaum, were found in the Mumbai Chabad House library, with holy books in front of them. According to ZAKA emergency service, the body of the Rabbi's wife Rivka was found covered with a tallit (Jewish prayer shawl), which her husband had managed to cover her with.

The bodies of the two other women who were killed along with Rivka Holtzberg were found tied with telephone cables. The women had apparently been bound before they were killed.







Rabbi Holzberg in Mumbai (2nd from right)

Flash 90









ZAKA volunteers in Mumbai Chabad House

ZAKA

ZAKA prevent autopsies

"After security forces completed the takeover of the Chabad House, ZAKA volunteers undertook the task of locating and extricating the bodies of the missing," ZAKA announced. "Six bodies were located and extricated during the course of the Sabbath. The operation was undertaken among the ruins despite risk of life, and the danger from exposed grenades," the hareidi-run group said.

ZAKA emissaries reportedly struggled through the Sabbath to prevent the bodies of the Jewish victims from being taken by local authorities for autopsies.

The sole terrorist who survived the Mumbai attacks told police that the attack on Chabad House was part of the squads' original plan. The terrorists planned to take hostages from the hotels and Chabad House and then use them to bargain for safe passage out of Mumbai, according to the Times of India.

Israeli pathologist being sent

Israeli officials said Saturday night that it appeared that Rabbi Holtzberg and his wife Rivka were killed during the first hours of the takeover of Beit Chabad by terrorists.

Voice of Israel Radio reported that nine bodies were found in Mumbai's Chabad House, and apparently seven were Israeli. Three have not yet been identified. Israel is sending a forensic pathology specialist to Mumbai to assist in the identification.

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2. 'Bring Our Mumbai Martyrs Home'
by Hana Levi Julian 'Bring Our Mumbai Martyrs Home'

Foreign Ministry officials say the bodies of Rabbi Gavriel and Rebetzen Rivka Holtzberg are not being delayed at this point by anything other than typical flight scheduling problems. "A plane already left Mumbai today," said spokesman Yossi Levi. "We are not sure it will be possible to arrange for another one later in the day. We are trying, but we will see."

The families of the Holtzbergs had requested that Indian and Israeli authorities expedite the return of their loved ones' bodies so they may be buried promptly in accordance with Jewish law.

Both were savagely murdered last week by Islamist terrorists along with six other Jews in the Chabad House they ran in Mumbai, India.

The attack, part of a multi-site massacre that targeted 10 different sites in the city, left at least 174 dead and more than 300 wounded, including at least eight Jews, six of whom were Israelis. Four Israelis still remain unaccounted for, according to Foreign Ministry spokesman Yossi Levi.

Rabbi Yitzchak David Grossman, Rivka's uncle, spoke with Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, asking her to take action to ensure a speedy return of his niece's body and that of her husband, as well as those of the others who were murdered. "Our family requests that you do not wait," he said. "The plane should return with the bodies of the martyrs immediately."

Rivka's parents, Rabbi Shimon and Rebetzin Yehudit Rosenberg, are both currently in India with their small grandson, Moshe Tzvi, who was rescued from the pogrom by his nanny, Sandra Samuel.

"We Jews believe that it is forbidden to delay a funeral," the Rosenbergs explained to media in India. "We ask that they be brought to burial in Israel immediately.

Amidst the Preparations, Moshe Tzvi Needs His Nanny

While preparations and travel plans are being debated and made, two-year-old Moshe Tzvi wants only his nanny.

The toddler responds only to the Indian babysitter in whose arms he escaped the shattering bloodbath and bullets that transformed his world last week. "In the evening his mother always puts him to sleep and now he doesn't understand what's going on," explained Samuel to reporters. "It was terrible, there were explosions everywhere, gunfire… they tried to shoot me."

Traumatized and bereft of his mother and father, Moshe is unwilling to be separated from the only person left with whom he has a connection to his former life.

His grandparents and the rest of his family agree, as does the Chassidic movement his parents represented in Mumbai when their Nariman Chabad House was attacked by Islamist terrorists.

Chabad-Lubavitch spokesman Rabbi Menachem Brod said in a statement that the grandparents on both sides feel that Moshe Tzvi's nanny should be allowed to accompany him back to Israel. "But there is paperwork to arrange," he pointed out. "We ask the government to work towards bringing her here."

The Foreign Ministry told Israel National News that it was preparing its response to the question of whether the nanny would be allowed to come to Israel and would have an answer shortly.

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3. Holtzberg Burials on Mon or Tues
by Tzvi Ben Gedalyahu Holtzberg Burials on Mon or Tues

Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivka, who were brutally murdered in the Mumbai terrorist attacks, will be buried in Israel on Monday or Tuesday. The funerals will begin at the 770 Kfar Chabad Center, 7 miles southwest of Tel Aviv.

Both victims were born in Israel, but Rabbi Holtzberg lived several years as a teenager in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, where he learned to be a kosher slaughterer of animals [shoche. He and his wife were Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries in Mumbai, formerly known as Bombay, since 2003, where they opened the Chabad House that served as a haven for Jewish visitors from all over the world.

Her father is the head of the world-famous Migdal Or Girl's School in Migdal HaEmek, located in the Lower Galilee.

Rabbi Moshe J. Kotlarsky, vice chairman of the education branch of the Chabad-Lubavitch Movement at its World Headquarters in Brooklyn, told reporters that Rabbi Holtzberg and his wife Rivka "gave up the comforts of the West in order to spread Jewish pride in a corner of the world that was a frequent stop for throngs of Israeli tourists. Their selfless love will live on with all the people they touched. We will continue the work they started."

The Muslim terrorists, apparently associated with the international Al Qaeda terror organization, killed the couple shortly after the beginning of the attack Wednesday night but were not eliminated by Indian commandos until shortly before the Sabbath began Friday night.

The couple was known for their warmth, Torah scholarship and hospitality at the five-story Chabad House, known as the Nariman House and which was a "home away from home" for Jewish businessmen, Israeli backpackers and Indian Jews.

Chabad-Lubavitch Chairman of Educational and Social Services, Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, said that "the targeting by terrorists of foreign nationals underscores the need for governments to work collectively to fight terrorism resolutely and effectively, so that the hands of those seeking to destroy life and disrupt peace will no longer reach their targets."

The Mumbai attacks, which were described as a pogrom by American radio newscaster John Batchelor, claimed more than 200 victims.

One of those who was saved was the Holtzberg's only living child, Moshe, who was two years old on the Sabbath. The cook at the Chabad House snatched him and ran out of the building after the terrorists had taken his parents as hostage in their top floor apartment. The boy's clothes were drenched in blood. The family is no stranger to tragedy: the couple's oldest son was only three years old when he died of an illness a little over two years ago.

Moshe was gathered to his family by Rivka Holtzberg’s parents, Rabbi Shimon and Yehudit Rosenberg, on Friday after they rushed to Mumbai from Israel following initial news of the attack.

Chabad emissaries organized Sabbath and meals and prayers for visiting Israelis in another location. The Chabad House suffered heavy damage from rocket-propelled grenades fired by Indian forces at the terrorists.

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4. Mayor: Olmert is Dividing J'lem
by Hillel Fendel Mayor: Olmert is Dividing J'lem

Outgoing Jerusalem Mayor Uri Lupolianski says that Olmert’s policies in Jerusalem manifest his desire to split the city.

Speaking with the Israeli business site "Globes" just days before Mayor Lupolianski is to leave office, the smiling, easy-going hareidi-religious public official had harsh words for his predecessor – though spiced with compliments. 

“When we talk about keeping the city unified,” Lupolianski said, “it must be clear that this cannot be done in a city that has such wide gaps [between the Jewish and Arab sector. But the government is, de facto, dividing the city.”

The Globes interviewer then fed him a leading question: “Perhaps the government is not giving money for the eastern parts of the city  because they want to divide the city, as Olmert, Ramon and others have said?”



“That’s true, they said that,” Lupolianski said. “But the situation at present is the worst of all. You have the authority and the responsibility? You have a thesis in which you believe? So either implement it, or invest money to reduce the tremendous gap. You want to [give awa the eastern neighborhoods? So do it. But you can’t hold the rope by both ends.  As long as I, as Mayor of Jerusalem, and the government of Israel are responsible for bringing running water and municipal services to the residents, we have to make sure the conditions for Jews and Arabs are the same, and put an end to the terrible situation that we now have.”

Lupolianski does not feel that Olmert – his predecessor in the Jerusalem City Hall – withheld the monies in order to make Lupolianski look bad: “I don’t think he thinks that way. Rather it appears to me that part of what he was thinking was that the city has to be divided and that we have to get rid of those neighborhoods.” Lupolianski feels that all in all, Olmert was a “good mayor” who succeeded in improving the city’s infrastructures.

Jerusalem Affairs Minister Eitan Took One Tour

Asked why the Minister of Jerusalem Affairs, Rafi Eitan, did not help, Lupolianski said that he was given the distinct impression that Eitan invested much more time and effort into his position as Minister for Pensioner Affairs, and in fact took part in only one official tour of the city.  Minister Eitan's office stated that Eitan is “primarily the Pensioner Affairs Minister, and therefore his main mission is taking care of pensioners’ problems, including those of Mr. Lupolianski after he retires.”

Temple Mount

Lupolianski himself has spoken out strongly on behalf of keeping Jerusalem unified – though he does not believe in changing the status quo on the Temple Mount. 

On Barkat

The outgoing mayor has nice words to say about his successor Nir Barkat: “When I defeated him in the elections five years ago [Lupolianski did not run in the most recent elections, earlier this month – ed, I thought he would leave politics.  Why would a successful hi-tech businessman want to spend five years in the opposition at City Hall? But he surprised me; he came to meetings, and showed dedication and adherence to the goal – and in the end, he won and became Mayor.  He will have to learn, as I did, but I think he has the potential, and if he does so, he has a good chance at succeeding.”

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5. Gaza Terrorists Upgrade Mortars
by Hana Levi Julian Gaza Terrorists Upgrade Mortars

Gaza terrorists have upgraded their mortars and changed their tactics, catching IDF troops by surprise over the Sabbath in an intense mortar attack on the Nahal Oz army base.

 

IDF Sgt. Noam Nakash, 21, of Be'er Sheva lost his leg in the Friday night attack and is being treated at Barzilai Hospital in Ashkelon. Three IDF soldiers suffered moderate-to-serious wounds, and four others were lightly injured. All were evacuated to Soroka Medical Center in Be'er Sheva.

 

The Hamas terrorist organization has acquired advanced 120-mm mortar shells that are more accurate and lethal than the previous models, according to a report by Sunday morning by Voice of Israel government radio military correspondent Carmela Menashe.

 

The Al Qassam Brigades division of Hamas, which took responsibility for the shelling, said it had carried out the attack "as a response to Zionist aggression… and against the occupation."

 

The attack came just 24 hours after Israel said it was prepared to continue the temporary truce that began on June 19, which had completely disintegrated over the past four weeks.

 

Defense Ministry Chief of Security and Political Affairs Amos Gilad told Egyptian intelligence head Omar Suleiman that Israel would agree to re-open the Gaza crossing to commercial traffic on the condition that Hamas cease its attacks.

 

Israel has periodically opened the crossings for delivery of humanitarian aid to the region, sometimes even while sporadic rocket attacks continued. Moreover, Palestinian Authority Arab residents of Gaza have continued to cross into pre-1967 Israel for medical treatment through the Erez Crossing.

 

Hamas has adopted a routine of planting bombs along the Gaza separation barrier, and using the provocation to draw counterterrorist fire by IDF soldiers. The terrorists then respond by firing mortar shells with a range that can reach as far as the nearby army bases.

 

Soldiers have complained that there is no fortification in their bases against Kassam rocket attacks, but government officials have said that it is impractical to protect every soldier by rocket-proofing the housing.

 

Deputy Defense Minister Matan Vilnai repeated stale threats issued a year ago by outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Defense Minister Ehud Barak that Israel "soon will have no choice" other than to stage an all-out offensive against Hamas.

 

The terror group has had a death grip over Gaza since it wrested total control over the region in a militia war with rival Fatah faction in June 2007. Despite a temporary truce with Jerusalem that began on June 19, there were sporadic violations with single and double Kassam rocket attacks on the western Negev and Gaza Belt region.

 

Four weeks ago, the temporary truce was destroyed with the discovery that Hamas operatives had prepared a tunnel some 250 meters from the security barrier with which they planned to kidnap another IDF soldier. Aside from the fact that the tunnel itself was a complete violation of the ceasefire, Israel's government decided its existence merited an immediate and unequivocal response, and sent the army to destroy it. Hamas responded with weeks of intensified rocket and mortar attacks on southern Israel.

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6. Likud Runner: 'Annex Yesha'
by Hillel Fendel Likud Runner: 'Annex Yesha'

Judea and Samaria activist Yechiel Leiter is hoping to be a Likud Knesset member – but is facing a strong challenge from other elements in the pro-Land of Israel movement.





What has raised the ire of some Yesha (Judea and Samaria) opponents is his diplomatic plan that calls for immediate steps that will lead to the annexation of some 50% of Judea and Samaria. “There are those who fear talking about annexing 50%, because that means giving up the other 50%,” he told IsraelNationalNews.com. “But that’s not how I look at it. Annexation is a long process that means first building up strong support within Israel for the settlement enterprise and for these areas, making major changes in how these areas are regulated and governed, moving the checkpoints, which are not supposed to be border points - and only then will we be able to annex the areas. It also means offering Israeli citizenship to possibly 100,000 Arabs – though not 1.5 million… It could take 10 years, or even 25 years. Once that works, then we’ll take it from there.”

 

The former Deputy Director-General of the Ministry of Education and top aide to both Ariel Sharon and Binyamin Netanyahu has spent much of the past three decades working on behalf of a strong Jewish presence in Judea and Samaria. He lived in Hevron for eight years, where he served as the head of the Jewish Community, and now lives in Eli in southern Shomron with his wife and eight children. As aide to then-Housing Minister Ariel Sharon, Leiter says, “there are countless number of buildings in Judea and Samaria that have my fingerprints on them.”

 

Leiter has plans for all but 11 Jewish towns, such as Yitzhar and Nachliel, which he admits might have to be given up. “But there are some elements within the Likud who are concentrating on that to accuse me of being a ‘so-called settler’ who wants to destroy communities in Judea and Samaria,” Leiter said, “despite all I have done and do to build up Yesha.”

 

Leiter’s plan - which he calls Hitgabshut [Blending Togethe, as opposed to the Hitnatkut [Disengagemen of Ariel Sharon and the Hitkansut [Inward Convergen of Ehud Olmert - calls for a de-facto annexation of the Jordan Valley, the western Shomron, and other large areas of Judea and Samaria.

 

“If we don’t form our own borders,” Leiter says, “others will do it for us, such as with the Saudi plan, which calls for a return to the pre-1967 borders. If we continue along the path of negotiations without taking pre-emptive action, we will end up giving up 100% of the area. If I have to choose between receiving 0% and receiving 50%, I choose the latter.”

 

Unilateral Annexation, Not Withdrawal

Leiter does not negate a unilateral move by Israel – but it must be one of annexation, not of withdrawal. “The original Disengagement plan was supposed to also include annexation of parts of Yesha,” he says, “but that part was never done. The fact that the withdrawal part failed doesn’t mean that the plan’s other part, the annexation, would also have failed. We must unilaterally set borders from which we will not retreat in any future negotiations.”



“Unless the Jordan Valley is a sovereign part of Israel, it will become a newer and much longer version of the Philadelphi Route – along 200 kilometers of Israel’s eastern flank. Iranian weapons of all types will flow into Judea and Samaria with no interference.”

 

Leiter is confident that the world will accept his plan for Israel to determine its own borders “after an Israeli consensus is formed around it. Generally, whenever we agree on something among ourselves, we are able to explain that position to the outside world. We did not do that with the Bush administration. We did not take advantage of the neo-conservatives there.”

 

Primaries on Dec. 8

Leiter is among 146 candidates running for a spot on the Likud list of Knesset candidates. The primaries will be held on Dec. 8; every registered Likud member will be able to choose up to 10 candidate that s/he wishes to see running for Knesset on the Likud list.

 

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7. High Court: Sakhnin Party Legal
by Maayana Miskin High Court: Sakhnin Party Legal

The High Court rejected an appeal filed by the Movement for Quality Government (MQG) on Thursday. MQG asked the court to retroactively ban the Sakhnin Democratic Front, which won three seats in the Sakhnin municipal elections. Parties should only be banned under the most extreme circumstances, the High Court ruled, and the allegations against the Sakhnin party do not qualify as such.

The MQG had hoped to disqualify the Democratic Front, a branch of the Hadash communist party, due to alleged support for terrorism. One of the party's candidates for city council, Tagrid Saadi, was a recently released terrorist who assisted a suicide bomber who murdered six people in Jerusalem in 2002.

Saadi stepped down once her terrorist record became widely known, but while she was on the list, the party used her actions as part of its campaign propaganda, MQG charged. The Democratic Front allegedly distributed flyers and posters calling on residents of Sakhnin to “vote for the prisoner for freedom,” and expressed support for Saadi's actions, calling her a “freedom fighter.” The party was clearly aware of Saadi's terrorist background from the moment she joined the list, despite claims to the contrary, MQG alleged.

High Court President Dorit Beinisch ruled that the evidence pointing to official Democratic Front support for terrorism was insufficient. In order to ban a party, there must be clear and unequivocal evidence that the party seeks to destroy Israel as a democratic and Jewish state, she said. The right to vote and be elected is a basic right that must be protected under all but the most extreme circumstances, Beinisch explained.

In addition, Beinisch ruled that the law MQG attorneys had based their appeal upon (Clause 27b of the Elections Law) did not support the group's case. The clause allows the court to bar a party for technical reasons, such as voter fraud, she said, not for fundamental reasons involving the party's ideological platform.

While many European countries passed laws banning political parties with anti-democratic values following World War II, Israel did not. However, in 1959 the High Court set a precedent allowing some parties to be barred from running in elections, when it decided to ban the Socialist List prior to the Sixth Knesset elections. The list was banned due to its members' calls to destroy the state.

The precedent was restricted by later High Court justices, and the only party banned in recent years has been the Zionist Kach party. Kach was charged with racist incitement for calling for hostile Arabs to be expelled from Israel and saying the right to vote in national elections should be exclusively Jewish.

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