One year on, there is hope…

Last night we were privileged to organize and hold a memorial service to remember the dead and to honor those who have fallen in battle so their loved ones can life in peace and safety.

A board member of the Holocaust Centre took part, and the President of the Canterbury Hebrew Congregation thanked us and gave us her approval.

Since the atrocities of October 7, the West after initially supporting Israel and abhoring the cruelty and barbarity of that day, quickly turned on Israel. The horror of war and Hamas’ clever propaganda campaign did its job.

On the other hand, another generation of Israelis have responded with courage, professionalism and boldness and proven to the world that they are capable of protecting their loved ones.

What has also emerged is a worldwide community of people who have stood up for Israel, who have called out the untruths that its enemies would so want the world to believe, who have stood in vigils every week, rain or shine.

The community has found its voice in prominent figures such as Juliet Moses, David Cumin, Sean Plunket, Bryce Turner, Nigel Woodley, Murray Douglas, Natasha Hausdorff, Melanie Phillips, Caroline Glick, Dr Phil, Hillel Neuer… too many to name here.

From Washington DC, to London, to Melbourne, to NZ towns and cities like Auckland, Wellington, Tauranga, Christchurch, Palmerston North, Invercargill, people who are salt of the earth, common everyday people are coming out on the streets and standing up.

When we marched in Christchurch to support Israel, people on the side of the street began to clap.  It felt like the Tour de France.  The majority of NZers are sensible and they can recognize evil when they see it.

Many thanks to the everyone who helped with the event last night. It was a grievous, poignant but also heartwarming evening. Unfortunately, for security reasons, we can’t name you but your contributions made the evening so special.

A member of the Jewish community messaged us this morning:

It was a healing evening.  Thank you.  There is hope.

“I Shall Not Hate” — A review

“I Shall Not Hate” – A Review

Director:            Tal Barda
Screened:          DocEdge Festival, Christchurch
Date:                  June 26, 2024.

We started out wishing that I Shall Not Hate would be a hopeful message of equality, justice and coexistence, but it is instead hijacked by factual omissions, making this documentary just another disappointing piece of deceptive Palestinian propaganda that will recruit even more “useful idiots.”

When I first heard that this documentary was being screened at DocEdge, I was told it was about a Nelson Mandela figure, Dr Izzeldin Abuelaish, who has risen above the death of three of his daughters in Gaza at the hands of the IDF in 2008, and was spreading a message of forgiveness and peace.

Dr Abuelaish is a remarkable man.  He has been able to overcome the poverty and adversity that characterizes Gazan life to become an Obstretician and Gynaecologist. 

He has served his community, worked in an Israeli hospital and supported his extended family by building a multi-storey apartment for them.  With his community straddling both Gazan and Israeli communities, he was already an increasingly well known advocate for peace before disaster struck.

Tragedy struck in the 2008-2009 Israeli-Gaza war.  The day before his apartment exploded, an Israeli tank trains its 120mm gun on them.  Dr Abuelaish is able to avert disaster by calling a Network Ten newsman, Shlomi Eldar, who is able to influence the IDF to stand down.

The next evening their apartment explodes, horrifyingly killing his three daughters, a niece and severely wounding another daughter.

Immediately after the explosion, he is on the phone to Eldar, who happened to be live, on-air at the time.  What followed was an extraordinarily raw, distressing, and intense dialogue that was broadcasted live.

From what we see in the documentary, it deeply moved many in Israel, and days later a ceasefire was called and it was largely kept.

The trauma and recovery of the family following the attack is deeply moving.

Yet remarkably, Abueslaish amidst his grief, renews his call for peace and declares that he shall not hate the Israelis for that was done and forgives.

This is its most important message, but this message is severely weakened by its other themes.

The documentary presents a history that is in keeping with the prevailing Palestinian narrative: 

That Israel is an Occupier, Oppresser, inflicting famine, horror and doom upon innocent Palestinians, who have had their land stolen from them. 

Living in Gaza is like a macabre game of “Russian Roulette” hoping that the next Israeli bullet or bomb doesn’t kill them, explains Abuelaish’s daughters.

The documentary mentions Israeli actions in the 1948 Arab-Israeli war yet omits the Arab invasion of the fledgling state of Israel just hours after its declaration of Independence. 

It shows Israeli bombardment of Gaza yet omits Hamas’ publicly declared objective to destroy Israel.

Israel is described as an Occupier, yet we are not told that Gaza cannot be occupied as Israel withdrew from there back in 2005.

The audience is not told that Hamas had assassinated its political opponents and now rules unopposed.

Israel’s bombardments in several wars are shown without informing us that each Gaza-Israeli War was preceded by Hamas-led violence which had provoked that war.

Images of slain civilians many of whom are Abuelaish’s relatives are shown but it omits to tell us that Hamas are using civilians as human shields.

We are not told Hamas started a war on October 7, and then sheltered in their tunnels while their civilians pay the price, only for Hamas to harvest images of wounded, maimed and dead children to push to Western media to undermine support for Israel. 

They also omit emails uncovered by the Wall Street Journal that show Hamas stating that civilian fatalities are necessary sacrifices for victory and that Israel is exactly where Hamas wants them.

Suppose one relied on the documentary for their complete guide to the conflict. In that case, it is only natural to believe that Israel randomly and malevolently starts clashes and kills civilians for sport similar to shooting fish in a barrel. 

In this sense, the Documentary is deeply deceptive. 

There is one short scene where Abuelaish presses his brother for an opinion of Hamas’ leadership, challenging him if anyone can speak against their regime without risk.  His brother refuses to criticize Hamas and declares that he never has. 

A clue to the audience that not all is as it seems.  Yet this scene is so short, it could and probably will be missed amidst the avalanche of implied and expressed allegations of brutality made against Israel.

How could this documentary have been made by Tal Barda, a French American born and raised in Jerusalem, as she would be very aware of these omissions?

We watched the screening with Director Yariv Mozer, who is an award-winning filmmaker and teaches at the Steve Tisch Film School at Tel Aviv University, where he taught Barda.  Ironically, his documentary, “We Will Dance Again” had its world premiere the evening before.

He told us Barda would be conscious of these omissions and has refused to give consent for it to be shown in Israel.  It’s likely the documentary would turn her into a pariah there.

Yet Barda stated during the Q&A session that followed the screening, that it would be shown on Israeli television. 

As the evening progressed, Mozer struggled to contain his anger and the omissions became apparent.  “It was lying by omission to the New Zealand public who know relatively nothing of what is going on in the Middle East” said Mozer.

“Yet, she was one of my students at Tel Aviv University and we are friends.  I will have to think carefully about our next conversation.”

For us, we started out wishing that I Shall Not Hate would be a hopeful message of equality, justice and coexistence, it is instead hijacked by factual omissions, making this documentary just another disappointing piece of deceptive Palestinian propaganda that will recruit even more “useful idiots.”

Tony Kan

Hostage Database: Updated weekly

Hi Folks

Here is a database of all the Israeli hostages known to us and their current status.

Sadly many have died. May their memory be a blessing to all.

Yet many still live.

We would like it to be a resource that can be referred back to and also for those who wish to pray, something to focus your prayers.

With a database like this, it could be easily a numbers or statistical thing but we have included postage stamp images of the hostages faces and included commentary about them so that we never forget that they are human beings.

What happened on October 7 was a crime against humanity and therefore a crime against us all.

We will keep updating it weekly until the crisis is over.


NZFOI

The latest billboard campaign is launched: Let my people go!

The latest billboard campaign is up! It’s on the corner of Hagley Ave and Moorhouse Ave. Just along from the netball courts.

One of the busiest streets in Christchurch, plenty of eyeballs see this one!

Great location and getting lots of positive feedback.

Kol hakavod to Shalom New Zealand and all the donors! There are billboards in Auckland and Wellington too but ran out of funds for Hamilton.

If you want to get behind this, follow the instructions on our website (www.nzfoi.org) how to make a donation.

Don’t forget to email us your details to get a tax receipt if you’re in New Zealand.

Christchurch 100 days address

On January 14, a bike ride and march were held to mark 100 days of captivity for the remaining hostages held by Hamas and other terrorist groups in Gaza. This was the address we gave at the gathering:

“Thank you for coming out today to show your support for the hostages.

My name is Tony Kan, President of the NZ Friends of Israel Association Incorporated.

As we’ve said before, today marks 100 days since October 7, since Israelis were cruelly attacked, atrocities committed and innocent civilians were ripped from their homes and held hostage.

It means a lot to the families of the hostages to know that you support them.

In NZ there are weekly vigils like this one organized by those who want to see the hostages freed and the people of Israel safe.

We want to thank Shalom New Zealand and its volunteers for creating the billboard campaign that has raised awareness of this tragedy to so many in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch.

We want to thank Bobby, Ariela, Ravit and others for sacrificing their time and energy to organize these weekly vigils.

There are hundreds of others who are sacrificing their time to debate and show their support on social media.  We thank them too.

But in marking 100 days, we also recognize that the fight to bring back the hostages and to win Israel’s safety is not over.

This struggle may last many more months, if not years.

Churchill said:

In war: Be resolute

In Defeat: Be defiant

In victory: be magnanimous

In peace: be of good will.

This is the time to be resolute. Relentless. Enduring.  Don’t give up. Do more than hang in there.  Get on the front foot.  Write to your mayor.  Write to your MP.  Write to Winston Peters.  Write to Chris Luxon.

A cease fire will only take the pressure off Hamas and prolong captivity.

To those who are afraid because of the Anti-Semitism that has become so apparent in recent weeks, even in New Zealand.

Now that anti-semitism is out in the open, we can fight it.

Be strong.  Be defiant.  The only way to beat bullies is to stand up to them. 

Have you ever wondered why Hashem commanded “be bold and courageous” in the Torah? 

It is because there is a likelihood that we wouldn’t feel bold and courageous. 

Hashem never commands you to do something impossible.  For with Hashem, all things are possible.  So be bold and courageous. 

To those supporters who don’t count themselves as Jews yet you can recognize evil, when you see it

Before October 7, anti-semitism in NZ was always here.  Growing like mushrooms in the dark, fed by lies and conspiracy theories.

On September 4, 1942, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. reported that:

When the King of Denmark was told the Germans were going to press for the introduction of the Yellow Badge for Jews, he declared:

“When this happens, I shall wear the Yellow Star on my uniform in public and I shall order the entire Royal household to follow my example.”

The king of Denmark has shown us a key.  You too can fight anti-Semitism by publicly and visually showing that you stand with all Jews. 

When the anti-Semites realize that they cannot bully people into submission they will lose their nerve.

Stand up to Antisemitism wherever and whenever you encounter it.  And give it a symbolic stiff uppercut.

To those who follow Hashem, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, thank you for your prayers. 

But remember the struggle, is not over.

Hamas continues to fight. Hostages are still in captivity and those who support Hamas in other countries are taking up arms.

Be resolute. Don’t stop.

Many of us limit our fight to what we can see. 

But you who pray, like Elisha’s servant, who saw the hosts of angels above his city, know that this is only one part of the struggle. 

Be resolute.  Don’t stop.

To the families of the hostages, you are not alone. Know that even in a country, as far away as at the ends of the earth, there are thousands of people who are deeply concerned about your plight.

To the hostages, in case you see any phone footage of this demonstration, we urge you to

stay strong,

to keep believing that you will be free.

We won’t give up on you,

we will do all within our power to bring you back.

Finally,

The DCM, Yael Horan, at the Embassy of Israel has asked us,

the Christchurch community of supporters to adopt one of the hostage families.

One of the families that was taken hostage, was the Bibas Family. 

They are a family who lived in Kibbutz Nir Oz

which is a community well known for its peace activism. 

Their youngest, Kfir, was nine months old when he was kidnapped. 

His first birthday is going to be this Thursday, January 18.

To mark his birthday, NZ Friends of Israel will be holding a special meeting at the Halswell Center at 7.30pm. 

See you there.

Thank you.”

Bring them back – Get in behind the Billboard Campaign

A Billboard campaign has been put together to highlight the plight of the hostages.

Politicians instead of exercising leadership, often follow voter sentiment. The Billboard campaign is therefore also a tangible way for our politicians to see that there is a constituency that supports Israel.

Above is an example of what has been put up in Wellington.

Please support this worthy campaign:

If you’re in New Zealand donate to

NZFOI’s BNZ account 02 0820 0569411 00 and put “Billboards” in the “code” field and your initials and surname in the “particulars” field.

If you’re outside NZ make your donation via Paypal below.



If you’d like a tax receipt, please send us your contact details and we’ll match it up to the donation deposit. Once matched, we’ll send you a tax receipt.

NZ Friends of Israel is a registered charity: CC 43880.

Photos of other sites with Billboards in Auckland below:

and

Sheryl Sandberg on accusations against Hamas: ‘Rape should never be used as an act of war’

Accounts of Sexual Violence by Hamas Are Aired Amid Criticism of U.N.

A meeting at the U.N., organized in part by Sheryl Sandberg, accused the body of ignoring the rape and mutilation of women in the Oct. 7 assault on Israel, and heard gruesome details from witnesses.

Sheryl Sandberg, the former Meta executive who, along with Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, was among the event’s primary organizers.Credit…Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Katherine RosmanLisa Lerer
By Katherine Rosman and Lisa Lerer
Published Dec. 4, 2023
Updated Dec. 5, 2023, 12:10 a.m. ET

The body of one woman had “nails and different objects in her female organs.” In another house, a person’s genitals were so mutilated that “we couldn’t identify if it was a man or a woman.”

Simcha Greinman, a volunteer who helped collect the remains of victims of the Hamas-led Oct. 7 assault on Israel, took long pauses as he spoke those words on Monday at an event at the United Nations.

“Horrific things I saw with my own eyes,” he said, “and I felt with my own hands.”

Shari Mendes, a member of an Israeli military reserve unit tasked with preparing the bodies of fallen female soldiers for burial, said her team saw several who were killed on Oct. 7 “who were shot in the crotch, intimate parts, vagina, or were shot in the breast.” Others had mutilated faces, or multiple gunshots to their heads.

Since the Oct. 7 attack, during which more than 1,200 people were killed and some 240 people were kidnapped, Israeli officials have accused the terrorists of also committing widespread sexual violence — rape and sexual mutilation — particularly against women.

Yet those atrocities have received little scrutiny from human rights groups, or the news media, amid the larger war between Israel and Hamas — and until a few days ago, they had not been specifically mentioned or condemned by UN Women, the United Nations’ women’s rights agency, which has regularly spoken out about the plight of Palestinian women and girls.

Israelis and many Jews around the world say they feel abandoned by an international social justice community — women’s groups, human rights groups, liberal celebrities, among others — whose causes they have supported in crises around the world.

On Monday, some 800 people, including women’s activists and diplomats representing about 40 countries, crowded into a chamber at U.N. headquarters in New York for a presentation laying out the evidence of large-scale sexual violence, with testimony from witnesses like Ms. Mendes and Mr. Greinman.

“Silence is complicity,” Sheryl Sandberg, the former Meta executive, told those assembled. She, along with Gilad Erdan, Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations, was among the event’s primary organizers. “On Oct. 7, Hamas brutally murdered 1,200 souls and in some cases, they first raped their victims,” Ms. Sandberg added. “We know this from eyewitnesses, we know this from combat paramedics, we would know this from some victims if more had been allowed to live.”

Hamas has denied that its fighters committed sex crimes, which it said would violate Islamic principles.

But ample evidence has been collected, like the bodies of women found partially or fully naked, women with their pelvic bones broken, the accounts of medical examiners and first responders, videos taken by Hamas fighters themselves, and even a few firsthand witnesses like a woman, in a video made public last month by police officials, who said she had watched Hamas terrorists take turns raping a young woman they had captured at a music festival, mutilate her and then shoot her in the head.

Meni Binyamin, the head of the International Crime Investigations Unit of the Israeli police, said in an interview that it had documented “violent rape incidents, the most extreme sexual abuses we have seen,” on Oct. 7, against women and some men. “I am talking about dozens.”

Israeli officials have not estimated how many women were sexually assaulted or mutilated. They say that overwhelmed forensic scientists had to focus at first on identifying bodies, rather than collecting perishable evidence of rape. Few victims or eyewitnesses survived, and fewer have spoken publicly.

At the United Nations on Monday, Yael Richert, a superintendent with the Israeli police, presented video of witness interviews, including with a paramedic who said, “Shooting was targeted at sexual organs, we saw that a lot.”

Outside, hundreds of protesters accused the United Nations of a double standard when it comes to sexual violence; some chanted, “Me too, unless you are a Jew.”

The United Nations, and UN Women in particular, have become a primary focus — though hardly the only one — of mounting anger for their silence. Secretary General António Guterres immediately condemned the Hamas massacre, but not until late November did he issue a statement that the related sex crimes specifically must be “vigorously investigated and prosecuted.”

Dr. Cochav Elkayam Levy, an Israeli law professor and founder of a commission on Oct. 7 crimes against women and children, said that on Nov. 1, she sent a letter to UN Women, signed by dozens of scholars, calling for an “urgent and unequivocal condemnation of the massacre committed by Hamas,” including the use of rape as a tool of war. “They didn’t even respond,” she said.

Mr. Erdan, the Israeli ambassador, said he sent two letters about the use of rape by Hamas militants, appended with photographs of victims’ bodies, to Sima Sami Bahous, the executive director of UN Women. “I got no response whatsoever,” said Mr. Erdan, “not even, ‘We received your letter.’”

On Nov. 25, UN Women first addressed the issue on social media, saying it was “alarmed by reports of gender-based violence on 7 October,” but the post did not mention Hamas.

In a statement on Monday, UN Women condemned “the abhorrent attacks by Hamas against Israel” and said it had been “closely following reports of brutal acts of gender-based violence against women in Israel since they first came to light.”

The agency added, “We believe a full investigation is essential, so that perpetrators at all sides can be held accountable and justice can be served.”

Last week, a bipartisan group of more than 80 members of Congress released a letter calling the agency’s response “woefully unsatisfactory and consistent with the UN’s longstanding bias against Israel.”

Since the start of the war, UN Women has focused its advocacy on bringing attention and humanitarian relief to girls and women in Gaza, and to push for a cease-fire as Israeli airstrikes resulted in thousands of Palestinian casualties.

Several supporters of Israel in Congress expressed outrage at the silence from international and domestic organizations.

“I’ve been internally raging for about two months,” said Representative Lois Frankel of Florida, who heads the Democratic Women’s Caucus. “There is antisemitism involved and there are some folks who are more interested in portraying the loss of life in Gaza than highlighting the complete inhumanity and viciousness and brutality of Hamas.”

Ms. Frankel plans to introduce a House resolution later this week condemning the use of sexual violence in war and has been pushing for congressional hearings on the topic.

Senator Jacky Rosen, a Democrat from Nevada, called out UN Women for its “failure to immediately and unequivocally stand up for Israeli women.” She said that international organizations “including several on the far left, have chosen to dismiss, downplay or outright deny Hamas’s widespread use of sexual violence and rape against Israeli women on Oct. 7.”

At the United Nations Monday, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Democrat of New York, gave an emotional address, speaking of “raw footage” she had been shown that “takes your breath away with the sheer level of evil it depicts.”

“When I saw the list of women’s rights organizations that said nothing, I nearly choked,” Ms. Gillibrand said. “Where is the solidarity for women in this country and in this world to stand up for our mothers, our sisters and our daughters?”

After the event, in the U.N.’s Flag Hall, Ms. Sandberg stood in front of Israel’s white and blue banner, and as she talked about the devastating realization that most of the victims had been killed, her voice began to crack.

“I don’t know how to talk about this and not,” — she paused, taking a deep breath before apologizing. She never finished her sentence.

Reporting was contributed by Jeffrey Gettleman, Adam Sella and Anat Schwartz.

A correction was made on Dec. 4, 2023: An earlier version of this article misstated the home state of Representative Lois Frankel. She represents Florida, not California.

When we learn of a mistake, we acknowledge it with a correction. If you spot an error, please let us know at
nytnews@nytimes.com.Learn more

Katie Rosman is a reporter for the Metro desk, contributing narratives and profiles about people, events and dynamics in New York City and its outer reaches. More about Katherine Rosman

Lisa Lerer is a national political correspondent, covering campaigns, elections and political power. More about Lisa Lerer

A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 5, 2023, Section A, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: Amid Criticism of U.N., Reports of Sexual Violence By Hamas Are Presented.