Palestinians: How to Achieve a Better Life | Gatestone

Mahmoud Abbas

  • “It’s become safer to demonstrate against Israel than against Abbas or the Palestinian Authority. Israel is at least a country of law and order and they have human rights organizations and a powerful media and judicial system. We can only continue to dream of having something like what the Jews have.” — Palestinian activist.
  • At the end of the day, Palestinians know that the power struggle between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas is not between good guys and bad guys, but between bad guys and bad guys. These bad guys are no different from other Arab dictatorships that enslave and kill their people. Anyone who thinks that Mahmoud Abbas is eager to go back to the Gaza Strip is living in a dream world.
  • If the Palestinians ever wish to seek a better life, the first thing they need to do is rid themselves of the “leaders” who have destroyed their lives.

Read more

Why ‘Fauda’ Is the Best-Kept Secret on Netflix | The Wrap

If you need convincing that “Fauda” should be your next binge-worthy Netflix offering, consider this: The series has become such a phenomenon, it’s beloved by both Israelis and Palestinians.

Written by Israeli veteran journalist Avi Issacharoff and the series’ lead actor, Lior Raz, the show centers around a team of “mistaravim,” Israeli commando soldiers who speak Arabic and operate undercover inside Palestinian territory. The high-octane drama — with both Arabic and Hebrew dialogue — tells opposite sides of the same story.

“We were shocked it made such a splash,” Raz, who is currently shooting the show’s second season in Israel, told TheWrap. “We thought, ‘Who in the U.S. would watch a show in Hebrew and Arabic?’”

Despite the language barrier, “Fauda” (chaos in Arabic), somehow managed to break out of the dark corners of Netflix’s foreign-language section and get noticed by both Hollywood heavy-hitters and New York Times TV critics. Dubbed “The Wire” of the West Bank, the show has been credited with blurring the Israeli-Palestinian divide and bringing some clarity to the disorder and confusion that has long enveloped the Middle East.

Read more

Israeli police: Woman critically wounded in stabbing attack | NZ Herald

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli police say a Palestinian has stabbed an Israeli woman, critically wounding her.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld says the woman was stabbed several times Monday in the northern city of Afula. She was being treated in hospital in critical condition. Rosenfeld says police forces tracked down a Palestinian suspect in his 30s from the West Bank and shot him in the leg after he refused to stop. A knife was found on him.

Police were investigating a motive.

Since 2015, Palestinians have killed over 50 Israelis, two visiting Americans and a British tourist in stabbings, shootings and car-ramming attacks. Israeli forces killed over 260 Palestinians in that period, most of them attackers.

Read more

Operation Entebbe 40 years on: A personal recollection

Rami Sherman (fourth from the left) with members of the Hardie family

In August, Major Rami Sherman (Retired) gave his fascinating story to a full house at the Air Force Museum in Christchurch.

He was an operations officer for the special forces unit that audaciously and successfully freed 102 hostages from Entebbe International Airport in 1976.

The story of this amazing mission has now become the stuff of legend in the history of Israel.

A combination of Palestinian terrorists and German anarchists hijacked an Air France flight that was originally scheduled to go from Athens to Paris.  They forced the plane to travel to Libya instead, where they refuelled.

They then made their way to Entebbe International airport in Uganda.  There, they were joined by additional terrorists, implying collusion with the Ugandan regime.

According to Sherman, the Israeli government initially felt that the French government was responsible for negotiating with the terrorists because the aircraft is legally considered French sovereign territory.

This changed, once the terrorists made their demands clear.  They required the release of 53  Palestinian and pro-Palestinian militants.  40 of them were prisoners within Israel.

At first, the Israeli military commanders were set against any kind of military action because there was a lack of concrete intelligence and the great distances involved created many logistical challenges.

Shimon Peres, the Minister of Defence insisted that Israel had a moral obligation to attempt a rescue, no matter what the risk.

The Prime Minister of Israel at the time, Yitzhak Rabin, said that if the military commanders were to put together a plan, he promised to seriously consider it.

The final green light for the operation was not given until the Hercules aircraft were well on their way to Uganda.

The aviation aspects were particularly challenging.  They had to organize somewhere nearby to refuel as they couldn’t travel from Israel and Uganda return on one tank.  They couldn’t guarantee the runway would be lit, so they would have to land in darkness.  MI6 convinced the Kenyans to open Nairobi airport for them.

Peres drafted his resignation, in case the mission was a failure.

Rami Sherman with a newspaper banner published at the time

After the mission was over, Idi Amin, the Ugandan dictator, arranged for the MI6 operative to be assassinated in retribution for the humiliation he felt.

Because of the crisis, they had to carry out the mission without regard to weather conditions.  Idi Amin was well known for being vindictive and wouldn’t hesitate to use deadly force to retaliate, so they had to set demolition charges on all the MIG fighters at the airport, so they couldn’t be used to give chase and shoot down the four C-130s they used.

They flew 30 feet above the ground most of the way to avoid radar, as many of the nearby countries were hostile to Israel and they did not want to risk the chance that the terrorists might receive advance warning of their arrival.  It was an eight hour flight so it certainly tested the stamina of the pilots.   Amazingly the runway lights were on when they arrived; the weather opened up near Uganda and the skies were clear.

When the terrorists decided to release the non-Jewish hostages, they separated the non-Jewish hostages from the Jewish hostages.  For the Jewish hostages, this evoked traumatic memories of the “selection” process adopted by the Germans during the Holocaust as they chose who would live and who would die.  The loud wailing from among some of the Jews distressed all the other hostages.  One of the hostages lost her mind.

A New Zealander and his wife, Colin and Nola Hardie were amongst the hostages.  Colin was the General Manager of the Christchurch Star.  He wrote down detailed descriptions of the terrorists, drew a layout of the terminal building, noted their routine for rotating the guards, as well as describing the experiences of the hostages on his shirtsleeves and arms.

He had to conceal what he was doing as there would be a very real risk that he would be shot if discovered.

When he was debriefed at Orly Airport, the officials said his information was like gold and would save many lives.

Rami often wondered how the intelligence he was given about what was going on inside the terminal building was so detailed.  Now he knew.

When Rami heard of this, he requested that we contact the family so that he could meet them.  Surprisingly, we tracked his family down and they were able to join us at the airport Museum and gave their story too.

During the crisis, the Hardie family were glued to the radio, as this was their only source of timely information.  At one stage, one of the bulletins said that the terrorists had changed their minds and were now going to execute the hostages.

One of their daughters was heavily pregnant at the time, and the intense anxiety caused her to go into premature labour.  Fortunately, they were able to arrest the labour at the hospital and the pregnancy went full term, with no harm to the baby.

Following their return, Colin gave many public talks about his experience.  Eventually he stopped giving them because he found reliving the experience over and over again too difficult.  He passed away at the age of 90 in 2012.

Nola came back a changed woman.  One of her daughters said that she became much more understanding and patient of others facing difficulty.

It was tremendously heartwarming to see Rami hug the family, as he showed his appreciation for the courage and bravery of Colin and Nola.  Who knows how many more would have died but for the intelligence that Colin was able to gather.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tony Kan is the President of NZ Friends of Israel and a Business Consultant based in Christchurch.