- According to a report in the Israeli newspaper, "Haaretz"
(reproduced below) a lengthy, well-researched letter was published this
week in the influential Russian newspaper,"Rus-pravoslavnaya,"
signed by 500 Russian newspaper editors, academics and intellectuals, connecting
the Talmud to the expulsion of the Palestinians. The document is so sophisticated
it extensively quotes from the Shulchan Aruch and other Talmudic law codes,
correctly citing these "sacred" texts as the genocidal backdrop
to Israeli leader Avigdor Lieberman's plan for the mass deportation ("transfer")
of all Palestinians. (Anyone who can furnish this writer with a complete
copy of this document in Russian or English, please do so).
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- By specifically citing the Shulchan Aruch, the Russian
authors undercut the standard disinformation ploy used by rabbis and their
apologists when responding to exposes of Talmudic hate. The rabbinate lie
to the inquiring dumb goyim and claim that "the Talmud is only a series
of debates," hoping that the naive goy doesn't know the difference
between responsora and minhag on one hand, and the Mishneh Torah and Shulchan
Aruch on the other. The latter two constituting the halacha which rigidly
regulate every minute and every action in the life of an observant Judaic.
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- The Russians, among the world's most accomplished chess
players, have not fallen for that semantic trap, even as many Americans
have. Americans often report to this writer that my book "Judaism's
Stange Gods" can't be true because they have found out from the rabbis
that the Talmud is "just a collection of non-binding debates."
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- You will also note in the article below that Russian-Israeli
Natan Sharansky, who, according to the US media, is reputed to have assisted
with or at the very least inspired the writing of George W. Bush's Second
Inaugural Address on "freedom," has called on Vladimir Putin
to "treat the authors of the document harshly." In other words,
Sharansky wants Putin to fine or imprison the authors for criticizing the
Talmud. Here is the "freedom" exemplified by the American-Israeli
empire, the freedom to suppress the intellectual expression of the enemies
of the Pharisees. Meanwhile, every conceivable incitement against Christ
and true Christians and against Muslims and Mohammed is allowed to flourish
in the U.S. under the shibboleth of "democracy" and "fighting
terror."
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- Russia harbors the largest and most astute analysts and
critics of Freemasonry, Judaism and Zionism in the world. No wonder that
Russophobes like the John Birchers are encouraged by the occult secret
society known as the OTO (as documented by Craig Heimbichner), while certain
segments of Catholic "Fatima apparition" believers are backed
and promoted by Rabbi Meyer Schiller. Both of these groups are used to
agitate against Russia as the supreme font of evil in the world, by Israelis
and Freemasons who fear that Russia, alone among the nations of the West,
has the potential to produce a government that will one day wield the might
of the state to officially oppose Freemasonry and Judaism.
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- ----
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- Blood libel makes comeback in Russia
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- By Lily Galili
Haaretz
Jan. 25, 2005
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- A blood libel accusing Jews of murdering Christians for
ritual purposes - a concept that disappeared for years from Russia's anti-Semitic
lexicon - made a comeback this week as an important crux in a remarkably
fierce anti-Semitic diatribe that was published Sunday in the Russian newspaper
Rus-pravoslavnaya.
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- The fundamentalist Pravoslavic paper, which defines itself
as "patriotic," ran a letter asking the Prosecutor General of
the Russian Federation, Vladimir Ustinov, to open an investigation against
all Jewish organizations throughout the country on suspicion of spreading
incitement and provoking ethnic strife.
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- The letter calls for an end to government subsidies for
these groups. The lengthy document was signed by 500 people, including
newspaper editors, academics and intellectuals. These signatories were
joined by 19 nationalist members of the lower parliament, the State Duma,
from the nationalist Rodina (homeland) party, Vladimir Zhirinovsky's Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), and the Russian Communist Party.
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- Even though the story was picked up by radio stations
and leading Internet sites in Russian, there has been no official condemnation.
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- The libelous document is divided into chapters with such
titles as "The Morality of Jewish Fascism," "Provocateurs
and People Haters" and "Jewish Aggression as an Expression of
Deviltry."
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- "I'm not a psychiatrist, and I can't help them if
they're crazy," said Russia's co-chief rabbi, Berel Lazar, in response.
"The worst possibility is that they're sane and are making a cynical
move for electoral purposes."
-
- The blood libel, described here as a ritual murder of
Christian children that has already been proved in the courts, is only
one thrust of the letter, which is thousands of words long and weaves a
convoluted web between classic religious anti-Semitism and current anti-Israeli
sentiment.
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- The writers see a direct line between the Shulhan Aruch
(Code of Jewish Law) and other halakhic sources they quote profusely, and
the transfer program espoused by Yisrael Beitenu chairman Avigdor Lieberman.
-
- The letter also indirectly criticizes President Putin
and the state courts for their policy of trying anyone charged with anti-Semitism
and incitement without verifying the claims' veracity. Those charged spoke
the truth, the letter maintains, and those accused of anti-Semitism were
nothing but patriots.
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- The writers make use of quotations from traditional Jewish
sources and current Israeli and Jewish publications. In the chapter on
the Jewish oligarchs' devastating control of Russia's economy and politics,
the letter quotes Jewish writers from Israel and the United States, along
with excerpts from interviews with the oligarchs themselves.
-
- Israeli Minister of Diaspora Affairs Natan Sharansky
expressed shock yesterday at the fierceness of the anti-Semitic letter,
saying that although the signatories represent a slim segment of Russian
society, latent anti-Semitism is clearly a major danger there.
-
- Sharansky quoted Putin saying that anti-Semitism is not
only a danger to his country's Jewish population, but a threat to the stability
of his regime.
-
- According to Sharansky, even though popular anti-Semitism
is entrenched in Russian culture, Putin viewed the Jews as a bridge in
new relations with the West, and granted freedom to Jewish communities
there.
-
- "However, Putin, for reasons of his own, precisely
now needs to bolster Russia's national pride," Sharansky said. "The
problem is that the moment you start playing with nationalist slogans,
they immediately link up with the most primitive prejudice."
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- Sharansky called on Putin and the Russian parliament
to treat the letter and its authors harshly.
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- [End quote]
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