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The Nuclear Card

Israeli police say vandals deface monastery with anti-Christian and pro-settler graffiti

Posted on 04 September 2012 by Emperor

What if they were Muslim?

Israeli police say vandals deface monastery with anti-Christian and pro-settler graffiti

JERUSALEM — Vandals spray-painted anti-Christian and pro-settler graffiti on a monastery on a hilltop overlooking the highway linking Tel Aviv with Jerusalem, Israeli police said Tuesday.

Suspicion fell on Jewish settlers and their supporters who retaliate against anti-settlement measures, generally by attacking Palestinian property, but also by vandalizing Christian sites and Israeli military facilities.

This week, Israel’s government ordered settlers out of two unauthorized enclaves in the West Bank.

Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the vandalism at the Trappist monastery in Latrun took place overnight. Some of the graffiti referred to unauthorized settler outposts and one read, “Jesus is a monkey.”

The vandals also set an exterior monastery door on fire.

The monastery, clearly visible from the main Tel Aviv-Jerusalem highway at the foot of the Jerusalem hills, is a large compound with orchards and vineyards, encircled by a stone wall.

In a statement, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his minister of public security briefed him on police efforts to apprehend the perpetrators.

“Those responsible for this reprehensible act need to be punished severely,” Netanyahu said. “Freedom of religion and freedom of worship are among the most basic foundations of the state of Israel.”

The monastery, built by French Trappist monks in the early 20th century, is under France’s protection according to a decades-old accord signed with Israel about French religious sites in the Holy Land.

France is calling on Israel to bring the vandals to justice, said French Foreign Ministry spokesman Philippe Lalliot.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

  • Nevermore

    “Typical israelis at work.”

    I don’t think you painted with a broad enough brush, friend. This is the kind of stuff that ‘counter jihadists’ obsess over; they look for every little comment like this directed at Israel and beat the rest of us over the head for it. Not to mention: it’s the exact same kind of logic that they apply to every Palestinian being a murderous baby-eater (or something).

    Not every Israel is Netanyahu just as not every Palestinian is part of Hamas or Hezbollah…

  • Wanderer

    And in a stunning display of “WTF did he just say??!”, Benny Netanyahu: “Freedom of religion and freedom of worship are among the most basic foundations of the state of Israel.” Funny story about that..

    Xithurel

    Let me get you straight, you are saying that the IDF count as victims of settlers as well, and are forced to shoot at Palestinian kids out of fear for their own well-being? And that the settler community do not represent the frontiers of the expanding Israeli state? And that they cannot be controlled, even though Israel has the most powerful armed forces in the region? And that these armed forces manage to control and oppress a much larger Palestinian community pretty effectively?

    Your position is confusing to me, please clarify. Thanks.

  • mindy1

    @JD, I wonder why they did that, CA is usually considered an open state :(

  • Wanderer

    JD

    Disturbing..

  • JD

    California State Assembly Seeks to Stifle Debate on Israel

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephen-zunes/california-state-assembly_b_1842841.html

    The California State Assembly has just passed a bipartisan resolution (HR 35) by voice vote which constitutes a serious attack on academic freedom and the rights of students and faculty to raise awareness about human rights abuses by U.S.-backed governments. While purporting to put the legislature on record in opposition of anti-Semitism on state university campuses, it defines anti-Semitism so widely as to include legitimate political activities in opposition to Israeli government policies.

    The resolution was opposed by a wide variety of groups, including the Center for Constitutional Rights, the Asian Law Caucus, Jewish Voice for Peace, and the Council on American-Islamic Relations, yet the Republican-sponsored measure received wide bipartisan support in the Democratic-controlled legislature.

    The non-binding resolution — which was sponsored by 66 of the 88 members of the lower house — demands that what it calls “anti-Semitic activity” should “not be tolerated in the classroom or on campus, and that no public resources be allowed to be used for anti-Semitic or intolerant agitation.”

    The resolution lists a number of examples of genuine anti-Semitic activities, such as painting swastikas outside Hillel offices. However, much of the text is focused upon criticism of the state of Israel. Among the examples given of “anti-Semitic activities” included in the resolution are:

    • Accusations that the Israeli government is guilty of “crimes against humanity”
    This would mean that a speaker from Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other reputable human rights groups which have documented such violations of international humanitarian law by the Israeli Defense Forces could not be provided space or honoraria to talk about their research.

    • Accusations that Israel has engaged in “ethnic cleansing”
    This would mean that Israeli scholars who have studied and published documents from Israeli archives pertaining to the 1947-49 conflict in Israel/Palestine which demonstrate that there was a calculated policy of ethnic cleansing against the Palestinian population in some regions, would similarly be barred.

    • “Student and faculty-sponsored boycott, divestment and sanctions campaigns against Israel”
    This would prohibit efforts to boycott goods made in illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, support international sanctions on Israel over its ongoing violations of a series of UN Security Council resolution, or have the university divest from its endowment stock in companies supporting the Israeli occupation.

    The resolution also declares a number of other political activities that, while clearly objectionable — such as disrupting a speech by a supporter of the Israeli government — as “anti-Semitic,” based on the assumption that hostility toward such a speaker is not based on opposition to policies of Israel’s right-wing government, but because the country is Jewish.

    Indeed, throughout the resolution, opposition to Israeli government policies is equated with bigotry towards Jews. There’s no question that some pro-Palestinian activists do sometimes cross the line into what could reasonably be called anti-Semitism, which should indeed be categorically condemned, as should all manifestation of prejudice. Unfortunately, this resolution makes no distinction between this tiny bigoted minority and the majority of activists who oppose the Israeli occupation and other policies of that country’s right-wing government on legitimate human rights grounds.

    Not only does this constitute an attack on academic freedom, it compromises legitimate efforts against the scourge of anti-Semitism which — while not as widespread a phenomenon on California campuses as the resolution implies — is still very real.

    College campuses, particularly those in California’s large public university systems, have long been a center of agitation for human rights and in opposition to U.S. policies which support violations of human rights, whether it be the war in Vietnam, investment in apartheid South Africa, intervention in Central America or support for Israel’s wars and occupation.

    This bipartisan effort appears to be an attempt to stifle this tradition. Indeed, if the California state legislature succeeds in shutting down debate regarding U.S. policy toward Israel and its neighbors, it will only be a matter of time before debate on other aspects of U.S. foreign policy will be suppressed as well.

    ==========================
    Freedom of Speech when we want it ?

  • Xithurel

    Heeeeey, let’s get something clear here. The settlers are philistines, they gives us headaches up and down the boarders. Most of our jails compromise of mostly them and there is never a day where they aren’t literally digging their nails into peoples faces at police stations. They disregard the IDF and bully the hell out of Palestinians instigating a lot of the violence, are armed to the teeth, and even attack the IDF if the IDF aren’t attacking Palestinians. They act outside our laws and more often enough clash with Jews all over Israel for just speaking English – you do not want to see what happens if you just disagree with one of them. They will gang up on you and declare you deserve to be raped and what not. I myself got attacked and accused of not being ‘Jewish enough’ for being born in New York at one point. These people are inherently nuts, and if anything was going to compromise Israel it would be them and the Orthodox Jews being installed into the military. It’s enough the young get ideas but these people hate absolutely anything that walks, talks, breaths air, that wasn’t born in their hearths. This incident is nothing compared to what those people do on a daily basis.

  • DrM

    Typical israelis at work. “Settlers” are nothing but terrorist scum.

  • Pingback: Israeli police say vandals deface monastery with anti-Christian and pro-settler graffiti | WhatIfTheyWereMuslim.com

  • Khalid

    What kind of horrific people are these?
    Reliigious extremism is so baffling, if you’re the devout and proud warrior then why not stick around for the authorities to arrive and boast about your skewed bigotry?

    Or are you just too cowardly for any clammer?

  • mindy1

    How sad :( :(

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