Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, “Knowing Who We Are
Golda Meir once said that those Jews who died in the gas chambers were the last ones to die without fighting back.
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She, hopefully, was right, but maybe not, but in any case I have an objection that needs to be made.
First, it seems she was wrong, as there are Jews in Israel today and around the world who would rather surrender to Hamas and Hezbollah and
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to the antisemites of the world by giving up rights and dignity than to fight.
I do not want Jews to be defined by Gentiles. I do not want Jews to be defined by persecution, by the Holocaust, by what others have done to us.
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And in spite of David Ben-Gurion’s statement that when he saw the first prostitute in Tel Aviv, he was not concerned to see us becoming a “normal people.” Wrong. Why should we define ourselves as normal by bad things?
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Why should we define ourselves as normal by noting that a Jewish state can be as filled with crime and corruption and stupidity as any country?
The cold, objective fact is that we Jews have defined ourselves by two things: persecution and Torah.
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So what happens when persecution is gone? What happens when Torah is ignored and put aside or segregated to one small portion of the community?
In the Diaspora, historically, assimilation (conversion) was motivated by wanting to avoid persecution or
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wanting material benefits the outside world offered, or both. Today, where persecution affects very few, those motives have been reduced, but the lack of importance placed on Jewish identity and the acceptance of those who have assimilated and
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intermarried or even converted to Christianity or Islam has spurred more assimilation and a loss to the Jewish people.
And in Israel, the absence of persecution has been replaced by the threat of war. But war may not be forever.
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And already, plenty of young people, without any specifically Jewish identity, raised in secular homes, have left Israel for Europe and the West, even for Germany, where more than 100,000 Israelis live today.
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And when war ends, what do you think will happen when young people look at the cost of living in Israel and have no real connection to Judaism?
The Jewish people simply have one thing in common: Torah, and we don’t use it all that well.
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Today, it is studied, read, repeated, quoted, and used as a part of ritual, but it almost never is used as a guide or understood as a guide to human behavior.
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And in a secular world, a world of various belief systems that are essentially veneers that have little to do with daily life other than for the superstitious and fearful, the Torah is not seen as relevant to many beyond ritual.
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But, frankly, that is a demonstration of our ignorance of its purpose and how it works.
And without Torah, the Jewish people are not a people with anything significant to hold them together and create a national identity.”
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Why would members of Congress search their own names in the Epstein's files if they weren't concerned about what would be found? If they did not know him and never met him, there would be no need.
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When members of the U.S. Congress go into a SCIF (often pronounced “skiff”) and search a computer, they are interacting with one of the most tightly controlled information systems in the U.S. government.
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Here’s what that really means — and what gets collected.
A SCIF is a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility. It’s a sealed room designed so that no signals can enter or leave without authorization. Inside are networks used by agencies like:
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, “From the river to the……… Palestine?
Here’s an idea.
There is a perfect spot that all the Palestinians, all of them wherever they may be, can be sent to have a homeland of their own.
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And it is a place in which they will get their wish to replace the Jews.
It is bordered by the great Amur River, has tons of resources, great farming and grazing land, and lots and lots of space.
Birobidzhan Биробиджа́н, بيروبيجان
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The former Jewish area in the old USSR can be a new homeland for the Palestinians. They can call it ‘Palestine,’ and that would be just as historically correct as calling the slice of land in the Middle East by that name.
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, “I have been asked lately why I sometimes end a post, a comment, with this:
המהפכה היהודית ממשיכה
The Jewish Revolution Continues.
Simple answer, really.
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The giving of the Torah to the Jewish nation, to Am Yisrael, is the only real revolution in human history.
It is the only revolution that changed the relationship of mankind and its Creator, established the principle that all people are equal under the law,
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created the concept of the presumption of innocence, a protection from the influence of the powerful (still unique worldwide, it seems), and defined civilization and
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, “Everyone (or at least the mainstream media people) seems interested in the Epstein case as if this will change the world, more than wars, more than hunger, more than the injustice of some governments worldwide.
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But I have a question.
If Epstein is such a great bad guy, and if Ghislaine Maxwell is deserving of a 20-year prison sentence, it seems to me that the parents of the underage girls should have some responsibility as well.
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After all, in a number of cases, girls 14–17 disappeared for days at a time, without parents seemingly seeing anything wrong. If one’s daughter is gone for several nights, missing school for days, and comes home with lots of money,
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, "It is time to bring back the 'Boarding House'.
Those that watch old movies, perhaps will remember what a boarding house is. But to explain what it is for everyone else…..
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A Boarding House was generally a large older home or building where the owners, usually older and in need of extra income, would rent out rooms, provide utilities, communal meals at least three times a day, for minimal rent. Often residents would share chores.
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Most often a Boarding House would be sort of something between a retail deal and a family, but providing many of the comforts (friendship, caring, responsibility) one associates with family.
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, "THE NEW INDIA-USA TRADE DEAL - A BRIEF LOOK
I waited until I could read it and I am very happy to see a lot of positive elements, especially considering how in the past US-India relations were often at odds,
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partly because of Indian protectionism and party because of political considerations on both sides, both of which were essentially without much sense.
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In short, the new agreement opens the door to a lot more trade between the USA and India in addition to a lot more investment into development in India. Tarriffs are to be lowered, with the prospect of further reductions as time passes.
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