Saturday, April 25, 2009

To the Three Clowns that Showed Us the Durban Circus: SMC Invites you to Sderot

#Durban conference, #Ahmadinejad, #Iran, #Grad missiles, #Sderot Media Center, #United Nations, #Israel,


http://www.sderotmedia.com/
By • Jacob Shrybman

Dear Rafael, Jonathan, and Jeremy, I would like to thank you and extend an open invitation for you to come visit Sderot, Israel so we can thank you in person for opposing the United Nations’ institutionalized anti-Semitism and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s diabolical diatribes.

We here in Sderot and southern Israel are living under the execution of the ideas Iranian President Ahmadinejad professes.


It is no secret that Iran supplies and largely finances the terror that the world has been witnessing in southern Israel for over eight years now but Iranian President is still invited to promote his beliefs on America’s university campuses and United Nations conferences on human rights. Dressed as clowns to object to Ahmadinejad and the Durban conference itself you demonstrated exactly what countless objectors around the world believe- it’s a joke and a circus.


Yesterday I took a group around Sderot to give them a sense of what it is like to live under the daily threat of missile attacks from the Gaza Strip. I took them to see the remnants of grad missiles that Iran directly supplies and qassam rockets that Iran finances to help plague the city. We then went atop a hill next to Kibbutz Nir Am, right outside Sderot, to a viewpoint of the Gaza Strip less than a mile away.


In clear view of the Gaza Strip cities of Beit Hanun and Jabalya from which missiles are fired, one can see how southern Israelis are not living hundreds of miles away from Iran but living with Iran right in our backyard.


After work yesterday evening I rode to the coastal city of Ashqelon, about 20 minutes northwest of Sderot, to sit on the beach and enjoy the sunset. As my buddies from the Sderot Media Center and I sat on the sand watching the peaceful sun lower over the calm water, we couldn’t help but discuss where we would run for shelter if the Tzeva Adom (Color Red) alarm sounded warning us of an incoming missile attack.


The grad missiles that have a capability of over 40 km and have tormented the city of Ashqelon which sits just over 20 km from the Gaza Strip have been and are still provided directly from Iran. You three were kicked out of the United Nations conference on Human Rights for what UN human rights spokesperson Rupert Colville described as “unacceptable behavior.”


The UN seems to be quite confused and mistaken on what is unacceptable. What is unacceptable when discussing human rights is that Israeli civilians have been targeted for over eight years by this terrorizing missile fire.


What is unacceptable is that the President of the country which funds and supplies the over 10,000 missiles that have been fired at Israel is continually invited by the United Nations to promote the beliefs that we in southern Israel witness him carrying out.


What is unacceptable is an entire generation of Jewish youth like you growing up having 15 seconds to run for their lives in this daily reality, not knowing life other than with these missiles. What is unacceptable is that the UN did not invite anyone from cities in southern Israel like Sderot and Ashqelon to speak about the over eight years of human rights abuses involved in the firing of these missiles at innocent civilians.


This past week we honored Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, believing in the slogan “Never Again.” In Sderot I watched online as Ahmadinejad made his case to the world against this popular slogan. By depicting how this UN Human Rights Conference is a circus giving the floor to someone who works to wipe the Jewish people off any map, you three truly stood up and said “Never Again.”


I would be overjoyed if you would visit Sderot so you can see how more of your Jewish people live day-to-day with human rights abuses that the United Nations ignores. I thank you again and am sure if you were to visit Sderot more people here would love to personally thank you.

Never Again,

Jacob Shrybman

Friday, April 24, 2009

Holocaust Remembrance Day: The Tragedy of Silence

#Holocaust, #Silence, #Iran, #Sderot, #Remembrance Day, #Nazi, #Jews


http://www.sderotmedia.com/
By • Anav Silverman

Today Israel marked Holocaust Remembrance Day. Standing on a street in Sderot, I listened quietly to the siren sound, remembering the tragedy of 6 million Jews killed in Nazi Europe, my great grandparents, uncles and aunts from Poland among them.


I’ve become used to sirens sounding in Sderot during my past two years here-the click of the intercom, followed by a female voice that calmly repeats Tzeva Adom, Tzeva Adom, or Color Red. The scenes that unfold usually entail people dashing into shelters-racing for 15 seconds that may mean the difference between life and death.


But now at this moment, the Holocaust siren gives me a moment to reflect. I watch passerby’s stop, Ethiopians, Russians, Uzbekistanis, Moroccans, Persians and the like; Israeli Jews from countries around the world who make up Sderot’s colorful cultural tapestry. We stand together to remember the tragedy of silence that cost the lives of so many innocent people in our nation.
It is this tragedy of silence which probably strikes hardest here in Sderot.


Eight years of Qassam attacks have wounded over 1,000 Israelis, destroyed hundreds of Jewish homes, and have left thousands of children psychologically traumatized. Today close to one million Israelis in southern Israel live under the threat of Palestinian rocket attack thanks to the financial aid and embedment from Iran.


Who will speak up for these Israelis who continue to be the targets of radical Islam in the form of Hamas rocket terror?


Sderot is targeted not because it is a city outside the 1967 green lines, nor because of an army base located in the city. Sderot is part of the UN Partition Plan of 1948 with a civilian population of 19,000, where over 5,000 residents have been forced to flee since Palestinian rocket fire began on the city in 2001.


Sderot is targeted simply because it is a Jewish city on the frontlines of Israel-an easy target for Palestinian terrorists who seek Israel’s destruction.


THE greatest testimony that the world is once again returning to its apathetic state of silence that defined the era of Nazi Germany was revealed no less ironically today at the Durban II conference when Iranian President Ahmadinejad was invited as a guest speaker. Moreover, Hans-Rudolf Merz, the president of Switzerland, a country that declared its “neutrality” during the Holocaust, agreed to meet with Ahmadinejad, who is a fervent Holocaust denier and has repeatedly called for the destruction of Israel.


According to an Associated Press report, the Swiss president defended his meeting with Ahmadinejad and said that the criticism of the meeting was unjustified, stating that “Switzerland is neutral and not part of any alliance.”


Ahmadinejad’s presence at Durban II is symbolic in that there has been no overwhelming international outcry against his views or the fact that he was invited to speak at the UN conference on racism.


Iran is considered the greatest threat to Israel’s survival. Although Iran, an oil-rich country, continues to claim that its nuclear program is meant to produce electricity, it remains clear to Israel that Tehran is intent on building nuclear weapons that could potentially cause massive destruction to the state.


SDEROT residents have been the silent targets of Islamic terror for too long. Last year on the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day, 13 rockets fell upon Sderot. Although rocket fire has significantly decreased since Operation Cast Lead, close to 200 rockets have still been fired at the western Negev region. If Israel does not effectively stand up for her citizens at home, who will stand up for Israel in the world?


As countries across the world show alarming acceptance of a blatantly anti-Semitic figure like Ahmadinejad, demonstrated in Durban II, the state of Israel and the Jewish people cannot allow silence to become a national policy in the face of anti-Semitic terror, be it rockets or rhetoric, at home or abroad.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Sderot Media Center Advisory Board

#Sderot Media Center, #Advisory Board

www.SderotMedia.com

Thu Apr 8 2009 05:10:20
Sderot Media Center

SMC’s Advisory Board is made up of a wide range of people including political activists, educators, community leaders, veteran journalists, and advocacy experts across the world who officially recognize and support Sderot Media’ Center’s vision to shape world opinion through the story of Sderot--via media outreach, education, and community activism.



Dr. Reuven Ehrlich
served in the IDF Intelligence Corps for 30 years, attaining the rank of colonel. He is a graduate of the National Defense College. He lectures on intelligence studies at IDC Herzliya and is the head of the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Israel Intelligence Heritage and Commemoration Center for Special Studies. Dr. Ehrlich served as the Israeli government’s deputy coordinator for Lebanese affairs and was a member of the Israeli delegation to the bilateral peace talks with Lebanon. He has written five books and numerous articles on Syrian, Lebanese and Palestinian affairs.

Sarah Stern is the president and founder of the Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET), an organization based in Washington that educates policy makers and the general public about Israel. Stern has also served as the National Policy Director for the ZOA from 1998-2004 and as the Director of the Office Legislative and Governmental Affairs of the American Jewish Congress (2004-2006).

Stern played a major role in the drafting and passage of many pieces of legislation, including the Syria Accountability Act, the Koby Mandell Act, and the resolution in support Israel’s right to build a security fence. She has worked on many other issues including the stationing of US troops on the Golan Heights, the sale of the Harpoon block missiles to Egypt, the hiring of Hamas agents to teach at the UNRWA camps, the issue of anti-Americanism, anti-Semitism and anti-Zionism on US college campuses.

Stern has has been published in The Jerusalem Post, the Washington Jewish Week, and the Middle East Quarterly. She is the author of one novel, "Cherished Illusions", (2005, Balfour Books), and has written a chapter in Frank Gaffney's widely acclaimed book, "War Footing" (Naval Press. 2006).


Pat Johnson serves at the Vancouver Hillel as the Development and Communications Director in since 2006. He has an extensive background in journalism and a broad understanding of the Jewish community. Pat, a native of British Columbia, writes frequently for the Jewish Independent as well as his own MVOX Multicultural Digest and is also a commentator.


Dr. Anna Geifman is Professor of History at Boston University, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate classes on the history of imperial Russia, the USSR, and psychohistory. She also presently teaches history of contemporary terrorism at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.



Dr. Geifman is the author of Thou Shalt Kill: Revolutionary Terrorism in Russia, 1894-1917 (Princeton University Press, 1993) and Entangled in Terror: The Azef Affair and the Russian Revolution (Rowman & Littlefeld Publishers, Inc., 2000). She is the editor of Russia under the Last Tsar: Opposition and Subversion, 1894-1917 (Blackwell, 1999). She has also authored journal articles and book chapters on Russian political and cultural history, as well as psychohistory. Her last major publication is a psychohistorical study, La mort sera votre dieu: du nihilisme russe au terrorisme islamiste (« La Table Ronde:» Paris, 2005).


Levi J. Attias received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in International Relations and African Studies. He has served in the embassy of Israel as an assistant to the Information Attaché. In 1982, Mr. Attias received his diploma in law and was called to the Bar of England Wales and Gibraltar. He is a Barrister at Law in Gibraltar.


Mr. Attias undertakes public relations for the Jewish Community of Gibraltar, having been appointed a representative of the International Forum for a United Jerusalem for the Iberian Peninsula in 1995. In 1997, Israeli Prime Minister, Binyamin Netanyahu conferred upon Mr. Attias the title of Gauardian of Jerusalem at the Jerusalem City Hall. He has been appointed to various non-political posts for the Government of Gibraltar.


Dennis Seaman is the Executive Director of the Betar Educational Youth Organization and is President of ZOA Cleveland. Mr. Seaman is also the founder and managing partner of Dennis Seaman & Associates Co. In addition to his professional career of protecting the rights of injured consumers, he has assisted the general community through his involvement of numerous civic organizations.



Lenny Ben-David, a former diplomat and lobbyist in Washington, serves as managing director of the Israel Consult, Inc. subsidiary I*Consult, a consulting firm that includes leading public relations firms, consultants and lobbyists in Washington, New York, Los Angeles, Tbilisi and Israel.

From August 1997 until August 2000, Ben-David served as Israel's Deputy Chief of Mission (number two diplomat) in Washington after being appointed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In his three years in Washington, he served under three Israeli ambassadors and two Israeli prime ministers.

Ben-David also held senior posts in the American Israel Public Affairs Committee for 25 years, in both Washington and Israel. He was AIPAC’s director of Information and Research for 10 years in Washington and opened AIPAC's first Israel office in 1982, directing it for almost 15 years. In that capacity, he coordinated the visits of hundreds of members of Congress and political delegations to Israel.

He attended both the Madrid and Cairo Peace Conferences as an advisor to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. He has traveled throughout the Middle East and Europe, including visits to Jordan, Qatar, Egypt, and Gaza.

Ben David has appeared in television interview shows, including CNN News, PBS’ News Hour, Fox News, and CNN’s Burden of Proof.


Rufus Greenbaum speaks about Israel from having lived and worked in Israel, Europe and UK for over 30 years. He is based in London, and conducts advocacy work for Israel which consists of communicating positive, background briefings about Israel to the UK press and media. Special themes are anti-Semitism and distortion of the news coming out of Israel. He is a member of the Israel Awareness Committee of Stanmore Synagogue.


Shimon Apisdorf is the author of eleven books including Israel In a Nutshell. Two of his books have won the prestigious Benjamin Franklin Award. He currently works with the Afikim Foundation on a broad range of educational initiatives. He has been involved in Israel advocacy for 25 years and is currently working on a revised and updated version of Israel In a Nutshell that will include a special section focusing on Sderot. The Apisdorf family currently resides in Baltimore though they hope to make Israel their home in the near future.


Richard Pater is the public affairs manager at the Britain Israel Communications and Research Center (BICOM). Previously, Mr. Pater worked in the foreign press department in the Israel government press office.


Bruce Orman made aliyah in 1979 and was the founder of Moshav Katif in Gush Katif. He is now president of the Life Skills Institute, an organization which assists people in achieving life goals.


Rabbi Allan Shwartz became the spiritual leader of Congregation Ohab Zedek in 1988. He is an alumnus of Yeshiva College and received his Master of Arts Degree in Bible, Rabbinics and Halacha from Yeshiva University's Bernard Revel Graduate School, where he continues to work on his doctoral thesis on Rashi's methodology. He currently holds the Raymond J. Greenwald Chair in Jewish Studies at Yeshiva University, where he has taught since 1983. Rabbi Schwartz serves on the executive board of the Rabbinical Council of America and has also served as President of the Council of Orthodox Jewish Organizations of Manhattan's West Side.


Arne NergÄrd is a Norwegian educator and representative of the Christian community in Norway. He has been a longstanding supporter of Israel and the Jewish people.



Sderot Media Center Board of Directors

Noam Bedein directs the Sderot Media Center, founded three years ago. Noam, a native of Tzfat, grew up in Efrat, Israel. Mr. Bedein served for three years as an IDF sergeant for an artillery scout unit along the Lebanese border. After the army, Noam served as an emissary for The Jewish Agency in Boston, and then traveled to the Far East for a year.

Upon his return to Israel, Mr. Bedein relocated to Sderot and pioneered the “Sderot Media Center for the Western Negev Ltd", which has spawned the Sderot Media Center. In this position, Noam provides briefings in Sderot and the Western Negev for foreign diplomats, government officials, student groups, and other visiting organizations from all over the world. Mr. Bedein has helped produce a segment for EuroNews, a major European broadcasting outlet with over 200 million viewers, and was twice featured in a weekend edition articles in The Sunday Times Magazine of London. In early January 2008, Mr. Bedein assisted the bureau chief of the New York Times, Steve Erlanger, who wrote a front page feature for the New York Times about the situation in Sderot.

Mr. Bedein has appeared on numerous US and Israeli radio and television stations, and has been published in the Jerusalem Post, IsraelInsider Magazine, NFC and Israel National News. He has lectured about Sderot on countless college campuses and communities across the US, England, Canada and Norway. Recently, Mr. Bedein briefed congressmen and their staffers at Capitol Hill on the rocket situation in southern Israel, in a meeting organized by EMET.


Nir Boms is a research fellow at The International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism (ICT) and a Member of the Board of the Center for Monitoring the Impact of Peace. He also serves as the Vice president of the Center for Freedom in the Middle East and as a consultant in the areas of Middle East policy. Prior to his return to Israel, in 2004, he served as the Vice President of the Washington based Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD). Mr. Boms held a position at the Embassy of Israel in Washington, DC as the Academic Liaison, serving as an educator, specialist and guest lecturer on Israeli and Middle Eastern affairs.

His articles appear in The Wall Street Journal, The Jerusalem Post, The National Review, Front Page Magazine, The Asia Times, Iran Times International, The Washington Times, The National Interests, Ynet and Ha’aretz among others.

During the course of his career, Mr. Boms has taught and lectured in Australia, Bulgaria, England, Hungary, Poland, Turkey and the United States on issues relating to the Middle East, Terrorism, Islam and Democracy. He is fluent in Hebrew, English and Arabic. Mr. Boms served in the Israeli Defense Forces as a communication officer and holds the rank of Lieutenant (Res).


Gary P. Ratner is the executive director of the Zionist Organization of America. He previously served as the Western Regional Director of the American Jewish Congress for nine years, countering anti-Jewish and anti-Israel environment on US campuses. He has been the leader of many Jewish organizations both in the US and Israel, including begin a member of the Board of Governors of Tel Aviv University, the board of the Chicago Jewish Federation, the Executive Committee of AIPAC, and the National Committee for an Effective Congress.

Mr. Ratner was a consultant to Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews to develop Jewish support for the fellowship and their humanitarian projects in Russia and the FIS as well as Israel in 1999.

Mr. Ratner received his master’s degree in International Relations and Economics from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington and Bologna, Italy, his B.A. from Northwestern University. He also studied at Concordia College in Montreal, the Sorbonne in Paris, and two years as a law student at Georgetown.


David Bedein is the Bureau Chief of the Israel Resource News Agency, located in Jerusalem since 1987, where he also serves as the Middle East correspondent for the Philadelphia Bulletin.
Mr. Bedein acts as a living witness to breaking events.

Mr. Bedein has provided hands on coverage of critical middle east negotiations and has overseen investigative studies of the Palestinian Authority, the Expulsion Process from Katif and Samaria, The Peres Center for Peace, Peace Now, The International Center for Economic Cooperation of Yossi Beilin, the ISM, Adalah, the New Israel Fund and UNRWA. Mr. Bedein is the author of the forthcoming book, "Swimming Against the Mainstream"


Danny Dahan is the spokesperson for the Sderot Small Businesses Association. He is the manager of Sderot’s SuperDahan, his family-owned supermarket that has been serving Sderot families for over 40 years. Mr. Dahan lives in Sderot with his wife and children.


Shalom Halevi, a native of Sderot is a Sderot municipality representative.


Rabbi Moshe Zev Pizem is the director of the Chabad-Lubavitch of Sderot. He lives in Sderot with his family.