Segacs's World I Know |
||||
|
Blog about politics (mideast and pro-Israel, Canadian and local Montreal), world events, and random thoughts.
![]()
Frequently asked questions about me and this blog. Comments are open and unmoderated, although obscene or abusive remarks may be deleted. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of segacs's world i know.
links
News Sources Montreal Gazette Globe and Mail Canadian Jewish News Jewish Tribune Jerusalem Post Ha'Aretz Ynet News
Blogs
Israel-Related archives Aug 30/09 - Sep 5/09 Aug 9/09 - Aug 15/09 Jul 19/09 - Jul 25/09 Apr 19/09 - Apr 25/09 Mar 8/09 - Mar 14/09 Feb 22/09 - Feb 28/09 Feb 15/09 - Feb 21/09 Feb 8/09 - Feb 14/09 Feb 1/09 - Feb 7/09 older archives
![]() << List Jewish Bloggers Join >> |
9.4.04
Random musings: What on earth is that William Hung kid doing performing on Jay Leno? Sheesh, he's so bad it's embarrassing! I'd feel bad for the poor kid... but he's more successful than most real musicians in North America. For the next 15 minutes at least. I don't watch American Idol or anything, but I'd venture to say he's enjoying more fame and publicity than any of the finalists! From Beatles to Hung in less than fifty years. What is music coming to? Letters like this one are encouraging and nice to see. But they're also easy. Too easy. It's simple to act upset and shocked when assholes firebomb an elementary school. It's harder to face down other forms of antisemitism that aren't so obvious but are just as harmful. I'd like to see a flooding of support for the Jewish community when there's a suicide attack in Israel. Instead, we get finger-pointing and Israel-bashing. Speaking of the UTT fire, Geoff has photos (via Celestial Blue). Disturbing to see the building that way. I can't bring myself to drive by. Though the attack happened in the elementary school's library, the high school is attached and so I spent 5 years of my life inside that building on a near-daily basis. I'm too used to remembering it as the place I dreaded seeing as we drove up every morning... and was happy to be let loose from every afternoon ... only because it meant long days trapped inside boring classes. It meant a school that was falling apart, with leaky toilets and an ever-present smell of rotton fish. It meant all the things that are a normal part of high school. It never meant fear of being harmed or attacked. What will the building mean to the current students? Lynn has the latest about the Mel Gibson movie, and its convenient messages in the Arab world. Here's a hint: it's not a hit in Muslim countries because of Monica Belluci's breasts. Michele has done a lot to restore my faith in the education system. It seems that there are actually teachers out there who encourage kids to think for themselves and debate! In the meantime, I've concluded that Passover must be sponsored by the gyms and fitness centres. It's been a long time since I've felt in such need of exercise. Finally, let's just pause for a moment and appreciate the wonderful thing that is a LONG WEEKEND!!! | 8.4.04
The EU, with American backing, has finally presented a resolution about North Korea to the UN Human Rights Commission: The European Union (EU), backed by countries including the United States, expressed concern on Thursday at reports of grave and systematic abuses in North Korea, including "infanticide in prison and labor camps."I'm wondering if they actually expect the UN to get off their asses and do something? | Bomb scare at local Jewish cemetary: Just four days ago, someone firebombed a local grade school. This morning, there was a suspicious package at a Jewish cemetary: Police detonated a suspicious package found at a Jewish cemetary in the Ahuntsic borrough Thursday morning. The package looked like a white bag with wires wrapped around it. A peice of paper was left behind but police would say little about it. Constable Micheal Kriaa told reporters that it could be a few days before we learn if there was actually explosive material in the package.It may be a little while until we know whether this was really a bomb, or a false alarm. I'm really hoping for the latter. This is starting to get scary. Update: The media is now reporting that it seems this was a false alarm after all. That's a relief. | 7.4.04
A dark spot in history: commemorating the Rwandan Genocide: Today, April 7th, is the "official" day to remember the victims of the genocide that took place 10 years ago in Rwanda: April 7 will now be set aside in Canada to remember the victims of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, the office of Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin announced.It would take me days to write about how woefully inadequate this token gesture seems. "We didn't know" was the excuse of most of the Western world and international community, who looked on silently while over 800,000 people - mostly Tutsis - were murdered. Last week, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan apologized for what he called "sins of omission" in allowing the genocide to happen: "The international community is guilty of sins of omission," Annan told the crowd gathered in New York for the summit.To Annan, I have to say, far too little, and far too late. Canadian Romeo Dallaire, who had a front-row seat for the horrors, blamed the world's leaders for failing to respond to his cries for action: The UN force had a limited mandate and an insufficient number of troops and weapons, and that appeals for reinforcements were rejected, Dallaire told the court.At least Dallaire went to Rwanda to face down his demons, and commemorate the date. Which is more than can be said for any of the leaders he blamed. Rwanda is a testament to the complete and utter failure of the United Nations. Period. It's been ten years now, and people are finally starting to wake up the fact that this international body is completely toothless, and will refuse to take action until it's ridiculously, tragically far too late. So we pause for a moment and remember. But it's not enough. Instead of a moment of silence for Rwanda, how about a moment of action - for North Korea... for Sudan... for Congo... for people anywhere their lives and freedoms are jeopardized. Because it's one thing to regret inaction after the fact. Hindsight is 20/20. It's another thing altogether to witness atrocities being committed right now, even as we speak, and fail to think about how people will think of our failure to act in 10 years from now. That's the true lesson of Rwanda. If we say "Never Again", we ought to mean it. | 6.4.04
Update on the U.T.T. arson: Well, firstly, it was #1 topic of conversation at tonight's seder. Considering a large portion of my attending family went to either the grade school or the high school sometime in their lives, it was certainly on the list of topics to discuss. As I'm sure it was at a lot of people's seders. Really, if you think about it, whatever sick freaks did this didn't time it very well. Not only is the school is closed for Passover anyway, but there's gonna be a lot of angry Jews discussing it at their seders and demanding action. In the blogosphere, I see that LGF and Burnside have picked up the story. And Stefan Sharkansky wonders whether officials are too politically-correct to release information that would seem to implicate Palestinian-sympathetic vandals as the responsible parties: The CBC and the Toronto Star might not want to confront the unpleasant truth about the motives and identities of the arsonists, but at least some Canadian journalists are doing their jobs:If - and this is a big if - what CTV said is true about the content of the note, then it must - and will - be dealt with. Especially considering the note threatened future attacks, which is truly chilling:The CTV network quoted sources who said the notes denounced recent attacks against Palestinians, including the killing of Sheik Ahmed Yassin, leader of the Islamic Hamas movement, and threatened further attacks.The contents of the note and the name of the "unknown organization" that signed the note should be released. "Our goal was only to sound the alarm without causing deaths. . .but this is just a beginning. If your crimes continue in the Middle East, our attacks will continue,'' the letter reads.There's no telling whether the assholes who did this were using it as an excuse or cover-up, or whether they really are affiliated with some Hamas-sympathetic group. Not yet anyway. My sense is that the police will release details when they see fit, and until then, they might be keeping them under wraps to help them do their jobs. And anything that increases the chances of apprehending the responsible parties is okay with me. And the political reactions continue. Here's PM Paul Martin: "This is not my Canada. This is not our Canada," he told reporters in Burlington, Ont.And of course, Justice Minister Irwin Cotler (a UTT grad himself) wasted no time ringing in: "As students, we experienced anti-Semitism, but it was an anti-Semitism of ignorance, of stereotype, of prejudice. What we have witnessed here today, it's anti-Semitism of hatred, racism and violence.''And Mayor Gerald Tremblay: "These acts will not be tolerated in our city and must be denounced as emphatically as possible,'' he said.It's good that people are taking this seriously. Never once in eleven years of Hebrew school did I feel unsafe in my classroom (except for maybe the fear of exams, or a test tube exploding in a science lab). The current students, who are pretty much exactly like me, won't have that luxury. I'm just plain angry now. There should be a special section of hell reserved for anyone who targets or frightens innocent children. Another update: It seems Michael Demmons has picked up the story. And Ted Belman at Israpundit posted about it, and included an e-mail from Lori Anders, who was a grade ahead of me in high school. The Globe and Mail, Gazette, and La Presse all have plastered the story prominently on their front pages. And the AP story is being picked up off the wires by publications as remote as the Kansas City Star. | 5.4.04
More antisemitism: This is truly sick and disgusting. Someone set fire to the library of U.T.T. St-Laurent, one of the major Jewish elementary schools here in Montreal and the feeder school of my (attached) high school. Not incidentally, it, along with my high school, was also the target of antisemitic vandalism last May. But the sheer hate required to set fire to a library of an elementary school is mind-boggling. Thank G-d there were no children there at the time, and nobody got hurt: United Talmud Torah School in St. Laurent was the target of an anti-Semitic attack Monday morning as the building was set on fire.I'm truly horrified. I remember we used to have practice drills in grade school and high school, both for standard fires and for "security incidents". It seemed normal that we had closed-circuit cameras in high school... we saw them as a tool to apprehend students skipping class, not antisemites with agendas. We truly, naively believed that the stories they taught us in Jewish history classes about hatred against Jews were just that - chapters in history books. It never occurred to us that our school was anything but safe. I feel bad for the students who will have to face the fact that someone set fire to their school. No elementary school child should have that illusion of safety shattered. Update: RDI has more, including the reaction of Jean Charest: "De tels gestes sont intolérables, écrit M. Charest, incendier une école est déjà un acte vil, mais quand cela est fait au nom du racime ou de l'intolérance, chaque Québécois doit se lever et le dénoncer afin que cela ne se reproduise plus."Strong words from the Premier's office. But unfortunately, this kind of hate has already recurred far too many times. And I fear it won't be the last. This hits way too close to home. | Why does the Left support the Palestinians? That's one of those questions that people have stopped even trying to answer. But I wonder... why does nobody notice how senseless the marriage is between self-defined "liberals" and the "Palestinian cause"? Why, when the Left claims to be for democracy, does it support an autocratic dictatorship over a free and democratic state? Why, when the Left claims to be for women's rights, does it support the Palestinians, who pay lip service to gender equity while still living in a society that doesn't see very much wrong with "honor killings" of a woman who isn't a virgin when she marries... instead of Israel, where women really do have equal rights in every sense of the word? Why, when the Left claims to be for minority rights, does it support the Palestinians, who want an Arab-only state (no Jews need apply) instead of the pluralistic democracy that is modern Israel? Why, when the Left claims to be for gay rights, does it support anti-gay discrimination as opposed to Israel, where (with the exception of marriage) gays have equal rights? Why, when the Left claims to be for peaceful conflict resolution and against war, does it support the armed intifada and rationalize Palestinian suicide bombings? How have the Palestinians become the media darlings of the Left, when only a few decades ago, the same idealistic people were rushing to Israel to go work on a kibbutz? It seems like it should be so obvious as to be a no-brainer. And yet, from Europe to North America to Australia, left-wing groups, academics and student groups, unions and minority-rights groups are all rallying for the Palestinian cause of wiping out the only democracy in the middle east. Whether they claim to be for a two-state solution (but because they support the so-called Palestinian "right of return", those two states are really both Palestinian), or a "one-state solution" (i.e. Jews as an oppressed minority in yet another Arab state in the mideast), they are, in effect, calling for Israel's destruction. Do they really not get it? Do they really have such a hard time seeing that the marriage between the Left and the Palestinians makes about as much sense as, say, the marriage between fundamentalist Christians and Israel? (Don't get me started on that one...) Because it seems to me that anyone with truly Liberal values would be first in line to support Israel. And even though this is hardly an original question, I think we ought to keep asking it until answers are forthcoming... until people realize that the motivations of certain groups are not what they may seem... until the Left has a crisis of conscience about its own habit of supporting murderous terrorists and dictators over democracies simply because it's "fashionable". | Happy Passover! Irony: One of the nicknames of Passover is "chag ha'aviv" - the holiday of spring. Yep. This snowstorm sure makes it look spring-like out there... But, whether it looks like it or not, the eight days of eating cardboard are once again upon us. And you know that the reason most of us keep at least some degree of kashruth on Passover - even those of us who don't bother with it the rest of the year - is so we can moan and groan and complain about how bad the matzah tastes. Passover is different from a lot of other holidays because it doesn't involve mere ritual or even belief, but action. From cleaning the house and changing over all the dishes, pots, and pans to cooking for two seders with twenty-plus people at each... anyone who wants to observe Passover has to roll up their sleeves and get their hands dirty, so to speak. It's not about words, it's about deeds. Even for those of us who draw our lines a lot more liberally, Passover is something of a pain. Oh sure, Manischewitz makes out like a bandit, but the grocery bill alone at this time of year is enough to make most of us wonder why the addition of the UP symbol seems to double or triple the price of most items. But despite all of the annoyances of Passover, there's something about it that makes it seem, well, to borrow a well-worn cliché, different from all other nights. Coming together to recount history and observe tradition, and - perhaps most importantly of all in these times - celebrate freedom. And there's a moment when the entire family gathers at the seder table and - in between my uncle's snoring and my little cousin's attempt to mash all food items into the carpet - I realize that this is what it's all about. Cardboard and all. Chag Sameach. | 4.4.04
Playoff fever: Well, the Habs ended the regular season with a lackluster win after five straight losses, which doesn't make me very optimistic for the playoffs. But looking on the bright side: Boston's win today will mean we don't have to face the Leafs in the first round. Rivalry or not, that would've been a real blow to Montreal pride if we lost. I'd much rather we take our chances in Boston. After all, we pulled it off two years ago there, so we can do it again. Go Habs Go! | Spring is officially here. Yes, I know technically it started two weeks ago. And I know the weather sucks and it doesn't feel much like spring. BUT... we changed the clocks last night, which means a whole extra hour of daylight! Woohoo! | |
|||