Thursday 17 December 2015

Israeli Spy set free


 Abbas Admits He Rejected Offer of Palestinian State

 
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (Middle) stands with France
in the face of terrorism.

Israel Stands With France Against IS Terrorism

"Shall I acquit someone with dishonest scales, with a bag of false weights?"  (Micah 6:11)

Israel extended sympathy to Paris in the wake of attacks — the worst since WWII — and rallied behind Paris after the devastating multiple-terror attack last Friday where Islamic State-linked assailants killed 130 people. Jerusalem was so sympathetic that it dressed its Old City in the colors of the French flag and lowered its own national flag to half-staff. "On behalf of the people and Government of Israel, I extend our deepest sympathies to the people of France and to the families of those who were brutally murdered in Paris last night.  We also extend our wishes for a speedy recovery to the wounded," Netanyahu stated last Saturday.  "Israel stands shoulder-to-shoulder with France in this common battle against militant Islamic terrorism." "I've instructed Israel's security and intelligence forces to assist their French counterparts and their counterparts from other European countries in any way possible," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.  "Terrorism must always be condemned.  It must always be fought.  Innocent people in Paris, like those in London, Madrid, Mumbai, Buenos Aires and Jerusalem, are the victims of militant Islamic terrorism, not its cause."
 
 

 
Parisians light candles and lay flowers near the Bataclan theater in
memory of those who were slain in terrorist attacks on Friday, November
13, 2015.

"The State of Israel stands shoulder to shoulder with France in the fight against terror," Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely said Tuesday.  "The people of Israel in their entirety mourn with the people of France following the terror attack that transpired last Friday night.  The entire world is awakening to the reality of Islamic terrorism, which is motivated by an ideology that challenges the very foundations of the free world." Indeed, just a week after the attack in Paris, Islamic terrorists struck in Mali, raiding a hotel as people gathered for breakfast.  At least 22 people died.  Among the dead is a 60-year-old Israeli identified as Samuel Benalal. Of course, Israel itself continues to experience a wave of terror.  Between October 1, 2015 and November 19, 2015, Palestinian terrorists have perpetrated 70 stabbings, 10 shootings, and 10 car rammings. A Palestinian taxi driver tried to run down a group of Israeli pedestrians at Kfar Adumim junction (east of Jerusalem).  Upon failing to hit them, he got out of the car and attacked them with a knife.  One man was wounded, and the attacker was shot and killed. In Kiryat Gat, four people were wounded in a stabbing attack.  One was a 13-year-old girl.  The stabber was captured several hours later. Thursday was the bloodiest day with two people killed and one wounded in a stabbing attack during afternoon prayers in a Judaica store in Tel Aviv.  In Gush Etzion, three people were killed when a Palestinian terrorist opened fire with a submachine gun on cars in a traffic jam.  One fatality was 18-year-old Ezra Schwartz, an American participating in a nine-month volunteer program.

 
 
Ezra Schwartz, 18

Hours before the Islamist attack in Paris, a Palestinian gunmen shot a car full of family members near Hebron, killing 40-year-old Ya'akov Litman and his 18-year-old son, Netanel.  Also in the car and lightly wounded were Litman's wife, 16-year-old son, and three daughters, 11, 9 and 5. "In Israel, as in France, terrorism is terrorism and standing behind it is radical Islam and its desire to destroy its victims," Netanyahu said on the Monday after the attacks.  "The time has come for countries to condemn terrorism against us to the same degree that they condemn terrorism everywhere else in the world." Meanwhile, Israel is not only being blamed for acts of terror against itself, it is being accused of Islamic-sourced terrorism, such as that which has been committed by the Islamic State — in Paris and elsewhere. "It's one thing that they blame us, rather than the terrorists, for the terror against us, but the greater [absurdity] is that we are being blamed for the terror against the French," Netanyahu said of Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Wallström's recent comments linking Islamist radicalization with Palestinian bitterness over claims that they have "no future." "Whoever fatuously attempts to create a link between radical Islamist attacks and the current problems between Israel and the Palestinians is fooling himself, his people and international public opinion," said Israel's foreign ministry following Wallström's statement.

 
 
Terrorists attacked the Radisson Blu Hotel in Mali, a popular hotel for
Westerners.

Many Palestinians celebrate acts of terror against Israelis, hailing them as heroes.  While the Palestinian Authority has named streets, sports matches and stadiums after terrorists that have been killed as a result of their crimes, Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (of the Fatah party) claims "intolerable conditions" and blames Jewish settlers for "escalating violence." "We are not to blame, any more than the people of Paris are to blame," Netanyahu said at the Jerusalem Post Diplomatic Conference on Wednesday, where he also said Palestinian rejection of Israel as a Jewish homeland "has become confused with militant Islam." Abbas offered France a sympathy card: "We condemn the terrorist #ParisAttacks and we extend our sympathy and solidarity with the French people and government," yet he has refused to condemn the Litmans' murders that happened the same day. Meanwhile, the official Facebook page of Abbas' party displays a cartoon showing Netanyahu helping a Muslim terrorist in Paris aim his gun.  An opinion article in the PA daily newspaper Al-Hayat Al-Jadida (The New Life) similarly claimed Israeli involvement in Paris as a result of European labeling of products in the disputed territories. "That is an absurdity that is comical if it were not so tragic," Netanyahu said of Israel receiving blame for Islamic attacks on internationals.  Yet, to militant Islam, "we are not the cause, we are the obstacle," he added.
 
 
 
Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas

Abbas Admits He Rejected a Palestinian State

"David went out to meet them and said to them, 'If you have come to me in peace to help me, I am ready for you to join me.  But if you have come to betray me to my enemies when my hands are free from violence.'"  (1 Chronicles 12:17)

For the first time, Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas has admitted that he rejected an offer by then-Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert for a Palestinian state. Olmert's 2008 offer would have created an independent Palestinian state out of the Gaza Strip and much of Judea-Samaria with a land bridge between them, incorporating land swaps of Jewish-majority neighborhoods with Arab-majority neighborhoods. Reporter Raviv Drucker said to Abbas in an interview for Israel's Channel 10: "In the map that Olmert presented you, Israel would annex 6.3 percent [of Judea-Samaria] and compensate the Palestinians with 5.8 percent [from pre-1967 Israel].  What did you propose in return?” Abbas replied to Drucker: "I did not agree.  I rejected it out of hand." "Why, really, did you not accept Olmert's offer?" Drucker asked a couple minutes later. "He showed me a map.  He didn’t give me a map," Abbas said.  "He told me, 'This is the map' and took it away.  I respected his point of view, but how can I sign on something that I didn’t receive?"
 
 
 
From left, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, President George W. Bush,
and Palestinian Chairman Mahmoud Abbas shake hands following
President Bush' address to more than 50 countries and international
organizations at the Annapolis Conference in the Naval Academy's
Memorial Hall in Annapolis, MD, Nov. 27, 2007.


Olmert had brought only one copy of the map to the September 16, 2008 meeting with Abbas, and Abbas reportedly told Olmert that he would need to talk with his senior advisers before returning "the next day" to complete the talks.  He never returned. Nevertheless, Olmert's offer to Abbas included complete relinquishment of Jerusalem's Old City as well as the near-withdrawal from Judea-Samaria. In 2013, according to Avi Issacharoff, the Times of Israel Middle East Analyst, "Israel would retain: The Ariel bloc, the Jerusalem-Maaleh Adumim bloc (including E1), and Gush Etzion" — the latter a target by Palestinian terrorists on Thursday who killed three.  Israel offered the Palestinians "the area of Afula-Tirat Zvi, in the Lachish area, the area close to Har Adar, and in the Judean desert and the Gaza envelope." Israel would also have left the Jordan Valley and absorb 5,000 Palestinian refugees across a period of five years.  The territory Palestinians would have received would have been only 0.7% less than the 1949 Armistice Lines.  The Palestinians made no attempt to negotiate for better terms. In an interview that aired on Channel 10 Tuesday, the former prime minister said of his meeting with Abbas: "I told him, 'Remember my words, it will be 50 years before there will be another Israeli prime minister that will offer you what I am offering you now.  Don’t miss this opportunity.'" In 2009, the chief Palestinian negotiator and an endorser of anti-Israel terrorism, Saeb Erekat, revealed Abbas' true motives for rejecting the offer. He said that Abbas "answered [Olmert] with defiance, saying:  'I am not in a marketplace or a bazaar.  I came to demarcate the borders of Palestine — the June 4, 1967, borders — without detracting a single inch, and without detracting a single stone from Jerusalem, or from the holy Christian and Muslim places.'  This is why the Palestinian negotiators did not sign." 
 
 

 
Saeb Erekat, chief Palestinian negotiator

Israeli Company Creates Pain-Free Glucose Monitor

"For the life of a creature is in the blood …"  (Leviticus 17:11)

With over 1,200 active life sciences companies, and about 40 new ones formed each year, Israel continues to make enormous contributions to health care.  Many such groundbreaking devices were on display from November 16–19 at Medica 2015 in Dusseldorf, Germany, including a non-invasive blood glucose monitor for diabetics. This particular glucose monitor is set apart from others in that it does not require a blood sample. Israel’s Cnoga Medical Ltd. headquartered in Haifa has developed a monitor that uses optical sensors to check blood-sugar content by assessing a diabetic's skin color. It can be used privately at home with results stored in the monitor, sent via Bluetooth to a mobile device or computer, or even through the cloud to a secure portal for access by monitoring physicians. For diabetics who dread the regular pinpricks and pain of traditional blood-sugar monitors, Cnoga Medical's non-invasive monitor will be a welcome change.
 
 
 
The TensorTip MATRIX (MTX) is a compact, finger-mount, non-invasive
device capable of measuring Hemodynamic & Bio parameters, Blood
Gases and Blood Chemistry for professional community use (doctors,
nurses, paramedics, etc.) as well as for home / remote medical
monitoring for private patients.

The idea behind the innovation drew from CEO Dr. Yosef Segman's knowledge of television processors.  Segman's first start-up company, OPlus Technologies, developed TV processors worthy of an Intel Corporation buyout in 2005.  "In my free time, I took pictures of people with all kinds of skin colors.  I asked myself, ‘What, nonetheless, is the similarity between them?'  I tried to find all kinds of common denominators for all people's skin," Segman told Globes. Through this research, Segman found that human skin color follows the same recipe as television screen color, which uses the primary pigments red first, then blue and green.  To ensure accurate readings of each person’s unique skin color, the Cnoga Tensortip Combo Glucometer tissue photography analysis is calibrated to each patient during a two-week monitor training process. Segman built his first working prototype from a wedding-ring box, which he presented to Texas Instruments (TI).  At his initial meeting with TI, the device "produced results that were similar to all the sophisticated monitors," Segman told Globes.  The prototype not only monitored blood-sugar levels, but heartbeat, skin-collagen quality, and skin resistance. TI is now producing the processors that drive the monitor.  Segman also raised $8 million from the technology giant and other investors to further develop the sensor’s capabilities. Where Europeans have bought the Cnoga product, Segman said, "no one has asked for their money back.  We're the first company in the world to sell non-invasive blood sugar monitors."
 
 
Medica 2015  

Jonathan Pollard Released After 30 Years in US Prison

"I will keep you and will make you to be a covenant for the people and a light for the Gentiles, to open eyes that are blind, to free captives from prison and to release from the dungeon those who sit in darkness."  (Isaiah 42:6–7)

During the 30 years Navy intelligence analyst Jonathan Pollard served in a United States federal prison for conspiracy to commit espionage, there have been many attempts to secure his release.  They all failed; however, on November 20, 61-year-old Pollard completed his life sentence and was released on parole. "It’s a happy day that he’s getting out of jail and I hope he gets to live a normal life, but I’d be happier if he was released a decade ago," said Lawrence Korb, senior adviser to the Washington-based Center for Defense Information and the 1981–1985 United States Assistant Secretary of Defense. Pollard was charged with only "one count of passing classified information to an ally [Israel], without intent to harm the United States."  He was not charged with treason nor indicted for harming the US or for compromising codes, agents or war plans. Before his arrest in 1985, Pollard learned as a civilian American Naval intelligence analyst "that information vital to Israel's security was being deliberately withheld," which "Israel was legally entitled to … according to a 1983 Memorandum of Understanding" writes the Jonathan Pollard website. "The information being withheld from Israel included Syrian, Iraqi, Libyan and Iranian nuclear, chemical, and biological warfare capabilities — being developed for use against Israel.  It also included information on ballistic missile development by these countries and information on planned terrorist attacks against Israeli civilian targets," Pollard's website further reports. When his superiors told Pollard, "Jews get nervous talking about poison gas; they don't need to know," Pollard began giving information to Israel directly.  Pollard was arrested by the FBI and took a plea bargain rather than having a public trial.
 
 

 
Jonathan Pollard

Five years ago, Korb said Pollard's punishment was too severe for his crime, where the median sentence for giving classified information to an ally has been two to four years in prison.  Korb pointed out that then Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger's accusation of Pollard's guilt in the deaths of 11 American agents in the former USSR had been debunked. Israel gave the American-born Pollard Israeli citizenship in November 1995.  Both Israeli President Reuven Rivlin and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu commented on Pollard's release. "We all welcome the release of Jonathan Pollard from prison after so many long and hard years," Rivlin said.  "Throughout the years, our pain was Pollard's pain... we felt the responsibility and obligation to secure his release," Rivlin added, speaking of repeated, failed attempts by Israel and non-profit groups to secure Pollard's release. "The people of Israel welcome the release of Jonathan Pollard," Netanyahu said in a public statement.  "As someone who raised his case before successive US presidents many times, I longed for this day.  And now after three long and difficult decades, Jonathan is being released." Netanyahu added, "I wish him on this first Sabbath that he's going to spend with his family a lot of joy, a lot of happiness, a lot of peace.  May these be the hallmarks for the rest of his life."  Pollard is required to remain in the US for another five years and to wear a GPS bracelet at all times, usually worn by dangerous felons, pedophiles and stalkers. Pollard's pro-bono lawyers, Eliot Lauer and Jacques Semmelman have filed against the parole conditions, stating, "There is no basis whatsoever to treat Mr. Pollard in that manner, and doing so is vindictive and cruel."

 
This Hebrew protest placard says, "Rotsim et Pollard babayit.  (We
want Pollard at home.)"

Hungary Scorns European Product Labeling for Disputed Territories

"He said to me, 'You are my servant, Israel, in whom I will display my splendor.'  But I said, 'I have labored in vain; I have spent my strength for nothing at all.  Yet what is due me is in the Lord’s hand, and my reward is with my God."  (Isaiah 49:3–4)

Hungary has rejected the European Union's (EU) decision to label products made in the disputed territories, with the Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade Péter Szijjártó describing the labeling as "irrational." "We do not support that decision," said Szijjártó at a meeting of the Israel Council of Foreign Relations on Monday.  "It is an inefficient instrument.  It is irrational and does not contribute to a solution [to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict], but causes damage." Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed Hungary's support against the EU's decision, which calls for labeling products made in Judea, Samaria, the Golan Heights and eastern Jerusalem as “Product from the Golan Heights (Israeli settlement)” or “Product from West Bank (Israeli settlement).” If a product were made in the Golan Heights but not in a settlement, which is mostly residential, the label could simply read, “Product from the Golan Heights.”


 
 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Hungarian Foreign Affairs
and Trade Minister Peter Szijjarto at the Knesset.
 

"Thanks for the strong statement you made against labeling," Netanyahu said.  "It’s the right position and the moral position, and we appreciate it." “We have to tell things as they are, especially in a time of crisis, otherwise we can’t come up with a solution,” Szijjártó said at the meeting. A November 11 Fact Sheet issued by the European External Action Service (EEAS) said it is "incorrect" and "misleading" to label products as “Made in Israel” when they originate in "the Golan Heights or the West Bank (including East Jerusalem)." The EU insists that it “does not support any form of boycott or sanctions against Israel,” nor does it “intend to impose any boycott on Israeli exports from the settlements."  Its stated purpose for the labeling is merely to "give consumers the possibility to make an informed choice.”
 
 
 
Although this United Nation's map suggests in
the fine print that it makes no judgment about
the disputed territories, the title "occupied
territories" suggests otherwise.

The irony is that while Europeans are trying to support the Palestinians by choosing not to buy products made in the disputed territories, they are actually limiting the ability of employers to hire and pay decent wages to thousands of Palestinian workers at Israeli companies.  As of 2013, the permit to work quota in these territories reached 23,000. As well, products from the territories do not receive preferential tariff treatment upon entry into the EU as products made in Israel do, further disabling employers and employees. Another hypocrisy is that the EU has allowed "Made in Morocco" labels on products developed in territory seized in the Western Sahara by Morocco.  But for Israel, "the EU legislation on indication of origin is very clear: 'Made in Israel' used for the products coming from Israeli [residential] settlements or [industrial zones in] the territories would mislead the consumer and therefore is inconsistent with existing EU legislation." Please stand together in these last days as we bring the Good News of Yeshua HaMashiach (Jesus the Messiah) to the Jewish People and Arabs here in Israel and around the world.

Monday 14 December 2015

Torah Portion


Being Overcomers in the Face of Life's Struggles is the Vayishlach

  
PARASHA VAYISHLACH (And He Sent)

Genesis 32:4 (3)–36:43; Obadiah 1:1–21; Ephesians 4:17–32 “And Jacob sent [vayishlach וַיִּשְׁלַח] messengers ahead of him to his brother Esau in the land of Seir, the country of Edom.”  (Genesis 32:4[3]) Jacob left his unjust father-in-law, Laban, while he was off shearing his sheep.  Fearing that Laban would keep his daughters, Leah and Rachel, Jacob stole away with all he had: his sons, his two wives, and all of his livestock, heading for the mountains of Gilead.  After 22 years in Haran, it was likely difficult for Jacob to free himself from Laban’s wicked manipulation and control, but he did succeed.  We can imagine that he was anticipating with great joy his return to his ancestral homeland of Canaan; however, in order to do so, he had to first pass through Edom, the territory of Esau, his estranged brother.
 
 

A Jewish man prepares to read from the open
Torah scroll.

Jacob’s Family Becomes a Nation

“Then the messengers returned to Jacob, saying, ‘We came to your brother Esau, and he also is coming to meet you, and four hundred men are with him.’  So Jacob was greatly afraid and distressed.” (Genesis 32:6–7) The time had come for Jacob to confront his past.  More than two decades had passed since Jacob had posed as his brother Esau and received the first-born blessing from their father. The last time Jacob had seen Esau, he was filled with murderous rage, vowing to kill him; therefore, it is no wonder that Jacob felt anxiety at the prospect of seeing Esau again, especially upon learning that his brother was headed his way with 400 men! Had Esau held a grudge against Jacob all these years?  Or had time eased the pain of betrayal and brought forgiveness?  Could the generous gifts of livestock sent ahead to Esau somehow appease his anger?  Jacob was about to find out. Jacob was a man of strategy: he divided his family and the people with him, along with his flock, herds and camels, into two camps.  That way, if Esau attacked one camp, the other would survive.  (Genesis 32:8) The Bible does not simply call these camps family.  This is the first time that the Torah refers to those who are with Jacob as a nation / people group (ha’am הָעָם). “Jacob divided the people [ha’am, הָעָם] who were with him into two groups.”  (Genesis 32:7) This is why the Jewish people, even today, are called the house of Jacob.

 



Jacob Sees Esau Coming to Meet Him.

Jacob Becomes Israel

That night, after separating everyone and everything into two camps, Jacob stays behind.  While alone, he encounters an angel with whom he wrestles until daybreak, insisting, “I will not let you go until you bless me.”  (Genesis 32:26) Jacob refuses to settle for anything less than a full physical and spiritual inheritance, and his tenacity is commendable; even the angel takes note of it. But the angel's response is puzzling at first.  The angel asks Jacob, “‘What is your name?’ He said, ‘Jacob (Yaacov יַעֲקֹב).’”  (Genesis 32:27) Why did the angel ask about Jacob’s name?  In Hebrew, his name (Yaacov) can mean the heel of the foot (because he grasped Esau’s heel when coming out of the womb); but it can also carry a connotation of deceiver or supplanted. The "angel” knew that in order for Jacob to embark on his divine destiny, he first needed to face the truth about himself. Stating his name was essentially admitting his character.  The angel changed his name to Israel (Yisrael יִשְׂרָאֵל) because he had struggled (sarah שָׂרָה) with God and with men, and had overcome.  (Genesis 32:28) The name of Israel comes from two Hebrew words: strive (sar שר) and God (El אל). Since the word sar also means prince, there is a connotation of princely power and Israel can also mean Prince with God.


Jacob Wrestled with an Angel

There is a lesson in this for everyone.  To become the overcomers we are called to be, and to experience full victory in our lives, there are times when we must be tenacious in our faith and times when we must prevail in prayer. Torah identifies Jacob’s mysterious wrestling partner only as an ish (man); nevertheless, it becomes obvious that he was much more than just a man. Jacob recognized this and, therefore, called the place Peniel (פְּנִיאֵל), which means Face of God, because He had seen God face to face (panim el panim). The prophet Hosea also saw that Jacob wrestled with God: “In the womb he took his brother by the heel, and in his manhood he strove with God.  He strove with the angel and prevailed.”  (Hosea 12:3–4) This intense encounter left Jacob with a permanent limp from a dislocated hip. “And the sun rose upon him as he passed over Peniel, and he limped upon his thigh.”  (Genesis 32:31)

A reader follows along in the Torah scroll using a yad (Torah pointer) in
order to keep his place and not obscure the view of those standing at
his side.

Jacob Makes Peace With Esau

Although Jacob had prepared for the worst to happen, none of his fears and worries about meeting his brother Esau materialized; instead, they hugged when they met. While there is obvious merit in being prepared for the worst, the Bible teaches us that worrying about the future is pointless, since much of what we waste time worrying about never comes to pass. It's not that we should deliberately fail to recognize the pitfalls before us and go ahead blindly. The point is that we can put all of our cares and concerns into God’s hands, trusting Him to take care of us in any and all situations, even those that could cause us to be fearful or distressed. “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.”  (Philippians 4:6)
 

Jacob Reconciled With Esau

Like Jacob, some of us have relationships that have been strained — perhaps family members who are angry over some past offense. We may even have committed a great wrong toward someone close to us.  In time and with the Lord’s leading, even these estranged relationships can be healed. Each of us have been given the ministry of reconciliation and should do whatever we can to bring healing and restoration to our relationships with one another, especially our brothers and sisters in the Body of Messiah.  “Now all things are of God, who has reconciled us to Himself through Yeshua the Messiah, and has given us the ministry of reconciliation.”  (2 Corinthians 5:18) Although Esau eventually reconciled with his brother, his descendants — the Edomites — continued to harbor hatred against Jacob’s descendants.  It is an ancient hatred, the spirit of which continues to this very day.
 
 

A Jewish man stands at the bimah in a Jerusalem synagogue.

The current lone-wolf Palestinian terrorists continue to claim the lives of Israeli civilians who are praying, shopping, and waiting for buses, returning home from the doctor— people just going about their daily lives.  Israeli security forces and soldiers are also targets of these "popular resistance" attacks. On November 24, 2015, a Palestinian rammed a car into Israeli security forces wounding three Israel Defense Force soldiers assessing a junction for the need for additional security. On November 23, a Palestinian terrorist fatally stabbed in the heart 18-year-old Israeli soldier Cpl. Ziv Mizrahi (photo to the right) at a gas station on the highway between Jerusalem and Modi'in.  Another 18-year-old was wounded in a car ramming attack that same day.  And in Jerusalem, two Palestinian youth (women aged 14 and 16) stabbed a passersby on Jaffa Road near Mahane Yehuda market. On November 22, 21-year-old Hada Buchris was stabbed as she waited at a hitchhiking post in Gush Etzion.  She died soon after the attack. On November 19, in Tel Aviv, yet another Palestinian terrorist stabbed two people to death outside the door of the prayer room during afternoon prayer.  That same day in Gush Etzion, a Palestinian opened fire with a machine gun on Israeli vehicles sitting in traffic.  Three people were killed in the attack.Between October 1 and November 24, 2015, Palestinians have perpetrated 74 stabbings, 10 shootings, and 12 car rammings. God judges such violence severely.  In the Haftarah (prophetic portion) for this week, in the book of Obadiah, God warns that because of their violence against the children of Jacob (Israel), there will be no survivors of the house of Esau, and they will be cut off forever.  “Because of the violence done to your brother Jacob, shame shall cover you, and you shall be cut off forever . . . and there shall be no survivor for the house of Esau, for the LORD has spoken.”  (Obadiah 1:10, 18)

 
Scissors used by Palestinian schoolgirls to wound Israeli pedestrians. 

Jacob’s Daughter Is Defiled

This week’s Scripture portion continues with the rape of Dinah, Jacob’s only daughter.  When Dinah goes out to see the women in the town of Shechem, the son of Hamor the Hivite (also named Shechem) takes her by force and lays with her; afterward, he wishes to marry her. Interestingly, the Hebrew meaning of the name Hamor is donkey, a herd animal renowned for its strength, intelligence, keen sense of curiosity, and stubbornness, which arises from an instinct for self-preservation.  Shechem turns to his father Hamor for help in securing Dinah's hand in a marriage covenant. The Hebrew in this passage of Scripture may hint that Dinah is responsible for her actions, though not her misfortune.  In Hebrew, a male youth is called a na’ar נער and a female youth is a na’arah נערה.  In describing Dinah’s adventure to see the daughters of the land, the Torah calls her a na’ar and not a na’arah.  True, it is only the difference of one letter, but this letter is the letter hey (ה), which can be used as an abbreviation for the name of God, and it is the suffix that generally makes words feminine in Hebrew, which is a gender-based language. “His heart was drawn to Dinah daughter of Jacob; he loved the young woman [han-na-‘ă-rā, הַֽנַּעֲרָ֔] and spoke tenderly to her.”  (Genesis 34:3) If someone is not aware of how precise and exacting Torah scribes are, one might think this a simple typo — a technical error.  But knowing of the preciseness with which Torah scholars transcribe each Torah scroll, one would know that the removal of the letter hey was not a mistake, but rather a deliberate act. It perhaps suggests that Dinah’s solo jaunt into the city was made without awareness of her vulnerability
The Abduction of Dinah.

Dinah was only going only to visit the women of the land, not the men.  As the sister of 12 brothers, the longing for female company her own age could be considered quite natural.  She may have felt safe in the land, as well, since her family lived in the area in peace, having bought the land they dwelled on from the sons of Hamor.  We do not know the exact circumstances.  Yet, it seems that Dinah went out with the confidence of a young man, not conscious of the dangers of entering the city alone as a young woman. Even today women need to recognize their vulnerabilities and walk in wisdom, not putting themselves in situations where purity or sanctity of mind, soul, and/or body could be endangered.  Of course, parents, both spiritual and legal, have a responsibility to teach, warn, and advise their children about these realities before they put themselves in danger. This idea may be contrary to the modern teaching that says, “Women can do everything men can do — and better;” nevertheless, we are in no way suggesting that women should sit around at home, either. Whatever her reasoning was, Dinah bears some responsibility for venturing out alone, while Shechem carries the full responsibility for his criminal and violent act toward a defenseless woman.

 
Orthodox Jewish women and children in Jerusalem. 

Jacob’s Sons Plot Revenge

Jacob’s sons, Dinah’s brothers, were outraged at the defilement and dishonoring of their sister.  But Hamor spoke with Jacob, asking that through a marriage of their son and daughter, their two people groups could come into covenantal relationship. The sons of Jacob dealt treacherously with Hamor, telling him that they would agree to his proposal on the condition that all the males be circumcised, since this was the sign of the covenant. Hamor and Shechem, in good faith, agreed, and all the males were circumcised.  On the third day, when they were immobilized with pain, Simeon and Levi killed every man as vengeance for Shechem defiling their sister.  They even took all the spoil — their flocks, riches, wives, and little ones. Simeon and Levi took revenge for a terrible crime committed against their sister, even though the entire city tried to make amends. Rage can cause people to do terrible things.  A bad temper is a character weakness that needs to be overcome if we are ever to be the people of God He desires us to be.  The word of God tells us that the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God, and that anger rests in the bosom of fools.  It is natural to feel anger at times, but we must not allow anger to control us.  The enemy wants to use our anger against us to cause much destruction. In the way of Yeshua (Jesus), we are not to return evil for evil, but to overcome evil with good.  Yes, we may become angry over injustice and the wrongs that people do against us or others, especially our loved ones, but this does not justify our sinning by committing ugly acts of vengeance. “Be angry and sin not.”  (Ephesians 4:26)
 
 
 
Before the mantle is placed over the Torah scroll,
a sash secures the tightly rolled scroll which
protects it when it is being held or standing in
the Torah ark.  This sash is symbolic of the sash
worn by the High Priest during the time when the
Temple stood in Jerusalem.
 
Rage Is Cursed

Did Simeon and Levi act righteously?  Not in their father's eyes.  Although Jacob did not deny that his daughter should have been avenged in some way, to his dying day he did not forgive them for acting in rage.  Rather than blessing them on his deathbed, he cursed their anger and cruelty. “Simeon and Levi are brothers; instruments of cruelty are in their dwelling place.  Let not my soul enter their council . . . cursed be their anger, for it is fierce; and their wrath, for it is cruel!  I will divide them in Jacob and scatter them in Israel.”  (Genesis 49:5–7) And by the time they entered the Promised Land, the tribe of Simeon was the smallest and weakest (see the second census of Moses Numbers 26:14), and they were left out of Moses’ final blessing before he died (Deuteronomy 33). In addition, their small inheritance lie within the larger inheritance of the tribe of Judah — so they were somewhat scattered among Judah (Joshua 19:1–9). The tribe of Levi is the only tribe of the twelve who did not receive an inheritance of land; yet, through their obedience to God in later generations (Exodus 32) and by His grace, they did receive the privilege and responsibility of the priestly duties in Israel, to this day. The word of God has so much to say about anger.  God Himself is called gracious and slow to anger (Psalm 103:8), and He asks us to imitate him in this. “He who is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he who rules his spirit than he who takes a city.”  (Proverbs 16:32)
Struggles Come to All of Us

This Parasha concludes on a sad note, as Rachel dies giving birth to her second son, whose name is changed by his father from Ben–oni (son of my sorrow) to Ben-yamin (son at my right hand). Jacob returns to his father, Isaac, who lives to an old age of 180, but Jacob never sees his mother again, since she died while he was away in Haran. Jacob’s life shows us that we may go through many trials and difficulties, but through tenacity and prayer, we can overcome. Yeshua told us that in this life we will have many troubles, but we can be of good cheer for He has overcome the world (John 16:33). To this very day, the descendants of Jacob (Israel) still struggle with this Divine Man who is Yeshua HaMashiach (the Messiah).  Please pray that they will come to know the Messiah and to a knowledge of the truth, encountering Him in a personal way, and receiving their full inheritance of eternal life through faith by grace.