Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Tonight is the first night of Chanukah – celebrate it with us!


Spinning Dreidels used during Chanukah

Tonight at sundown, we will begin celebrating the joyous eight-day festival
of Chanukah
, also called the Festival of Lights and the Feast of Dedication.



Click here to give a Chanukah gift for our ministry work in Jerusalem


Boy watching his father light the chanukiah (Chanukah menorah).

Happy Chanukah! 
Tonight Jewish people around the world will begin celebrating Chanukah by
lighting the Chanukah menorah, reading stories, spinning the dreidel, singing
songs, and eating sufganyot (jelly donuts—a favorite in Israel) and latkes
(potato pancakes)
 fried in oil (served with sour cream and applesauce,
of course).

As fattening as these deep fried foods are, they are prepared to memorialize
the miracle God did in restoring the Temple in Jerusalem and saving the
Jewish people against the Greek Syrian army.  (It’s all about the story
of the olive oil!)




Delicious potato latkes served with a generous dollop of sour cream or
applesauce
—such a Chanukah delight!

Let’s go back in time and remember what happened at Chanukah.  

The word “Chanukah” comes from the Hebrew word Chanukh which means
dedication or education.
Chanukah is celebrated as the Feast of Dedication to remember God’s
great faithfulness in delivering Israel from their oppressors, as well as the
re-dedication of the Temple.

Since Chanukah is not a holiday ordained by God in the Torah, some
wonder if Yeshua (Jesus) actually celebrated it.

The answer is a resounding yes!

“It was winter, and the Festival of the Dedication was being held in
Jerusalem. 
 Yeshua was walking in the Temple precincts, in Solomon's
Portico.  The Jews gathered round Him and asked: ‘How long must you
keep us in suspense?  If you are the Messiah say so plainly.’”  (John 10:22–24)


Yeshua (Jesus) went to Jerusalem for the Feast of Dedication (Chanukah),
and while in the Temple area He proclaimed “I and the Father are
one” (John 10:30).




Sufganyot (donuts) frying in oil:  The fried foods of Chanukah
memorialize the miracle of a one-day supply of holy oil burning for eight days
when the Temple was rededicated after being desecrated by the Greeks.


Out of the frying pan:  You can find sufganyot sold everywhere in
Israel during Chanukah.



Chanukah Observance

On the Hebrew calendar, Chanukah is celebrated from Kislev 25 to the
Tevet 2, coinciding year to year with the November to December time
period.   This year Christmas Eve falls on the fifth night of the
Festival of Lights (Chanukah).  


The most common Jewish custom on Chanukah is lighting a special
nine-branch menorah called a chanukiah.  This special menorah differs from
the seven-branch one that was in the Temple and is used only at Chanukah.



Replica of the Temple menorah, made by The
Temple Institute in Jerusalem

Another key difference between the menorah and the chanukiah is that the
eight candles on the chanukiah are kindled with special candle called a
shamash.  The shamash is considered the ‘servant candle’ because it is
used to light all the others.
This ninth candle often is elevated over the eight other candles in the chanukiah.

For each night of Chanukah, an additional candle is added to the chanukiah
until the last night when the shamash lights all eight candles.


First night of Chanukah: The shamash (servant) candle, which is elevated
in the middle, is used to kindle all the other candles on the chanukiah.



Click here now to kindle a light in the hearts of the Jewish People this Chanukah

Yeshua: the Shamash that Kindled the Light in our Hearts and Lives

"For even the Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve, and to give
His life as a ransom for many."  (Mark 10:45)


Just as the shamash (candle in the middle) is the servant candle that lights
all the candles on the chanukiah
, Yeshua (Jesus) the Messiah came as a
servant to be the light that shines in and through us to others.


John confirms that Yeshua is the light that darkness cannot overcome.

“In him was life, and that life was the light of all mankind.  The light shines
in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.”  (John 1: 4–5)


The darkness has no power over the light.  When the lights are turned on,
the darkness disappears immediately!  It’s never a struggle or a contest.
Light wins every time!

Despite that, many people in the world are trapped in darkness.  Why?
Because they are living without the light that has come into the world
whose name is Yeshua Hamashiach (Jesus the Messiah).  


“When Yeshua spoke again to the people, He said, ‘I am the light of the
world.  Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the
light of life.’”  (John 8:12)




Shamash: Yeshua the Messiah, like the shamash candle, kindles the light
in our hearts and brings us out of darkness into the light of life.


Chanukah: A Great Miracle Happened Here

“His armed forces will rise up to desecrate the temple fortress and will
abolish the daily sacrifice.  Then they will set up the abomination that causes
desolation.  With flattery he will corrupt those who have violated the
covenant, but the people who know their God will firmly resist him.”
(Daniel 11: 31–32)


The reason for lighting eight candles and celebrating Chanukah for eight
nights relates to the miraculous story of Chanukah.


Between the years 175 to 163 BCE, after the death of Alexander the Great,
who had conquered and divided the entire ancient world of the Eastern
Mediterranean, the area of Judea came under control of Antiochus IV Epiphanes.

Antiochus tried to force the Jews to accept Greek culture, and even defiled
the Beit Hamikdash (Temple in Jerusalem) by sacrificing a pig on the altar
and desecrating this holy place with the blood of this unclean animal.



The dreidel was played to fool the Greeks.  Because studying Torah was
outlawed by the Greeks, when someone approached, the Torah was hidden
and the dreidels taken out and played like a game of chance.  The letters nun,
gimmel, hey, shin 
stand for nes gadol haya sham (a great miracle happened
there).  In Israel the letters nun, gimmel, hey, pey mean "a great miracle
happened here."

As described in the book of the Maccabees in the Apocrypha, this wicked
ruler forbade the Jewish people from keeping God’s laws in the Torah,
if they kept the Torah, the penalty was death. 
 Many Jewish people were
martyred rather than defy God’s commandments.

Antiochus also erected a statue of the Greek false god, Zeus, in the Holy of
Holies!  This “abomination of desolation” was prophesied by the Prophet
Daniel (Daniel 11:3132).

This caused a Jewish revolt led by the courageous freedom fighters, the
Maccabees.  This word is an acronym standing for the Hebrew phrase
Mi kamocha ba’elim Adonai, which means, Who is like you, Lord,
among the gods?


Although greatly outnumbered and overpowered, Yehudah (Judah) the
Maccabee led his brothers and some other Jewish men in a valiant battle to
drive out tens of thousands of Greeks and re-claim the Temple.

God helped this small group of men and they won the victory in 163 BCE,
taking back Jerusalem and rededicating the Temple to God.

Tradition has it that they only found a one-day supply of sealed, consecrated
oil for the Temple Menorah; however, miraculously the oil burned for a
whole eight days until more oil could be prepared.







The Significance of the Menorah

The act of re-lighting the Menorah in the Temple represented restoring
God’s presence there.


The Temple was set up so that the Jewish people would have a place to
come and meet with God.

Without the presence and Light of God, we are all lost.

Those who know Yeshua are now the Temple of God, the dwelling place for
His Holy Spirit (Ruach HaKodesh).

“Don’t you know that you yourselves are God’s temple and that God’s
Spirit dwells in your midst?”  (1 Corinthians 3:16)


As we enter this joyous eight-day season of Chanukah, please get
involved with our ministry as we reach out to the Jewish people here in
Israel and around the world with the Good News of Yeshua through the
Messianic Prophecy Bible Project.

We do need your help during Chanukah!





Please click here on this first day of Chanukah to bring Yeshua, the Light of the World, to the Jewish People!

From all of our ministry staff in Israel...
Wishing you a Very Happy Chanukah and a Joyous Holiday Season with many blessings!

I congratulate our Honourable Prime Minister Stephen Harper


I congratulate our Honourable Prime Minister Stephen Harper for the courageous stand he is taking since he took office in 2006. Please see letter to Honourable Prime Minister Stephen Harper by David Harris, Executive Director, American Jewish Committee (AJC) and Senior Associate, St. Antony's College, Oxford University, assesses challenges to Jewish security worldwide.  Here’ an excerpt: 
When Israel responded to the killing and kidnapping of its soldiers on the Lebanese border by targeting Hezbollah, Stephen Harper spoke up for Israel’s right to defend itself, citing Hezbollah as responsible for the violence and asserting that the terrorist group sought Israel’s destruction.
In the same year, the 53 French-speaking countries known as the Francophonie met, Canada vetoed language to condemn Israeli violence against civilians in Lebanon because it failed to mention Israeli civilians targeted by Hezbollah. You stated: “The Francophonie cannot recognize victims according to their nationality. Recognize the victims of Lebanon and the victims of Israel.”

In 2008, during a radio interview on the eve of Israel’s 60th anniversary, Stephen Harper spoke with characteristic clarity:
“What I see happening in some circles is an anti-Israel sentiment, really just a thinly disguised veil for good old-fashioned anti-Semitism, which I think is completely unacceptable. We learned in the Second World War that those who would hate and destroy the Jewish people would ultimately hate and destroy the rest of us as well, and the same holds today.”
When, a few months later, terrorists attacked a Jewish center in Mumbai, Stephan Harper described the murder of six people, including the rabbi and his pregnant wife, as “affronts to the values that unite all civilized people.” When a new rabbi was quickly installed, you declared that the Jewish people will “never bow to violence and hatred.”
In January 2009, when the Geneva-based UN Human Rights Council called on Israel to stop its military operation in Gaza, Canada alone voted against. (Note: The United States was not on the Council at the time.)  Stephen Harper representative explained: “It was regretful that the current draft resolution did not condemn the rocket attacks on Israeli civilians.”
That spring, when the UN planned to convene the Durban II conference in Geneva, a follow-up to the anti-Israel hatefest of 2001, Stephen Harper were the first to declare that Canada would not attend. And now, as Durban III approaches this September, you have again taken the same position.
When, in the fall of 2009, the UN General Assembly endorsed the infamous Goldstone Report, Canada was one of only 18 countries that voted against, while 114 were in favor and 44, including, notably, France and the United Kingdom, abstained.
The next year, when Canada lost a bid for a rotating seat on the UN Security Council, Stephen Harper attributed the result to Ottawa’s pro-Israel stance. You declared that, if this were the price to pay for supporting a friend, you were willing to pay it. As a Winnipeg newspaper editorialized, “We don’t have a seat because we didn’t dance to the UN’s hypocritical tunes.”
 When Israel, the only country in the world whose very existence is under attack, is consistently and conspicuously singled out for condemnation, I believe we are morally obligated to take a stance.... I have the bruises to show for it, that whether it is at the UN or any other international forum, the easiest thing to do is simply to just get along and go along with this anti-Israel rhetoric, to pretend it is just about being even-handed, and to excuse oneself with the label of “honest broker”.... There are, after all, a lot more votes – a lot more – in being anti-Israel than in taking a stand. But, as long as I am prime minister, whether it is at the UN or the Francophonie or anywhere else, Canada will take that stand, whatever the cost. Not just because it is the right thing to do, but because history shows us, and the ideology of the anti-Israel mob tell us all too well, that those who threaten the existence of the Jewish people are a threat to all of us.

And when the G8 leaders met in France a few days ago, you again bucked the trend. Drawing from President Obama’s May 19th speech, the final communiqué’s draft language called on Israelis and Palestinians to begin talks on the basis of the 1967 lines, with mutually-agreed territorial swaps. You, however, pointed out that President Obama’s speech touched on other critical elements as well, including recognition of Israel as a Jewish state and Palestine as a non-militarized state. Therefore, it was inappropriate to “cherry pick,” as Stephen Harper successfully insisted, selected elements of the president’s speech for the G8 statement.

"Mr. Prime Minister, thank you for demonstrating that, when it comes to the Middle East, “Moral courage and a hankering to learn the truth” aren’t “on vacation” in Ottawa."

I wish to thank also Honourable Irwin Cotler, Former Liberal party’s Special Counsel on Human Rights and International Justice and Former Attorney General and Minister of Justice of Canada, for calling on Canada to take action under the U.N. Charter to have Iran called to account for its violation of the Convention.  As he point out, “Canada not only have a right to invoke the Convention to prevent genocide but also are under an obligation to do so. Article 8 of the Convention reads: Any Contracting Party may call upon the competent organs of the United Nations as they consider appropriate for the prevention and suppression of acts of genocide or any of the other acts enumerated in Article 3.”



Irwin Cotler also points out that the making of genocide consists not only of the machinery of death but also the state sponsorship of incitement to hatred, which is forbidden by the Convention. Mr. Cotler writes, “As international tribunals have recognized and affirmed, the Holocaust did not begin in the gas chambers; it began with words. These are the chilling facts of history.”

God bless Israel, and God bless Canada.




Do you understand now why Canada is so blessed?  You want God's blessing...all you have to do is to accept His Son Jesus and bless Israel.

Please visit other commentary on the above subject 


Quartet's Road Map for War
Caliphate vs. Western Democracy

Israel is proof that God exist

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Christmas: was Messiah Yeshua (Jesus) Really Born on December 25th?







“But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, are only a small village among all the
people of Judah.  Yet a ruler of Israel will come from you, one whose origins
are from the distant past.”  (Micah 5:2)

 
Christians around the world have already set up their Christmas trees,
bought their presents to give family and friends, and depending on which
denomination they are a part of, will be celebrating the prophetic
fulfillment of the birth of the Jewish Messiah in Bethlehem.


Orthodox Christians, unlike Protestants, do not celebrate it on
December 25th.



The tradition of the Christmas tree arose out
of tree worship that has existed in many
societies throughout history. 


“I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people.  Today in
the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the
Lord.”  (Luke 2:10-11)


The Tanakh (Jewish Scriptures) doesn't identify the month in which the
Messiah would be born, and the Brit Chadasha (New Testament) doesn't
identify the date he was born.

When was the Messiah Born?

Although Christmas is a well established Christian tradition, Biblical scholars
suggest that December 25th is not the true date of Yeshua’s birth.

Winter in Israel is generally too cold at night to be out shepherding flocks,
and yet at the time of Yeshua’s birth, the shepherds were in the fields watching
over their flocks at night.

This month it has been sunny and hot during the day.  The men at our ministry
wear short sleeve shirts, but around 4 PM each day as the sun goes down, it
becomes freezing cold, and you need to put on a warm jacket.

“And there were shepherds living out in the fields nearby, keeping watch over
their flocks at night.”  (Luke 2:8)

 

The fact that shepherds were in the field keeping watch over their sheep at
night when Yeshua was born likely indicates that he was not born in the
winter.  Some scholars suggest the sheep were brough under cover from
November to March.
Winter in Israel is not the logical time to take a census, and yet at the time
of Yeshua’s birth, Joseph and Miriam (Mary), had gone to Beit Lechem
(Bethlehem) to register for a census (Luke 2:1-5).

Jerusalem would only have been so crowded at the time of one of the three
pilgrimage feasts: Passover, Shavuot (Pentecost) or Sukkot (Tabernacles/
Booths).  For Yeshua’s birth, Jerusalem was so crowded that there was no
room at the inn.


“While they were there, the time came for the baby to be born, and she gave
birth to her firstborn, a son.  She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a
manger, because there was no guest room available for them.”  (Luke 2:6-7)


Likely, Yeshua was born at the end of the harvest, during the Biblical holiday
of Sukkot, fulfilling the Scripture that one day the Lord would ‘tabernacle’
will His people.

“Look! God’s dwelling (Sukkah) is now among the people, and He will
dwell with them.  They will be His people, and God Himself will be with
them and be their God.”  (Revelation 21:3)



God first revealed Messiah's birth to nearby shepherds.

Click here to give a gift for YESHUA this Season that will last for Eternity

Birthdays and the Culture of the Time

“The end of a matter is better than its beginning, and patience is better than
pride.”   (Ecclesiastes 7:8)


Yeshua was born into a completely Jewish, Hebraic culture where the date
of one’s death was remembered and observed rather than the date of one’s
birth.
  This could explain why we are certain of the date of his death
(Passover), but not clear on the date of his birth.

How, then, did December 25th come to be celebrated as the day of Jesus’
birth and what is the origin of the festival of Christmas?

It was certainly not included in the early celebrations of the Christian church.
The Catholic Encyclopedia says, “Christmas was not among the earliest
festivals of the Church.  Irenaeus and Tertullian [early Church fathers] do
not show it on their list of feasts.”


Later, when churches in different parts of the world began celebrating the
birthday of Jesus, they had various opinions as to the correct date.  It was
not until the latter part of the fourth century that the Roman Church began
observing December 25th.
 

Interior of the Church of the Multiplication in Tabgha, which is on the banks
of the Sea of Galilee, at Christmas.
By the fifth century, it was decreed that the birth of Jesus be forever
observed on this date
, even though this was the day of the old Roman feast
of the birth of Sol, one of the names of the sun-god.

Mithraism—a large, pagan, sun worship cult fostered the celebration of
December 25th as a holiday throughout the Roman and Greek worlds.

This winter festival was called ‘the nativity’ and ‘the Nativity of the sun’.
Semiramis, the Queen of Babylon, (also called the Queen of Heaven and
Ishtar) contaminated the Israelites’ worship of God with Baal worship
(Jeremiah 7:18, 44:17). 

“The children gather wood, the fathers light the fire and the women knead the
dough and make cakes to offer to the Queen of Heaven.  They pour out
drink offerings to other gods to arouse my anger.”  (Jeremiah 7:18)


Semiramis ordered the ancient world to celebrate the birth of her son
Tammuz, who was apparently believed to be the sun god reincarnated.
She set December 25th as the date of Baal’s birth on the advice of her
astrologers, since the sun is at its farthest point from the earth during the
winter solstice.

Over time, the sun god came to be worshipped all over the ancient world on
this date of December 25th.  It was a time of orgies, drunkenness, and the
sacrificing of infants to the pagan god, Baal.

Because this feast was so popular among the pagan population of Greece
and Rome, the date was simply adopted as the time of the birth of Jesus
by the Roman church.
 

Although Christmas caroling today brings cheer to many Christians, in
their earliest beginnings, carols really had nothing to do with Christmas.
The melodies were originally written to accompany an ancient dance form
called the circle dance associated with fertility rites and pagan festivities.
Many customs associated with the season–the giving of gifts, house-to-house
caroling, and the general rejoicing and festivity derived from this winter
festival of Saturnalia–are a remnant of paganism that has remained attached
to the Christian Church.

The Christians who first observed the birth of Jesus on December 25 did not
do so thinking that he was born on that day, but because the pagan winter
festival of Saturnalia was celebrated on that date in Rome, they were willing
to have this pagan holiday metamorphosed into a Christian one.

Due to its known pagan origin, the Puritans (Christians from the Church of
England
) banned Christmas altogether.  In Massachusetts, its observance
was illegal between 1659 and 1681.


Despite its association with paganism, Christmas was, and still is, celebrated
by most Christians.

Rabbis and Orthodox Jewish anti-missionaries, often use this information to
confirm that Christianity is a pagan religion and that the story of Jesus’
birth is just a myth from the pagan festival of the birth of Sol the sun-god.
According to this logic, Yeshua couldn't be the Jewish Messiah!
 

This mosaic found in the Vatican grottoes under St. Peter's Basilica,
on the ceiling of the tomb of the Julii (Pope Julius I), represents
Messiah Yeshua (Jesus) as the sun-god Helios or Sol Invictus riding in his
chariot.  It's dated the 3rd century AD.
According to David Kertzer, in his book The Popes Against the Jews: The
Vatican’s Role in the Rise of Modern Anti-Semitism
, throughout the 18th
and 19th centuries CE, Jewish rabbis of the ghetto in Rome were forced to
wear clownish outfits and march through the city streets to the jeers of the
crowd, pelted by a variety of missiles as part of the Saturnalia carnival
 (p.  74).

In 1836, the Jewish community of Rome sent a petition to Pope Gregory
XVI pleading with him to stop the annual Saturnalia abuse of the Jewish
community, to which the Pope responded, “It is not opportune to make any
innovation.”


And on December 25, 1881, riots broke out across Poland when Christian
leaders incited the Polish masses into an anti-Semitic frenzy.  On this
Christmas Day, twelve Jews were brutally murdered in Warsaw, several
others injured, and many Jewish women raped.  In addition to the personal
violence, two million rubles of Jewish property was destroyed.


The Hebrew Scriptures

Please click here to support Bibles for Israel, and teaching the truth of Scripture


The Origins of Christmas Customs

The season of Christmas can be a joyous time.  Many Christians set up
Christmas trees with beautiful lights, and as long as it brings joy to family and
friends while keeping them focused on the Messiah Yeshua (Jesus) and all
the blessings from God, then that’s a blessing.

However, one should know the history of traditions that they keep.

While the custom of decorating a Christmas tree dates back only a few
centuries, the principle behind it is ancient.  Pagans had a custom of
worshipping trees in the forest (Jeremiah 7:18), or bringing them into their
homes and decorating them, and this observance was adopted by the
Christian Church.

Furthermore, sacred trees as symbols of the life force were also associated
with Canaanite cults.


Cylinder seals dating from the Late Bronze Age often show a worshipper
standing in front of a tree.
 

Bronze Age Megiddo site:  Seals depicting sacred trees have been found
at Megiddo and other archaeological sites in Israel.


Other seals dating from the 8th to the 10th centuries BC, which depict a tree
flanked by worshippers, have been found at Lachish, Beth-shemesh, Gibeon,
Samaria, and Megiddo archaeological sites in Israel.
A drawing of a sacred tree with lily flowers being eaten by two ibex was
discovered on a jar at the religious center of Kuntillet Ajrud.  Gold pendants
of the Late Bronze Age from Tell al-Ajjul (near Gaza) and from Ugarit show
stylized trees growing out of a formalized goddess, according to ‘The
Harper Atlas of the Bible
’ (pgs.101-102).

Sexual intercourse under these "holy" trees was thought to transmit the
potency and vitality of the goddess.

"They sacrifice on the mountaintops and burn offerings on the hills, under oak,
poplar and terebinth trees
, where the shade is pleasant.  Therefore your
daughters turn to prostitution and your daughters-in-law to adultery."  (Hosea 4:13)

 

Lashish archaeological site in Israel

These female deities could well have been the Asherah or Astarte who are
often mentioned in the Jewish Scriptures (Tanakh/Old Testament) as the
consort of the weather god Baal.

"The Israelites did evil in the eyes of the Lord; they forgot the Lord their God
and served the Baals and the Asherahs."  (Judges 3:7)


In at least 10 Bible references, the green tree is associated with idolatry
and false worship.


"They also set up for themselves high places, sacred stones and Asherah poles
on every high hill and under every spreading tree."  (1 Kings 14:23)


The use of holly and mistletoe comes from the Druid ceremonies.  Some
historians think that the Druids used mistletoe to poison their human
sacrificial victim.

Kissing under the mistletoe is a synthesis of Druid sacrificial rituals with
Saturnalia sexual immorality.


Places of worship with sacred Christmas trees are frequently mentioned in the
Bible and the prophet Jeremiah condemned their use:

“Do not learn the ways of the nations...  For the customs of the peoples are
worthless; they cut a tree out of the forest, and a craftsman shapes it with his
chisel.  They adorn it with silver and gold; they fasten it with hammer and
nails so it will not totter.”  (Jeremiah 10:1-4)

 

The custom of kissing under the mistletoe at
Christmas has pagan origins.

Christmas Today

“Look! The virgin will conceive a child!  She will give birth to a son, and they
will call him Immanuel, which means ‘God is with us.’”  (Matthew 1:23)


In light of all this information, some Messianic Jews and Gentiles choose not
to celebrate Christmas in any form whatsoever, while others continue to
celebrate December 25th as Jesus’ birthday.

It is important to refrain from condemning those who choose to
celebrate Christmas, as well as those who choose not to.


What is truly important during this season, while people are confronted with
the birth of the Messiah, is to spread the good news that Yeshua came as
the Light of the World, not to condemn the world, but to save it.

"I am the light of the world.  Whoever follows me will never walk in
darkness, but will have the light of life."  (John 8:12)

"For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that
whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.”  (John 3:16)



Redeeming the Time
"Make the most of every opportunity in these evil days."  (Ephesians 5:16)
Although the celebration of Christmas has pagan origins, this time can be
redeemed by doing special mitzvot (good deeds) to help those who are
feeling lost or alone while others are celebrating with friends and family.  


It’s a fact that this time of the year is the hardest for many people who
don’t have family or who are struggling.

We can be a ‘light’ by bringing cheer, comfort, hope and support into the
lives of friends, family, neighbors, and those less fortunate than ourselves.


This season is a good time to help single mothers, widows, or anyone who
has fallen upon hard times.

Many Christians will celebrate the pagan traditions in ignorance on one day
of the year – December 25th.  However our focus should be celebrating the
Messiah’s birth and life everyday of the year as Yeshua was born in
prophetic fulfillment of the Scripture to redeem the world.

We need to celebrate our Creator and His Scriptures (The Word) and the
Messiah (The Word that became flesh).
 


“For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on
His shoulders.  And He will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.”  (Isaiah 9:6)


God is love and so He gives His very best to us.  We can choose to share the
love of God during this festive season by giving of ourselves so that others
can also come to know His salvation (Yeshua).

Will you give at this time to help the Jewish people to come to know their
Messiah, Yeshua?

This year Christmas and Chanukah fall during the same week – so please
remember the Jewish People, and to help us bring the Word of God to them.


Jewish man praying with prayer book after lighting the Chanukah
menorah (chanukiah).  Both Chanukah and Christmas are celebrated
next week.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Newt Gingrich and the "Invented" Palestinian People

by Daniel Pipes

December 10, 2011
http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/2011/12/newt-gingrich-and-the-invented-palestinian-people
The former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives and current Republican presidential candidate said yesterdaythat "there was no Palestine as a state. It was part of the Ottoman Empire. We have invented the Palestinian people, who are in fact Arabs and are historically part of the Arab people, and they had the chance to go many places."
Everyone from the PLO to a Mitt Romney spokesman jumped on Gingrich for this assertion, but he happens to be absolutely correct: no Arabic-speaking Muslims identified themselves as "Palestinian" until 1920, when, in rapid order this appellation and identity was adopted by the Muslim Arabs living in the British mandate of Palestine.
For details, see a long article of mine from 1989 on the topic or a short one from 2000. (December 10, 2011)

The Year the Arabs Discovered Palestine {Long version]

by Daniel Pipes
Middle East Review
Summer 1989
http://www.danielpipes.org/8025/the-year-the-arabs-discovered-palestine
Judging from news reports, one might think that Palestinian nationalism has been active as long as Jews and Arabs have been living at the eastern edge of the Mediterra­nean Sea. And as Yasir 'Arafat rides high since his declaration of a Palestinian state, there is an understandable tendency in the West to accept at face value his insistence that the Palestinians have always sought an independent Palestinian state. In fact, this is far from the truth.
The idea of an Arab state resting between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is, rather, a twentieth-century concept. In­deed, its origins can be traced with surpris­ing precision to a single year — 1920. In January 1920, Palestinian nationalism hard­ly existed; by December of that critical year, it had been born.
The events of 1920 encapsulate the current successes and tribulations of the Palestinian movement. They foreshadow some abiding themes, such as the potential for rapid change and the major role of the Western powers. They also provide insight into the most widely supported but possibly the least successful nationalist cause of this century.

Early 1920: The Heyday of Pan-Syrianism

Palestinian nationalism cannot be age-old. To begin with, nationalism itself origi­nated only in late eighteenth-century Eu­rope, and took hold among the Muslims even more recently. Until the early years of this century, the ancestors of today's Pales­tinians had thought of themselves mainly in terms of religion. Islam emphasized bonds between fellow-believers, allowing little scope for territorially-bound loyalties among Muslims. Like it or not, adherents of other religions also found themselves ar­rayed along religious lines. Coreligionists shared strong bonds, but they had few ties outside their own community. Religious lines became residence lines; except for spe­cific commercial or political purposes, little intermingling took place. A sense of com­mon political identity was entirely lacking. In addition to religious ties, loyalties were tied primarily to family; then came other genealogical relations, as well as some eth­nic, regional, linguistic, and class bonds.
When nationalism reached the Middle East from Europe, it captivated Middle Easterners as much as it did other peoples. The dream of governments embodying the spirit of their people was utterly alien, to be sure, but it excited many. The difficulty in the Middle East, as in most places, was exactly how to apply the national ideal. Where would the boundaries be placed? Did the Maronite Christians constitute a nation of their own? Did the Christians of the Levant? The Syrians? The Arabs? The Mus­lims? In the early years of this century, theorists took each of these peoples as the basis for grandiose plans for their favorite nation.
But not a single writer imagined a Pales­tinian nation, and for good reason. Palestine had always been, and at that time remained, a Jewish and Christian concept, utterly for­eign to the Muslims. Eretz Yisrael and Terra Sancta have no analogue in Islam. Muslims look to the Hijaz, not Palestine, for their most sacred landmarks. Further, there has never been an independent state in Palestine ruled by Muslims; such states that were brought into existence were ruled either by Jews or Christians.
Muslim distaste for the very notion of Palestine was confirmed in April 1920, when the British authorities carved out a Palestinian entity. The Muslims' response was one of extreme suspicion. They saw the delineation of this territory as a victory for the Zionists; in their more paranoid moments, they even thought it reflected linger­ing Crusader impulses among the British. The Zionists, by contrast, rejoiced at the formal defining of a Palestine, correctly seeing it as a major step on the road to Theodor Herzl's Judenstaat. (In other words, the term "Palestine," which today symbolizes the Arab rejection of Israel, served the Jews not long ago as the symbol of Jewish nationalism.)
This point cannot be overemphasized. Palestine was brought into existence by Brit­ish imperial authorities, not by Arabs; fur­ther, Muslims felt defeated by the British carving out of a distinct Palestinian entity. I know of no Palestinian endorsing this act when it took place in 1920. To the contrary, every recorded opinion suggests intense opposition.
What, then, was the objective of the Arabs living between the Jordan and the Mediterranean? What political unit did they endorse? To the extent that there was any proto-national unit to the east of the Mediter­ranean Sea, it was not called Palestine but Sham, the historic region of Syria which included the modern states of Syria, Lebanon, Israel, and Jordan. This choice reflected a basic fact about the Levant, now often forgotten: Sham, usually translated as "Greater Syria," was a truly age-old ecolo­gical and cultural (but not political) unit.
Like Egypt, Arabia, Yemen, and the other large traditional units of the Middle East, it had geographic boundaries and ecological characteristics which made it distinct from adjoining areas. It constituted the western part of the Fertile Crescent, a dry region that supports life when—and only when—tended with great care. Residents of this area share a physical typology and an extended family structure. They speak Arabic with a distinctive lilt and prepare foods in a similar fashion. Just after World War I, a meeting of Arabs called for a united Syria on the basis that "the people speak Arabic; they are intermarried and have many links of kin­ship; and commerce has for ages moved freely between them."
Even so, Pan-Syrian sentiment was ex­tremely weak before World War II; Greater Syria was, after all, only a proto-nationalist unit. Europeans and Westernized Syrians often remarked on the absence of national solidarity. Testimony on this subject is unan­imous. The well-informed author of a Brit­ish travel guide to Greater Syria noted in the mid-nineteenth century that "patriotism is unknown. There is not a man in the country, whether Turk or Arab, Mohammedan or Christian, who would give a para [penny] to save the empire from ruin; that is, if he be not in government pay ... The patriotism of the Syrian is confined to the four walls of his own house; anything beyond them does not concern him." Gertrude Bell, a knowl­edgeable British observer, wrote in 1907 that "Syria is merely a geographical term corre­sponding to no national sentiment in the breasts of the inhabitants." K.T. Khaïrallah noted in 1912 that "Syrian society did not exist in the past. There was nothing but distinct and often hostile groups....Society was based on a despotism of brutal force modeled on that of the ruler."
By the end of World War I in November 1918, however, the notion of a Syrian nation had made considerable headway among the Arabs of Palestine. They agreed almost unanimously on the existence of a Syrian nation. With few exceptions, they identified with the Syrian Arab government in Damascus, headed by Prince Faysal, a member of the Hashemite family. Palestinian enthusiasm for Pan-Syrian unity steadily increased through mid-1920.
There is ample evidence for this enthusi­asm. Three major Palestinian organizations propounded Pan-Syrian ideas in the imme­diate aftermath of World War I: the Arab Club, the Literary Club, and the Muslim-Christian Association. (Note that none of these names makes any mention of Palestine.) The first two groups went furthest, calling outright for unity with Syria under Faysal. Even the Muslim-Christian Associa­tion, an organization of traditional leaders — men who would expect to rule if Palestine became independent — demanded incor­poration in Greater Syria.
The Muslim-Christian Association held a congress in January-February 1919 to draw up demands to submit to the Paris Peace Conference. Representatives of fourteen Palestinian cities and towns presented a peti­tion calling for Southern Syria to be "insep­arable from the independent Arab Syrian government." The congress declared Pal­estine "nothing but part of Arab Syria and it has never been separated from it at any stage." The delegates saw Palestine tied to Syria by "national, religious, linguistic, moral, economic, and geographic bonds." On the basis of this view, they called for a Palestine that would remain "undetached from the independent Arab Syrian Government."
Musa Kazim al-Husayni, head of the Jerusalem Town Council (in effect, mayor) told a Zionist interlocutor in October 1919: "We demand no separation from Syria." According to Ahmad ash-Shuqayri (the man who headed the PLO in the 1960s), the ubiquitous slogan of 1918-19 was "Unity, Unity, From the Taurus [Mountains] to Rafah [in Gaza], Unity, Unity." The same appeal echoed from all corners. A singer in Ramla encouraged her "enraptured listeners" to join Faysal's forces. From San Salvador, of all places, a protest in March 1919 went out from the "Syrian Palestin­ians" to international leaders calling for "no separation between Syria and Palestine" and expressing hope that "Syria and Pal­estine remain united." The Salvadorans de­clared: "We trust that if Syria and Palestine remain united, we will never be enslaved by the Jewish yoke."
A congress of Palestinians met in Damascus in February 1920 and strongly advocated Pan-Syrian unity. One speaker suggested that Palestine stood in the same relationship to Syria as Alsace-Lorraine did to France. According to a contemporary newspaper report,
'Izzat Darwaza spoke about Palestine and [the need for] Syrian unity, then he submit­ted a statement for general opinion. No one disagreed with him. The discussion pro­ceeded further on this matter; some partici­pants wanted not to mention Palestine but to use the expression Greater Syria for all the regions of Syria, and they were applauded.
The Congress passed four resolutions. The first of them noted that "it never oc­curred to the peoples of Northern and Coast­al Syria that Southern Syria (or Palestine) is anything but a part of Syria." The second called for an economic boycott of the Zion­ists in "all three parts of Syria" (meaning the whole of Greater Syria). The third and fourth resolutions called for Palestine "not to be divided from Syria" and for "the independence of Syria within its natural borders."
The crowning of Faysal as King of Syria in March 1920 elicited strong Pan-Syrian reactions among the Arabs of Palestine. The British military governor of Palestine re­ceived a petition (bearing Amin al­-Husayni's signature) that demanded the eradication of borders with Syria and the inclusion of Palestine in a Syrian union. Musa Kazim al-Husayni broke his promise not to engage in politics and spoke from the municipality building's balcony in praise of Faysal. 'Arif al-'Arif led a mass demonstra­tion in Jerusalem in which the participants carried pictures of Faysal and called for unity with Syria.
Then, in April, came the sobering news from San Remo that the British and French governments had decided to separate Pal­estine from Syria and to keep both territories under their control. This precipitated pro­tests from all parts of Palestine. New calls went out for the independence of a united Syria stretching from Turkey to the Sinai.
These and many other indications point to two indisputable facts: until July 1920, the Palestinian goal was to join in a union with Syria, while the aspiration of an independent Palestinian state barely existed. Matters changed quickly in the next few months, however.

Late 1920: The Rise of Palestinian Nationalism

The French conquered Damascus and scuttled the Arab kingdom ruled over by Faysal in July 1920. One result was that Syrians came to devote almost all their atten­tion to the issue of French rule, leaving very little time or concern for Palestine. Another was that, for Palestinians, the attractiveness of a Syrian connection faded away. Why be joined to Damascus, the Palestinians felt, if this meant rule by Paris? Palestinian leaders came to recognize that they were on their own against the British and the Zionists. From that point on, they sought to establish an autonomous Arab government in Pal­estine which would be ruled by themselves, not by politicians in Damascus. Herein lay the origins of Palestinian nationalism.
This reorientation was made formal by the Third Palestinian Congress, meeting in December 1920. Delegates at the Congress decided to drop the appellation Southern Syria and to stop demanding the joining of Palestine with Syria. At this moment, Pal­estine became acceptable to the Muslims; and it would not be long before they would actually find it appealing.
Subsequent meetings confirmed this new identity. When the Syrian Congress (the main exile organization dedicated to build­ing Greater Syria) met in August 1921, Pal­estinians would no longer endorse the unity of Greater Syria. They even compelled the organization to rename itself The Syro-­Palestinian Congress and to issue a state­ment calling for the "independence of Syria and of Palestine." A year later, Palestin­ians withdrew from this Congress.
This rapid switch suggests that, despite the apparent solidity of Palestinian interest in union with Syria, the sentiment was al­ways precarious. In large part, this has to do with the two sides, Syrian and Palestinian, having had different expectations. Prince Faysal, who, along with many Syrians in 1918-20, saw the Zionists as a less pressing danger than the Maronites of Lebanon, was willing to work with the Jews if they could help him achieve his Greater Syrian goal. In January 1919, for example, he reached an agreement with the Zionists. In return for Faysal's promise "to encourage and stimu­late immigration of Jews into Palestine on a large scale," he won Zionist backing for his campaign against the French. (But this agreement was contingent on Britain keep­ing France out of Syria; and since this was not done, the accord did not take effect.) Soon after, in a letter to Felix Frankfurter, Faysal noted that "there is room in Syria for both of us."
Palestinian leaders, in contrast, saw Zion­ists as the pre-eminent problem. In their eyes, Faysal's standing depended almost ex­clusively on his ability to help them against the Zionists. In late 1918, the Palestinians considered Faysal (in the words of a French diplomat) the only Arab leader "capable of resisting the Jewish flood" into Palestine. Faysal's subsequent willingness to deal with the Zionists diminished Palestinian backing for him.
This divergence in outlook created ten­sions between Syrian and Palestinian leaders from the moment World War I ended in November 1918. Signs of disaffection were apparent within three months of Faysal's arrival in Damascus, and they grew with time. Already in early 1919, the Muslim-Christian Association resolved that Pal­estine "should be part of Southern Syria, provided the latter is not under foreign con­trol." The Association's Jerusalem branch went farther, calling for an independent gov­ernment in Palestine to be only "politically associated" with Syria. It authorized Faysal "to represent Palestine and defend it at the Paris Conference," on the understanding that Palestine would enjoy full autonomy within a Syrian union. And while 'Arif Pasha ad-Dajjani, president of the Muslim-Christian Association, insisted that "Pal­estine or Southern Syria — an integral part of the one and indivisible Syria — must not in any case or for any pretext be de­tached," he also had doubts about rule from Damascus.
To be fair, it must be recorded that argu­ments against connections to Damascus ap­peared in the press as early as 1919. The Arab Club was the first nationalist institu­tion to abandon Faysal's leadership. Despite its name, the newspaper Suriya al-Janubiya ("Southern Syria") led the campaign away from Pan-Syrianism, arguing that Syrians had become too absorbed in their conflict with France to pay enough attention to the Zionist challenge. In January 1920, when Faysal returned empty-handed from his sec­ond trip to Europe, some top Palestinians began to see him as not essential to their cause, an impression reinforced by the lack of Syrian response to the Jerusalem riots of April 1920.
But these strains had only limited impor­tance. Syrian and Palestinian leaders effec­tively minimized their differences until July 1920, for both had an interest in Prince Faysal's success.
What accounts for the extremely rapid collapse of Pan-Syrian sentiment in Pal­estine? Yehoshua Porath, the leading histo­rian of Palestinian nationalism, argues in his 1974 book The Emergence of the Palestinian-Arab National Movement, 1918-1929 that Palestinians supported Pan-­Syrianism only as long as it served them but abandoned it when it no longer had utility. In contrast to Syrians, who tended to see Pan­-Syrianism as an end in itself, he says, Pales­tinians saw it as a means, a weapon in the battle against Zionism; it was weak because it only served ulterior purposes. Being treat­ed as part of Syria had three advantages in the years 1918-20.[xix] A joint Anglo-French declaration of November 1918 promised "to encourage and assist the establishment of native governments and administrations in Syria and Mesopotamia" — not Palestine. This declaration made it desirable for Pal­estine to be seen as part of Syria. Also, associating with the larger Muslim popula­tion of Greater Syria offered a way to over­whelm the Jewish immigrants demographi­cally. And alliance with Faysal gave Pales­tinians a relatively powerful protector.
According to Porath, the French conquest of Damascus caused these advantages to disappear:
Disappointment over the moderation of the Syrians toward Zionism cooled the Pal­estinians' enthusiasm for the idea of Pan-Syrian unity.... The orientation towards Damascus was based less on the growth of nationalism around this area [i.e., Greater Syria] than upon a given political situation. When this situation changed, the foundations of the Pan-Syrian movement collapsed.
All these points are correct, but not the implication that Pan-Syrian nationalism was merely a tactic while Palestinian national­ism appealed to deep sentiments. The re­verse is closer to the truth. Existing sentiments fitted better within Greater Syria than Palestine. Palestinians abandoned Pan-­Syrianism and replaced it with Palestinian separatism for tactical reasons, not out of heartfelt sentiment. Porath himself quotes one Palestinian leader who openly admitted this. Only days after the fall of Faysal's government, Musa Kazim al-Husayni de­clared, "after the recent events in Damascus, we have to effect a complete change in our plans here. Southern Syria no longer exists. We must defend Palestine." Kamil ad-Dajjani explained many years after the event that "the collapse of Faysal's rule in Syria and the disappointment of the hopes which were pinned upon that rule, made Palestinians feel that the orientation toward a Greater Syria bore no fruit." Palestinian nationalism originated not in spontaneous feelings but in calculated poli­tics, and a long time passed before the emotional appeal of this premeditated and novel allegiance matched that of Pan-Syrian nationalism.
In short, the Palestine concept served better than that of Greater Syria. It allowed the Arab leaders of Palestine to speak the same political language as the Zionists and the British. Rather than refer to some out­side source of authority, they could claim sovereignty for themselves. In the process, they evolved from provincial notables into independent actors. Thus, tactical consid­erations caused the rapid rise of Palestinian nationalism.
Ultimately, Palestinian nationalism origi­nated in Zionism; were it not for the exis­tence of another people who saw British Palestine as their national home, the Arabs would have continued to view this area as a province of Greater Syria. Zionism turned Palestine into something worthy in itself; if not for the Jewish aspirations, Sunni Arab attitudes toward Palestine would no doubt have resembled those toward the territory of Transjordan — an indifference only slowly eroded by many years of governmental effort. Palestinian nationalism promised the most direct way to deal with the challenge presented by Zionist settlers — a challenge never directly felt on the East Bank.

Amin al-Husayni

The career of Al-Hajj Muhammad Amin al-Husayni (1895-1974), the long-time mufti of Jerusalem, dramatizes the switch from Pan-Syrianism to Palestinian nationalism.
Husayni began as a partisan of Greater Syria. He wrote sentimentally about ties between Syrians and Palestinians during World War I. When the Hashemites launched the Arab revolt, breaking the Otto­man Empire's four centuries' control over the Levant, Husayni saw this as a more effective way to block the Zionists. As Philip Mattar, a biographer of the mufti, writes: "Since it appeared futile for the Arabs to oppose British rule, Amin believed the only practical approach was to attempt to change the British Balfour policy by organizing mass support for reuniting Syria and Palestine, which would then work to­gether against Zionism."
Husayni therefore deserted the Ottoman army and joined the Hashemites. He then became a leading agent of the Hashemites (an ironic development in light of his later mortal enmity with this family), recruiting about 2,000 military volunteers in 1918 and working actively on Faysal's behalf in 1919. At the Palestinian congress in January-February 1919, Husayni called for unity between Palestine and Syria. A British dip­lomatic report noted that Husayni's activities were directed "in favor of union with Sharifian [i.e., Faysal's] Syria."
Husayni served as president of the Arab Club, which was especially eager for union with Syria. Toward the end of 1919, this group tent a letter to the British military governor of Jerusalem declaring that "Southern Syria forms a part of the United Syria beginning from Taures [and extending to] Rafa, the separation of which we do not tolerate under any circumstances, and we are as well pre­pared to sacrifice ourselves towards its de­fense with all our power."
Returning from Damascus on April 1, 1920, Husayni introduced a new element into an already tense atmosphere in Pal­estine by reporting (wrongly) that the Brit­ish government would be willing to recognize Faysal as ruler of Palestine as well as Syria. This report raised Pan-Syrian ex­pectations to a fever pitch. Then came the Nabi Musa riots in Jerusalem on April 4, when Arab mobs attacked Jews; according to Horace B. Samuel (and the British police report corroborates his account), these dis­turbances were initiated by two young men who shouted "Long live our King — King Feisul." Taysir Jbara, a historian, believes that Amin al-Husayni was one of these two. The police sought Husayni, but he fled to Damascus, where he again worked to spread the influence of King Faysal. Al­though a Palestine court had sentenced Hu­sayni in absentia to ten years in jail, the High Commissioner of Palestine, Sir Her­bert Samuel, pardoned him less than five months after the Jerusalem disturbances had occurred. This permitted Husayni to make his way back to Palestine after the fall of Damascus.
Faysal's defeat caused Husayni, like the other leaders, to change ideologies without missing a beat, turning into an un­bending Palestinian nationalist. He became mufti of Jerusalem in 1921, president of the Supreme Muslim Council in 1922, and pres­ident of the Arab Higher Committee in 1936. Each of these positions gave him new power; by the mid-1930s he had become the out­standing political leader of the Palestinians, the symbol and the bulwark of Palestinian nationalism.

Conclusion

Four major events occurred in 1920. In March, Faysal was crowned king of Syria, raising expectations that Palestine would join his independent state. In April, the British put Palestine on the map, dashing those hopes. In July, French forces captured Damascus, ending the Palestinian tie with Syria. And in December, responding to these events, the Palestinian leadership adopted the goal of an independent Palestin­ian state.
Having thus originated out of political calculus, not spontaneous feelings, Pales­tinian nationalism had to wait for many years to pass before it acquired real force. Still, what Palestinian nationalism lacked by way of natural origin, it soon made up for with passionate identification. How did a premeditated and novel allegiance come to exert so strong an emotional appeal? The logic of need caused Palestinian nationalism to flourish, and it became a popular cause.
So thoroughly has it come to dominate the current scene that its recent and util­itarian origins have been forgotten by all but a handful of scholars. To make matters worse, an informal campaign seems to be underway to suppress the fact that Pan-Syrianism predominated for two critical years. A number of solidly researched aca­demic books of recent years wave this whole phenomenon aside in an effort retro­actively to enhance the stature of the Pales­tinian nationalism of those years.
This rewriting of history serves to empha­size the abiding importance of 1920. A re­view of the events of that year points, first, to the fact that Palestinian nationalism is just one variant of anti-Zionism; in turn, others are always nipping at its own heels. Yasir 'Arafat and his followers can never rest easy, for they always have to contend with not only their Israeli enemy but also their Arab rivals. (Many of them are still based in Damascus.)
Second, 1920 demonstrates the extreme fickleness of the Arabs' nationalist loyalties. Only superficially grounded in nationalist sentiments, they found it easy to bounce from one formulation to another. Palestinian leaders supported the Greater Syria goal so long as it served their purposes; then, after the French capture of Damascus changed the premises, the leadership seamlessly adopted a new approach. During the 1950s, when Gamal Abdel Nasser and Arab nationalism were flying high, many of the Palestinian leaders moved into his camp. This could happen again. Were circum­stances to call for another switch, say, to federation with Jordan, many of those Pales­tinians who now fervently espouse an inde­pendent Palestinian state might take up this new aspiration.
While it is true that the flexibility of 1920 occurred at a moment of special fluidity, and positions have hardened since that date, the Middle East remains the world's most politi­cally volatile area. Major realignments take place almost predictably, about once a dec­ade. Given that today's constellation of forces is unlikely to last into the distant future and that an independent Palestinian state does seem forthcoming, the primacy of Palestinian nationalism could eventually come to an end, perhaps as quickly as it got started.

Sep. 13, 2000 update: I published a summary version of this article today to commemorate the would-be declaration of a Palestinian state.
Related Topics:  HistoryPalestiniansreceive the latest by email: subscribe to daniel pipes' free mailing listThis text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an integral whole with complete information provided about its author, date, place of publication, and original URL.