Palestinian woman subject of another Jewish hate crime in Jerusalem  

February 27, 2013
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Section: [Main News] 
Tags: [hate crimes] [attacks on Palestinians] [Jerusalem] [Orthodox Jews] 
  
 
 
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On Monday, February 25 a Palestinian woman was attacked by a mob of 
ultra-Orthodox Jewish women in broad daylight at the light rail station 
in Jerusalem.
The Palestinian woman was punched by one passing Jewish woman in an 
unprovoked attack, before the Jewish woman's friends joined in, managing to 
tear off the Palestinian's headscarf off as they rained blows on her body.
The Israeli daily newspaper Maariv reported that the light rail security guard, 
in addition to around 100 religious Jewish men, stood 
by at the Kiryat Moshe rail station watching the beating and doing 
nothing.
Dorit Yardan Dotan, an eyewitness who captured the assult with her 
camera phone, told Maariv that she was horrified by the violence and 
that the security guard was even smiling.
There were more than 100 Orthodox Jews including Yeshiva students who 
watched an Arab woman being beaten," Dotan said. "She was escorted by an 
elderly man before a heated argument erupted and people shouted. I 
couldn't understand the motive behind that, and all of a sudden they all 
attacked the Arab woman beating her severely."
Hate crimes are not uncommon for Palestinians living in Jerusalem or in the '48 
territories. Ynet reported that on February 24, a Palestinian man in his 40's 
who works for the 
Tel Aviv Municipality as a street cleaner was assaulted by 20 Jewish 
youth, who targeted his head.
As a result, Hassan Usruf had to undergo surgery on his jaw while 
suffering injuries made to his eye socket, but no arrests were made and 
his attackers remain unpunished.
In August 2012, dozens of Jewish teenagers beat up three Palestinian youth in 
Zion Square, West Jerusalem. The mob relentlessly kicked and punched the 
Palestinians, and shouted racist slurs and chants such as "Death to Arabs!" 
over and over again as more than 100 bystanders stood by 
watching the lynching without interfering.
One of the Palestinian youth, 17 year old Jamal Julani, was beaten 
unconsciousness and had to be resuscitated on site after the mob ran 
away. Julani had to be hospitalized, and has no recollection of the 
incident.
In the aftermath of the lynching, Israeli police arrested several Jewish 
teenagers, the youngest being 13 year old. One of the suspects, a 15 
year old, defiantly told the court, "For my part he [Julani] can die. 
He's an Arab."Nimrod Aloni, the head of one of Tel Aviv's colleges for the 
Institute for 
Educational Thought said of the mob attack, "This is directly tied to 
national fundamentalism that is the same as the rhetoric of neo-Nazis, 
Taliban, and K.K.K. This comes from an entire culture that has been 
escalating toward an open and blunt language based on us being the 
chosen people who are allowed to do whatever we like."

http://www.palestinemonitor.org/details.php?id=vtq1eua2867ync3dkezhe


Jewish Violence on Purim: Time for a Religious Reckoning?Posted: March 4, 2013 
| Author: Rabbi Brant Rosen | Filed under: Israel, Palestine, Purim, Religion, 
Terrorism   | 9 Comments » 
Purim 2013: A Palestinian woman is attacked by ultra-nationalist Jews in 
Jerusalem.
Like many Jews around the world, I dutifully celebrated Purim last 
week. In my case, it meant hearing the Book of Esther read aloud in my 
synagogue while drinking an occasional shot of scotch, enjoying our 
annual “Oy Vey Cafe,” (a beloved congregational tradition that mixes 
member-written and performed show tune and classic rock parodies) and 
attending our synagogue Religious School’s costume parade and Purim 
carnival.
I’m sure that many middle-class American Jews celebrated Purim in 
similar fashion. I’m also fairly sure that most middle-class American 
Jews are unaware that Purim has long been “celebrated” in a very 
different manner by ultra-nationalist Jews in Israel.
Last week on the day after Purim, it was reported that a Palestinian woman was 
attacked by ultra-orthodox women at a light rail station in Kiryat Moshe, 
Jerusalem.  According to the Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv, an 
ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman walked by the Palestinian woman and began 
punching her (see pic above).  Others soon joined in the attack and 
eventually tore off her hijab. According to the report, the light rail 
security guard, as well as some 100 religious Israeli men, stood by and 
did nothing. Eyewitness Dorit Yarden Dotan, who was horrified by the 
violence and took photos of the beating with her telephone, reported that the 
security guard even “watched and smiled”. “It was simply terrible,” she added.
Photo: Jerusalem Post
By the way, this was not the only act of Purim violence this year. On the same 
day as the Jerusalem attack, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, 
Hassan Usruf (right), was attacked by drunken Jewish youths whom police suspect 
had been participating in Purim celebrations during the evening. Usruf was 
punched, hit in the head with a bottle and 
kicked after he fell to the ground. He sustained injuries to his head, 
eye socket and jaw. The police have yet to arrest any suspects.
Those who follow the news must surely know that this kind of Jewish 
violence against Palestinians have become an annual inevitability in 
Israel. The most infamous Purim moment, of course, occurred in 1994, 
when Baruch Goldstein walked into the Cave of Machpelah in Hevron 
wearing an Israeli army uniform and opened fire on Palestinian 
worshipers, killing 29 and wounding more than 125.  By committing this 
act of mass murder, Goldstein believed he was fulfilling the the Book of 
Esther, which describes the slaughter of seventy five thousand Persians at the 
hands of the Jews. Since that time, Goldstein has become 
venerated by ultra-orthodox, ultra-nationalist Jews and for rest of us, 
Purim as never been quite the same.
Purim 2009: A Jewish settler throws wine at Palestinian woman in Hevron, West 
Bank, (Photo: Rina Castelnuovo, NY Times)
I’ve recently finished Elliot Horowitz’s 2006 book “Reckless Rites: Purim and 
the Legacy of Jewish Violence” – a deeply troubling (but to my mind, profoundly 
essential) book that 
traces the history of Jewish violence on Purim over the centuries. Among the 
many disturbing revelations of Purim history in Horowitz’s book, I 
was surprised to learn that bad Jewish behavior on Purim has a long and 
not so venerable history – one that most Jewish histories either gloss 
over or simply choose to ignore.
Horowitz also parses the history of Purim violence in contemporary 
Israel, going back to Purim 1981, when Jewish settlers brought down the 
roof of a Palestinian upholsters’ home, expelled its owner and took over the 
house. (The house had once been a Jewish infirmary and synagogue, 
“Beit Hadassah.”) Since then, the settlers’ Purim parade in Hevron has 
become an annual tradition of Jewish pogroms against Palestinians. As 
last week’s events have demonstrated, however, this brutality is now 
ominously expanding into Israel proper.
Yes, the Book of Esther does come off as a kind of Jewish communal 
revenge fantasy, one that portrays the Jews’ massacre of the ancient 
Persians with sick kind of relish. As for me, I’ve always read the book 
according to the satirical spirit of the day: an expression of the 
“Jewish Id” that gives us the chance to indulge our darker fantasies in 
this one cathartic moment, perhaps so that they might have less of a 
hold over us during the rest of the year.  But of course, there are – 
and apparently have always been – religious literalists who are all too 
prepared to treat what is essentially a secular tale of palace intrigue 
as a sacred imperative to engage in xenophobic violence against others.
In his book, Horowitz quotes the venerable Jewish scholar Samuel Hugo Bergman 
(1883-1975), a former rector and professor at Hebrew 
University, who expressed dismay at boorish and violent behavior of Jews on 
Purim. Bergman – a religiously observant Jew – commented that its 
continued observance as a religious holiday was a sign of “the deep 
decay of our people.”  (p. 277)
In the post-Goldstein era, I’d say Bergman’s words resonate with 
ever-increasing urgency.

http://rabbibrant.com/

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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