Do black lives matter in Israel?

BlackWolf

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Operation Moses

Operation Moses, named after the biblical figure Moses, was the covert removal of Ethiopian Jews (known as the "Beta Israel" community or "Falashas") from Sudan during a famine in 1984. The operation was a cooperative effort between the Israel Defense Forces, the Central Intelligence Agency, the United States embassy in Khartoum, mercenaries and Sudanese state security forces.

Begun November 21, 1984, it involved the air transport of some 8,000 Ethiopian Jews from Sudan directly to Israel, ending January 5, 1985 (one source claims as many as 18,000 were rescued). Thousands of Beta Israel had fled Ethiopia on foot for refugee camps in Sudan. It is estimated as many as 4,000 died during the trek. Sudan secretly allowed Israel to evacuate the refugees. Once the story broke in the media, Arab countries pressured Sudan to stop the airlift. Some 1,000 Ethiopian Jews were left behind. Most of them were evacuated later in the U.S.-led Operation Joshua. More than 1,000 so-called "orphans of circumstance" existed in Israel, children separated from their families still in Africa, until Operation Solomon took 14,000 more Jews to Israel in 1991.

This operation was the subject of an Israeli-French film titled Go, Live, and Become, directed by Romanian-born Radu Mihăileanu. The film centers on an Ethiopian Christian child whose mother passes him as a Jew so he can immigrate to Israel along with the Jews in order to escape the famine that is looming in Ethiopia. The film went on to win the 2005 award for Best Film at the Copenhagen International Film Festival.

Operation Joshua

Operation Joshua was the 1985 removal of 800 Ethiopian Jews (called Beta Israel) from Sudan to Israel.

George H. W. Bush, Vice-President of the United States at the time, arranged a CIA-sponsored follow-up mission to Operation Moses, which had brought 8000 people to Israel. Under Operation Joshua, an additional 800 were flown out of Sudan to Israel. But in the following five years, a virtual stalemate occurred in the emigration of Ethiopian Jewry. All efforts on behalf of the Beta Israel fell on the closed ears of Mengistu Haile Mariam's dictatorship. The transfer only resumed in 1991 in Operation Solomon after Mengistu lost control.

Operation Solomon

Operation Solomon was a 1991 covert Israeli military operation to take Ethiopian Jews to Israel.

In 1991, the sitting Ethiopian government of Mengistu Haile Mariam was close to being toppled with the recent military successes of Eritrean and Tigrean rebels, threatening Ethiopia with dangerous political destabilization. Several Jewish organizations, including the state of Israel, were concerned about the well-being of the sizable population of Ethiopian Jews, known as Beta Israel, residing in Ethiopia. Also, the Mengistu regime had made mass emigration difficult for Beta Israel residing in Ethiopia, and the regime's dwindling power presented a promising opportunity for those Beta Israel who had been wanting to immigrate to Israel. In the previous year, 1990, the Israeli government and Israeli Defense Forces, aware of Mengistu's worsening political situation, made covert plans to airlift the Beta Israel population in Ethiopia to Israel. This became the largest emigration of Beta Israel to date.

In 36 hours, non-stop flights of 34 Israeli aircraft, including IAF C-130s and El Al cargo planes, transported 14,500 Ethiopian Jews to Israel.
Operation Solomon airlifted twice as many Ethiopian Jews to Israel as Operation Moses and Operation Joshua combined. The operation set a world record for single-flight passenger load on May 24, 1991 when an El Al 747 carried 1,122 passengers to Israel (1,087 passengers were registered, but dozens of children hid in their mothers' robes). "Planners expected to fill the aircraft with 760 passengers. Because the passengers were so slight, many more were squeezed in. Two babies were born during the flight.
 
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Israel’s Racist Persecution Of African Immigrants

Israel’s Racist Persecution Of African Immigrants


Advise Show Media
Some people didn't understand why i was so bothered when Benjamin Netanyahu came to speak at in our congress. Watch this video and you will understand the commentary in that video. Africans are suffering severe racial persecution in Israel. I also understand why Netanyahu disrespects President Obama.
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<iframe frameborder="0" width="480" height="270" src="//www.dailymotion.com/embed/video/k18YoBD7Ofi8G1aC0Tn" allowfullscreen></iframe><br /><a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/video/k18YoBD7Ofi8G1aC0Tn" target="_blank">15</a> <i>by <a href="http://www.dailymotion.com/AdviseShow" target="_blank">AdviseShow</a></i>
 
Why Is Israel Kicking Out the Africans?

Why Is Israel Kicking Out the Africans?
Large numbers of Africans fleeing unstable governments, terrorism and poverty are flooding into Israel and some European nations, and there is one message for them: Go home.

472155066-ethiopian-jews-demonstrate-against-police-violence-and.jpg.CROP.rtstory-large.jpg

Advise Show Media
It amazes me that a country that knows racial discrimination would turn around and do the exact same to others. It's said that Israel is the land of the Jews. The Jewish faith comes from Judaism. Anyone can be a Jew it has no bearing on skin tone. Any bible scholars on the page? If you remember in the book of Acts Ethiopians were one of the first group of Gentiles to accept Christianity. So why the Klan style hate to your fellow brother in faith. I posted a video to my website highlighting the treatment of Ethiopian Jews in Israel. It's funny how nothing is said about this but if it was the other way around. Well we all know the narrative.



A few days into an educational trip to Israel in 1991 shortly after the mass airlift of Ethiopian Jews into the country, my jaw dropped when a Jewish official casually described the arrival of the Ethiopians as an opportunity to beef up Israel’s Olympic running team.

More than two decades later, and it appears that probably didn’t work out. Israel now seems more anxious to give its sizable black African migrant population the boot. At the moment, the focus is much less on settled-in Ethiopian Jews and more so on Sudanese, Eritrean and Ethiopian Christians fleeing war, persecution and poverty at home. And, naturally, if you’re a poor African migrant looking for work, you’re headed to Israel, a top 40 country in terms of gross domestic product and the closest, most powerful, democratic, free market economy you can find within regional distance.

But now, turn back: because if you’re a black undocumented migrant, Israel is giving you 30 days to get gone. In a bid to put a humane face on it, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is putting money where its racially charged mouth is. An estimated 45,000 Eritrean and Sudanese refugees not only get a free, no-return ticket back home (or to some “unnamed” African nation) but also get sent with $3,500 in their pocket.

That might not seem like such a bad deal, some might say. After all, what other country (including the United States) deports its undocumented migrants with game-show-like cash offers?

But throughout the Euro-influenced parts of the Mediterranean, there’s been a discomforting trend of countries like Israel, Italy, France, Spain and others taking extreme military-enhanced measures to keep the Africans out. Part of it (cutting European countries some slack) has to do with an uncontrolled tsunami wave of North African and sub-Saharan African migrants crossing dangerous Mediterranean waters to escape destabilization spreading throughout parts of Africa.

Libya, with its former despot Muammar Qaddafi deposed by a U.S.-led effort in 2011, is now a bubbling cesspool of factional violence. Terrorism is spreading into the continent, and civil wars remain unresolved in places like Sudan, Mali and elsewhere. Climate change and economic disruption are also spreading resources thin, prompting many Africans to look for lands of milk and honey farther north.

Gripped in a debilitating debt crisis of its own, Europe is just not having that. The European Union, also fearful that hard-to-detect Islamic State group and al-Qaida operatives will slip in, just asked the United Nations Security Council to authorize a major military-style campaign against seafaring migrant smugglers before they pick up refugees.

The situation in Israel also appears equally complicated and racially challenged. Plans to push African migrants out of the Holy Land had been stirring for some time as Israel built new fences and detention centers along its southern borders. Netanyahu’s government claims it’s all about keeping black migrants safe from deadly desert crossings. But the U.N. refugee agency pushed back on that, accusing Israel of “creat[ing] fear and chaos amongst asylum seekers” and dangerously teetering on the edge of an international refugee-treaty violation.
See Also

NYC Motorman Suspended for Breaking Rule to Get Medical Help for Trainee Who Collapsed: Report
Female Inmates Raped and Abused by Rikers Island Guards, Lawsuit Claims
Detroit Teacher Donates Kidney to 18-Year-Old Student
Captain America: Off-Duty Army Captain Pulls Man From Burning Car
Ga. School Nurse to 11-Year-Old Student: ‘I’m Going to F--k You Up’
New Details Emerge About Ben Affleck’s Slave-Owner Ancestor

No surprise, then, when Israel, probably fearing how anti-Africa it looked, later announced the deployment of three “mobile emergency clinics” to fight Ebola in West Africa.

Charges of racial discrimination are a heated and very complicated topic for Israel, especially when considering the Jewish state’s own origins as a destination point for European Jews escaping genocide after World War II. And critics are quick to point out hints of hypocrisy in the black-migrant deportation policy or the expectation that Israel should be the last place oppressing populations of color.

Recent #BlackLivesMatter-style protests organized by Ethiopians in Tel Aviv underscore an embarrassing undercurrent of discrimination in a society popularly viewed as Jewish but racially as majority white. And with that comes familiar white-people-prompted problems. Israeli Ethiopians face challenges similar to those of African Americans in the United States: from high unemployment to police brutality and rampant incarceration.

Some critics, like black British filmmaker Ishmahil Blagrove, charge that the Israeli prison system is 90 percent black. Others, like Forward’s Seth Frantzman, point out that Israeli Defense Forces military-prison populations are 40 percent Ethiopian, or “760 percent higher than their proportion in society.” Israel, always in a state of war, mandates compulsory military service from its citizens.

There’s been a troubled history of Israel’s policies toward African migrants, including the treatment of once wildly embraced Ethiopian Jews who arrived by Operation Solomon in the early ’90s fleeing anti-Jewish persecution. Worries mount for Israel as its Jewish majority sweats a fast-growing non-Jewish Arab population and the presence of nearly 100,000 non-Jewish African migrants challenging the stability of the country’s relatively tiny population of 9 million. At some point, Israel has to find a solution as it frets over nonstop national-security issues. But given its history, it should probably ease up on black migrants, who, ultimately, had little to do with that in the first place.

Charles D. Ellison is a veteran political strategist and a contributing editor at The Root. He is also Washington correspondent for the Philadelphia Tribune, chief political correspondent for Uptown magazine, Sunday Washington insider for WDAS-FM in Philadelphia and a panelist on MSNBC’s Hardball With Chris Matthews. Follow him on Twitter.
 
Why Is Israel Kicking Out the Africans?
Large numbers of Africans fleeing unstable governments, terrorism and poverty are flooding into Israel and some European nations, and there is one message for them: Go home.

472155066-ethiopian-jews-demonstrate-against-police-violence-and.jpg.CROP.rtstory-large.jpg

Advise Show Media
It amazes me that a country that knows racial discrimination would turn around and do the exact same to others. It's said that Israel is the land of the Jews. The Jewish faith comes from Judaism. Anyone can be a Jew it has no bearing on skin tone. Any bible scholars on the page? If you remember in the book of Acts Ethiopians were one of the first group of Gentiles to accept Christianity. So why the Klan style hate to your fellow brother in faith. I posted a video to my website highlighting the treatment of Ethiopian Jews in Israel. It's funny how nothing is said about this but if it was the other way around. Well we all know the narrative.



A few days into an educational trip to Israel in 1991 shortly after the mass airlift of Ethiopian Jews into the country, my jaw dropped when a Jewish official casually described the arrival of the Ethiopians as an opportunity to beef up Israel’s Olympic running team.

More than two decades later, and it appears that probably didn’t work out. Israel now seems more anxious to give its sizable black African migrant population the boot. At the moment, the focus is much less on settled-in Ethiopian Jews and more so on Sudanese, Eritrean and Ethiopian Christians fleeing war, persecution and poverty at home. And, naturally, if you’re a poor African migrant looking for work, you’re headed to Israel, a top 40 country in terms of gross domestic product and the closest, most powerful, democratic, free market economy you can find within regional distance.

But now, turn back: because if you’re a black undocumented migrant, Israel is giving you 30 days to get gone. In a bid to put a humane face on it, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government is putting money where its racially charged mouth is. An estimated 45,000 Eritrean and Sudanese refugees not only get a free, no-return ticket back home (or to some “unnamed” African nation) but also get sent with $3,500 in their pocket.

That might not seem like such a bad deal, some might say. After all, what other country (including the United States) deports its undocumented migrants with game-show-like cash offers?

But throughout the Euro-influenced parts of the Mediterranean, there’s been a discomforting trend of countries like Israel, Italy, France, Spain and others taking extreme military-enhanced measures to keep the Africans out. Part of it (cutting European countries some slack) has to do with an uncontrolled tsunami wave of North African and sub-Saharan African migrants crossing dangerous Mediterranean waters to escape destabilization spreading throughout parts of Africa.

Libya, with its former despot Muammar Qaddafi deposed by a U.S.-led effort in 2011, is now a bubbling cesspool of factional violence. Terrorism is spreading into the continent, and civil wars remain unresolved in places like Sudan, Mali and elsewhere. Climate change and economic disruption are also spreading resources thin, prompting many Africans to look for lands of milk and honey farther north.

Gripped in a debilitating debt crisis of its own, Europe is just not having that. The European Union, also fearful that hard-to-detect Islamic State group and al-Qaida operatives will slip in, just asked the United Nations Security Council to authorize a major military-style campaign against seafaring migrant smugglers before they pick up refugees.

The situation in Israel also appears equally complicated and racially challenged. Plans to push African migrants out of the Holy Land had been stirring for some time as Israel built new fences and detention centers along its southern borders. Netanyahu’s government claims it’s all about keeping black migrants safe from deadly desert crossings. But the U.N. refugee agency pushed back on that, accusing Israel of “creat[ing] fear and chaos amongst asylum seekers” and dangerously teetering on the edge of an international refugee-treaty violation.
See Also

NYC Motorman Suspended for Breaking Rule to Get Medical Help for Trainee Who Collapsed: Report
Female Inmates Raped and Abused by Rikers Island Guards, Lawsuit Claims
Detroit Teacher Donates Kidney to 18-Year-Old Student
Captain America: Off-Duty Army Captain Pulls Man From Burning Car
Ga. School Nurse to 11-Year-Old Student: ‘I’m Going to F--k You Up’
New Details Emerge About Ben Affleck’s Slave-Owner Ancestor

No surprise, then, when Israel, probably fearing how anti-Africa it looked, later announced the deployment of three “mobile emergency clinics” to fight Ebola in West Africa.

Charges of racial discrimination are a heated and very complicated topic for Israel, especially when considering the Jewish state’s own origins as a destination point for European Jews escaping genocide after World War II. And critics are quick to point out hints of hypocrisy in the black-migrant deportation policy or the expectation that Israel should be the last place oppressing populations of color.

Recent #BlackLivesMatter-style protests organized by Ethiopians in Tel Aviv underscore an embarrassing undercurrent of discrimination in a society popularly viewed as Jewish but racially as majority white. And with that comes familiar white-people-prompted problems. Israeli Ethiopians face challenges similar to those of African Americans in the United States: from high unemployment to police brutality and rampant incarceration.

Some critics, like black British filmmaker Ishmahil Blagrove, charge that the Israeli prison system is 90 percent black. Others, like Forward’s Seth Frantzman, point out that Israeli Defense Forces military-prison populations are 40 percent Ethiopian, or “760 percent higher than their proportion in society.” Israel, always in a state of war, mandates compulsory military service from its citizens.

There’s been a troubled history of Israel’s policies toward African migrants, including the treatment of once wildly embraced Ethiopian Jews who arrived by Operation Solomon in the early ’90s fleeing anti-Jewish persecution. Worries mount for Israel as its Jewish majority sweats a fast-growing non-Jewish Arab population and the presence of nearly 100,000 non-Jewish African migrants challenging the stability of the country’s relatively tiny population of 9 million. At some point, Israel has to find a solution as it frets over nonstop national-security issues. But given its history, it should probably ease up on black migrants, who, ultimately, had little to do with that in the first place.

Charles D. Ellison is a veteran political strategist and a contributing editor at The Root. He is also Washington correspondent for the Philadelphia Tribune, chief political correspondent for Uptown magazine, Sunday Washington insider for WDAS-FM in Philadelphia and a panelist on MSNBC’s Hardball With Chris Matthews. Follow him on Twitter.
 
Do black lives matter in Israel?


Ethiopian Jews are protesting in Israel over alleged police brutality and racism
May 23, 2015 12:04PM ET

Citizens of Ethiopian descent have taken to the streets of Israel in recent weeks to protest alleged police brutality and widespread racism.

The Ethiopian Jewish community, which comprises 2 percent of the Israeli population, has long complained of police criminalizing young black men, but the issue was amplified in April after a video of officers violently beating an Ethiopian-Israeli soldier went viral.

The protesters – some of which have clashed with police – say black lives don’t matter in Israel, and are seeking equal treatment under the law.

So what’s life like for Ethiopian Jews living in Israel? AJ+’s Dena Takruri takes a look.

<iframe width="821" height="491" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/qS9zdTDB90M" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Israel is a complete apartheid state. The U.S. corporate media is hiding this reality from the American 'sheeple'

 
Israel begins telling African migrants to leave


BBIGp4a.img

© Provided by AFP African migrants demonstrate on January 22, 2018 in Herzliya against Israel's policy to forcibly
deport African refugees and asylum seekers


Israel began warning thousands of African migrants Sunday that they must leave by the end of March, officials said, under a plan that could see them jailed if they refuse.

On January 3, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced implementation of a plan to deport about 38,000 migrants who had entered the country illegally, mainly Eritreans and Sudanese.

The controversial plan gives them until the end of next month to leave voluntarily or face jail and eventual expulsion.

Immigration authority spokeswoman Sabine Haddad told AFP that officials began issuing migrants letters on Sunday advising them that they had 60 days in which to leave the country voluntarily.


For now, the notices are being given only to men without families, officials said.

Israeli newspaper Haaretz said "anyone recognised as a victim of slavery or human trafficking, and those who had requested asylum by the end of 2017 but haven't gotten a response" would also be exempt for now.

It added that this left the number subject to near-term deportation at "between 15,000 and 20,000 people".

The authority is offering those who agree to leave a grant of $3,500, a flight ticket and help with obtaining travel documents.

Should they not leave by the deadline, the grant would be reduced and "enforcement measures" would be taken against them and anyone employing them, the authority says.

Israel refers to the tens of thousands of African migrants who entered the country illegally from neighbouring Egypt as "infiltrators".

Israeli officials tacitly recognize that it is too dangerous to return Sudanese and Eritreans to their troubled homelands, but local media say the notices do not specify where departing migrants would be sent.

Aid workers and media have named Uganda and Rwanda, although both countries deny being a destination for migrants being expelled involuntarily.

Public opposition to the plan has been slow to build, but some Israeli airline pilots have reportedly said they will not fly forced deportees.

Academics have published a petition and Israeli Holocaust survivors wrote an open letter to Netanyahu last month pleading with him to reconsider.

The UN refugee agency has called on Israel to scrap the plan, calling it incoherent and unsafe.

A 2016 UN commission of inquiry into Eritrea's regime found "widespread and systematic" crimes against humanity, and said an estimated 5,000 people flee the country each month.

The International Criminal Court has indicted Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide linked to his regime's counter-insurgency tactics in the Darfur conflict.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/worl...o-leave/ar-BBIGwtY?li=BBmkt5R&ocid=spartanntp


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What if there was a mass movement to send all whites back to the caves of Europe. We only call them devils because what ever controls them is unnatural. They accept us in America when we become totally controlled by what ever it is that controls them. The so called Jews are there in so called Israel because they help America investigate anything that blacks can find out about their life before whites were grafted from us.
I know Israel and other white power countries have some serious plans going on about us. We all should be using any money we get to build a base of black power. Here in America a cosmic clearance is the highest security clearance you can have. Anyone with that clearance must see blacks in a total different way than the masses see us. Omni cosmics deal with powers beyond the subconscious mind. The mind can be erased and reprogrammed. These devils have already done a hell of job on us. Shit seems calm right now. But watch all hell break lose if any chance of blacks separating. We should at least own and control Alabama which is my goal in life. In the past we have helped whites to conquer the world without getting the world for our self. There will never be any real peace of real humanity until we get the world back from these devils.
 
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