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How One Evacuee From Israel’s North Has Found Normalcy During War — With the Help of Her Temporary Hotel Home
Bringing a sense of normalcy during times of war can be tough, particularly for the more than 100,000 evacuees from Israel’s north and south living in hotels since the outbreak of war with Hamas in October. Shula Giladi, 70, from Moshav Shtula in northern Israel, is one of those finding light in these dark times.
Forced from her home on the Lebanese border due to the intense security risk from Hezbollah rocket fire, Giladi and members of her community have been living at the Royal Beach Hotel in Tel Aviv, a property of the Israeli hotel chain Isrotel, which has hosted thousands of evacuees in their properties across the country.
Giladi told The Algemeiner that prior to the war, which erupted with Hamas’ Oct. 7 cross-border raid into southern Israel from Gaza, she was running a successful culinary business in her hometown called Shula Mastula, catering traditional kosher Kurdish food to visitors from Israel and abroad. She served her food fresh from her garden, while singing traditional songs and telling stories about her life. “I love my kitchen; I love people — I know how to interact with them,” she said, describing her passion for the business.
However, when the war broke out, Giladi was forced to abandon both her home of the last 55 years and her business, bringing her to Tel Aviv where she has been living ever since. This was of course not easy, she said, remarking that “three months away from home is not simple.”
Conflict for Giladi, though, was not new, as she had been living for decades near the contentious Israel-Lebanon border, where the presence of soldiers and the potential for war was the norm. “Forever our view was the soldiers. The soldiers are a part of life,” she said.
Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed terror group that wields significant influence in Lebanon, has intensified along the border since the eruption of conflict in Hamas-ruled Gaza, forcing Israelis to leave their homes under threat of rocket fire.
As the weeks passed since evacuating, Giladi explained, “I had to return to myself and a feeling of home. It was hard to just think about the war.” To make that a reality, the staff at the Royal Beach allowed her to set up a pop-up shop, selling the food she had been making for so many years at her home in Shtula.
The current arrangement allows Giladi to cook dishes from the hotel’s kitchen such as kubeh soup, stuffed grape leaves, beef meatballs, special pickles, among others to those eager to dine or bring home food for the weekend. Open on Thursdays from 11 am to 3 pm and Fridays from 9 am to 1 pm, she charges 25-30 NIS (about $6.50-$8.00) per dish, giving her the ability to earn a living even though her business cannot currently operate.
“I want to thank Isrotel and the hotel for giving me the ability to earn … All they can do to help they have done,” she said. “I feel it and all the other evacuees feel it … We really feel at home.”
According to the hotel’s head chef, Eitan Mizrachi, the shop has been a huge hit. “The pilot sold out every dish. People came and bought and said how good and special the food was,” he said. “It’s very tasty — if it wasn’t it would [still] be there. The food is also so pretty.”
Giladi is grateful to those whom come. “Which country gives such a big hug to its citizens?” she said. “I do not have any words.”
Still, Giladi and the members of her community are ready to return home. “My whole life is there,” she said. “Everyone is ready and waiting.”
The post How One Evacuee From Israel’s North Has Found Normalcy During War — With the Help of Her Temporary Hotel Home first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Candace Owens Barred From New Zealand After Facing Similar Ban From Australia for Comments on Jews, Holocaust
Right-wing American political commentator and YouTube content creator Candace Owens has been denied a visa to enter New Zealand because she was banned from the nearby country Australia, immigration officials reportedly said on Thursday.
Owens was scheduled to embark on her first speaking tour across Australia and New Zealand in February and March of next year. The tour includes a stop in Auckland, New Zealand, on Feb. 28 and tickets remain on sale online.
Australia rejected her request for a visa last month. Australian Immigration Minister Tony Burke said the decision was made because of Owens’s past remarks, including her apparent denial that Nazis forcibly did medical experiments on Jews in concentration camps during World War II.
“From downplaying the impact of the Holocaust with comments about [Nazi doctor and war criminal Josef] Mengele through to claims that Muslims started slavery, Candace Owens has the capacity to incite discord in almost every direction,” Burke said at the time. “Australia’s national interest is best served when Candace Owens is somewhere else.
Jock Gilray, a spokesperson for New Zealand’s immigration agency, said on Thursday that Owens was refused an entertainer’s work permit for New Zealand because visas legally cannot be granted to someone who have been banned from another country, The Associated Press reported on Thursday. New Zealand officials did not refer to Owens’s past comments when announcing the denial of her visa.
Owens and the Australia-based promoter behind her speaking tour, Rocksman, have yet to comment on news regarding the ban from New Zealand but said in October that they will file a legal appeal to a federal judge in response to the ban from Australia. Owens commented on Burke’s decision to deny her a visa for Australia and blamed it partially on the alleged influence of the global “Zionist media empire.”
Owens, who has over 3 million subscribers on YouTube and hosts the podcast titled “Candace,” has promoted conspiracy theories and made numerous antisemitic comments about Israel, Jews, Zionists, and the Holocaust. She has also made controversial comments against Black Lives Matter, feminism, vaccines, and immigration.
The post Candace Owens Barred From New Zealand After Facing Similar Ban From Australia for Comments on Jews, Holocaust first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Israeli Bus Attacked in West Bank, At Least Eight Injured
A Palestinian opened fire on a Tel Aviv-bound Israeli bus near the Jewish settlement of Ariel in the West Bank on Friday, wounding at least eight people before he was killed by Israeli troops, the Israeli military said.
Israel‘s MDA medical service said four people suffered gunshot wounds, with three in a serious condition, and four others were hurt by flying glass.
The Palestinian Health Ministry identified the shooter as a 46-year-old local man. Hamas’s armed wing, the al-Qassam Brigades, said he belonged to the terrorist group.
Violence has surged across the West Bank since the start of the Hamas-Israel war in Gaza in October last year.
In the first six months of 2024, the West Bank experienced more than 500 Arab terrorist attacks each month on average, according to data made public by Hatzalah Judea and Samaria (Rescuers Without Borders).
Dozens of Israelis have been killed in Palestinian street attacks, Israeli authorities say, while hundreds of Palestinians — including armed fighters, stone-throwing youths, and civilian bystanders — have died in clashes with Israeli security forces.
The post Israeli Bus Attacked in West Bank, At Least Eight Injured first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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The Winds Are Blowing Agains the Jewish People; But the Response to Chaos and Violent Protests Could Lead to a Reversal
People are asking why we are now experiencing such a tsunami of hatred — a kind of Ma Nishtana moment. There are very different factors that have come together to create a perfect storm of conflicting world and ethical values. Old certainties have died, and new ones are flourishing, and not always for the best. One can look at this from different perspectives — the historical, the social, the religious, and the long-term instability of societies and governments.
For thousands of years, the fate and role of societies have been determined by the people who exercised power and what religion or gods they adhered to. Power rose or fell violently and unpredictably. Authorities cared little for human life. Religions were supposed to take care of morality. Winners determined the fate of humans — who was accepted and who was not, or merely tolerated. Every country was guilty at some stage of abuse, and benefited from servitude. This does not mean one cannot try to make things better.
Throughout history, rival religions competed for supremacy and Jews were always caught in the middle. Judaism found itself attacked both by religions and by secular ideologies. And many Jews themselves abandoned their religion and culture ,and joined the different and conflicting ideologies and fought for recognition and rights for everyone. We expected to be hated by the European devils of Stalin and Hitler. But we never believed we would be hated by so many Americans. By Harvards and Columbias.
The First and the Second Great Wars were watersheds. They created new global rivalries and exacerbated cultural opposites. The dream that a United Nations could bring peace has been shattered by its politics. The dove of peace is crippled, and the lion will not lie down with the lamb. As many societies have advanced technologically, and billions were raised out of poverty and servitude, people began to talk about rights instead of obligations. And different groups who felt poorly treated, began to demand respect and amelioration.
Unfortunately, like all such movements, they developed into orthodoxies that allowed for no dissent or criticism. The current curse in the West is wokeism. And in the east, it is the curse of totalitarianism.
Another important factor in a changing world is migration. In the past, people fled prejudice, wars, and oppression. Many wanted a freer life and opportunities. And they integrated into the host societies. Ease of travel and access have now meant that larger numbers are fleeing, bringing with them values directly in conflict with host societies. The Western world is being and will continue to be challenged by massive immigration because it needs more workers to fill the gaps left by declining birthrates. In itself this is not a problem. But by refusing to deal with the issue of integration, by burying heads in sands, and now by fearing to act to remove those inciting hatred, it is only stoking up more chaos for the future. In many places, the character of nations has already begun to change.
Multiculturalism, once seen as an ideal, is now becoming a problem. It has led to a choice, between cultural capitulation and an alliance of false brothers, religious fundamentalists allied with left-wing progressives to gain power despite opposing values. One day, they may overturn states from within.
Some will argue that Israel is the cause of world dysfunction. Strange that such a small people are thought to have such influence. Others argue that Israel was a mistake, and all other states that emerged from the ashes of the Ottoman Empire are legitimate. And they argue that Israel has no right to defend itself. All these are both nonsensical and evidence of prejudice. And they simply reiterate what the Bible foretold, that we are people who are alone, not appreciated by other nations (Numbers 23:9).
If the world is bent on tearing itself apart, we can only look on in despair for them. And do our best to ensure that we are well protected.
All is not lost. There are signs of a reaction. The winds that bring storms can also revive and refresh.
Florence, Italy, in the 15th century was the pinnacle of wealth, culture, and influence. Its banking families controlled the Western world. The Franciscan monk Savonarola (1452-1498) attacked the power and the wealth of the wealthy rulers. But he went too far in destroying great art, music, and what he saw as luxury. Instead, he enforced dull pious conformity. For a while, he was successful. But people soon tired of it, and in the end, he was burnt as a heretic. After the French Revolution came the Reign of Terror. Let us hope it won’t happen now.
The author is a writer and rabbi, based in New York.
The post The Winds Are Blowing Agains the Jewish People; But the Response to Chaos and Violent Protests Could Lead to a Reversal first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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