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jueves, 22 de agosto de 2013

¡Quiere usted ser hebreo?

 Pues olvídese de procesos de estudio, de clases de aprendizaje, de conversiones largas y meticulosas.
 Es más simple y rápido que eso. Usted se declara Sionista, ofende en cualquier modo  a uno o varios musulmanes , de cierta relevancia por supuesto, y le encuentran a usted -veloces- padres , abuelos, tíos y hermanos JUDÍOS  que lucharon  siempre por el Sionismo.
   ¿Facil y veloz, no es así?


Gamal Nasser, comentador de Al-Jazeera:
  "La madre de al-Sissi se llama Mulaïka Titani y su hermano (de ella) fué miembro de la Naganah ,organización judía..." Sigue diciendo el comentador de Al-Jazeera :" Por ello, vemos ahora que este hombre , según todas las normas establecidas , está poniendo en marcha un plan sionista para dividir a Egipto."
  
  Son ridículos los islamistas. Tal vez si se dedicasen a hacer el payaso llegarían a ser simpáticos, tal vez. 

                    Esther T.
                    Le Groupe

Biography


Ze'ev (Vladimir) Jabotinsky was born on October 17, 1880 in Odessa, Russia. At age 18, he left for Italy and Switzerland to study law, where he also served as a correspondent for several well-known Russian newspapers. His dispatches and articles were widely read, bringing him recognition as one of the most brilliant Russian journalists. Jabotinsky signed each dispatch and article with his literary pseudonym Altalena.
The horrors of the1903 pogrom against the Jews of Kishinev had the profound effect of spurring Jabotinsky's Zionist pursuits. He became a pivotal force in organizing self-defense units and fighting for Jewish minority rights in Russia. Jabotinsky was elected as a delegate to the 6th Zionist Congress, the last in which Theodor Herzl participated. During this period, Jabotinsky championed the spread of Hebrew language and culture throughout Russia, as well as the establishment of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Following the outbreak of World War I in 1914, he left for the front as a newspaper correspondent. While in Alexandria, his meeting with Joseph Trumpeldor sparked the beginning of his unflagging efforts to establish a Jewish Legion. Jabotinsky was singularly intent upon this goal, and refused to divert the plan by creating an auxiliary unit instead. Following diligent endeavors in London, final confirmation was received in August 1917 to create the first Jewish Legion. Jabotinsky also served in the British army as a lieutenant, seeing duty in the assault on the Jordan River crossings in the campaign to free Eretz Israel (Palestine) from Turkish rule. During Passover, 1920, Jabotinsky headed the Hagana in Jerusalem against Arab rioters, and was condemned by the British Mandatory Government to 15 years hard labor. Following a public outcry against the verdict, he received amnesty and was released from Acre prison.
From 1921, Jabotinsky served as a member of the Zionist Executive and became one of the founders of "Keren Hayesod." Following a series of policy disagreements on the direction of the Zionist Movement, however, he seceded. In 1925, Jabotinsky established the Union of Zionists-Revisionists (Hatzohar), which called for the immediate establishment of a Jewish State.
In 1923, the youth movement Betar (Brith Joseph Trumpeldor) was created. The new youth movement, with Jabotinsky at its head, imbued its members with a military and nationalistic spirit. During the years 1928-1929, he resided in Palestine and edited the Hebrew daily "Doar Hayom," while undertaking increased political activity. When Jabotinsky left Eretz Yisrael (Palestine) on a lecture tour in 1929, the British administration denied him re-entry into the country. From that point until his death in 1940, Jabotinsky resided in the Diaspora.
In 1935, after the Zionist Executive rejected his political program and refused to clearly define the aim of Zionism as "the establishment of a Jewish state," Jabotinsky resigned from the Zionist Movement. He later founded the New Zionist Organization (N.Z.O), which purported independent political activity for free immigration and the establishment of a Jewish State.
In 1937, the Irgun Tzvai Leumi (I.Z.L) became the military arm of the Jabotinsky movement, with him as its commander. The three entities headed by Jabotinsky, the New Zionist Organization (N.Z.O), the Betar youth movement and the Irgun Tzvai Leumi (I.Z.L), were the three operative extensions of the Jabotinsky movement. The New Zionist Organization served as the political arm, maintaining contacts with governments and other political bodies; Betar educated Diaspora youth for the liberation and building of Eretz Israel; and the Irgun Tzvai Leumi (I.Z.L) was the military arm fighting the enemies of Zionism. These three entities synchronized their efforts in organizing the Af Al Pi illegal immigration. This dramatic, intricate rescue effort involved over 30 ships setting sail from European ports to bring tens of thousands of illegal immigrants to Eretz Israel.
Throughout this period of intense political activity, Jabotinsky continued to write prolific poetry, novels, short stories and articles on politics, social and economic problems. Among his works, The Jewish Legion, Prelude to Delilah (Samson) and The Five served as particularly profound inspirations for Jews of the Diaspora.
Jabotinsky was fluent in many languages and translated some of world literature's best-known classics into Hebrew.
During 1939-1940, Jabotinsky was active in Britain and the United States in endeavoring to establish a Jewish army to fight alongside the Allies against Nazi Germany.
On August 4, 1940, while visiting the Betar camp in New York, Ze'ev Jabotinsky suffered a massive, fatal heart attack. His will stipulated the request to be buried in Eretz Israel, only at the express order of the Hebrew Government of the future Jewish State. His last will and testament was indeed fulfilled by Levi Eshkol, Israel's third Prime Minister: in 1964, Jabotinsky's remains and those of his wife Jeanne were re-interred on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem.
Ze'ev Jabotinsky will be inscribed in the annals of the history of the Jewish People as a distinguished politician, journalist and philosopher; a visionary and inspirational leader who fought unceasingly and passionately for the establishment of the State of Israel and the return of the Jewish People.






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