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mitain 03-01-2007 11:18 PM

ur opinion is needed
 
check out this video , its was made by a lebanese jews who emigrated during the lebanese civil war , after u see the video , tell me ur opinion about it and ur opinion about the return of emigrated jews to lebanon , are u with or against and why ....


here it is the link http://thejewsoflebanon.org/me/

Ghnadine 03-01-2007 11:54 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Some usefull info.

"Lebanon’s Jewish population actually rose after the creation of Israel in 1948"

Yeh when Great Britain,France decided to divide the middle East.


"This year, Beydoun announced that he will start an NGO who’s mission will be to revive Lebanese Jewish life in Lebanon itself"

Thats what left ,let us revive the Lebanese life first.

Thanks for the article.

mitain 03-02-2007 03:11 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ghnadine
Some usefull info.

"Lebanon’s Jewish population actually rose after the creation of Israel in 1948"

Yeh when Great Britain,France decided to divide the middle East.


"This year, Beydoun announced that he will start an NGO who’s mission will be to revive Lebanese Jewish life in Lebanon itself"

Thats what left ,let us revive the Lebanese life first.

Thanks for the article.

im absolutly with you, ur 100% right :) ,so wat about the other members cmon guys i need ur opinion :D

JouJoulika 03-02-2007 04:35 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
i'm totally against the idea because they will not have a Lebanese post but pro-isrelis and israeli massacres in Palestine ... and besides HA will not let them and even if he didn't it's a very very difficult task

mitain 03-02-2007 04:51 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
i'm totally against the idea because they will not have a Lebanese post but pro-isrelis and israeli massacres in Palestine ... and besides HA will not let them and even if he didn't it's a very very difficult task

yes man ur right , cause entimai2on la7 ykoun la israel not for lebanon, and iza al lebanese 3am yet3amalou ma3 israil , so chou michen al yahoud , of course la betkoun masala7et isra2il , hiyai masal7eton first.

J()e 03-02-2007 06:37 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
yes why not but in one condition:they should be loyal to lebanon and not 2 any country to any other country

mitain 03-02-2007 09:30 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lf rabieh
yes why not but in one condition:they should be loyal to lebanon and not 2 any country to any other country

lol :D and u think they will be loyal to lebanon ,they will fight their religion in favor of lebanon :D

J()e 03-02-2007 10:02 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Man man ... im not defending the jews but there r jews who cherako bi hayda el taba3 iran el nsite choiu esma honoloulou chi heik.... man the jews of isreal r caled sahyouniye,,so plz dont say that... fi u r a sunni will u fight for ur religion and saudi arabia against leb,and a shiite boy will he be loyal to iran and not for his country as for me im a maronite= catholics (te2riban)akide akide manne more loyal to vatican as for leb !!

mitain 03-02-2007 10:11 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lf rabieh
Man man ... im not defending the jews but there r jews who cherako bi hayda el taba3 iran el nsite choiu esma honoloulou chi heik.... man the jews of isreal r caled sahyouniye,,so plz dont say that... fi u r a sunni will u fight for ur religion and saudi arabia against leb,and a shiite boy will he be loyal to iran and not for his country as for me im a maronite= catholics (te2riban)akide akide manne more loyal to vatican as for leb !!

no man , i wont fight to saudi arabia , mayeb i respect saudi arabia ,but to fight against leb i dont think so , cause my cowntry and my religion are in the same level.
:leb:and my religion is with my holy book . not with location :)

lebanese_a 03-02-2007 10:24 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
(***) some jews participated in the first Lebanese-Israely war in 48 and they fought with the Lebanese army like any other citizen.

J()e 03-02-2007 10:29 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
:clap::clap::clap::clap::clap: man u made my day with ur last reply mitain:clap::clap::clap::clap::clap:

mitain 03-02-2007 10:49 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lebanese_a
Bunch of ignorant racists! go read some history some jews participated in the first Lebanese-Israely war in 48 and they fought with the Lebanese army like any other citizen.

are u talking to us , plz man respect ur self , and u go and read and educate urself before posting shit comments , lol :D , jew fighted with lebanese army , lol :D how they fighted their israel , i dont think so ,maybe who told u was dizzy or somthing :D

J()e 03-03-2007 10:15 AM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
dear mitain..as i told u that not all the jews byentemo la isreal...fi jews cherako ma3 iran bi e5er chi mn chi 4 month and yes u seemed very racist when u say that u hate the jews and no2ta 3al sater.as said lebanese_e there is lebanese jews whou fought against isreal in 1948 go back to old videos and reports and u will see ;)

mitain 03-03-2007 10:36 AM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lf rabieh
dear mitain..as i told u that not all the jews byentemo la isreal...fi jews cherako ma3 iran bi e5er chi mn chi 4 month and yes u seemed very racist when u say that u hate the jews and no2ta 3al sater.as said lebanese_e there is lebanese jews whou fought against isreal in 1948 go back to old videos and reports and u will see ;)

where did i say i hated jew lol :D hehehe :crazy: , man i said give me ur opinion lol :D , man read the thread before u talk , hehe :D

lebanese_a 03-03-2007 12:11 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
War-shattered place of worship once catered to Lebanon’s 14,000 Jews, but now only a handful remain

by Dima Karam

Special to The Daily Star (Beirut) October 2003


You won’t notice it if you don’t look carefully. But it’s there, standing amid the revamped streets and empty plots of Beirut’s Central District (BCD), alternatively referred to as Downtown or Solidere (after the company in charge of restoration).

The Maghen Abraham Synagogue lies on the main Wadi Abu Jmil Street, a crumbling mystifying witness to a past era when Lebanon’s confessional mosaic seemed to offer the promise of a unique amalgamation of ethnic richness and tolerance. Visible from the highway crossing from Minet al-Hosn to Bab Idriss, it is one of the few remaining unrenovated buildings in the area testifying to the ravages of the Beirut’s civil war past. Above it the Grand Serail, the prime minister’s headquarters, stands tall in its restored glory.

What was a place of worship for the once 14,000-strong Jewish-Lebanese community is now seriously damaged, the only structure still standing being its fragile outer facade. The site looks like a scene from Downtown Beirut in the early 90s, when devastation, neglect and overgrown vegetation were choking the streets. The cream-colored stucco synagogue’s wooden roof is mostly destroyed; any inscription in Hebrew has been painstakingly chiseled off or erased.

What points out the building’s religious allegiance are two remaining stars of David painted in gold on each side of the central columns. The interior of the synagogue closely resembles a church’s structure; a large prayer hall flanked by two arched corridors faces the central holy arch, or Heykal, while stairs at each side lead to a large balcony overlooking the prayer hall. Beautiful turquoise paint remaining on the wall exposes the Mediterranean character of Maghen Abraham.

The synagogue’s land is owned by the Lebanese Jewish Community Council, according to Solidere’s press office. Many Lebanese Jews who still remain in Lebanon don’t like to talk about their community or past, but a spokesperson for the expatriate Jewish-Lebanese group in Paris, Juifs du Liban, (Jews of Lebanon) shed some light on the temple’s history in an e-mail interview.

“The synagogue was built in 1925 thanks to the contributions of a Sasson family member who named the synagogue after his father,” the group explained, adding that Maghen Abraham translates as Abraham’s shield.

“The head of the Jewish community then, Joseph Farhi, financed its interior furnishings, (but) in 1976 the torahs present in the synagogue were transferred to Geneva and entrusted to renowned Jewish-Lebanese banker Edmond Safra, who preserved them in his bank’s coffers. Most of them have since been relocated to Sephardic synagogues in Israel,” Juifs du Liban explained.

The reality of what exactly happened to the synagogue during the civil war is more complex than one might expect. Contrary to the prevailing view that anti-Semitism was the only driving force behind the migration of Arab Jews from their Arab lands, what happened at the Maghen Abraham synagogue lends some support to a view held by some pundits that Israelis had a direct hand in wanting to “facilitate” Jewish-Arab migration to Israel by terrorizing the communities into fleeing their homes.

An article published in the New York Times in 1982 relates how shortly after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in that year, an Israeli shell targeted the Maghen Abraham synagogue, blowing a hole in its roof while some 60 Jewish and Muslim refugees were sleeping there.

The assault came after Israeli artillery had fired from East Beirut and gunboats cruising offshore had been persistently pounding Wadi Abu Jmil, a district well known for being a Jewish quarter, said neighborhood residents.

At the same time, in July 1982, an article in the Israeli newspaper, Yediot Ahronot, said that representatives of the World Zionist Organization had been unable to convince the Jews of West Beirut to emigrate to Israel.

“‘Why should we leave?’ they asked. ‘Here are our homes and our friends,’” said one Lebanese Jew quoted in the report.

Others argue, however, that a heavy PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) presence in Wadi Abu Jmil was the reason for Israeli bombardment. While exact details may never become clear, either way the synagogue suffered at different times throughout the Lebanese civil war, as did many other religious temples of all confessions located in Downtown Beirut. Unlike many of these, Maghen Abraham was never totally destroyed.

Lebanese Jews historically have been an integral part of the Lebanese fabric of confessional communities. Judaism is one of the 18 officially recognized confessions. Lebanese Jews enjoyed the same rights and privileges as other minorities, sharing a minority seat in the Parliament, serving in the army, some even fighting in the 1948 first Arab-Israeli war. Lebanon, argues Kirsten Schulze in her book The Jews of Lebanon: Between Coexistence and Conflict, compared to other Arab states had a more tolerant and liberal attitude toward its own Jews and toward Jewish refugees seeking asylum in Beirut.

Lebanon was the only Arab country in which the number of Jews grew after the establishment of the state of Israel and the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948, with the influx of Syrian and Iraqi Jews growing to number some 14,000. But intensification of the Arab-Israeli conflict, especially after 1967, helped politicize attitudes to Jews, who became increasingly associated with the policies of Israel. This led to an overall decline in the community, many of whom chose to go to Europe and the Americas rather than to Israel.

The civil war and the Israeli invasion escalated this emigration until almost no Jews were left. Today there are about 100 practicing Lebanese Jews remaining in the country.

One middle-aged Lebanese-Jewish woman, still living in Wadi Abu Jmil and known by everyone in the neighborhood, was happy to recall the pre-war days and the synagogue during an interview at her home.

“I was not a very practicing person, but I used to go with my mother and aunts to weddings and celebrations at the synagogue, it was one of the most beautiful ones in the Middle East,” Layla (not her real name) says. Pointing at her living room she continues: “And what was special about it was the chandelier, it was as big as this room and laden with gold.”

“Layla” lives off money her brothers in France send her and her pension. She says she has no contact with the few remaining members of the Jewish community in Lebanon and lives in “isolation.”

But what is to become of the Maghen Abraham synagogue? Juifs du Liban explains that one Jewish-Lebanese family, who did not wish to be identified, is organizing the synagogue’s restoration and has already drawn up plans for its rebuilding, but the necessary funds from different donors have yet to be raised. The synagogue falls inside the reconstruction perimeter of the BCD, so by law the corresponding religious community must assume responsibility for restoration, preserving the original architectural character.

Solidere has granted a delay for the Jewish community to restore the synagogue due to the small number of Jews still living in Lebanon. According to the family cited by Juifs du Liban, Lebanese authorities have been in contact with them to restore the synagogue, but plans are uncertain.

mitain 03-03-2007 01:37 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lebanese_a
War-shattered place of worship once catered to Lebanon’s 14,000 Jews, but now only a handful remain

by Dima Karam

Special to The Daily Star (Beirut) October 2003


You won’t notice it if you don’t look carefully. But it’s there, standing amid the revamped streets and empty plots of Beirut’s Central District (BCD), alternatively referred to as Downtown or Solidere (after the company in charge of restoration).

The Maghen Abraham Synagogue lies on the main Wadi Abu Jmil Street, a crumbling mystifying witness to a past era when Lebanon’s confessional mosaic seemed to offer the promise of a unique amalgamation of ethnic richness and tolerance. Visible from the highway crossing from Minet al-Hosn to Bab Idriss, it is one of the few remaining unrenovated buildings in the area testifying to the ravages of the Beirut’s civil war past. Above it the Grand Serail, the prime minister’s headquarters, stands tall in its restored glory.

What was a place of worship for the once 14,000-strong Jewish-Lebanese community is now seriously damaged, the only structure still standing being its fragile outer facade. The site looks like a scene from Downtown Beirut in the early 90s, when devastation, neglect and overgrown vegetation were choking the streets. The cream-colored stucco synagogue’s wooden roof is mostly destroyed; any inscription in Hebrew has been painstakingly chiseled off or erased.

What points out the building’s religious allegiance are two remaining stars of David painted in gold on each side of the central columns. The interior of the synagogue closely resembles a church’s structure; a large prayer hall flanked by two arched corridors faces the central holy arch, or Heykal, while stairs at each side lead to a large balcony overlooking the prayer hall. Beautiful turquoise paint remaining on the wall exposes the Mediterranean character of Maghen Abraham.

The synagogue’s land is owned by the Lebanese Jewish Community Council, according to Solidere’s press office. Many Lebanese Jews who still remain in Lebanon don’t like to talk about their community or past, but a spokesperson for the expatriate Jewish-Lebanese group in Paris, Juifs du Liban, (Jews of Lebanon) shed some light on the temple’s history in an e-mail interview.

“The synagogue was built in 1925 thanks to the contributions of a Sasson family member who named the synagogue after his father,” the group explained, adding that Maghen Abraham translates as Abraham’s shield.

“The head of the Jewish community then, Joseph Farhi, financed its interior furnishings, (but) in 1976 the torahs present in the synagogue were transferred to Geneva and entrusted to renowned Jewish-Lebanese banker Edmond Safra, who preserved them in his bank’s coffers. Most of them have since been relocated to Sephardic synagogues in Israel,” Juifs du Liban explained.

The reality of what exactly happened to the synagogue during the civil war is more complex than one might expect. Contrary to the prevailing view that anti-Semitism was the only driving force behind the migration of Arab Jews from their Arab lands, what happened at the Maghen Abraham synagogue lends some support to a view held by some pundits that Israelis had a direct hand in wanting to “facilitate” Jewish-Arab migration to Israel by terrorizing the communities into fleeing their homes.

An article published in the New York Times in 1982 relates how shortly after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in that year, an Israeli shell targeted the Maghen Abraham synagogue, blowing a hole in its roof while some 60 Jewish and Muslim refugees were sleeping there.

The assault came after Israeli artillery had fired from East Beirut and gunboats cruising offshore had been persistently pounding Wadi Abu Jmil, a district well known for being a Jewish quarter, said neighborhood residents.

At the same time, in July 1982, an article in the Israeli newspaper, Yediot Ahronot, said that representatives of the World Zionist Organization had been unable to convince the Jews of West Beirut to emigrate to Israel.

“‘Why should we leave?’ they asked. ‘Here are our homes and our friends,’” said one Lebanese Jew quoted in the report.

Others argue, however, that a heavy PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) presence in Wadi Abu Jmil was the reason for Israeli bombardment. While exact details may never become clear, either way the synagogue suffered at different times throughout the Lebanese civil war, as did many other religious temples of all confessions located in Downtown Beirut. Unlike many of these, Maghen Abraham was never totally destroyed.

Lebanese Jews historically have been an integral part of the Lebanese fabric of confessional communities. Judaism is one of the 18 officially recognized confessions. Lebanese Jews enjoyed the same rights and privileges as other minorities, sharing a minority seat in the Parliament, serving in the army, some even fighting in the 1948 first Arab-Israeli war. Lebanon, argues Kirsten Schulze in her book The Jews of Lebanon: Between Coexistence and Conflict, compared to other Arab states had a more tolerant and liberal attitude toward its own Jews and toward Jewish refugees seeking asylum in Beirut.

Lebanon was the only Arab country in which the number of Jews grew after the establishment of the state of Israel and the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948, with the influx of Syrian and Iraqi Jews growing to number some 14,000. But intensification of the Arab-Israeli conflict, especially after 1967, helped politicize attitudes to Jews, who became increasingly associated with the policies of Israel. This led to an overall decline in the community, many of whom chose to go to Europe and the Americas rather than to Israel.

The civil war and the Israeli invasion escalated this emigration until almost no Jews were left. Today there are about 100 practicing Lebanese Jews remaining in the country.

One middle-aged Lebanese-Jewish woman, still living in Wadi Abu Jmil and known by everyone in the neighborhood, was happy to recall the pre-war days and the synagogue during an interview at her home.

“I was not a very practicing person, but I used to go with my mother and aunts to weddings and celebrations at the synagogue, it was one of the most beautiful ones in the Middle East,” Layla (not her real name) says. Pointing at her living room she continues: “And what was special about it was the chandelier, it was as big as this room and laden with gold.”

“Layla” lives off money her brothers in France send her and her pension. She says she has no contact with the few remaining members of the Jewish community in Lebanon and lives in “isolation.”

But what is to become of the Maghen Abraham synagogue? Juifs du Liban explains that one Jewish-Lebanese family, who did not wish to be identified, is organizing the synagogue’s restoration and has already drawn up plans for its rebuilding, but the necessary funds from different donors have yet to be raised. The synagogue falls inside the reconstruction perimeter of the BCD, so by law the corresponding religious community must assume responsibility for restoration, preserving the original architectural character.

Solidere has granted a delay for the Jewish community to restore the synagogue due to the small number of Jews still living in Lebanon. According to the family cited by Juifs du Liban, Lebanese authorities have been in contact with them to restore the synagogue, but plans are uncertain.

bla bla bla bla bla bla , so u didnt tell me ur opinion , with or agaisnt and why

lebanese_a 03-03-2007 04:39 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by mitain
bla bla bla bla bla bla , so u didnt tell me ur opinion , with or agaisnt and why

"bla bla bla" what a reply!!! that shows a lot about you, specialy how open to new information you are!

w bi khssouss ur question ma bada so2al, those people are as Lebanese as http://img185.imageshack.us/img185/469/urue5.jpgany other Lebanese is.
w about the video badak y3ali2 chi mino 3al neiss l mitlak!

mitain 03-03-2007 09:25 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lebanese_a
"bla bla bla" what a reply!!! that shows a lot about you, specialy how open to new information you are!

w bi khssouss ur question ma bada so2al, those people are as Lebanese as http://img185.imageshack.us/img185/469/urue5.jpgany other Lebanese is.
w about the video badak y3ali2 chi mino 3al neiss l mitlak!

man cause i didnt tell u to bring me info, didnt u read the thread title , ur opinion needed, so i wanted ur opinion only , i didnt wanted info okay , so the truth should not make u angry !!

JouJoulika 03-03-2007 11:08 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Mr Lebanese_a u shouldn't talk about someone eles' SACRED racisim when u have the same Bad problem ur picture shows (i figured it out as u did bennebe lal post taba3 khayye mitain) that u r also racist , u hate SHiites but the difference is if u do and i'm sure u do , this is a severe problem b/c these people are also Lebanese people even more lb than u are and they live with u in the same country and now u're gona say about the lebanese jews and my respond is they live now in Palestine and not lb and they r commited to the jews and the jewish religion and opinion ... and they did so many massacres (there was a thread about them which in u didn't tell us ur opinion) but anyway the Shiites didn't enter the lbnese war (muslim against christian) and didn't harm the christians not then not now not ever and as foe the jews keno 3am bi bazz2o 3al masi7 lamma nsalab (i'm not talkin ta2ifiyyan bass i think this is ur mentality and ur way of talking so i'm talking to u with ur own laguage which will destroy our country if it continues) ...

lebanese_a 03-03-2007 11:40 PM

Re: ur opinion is needed
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
Mr Lebanese_a u shouldn't talk about someone eles' SACRED racisim when u have the same Bad problem ur picture shows (i figured it out as u did bennebe lal post taba3 khayye mitain) that u r also racist ,

What's wrong with my picture and what's "bennebe".

Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
u hate SHiites but the difference is if u do and i'm sure u do , this is a severe problem b/c these people are also Lebanese people even more lb than u are and they live with u in the same country and now u're gona say about the lebanese jews and my respond is they live now in Palestine and not lb and they r commited to the jews and the jewish religion and opinion ...

What made you say the Jews are in Palestine now?? didn't you read the article, didn't you read the 100 of articles on this subject on the site??? Ba3dena who are you to say that they are commited to their jewish religion, walla 3andone pape walla 3andone Ka2ed sawra heneh.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
and they did so many massacres (there was a thread about them which in u didn't tell us ur opinion)

Again please read, the site is having bandwith problem as you can see in all the errors you get and repeating everything for you 10 times is not gonna help in this manner. bass yalla: The Zionist did the massacres not the jew and if you took just a little time and read the article you would have noticed that Israel bombed the jewish neighberhood of beirut to force them to go to Israel and they stayed or if they left it was for the US and europe.

Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
but anyway the Shiites didn't enter the lbnese war (muslim against christian) and didn't harm the christians

Aoun 3a mine kene 3am bi awiss 3a soo2 l ghareb ???? Joumblat w mine ya chatoor??


Quote:

Originally Posted by JouJoulika
not then not now not ever and as foe the jews keno 3am bi bazz2o 3al masi7 lamma nsalab (i'm not talkin ta2ifiyyan bass i think this is ur mentality and ur way of talking so i'm talking to u with ur own laguage which will destroy our country if it continues) ...

Hala2 sort jeyeh tdefe3leh 3an l massi7 smalla 3lek???O_o That's a whole other discussion bass uno akideh ana dod uno atlo l massi7 bass eza badak terja3 bi terikh l adyeine, The Christian did the Crusades, the Muslims the Ftoo7ate ....


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