Title: Watch the video the New York Times didn't Want You to See Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Oct 19, 2013 Author:. Post Date:2013-10-22 00:09:07 by wudidiz Keywords:None Views:279 Comments:19
I suspect that there is more to the story than Sheen and Blumenthal want to make known because the video doesn't mention Ben-Ari's Kahane connections, speaks only vaguely of non-Jewish African migrants (as if that means Muslims or mostly so, not Christians) and mentions Sudan specifically about 4 times without any historical background on that country as to the various Israel-conducted Operations through the years (even as recently as 2013) for importing thousands of Ethiopian-Africans -- at least three times bringing them from Sudan refugee camps where they had gathered [Operations Brothers, Moses and Joshua]. One of the airlift Operations was probably called Moses because his wife, Zipporah, is mentioned in the Scriptures as being from the region of Ethiopia. Some Wikipedia references and one from the BBC on those srael-conducted Operations: Brothers [1979 and 1990] || The Lion of Judahs Cub aka Moses [1984-1985; approx. 8 thousand] || Joshua aka Sheba [1985; approx. 500] || Solomon [1991; approx. 14.5 thousand || Dove's Wings aka Wings of a Dove [2008, 2010-2013; approx. 500; BBC reference: About 90,000 Ethiopian Jews have immigrated to Israel since it was founded in 1948.]
Ethiopian Jews in Israel || Beta Israel: Ethiopian Jews || Falash Mura: In 1860 Henry Aaron Stern, a Jewish convert to Christianity, traveled to Ethiopia in an attempt to convert the Beta Israel community to Christianity. ... Falash Mura is the name given to those of the Beta Israel community in Ethiopia who converted to Christianity
Two racism controversies are noted at the above Wikipedia link for Ethiopian Jews in Israel -- one in 1996 involving rejection of their blood donations and another in 2012 involving uninformed birth control injections.
"I was most surprised at the banality of the racism and violence that I witnessed and how it's so widely tolerated because it's so common," says Blumenthal about his four years of reporting in Israel. "And I'm most surprised that this it hasn't made its way to the American public ... that's why I set out to do this endeavour, this journalistic endeavor, to paint this intimate portrait of Israeli society for Americans who don't see what it really is."