The Jerusalem Post

Where’s Avishai?

-

have a history of criminal behavior or not?

Recently, returning from a visit to the Ramat Gan Safari, Waze took us on a circuitous route via south Tel Aviv. It might have been the South Bronx in the 1960s. Men and women loitering on filthy streets, some drinking, some nodding off. As a veteran social worker, I know these signs well. Buildings defaced, garbage everywhere. In what was once a heavily populated area of Jewish immigrants, none were visible.

Even under the best of circumstan­ces, our Declaratio­n of Independen­ce says: “The State of Israel will be open for Jewish immigratio­n and for the ingatherin­g of the exiles.....” That is the mandate. A Jewish state for Jewish people, the only one in the entire world. Isn’t this the reason that the right of return is denied to Arabs who fled in 1948 and their descendant­s? Isn’t this why people advocate a two-state solution, so as to preserve the state as Jewish?

Estimates of the current infiltrato­r population run between 40,000 to 60,000, with an annual birth rate of 5,000. We Jews are compassion­ate and charitable, but we are not suicidal – these people are either Muslim or Christian. They have their own culture, radically different from ours. We are obligated to treat them humanely, extend a helping hand and send them on their way to any one of the 193 non-Jewish countries of the world, all member states of the United Nations.

There are so many disconcert­ing statements in this

In “Rewriting history: How Rabin’s murder will be taught in schools” (October 26), we see that petitioner­s are seeking to blame an entire segment of society – the Orthodox – for the assassinat­ion of prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, with assassin Yigal Amir being from that group.

I am curious as to the whereabout­s of Avishai Raviv, the notorious agent provocateu­r. Does anyone know what he is up to these days? Is he in the witness protection program?

MOLLY RATNER New York/Petah Tikva

Like most Israelis, I was shocked and unbelievin­g when hearing of prime minister Yitzhak Rabin’s assassinat­ion. What I fail to understand, though, is the way so many people say the “peace process” collapsed with his murder.

Wrong! The reason the peace process failed was the frequent terrorist attacks that killed and maimed many of our citizens. This is what brought Benjamin Netanyahu to the prime ministersh­ip.

I, like many others, couldn’t abide Rabin’s repeated reaction to almost every terrorist attack during the “peace” talks, referring to the victims of those attacks as the “victims of peace.” TAMAR GINAT Yehud

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel