The Jerusalem Post

Pause to re-arm

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The Jerusalem Post mistakenly reported that a “cease-fire” was achieved with Hamas (“Shaky cease-fire after Gaza sniper kills IDF soldier,” July 22).

The paper’s use of the term “cease-fire” is a misinterpr­etation of the terms in Arabic that the Palestinia­n Arab leaders use when they when they refer to a temporary halt in fighting: hudna, tahadia and hudaybiyya­h, all of which mean continued war after a respite for rearmament.

• Hudna connotes only a tactical pause intended for rearmament in the war between Islamic forces and non-Islamic forces. The authoritat­ive Islamic Encycloped­ia (London, 1922) defines hudna as a “temporary treaty” that can be approved or abrogated by Islamic religious leaders, depending on whether or not it serves the interests of Islam. A hudna cannot last for more than 10 years.

• Tahadia is a temporary halt in hostile activity that can be violated at any time

• Hudaybiyya­h is an understand­ing that there will be no fighting for 10 years named for the “treaty of Hudaybiyya­h” in 628 AD.

The Islamic Encycloped­ia mentions the hudaybia treaty as the “ultimate hudna.”

Hudna, tahadia and hudaybiyya­h – the only options on the table with Hamas – do not compare to the mu’ahada treaty of peace that Egypt signed with Israel in 1979, or the mu’ahada treaty of peace that Jordan signed with Israel in 1994.

Bottom line: hudna, tahadia and hudaybiyya­h do not connote a “cease-fire.”

A real “cease-fire” recalls the cease-fire armistice agreement that marked the last moment of World War I on November 11, 1918, paving the way to the Versailles peace treaty and the genesis of the League of Nations. DAVID BEDEIN Director, Israel Resource News Agency

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