David Cameron's a jеw & pledges 'unbreakable' support for Israel

Started by MikeWB, March 14, 2014, 07:20:35 PM

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MikeWB

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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/10693327/David-Cameron-pledges-unbreakable-support-for-Israel.html

David Cameron has pledged his "unbreakable" support for Israel and condemned Iran for its "despicable" attempts to smuggle missiles to terrorists.

On Mr Cameron's first visit as Prime Minister to the country, he revealed he has Jewish ancestry and pledged to his "rock solid" to the Israeli people.

On Wednesday afternoon, as Mr Cameron laid a wreath and rekindled the eternal flame in the Hall of Remembrance at Yad Vashem, Israel's Holocaust memorial, the country came under attack from a barrage of at least 25 rockets fired from Hamas-controlled Gaza, in the biggest launch in more than two years.

If his four-year delay in coming had raised eyebrows among his hosts, Mr Cameron made up for it by his giving unreserved support to Israel over its most pressing security concerns.

In a speech peppered with Hebrew to the Knesset, Israel's Parliament, Mr Cameron vows to protect the customs of British Jews by ensuring the kosher slaughter of animals remains legal.



The practice, in which animals have their throats slit, has been condemned by leading vets, but Mr Cameron said: "On my watch Shechita is safe in the UK."

He also vowed to keep hate preachers and anti-semites out of Britain, citing the refusal to grant entry to Britain to Dieudonne, the French comedian known for his "abhorent" inverted Nazi salute which was copied by the West Bromwich footballer Nicolas Anelka.

In comments that will delight Prime Minister Netenyahu, Mr Cameron condemned the British boycott movement, including trade unionists and academics, of being "amateur politicians".

Crucially, he also declared Israel to be the Jews' historic "homeland" – a status the Israelis have insisted the Palestinians recognise before any Palestinian state can be granted, but one the Foreign Office has shied away from.

The issue is a major sticking point in US-led peace talks which risk petering out.

Mr Netenyahu has accused European leaders of turning a blind eye to Iranian support for terrorism in the wake of recent nuclear talks, most recently when a ship carrying Iranian-supplied missiles was intercepted.

But Mr Cameron insisted he was not "starry-eyed" about the regime's new president HassanRouhani, saying he understands how "narrow and vulnerable this land is" and the terror felt by Israeli civilians.

"A vulnerability that just this week has seen the interception of the Klos C ship – yet another despicable attempt by the Iranians to smuggle more long-range rockets into Gaza.

"A vulnerability that has too often seen nearby Palestinian schools being named in honour of suicide bombers."

He added: "I will always stand up for the right of Israel to defend its citizens."

The Iranian nuclear programme presents a threat to the entire world, he added.

He said the root cause of terrorism in the Middle East is not Israel but the solely the "warped and barbaric ideology" of Islamist extremism that wants to establish a caliphate across the Middle East.

The United Nations is guilty of hypocrisy by ruling Israel has violated international law, the Prime Minister declared, saying last year the general assembly passed "three times as many resolutions on Israel as on Syria, Iran and North Korea put together."

He wishes to see "an end to the outrageous lectures on human rights that Israel receives at the United Nations from the likes of Iran and North Korea."

He added he would not "tell you how to run your peace process" but urged Israel to focus on the "great prize" of a deal.

Mr Cameron told the Knesset that his great-grandfather was Emile Levita, a Jewish man from Germany and a more distance relative was Elijah Levita, thought to be the writer of the first Yiddish novel.

He added he was initially confused by the Israel political system which produces fractured Coalition governments.

"But after nearly four years as Prime Minister of my own coalition all I can say is: ach-shav ani mevin," he said – a phrase which means "Now I get it."

The beginning of the session was marked by heckling by members of the Knesset towards Prime Minister Netenyahu, as Israel is split by plans to draft Orthodox Jews into the Army.

Mr Cameron joked he had "clearly come to the wrong place" if he wanted a "quiet afternoon" away from Prime Minister's Questions, but saluted Israel's healthy democracy.
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MikeWB

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/david-cameron/10692563/David-Cameron-tells-Israelis-about-his-Jewish-ancestors.html

David Cameron tells Israelis about his Jewish ancestors
In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, the Prime Minister says his great-great-grandfather was a Jewish man from Germany

By Matthew Holehouse, Political Correspondent, Jerusalem

1:57PM GMT 12 Mar 2014

David Cameron has said he has Jewish ancestors.

In a speech to the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, the Prime Minister said his great-great-grandfather was a Jewish man from Germany.

The link gives Mr Cameron "some sense of connection" to the Israeli people, he said, as he hailed their "extraordinary journey" and history of persecution.

In the address he pledged to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the "vulnerable" state against terrorism, and said the phrase "We are with you" in Hebrew.

"My Jewish ancestry is relatively limited but I do feel just some sense of connection. From the lexicon of my great, great grandfather Emile Levita, a Jewish man who came from Germany to Britain 150 years ago to the story of my forefather Elijah Levita who wrote what is thought to have been the first ever Yiddish novel," he said.
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In comments that are likely to be received warmly by the community in Britain, Mr Cameron said he would defend Jewish cultural practices including Shechita, the kosher slaughtering of animals.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (L) meets with British Prime Minister David Cameron (R) at his office in Jerusalem

The Prime Minister said Britain had denied entry to hate-preachers and anti-semites, including Dieudonne M'bala M'bala, the French "comedian" known for the "quanelle" gesture, whose "abhorrent displays of anti-Semitism have no place in a tolerant and inclusive Britain."

The gesture was copied by Nicolas Anelka, the West Bromwich footballer, to the outrage of Jewish community.

Mr Cameron said that he was initially bemused by Israel's political system, which produces many coalition Governments, before breaking into Hebrew.

"I came as Leader of the Opposition and I remember being quite bemused as I sat listening to Israeli politicians telling me all about the challenges of coalition politics.

"They told me about building a coalition, keeping it together, balancing the demands of different parties, sorting out the disputes and I just didn't understand this strange system of government.

"But after nearly four years as Prime Minister of my own coalition all I can say is: ach-shav ani mevin," he said - a phrase which means "Now I get it."

Mr Cameron hopes the visit will boost trade between Britain and Israel, and said Israeli technology is being used by the Army in Afghanistan and in the NHS.

He is joined on the two-day tour to Israel with a delegation from the Holocaust Commission, including survirors and former newsreader Natasha Kaplinsky, which is setting up a permanent memorial to the genocide in Britain. He will visit Auschwitz later this year.

"As a father, I will never forget last year visiting the Holocaust Memorial in Berlin with my children and for the first time trying to explain to them quite what had happened.

"I want every child in Britain to learn about the Holocaust and to understand just how vital it is to fight discrimination and prejudice in our world," he said.

Mr Cameron said he had changed the law on universal jurisdiction in order to block attempts to arrest Israeli politicians in Britain.

He said:"My country is open to you and you are welcome to visit any time."
David Cameron

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