Tony Greenstein | 06 June 2015 | Post Views:

Tzipi Hotoveli – Israel’s new religious Zionist Deputy Foreign Minister
Racial hygiene under another name – for Hotoveli it is another holocaust

 Israeli Government Attacks the Messenger

It was of course utterly predictable. 
How does the Acting Foreign Minister, the religious nutcase Tzipi Hotovely,
defend the most moral occupation the world has ever seen?  By silencing those who having seen and served
say otherwise.
Hotoveli is one of a number of settlers in the Israeli Cabinet and her
other main concern is the fact that some people fall in love without taking
into account the need to keep the ‘races’ 
separate.  No greater crime is
there in her jaundiced eye than the fact that an Arab male might have a
relationship with a Jewish female.
Measuring facial characteristics as part of racial hygiene
Unfortunately
the remedy of Nazism Germany cannot be utilised.  Under the Nuremberg Laws 1935, which the Zionists
welcomed at the time, sexual relations between male Jews and Aryan women was
made a capital offence (for the Jew).  It
was all a question of Rassenhygiene (racial health).  So in 2011 Hotoveli did the next best thing
and invited Lehava, a fascist group whose raison d’être is to prevent Jewish-Arab
liaisons and which even Israel has now accepted is a terrorist group, to address
the Knesset’s Committee on the State of Women and
Gender Equality.  Hotoveli
still defends her invitation as “it is important to me to check systems to
prevent mixed marriages, and Lehava are the most suitable for this.”  [Deputy FM orders action against IDFwhistle-blowing group, YNet 16.5.15.]
Hotoveli has now embarked on an absurd campaign to pressurise the Swiss Government
to ban an exhibition by the group Breaking the Silence in Zurich.  Since the Swiss Government funded the
exhibition it is unlikely they are going to back down, especially since the
Obama Administration is now setting up a meeting with the organisation.  But as the old saying goes, ‘Those whom the
gods seek to destroy they first drive mad’.

Tony Greenstein

Tzipi Hotovely says Breaking the Silence exhibit in Switzerland ‘tarnishes’
soldiers in the international arena

By Stuart Winer
June 2, 2015, 11:38 pm
Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely told the Israeli
embassy in Switzerland to take action against an upcoming exhibition by an
Israeli organization that gathers testimonies by IDF soldiers alleging abuse of
Palestinians and war crimes by Israeli forces in the West Bank and the Gaza
Strip.
How the those with a genetic illness put a burden on the racially pure
 “I sent an
instruction to the Israeli embassy in Switzerland to immediately review ways to
act against the exhibition by Breaking the Silence,” Hotovely said, according
to a report by the Hebrew-language news site NRG.
Racial mixing increasingly diminishes the racially superior specimen
“We will not be complacent when an organization whose
whole purpose is to tarnish IDF soldiers acts in the international arena in
order to cause serious damage to Israel’s image.”
The Breaking the Silence exhibit is scheduled to open in
Zurich later in June, and received funding of some NIS 100,000 ($26,000) from
the Swiss government and the city municipality, the report said.
“The Foreign Ministry will continue its extensive
actions against organizations that are acting against Israel, at home and
abroad,” Hotovely declared.
Andrei Bolog, president of the Zurich Jewish community,
said that although opposing the exhibit, local Jews would not act against it.
“Yesterday we had a meeting and decided not to ask our
government to prevent the exhibit,” Bolog told NRG. “It is not our affair. We
don’t represent Israel. True, we won’t be present at the exhibit, but we will
not act to prevent it. That is the job of the Israeli ambassador.”
A group of IDF reservists from the Emet Sheli (“My
Truth”) organization that seeks to counter Breaking the Silence and other
similar organizations, sent a letter on Monday to Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, Public Diplomacy Minister Gilad Erdan and Hotovely drawing attention
to the exhibit.
“We, reserves combat soldiers who fought in Operation
Protective Edge, just like in other operations and wars in the past, declare
that we no longer intend to remain silent while the IDF, its soldiers and those
who were killed, are defamed in streets around the world by Israeli
organizations,” the organization wrote.
“We were very surprised at the Swiss government’s
involvement in the campaign against IDF soldiers. The Swiss government and the
Zurich municipality contributed NIS 100,000 to an anti-Israel event that at its
heart is an exhibit by Breaking the Silence.”
Emet Sheli claimed Breaking the Silence has received NIS
3.5 million ($910,000) over the past three years from the governments of
Denmark, Switzerland, Sweden, Holland, Spain, France, the European Union,
Belgium and Norway.
Founded in Israel in 2004, Breaking the Silence
publishes testimonies, almost always anonymous, by Israeli soldiers who recount
their experiences serving in the West Bank and their interactions with the
Palestinian population there, as well as in eastern Jerusalem, Lebanon and
Gaza. Breaking the Silence’s founders have said they wish to end Israel’s
occupation of the West Bank.
Breaking the Silence has garnered controversy in Israel,
with supporters crediting the group with raising awareness to what they
consider to be the immorality of occupation, and critics accusing it of
spreading falsehoods and helping Israel’s enemies to weaken and isolate the
Jewish state.

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