Showing posts with label Barriers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barriers. Show all posts

Monday, December 29, 2025

Israel's Illegal Immigrants Problem

 Nadene Goldfoot


"A 37 year old terrorist, who entered Israel illegally from his village in Samaria, rammed his car into a 68 year old man in Beit She'an (in northern Israel), killing him," evidently on purpose.

Palestinians generally require specific permits from Israeli authorities to enter Israel legally for work or other exceptional humanitarian reasons, and these permits are often limited in number. For those without permits, illegal entry methods include: 

  • Breaching the barrier: Individuals often use ropes or makeshift aids to climb over sections of the Israeli West Bank barrier where there are breaches or known weak points.
  • ** circumventing checkpoints**: While there are official checkpoints, many illegal entrants bypass these by finding unsecured routes, particularly in rural or less monitored areas along the "seam line" separating the West Bank from pre-1967 Israel.
  • Smuggling: Smugglers are also involved in facilitating the movement of people across the border. 
Israeli officials report that thousands of Palestinians attempt to enter Israel illegally each month using these methods. Security forces work to thwart these attempts, with arrests of large groups being a regular occurrence. 

The map above shows Samaria, in Hebrew-Shomron), the northern land and Judea the southern including Jerusalem. ; which had been the capital of the northern kingdom of Israel that was founded in about 880 BCE by King Omri of Israel; built on a hill bought from Shemer (I Kings 16:24).  The site was 7 miles NW of Shechem, now Nablus, and was on an isolated elevation dominating a wide countryside consisting of 25 acres. The name, Samaria, is also applied to the entire northern region of the central Highlands of Eretz Yisrael. 

The Assyrians, led by King Shalmaneser V and completed by Sargon II, conquered Samaria, the capital of the Northern Kingdom of Israel, around 722 BCE after a three-year siege, leading to the deportation of many Israelites and the settlement of foreigners in the region, creating the people known as Samaritans.   

It was later passed to the Neo-Babylonian Empire, then the Persians, and was rebuilt by Herod the Great as Sebastia. 

 The Second Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE (Common Era), specifically on the 9th of Av (around August 30th) during the First Jewish-Roman War, marking a catastrophic event that ended the Second Temple period and reshaped Jewish history. Roman forces under General Titus besieged the city and set fire to the Temple after months of fighting. 

Jews got control of the biblical region of Samaria (referred to by Israel as Judea and Samaria) back after the 1967 Six-Day War, when Israel captured it from Jordan, restoring Jewish authority over the area for the first time since the Second Temple's destruction, leading to the re-establishment of Jewish communities there.

 A short time later our 37 year old terrorist rammed into a 16 year old, lightly injuring him. 

The terrorist then drove onto Highway 71 toward the Ein Harod area, where he rammed a vehicle carrying a 19-year-old woman near Kibbutz Tel Yosef. The woman, Aviv Maor of Kibbutz Ein Harod Ihud, managed to flee her car, but the terrorist chased her and stabbed her to death.                                       


The terrorist then drove toward Afula, where he was stopped near the city and neutralized by a security guard.  Afula is located in the Jezreel Valley (also known as the Valley of Megiddo) in the Northern District of Israel, in the region historically known as the Lower Galilee, not in Samaria or Judea. It is often referred to as the "Capital of the Valley" due to its central location. While Afula is geographically separate from the regions of Judea and Samaria, it is close to the administrative border with the northern West Bank (Samaria region), which has made it a target of terrorist attacks in the past.

Afula, Israel, had a population of approximately 64,578 in 2023, though recent estimates for 2025 place it around 54,250, with figures varying slightly depending on the source and date. It's a diverse city in the Jezreel Valley, known as the "Capital of the Jezreel Valley," with a predominantly Jewish population alongside Arab residents and immigrants from places like Ethiopia, the former Soviet Union, and Latin America.

Resource:

israelAM

https://bible.ucg.org/bible-commentary/2-Kings/Fall-of-Samaria;-Rest-of-Israel-deported/

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Why Jerusalem Cannot Be Divided

Nadene Goldfoot
"The area you are accustomed to calling "east Jerusalem," in other words, the area north and south and east of the Green Line that split the city in half during the Jordanian occupation, is home today to some 200,000 Jews comprising 41 percent of all the residents living in this area. Eighty-five percent of the 295,000 Arabs in east Jerusalem were born after 1967 into the reality of a united Jerusalem under Israeli governance, and were never exposed to the reality of a divided city."

"Palestinians living in east Jerusalem  are extremely fearful of Palestinian Authority rule and the division of the city. Tens of thousands of them voted with their feet by crossing the security barrier in north Jerusalem over to the Israeli side, to remain inside the united city. Additional tens of thousands have said in surveys that they will do the same thing if the city is once again divided."

"The health care system in Jerusalem serves both populations, as does Hebrew University, the Roads Authority, public transportation, shopping malls, electricity grids, telephone wires and the sewage system. The neighborhoods themselves are also intertwined. Even the barriers between the different quarters in the Old City are increasingly blurred. Jews live in the Muslim Quarter; Muslims live in the Christian Quarter. In contrast to the period under Jordanian rule, the holy sites are open to everyone. The only such restriction is against Jews — on the Temple Mount."

Mahmoud Abbas b: March 26, 1935, former PLO terrorist who took over from Yassar Arafat, now Chairman of the Palestinian National Authority, has been holding this post since November 11, 2004.  His capital has been Ramallah in Judea-Samaria, but he and Khaled Mashaal of Hamas are pushing for east Jerusalem which they would make Judenrein.  Four days ago Abbas said that he wouldn't allow Israel to build in the E1 area.   Reports in the London Sunday Times from 3 days ago say that Hamas is preparing to oust Abbas from Ramallah and take over even it means another war.  They've had an on and off love affair ever since Hamas kicked him out of Gaza in 2007 in a bloody coup.    

"Nir Barkat is the mayor of Jerusalem.  Barkat also makes the important point that Jewish sovereignty over the city has been its only reliable guarantor of religious openness, access, and equality.   By 2030, the city’s population will expand to one million residents from 800,000 today (33% Muslim, 2% Christian and 65% Jewish). Where does the world suggest we put these extra 200,000 residents?

The expansion of Jerusalem’s residential areas is essential for the natural growth of all segments of our population. It enables Jewish and Arab families alike to grow and remain in the city. The capital of a sovereign nation cannot be expected to freeze growth rather than provide housing to families of all faiths eager to make their lives there.
As for “E-1,” this land has always been considered the natural site for the expansion of contiguous neighborhoods of metropolitan Jerusalem. “E-1” strengthens Jerusalem. It does not impede peace in our region. The international alarm about planned construction is based solely on the misplaced dreams of the Palestinians and their supporters for a divided Jerusalem."
Resource: from: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=3092 "Europe, face reality in Jerusalem" by Nadav Shragai
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/163454
http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintArticle.aspx?id=292809
http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/12/12/jerusalems-mayor-defends-his-city/ by Seth Mandel
http://www.camera.org/index.asp?x_context=2&x_outlet=10&x_article=2358 , explanation of the fallacy of E-1 causing problems of movement