Richard Melson
September 2004
JERUSALEM SUMMIT II, NOVEMBER 27-30, 2004:
CREATING THE ANTI-MUSLIM GLOBAL AXIS AND GLOBALIZING ZIONISM
The second Jerusalem Summit will be held in Jerusalem, November 27, 2004.
(See the essay, below: "JERUSALEM SUMMIT" 2004)
The real purpose of these summits is to create an anti-Muslim world alliance with its capital in Jerusalem. This would then be sold to Washington and we would have the "clash of civilizations" the neo-con Zionists desire.
Some aspects of this globalization of anti-Muslim Zionism include:
1. The idea that if the Palestinian Liberation Movement can be identified as part of "Islamic fundamentalism," then Arafat can be depicted as a Palestinian Osama Bin Laden, with Hamas and Islamic Jihad as the Taliban.
2. The Jerusalem Summit recently had its first Asia Summit in Manila. The idea is to cement Christian-Jewish alliances worldwide against Islam. Since there is a Mindanao Muslim ferment that has gone on for generations, the Philippines is seen as a promising launching ground for an anti-Muslim Asia.
3. Jerusalem Summit persons are reaching out to the Russian Orthodox Church to promote "Russian Orthodox Zionism" and fold it into worldwide Christian Zionism.
(See below: Yuri Shtern piece.)
4. The Michael Cherney Foundation which partly funds the Jerusalem Summits is very active in Russia trying to woo Russians into a Russia-Israel anti-Muslim alliance with Chechnya as the Russian Palestine, to be suppressed with Israel's assistance.
See materials on Michael Cherney Foundation below:
MICHAEL CHERNEY AND HIS FOUNDATION:
Subject: |
Beslan Survivors in Medical Airlift to Israel |
Date: |
Wed, 8 Sep 2004 16:08:50 -0400 |
| Beslan Survivors in Medical Airlift
to Israel Cherney Foundation Commits NIS. 250,000 TEL-AVIV, Israel, September 8 / -- The Michael Cherney Foundation ( www.cherfund.org ) is spearheading a lifesaving airlift to Israel of a number of children survivors of the Beslan massacre. Israel Health Minister Dani Naveh has reached out to his counterpart in Russia in efforts to speed up the bureaucratic process that will enable the wounded schoolchildren to arrive quickly. The Cherney Foundation is focusing its efforts on up to 10 of the most severely hurt children, who stand to benefit most from Israel's highly advanced medical care for victims of terrorist attacks. The individual cases will be determined according to need and urgency. The Russian Embassy in Israel is working to expedite the arrival of the children. Together with their mothers, they will be brought to Israel's best hospitals for care. Michael Cherney, founder of the Cherney Fund commented that "since terror knows no borders, neither should our solidarity in fighting this evil and helping its victims. That is our mission, and we will spare no effort to ease the horrific pain this tragedy has created." When news of the Beslan tragedy reached Israel, the Michael Cherney Foundation was already in the midst of helping Russian-born victims of the recent Beersheba bus bombings. The Fund was created on June 1, 2001, following the suicide bomb attack at the Dolphinarium in Tel Aviv, which killed 20 teenagers and wounded over 100, mostly from the former Soviet Union. In its work, the Fund combines projects that inform the world about Israel's battle against terror through the direct assistance of terror victims. The latter is not confined to Israel's borders: the Fund also helped the victims of May 2002 bombing in Kaspiysk (Dagestan, south Russia), where 10 children were killed and many more wounded. |
| Michael Cherney |
| Childhood | |
| 1984-1989: The Pioneer of Post-Soviet Business |
|
| 1989-1993: The Starting Capital | |
| 1993-1996: Privatization | |
| 1996-2003: Israel | |
Following the repatriation to Israel, Mr. Cherney maintains his business interests in Russia and post-Soviet states, while developing new business contacts between Russia, on the one hand, and Europe, Israel, and the US, on the other.
In Israel, Mr. Cherney spends much effort on charity work and humanitarian projects that reinforce cooperation between Israel and Russia in fighting terror. Mr. Cherney and his family live in a suburb of Tel Aviv.
Jerusalem Summit 2004
27- 30 November
On the cross-roads of history Jerusalem has produced new ideas which changed the world and advanced it towards the great ideals of Truth and Peace.
Now is the time of a world-wide crisis when the new ideas are especially needed for developing an alternative to the twin dangers of modernity: religious totalitarianism of the East, as represented by radical Islam, and moral relativism of the West, as represented by atheistic globalization.
New ideas, even the most efficient and needed, are accepted with great difficulties.
Jerusalem Summit strives to gather in the capital of Israel the best minds and souls from around the world to present the most innovative socio-political ideas, so that the combined wisdom of participants will propel the best of these ideas to the global status.
The Second Jerusalem Summit will take place on November 27-30, 2004 and will focus on the several global issues key for advancement of democracy and overcoming the global threats. Among them are:
Liberation of Moslem Women
Use of Technology in Fighting Poverty
Improving Democratic Voting System
Humanitarian Solution to the Problem of Palestinian Refugees
Jerusalem Summit 2004 will also start developing a new concept, the Council of Civilizations, which we expect to evolve into a new model for the unity of nations.
International Advisory Board
| Chairman of the Board of Trustees Dmitry Radyshevsky, Executive director of the Summit Chairman:
Gary Bauer, President, American Values Academic Committee: Prof. Shlomo Slonim Public Affairs Committee: Amb. Alan Keyes |
By Yuri Shtern
Chairman, Israel-Russia interparliamentary association
Many pseudo-liberals in Europe, Israel, and even Russia, claim that Israel and Russia are united in their cruelty towards Islamic separatists. Recently, this colossally erroneous view has been dealt a serious blow in Moscow by the publication of a new book, Babylon and Jerusalem: the Biblical View of the Middle East Conflict. The book is sponsored by the Michael Cherney Fund to Aid Terror Victims.
The book is collection of works by prominent Russian Orthodox theologians, which prove that uniting Russia and Israel to fight terror is not an end, but a means of joining the Russians and the Jews for the most important objective: creative collaboration in spreading the light of the Bible.
The alliance of Israel and Russia is rooted in common spirituality. If we are joining
hands only now, when evil of terror casts its shadow over the world, this shows our
spiritual stupor: when we refused to follow the path of knowledge, God took us down the
path of suffering. In a short period of time, this is the second occasion that fate brings
the Russians and the Jews together; the first one was World War Two, when they fought
Fascism together. But that alliance did not bear fruit of a real union between Jews and
Russians, and now we again have to fight the new Fascism together.
What is sensational for Russia is that for the first time the Church has supported not
merely Russia's stance against anti-Semitism, but exhorted it to lend decisive support to
Israel and Zionism. Now one can say that this project gives birth to "Russian
Orthodox Zionism", analogous to the Christian Zionism of the West.
More and more Russian Christians - and the Kremlin itself counts a number of religious people, beginning with Putin himself - become convinced that one cannot believe in the Bible and its promise of rebirth of Israel as key to the dawn of the true Era of Peace, and at the same time support the creation of a state led by Arafat who openly asserts that Palestinian sovereignty is a mere springboard for destruction of Israel.
I was especially inspired by the Russian Church and the Kremlin's emerging interest in their Arab co-religionists. Both the book and the Russian media are revealing for the first time the new facts about the role played by Yassir Arafat, whom the KGB tenderly called "Uncle Yasha", in the destruction of Christian Maronites in Lebanon. Russians are showing particular concern about the suffering of Christian Arabs under the Palestinian Authority. At one time, Russia used to support the Christians of the Balkans against the Turkish Islamization, and was the guarantor of the rights of Christian Arabs who lived in the Holy Land under the Turkish rule; now Russians begin thinking about reassuming the key role of Russia in the Middle East - now as a protector of Christian Arabs suffering from Islamic extremism, rather than a supporter of dictatorships.
The Russian politicians were particularly interested in the plan of our party to create an autonomous Christian enclave in Bethlehem with the active support of Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church.
Of course, the pro-Arab lobby is still influential in Russia and the Russian church - both as an aftermath of Soviet-era politics and as a result of financial gains from trade with Iraq and Iran. Yet more and more Russians realize that they have to choose between Babylon and Jerusalem. Babylon is a symbol of totalitarian ideology. Jerusalem is a symbol of individual and free responsibility of Man before God; it is the symbol and the center of our civilization. Babylon and Jerusalem are locked in constant combat, but in the last 100 years this conflict has reached the critical point. During this period, Babylon has three times attempted to take over the world - Communism, Fascism, and now Islamic Fundamentalism. Now Jerusalem physically has become the arena of this combat. TANAH said, I shall make Jerusalem a heavy rock for all nations, and he who will try to lift it will collapse. Russia begins to understand that if Islamic terror triumphs in Israel, it will triumph everywhere.
The Michael Cherney Fund has accomplished a very important thing for Israel: it took a risk of suggesting that the Russian Orthodox Church, which has always been suspected of anti-Semitism, should move from general talk about condemning anti-Semitism to the specific support of Israel. The presentation of the book, sponsored by the Fund, was followed by a church prayer service for the people of Israel - for the first time in Russian history.
It is regrettable that this important initiative came from a private fund, rather than from the State of Israel. Ministry of Propaganda and Foreign Ministry are too cautious in conducting hasbara - and that's too bad. The world is capable of realizing that by withholding its support of Israel, it supports death.
What we should do is bury our own cliches and stop thinking of anyone as a biological anti-Semite. Then we'll find supporters in the most unexpected places - Russian Church, for one.