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Neturei Karta

A Wisdom Archive on Neturei Karta

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Neturei Karta

A selection of articles related to Neturei Karta:

Adherents of Neturei Karta stress those portions in rabbinic literature which state that the Jewish people were first sent into exile from the land of Israel for their sins. Additionally, they maintain a minority view that any form of forceful recapture of Israel is a violation of divine will (Babylonian Talmud, tractate Ketuboth 111). Leaders of the movement hold that the Holocaust was divine punishment for the Jewish people's sin, namely Zionism

Neturei Karta - Early history. For the most part, the members of Neturei Karta are descended from Hungarian Jews that settled in Jerusalem's Old City in the early nineteenth century, and from Lithuanian Jews who were students of the Gaon of Vilna, who had settled earlier. In the late nineteenth century, they participated in the creation of new neighborhoods outside the city walls to alleviate overcrowding in the Old City, and most are now concentrated in the neighborhood of Batei Ungarin ..


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ARTICLES RELATED TO Neturei Karta
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* Encyclopedia II - Neturei Karta - History

Neturei Karta - Early history. For the most part, the members of Neturei Karta are descended from Hungarian Jews that settled in Jerusalem's Old City in the early nineteenth century, and from Lithuanian Jews who were students of the Gaon of Vilna, who had settled earlier. In the late nineteenth century, they participated in the creation of new neighborhoods outside the city walls to alleviate overcrowding in the Old City, and most are now concentrated in the neighborhood of Batei Ungarin ...

Read more here: » Neturei Karta: Encyclopedia II - Neturei Karta - History

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* Encyclopedia II - Neturei Karta - Ideology

Adherents of Neturei Karta stress those portions in rabbinic literature which state that the Jewish people were first sent into exile from the land of Israel for their sins. Additionally, they maintain a minority view that any form of forceful recapture of Israel is a violation of divine will (Babylonian Talmud, tractate Ketuboth 111). Leaders of the movement hold that the Holocaust was divine punishment for the Jewish people's sin, namely Zionism. In their view, Zionism is a presumptuous affront against God; Neturei Karta teaches tha ...

Read more here: » Neturei Karta: Encyclopedia II - Neturei Karta - Ideology

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Videos - neturei karta
The Satmar Hasidim, Neturei Karta, and Hadash (Part 1 of 2)The Satmar Hasidim, Neturei Karta, and Hadash (Part 1 of 2)

I read an essay about the anti-Zionism and pro-Palestinianism of the Satmar Hasidic sect of ultra-Orthodox Jews, the Neturei Kar...

Torah Jews Against Zionism -- Neturei KartaTorah Jews Against Zionism -- Neturei Karta

Torah Jews Against Zionism -- Neturei Karta (copy). PLAYLIST: www.youtube.com . * Featuring Orthodox Torah Jew (Rabbi Weiss) dur...





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* Encyclopedia - Hasidic Judaism

Hasidic Judaism (from the Hebrew: Chasidut חסידות, meaning "pious", from the Hebrew root word chesed חסד meaning "loving kindness") is a Haredi Jewish religious movement. Some refer to Hasidic Judaism as Hasidism, and the adjective Chasidic/Hasidic (or in Yiddish Chasidish חסידיש) applies. The movement originated in Eastern Europe (Belarus and Ukraine) in the 18th century. Rabbi Israel ben Eliezer (1700–1760), also known as the Ba'al Shem Tov Including:

Read more here: » Hasidic Judaism: Encyclopedia - Hasidic Judaism

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* Encyclopedia II - Star of David - Used by Jews

The Star of David can be found on the tombstones of religious Jews going back hundreds of years in Europe, as it became accepted as the universal symbol of the Jewish people. Following Jewish emancipation after the French revolution, Jewish communities chose the Star of David to represent themselves, comparable to the cross used by most Christians. Some Orthodox Jewish groups reject the use of the hexagram because of its association with "magic" and the "occult". Some Haredi groups, such as Neturei Karta, reje ...

Read more here: » Star of David: Encyclopedia II - Star of David - Used by Jews

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* Encyclopedia II - Zionism - Anti-Zionism and post-Zionism

More than 50 years after the founding of the State of Israel, and after more than 80 years of Arab-Jewish conflict over Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, some groups have misgivings about current Israeli policies. The overwhelming majority of Jewish organizations and denominations are strongly pro-Zionist. Some liberal or socialist Jews, as well as some Orthodox Jewish communities (the most vocal and visible being the small Neturei Karta group), oppose Zionism as a matter of principle. Well-known Jewish scholars and statesmen who hav ...

Read more here: » Zionism: Encyclopedia II - Zionism - Anti-Zionism and post-Zionism

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* Encyclopedia II - Jews Against the Occupation - Selected quotes

"The Israeli military fires ... live ammunition at unarmed Palestinian civilians engaged in peaceful protest, failing to distinguish between peaceful and violent resistance." -- Sam Miller-Eisenstein [3] "Dore Gold is an architect of the spin that the killing of Palestinian civilians and the destruction of Palestinian society somehow constitute a battle between two equal sides," said Sam Miller-Eisenstein of Jews Against the Occupation. "Palestinians don’t have tanks – they have stones, a few militants, and what remains of their dignity. This is not a war ...

Read more here: » Jews Against the Occupation: Encyclopedia II - Jews Against the Occupation - Selected quotes

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* Encyclopedia II - Joel Teitelbaum - Love for Fellow

Rabbi Teitelbaum was known to be a great lover of all people, particularly his fellow Jew. Once, he was traveling to the Holy Land on a ship, accompanied by many followers. A non-Jew on the ship asked one of the Hasidim in amazement, "why do they all love him so much?" When the Hassid told Rabbi Teitelbaum about this query, he answered, "you should tell him they love me because I love them." He then said to see Proverbs 27:19 for the Biblical source for this concept. (source: S ...

Read more here: » Joel Teitelbaum: Encyclopedia II - Joel Teitelbaum - Love for Fellow

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* Encyclopedia II - Joel Teitelbaum - Opposition to modern Zionism
Rabbi Teitelbaum was renowned for his vocal religiously motivated opposition to all modern forms Zionism in all arenas. This approach was a continuation of his father's views and of other prominent Hasidic rabbis. His father and predecessor was Rabbi Chananya Yom Tov Lipa Teitelbaum. He encouraged his followers to form self-sufficient communities without the help of the State of Israel and forbade "official" engagement with it. Before World War II most Hasidic rabbis, as well as many other prominent Orthodox leaders, believed that God ...

Read more here: » Joel Teitelbaum: Encyclopedia II - Joel Teitelbaum - Opposition to modern Zionism

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* Encyclopedia II - Hasidic Judaism - Religious practice and culture

Hasidic Judaism - Fundamental conceptions. The teachings of Hasidism are founded on two theoretical conceptions: (1) religious panentheism, or the omnipresence of God, and (2) the idea of Devekut, communion between God and man. "Man," says the Besht, "must always bear in mind that God is omnipresent and is always with him; that God is, so to speak, the most subtle matter everywhere diffused... Let man realize that when he is looking at material things he is in reality gazing at the image of the Deity which is present in all things. W ...

Read more here: » Hasidic Judaism: Encyclopedia II - Hasidic Judaism - Religious practice and culture

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* Encyclopedia II - Hasidic Judaism - History

Hasidic Judaism - Prelude. In Poland, where the bulk of Jewry had established itself since the sixteenth century, the struggle between traditional rabbinic Judaism and radical Kabbalah-influenced mysticism became particularly acute after the Messianic movement of Sabbatai Zevi in the 17th century. Leanings toward mystical doctrines and sectarianism showed themselves prominently among the Jews of the south-eastern provinces of Poland, while in the north-eastern provinces, in Lithuania, and in White Russia, rabbini ...

Read more here: » Hasidic Judaism: Encyclopedia II - Hasidic Judaism - History

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