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Is Minister of Justice, Ayelet Shaked, a Neo-Nazi?

This is a translation of Yossi Gurvitz’s post published in Hachaverim shel George (George’s Friends) blog.

I guess there is no debate about “scum.” But is Ayelet Shaked a neo-Nazi?

Yesterday (Monday) the earth trembled: Hebrew University Professor Ofer Cassif published a status calling Minister of Justice, Ayelet Shaked, “neo-Nazi scum.” Cassif, to his credit, refused to retract his statements. Therefore, we should examine: Is Ayelet Shaked is a neo-Nazi scum?

The scum part is fairly easy. The answer is clearly yes. Shaked lives off of spreading hate. In 2014, as a member, she published a status claiming that Muslims had set fire to a Jewish cemetery. It was a lie. She was forced to erase it and half-heatedly deny the blood-libel. Notice the timing: early July 2014, just before Operation Protective Edge, but after the three boys and Muhammad Abu Khdeir had been murdered. Everything was burning and Ayelet Shaked had to stoke the fire.

To be sure, Shaked has not learned from her mistake. In August 2015 – now as Minister of Justice, she published a video clip which, according to her showed a “Sudanese refugee attack a girl in the center of .” Again, the timing is crucial: this was the day before the High Court – the top of the legal pyramid that Shaked, as Minister of Justice, is responsible to defend – issued its ruling on the third version of the concentration camps for refugees Law. Once again, Shaked published a blood libel: the video which allegedly was taken in the center of Tel Aviv was in fact filmed in Turkey. Shaked erased it, but neither apologized nor explained.

We should remember that Shaked began her career disseminating photos of the Fogel family massacre. The did not want to dirty its hands with these photos, so it contracted Shaked’s advocacy group My (Yisrael Sheli) to do the dirty job for it.

So, Ayelet Shaked is a serial distributor of hatred, and as such the nickname “scum” is certainly suitable to describe her. But is Israel’s justice minister a neo-Nazi?

It is time to conduct a public debate about this question. I believe she is a neo-Nazi, but it is plausible to imagine decent people who think otherwise. Let us present prosecution exhibit No. 1.

On July 1, 2014 Shaked posted on her Facebook page an article Uri Elitzur had written a dozen years earlier a post. The timing – the day before Abu Khdeir’s murder. Why did the article provoke such an outcry? Because it included the following text: [Original Translation: Electronic Intifada] And in our war this is sevenfold more correct, because the enemy soldiers hide out among the population, and it is only through its support that they can fight. Behind every terrorist stand dozens of men and women, without whom he could not engage in terrorism. Actors in the war are those who incite in mosques, who write the murderous curricula for schools, who give shelter, who provide vehicles, and all those who honor and give them their moral support. They are all enemy combatants, and their blood shall be on all their heads. Now this also includes the mothers of the martyrs, who send them to hell with flowers and kisses. They should follow their sons, nothing would be more just. They should go, as should the physical homes in which they raised the snakes. Otherwise, more little snakes will be raised there.

On its face, this article calls for genocide. Uri Elitzur had enough sense to shelve it. Shaked had to publish it in early July 2014.

As usual, Shaked erased the post after the outcry began. But it was nonetheless saved.

So, once again, at the epic of tension, when any sane person would try to lower the flames, Ayelet Shaked published a call that smells of a call to genocide. She attributes it to Uri Elitzur, but concedes that he had shelved the article and in any case, it was (not) published 12 years prior.

So is Ayelet Shaked a neo-Nazi? I do not know, but if the term “neo-Nazi” means “a person who holds Nazi-like views after the Nazi party had been outlawed,” Ayelet Shaked seems suspiciously fitting this definition. It is certainly unpleasant, perhaps embarrassing, but if this is true, we should be honest about it.

By the way, one more remarkable argument. Recently Shaked expressed dissatisfaction that the Hilltop Settler Wedding video was broadcast. It doesn’t make us look good in the world, she said.

You know what, Ayelet, there are other things that make us look bad in the international arena. For example, the speech of an Irish lawmaker quoting Israel’s Justice Minister speaking about what suspiciously sounds like call for a genocide. Watch minute 4:24

So please do inform me Ayelet about damaging Israel’s image abroad. But before that, if you may, please answer one question: Are you a neo-Nazi? [su_youtube url=”https://youtu.be/jHejuqu1o4c” width=”500″ height=”200″]