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Thursday, May 31, 2018

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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Voice Of The Copts

Voice of the Copts, a nonprofit organization, fights the spread of Islamic supremacy and Sharia throughout the Western world through education, advocacy and action. By drawing attention to the suffering of Coptic Christians in Egypt, it endeavors to educate the Western world as to the chilling effect of Sharia (Islamic law). Founded in 2007 by Dr. Ashraf Ramelah, Voice of the Copts focuses on three key issues: freedom of religion, cultural identity and women’s rights.

The personal stories of Egyptian refugees – Series No.9 of 22
 The following narratives introduce individuals who are detained in refugee camps. They are in desperate need of the La Casa Futura project currently underway by Voice of the Copts. Egyptian youths have been uprooted and displaced for various reasons all related to religious persecution. Names have been changed to protect identities. Narratives are based on true accounts of actual events.  
Negib will always live with the memory of one tragic day. 
He was walking with other pedestrians down a sidewalk in Cairo and witnessed a murder a few meters away. A terrorist attacked a priest who was about to enter a store. As if from nowhere, the jihadist raced toward the priest and struck him from behind with his sword, knocking him to the ground. He thrust his blade into the priest’s stomach and stabbed him again in the neck -- all the while praising his God. 
Like the other witnesses, Negib was unable to react soon enough to stop the attack. He relives the horror of this moment in regret. However, he was among the few brave souls who chased down and captured the killer a few meters from the crime scene.  
Negib blames his country and its policies for creating and allowing terrorists to roam the streets committing crimes against the minority. Negib’s solution was to flee his homeland. He refused to waste away his life living in fear and hopelessness.
He now resides in a temporary refugee camp. He does not regret this. He has never looked back. He chooses to create a future in western civilization. He is glad he left Egypt.
 Negib is a religious refugee without a home. He’d rather live in this status than remain in a system that unapologetically blames and targets minorities by means of brute force and misuse of the courts. Clearly, his group is at risk. Growing up, Negib sensed danger all around him as a normal way of life. Violence is used to restrict religion and speech.
 Negib dreams of a family someday and wants his children to be free of physical danger and human rights violations. It will take our help for him to reach this goal. Why should peace and civility be too lofty a goal or too difficult to achieve in the 21st century? Accomplishing his dreams will actually make the world a better place for all of us. 
Donate to the La Casa Futura project and help us help Negib. The program to aid Negib and others like him is under development and will finally establish with your help. 
Donate today so that you will be a part of this exciting opportunity to positively affect the lives of Egyptian youths. They seek a better future with your help!  
Thank you!    
 La Casa Futura project currently consists of one dormitory building providing help for up to 100 youths per session. Each session provides language learning, job direction, and cultural understanding. LCF is in its initial stage of development as we seek financial backers and matching funds for individual donations.
 
 
Dr. Ashraf Ramelah is the founder and president of Voice of the Copts, a human rights nonprofit organization 501 (c) (3). The organization has offices in Italy and the United States.
Dr. Ramelah is dedicated to the Coptic cause and believes that his life’s mission is to speak up for the oppressed Copts who cannot speak up for themselves.
Dr. Ramelah is well known to the Egyptian government due to his advocacy for the Egyptian Copts as well as for Voice of the Copts’ lawsuit against them on behalf of Muslim convert to Christianity Mr. Hegazy and his family in 2009-2010. Ashraf Ramelah also appears as an entry in the Coptic History Encyclopedia (http://www.coptichistory.org/new_page_5260.htm).
Dr. Ramelah, himself a Copt, was born in Cairo, Egypt. At the age of 17, he travelled to Italy to study architecture. He graduated with a doctorate in architecture from La Sapienza – Universita’ Degli Studi di Roma,Italy. His special study is restoration of old monuments and history of architecture.
His career as an architect took him to work and live in Italy, Saudi Arabia, Gabon and the USA. His personal interests are Egyptology and Coptic history in the period after the Arab invasion of Egypt in 651 AD.
Voice of the Copts is dedicated to bringing fair, correct and balanced information to the entire world regarding Copts and Christians in countries with an Arab-Muslim majority.

 
La Casa Futura: Achieving independence for Egyptian youths in the freedom of the West
Rome, Italy. -– a Voice of the Copts’ project
La Casa Futura assists refugee youths fleeing from Egypt due to religious persecution. La Casa Futura is a two-year assimilation program in a residence building for young men and women (ages 15-20 years old) coming from Italian refugee camps. Language classes, vocational training and assistance for legal status in Italy are provided.

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Mark Levin Show 05-29-2018

THIS DAY IN CUBAN HISTORY



On May 28, 1898, after several days of confusion and misinformation, the United States Navy confirmed that the Spanish fleet of Admiral Pascual Cervera was in the harbor of Santiago de Cuba.  This fortuitous event drastically changed U.S. war strategy.

The U.S. High Command had been looking into the feasibility of landing a 70,000 men-army in Mariel to fight the final battle at the gates of Havana.  The news that Cervera’s fleet was in Santiago induced a reevaluation of the military objectives of the American theater of operations in Cuba.

The U.S. Armed Forces were immediately re-directed to the eastern end of the island (Oriente), where the decisive battles, both on land and sea, were to be fought.  For some military experts nothing could have been more fortunate for the Americans than the presence of the Spanish fleet in Santiago.

By stroke of chance, the crucial battles went from the West, where the Spanish army was stronger, to the East where the Spaniards were weak, marching through dilapidated roads, and fighting the Cuban Army of Independence, under the command of General Calixto García, who had become a powerful force of experience and well led veteran fighters.

For few faithful days, before the U.S. Navy blockaded Santiago’s harbor, Cervera’s senior officers proposed a dash of the fleet to Havana.  The Admiral refused the advice, (Cienfuegos was an alternative) deciding the final stage of the war in Oriente province, the heroic cradle of Cuban independence.

 

*Pedro Roig is Executive Director of the Cuban Studies Institute. Roig is an attorney and historian that has written several books, including the Death of a Dream: A History of Cuba. He is a veteran of the Brigade 2506.
  


This is a publication of the Cuban Studies Institute. 

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Tuesday, May 29, 2018

From The Religion Of Peace

WATCH: Palestinians throw heavy marble slab at IDF soldiers

Palestinians in Jenin threw a heavy marble platter from the roof of a home at IDF soldiers. The soldiers were fortunate not to get hurt.
Last week a soldier was killed by a heavy marble object thrown at him by a local Palestinian in Ramallah.

Moshe Needs Your Friendship

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Moshe Needs Your Friendship

Shalom, Eduardo,

I have a special request, a request that will change the life of someone like Moshe.

Moshe is an elderly Jew living in Israel whose painful life of poverty and failing health have been compounded by two grievous losses.

Tragically, Moshe’s son passed away from a heart attack a few years ago. And then, after many years of marriage, Moshe lost his dear wife. My father cried with him when Moshe told him about losing his son and his wife. And now, with no family, he struggles every day on his limited means.

We were so glad to tell Moshe that you pray for and care about struggling Jews like him. Because it’s only through your support that we could provide someone like Moshe with a box of food.

Thankfully, we were able to help Moshe that day. However, there are so many more hungry and hurting people like Moshe who desperately need your care each month just to survive.

With nowhere else to go, they cry out to you and me for essential assistance. And yet, as more desperate calls pour into the Fellowship Crisis Hotline for help, resources are becoming more limited!

I remember the words of Proverbs 21:13 that, “Whoever shuts their ears to the cry of the poor will also cry out and not be answered,” and shudder at the thought of turning Jews away – especially those in the last years of their life.

Because without us they will go hungry. And that’s why I am asking you now, in faith, to commit to a monthly gift to help someone like Moshe who depends on your godly compassion.

Over and over again, you have shown your love for these Jewish men and women in distress—giving them hope and letting them know they are not alone.

Join me in becoming a faithful, monthly Friend of The Fellowship partner to bless God’s people each month of the year.

Through your monthly gift, you will give hope and comfort to older Jews like Moshe who struggle with devastating poverty every day of their tragedy-filled lives.

Please say yes today by becoming the newest member of our monthly giving family. Thank you for caring about and blessing Jewish people in need.
With blessings from the Holy Land,

Yael Eckstein
Global Executive Vice President
Give Monthly
PS My father's visit not only brought Moshe physical nourishment, but spiritual nourishment as he prayed over him on your behalf. I thank God for a friend like you who answers the prayers of the poor. And I am praying you will take the next step by becoming a monthly partner of The Fellowship. God bless you for acting in faith and touching lives!
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Since 1983, various stories of destitute Jewish people, whose names and photos may have been changed for privacy and security have been used to bless Israel and her people. Through these retellings, generous friends like you have helped feed, clothe, and shelter as well as provide medical care and heating for tens of thousands of those who struggle greatly.
  

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The Azel Perspective


 
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the AZEL

PERSPECTIVE

Commentary on Cuba's Future, U.S. Foreign Policy & Individual Freedoms - Issue 128
 

No, You Do Not Have a Right to Your Opinion

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“You are not entitled to your opinion” is an incongruous opening for an opinion page column, but I hope to have your attention.
Our democratic and free speech convictions lead us to proclaim that we have an uncontestable right to our opinions. However, that expression embodies a logical fallacy in which an individual discredits any opposition by claiming a right. When we assert the existence of a right, we excuse ourselves from having to offer any justification for our opinion. We have a right to it period. That is all; no further discussion is necessary.  And worse, if we have a right, it is irrelevant if our assertions are true or false.

Opinions have a high degree of subjectivity and uncertainty and, as philosophers see it, we are not entitled to opinions; we are only entitled to what we can argue for. We are entitled to construct and defend an argument.  To offer an opinion imposes an enormous responsibility to question our thought process and to be open to the possibility of being wrong. Those elements are often lacking in many opinions, including some offered in newspaper opinion pages.

To be clear, I am not speaking of opinions of preference, taste, or opinions substantiated by technical expertise of some kind.  We should not argue about your preference of vanilla over chocolate ice cream; and given my ignorance of the subject matter, I will not argue about nuclear physics. I am referring mainly to sociopolitical opinions when we pretend to know what we do not know.     

If by, “everyone is entitled to their own opinion” we mean only that people can say whatever they want, that is a factual and rather boring statement, at least in a democratic milieu. However, if by that statement we mean, as we often do, that everyone’s views should be considered as equal contenders for the truth, then it is clearly false. Truth is not relative; truth is not a matter of opinion. Something cannot be true for one person and not for another.

We tend to confuse our democratic equal right to an opinion, with the idea that all opinions are of equal value. They are not. Some solutions are better than others.  The fact that someone believes something does not make it true. A belief cannot be its own justification. We should not make beliefs immune to critical inquiry. Someone still has to be wrong.

The Nazis were not entitled to their opinion that Jews were subhuman and needed to be exterminated. It is our responsibility to seek to acquire true beliefs and reject false beliefs, and to deny the lazy moral relativism that all opinions are of equal value.

Our opinions should be based on evidence or on good arguments that seek truth.  We are not morally obligated to accept someone’s falsehoods under the commandment that “it is true for them,” which flows from the “everyone is entitled to their opinion” precept.

The term “truthiness,” coined by comedian Stephen Colbert, captures the flaws in the “everyone is entitled to their opinion” idea. Truthiness refers to the truth that someone knows intuitively because it feels right. Truthiness disregards evidence, logic, intellectual examination, or facts. Unfortunately, many of our claims to knowledge fall in the truthiness category.

We can also become victims of “Wikiality,” another Colbert term, where if enough people agree with an opinion it becomes the truth. Wikiality, a blend of the words Wikipedia and reality, shapes truth by consensus or cultural relativism.

Expositions on the popular encyclopedic site Wikipedia are designed to be accepted as true by majority vote. Given that anyone can edit Wikipedia, then anyone can edit the truth and, if enough people agree with an edit, it becomes the new truth as consensual truth-building.

Rather than parroting indiscriminately that we are all entitled to our opinions, perhaps we should, in Colbert fashion, rework the phrase to: “everyone has a right to ignore our opinions.” Maybe then, we will begin to take our philosophical responsibility seriously and begin offering more thoughtful opinions.

Please let us know if you Like Issue 128 - No, You Do Not Have a Right to Your Opinion on Facebook this article.
We welcome your feedback.
Abrazos,
 
Lily & José
 
(click on the name to email Lily or Jose)
This article was originally published in English in the Miami Herald and in Spanish in El Nuevo Herald.
 
José Azel, Ph.D.
José Azel left Cuba in 1961 as a 13 year-old political exile in what has been dubbed Operation Pedro Pan - the largest unaccompanied child refugee movement in the history of the Western Hemisphere.

He is currently dedicated to the in-depth analyses of Cuba's economic, social and political state, with a keen interest in post-Castro-Cuba strategies. Formerly, a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS) at the University of Miami, Jose Azel has published extensively on Cuba related topics.

In 2012 and 2015, Dr. Azel testified in the U.S. Congress on U.S.-Cuba Policy, and U.S. National Security.  He is a frequent speaker and commentator on these and related topics on local, national and international media.  He holds undergraduate and masters degrees in business administration and a Ph.D. in International Affairs from the University of Miami.

José along with his wife Lily are avid skiers and adventure travelers.  In recent years they have climbed Grand Teton in Wyoming, trekked Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and Machu Pichu in Peru.  They have also hiked in Tibet and in the Himalayas to Mt. Everest Base Camp.

They cycled St. James Way (
El Camino de Santiago de Compostela) and cycled alongside the Danube from Germany to Hungary. They have scuba dived in the Bay Islands off the Honduran coast.

Their adventurers are normally dedicated to raise funds for causes that are dear to them. 
Watch Joe & Lily summit Kilimanjaro.

Books by Dr. José Azel
In Reflections on FreedomJosé Azel brings together a collection of his columns published in prestigious newspapers.  Each article reveals his heartfelt and personal awareness of the importance of freedom in our lives.  They are his reflections after nearly sixty years of living and learning as a Cuban outside Cuba. In what has become his stylistic trademark, Professor Azel brilliantly introduces complex topics in brief journalistic articles.
Buy Now
En Reflexiones sobre la libertad José Azel reúne una colección de sus columnas publicadas en prestigiosos periódicos. Cada artículo revela su percepción sincera y personal de la importancia de la libertad en nuestras vidas. Son sus reflexiones después de casi sesenta años viviendo y aprendiendo como cubano fuera de Cuba.  En lo que ha resultado ser característica distintiva de sus artículos, el Profesor Azel introduce con brillantez complejos temas en  breves artículos de carácter periodístico.
Compre Aqui
Mañana in Cuba is a comprehensive analysis of contemporary Cuba with an incisive perspective of the Cuban frame of mind and its relevancy for Cuba's future.
Buy now

 
Pedazos y Vacíos is a collection of poems written in by Dr. Azel in his youth. Poems are in Spanish.
Buy now
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