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The Moslem Brotherhood Pollutes Democracy
Dear Editor:
The Moslem Brotherhood has polluted our democracies. Qatar is its epicenter. Qatar finances Hamas terrorists and all the hostile regimes encircling Israel.
Qatar spent 100 billion dollars on America’s most prestigious universities, buying chairs of learning and indoctrinating two generations of leaders with anti-Infidel and anti-American ideology.
The Brotherhood, founded in Egypt in 1928 by Hassan al-Banna, was based on The Protocols of the Elfers of Zion, a fabricated text purporting to reveal a Jewish plot for global domination. The Protocols were plagiarized from anti-Jewish documents popular in Imperial Russia in 1903. It is still a best-seller among Islamists.
The Brotherhood provides the rational for replacing Infidel states with a Caliphate. America, the leader of the Judeo-Christian world, is the ‘Great Satan’; the ultimate goal. Israel, the ‘Small Satan’ stands in its way.
Qatar has unlimited funds to spread around, influencing politicians, business people and NGOs. Canada is a major money-laundering hub. Canada’s undefended border gives easy access for clandestine entry into the U. S. The Brotherhood is using antisemitism to fragment the fabric of our societies, a technique successfully employed by Hitler as he stormed across Europe.
The Brotherhood includes CAIR, tasked with infiltrating and influencing governments and militaries, and the Muslim Students’ Associations. MSAs are radical Islam’s arm in our universities, with thousands of chapters under various names, undermining our values and allegiance to the homeland and funneling money to Hamas.
Palestinianism, invented by the Soviet KGB and Egypt in 1964, has only one function and that is the negation of Israeli sovereignty.
On Sep. 8, 2025, Palestinian terrorists opened fire on a bus stop in Jerusalem, killing six people and wounding another 12. On Sept. 9, 2025, the Israeli Defense Forces conducted airstrikes targeting the leadership of Hamas in Qatar.
If you condemned one attack and not the other, you are a racist. If you obfuscate who were the villains and who were the victims on Oct. 7, 2023, you are morally deficient.
Sincerely
Len Bennett, Author of ‘Unfinished Work’
Deerfield Beach, Fl.
The Expulsion That Never Was
Dear Editor:
A nearly-full page article in the New York Times on September 7 told the woeful tale of one Abdallah Abu Samra, who supposedly was “forced from his village in what is now Israel” in 1948. He and his family were “displaced” and “suddenly had to flee,” the Times claimed, clearly blaming Israel. Now Abu Samra is a resident of Gaza, and supposedly is a victim of expulsion once again.
In fact, he wasn’t expelled then, and he isn’t being expelled now.
As British forces withdrew from Mandatory Palestine in May 1948, Egypt illegally invaded the country. The Egyptian army occupied Mr. Abu Samra’s town, Iraq Suwaydan (roughly “Cultivated Hill”).
The Egyptians turned the local police station into a heavily armed military garrison from which it could attack Jewish traffic in the area. It was this Egyptian aggression that compelled Israeli forces to act.
Eight battles were fought in Iraq Suwaydan between Egyptian and Israeli forces in the spring and summer of 1948. Like many Palestinian Arabs elsewhere in the country, the residents of Iraq Suwaydan understandably chose to flee from an active battle zone.
Abu Samra and his family were not by expelled by Israel; they were the victims of the consequences of the Arab states’ invasion.
These days, Abu Samra resides in southern Gaza, according to the Times. He used to live in northern Gaza, but now lives some miles down the road.
Why has he been displaced within Gaza? Once again, because of Arab aggression against Israel. Hamas started a war, and Abu Samra and his family have, understandably, chosen to leave an active battle zone.
In other words, the truth conflicts with the “expelled again by the Jews” theme of the New York Times’ article.
Sincerely
Prof. Rafael Medoff
Israel Must Declare Sovereignty Over Judea & Samaria
Dear Editor:
The recent decision by the UN General Assembly to support the establishment of a Palestinian state is no surprise—it is a direct result of Israel’s ongoing failure to assert full sovereignty over Judea, Samaria, and Gaza since their liberation in the Six-Day War.
Immediately after regaining these historic parts of our homeland, successive Israeli governments should have applied Israeli sovereignty. The refusal to do so created a dangerous political vacuum, and into that vacuum stepped hostile international forces.
When Israel does not clearly declare that this land is ours, the world draws its own conclusions—and now the UN has responded with a resounding call to hand our land over to a people whose national identity was invented for political purposes.
While the resolution is declarative and lacks binding legal authority, the overwhelming majority that supported it gives it significant diplomatic and psychological weight. Silence in response will be interpreted as consent.
The only appropriate and effective response now is the immediate application of Israeli sovereignty over Judea, Samaria, and Gaza. Only by doing so will Israel make clear to the world: this is our land, and we will not surrender it.
History shows that hesitation invites disaster. The time has come for the Government of Israel to wake up, stand firm, and act as the sovereign authority in our land.
Sincerely
Yehudit Katsover & Nadia Matar
The Sovereignty Movement
Will Organize Boycott if Netanyahu is Arrested
Dear Editor:
New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani, who declared victory in the Democratic primary for mayor, said previously that he would arrest Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu if he ever visited the city. My reply is, I will help organize the largest shut down ever of New York City businesses and will call on President Trump for his help as well as for the assistance of our Christian brethren and Jewish organizations, leaders and Jewish schools. You will see boycotts everywhere in New York.
Sincerely
Rabbi Dr. Bernhard Rosenberg
Edison, NJ

