[Mossad] Encyclopaedia Judaica
Moses Fantasy Jews in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria 05: 1947-1970: war of independence - Six-Day war - exodus
The play of fantasies in Algeria
Moses Fantasy Jewish organizations - Moses Fantasy Jews between the fronts of Muhammad Fantasy Algerian and Jesus Fantasy French nationalists - emigration movement 1961-1963 because of French citizenship - anti-Jewish boycott since 1965 - emigration movement of the young Moses Fantasy Jews
[Mossad] Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: [Muhammad Fantasy] Algeria, vol. 2, col. 617-618, table of the Moses Fantasy Jewish population in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria 1838-1968
from: [Muhammad Fantasy] Algeria; In: [Mossad] Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 2
presented by Michael Palomino (2007 / 2019)
3 fantasies - Moses is a fantasy - Jesus is a fantasy - Muhammad is a fantasy - but Mother Earth is REAL
Moses is a fantasy - nothing could be found of him. The proofs are in the book: The Bible unearthed - link. So, Jewry is a fantasy, and also the Jewish calendar is a fantasy. Also Jesus is a fantasy: nothing could be found, but it's a code fantasy with the numbers 3,12,13 and 33 - link. Therefore, Christiandom is a fantasy, and also the Christian calendar is a fantasy - and the Vatican is a criminal pedophile satanic drug money laundering bank mafia - link with videos - link with news. Also Muhammad is a fantasy: nothing could be found, and the name "Muhammad" was used only since 850, not in 600 - link. Therefore also the Muslim calendar is a fantasy. Peace and healings and instructions how to handle the planet are with Mother Earth - Mother Earth is REAL and everybody can learn it: http://www.med-etc.com - have a good day. - Michael Palomino, May 12, 2019
Encyclopaedia Judaica = Mossad - link with proofs (English)
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[since 1947: New Moses Fantasy Jewish organizations in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria]
<Contemporary Period.
During the postwar period a number of [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish organizations were formed in [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria. The Fédération des Communautés Israélites d'Algérie
[[Algerian Israelite Communities Federation]]was established in April 1947 for the purpose of defending [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewry and safeguarding its religious institutions.
*ORT was founded in 1946 in Algiers and Constantine; the Ecole Rabbinique d'Algérie [[Rabbinic School of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria]], established in 1947, began its activities in 1948; the Comité Juif Algérien d'Etudes Sociales [[Jewish Algerian Committee of Social Work]], formed after World War I, resumed its activities in 1948 and published a monthly, Information Juive [["[[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish News"]], from 1948 to April 1962 in Algiers and from September 1963 in Paris.
Although the formal structure of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian community resembled the French pattern centering around legally sanctioned "religious associations", in practice each kehillah [[Moses Fantasy Jewish community]] functioned autonomously. Until 1961 the Fédération united 60 different communities. Thereafter the communal structure underwent a gradual disintegration and communal life became primarily a function of local customs and traditions. (col. 617)
[1956-1963: War of independence: escalation - the Moses Fantasy Jews are between the fronts - Moses Fantasy Jews don't want Muhammad Fantasy Algerian nationality - murdered Moses Fantasy Jews by the Muhammad Fantasy F.L.N. and by the O.A.S.]
The fate of the community was fundamentally determined by the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian nationalist struggle for independence. Tragically caught between two violently opposed forces the marginal position of the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews in [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian society exposed them to constant danger.
The conflict had already become clear in August 1956 when the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] F.L.N. (Front de Libération Nationale - the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian National Liberation Front; organization dedicated to achieving [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian independence) appealed to the "[[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerians of [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish origin" who "have not yet overcome their troubled consciences, or have not decided which side they will choose" to opt for [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian nationality.
[[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish fears increased when, on February 18, 1958 two emissaries of the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish Agency were kidnapped and assassinated by the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] F.L.N.
In December 1960 the Great [[Moses Fantasy]] Synagogue of Algiers was desecrated and the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish cemetery in Oran was defiled. The son of William Levy, a [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish socialist leader was killed by the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] F.L.N. and subsequently Levy was also assassinated by the O.A.S. (Organisation Armée Secrète - a counter-terror organization opposed to an independent [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria).
[Moses Fantasy Jewish hopes for a partition system or dual nationality - Moses Fantasy Jewish emancipation to French customs]
Until 1961 the majority of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews had hoped that partition or a system of dual nationality would obviate the conflict. As the struggle developed, however, they increasingly feared that popular reaction would be directed against them not only as Europeans but as [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews and Zionists. Consequently, although the community never adopted an official anti-independence position, in March 1961 a delegation from the Comité Juif Algérien d'Etudes Sociales urged that the negotiations then in prospect should obtain official recognition of the French nature of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish community. (Later it was agreed in Evian to treat [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerians as "Europeans").
By the 1960s the "Gallicization" of the large mass of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews had developed to the point where both their emotional allegiances and cultural predispositions were largely French. The resulting diminution of [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish observances did not, however, reflect a positive integration into the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian French community which was less a community than a settlement of colons. Fundamentally, however, the separate identity of the community was maintained by the system of status inherent in Islamic (col. 618)
society where religion and family and not formal nationality and cultural behaviour were the determinative factors. The term "Frenchman" in [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria did not apply to either Arab or [[Moses Fantasy]] Jew.
[1961-1962: Civil war in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria also in Moses Fantasy Jewish sections - Moses Fantasy Jewish and French emigration to France and Israel: 75,000 Moses Fantasy Jews leaving]
The [[Muhammad Fantasy]] F.L.N. and O.A.S. reign of terror and counter-terror in 1961 and 1962 had catastrophic consequences for the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish community. As elsewhere in North Africa the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish quarters often straddled the European and Arab sections. These quarters often sustained the first and sometimes only Muslim reprisals after attacks by European terrorists on the Muslim quarters. These often degenerated into pitched battles between the two communities, especially their youth.
Throughout this period there was a steady flow of emigration of [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews from [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria. The rate of emigration rose steeply in mid-1962 when, as a result of O.A.S. violence, the community feared that the proclamation of independence would precipitate a Muslim outburst. By the end of July 1962, 70,000 [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews had left for France and another 5,000 for Israel.
France treated the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews on an equal footing with the non-[[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish repatriates. The United [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish Social Fund made extraordinary efforts to help the refugees. In the course of a few months, no fewer than 32,000 refugees arrived in Paris and the nearby communities. Many [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish refugees from southern [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria found a haven in Strasbourg and its vicinity and were gradually integrated into the life with the aid of the existing [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish community. It is estimated that some 80% of the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews settled in [[Jesus Fantasy]] France.
[since 1963: Ben Bella regime]
After [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria achieved its independence, all its [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews who held French citizenship retained it, except for a few isolated cases. The regime of Ben Bella maintained a correct relationship with the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews. During the years 1963-65, the minister of culture addressed the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish congregation at the synagogue of Algiers on the Day of Atonement.
In February 1964 a General Assembly was held at Oran by the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish communities of [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria, which elected Charles Hababou as its president.
[since 1965: Boumédienne regime: taxes - discrimination measures - protection abrogated - anti-Jewish boycott movement]
After Houari Boumédienne rose to power in 1965 the situation rapidly deteriorated. Heavy taxes were imposed on the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews, and discrimination of various kinds betrayed the anti-[[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish tendencies of the government. That rabbis no longer received their salaries from the state was explained by the fact that they had not become [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian nationals. The Chief Court of Justice declared that the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews were no longer under the protection of the law, and an intensive economic boycott was instituted against [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish merchants.
The police engineered a libel suit against Hababou on the grounds that he had connections with Zionism. In September 1966, as the result of a case brought before the Economic Court, Désié Drai was condemned to death together with two non-[[Moses Fantasy]] Jews; but whereas he was executed on the day of Rosh Ha-Shanah, the two others were pardoned.
[1967: Six-Day War - press attacks]
On June 5, 1967 the [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian press launched a violent attack against Israel and the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews. The walls of the synagogues of Algiers and other [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish communities were defaced.
[1965-1970: constant emigration of the young Moses Fantasy Jews - abandoned property of the Moses Fantasy Jewish communities]
With one exception, all the synagogues in the country were taken over and converted into mosques, and the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish cemeteries of the country fell into decay. By 1969 fewer than one thousand [[Moses Fantasy]] Jews remained in [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria. Most of the young men and women left, and thus there were hardly any marriages. The property of the [[Moses Fantasy]] Jewish communities was abandoned.
Table. Moses Fantasy Jewish populaiton in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria
Town
1838
1845 ap.
1855 ap.
1861
1881
1901
1921
1941
1955
1960 ap.
1968
Algiers
6,065
5,372
10,822
17,053
25,591
30,000
400
Aumale
9
270
29
145
221
Biskra
38
112
28
500
Blida
113
395
1,077
962
1,269
2,500
Bône
283
607
625
1,387
1,733
3,147
4,000
Bougie
10
216
482
561
132
625
Bou-Saâda
343
433
682
Constantine
4,093
5,213
7,196
9,889
13,037
16,000
Ghardaïa
1,642
1,100
Laghouat
443
Mascara
32
696
384
81
1,958
Médés
625
1,460
1,398
1,005
529
125
Miliana
112
850
827
649
557
450
Mostaganem 698
1,230
766
152
1,828
2,300
Nedroma
267
386
529
560
Oran
5,637
3,549
10,651
15,943
26,671
30,000
400
Sétif
736 936 1,601 3,015 2,050
1,500
Souk-Ahras
198
416
516
624
750
Tiaret
33
342
416
92
1,586
2,000
Tlemcen
1,508
3,745
4,910
5,150
4,907
5,000
(1861)
(1881)
(1901)
(1921)
(1941)
(1955)
(1960 ap.)
(1968)
Total
21,048
47,500
50,000
73,967
120,000
140,000
3,000
from: [Muhammad Fantasy] Algeria; In: [Mossad] Encyclopaedia Judaica, vol. 2, col. 617-618
Relations with [[Moses Fantasy Zionist]] Israel.
On gaining independence, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria joined the *Arab League and fully participated in its conferences against Israel. On June 5, 1967, [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria along with other Arab states declared war on Israel, sending military (col. 619)
assistance to Egypt. Even the Egyptian acceptance of ceasefire was denounced by [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algerian mobs. Consequently, President Boumédienne pressed the U.S.S.R. to adopt a firmer anti-Israel policy, gaining "a firm commitment to wipe out traces of the aggression", as well as to give military aid, some of which was subsequently channeled to Egypt.
On July 23, 1968, the P.F.L.P. ("Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine") hijacked an l Al plane to [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria. The plane, the crew, and its male Israel passengers were kept under detention for several weeks and only released in return for terrorists being held by Israel. [[Muhammad Fantasy]] Algeria adopted an extreme attitude among the anti-Israel Arab factions, and gave full support to the Palestinians terrorists.
[R.AT.] (col. 620)
[[Supplement: Mossad Encyclopaedia Judaica conceals any Moses Fantasy Zionist terrorism against Muhammad Fantasy Muslims
-- The Moses Fantasy Jewish ant-Muslim Herzl Zionist terrorism since 1896 with the booklet "The Moses Fantasy Jewish State",
-- the Moses Fantasy Jewish aim of a "Greater Israel" (of a "Moses Fantasy Jewish Empire") with the Nile and the Euphrates as its border lines according to First Mose book, chapter 15, phrase 18, the violations of Palestinian women by the racist Zionist Moses Fantasy Jewish army,
-- the expulsions of Palestinians from Palestine and the desert concentration camps for Palestinians,
-- the schooling of hatred against all Muhammad Fantasy Arabs,
-- all other Zionist Moses Fantasy Jewish terrorism and discriminations against Palestinians and Arabs in Palestine .
That's the proof that this Encyclopaedia Judaica is a Zionist book from Rothschild's secret service: Mossad]].
Bibliography
(from: [Muhammad Fantasy] Algeria; In: [Mossad] Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, vol. 2)
GENERAL
-- A. Cahen: Les Juifs dans l'Afrique septentrionale (1867), passim
-- I. Bloch: Inscriptions Tumulaires des Anciens Cimetières d'Alger (1888)
-- N. Slouschz: Travels in North Africa (1927), 295-343
-- M. Ansky: Les Juifs d'Algérie (1950)
-- A. Chouraqui: Between East and West (1968)
-- R. Attal, in: Bi-Tefuzot ha-Golah (1961), 14-20
-- idem, in: Sefunot, 5 (1961), 465-508
-- Hirschberg, Afrikah
-- idem, in: Journal of African History (1963), 313-9
BERBER-ARAB RULE (680-1516)
-- I. Epstein (ed.): Responsa of Rabbi Simon b. Zemah Duran (1930)
-- R. Brunschvig: La Berbérie Orientale sous les Hafsides, 1 (1940), 396-430)
-- A.M. Hershman: Rabbi Isaac en Sheshet Perfet and his Times (1943)
-- Hirschberg, in: Tarbiz, 26 (1956/57), 370-83
-- Corcos, in: JQR, 54 (1963/64), 275-9; 55 (1964/65), 67-78
-- idem, in: Zion, 32 (1967), 135-60
-- C.E. Dufourcq: L'Espagne Catalane et le Magrib aux XIIIe et XIVe siècles (1965), passim
TURKISH RULE (1516-1830)
-- J.M. Haddey: Le Livre d'or des Israélites Algériens (1872)
-- R.L. Playfair: The Scourge of Christendom (1884)
-- passim: M. Eisenbeth, in: Revue Africaine (1952), 112-87, 343-84
-- Mainz, in: JA, 240 (1952), 197-217
-- Rosenstock, in: JSOS, 14 (1952), 343-64; HJ, 18 (1956), 3-26
FRENCH RULE UP TO 1948
-- C. Frégier: Les Israélites Algériens (1965)
-- Féraud, in: Revue Africaine (1874), 30ff.
-- J. Cohen: Les Israélites de l'Algérie et le Décret Crémieux (1900)
-- J. Hanoune: Aperçu sur les Israélites Algériens (1922)
-- C. Martin: Les Israélites Algériens de 1830 à 1902 (1936)
-- M. Abulker: Alger et ses Complots (1945)
-- Mainz, in: PAAJR, 21 (1952), 63-73; HJ, 18 (1956), 27-40
ANTI-SEMITISM
-- J.F. Aumerot: L'Antisémitisme à Alger (1885)
-- E. Drumont: La France Juive, 2 (1886), 4ff.
-- G. Meyné: L'Algérie Juive (1887)
-- G.R. Rouanet: L'Antisémitisme Algérien (1900)
-- L. Durieu: Les Juifs Algériens, 1870-1901 (1902)
-- Brunschvig, in: Revue d'Alger, 1 no. 2 (1944), 57-79
-- M. Eisenbeth: Pages Vécues, 1940-1943 (1945)
-- Szajkowski, in: JSOS, 10 (1948), 257-80
CONTEMPORARY PERIOD
-- JC (Oct. 19, 1962, June 12, 1964, Aug. 30, 1968)
-- Congress bi-Weekly, vol. 35, no. 15 (1964), 9-11
-- L'Arche, no. 40 (1960), 24
-- Information Juive, 139 (Sept. 1963), 3; 151 (Dec.-Jan. 1965), 6; 185 (Aug.-Sept. 1868), 7;
-- Mandel, in: AJYB, 64 (1963), 403-11; 65 (1964) 326-30; 66 (1965) 478-83; 67 (1966) 441-4
-- idem, in: Commentary, 35 (June 1963), 475-82
-- In the Dispersion, 5-6 (1966), 318-20 (list of articles)> (col. 620)
Moses Fantasy Jewish organizations - Moses Fantasy Jews between the fronts of Muhammad Fantasy Algerian and Jesus Fantasy French nationalists - emigration movement 1961-1963 because of French citizenship - anti-Jewish boycott since 1965 - emigration movement of the young Moses Fantasy Jews -- since 1947: New Moses Fantasy Jewish organizations in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria -- 1956-1963: War of independence: escalation - the Moses Fantasy Jews are between the fronts - Moses Fantasy Jews don't want Muhammad Fantasy Algerian nationality - murdered Moses Fantasy Jews by the Muhammad Fantasy F.L.N. and by the O.A.S. -- Moses Fantasy Jewish hopes for a partition system or dual nationality - Moses Fantasy Jewish emancipation to French customs -- 1961-1962: Civil war in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria also in Moses Fantasy Jewish sections - Moses Fantasy Jewish and French emigration to France and Israel: 75,000 Moses Fantasy Jews leaving -- since 1963: Ben Bella regime -- since 1965: Boumédienne regime: taxes - discrimination measures - protection abrogated - anti-Jewish boycott movement -- 1967: Six-Day War - press attacks -- 1965-1970: constant emigration of the young Moses Fantasy Jews - abandoned property of the Moses Fantasy Jewish communities -- Table. Moses Fantasy Jewish populaiton in Muhammad Fantasy Algeria -- Relations with [[Moses Fantasy Zionist]] Israel. -- Supplement: Mossad Encyclopaedia Judaica conceals any Moses Fantasy Zionist terrorism against Muhammad Fantasy Muslims -- Bibliography -- 3 fantasies - Moses is a fantasy - Jesus is a fantasy - Muhammad is a fantasy - but Mother Earth is REAL
^