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If he wasn't a negro why wasn't he identified and named?
I guess you have a point there.
The bigger question, which I have heard others ask, is why these articles were referring to the Rabbi as a 'Good Samaritan'.... Amongst religious Jews the samaritans are not so good and the stories should have said 'Righteous Jew Killed Trying to Save Young Boy'.I also don't believe you can make assumptions about the identity of a victim based on whether they release the name to the media. There were several media sources which reported that the name of the 5 Year Old child is 'Reuven David Herbst'
According to their tally, there were 712[1] Samaritans as of November 1, 2007, living exclusively in two localities, one in Kiryat Luza on Mount Gerizim near the city of Nablus in the West Bank, and the other in the Israeli city of Holon.[8]
The term "good samaritan" is just an expression.
http://ohr.edu/ask_db/ask_main.php/230/Q3/Janet from Dallas, Texas wrote:Dear Rabbi,Could you please tell me the ways in which Samaritans differed from other Jews? I am preparing a talk and would like to be able to enumerate why the Samaritans were considered different from other Jews. Thank you for your help.Dear Janet,The Samaritans were non-Jews brought to Israel by the Assyrians to populate the North after the exile of the Ten Tribes. They ostensibly converted to Judaism, but in reality they continued worshipping idols, save for a period when they were mistakenly considered genuine converts; hence the Samaritans were not considered Jews, neither by Jewish law nor by the Jewish people.They did not accept the Oral Tradition, which forms the overwhelming bulk of Jewish law. They also did not accept any books of the Bible except for the Pentateuch and the book of Joshua. Today, the Samaritan version of the Torah manuscript differs from ours by about 800 letters.The Samaritans often acted as enemies of the Jewish people. They tried to destroy the Temple and to inform against the Jews to Roman authorities. The parable of the "Good Samaritan" was actually an anti-Semitic story intended to discredit the Jews.