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Well I'm just quoting from zootube, I know their not Torah Jews.
Well in the future it would make more sense to put something truthful in the title of the post otherwise it looks like you endorse that view.
I don't consider them Jews at all. These monsters are muslims posing as Jews. Shalom - Dox
Quote from: Republicandox on November 08, 2009, 10:06:38 AMI don't consider them Jews at all. These monsters are muslims posing as Jews. Shalom - Dox Most all of them are certainly Jewish because their mothers were Jewish... This is the definition of who a Jew is... I believe you have heard the Jewish law concerning who is a Jew...What they do is worthy of being Cherem {excommunicated} and I have heard that some Jewish courts have gone ahead and made a Cherem against NK...
Quote from: muman613 on November 08, 2009, 12:09:41 PMQuote from: Republicandox on November 08, 2009, 10:06:38 AMI don't consider them Jews at all. These monsters are muslims posing as Jews. Shalom - Dox Most all of them are certainly Jewish because their mothers were Jewish... This is the definition of who a Jew is... I believe you have heard the Jewish law concerning who is a Jew...What they do is worthy of being Cherem {excommunicated} and I have heard that some Jewish courts have gone ahead and made a Cherem against NK... What I mean is they do not have Jewish Hearts. So their Mothers were Jewish, but that does not give them the right to stab their fellow Jews in the backs and curse Israel. Though they may be considered Jewish, it is obvious these so called Jews are activists for islam. Shalom - Dox
For the most part, the members of Neturei Karta are descended from Hungarian Jews who settled in Jerusalem's Old City in the early nineteenth century, and from Lithuanian Jews who were students of the Gaon of Vilna (known as Perushim), who had settled earlier. In the late nineteenth century, their ancestors participated in the creation of new neighborhoods outside the city walls to alleviate overcrowding in the Old City, and most are now concentrated in the neighborhood of Batei Ungarin and the larger Meah Shearim neighborhood.At the time, they were vocal opponents to the new political ideology of Zionism that was attempting to assert Jewish sovereignty in Ottoman-controlled Palestine. They resented the new arrivals, who were predominantly secular and anti-religious, and asserted that Jewish redemption could only be brought about by the Jewish messiah.Among their arguments against Zionism was a Talmudic discussion about portions in the Bible regarding a pact made between God, the Jewish people, and the nations of the world, when the Jews were sent into exile. One provision of the pact was (1) that the Jews would not rebel against the non-Jewish world that gave them sanctuary; a second was (2) that they would not immigrate en masse to the Land of Israel. In return the (3) gentile nations promised not to persecute the Jews too harshly.[9] By rebelling against this pact, they argued, the Jewish People were engaging in rebellion against God.Other Orthodox Jewish movements, including some who oppose Zionism, have denounced the activities of the radical branch of Neturei Karta. According to The Guardian, "[e]ven among Charedi, or ultra-Orthodox circles, the Neturei Karta are regarded as a wild fringe".[13] Neturei Karta asserts that the mass media deliberately downplays their viewpoint and makes them out to be few in number. Their protests in America are usually attended by, at most, a few dozen people. In Israel, several hundred is typical, depending on the nature of the protest and its location.[14]