This is the kind of anti-Jewish stuff I expect from the NYT...
Always trying to get Jews to abandon their faith and their covenant with Hashem...
I hope that honorable Israeli Jews find a use for this book as kindling material or to line their pet cages with... I think this is dispicable..
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/29/dining/29trayf.htmlIn Israel, a Pork Cookbook Challenges a Taboo
By JEFFREY YOSKOWITZ
ANY author has to deal with bad reviews, but how about the wrath of G-d?
Dr. Eli Landau has written “The White Book,” touted as the first Israeli pork cookbook.
With 80 mainly Mediterranean recipes and Eastern European dishes, “The White Book” tries to reveal the secrets of the pig for cooks who have never prepared it nor perhaps even tasted it.
Since the mid-1950s, Israel has had laws restricting the sale of pork and banning its farm production in deference to biblical proscriptions. But because of legal loopholes, it was possible to raise pigs for science or in areas considered Christian. Pork buyers included secular Jews, Christian Arabs and more recently, immigrant workers and the hundreds of thousands of immigrants from the former Soviet Union who don’t keep kosher.
Now it is up to individual municipalities to determine whether pork can be sold in each neighborhood and whether shops will incur fines for selling it, much as they would for staying open on the Sabbath. Many Jews who ignore other kosher rules will not eat pork for cultural and historical reasons. Observant Muslims also abstain from it.
Even more than other nonkosher foods, pork is seen by many Israelis as an affront to Jewish nationalism. Pork sellers routinely face protesters, and in recent years, arsonists have attacked shops in cities like Netanya and Safed, where Orthodox Jews live near secular immigrant communities.
.
.
.
“The younger generation keeps less and less of the rules,” Mr. Adoni said.
Dr. Landau said he hopes his book will resonate with young people who have become less observant Jews, and with his peers who have embraced an internationalist perspective.
“It was not possible 20 years ago,” Dr. Landau said. “In 20 or 30 years, it will be a natural thing. I don’t think I will be around to see it.”
Yemach Shemo Ve Zichron to Dr Landau