Tuesday, 17 March 2026

How Israel Struck Iran's Missile and Defense Systems

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423985

How Israel struck Iran’s missile and defense systems

The IDF published data on Operation Roaring Lion, which began after extensive intelligence preparation, a surprise opening strike, and widespread damage to the military and security capabilities of the Iranian regime.

     Intelligence unit at work

The IDF has released new data on Operation Roaring Lion in Iran, detailing the stages of preparation for the campaign, the opening strike, and operational efforts undertaken since the start of the conflict.

According to the army, in the months preceding the operation, the Intelligence Directorate concentrated extensive efforts while applying lessons learned from previous operations against Iran. The IDF emphasized that Israel entered the campaign with the understanding that Iran is a significant-capability enemy that must not be underestimated.

According to the data, the operation in Iran is being conducted according to a pre-planned, structured program, on which thousands of military Intelligence and IDF personnel in both regular and reserve units worked. The IDF noted that almost all targets struck in the operation are new targets identified by Military Intelligence after Operation Rising Lion, the result of a long-term intelligence effort spanning years.

The IDF also noted that Hezbollah was significantly weakened following Operation Northern Arrows, with its weapons arsenal reduced by approximately 90 percent. The damage to the organization and the IDF’s defensive preparations, according to them, allow freedom of action in Lebanon and Iran.

Security officials assessed that Hezbollah might join the conflict, so a broad preparation effort was carried out and operational plans were adapted in advance. The IDF stated that it is well-prepared for both defense and offense on the northern border.

As part of the preparations, the IDF also strengthened cooperation with the US. According to the army, both sides synchronized the situational picture and intelligence assessment through meetings and visits by military officials to the US in recent months.

The IDF emphasized that during Operation Rising Lion the army succeeded in denying Iran the immediate ability to develop nuclear capabilities and reducing the ballistic missile threat. They stated that without that operation, Iran would currently have more than a thousand additional missiles.

According to the IDF, the operation’s opening strike was carried out by surprise. Although the Iranian regime had been on alert in recent months, the IDF succeeded in creating surprise and significantly striking the regime’s capabilities.

The purpose of opening the campaign, according to the army, was to significantly weaken the Iranian regime’s capabilities, reduce threats, and even create military conditions that would allow the Iranian people to overthrow the regime.

During the opening strike, many senior officials in the Iranian government and security apparatus were eliminated. According to the IDF, this was made possible through close intelligence monitoring of the Iranian Defense Council and other targets, which allowed them to identify a window of opportunity when senior officials were concentrated in certain locations simultaneously.

At the current stage of the campaign, the effort is focused on systematically targeting centers of power of the Iranian regime, including command headquarters, control centers, Basij sites, and the regime’s suppression forces.

The IDF noted that unlike Operation Rising Lion, which focused on an immediate threat, Operation Roaring Lion provides an opportunity to strike more broadly at Iran’s strategic capabilities.

In the early days of the operation, efforts focused on striking Iran’s ballistic missile system, aiming to reduce launches toward Israel. According to the IDF, after more than two weeks of fighting, a significant decline in launches toward the Israeli home front is observed compared to Operation Rising Lion.

It was also reported that the IDF achieved air superiority within just 24 hours, enabling extensive operations over most of Iran’s airspace. As part of the strikes, 120 detection components and 100 air defense systems were destroyed.

The IDF noted that so far, most Iranian missile launchers have been hit and 85 percent of the regime’s detection capabilities have been damaged. Additionally, approximately 70 percent of Iranian launchers were rendered inoperative.

As part of the strikes against Iranian military industries, a significant impact was inflicted on missile production, leaving Iran with no current ability to manufacture missiles. The IDF stated that it continues to strike the production chain to maintain this achievement.

In recent days, the IDF has also acted against the command chain of the Iranian missile system, including command officers and missile bases, as well as against alternative residences and headquarters. These moves, according to the army, have led to a drastic reduction in missile fire toward Israel.

The IDF noted that the strikes are carried out systematically across Iran, targeting internal security forces, the Revolutionary Guards, and other regime-affiliated bodies. So far, according to the army, over 2,200 components of the Iranian regime have been destroyed.

Security officials noted indications of significant damage on the Iranian side, including thousands of deaths and tens of thousands of injuries among regime forces, along with drops in morale and instances of refusal to follow orders and desertion.

In addition, the IDF is acting in the campaign against the Quds Force, both in Iran and in other theaters.

Regarding the nuclear domain, it was reported that the IDF is working to strike the entire value chain of Iran’s nuclear program, attempting to inflict broader damage than was caused in Operation Rising Lion.

The IDF emphasized that the operation is not time-limited but depends on achieving the predetermined objectives. According to them, eliminating a threat built over decades requires prolonged action and a broad maneuvering window.

Simultaneously, the IDF continues to collect intelligence for warning and thwarting terrorist plots, focusing primarily on the Iranian and Lebanese theaters while monitoring the entire Middle East.

The IDF also noted that Iran has made a strategic decision to attack multiple countries in the Middle East, particularly the Gulf states. Despite Iran’s claim that it is targeting only American targets, in practice, civilian infrastructure was also hit, including hotels, economic centers, and population concentrations.

The IDF stated that in the continued campaign, emphasis will be placed on deepening achievements in Iran by continuing to strike missile capabilities and the Iranian defense industry.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423985


Monday, 16 March 2026

New Book: Historical Analysis of October 7

https://www.jpost.com/history/article-888864

What history teaches about October 7

A renowned historian’s scholarly work examines alarming trends to watch out for.


Award-winning historian Prof. Rafael Medoff (Jewish history at Yeshiva University) is the founding director of the DC-based David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies and a leading expert on the American Jewish response to the Holocaust. His latest book is The Road to October 7: Hamas, the Holocaust, and the Eternal War against the Jews.

It demonstrates the similarities between the heinous pogrom in southern Israel in 2023 and the unspeakable horrors inflicted on the Jewish people throughout the centuries.

This scholarly work explains not only the reasons for the virulent hatred of Jews in Palestinian society that led to the atrocities committed on Oct. 7 but also the reaction of the Western world – including Israel – to the warning signs that enabled the worst attack on Israeli soil since its establishment. If one wishes to learn from history, Medoff’s book is essential reading.

The author sat down with The Jerusalem Post to discuss his work.

You described the profound indoctrination of hate in Palestinian society leading up to Oct. 7. What about other factors that made it possible?

Divisions in Israeli society may have led to the October 7 massacre

Enemies of Israel watch carefully for signs of internal weakness. And it does appear that Israel’s domestic divisions may have affected the timing of the attack – seeing Israelis fighting among themselves encouraged Hamas leaders to perceive Israel as particularly vulnerable in the autumn of 2023.

But the root cause of the attack itself was the decades of anti-Jewish hate in Palestinian Arab schools, summer camps, mosque sermons, and television and radio programs.

With the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993 and the creation of the Palestinian Authority, Yasser Arafat and his successors took control over what Palestinian Arab children are taught. For the past 33 years, they have been taught to hate Jews, idolize terrorists, and devote themselves to the goal of destroying Israel. On Oct. 7, 2023, they put what they were taught into practice.

Do you think the events of Oct. 7 might make some Zionists lose faith in the Jewish state as a haven?

While I show the many similarities between Oct. 7 and previous antisemitic violence, going back to the Middle Ages, no two situations were ever identical. Oct. 7 was unique in many ways – as you note, it was unprecedented for an armed mob of that size to infiltrate Israel. What was also unique was how lightly the border was guarded. So yes, it would be understandable if the faith of some Israelis in their political or military leaders was shaken by what happened.

Still, there have been other episodes in the past when the faith of the Israeli public was shaken, at least for a time. For example, many people were deeply disillusioned when they learned that the Israeli government gave in to US pressure not to launch a preemptive strike on the eve of the Yom Kippur War.

Israelis typically have responded to such disappointments not by giving up on their country but by expressing their dissatisfaction on election day.

It seems that most Jews in the Western world seeking to relocate are looking at destinations other than Israel. Why is that?

Historically, there never has been a significant wave of aliyah from any country where Jews were comfortable. Even the election of an antisemitic mayor in New York City is more likely to galvanize the city’s Jews to move to Florida or California rather than Israel.

Keep in mind that although antisemitism has increased dramatically in the United States in recent years, it doesn’t directly or personally impact the lives of most Jews. They are still, for the most part, financially successful and culturally integrated. If that changes, then we can expect some will start to look at Israel as a serious option.

Is the current surge of antisemitism worldwide different from historical precedents because of social media?
Technological innovations can cut both ways. The rise of social media has revolutionized modern communication, both for good and bad – and the spread of antisemitism via social media illustrates the danger. The ability of the Oct. 7 terrorists to live-stream their atrocities added a ghoulish dimension to their crimes, one that we could never have imagined.

In the end, however, the main problem is not the technology but the quality of the human beings who are using it. Anti-Jewish pogromists in past centuries also boasted about their crimes; they just did it in different ways. In the Middle Ages, they celebrated the murder of Jews through engravings or antisemitic poetry. In the 1950s, Arab terrorists returning to Gaza after attacking Israeli Jews broadcast their atrocities by parading body parts from their victims.

The subtitle of your book is ‘Hamas, the Holocaust, and the Eternal War Against the Jews.’ Is it eternal? Is there hope for change?

It’s reasonable to assume that antisemitism will always exist somewhere, and there will always be somebody waging war against the Jews. But the actions taken by Israel and world Jewry can affect how much damage those wars inflict.
Rooting out hate-inciting education is the most urgent need. The Allies called it “de-Nazification.” After World War II, the American occupation forces in Germany outlawed the Nazi Party and overhauled the schools, firing pro-Nazi teachers and getting rid of pro-Nazi textbooks. The result was that entire generations of German children were raised to embrace peace and democracy, and Germany has become one of America’s closest friends in Europe.

The Oslo Accords envisioned a similar transformation of Palestinian Arab society. Terrorist groups were supposed to be outlawed and disarmed. Government-sponsored anti-Jewish incitement was supposed to stop. And most of all, antisemitism and the glorification of violence were supposed to be rooted out of the schools. Hillary Clinton once called the Palestinian Authority’s educational system “child abuse,” and she was right.

The PA has had 33 years since Oslo to stop teaching hate and violence, but it hasn’t done it – so somebody else is going to have to step in, if there’s ever going to be hope for peace.

THE ROAD TO OCTOBER 7:
HAMAS, THE HOLOCAUST,
AND THE ETERNAL WAR 
AGAINST THE JEWS
By Rafael Medoff
Jewish Publication Society
368 pages; $17

https://www.jpost.com/history/article-888864


Sunday, 15 March 2026

Camel Hugging Therapy in Dubai

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15645871/Dubai-Brits-offered-camel-hugging-therapy-attractions-desperate-tourists.html

Brits are offered camel hugging therapy by empty attractions desperate for tourists in 'ghost town' desert city


Tourist attractions in ‘ghost town’ Dubai desperate to attract customers during the drone and missile attacks from Iran are offering free admissions - including ‘camel hugging therapy’. 

Visitors are invited to ‘release your stress with a private encounter with our cuddliest animals’ at the Camel Farm set in the dunes of Al Marmoom Conservation Reserve, 30 minutes outside the city, an experience which normally costs around £6. 

Italian owner Luca Lombardi announced on Instagram: ‘We have a gift for you. In this stressful time it’s easy to be affected by fear, anxiety and depression and we firmly believe relaxation is a fundamental right.’ 

Other free tickets being handed out included up to four tickets per booking at Aquaventure World, a huge water park and aquarium which normally costs between £40 and £67 for a day ticket. 

Dubai Miracle Garden, where tickets usually cost from around £18, are also offering free tickets to residents. 

House of Hype, an immersive tech-driven attraction, is offering the first 50 visitors of the day who are wearing the colours of the UAE flag free entry, rather than paying the usual entrance fee of around £30. 

And the Aura Skypool, the world’s highest 360 degree infinity pool on the 50th floor of the Palm Tower, is also offering 500 complimentary tickets instead of the usual £40. 

A number of beach clubs are also waiving entry fees to try and entice visitors inside. 

Visitors are invited to ¿release your stress with a private encounter with our cuddliest animals¿ at the Camel Farm set in the dunes of Al Marmoom Conservation Reserve

Visitors are invited to ‘release your stress with a private encounter with our cuddliest animals’ at the Camel Farm set in the dunes of Al Marmoom Conservation Reserve

The offers come as Dubai has been deserted by tourists and thousands of expats, with its sun loungers and pools lying empty as Iran continues to pound the United Arab Emirates. 

Once a tax-free haven attracting social media stars and countless Brits seeking warm weather and crime-free streets, Dubai's carefully crafted image has been shattered and some residents believe it is 'finished'. 

Thousands have fled the war-torn city, some vowing to never return as the Islamic Republic sends barrages of missiles and suicide drones at glitzy skyscrapers and glamorous five star hotels, even striking the world-famous Fairmont Hotel on Palm Jumeirah. 

The white sand Jumeirah beach, in the centre of Dubai, within sight of the famous Palm archipelago with its Atlantis resort, is a favourite among Dubai's 240,000 Brits. 

Usually overflowing with holiday-makers, it was virtually empty amid reports that some facilities are closing because of a lack of visitors. 

Beach bars, sun loungers, swimming pools and the sandy coastline were all largely deserted. 

But the loyal Dubai influencers who remain in the state are calling Brits who have fled the bombing 'ungrateful' and that these 'are the types of people we don't mind leaving'. 

Some Dubai influencers even claimed they were profiting from the war in the Middle East, amid claims that some influencers based in the United Arab Emirates are being paid to pump out 'propaganda'. 

Thousands have fled the war-torn city, vowing to never return as the Islamic Republic sends barrages of missiles and suicide drones at glitzy skyscrapers and glamorous five star hotels

Thousands have fled the war-torn city, vowing to never return as the Islamic Republic sends barrages of missiles and suicide drones at glitzy skyscrapers and glamorous five star hotels

Dubai has been deserted by its army of influencers and thousands of expats with its sun loungers and pools lying empty

Dubai has been deserted by its army of influencers and thousands of expats with its sun loungers and pools lying empty

More than 63,000 Britons have returned home from the region since the start of the conflict in the Middle East, according to Government figures. 

Meanwhile, 45 people of 'various nationalities' have been arrested by police in Abu Dhabi for 'spreading misinformation and filming and sharing event locations' over alleged footage showing attacks.

A 60-year-old Londoner was arrested this week after filming missiles hitting Dubai.  

In total, as of yesterday, 285 ballistic missiles, 15 cruise missiles and 1,567 drones from Iran have been intercepted, the UAE's Ministry of Defence said.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15645871/Dubai-Brits-offered-camel-hugging-therapy-attractions-desperate-tourists.html


Saturday, 14 March 2026

Israel Attacks Bridge Over Litani River

      Litani River



https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423877

IDF strikes bridge on the Litani River

The IDF attacked the A-Zararia bridge on the Litani River, which had served as a central crossing point for Hezbollah operatives from northern Lebanon to the south.


The IDF announced that it has attacked the A-Zararia bridge on the Litani River, which had been used as a key passage for Hezbollah militants moving from northern Lebanon to southern Lebanon.

"The IDF attacked the A-Zararia bridge on the Litani River in Lebanon, which was used as a central crossing for terrorists from the Hezbollah terror organization," said the IDF spokesperson.

"Hezbollah used this bridge to travel from north to south Lebanon, prepare for combat against IDF forces, and act against Israeli citizens, thereby endangering Lebanese civilians and causing significant destruction in populated areas. In order to prevent threats to Israeli citizens and further harm to Lebanese civilians, the bridge needed to be attacked.

"Recently, Hezbollah has positioned launchers near the bridge and used it to launch missiles toward Israel. The IDF is acting with force against the terrorist organization's decision to join the conflict and act under the auspices of the Iranian terror regime. The IDF will not allow harm to Israeli citizens."

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423877






Lebanon is now a co-equal primary front with Iran in the current war, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Eyal Zamir said.





Friday, 13 March 2026

The Big Lie about Greater Israel

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423801

The Big Lie of “Greater Israel"

Anyone who talks to you about ‘Greater Israel’ - which does not exist -is out to distract you from ‘Greater Islam’ - which is becoming greater every moment


by Daniel Greenfield



Tucker Carlson, who has defended Islam, Sharia law, Hamas and Hezbollah, flew into Israel for a few hours, only long enough to put out a fake claim that he was harassed by Israeli security (later disproven by video footage) and to berate Trump’s Ambassador Mike Huckabee with assorted Islamic propaganda, like his claim of a “Greater Israel".


The former FOX News talking head, who now seems to spend much of his time in the Muslim world and spoke of buying a home in the terrorist state of Qatar, has spent the last few years bringing on increasingly disreputable figures like Soros-funded UN official Jeffrey Sachs, George Stephanopoulos’s sister, and John Mearsheimer to push this particular lie.

The premise of the lie is that Israel is starting wars to expand its territory across the Middle East.

Knowing that Ambassador Huckabee is an evangelical Christian who believes in the literal truth of scripture, Tucker challenged him over the ‘from the Nile to the Euphrates’ in Genesis 15:18 as his idea of ‘Greater Israel’. (Deuteronomy alternatively states that the borders will be “from the wilderness to the Lebanon and from the river - the Euphrates - to the Western Sea.")

Mainstream media talking heads asking religious people if they believe in the truth of biblical prophecies is an old cynical liberal media gotcha game. And Tucker was using it to prop up the Islamic ‘Big Lie’ that Israel was expanding when it’s actually been shrinking for 50 years.

It’s a matter of simple math.

Israel was at its largest size in the seventies when it controlled some 33,000 square miles: a territory around the size of South Carolina. As part of Carter’s 1978 Camp David peace accords, which Egypt has spent the last decade flagrantly violating, Israel turned over the Sinai, some 23,000 acres, a territory the size of West Virginia, leaving it with around 10,000 square miles.

That’s the size of Massachusetts.

(Egypt’s territory is over 380,000 square miles. And yet after losing several wars to Israel, it demanded massive territorial concessions from a country less than 3% its size.)

During Bill Clinton’s Oslo Accords, Israel directly turned over 1/10th of its remaining land, around 1,000 square miles, also known as ‘Area A’ to the control of the PLO, Area B, making up around 500 square miles, was to be under joint control, with further concessions expected as part of a final agreement. That shrank Israel down from Massachusetts to New Hampshire.

Meanwhile, Israel reached an agreement with Jordan that ceded yet more land as part of the ‘Island of Peace’ that was supposed to be under Jordanian sovereignty but with Israeli access.

(Jordan has a territory of over 34,000 square miles or over three times the size of Israel.)

In 1997, a Jordanian Muslim soldier opened fire on a group of seventh and eight grade Jewish girls touring the area, killing 7 and wounding 5. The terrorist is considered a hero in Jordan, with the majority of the Jordanian parliament calling for his release. He has been freed. Two years later, Jordan cut off the access of Israeli farmers to the land.

Meanwhile no final agreement was ever reached with the PLO because its leader Yasser Arafat and his Communist-trained successor Mahmoud Abbas broke up multiple negotiations efforts, and continued carrying out and funding terrorist attacks against Israeli civilians.

Still, Israel went on turning over territory to be occupied by the Islamic terrorists.

At the Wye River summit in 1999, Netanyahu agreed to turn over another 11% of Judea and Samaria while the Clinton administration demanded 13% in exchange for an end to terrorism. The withdrawal became much more limited when the Islamic terrorist attacks continued.

In response, Bill Clinton worked to bring down the Netanyahu government and replaced him with Prime Minister Ehud Barak, currently in disgrace over his ties to Clinton pal Jeffrey Epstein.

Barak agreed to a multi-stage handover of 18% of Judea and Samaria. That included a single handover of 400 kilometers.

At the Camp David summit in 2000, Barak, accepted the ‘Clinton Parameters’ for, in Bill Clinton’s words, “a Palestinian state in roughly 97 percent of the 'West Bank', counting the swap, and all of Gaza" along with the land swap that would annex Israeli communities in exchange for more land in Israel. Arafat rejected it and launched another war. Barak did go ahead with a ‘unilateral withdrawal’ from Lebanon that allowed Hezbollah to seize the formerly Christian country.

In 2003, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and later Prime Minister Ehud Olmert implemented a unilateral withdrawal from Gaza, violently expelling the Jewish population, and allowing Hamas to come to power. This added 141 square miles of Israeli land to the control of the terrorists.

By the time that Obama was elected, Israel had shrunk to 8,986 square miles or the size of New Jersey. More negotiations with John Kerry followed and so did more Islamic terrorism.

Since then, President Trump recognized Israeli control over the Golan Heights, around 400 square miles, and all of Jerusalem, another few dozen miles. This was land that Israel already controlled, but it at least validated that land as legitimately being a part of Israel.

Over the last 50 years, the amount of territory under Israeli control shrank from around 33,000 square miles to 10,000 square miles to around 9,000 square miles. It’s possible to dispute these exact numbers and decades have been spent debating exactly how to calculate them, but it’s indisputable that Israel has not only not been growing, but it’s been steadily shrinking down.

Over the last two generations, Israel made ‘peace’ deals with the PLO and Jordan that traded land for peace (without ever getting peace) and unilaterally withdrew from Gaza and Lebanon, turning over yet more land to Islamic terrorists, and certainly not getting peace out of it.

Not only isn’t Israel growing from the ‘from the Nile to the Euphrates’: it’s continually shrinking.

When Tucker Carlson claims that Israel is fighting Hamas in Gaza after the massacres of Oct 7 to create a ‘Greater Israel’, he’s ignoring the fact that Israel withdrew from Gaza in the first place. If its goal was to create a ‘Greater Israel’, it sure had a funny way of doing it.

But the purpose of a ‘Big Lie’ is to invert the truth. To swap perpetrators and victims, good and evil, and truth and lies. For the last 50 years, Israel’s territory shrank while that of the Muslim entities on and inside its borders has increased. Telling the truth about that would make it all too clear who is expanding, who is colonizing and who is really building a ‘Greater’ territorial entity.

‘Greater Israel’ is a lie put out by Muslim countries and their pawns to justify their invasion and colonization to create an ‘Ummah’, a Greater Islam, to dominate the entire Middle East.

And then the world.

The only part of the Middle East that is still not under the dominion of Islam, is Israel.

Anyone who talks to you about ‘Greater Israel’ is out to distract you from ‘Greater Islam’. And the intended boundaries of Greater Islam, as Islamic clerics and leaders have said over and over again, are the entire planet. It is in the name of this ‘Greater Islam’ that Europe and America have been flooded with Muslim mass migration just as Israel once was.

Europe, America and the West, like Israel, are becoming ‘lesser’, their lands bisected and segregated into ‘No-Go Zones’ where Islamic law and Islamic terror reign violence and death.

The Christian and Jewish realms have been steadily shrinking while Islam has been growing. And anyone who notices this is accused of ‘Islamophobia’, of plotting wars against Islam, rather than recognizing a war that has been going on for over 1,000 years.

“Is Islam really evil?" Tucker asked on a recent broadcast. “Or is that how they’re framed by the political elite to create perpetual wars."

Who is fighting those perpetual wars? How did Constantinople become Istanbul? Why was Spain occupied by the Moors? What happened to the Christians of the Middle East? Where did Israel’s Muslim population come from? Where did London and New York’s Muslims come from?

Instead of asking about ‘Greater Israel’, what is the position of our leaders on ‘Greater Islam’?

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423801


Thursday, 12 March 2026

History of Curacao

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423742

The Jews in Curaçao: A remarkable story

A tiny Caribbean island once had more Jews than all thirteen American colonies combined, and quietly saved thousands from the Holocaust.


Curacao is a small island in the Atlantic Ocean near Venezuela known for its rich Jewish history. Covering 170 square miles, it is an autonomous country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Curacao may ring a bell as the place Jews escaping Lithuania named as their final destination in escaping Europe, but its Jewish roots go back much further, to when it was called the “Mother Congregation of the Americas."

This is the story of Curacao.

Curacao was conquered by a Spanish expedition in 1499 and remained under Spanish control until 1634. At that time, the Dutch decided to capture Curaçao from Spain in response to Spain’s seizure of Saint Martin from the Dutch West India Company (WIC).

In April 1634, the WIC sent Admiral Johannes Van Walbeeck to take Curacao and Bonaire from the Spanish. These islands were important for their location near the American continent and for their role in trade and shipping.

Beth Haim Cemetery

In May 1634, Van Walbeeck departed from Holland with a fleet of four ships, 180 sailors, and 250 soldiers. To their good fortune, the Spanish had mostly abandoned Curacao, which facilitated the Dutch conquest. During this time, Curacao’s first known Jew, Samuel Cohen, arrived to serve as an interpreter for the Dutch. On August 21, the Spanish forces surrendered, and Van Walbeeck was appointed the first governor of the Netherlands Antilles.

Arrival of the First Jewish Settlers

At first, the Dutch used Curaçao as a naval base against Spain. After the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, the island lost its strategic value, so the WIC encouraged Dutch settlers to farm there. In 1651, Joao d’Yllan, a Portuguese Jew, and 12 Jewish families from Amsterdam’s Portuguese community moved to Curacao. They were promised religious freedom, land, tax breaks, exemption from guard duty on Shabbat even during war, and government protection. This was the earliest charter of its kind for Jews in the New World.

The families established a plantation called Plantation De Hoop (Plantation of Hope).

A larger group of Jewish settlers came in 1659, bringing a 14th-century Torah Scroll from the Amsterdam community. This Torah is still used today at the Mikveh Israel-Emmanuel Synagogue. Most of these settlers were refugees from the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions. After first moving to the Netherlands or Northern Brazil, they now settled in Curacao, starting a new chapter for the Jewish community there.

Farmers? Not Quite. Financiers-Absolutely!

The settlers first tried to farm, but the dry soil made it difficult. By 1660, the Jewish community moved to Willemstad and began trading between Northern Europe and South America. They found great success in this new focus.

Once trade routes connected Curacao with Northern Europe and South America, business on the island grew quickly. The Jewish community became the largest and wealthiest in the Americas. From 1670 to 1900, Jews in Curacao owned over 1,200 sailing ships, with at least 200 Jewish captains. A 1728 report said, “the lion’s share of shipping is in Curacao Jewish hands."

Due to the risks involved in shipping, marine insurance was invented to help distribute the risk of loss of ships or cargo among the parties involved. Most of the insurance brokers were Jewish, and they eventually also became the bankers of Curacao. By the early 20th century, three commercial banks owned by Sephardic Jews were established in Curacao: Maduro’s Bank, Curiel’s Bank, and Edwards Henriquez & Co.’s Bank. (The first two merged in 1932 to form Maduro & Curiel’s Bank, which is the oldest and most extensive bank in the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba.)

Archived photo inside Maduro’s Bank

In another successful business, Jewish businessmen Haim Mendes Chumaceiro and Edgar Senior started Senior & Co. in 1896 to make Curaçao liqueur. It was first made for medicine but soon became a popular drink. The founders’ families still run the company, and they are the only ones who use Curacao-grown larahas in their liqueur. The product is also Star-K Kosher certified.

The Seniors

Interestingly, the Jews of Curacao also provided refuge and funds to Simon Bolivar, known as the “George Washington of South America" when he was fighting for freedom from Spain. As the Jews of Curacao shared his hatred for Spain, due to their experience of the Inquisition, they were eager to help him. They provided a place for Bolivar and his family and Curacao’s Jews even served in his army.

In short, over the years, the Jewish community in Curacao gained great wealth and influence, and, as we will see, they used it to strengthen their own community and support other communities throughout the Americas.

Building The Community

While still in its early years, in 1659, the Jewish community of Curacao created Haskamos, defining how the community would be governed. A key component of rulership was a Machamad (the equivalent of a board) that would govern the community for years to come.

The Machamad was a mixed blessing. They had control over all that went on within the community, and in good times, this was positive, but in times when the members of the Machamad were more concerned with their own power than the good of the community, this led to divisions and strife that would ultimately lead to the demise of the proud Curacao community.

The Haskamos of the Curacao community were patterned after those of the Portuguese Talmud Torah Kehillah in Amsterdam, from where most of them had come, and to which they would remain deeply connected. Over the coming centuries, Rabbis for Curacao would be sent from Amsterdam, and Amsterdam would continue to lead and direct the Jewish community from across the ocean.

In 1651, the community established itself as Congregation Mikveh Yisrael. By 1674, the community had grown enough in size and finances to buy its first shul building in Willemstad. In 1703, they rebuilt it with a larger structure, and in 1730, they tore it down and constructed a magnificent edifice that remains in use to this day. It was built by a master carpenter brought in from Amsterdam and was completed by Pesach of 1732. The beautiful shul is called the Snao (which means synagogue in Papiamentu, the language of Curacao). It has 50-foot-high ceilings and 18th-century copper chandeliers, and it was built to resemble the shul in the Amsterdam community from which most Jews in Curacao had come. The shul is large enough to seat 600 people. Today, it is a major tourist attraction in Curacao.

Mikveh Israel-Emmanuel Synagogue

The shul is unique for its sand-covered floors. Some believe the sand is to remember the forty years the Jewish people spent in the desert. Others say it recalls God’s promise to Abraham that his descendants would be as many as the stars and the sand. Another idea is that it comes from Jews who prayed in secret during the Inquisition and used sand to quiet their footsteps and prayers.

By the late 1740’s, the Jewish community had expanded beyond Willemstad into its neighboring Otrabanda, where a new shul, Neve Shalom, was founded in 1746. Over the next few years, disagreements arose over whether Mikveh Yisroel shul should make decisions for the new community or whether Neve Shalom was now an independent community. The conflict grew to such an extent that it affected the island’s economy (indicating the Jewish community’s importance to Curaçao’s economy), and the government got involved.

In 1750, the Prince of Holland ordered the two communities to make peace. His royal order required Neve Shalom to follow the leadership of the Machamad and the board of Mikveh Yisroel, and to obey the directives of the Portuguese community in Amsterdam.

Inside the shul with sand covered floor

The Curacao community had many organizations that helped the poor and the sick. In fact, the community was so renowned for taking care of the needy that the Kehillah of Amsterdam would pay the travel expenses for poor members to go to Curaçao and settle there, knowing they would be well cared for. This occurred so frequently that by 1736, Governor Juan Pedro van Collen asked the West India Company to stop giving passports to poor Jews because he worried that they would become a burden to Curacao.

The Rabbis of Curacao

The Jewish community in Curaçao was deeply committed to their faith. In the 1600s, Jews there had more rights and freedoms than anywhere else in the Western world. While more rights often led to assimilation in other places, this was rare in Curaçao. For the next two centuries, the community remained strong. Unlike other Jewish communities in the Americas, they made Jewish education a top priority and worked hard to give their children a strong religious foundation.

In 1674, Chacham Josiau Pardo arrived from Amsterdam to become Curacao’s first rabbi. He came from a family of rabbis, and in fact, his father had served as a judge in the Amsterdam Jewish court of law alongside the famous Rabbi Menashe ben Israel. Rabbi Pardo’s focus was on the Torah study of the community. He set up a medras (beit medrash study hall) for the children of the community.

With Chacham Pardo as leader, the community required boys to attend the medras from age five to sixteen, showing their strong commitment to Torah study. In Europe then, only wealthy or very dedicated boys continued learning after bar mitzvah, yet in Curacao attendance was mandatory. Families that did not send their sons to the medras could be fined or even forced by the government to comply.

Chacham Pardo also started the Yeshiva Eitz Chaim v’Ohel Yaakov to train teachers, Chazzanim, and those who wanted to study Torah for additional years. This was the first yeshiva-like school in the Western Hemisphere, and many of its graduates would go on to lead Jewish communities in the Americas.

In 1683, after Rabbi Pardo moved to Jamaica, there was no rabbi for the community until 1696 when Rabbi Eliau Lopez arrived in Curacao. He had previously served as the Chacham of Barbados and as the leader of the Curacao community until his passing in 1713.

Rabbi Raphael Jesurun, a student of the Eitz Chaim Yeshiva in Amsterdam, served as rabbi from 1717 to 1748. Rabbi Raphael Mendes de Sola, who had been a rabbi in Amsterdam, came to Curacao in 1744 to serve as an assistant Rabbi to Rabbi Jesurun. After his passing, he served as the Chacham until his passing in 1761.

The next rabbi was Rabbi Isaac Henriquez Farro from Amsterdam. Tragically, he passed away just a few days after arriving in Curacao in July 1762. At this point, the community persuaded Rabbi Raphael Chaim Yitzchok Karigal, who was a Torah scholar and a fundraiser for the community of Chevron, to serve as rabbi until the native Curacaon Rabbi Jacob Lopez da Fonseca would return with semicha from the Eitz Chaim Yeshiva of Amsterdam, as he was expected to become the next rabbi of Curacao. Rabbi Karigal agreed and stayed for two years. He later became a rabbi in Newport, Rhode Island, and New York City.

Rabbi Jacob Lopez da Fonseca returned to Curacao in 1764 and served as the Chacham until his passing in 1815. He was the first Chacham born in Curacao to serve the community.

Mother Congregation of the Americas

With strong leaders, the Curacao Jewish community grew both spiritually and financially. By 1750, about 2,000 Jews lived on the island, likely more Jews than in all thirteen American colonies combined.

During the 1700s and 1800s, the rabbis encouraged the community to share their wealth with Jewish communities worldwide, especially in the Americas and the Land of Israel. The community gave generous donations to help build the Touro Synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, the Shearith Israel Synagogue in New York, and shuls in Kingston, Jamaica, Charleston, and Philadelphia.

Until today, every Yom Kippur, the Touro Synagogue and Shearith Israel in New York say a prayer of thanks to Curacao for the help they gave over 200 years ago. Because of their generosity during this period, Curacao became known as the “Mother Congregation of the Americas."

Signs of Assimilation

After 200 years of a strong Jewish community, things began to weaken. When Chacham Jacob Da Fonseca died in 1815, the community chose Jacob Hain de Abraham Curiel, a 60-year old merchant who was not knowledgeable of Jewish law, to replace him.

After some time, the community realized that his lack of knowledge was a problem, and they asked the Amsterdam community to send them a chazzan who would also serve as a temporary rabbi. Rabbi Jeosuah Piza, a student of Yeshivas Eitz Chaim, arrived in 1815. However, minor issues regarding things Rabbi Piza did (such as using a different wording to end kiddush) upset some in the community, and in December of 1818, Piza was honorably suspended from his position.

This suspension created a deep divide in the community, and a large group left. The separatists organized their own services and bought land to make their own cemetery. At the behest of the Machamad, which wanted to retain control over the community, the government once again became involved, trying to force the community to reunite, but the peace was very shaky.

The situation kept getting worse.

At the time, the Reform movement was spreading amongst German Jews in America, and the Curacao community, already weakened by strife, began to copy them. In 1864, one-third of the Jewish community broke away because they wanted to use an organ in shul on Shabbat. They built a new building that they called Temple Emanuel, and they established their own cemetery at Berg Altena.

Looking to cut his losses and appeal to the masses, the Chacham of Mikveh Yisroel, Rabbi Aron Mendes Chumaceiro, decided to make changes as well to liberalize the congregation.

Rabbi Isaac Leeser of Philadelphia, a prominent and vocal fighter against Reform, strongly criticized these changes in his periodical “The Occident." He wrote, “We deeply regret that the rabbi should have found himself compelled to yield to the introduction of instrumental music in the synagogue…and it is futile to have this work done by a non-Jew."

By 1964, due to assimilation, intermarriage, and emigration, neither Mikveh Israel nor Emmanuel could gather a minyan. They decided to reunite as Mikveh Israel-Emmanuel.

Today, Mikveh Israel-Emanuel still holds 18 Torah Scrolls that are centuries old. They are kept in the beautiful shul, built with great devotion. However, the strong Torah community that once thrived here, rooted in Spanish-Portuguese tradition, is now gone.

The Ashkenazi Community

Ashkenazi Jews started coming to Curaçao in the 1920s and 30s. Many did not plan to settle there, but when their ships stopped in Curacao, some decided to stay. Most were poor and earned a living by selling goods in rural areas, often buying from the Sephardi Jews already on the island. Over time, they opened shops and later larger stores.

As the Ashkenazi Jews became more successful, they formed their own community \called Shaarei Tzedek. In 2006, they dedicated a new shul with a stunning glass dome. Today, the shul follows Ashkenazi customs, but Sephardim also pray there. The Chabad of Curacao uses the shul for its services and programs.

No Visa Required: Escaping Lithuania for Curacao (Sort of)

In 1939, two-thirds of Poland had been conquered by Germany, and one-third was under the rule of the Soviet Union. For a brief period at the end of 1939 and in early 1940, Lithuania was a neutral country. Recognizing a window of opportunity, Reb Chaim Ozer Grodzensky, leader of European Jewry, sent urgent telegrams to the yeshivas he could make contact with in Soviet-controlled Poland, urging them to escape to Lithuania en masse, hoping they would be saved in that manner. They followed his directive. However, when the Soviets invaded Lithuania in June of 1940, the haven of Lithuania was no longer safe for Jews.

Nachum Zvi (Nathan) Gutwirth, originally from Holland, was a student at Telshe Yeshiva and he joined the yeshiva as it fled to Lithuania. After the invasion, he too was desperate to escape Soviet rule, yet he could not return to his native Holland, because the Nazis had already taken it over. Nachum Zvi remembered from his school years that the Dutch owned an island called Curacao, 60 miles north of Venezuela. He thought that, as a Dutch citizen, he might be able to travel there and find freedom.

To leave the Soviet Union, a person needed an exit visa from Russia, a transit visa through Japan or another country, and a final destination. Knowing he could only get the first two if he had a destination, Nachum Dovid wrote to the Dutch Ambassador in Riga to ask for a visa to Curacao. The Ambassador replied that he did not need a visa for Curacao, just permission from the island’s governor, and only the governor could give that.

After thinking it over, Nachum Dovid had an idea that would later save thousands, including the students and teachers of the famed Mir Yeshiva. He asked the Ambassador to write on his passport, “No Visa to Curacao required," hoping this would help him get the Russian exit visa and the Japanese transit visa.

To his great joy, the Ambassador was amenable to that and wrote to Nachum Dovid that he could go to the Dutch honorary consul, Jan Zwartendyk, based in Kovno, to have the words written on his passport.

On July 24, Zwartendyk, who was an acquaintance of Nachum Dovid, wrote “No visa to Curacao required" on Nachum Dovid’s passport. (Interestingly, just two days before, on July 22nd, another Dutch native who was stranded in Lithuania, Peppy Lewin, had the same idea and received “Curacao visas" for herself and her husband.) When two of the teachers of the Mir Yeshiva, Rabbi Leib Malin and Reb Lazer Portnoy, heard about Nachum Dovid’s idea, they approached him and asked if he could get the statement stamped on the passports of the 300 members of the Mir Yeshiva. Assisted by five Mir students, Zwartendyk was more than happy to help.

With the Curacao “visas," Nachum Dovid, the Mir Yeshiva, and about 2,000 others received transit visas from Chiune-Sempo Sugihara to travel through Japan. After also getting exit visas from Russia, they managed to escape Nazi and Soviet Europe.

The Curacao Connection

In a remarkable turn of history, Curacao, once called “The Mother Congregation of the Americas" and home to about 2,000 Jews at its peak, played a key role in saving Jews who escaped Europe with the 2,000 “Curacao" visas. Among the refugees, the Mir Yeshiva stood out, later rebuilding Jewish life and Torah institutions in America and Israel after the Holocaust.

Perhaps there is a spiritual connection between the Curacao community’s dedication to Jewish community and Jewish education, and the fact that it was the destination that enabled the Mir Yeshiva and hundreds of other Jews to escape the Holocaust and rebuild Jewish communities in America and Israel after the war.

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/423742