MAAYAN MISKIN: GRANDSON OF JABOTINSKY SPEAKS ON MODERN ISRAEL

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/146481
THIS IS WHAT HE SAID IN A PREVIOUS INTERVIEW IN 2008

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/128513

Two states? 30,000 dead
In a past interview in Yediot Acharonot, Jabotinsky blamed Oslo Accord architects Shimon Peres and Yossi Beilin for making the security situation “500 times worse” and turning the Arab insurrection “from a struggle with rocks to war with live ammunition.”

A “Palestinian” state, Jabotinsky said, “would be the base for the international terror of Al Qaeda and Hizbullah with Iranian funding. If they opt for that we will reach a situation in which instead of 1,400 [Jewish] dead there will be 30,000 dead. They will not hesitate to use chemical weapons against us.”

He added that “the will to slaughter as many Jews as possible” and to end Jewish hegemony in the Land of Israel has also trickled into the Arab population within pre-1967 Israel.

 Jabotinsky: Israel Created In Spite of the Holocaust
Zev Jabotinsky, the grandson, answers questions on Jews and Israel. Modern Israel – in spite of, not because of, the Holocaust.
A small memorial for Zionist visionary Zev Jabotinsky last week featured speaker Zev Jabotinsky, the grandson. Jabotinsky and a handful of leading Likud politicians answered questions regarding the pressing issues facing Israel.
Jabotinsky

Jabotinsky
Arutz Sheva photo


Jabotinsky focused on the Jewish connection to Israel. “No person can remove our rights to this land,’ he declared. “The only thing that can take away our rights is if we forget them.”

Jews have a right to the land of Israel under international law, a fact that too few Israelis are aware of, he said.

When asked if the state of Israel was created due to international guilt over the Holocaust, he replied, “Israel was created in spite of the Holocaust, not because of it.” International recognition of the Jewish people’s right to reestablish its homeland began decades earlier, he noted.

Minister of Education Gidon Sa’ar and Vice Minister Silvan Shalom spoke about issues regarding the Palestinian Authority, and in particular, the PA’s threat to go to the United Nations in September for unilateral recognition of a PA-led Arab state in Judea and Samaria.

Both agreed that the PA is likely to enjoy an automatic pro-Arab majority in the General Assembly, but that Israel stands a chance of getting a “quality minority” to oppose the measure.

S’aar and Shalom also discussed their latest political initiatives, such as Saar’s plans for educational reform and cheaper schooling, and Shalom’s hopes to move Israel to a Saturday-Sunday weekend.

The conference was brought to a close by local Likud activist Daniel Tauber, who called on those present to be politically active. Tauber quoted Jabotinsky’s

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