Date: November 30th, 2025 7:14 PM
Author: (she was a bowl of yams) ((zurich is stained))
i guess this is what they were talking about a couple months ago when they said israel was spending $50m on a social media campaign.
i got a poast in my feed just now from a group called "the nation of israel lives" LOL. POST BELOW:
The handful of extremist Jews who spit on Christians do not get away with it.
Here are the facts - not the memes.
When this topic pops up online, it’s often framed as if this is widespread, accepted behavior - “The Jews” spitting on “The Christians.” But let’s remember what we covered in my last post:
👉 Judaism does not teach hatred toward Christians.
👉 The Talmud was completed long before modern Christianity.
👉 Jews themselves make clear that Yeshu is not the Jesus of Nazareth of Christian tradition.
👉 The Israeli Rabbanut (Chief Rabbinate) explicitly rejects the idea that Jews should hate Christians.
The bottom line: there’s no credible evidence of institutionalized hate toward Christians in the State of Israel or in early Jewish scripture.
Now, back to the spitting accusation - yes, it happens, but it is fringe, rare, condemned by Jewish law and by Israeli law, and it leads to arrests in Israel.
Here’s when it actually happened:
👉 4 October 2023 - Old City, Jerusalem
Israeli police arrested five people (four adults and one minor) on suspicion of spitting at Christian pilgrims and at churches. They were detained, questioned, and in some cases charged with assault or offensive behavior. (According to Reuters and other media)
👉 4 February 2024 - Jerusalem
Two Israelis (one of them 17 years old) were arrested after being recorded spitting toward a Christian archpriest. Police placed them under house arrest and launched a criminal investigation.
👉 A handful of other small-scale incidents in recent years
Each time one of these spitting cases comes to light:
• Police intervene
• Suspects are detained or arrested
• It is treated as criminal harassment or assault
• Public condemnation follows from Jewish leaders and Israeli officials
These cases are extremely rare, usually involving fringe extremist youth, not mainstream Jewish society.
👉 This is not “Jewish culture.” It’s not Torah. It’s not accepted.
Judaism describes this behavior as a Chilul Hashem - a disgrace, a violation of God’s name. Rabbis across the spectrum - Orthodox, Haredi, Religious Zionist - have condemned it.
The Israeli government has condemned it.
The Chief Rabbinate has condemned it.
The Mayor of Jerusalem has condemned it.
Ordinary Israelis despise it.
👉 So why does it seem bigger online than in real life?
Because haters take a fringe act by a handful of teenagers and turn it into a “Jewish tradition.”
In a city that sees millions of Christian visitors a year, the number of reported spitting cases is in the single-digits. Yet online they’re amplified into a weapon to smear an entire people.
The truth is simple:
When it happens - Israel arrests the perpetrators. Judaism condemns it. And the individuals doing it belong to tiny extremist sub-groups. Nothing more. Don’t let propaganda turn fringe misbehavior into a stereotype about an entire nation.
🇮🇱 The Nation of Israel Lives
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5804508&forum_id=2.#49472932)