Saturday, October 31, 2020

Ten Thousand Jews Taken Into Slavery By Nebuchadnezzar

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                

Babylonia is also called the land of Shinar or of the Kasdim (Chaldees).  Genesis, 1st book in the Torah,  teaches us that Babylonia was the cradle of humanity and the scene of man's first revolt against God which was the Tower of Babel section.  Many of the early biblical stories find a parallel in Babylonian literature , like the story of the Flood,  Last of all and most importantly is that Abram (Abraham) was born here in Ur of the Chaldeans, and emigrated to Canaan where he later fought King Amraphel of Shinar as told in Genesis 14.  Babylon is regarded by the prophets as a symbol of insolent pagan tyranny, and this symbolism has been adopted by later writers.  Nebuchadnezzar II of 604-561 BCE inherited the Assyrian Empire and after his conquest of Judah in 597 and 586 exiled the Jews to Babylon.       

 Kin 24:13-14 "And Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon carried out from there all the treasures of the house of the LORD and the treasures of the king's house, and he cut in pieces all the articles of gold which Solomon king of Israel had made in the temple of the LORD, as the LORD had said. Also he carried into captivity all Jerusalem: all the captains and all the mighty men of valor, ten thousand captives, and all the craftsmen and smiths. None remained except the poorest people of the land."  His army had done this in 597BCE and again in 586BCE.                                    

Nebuchadnezzar was the king of Babylon at its height.  He was the Stalin of that period from 605-562 BCE.  A result of his victory over the Assyrian-Egyptian alliance at Carchemish in 605BCE resulted in conquering all the lands from the Euphrates to the Egyptian frontier, including Judah (our Jewish state, the southern part of Israel.)

According to clay tablets found, discovered in Iraq and on display at an exhibit, 100 cuneiform tablets, each no bigger than an adult’s palm, the Jews were not slaves but were just needed for their capabilities.  Imagine, highjacking great workers! 

 "One exile in 587 BC saw around 1,500 people make the perilous journey via modern-day Lebanon and Syria to the fertile crescent of southern Iraq, where the Judeans traded, ran businesses and helped the administration of the kingdom.“They were free to go about their lives, they weren’t slaves,” Vukosavovic said. “Nebuchadnezzar wasn’t a brutal ruler in that respect. He knew he needed the Judeans to help revive the struggling Babylonian economy.”The tablets, each inscribed in minute Akkadian script,  was the Semitic language oral and written; used from 4th millennium BCE and used everywhere;  the English of the day until the Greek conquests; but no doubt written by a non-Jew;  detail trade in fruits and other commodities, taxes paid, debts owed and credits accumulated.        

 I'd call being forcefully taken away from one's home and family would be for slavery-and the 2nd generation may have felt at home in Babylonia, but certainly not the first.  We have evidence of our people crying at the river for Jerusalem right in the Bible. Psalm 137 is the 137th psalm of the Book of Psalms, and as such it is included in the Hebrew Bible. In English it is generally known as "By the rivers of Babylon", which is how its first words are translated in the King James Version. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uTnspbSjKVc

In 597 BCE, after Judah had revolted, he sent contingents which captured Jerusalem, replaced the   Pharoah Necoh- appointed Jewish king Jehoiachim-son of Josiah, birth name-Eliakim (king from  608-598 BCE) who reported to Egypt for 3 years, but became a Babylonian vassal;  with his own nominee, young 21 year old Zedekiah, son of Josiah (king from 597-586) birth-name was Mattaniah but took this name when bestowed as king , and exiled 8,000 of the local aristocracy to Babylon.  Nebuchadnezzar's account of these events is preserved in the British Museum.                    

8 years later, Zedekiah rebelled.  The forces of Nebuchadnezzar under Nebuzaradan against invaded Judah, captured Jerusalem in 586, and destroyed Solomon's Temple this time, laying waste the cities and exiling masses of the population.  The king was taken to Riblah, where Nebuchadnezzar had him killed.  Nebuchadnezzar also figures in a number of legends related in the Book of Daniel.  

King Nebuchadnezzar is mentioned in the Tanakh (Old Testament books) of 2 Kings, 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. However he is spoken of most in the book of Daniel. He is first introduced in 2 Kings 24, amidst a crop of corrupt kings of Judah. Eventually, the Babylonian army destroyed and took captive all survivors, fulfilling the prophet Jeremiah’s warnings, and God’s disciplinary action of His people.                                                             The Seleucid Empire was a Hellenistic state in Western Asia that existed from 312 BC to 63 BC. It was founded by Seleucus I Nicator following the division of the Macedonian Empire established by Alexander the Great.  Persia (Iran) would be above the Persian Gulf in Seleucid territory. Ur, home town of Abraham, is in Mesopotamia near the Persian Gulf.  As I have found out, Elam destroyed Ur and Elam was in Perisa (iran). 


Here is a map showing Mesopotamia.
Mesopotamia became Iraq. The Arabs conquered it in 637 CE. 
The name is (from the Greek, meaning 'between two rivers') was an ancient region located in the eastern Mediterranean bounded in the northeast by the Zagros Mountains and in the southeast by the Arabian Plateau, corresponding to today's Iraq, mostly, but also parts of modern-day Iran, Syria and Turkey.

Map showing modern day countries where Ur, Haran and Caanan were as Sumerian / Mesopotamian areas in Abram's time. Ur of the Chaldees is in Southern Iraq (Written in White). Canaan is shown under the word, Israel.  
Resource:
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-archaeology-babylon/ancient-tablets-reveal-life-of-jews-in-nebuchadnezzars-babylon-idUSKBN0L71EK20150203
The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia
maps online


Thursday, October 29, 2020

The Last Palestinian Refusal of Offers From Arafat To Clinton

 Nadene Goldfoot                                                 

  Prime Minister of Israel Barak, USA President Clinton, PA's Arafat    Barak was born February 12, 1942 (Abraham Lincoln's birthday).  

 US President Bill Clinton (C) accompanies Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak (L) and PLO Chairman Yassar Arafat (R) shake hands at the US Ambassador's residence 02 November, 1999, in Oslo, before their meeting. President Clinton is in Norway along with Barak and Arafat to give "added momentum" to the Middle East peace effort which began in Oslo in 1993 when Israel first agreed to withdrawls from the West Bank. (ELECTRONIC IMAGE) Paul Richards / AFP Photo (Photo credit should read PAUL J. RICHARDS/AFP via Getty Images)

In 2000, PA Chairman Arafat rebuffed President Clinton's most generous offer and initiated a harsh intifada against Israel in his refusal.  Israel's Prime Minister Barak, hoping to end the protracted conflict with the Arabs, accepted the offer despite the fact that it would have forced Israel to make extremely painful concessions.  Clinton had offered, at least in his own mind,  a viable contiguous Palestinian state plan and the resolution of the refugees problem as well.                                                 

The Palestinian negotiators indicated they wanted full Palestinian sovereignty over the entire West Bank and the Gaza Strip, although they would consider a one-to-one land swap with Israel. Their historic position was that Palestinians had already made a territorial compromise with Israel by accepting Israel's right to 78% of "historic Palestine", and accepting their state on the remaining 22% of such land. This consensus was expressed by Faisal Husseini when he remarked:'There can be no compromise on the compromise'.  They maintained that Resolution 242 calls for full Israeli withdrawal from these territories, which were captured in the Six-Day War, as part of a final peace settlement

Most Israeli village, towns and cities in Judea and Samaria are legal and violate no international laws or relevant UN resolutions.  Most do not involve stealing of any Palestinian land.  In fact, Jews had paid ungodly prices for any land, and really, it's value is high, artificially raised only to Jews being they've been the only buyers.  

The movement of settling in the land has provided much benefit to the Arabs of those area and fueled a tripling of the Arab populations and a skyrocketing economy for the areas which were doing so well until the onset of Arafat's rules.  

Neither villages or towns and cities create stumbling blocks to peace or hinder peace negotiations.  They can and have been dismantled in the context of negotiations with an honest peace partner.  Concessions about homes already built or apartment houses should be made only in the context of negotiations, which can begin only after Palestinian leadership stops the violence, ends the terror war, and ends the hate speech and the hate preaching and the hate teaching that has permeated the Palestine society since 1994.  

There is no rational justification for a one-sided Jewish community of any size  being compromised when the other side maintains a state of war against them.

Unilateral withdrawal enhances the ability of terrorists to wage  terror and war. We saw this in Gaza.  

                                             

 Mahmoud Abbas has been President of PA since  January 15, 2005.  He was born November 15, 1935, so is now 85 years old.

Camp David II failed in large part due to Arafat's strategy of pocketing Barak's concessions, making no substantive concessions, and then demanding more from Barak.  Arafat never intended to negotiate.  He always intended to perpetrate his long-dreamed final solution of the total destruction of Israel.  In light of the unrelenting commitment of terror groups of Fatah like Hamas and others from Lebanon and Mahmoud Abbas' frequent public statements commending the terror groups, defining their casualties as martyrs and vowing to never use force against them, it is irrational to suggest that further Israeli concessions will generate a Palestinian willingness to reciprocate.  The opposite has happened.  

In his 90-minute cell-phone speech to a Lebanese PLO radio station on April 14, 2002, made from his bedroom in his headquarters in Ramallah which Israel had surrounded and partially destroyed in Operation Defensive Shield, he outlined his strategy.  The terror armies and their allies were using  Judea-Samaria as a launching pad for the great final Jihad against Israel.  Arafat died on November 4, 2004 in France. 

President Trump's plan for a Palestine is that: Palestinians would be given parts of the Negev Desert, connected through small land corridors to Gaza. The Trump plan gives Palestinians less territory than previous proposals.

The plan recognizes an Israeli right to the entire Jordan Valley.


Resource:

BIG LIES, demolishing the myths of the propaganda war against Israel. by David Meir-Levi 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trump_peace_plan#:~:text=Status%20of%20borders%20and%20territory,-The%20plan%20recognizes&text=Palestinians%20would%20be%20given%20parts,to%20the%20entire%20Jordan%20Valley.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_Camp_David_Summit

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahmoud_Abbas


The Awaiting of the Moshiach Expected Soon By the Triad of Religions

 Nadene Goldfoot                                         


It just so happens that all 3 religions;  Judaism, Christianity and Islam expect their Messiah (Moshiach) to make an appearance very soon.  Each one has different expectations as to what is to happen.  This has been expected for many years.  We Jews have had a number of false messiahs along the way.  Is this just to be another false expectation?  Rabbis of much knowledge expect it to happen.  

                                              

                Eliyahu Rips, created the code he found in the Torah

Some even are aware of the Bible Code discovered by a scholarly Israeli mathematician, Eliyahu Rips, who fed his computer with the Torah's Hebrew writings  and out came a number of prophecies in code and shared with us by a writer, Drosnin who has since died, possibly from Covid 19, at least during this pandemic.  Many others including rabbis are now doing the same thing, trying to find proof of their expectations. Some have been shockingly true. The author of 3 books about the Bible Code, Michael Drosnin, a New York journalist,  has died recently at age 74.                         


I had a thought.  Moses went to the Pharaoh of Egypt at age 80 and asked that he let his slaves leave under his care, most of whom were of the Israelite family of 70 who had entered Egypt 400 years earlier and multiplied so fast that the Egyptian government was worried of a take-over, and now numbered about 600 thousand, Moses figured.

                                                

       The 10th plague: death of the 1st born is explained

  After Egypt went through 10 plagues of  blood, frogs, lice, beasts, blight, boils, hail, locusts, darkness, and slaying of the first born of all forms of life, with Moses warning the pharaoh after each time to let his people go, he was finally convinced when his own son had died.  These were of all natural events, nothing conjured up by some magician that Moses might have turned into.  They just managed to happen when Moses needed something the most.

                                             


   Elon Musk's next project of being able to take a vacation this way.  
 

Today's world has come to a boiling point in many respects.  We homo-sapiens have made progress, alright, but in technical skills more than social ones.  It's like a pot of water on high on the stove, with the immense capabilities our technical abilities have arrived at all over the world. We're at the boiling point.   We have gone to the moon, made a hydrogen bomb, plan space exploration, and yet our social skills are still at the level of Abraham's day; fighting, taking lives, while some even ignore what progress we have made in medical science.  

                                                

    Reading the Torah in the synagogue, a happening every Saturday morning (Shabbat).                                              

The religious leaders are only going by their time-table in their special books of references.  Their time table surprisingly says that now is that special time.  One of our rabbis even say this will happen in the end of this year or the next year.  I always thought the evidence they presented gave us a couple hundred more years to go.  Well, progress does happen in leaps and bounds, I guess.  

                                              


Could it be that the higher power who created this world, G-d, has been using more natural events found on this earth such as the coronavirus, known to us as COVID 19 to bring us to that time of the entrance of a messiah?  it would take a pandemic to get our attention to such a climax.  It's not abating;  it's getting worse according to today's news.  

                                                 

      The Dodgers' Justin Turner took the test and is positive.  They won and he's possibly exposing his players and didn't go into immediate quarantine.  

People are not even capable of following the scientists' advice in getting it to leave us.  Even the scientists don't all agree, some more lenient, others very strict.  We saw the Dodgers, a baseball team on the news today with a major player break the rules after being declared showing he had the virus and expose his team-mates.  He wanted to be in the winning picture!    

The very latest news is that couples are getting divorces over political differences.  What is to happen after January 3rd?                     


So while we wait for COVID 19 to abate at a time in our lives when another virus could be in the works, off-stage, or some meshugeneh might be lurking in the near future with some scheme to end a city such as is shown in Net-Flix series or movies or books that we all love to watch, because we always have a hero saving us in the end, some of us await for the messiah to make his appearance.  

Resource:

https://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2012/01/bringing-in-mashiach-messiah.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2013/05/messiahs-jews-have-known-and.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2013/05/what-is-to-happen-at-end-of-days.html

https://jewishfactsfromportland.blogspot.com/2014/07/the-end-before-messiah-ezekials.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/rips-bible-code-alive-and-well.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/how-to-know-moshiach.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/part-5-bible-code-tells-of-more.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/part-4-findings-of-bible-code-and.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/part-3-ripss-bible-code-prophecies-that.html

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/07/part-2-of-ripss-bible-code-predictions.html 

https://jewishbubba.blogspot.com/2020/08/possible-messiahs-to-appear-2021.html




Wednesday, October 28, 2020

The Skinny on What Happened When Israel Tried to Make Peace With the Palestinians

Nadene Goldfoot                                                  

About 2.5 million Palestinians and 400,000 Jewish Israelis live in the West Bank or Judea and Samaria.

Jordan conquered the West Bank after Israel’s 1948 War of Independence. Then Israel captured the territory from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War, but never fully annexed it into the country. So for more than 50 years, the West Bank has been controlled by Israel, but its status has been under debate.  Historically, and by Jewish tradition, this is where the Jewish patriarchs lived and where many of the events of the Bible took place.

From 1949 to 1967, there were no Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria or even in the Gaza Strip. There wasn't any peace, either.  Arab belligerence was unrelated to Judea and Samaria and Gaza villages.  The Jewish communities they called settlements that the Arabs objected about at the time were Tel Aviv, Haifa, Hadera, Afula, etc; cities in Israel, proper.                                    
    Ariel, a city in Samaria: It is 
20 kilometres (12 mi) east of the Green Line and 34 kilometres (21 mi) west of the Jordan border Ariel was first established in 1978 and its population was 20,540 in 2019, composed of veteran and young Israelis, English-speaking immigrants, and immigrants from the Former Soviet Union, with an additional influx of 10,000 students. It is the fourth largest Jewish settlement in the West Bank, after Modi'in IllitBeitar Illit, and Ma'ale Adumim.  Ariel was established in 1978.   Ariel is in the Shomron council.                                                 
 Almon in southern Samaria in council of Binyamin has population of 1,420 in 2019.
It was established in 1982. The council's jurisdiction is from the Jordan valley in the east to the Samarian foothills in the west, and from the Shiloh river in the north to the Jerusalem Mountains in the south.

Palestinians see apartments going up in Judea and Samaria and they see it as a harbinger of Israel's permanent occupation of the land and so make territorial compromise impossible in peace talks. They also feel the building signal's Israel's inherently obvious unwillingness to negotiate a fair peace.  Do their suspicions correspond to historical reality?  

Yet the propaganda the Palestinians spewed out and continue is that Jewish building is illegal and is a sign of Israel's intent on conquest of Palestinian land and it is this that is the obstacle to peace. Their intention  evidently is that Judea and Samaria and East Jerusalem is to be their country of Palestine. 

                                                      

Metzad (Hebrewמיצד‎), also Asfar, is an Israeli settlement organised as a community settlement in the Gush Etzion settlement bloc in Judea. Established as by ultra-orthodox Jews in 1984, it is located south of Bethlehem in the eastern Judean Mountains, 14.5 km from the Green Line, outside the Separation Barrier. In 2019 its population was 932. It falls under the municipal jurisdiction of the Gush Etzion Regional Council.

Metzad was established in 1984 by immigrants from the United States, the United KingdomSouth Africa and France.


Actually, a Palestine exists under the name of Jordan right next door.  The king is married to a Palestinian Arab girl.  Palestinian Arabs fought against Jordan and lost but remained as his subjects.  A lot of them make up the population.  Luckily, it seems that the king, from a line in Saudi Arabia, has been keeping the peace since 1967's war, and on the most part, except for the Temple Mount, a good neighbor.  The thought of having 2 Palestines next door to Israel is unnerving. 

 Jordanian 69.3%, Syrian 13.3%, Palestinian 6.7%, Egyptian 6.7%, Iraqi 1.4%, other 2.6% (includes Armenian, Circassian) (2015 est.) 

Actually, the whole history of the Middle East has been that of conquest and divide.  It is a shock to their system that someone else doesn't want to conquer, though they had to do  lot of defensive fighting.  It was the Jews who were attacked and conquered and it's been our history pretty much, ending with our Temple's destruction in 70 CE by the Romans leaving us without a country.  

In June, 1967, immediately after the 6 Day War and before there were any Israeli development in Judea and Samaria and Gaza Strip, Israel proposed its dramatic peace initiative both at the UN and in sub rosa talks with Jordan.  This initiative was rejected by all Arab states and the PLO at the Khartoum Conference in August-September, 1967.  The obstacle to peace was the very existence of Israel, not settlements in Judea-Samaria. 

In 1979, as part of the accord with Egypt, Israel froze their building on empty land expansion plans for 3 months in order to encourage entry of Jordan into the Egypt-Israel peace process.  Jordan refused.  The freezing of building development did not stimulate peaceful interaction.  Arafat had been working on creating his own terrorist state in southern Lebanon and was invited to join Egypt at the peace talks.  This building freeze was intended to encourage his participation and he had refused.  The existence of villages or towns in Sinai did ot interfere with the Israel-Egypt peace accords;  and the freeze on building activity did not encourage Jordan or the PLO to enter into peace accords.  

                                             


In 1994, Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel, while towns grew into cities in Judea and Samaria and Gaza.  Their existence in no way impaired the peace process with Jordan.  

In 2000, part of PM Barak of Israel's offer to Arafat was the exchange of land such that the Palestinians would be compensated for the small number of Jewish communities that would not be dismantled by the ceding of Israeli land within the pre-1967 boundaries to the Palestine National Authority (PA).  This was an offer made in addition to the almost 95% of all the disputed land in Judea and Samaria and 100% of the territory in Gaza which were to be under the control of the PA.  Arabs rejected the offer, much to the surprise and chagrin of President Clinton.  

The accords discussed at Madrid, Wye, Oslo and Taba all included the acknowledgement that these villages or cities would be dismantled in the context of a peace agreement, even though it's a hardship on the people living there.  Jewish communities did not impede negotiation then. 

In 2005, about 250,000 Jews lived in a total of 144 communities scattered through Judea and Samaria and Gaza.  This is the year that all Jews, 8,500 of them,  were moved out of Gaza from their 21 communities for peace which they did not get.  To this day Gazans continue to shell Israel. Who was hurt in this act of peace?  It was Israel.  Besides that, 80% of them could be brought within Israel's pre-1967 borders with only a very minor re-arranging of "green line" boundaries but have not been.   

Professor Kontorovich, and international lawyer and scholar, says that Israelis are not breaking international law by living in Judea and Samaria.  The Geneva Convention and UN Resolution 242 do not say that Israel is breaking the law.  The Palestinian  accusations are red herrings.  Israel has been more than willing to negotiate a fair peace. In fact Israel did with Gaza and got burnt.   It's been a catastrophe.  Gaza has become a platform for rockets, mortars and missiles to be aimed and shot at Israel.  Jews had left their homes and businesses for nothing when they were removed.       

 Most of the international community sees the settlements as illegal. Palestinians see the settlements as colonies that prevent them from achieving statehood, and blame the residents there for inflicting violence on them. The settlers and their defenders see the settlements (villages, towns and cities) as a security bulwark against Palestinian terrorism in the West Bank and Israel. The seriously religious people see the land of Judea and Samaria the most important element of Judaism.  That's why they have been returning and settling there.   How can you ever have Israel so close to our history of Judea-Samaria yet not be a part of it?  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_disengagement_from_Gaza#:~:text=The%20Israeli%20disengagement%20from%20Gaza,from%20inside%20the%20Gaza%20Strip. 

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/facts-about-jewish-settlements-in-the-west-bank

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Population_statistics_for_Israeli_settlements_in_the_West_Bank

BIG LIES: by David Meir-Levi of David Horowitz Freedom Center, demolishing the myths of the propaganda war against Israel. 

https://www.jta.org/2019/04/08/israel/netanyahus-promise-to-annex-the-west-bank-settlements-explained

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2020/06/26/palestine-and-israel-mapping-an-annexation/

Who the Palestinian Arabs Were and Their Relation to the Israelis Through Syria From Ottoman Empire

Nadene Goldfoot                                             

            The six-century rise and fall of the Ottoman Empire

The Ottoman Empire is named for Osman, its first ruler, who in the early 1300s expanded it from a tiny part of northwest Turkey to a slightly less tiny part. It continued expanding for about 500 years — longer than the entire history of the Roman Empire — ruling over most of the Middle East, North Africa, and southeastern Europe for centuries. The empire, officially an Islamic state, spread the religion in southeast Europe but was generally tolerant of other religious groups. It was probably the last great non-European empire until it began declining in the mid-1800s, collapsed after World War I, and had its former territory in the Middle East divided up by Western Europe

Ask a Palestinian Arab in 1930 where he was from or what he was and he would say that he was a Syrian.  Joan Peters shared that information with us in her book, From Time Immemorial.  The reason for the answer is that the Ottoman Empire ruled over Palestine in the Middle East for 400 years and when they lost in World War I of 1914-1917 to the Allies, their land was divided.  Ottoman Syria became 4 independent countries;  Syria, Lebanon, Jordan and Israel.  This division and its anger over Israel having been created, had never been accepted by ardent Syrian nationalists.  

 A total of 36 Sultans ruled the Ottoman Empire between 1299 and 1922.  Following the Armistice of Mudros, most Ottoman territories were divided between Britain, France, Greece and Russia The Caucasus campaign comprised armed conflicts between the Russian Empire and the ... The  land warfare was accompanied by the Russian navy in the Black Sea ... on June 4, 1918, the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Batum with Armenia, ... A Caucasus campaign would have a distracting effect on Russian forces.

Syria is one of the best examples of the Arabs' desire for unity and their difficulties in achieving it.  It is the home of modern Arab nationalism.  Yet they had never been able to speak with one voice before the First World War.                                  

Anyone living in "Palestine" in the 1930s were ruled from Turkey by the Turks who were "the Ottoman Empire, and both Jews and Arabs were called Palestinians since they lived there."  There was no country with a ruler called Palestine.  Many types of people lived under this yoke as there were all sorts of religions, ethnicity and sectional differences.  One thing united them pretty much and that was that they had 85% of the people being Muslims.  Of that they were divided into Sunnis, Shi'is, Alawis, Druze, Isma'ilis, Jews and Yazidis.  The smaller Christian population was divided into at least 12 denominations.  10% of the population did not speak Arabic, which included the Kurds, Turkomans and Circassians.  Another 10% were roaming Bedouins who caused more devisiveness than their number would indicate.  The 4 major cities with the most influence were Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo. 

                                                 

                            Bashar al-Assad, President of Syria

Hafez al-Assad took power in 1970. After his death in 2000 his son, Bashar al-Assad, succeeded him as President. A surge of interest in political reform took place after Bashar al-Assad assumed power in 2000. Human-rights activists and other civil-society advocates, as well as some parliamentarians, became more outspoken during a period referred to as the "Damascus Spring" (July 2000-February 2001). Assad also made a series of appointments of reform-minded advisors to formal and less formal positions and is included a number of similarly oriented individuals in his Cabinet.

Syria was a place of arguments.  During any week, a Sunni Syrian could be against the rest of the Muslims;  as a Muslim, against the non-Muslims;  as a pan-Arab secularist, against the religious communalists;  as a Damascene against all other sections of Syria;  and as a Syrian against other Arab countries.  One's intense individualism could hinder their cooperation.  Syria is the Arab world in microcosm;  anyone who rules Syria can unite the Arabs.   Basically, you can't tell a Syrian Arab what to do.  He is an individualist, a leader, not a follower.  

In the Bible, the land of Syria was referred to as Aram.  Even back then the kings of Arab could not create a homogeneous state.  The coast was settled by the Phoenicians and they had constant friction with the kingdoms of Israel and Judah until the 8th century when Syria was overrun by the Assyrians in 721 BCE.  It had a Jewish population at Antioch that was important to the SELEUCID era of their rulers, but suffered from the hostility of the Greeks.  

There were some Jews there in the Talmudic Period and also under Theodosius II from 408-450 CE, but their religious freedom was restricted and many synagogues were converted to churches.  

The situation improved with the Arab conquest of 634 to 637 when Jews were allowed to maintain their faith but were forced to pay a poll-tax because they were considered as 2nd class citizens or Dhimmis like the Christians also were.  

More Jews entered here into the Ottoman Empire after 1492's Spanish Inquisition and by the 12th century 5,000 Jews lived in Aleppo, 3,000 in Damascus, and 2,000 in Palmyra.  The Jews of Spain and Sicily had found a niche in the transit trade between Europe and Asia. 

                                                 

                         Syrian missiles aimed at Israel
 

Jews in recent years had been confined to their own quarter, notably in Damascus.  By 1973, the number of Jews was down to 4,000 and had not changed.  Syria had been consistent in their anti-Israel policy and had continued acts of hostility since it joined the Arab invasion of 1948 when Israel was re-born. "The Jews of Damascus experienced fear and discrimination after the Israeli War of Independence. In July–August 1948 the Jewish quarter was bombed and dozens of Jews were killed and injured. Its extremism was largely responsible for the SIX-DAY WAR of 1967 in the course of which Israel defeated the Syrian army and occupied the GOLAN HEIGHTS from which the Syrians had been bombarding ISRAEL communities below.  

A Jewish lady from Canada, Judith Carr, a singular activist who managed to talk Assad out of letting her remove all the Jews to Brooklyn , New York since they were confined to their ghetto in Syria, and he agreed as long as she wasn't taking them to Israel. She had managed to free 3,228 Jews, mostly out of Aleppo and Damascus.  Today, only a few might be left.  "In an undercover operation in late 1994, 1,262 Syrian Jews were brought to Israel. The spiritual leader of the Syrian Jewish community from 1976 to 1994, Rabbi Abraham Hamra, was among those who left Syria and went to New York (and later Israel). Syria had granted exit visas on the condition that the Jews did not go to Israel. The decision to finally free the Jews came about largely as a result of pressure from the United States following the 1991 Madrid Peace Conference."

June 2, 2019, "The Israel Air Force struck several Syrian military positions in southwestern Damascus and Quneitra, killing three Syrian Armed Force (SAF) soldiers and injuring seven others, in retaliation for rockets fired earlier into northern Israel."  

Syria and Russia have an alliance today.  Now in its 10th year, the Syrian conflict has led to more than 500,000 deaths and displaced an estimated 13 million—over half of Syria's pre-war population. Over 6.2 million Syrians are internally displaced, and 5.6 million are refugees, predominantly in Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey.Aug 26, 2020.  

Syria's Emergency Law was in force from 1963, when the Ba'ath Party came to power, until 21 April 2011 when it was rescinded by Bashar al-Assad (decree 161). The law, justified on the grounds of the continuing war with Israel and the threats posed by terrorists, suspended most constitutional protections.

In December 2000, Assad married Asma al-Assad (née Akhras), a British citizen of Syrian origin from Acton, London.  In 2001, Asma gave birth to their first child, a son named Hafez after the child's grandfather Hafez al-Assad. Their daughter Zein was born in 2003, followed by their second son Karim in 2004.  Bashar is an Alawite Muslim.

Assad's sister, Bushra al-Assad, and mother, Anisa Makhlouf, left Syria in 2012 and 2013, respectively, to live in the United Arab Emirates.  Makhlouf died in Damascus in 2016.

Resource:

Messages From A Syrian Jew Trapped In Egypt by Nadene Goldfoot

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/judith-carr

Middle East Past & Present by Yahya Armajani and Thomas M. Ricks

FROM TIME IMMEMORIAL by Joan Peters

The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia

https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/damascus-jewish-history-tour

https://www.jpost.com/breaking-news/syrian-air-defense-confront-enemy-targets-near-damascus-591333

https://www.usip.org/publications/2020/08/current-situation-syria#:~:text=Now%20in%20its%2010th%20year,Lebanon%2C%20Jordan%2C%20and%20Turkey.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Politics_of_Syria

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caucasus_campaign