Monday, November 4, 2019

"Asra Kadisha" Extortionists Run Away When Women Sing .....


The Atra Kadisha group is famous for disturbing constriction works and archeological excavations around the country on account of protecting Jewish graves, often asking for bribe money to evacuate and allow the costly work to continue. 

However, the group possess no archaeological knowledge and often arbitrarily provokes protests despite professional surveys and excavations ruling out any presence of such ancient graves.
  
They came to Shoham for a second time late June and as usual, got in the construction pit and halted works despite an Antiquities Authority report that determines no graves ever existed in the area. Local women were outraged to hear about the demand for bribe and quickly arrived in the scene, where they burst out singing Halleluiah.


  
The ultra-Orthodox provocateurs, who believe women's singing posses sexual characteristics that men should no listen to, were quick to run away, covering their ears. Construction resumed and the crisis was over.

"This (land) belongs to a contractor who has the rights over it. He started digging with all the necessary permits, including one by the Antiquities Authority who excavated in the area in the past and found nothing," says Susan Bar, head of the opposition list in the small community.
  
"This has a broad impact," says Bar. "There's the loss of money (when construction stops) but beyond that they asked for extortion money. When the money is received, the works can resume."
  
"There is no fight between secular and religious residents in Shoham," said Bar. "We live together and set an example for other cities, we cooperate. But when works like this are halted, the contractor understands that next time he takes on a project, he has to include extortion money in the budget, and that affects the prices all of us have to pay."
  
The two activists are getting ready to sing it loud along with other women from the community in construction works planned for mid-July. "We're very happy that there's no need to use any kind of strength or violence (to intervene)," Shefer says.

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