AVI BINUR: MERCY GATE בָּרוּךְ הַשֵׁם
Memaparkan catatan dengan label OREI MIKLAT. Papar semua catatan
Memaparkan catatan dengan label OREI MIKLAT. Papar semua catatan

Eduardo Eurnekian: President Quezon’s legacy is in the core of the Filipino people, who cherish a tradition of hospitality and solidarity with refugees. It is no wonder that refugees from the Spanish Civil War and more recently, Vietnamese and Indochinese refugees sought refuge in the Philippines.




Sharon Delmendo: Quezon developed an affinity for the Jews because he felt that there was a symbolic brotherhood between Filipinos and Jews, as the Filipinos were the recipients of racial discrimination and bigotry on the part of many Americans at the time and the Jews were similarly the recipients of bigotry by the Nazis. Even though Quezon had extremely important political and economic issues to wrestle with at this time, he was willing to take a stand to help the Jews.

rescueinthephilippines.com

Regina Teplitsky, left, and Joy Lazo sing the Canadian anthem together prior to a screening of the documentary Rescue in the Philippines at the Asper Jewish Community Campus in Winnipeg on Monday. (Chris Glover/CBC)
CBCfanzine: The Jewish and Filipino communities of Winnipeg have contributed so much good to the city. They are very much a big part of what makes Winnipeg, well Winnipeg. There’s no other city quite like it in Canada, and I say that as a jealous resident of Ottawa!
A photo posted by Ashley (@ashleysmiles143) on
By BARUCH TENEMBAUM, EDUARDO EURNEKIAN: President Quezon’s legacy is in the core of the Filipino people, who cherish a tradition of hospitality and solidarity with refugees. It is no wonder that refugees from the Spanish Civil War and more recently, Vietnamese and Indochinese refugees sought refuge in the Philippines.

Yovic Yee: Manila allotted as many as 10,000 visas for Jewish refugees and even considered raising the number to 100,000.

Ephraim Ben Matityau: In all that darkness, a ray of hope came unexpectedly from a remote place of the world: the Philippines

Sharon Delmendo: On Nov. 19, 1938, over 2,000 Manila residents held an indignation rally against Kristallnacht

||King Moshiach will arise and renew the Davidic dynasty, restoring it to its initial sovereignty.||

Nena C. Benigno: The German and Austrian Jews were given visas to work in Manila. Quezon would sanction the Jews’ official entry and even donate his own land in Marikina and Mindanao for their settlements;
Yirmiyahu 44:28And fugitives of the sword [who] shall return from the land of Egypt to the land of Judah [shall be] few in number
‎‎‎||The Golan Heights is an upland region in the northeast corner of Israel, spanning east from the Sea of Galilee and north to Israel's borders extending to southwest Syria and Lebanon. As per Hoshea ben Efrayim of South Central Asia, it is a City of Refuge belonging to Bnei Menashe of Southeast Asia and under their jurisdiction, so it's sorta like residing in Indochina or Chindia, in the strictest sense of the navigational word.||

Walang ligaya sa lupa na hindi dinilig ng luha.

Filipino Proverb: There is no earthly bliss not watered by tears.

Bnei Lot are of an ancient origin. In the migratory tradition of Ruth begun more than two millennia ago, a remnant of David and Solomon migrated into Maritime Southeast Asia which comprises what is now Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, and Singapore, as well as Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, with a sizeable minority of Malays migrating back to their tribal allotments in Sephardic Judah, besides Terrestrial and Figurative Jordan.