To: Red Heeler who wrote (480980 ) 10/24/2003 3:34:38 PM From: Emile Vidrine Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670 TOLEDOTH YESHU reprinted in YEDIOTH AHARONOTH The TOLEDOTH YESHU (chronicels of Jesus) is an antichrist work written by Jewish rabbis some 1000 years after the Resurrection of Christ. If the Gospel is the book of love, Toledoth is the book of hate for Christ. Galilee Flowers. [by Israeli author Israel Shamir] 2001 "Last year, the biggest Israeli tabloid Yedioth Aharonoth reprinted in its library the Jewish anti-Gospel, Toledoth Eshu, compiled in the Middle Ages. It is the third recent reprint, including one in a newspaper. If the Gospel is the book of love, Toledoth is the book of hate for Christ. The hero of the book is Judas. He captures Jesus by polluting his purity. According to Toledoth, the conception of Christ was in sin, the miracles of Jesus were witchcraft, his resurrection but a trick. Joseph Dan, a Professor of Jewish mysticism in Hebrew University in Jerusalem, writing on the death of Jesus stated: 'The modern Jewish apologists, hesitantly adopted by the church, preferred to put the blame on Romans. But the medieval Jew did not wish to pass the buck. He tried to prove that Jesus had to be killed, and he was proud of killing Him. The Jews hated and despised Christ and Christians.' Actually, adds Prof. Dan, there is little place to doubt that the Jewish enemies of Jesus caused his execution. Even today, Jews in Israel refer to Jesus by the demeaning word Yeshu (instead of Yeshua), meaning ‘Perish his name’. There is an ongoing argument, whether His name was turned into a swear word, or other way around. In a similar pun, the Gospel is called ‘Avon Gilaion’, the booklet of Sin. These are the endearing feeling of the friends of Christian Zionists towards Christ ... Jews feel towards Jesus today what they felt in 4 CE or in the Middle Ages ... It is not fear, it is hatred and despise[ment] ... For centuries, Jews concealed from Christians their hate to Jesus, and this tradition continues even now."