Rachel Abrams

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Rachel Abrams, 1981

Rachel Abrams (née Decter; January 2, 1951 – June 7, 2013, aged 62)[1] was an American writer, editor, and artist. She was the daughter of Moshe Decter and Midge Decter and wife of Elliott Abrams.

Career[]

She was a visual artist and sculptor, and her writing appeared in several publications including The Wall Street Journal, The Weekly Standard and Commentary, which was edited first by Abrams' step father, Norman Podhoretz, and later her half brother (Same mother - Midge Decter), John Podhoretz.[2]

Abrams was a board member of the Emergency Committee for Israel. A critic of liberal thinkers, she kept a politically oriented blog called Bad Rachel. In the 1970s, she spent three years working on Kibbutz Machanaynim in the Galilee. Of the Palestinians who kidnapped Gilad Shalit, Abrams wrote:

... the slaughtering, death-worshiping, innocent-butchering, child-sacrificing savages who dip their hands in blood and use women — those who aren't strapping bombs to their own devils' spawn and sending them out to meet their seventy-two virgins by taking the lives of the school-bus-riding, heart-drawing, Transformer-doodling, homework-losing children of Others — and their offspring — those who haven't already been pimped out by their mothers to the murder god — as shields, hiding behind their burkas and cradles like the unmanned animals they are, and throw them not into your prisons, where they can bide until they're traded by the thousands for another child of Israel, but into the sea, to float there, food for sharks, stargazers, and whatever other oceanic carnivores God has put there for the purpose.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Rachel Abrams, writer and artist, dies, stljewishlight.com; accessed June 17, 2016.
  2. ^ "Moshe Decter, 85, Advocate for Soviet Jews, Dies". July 5, 2007. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  3. ^ Clifton, Eli (October 19, 2011) "Emergency Committee For Israel Board Member Calls Palestinians 'Savages', 'Unmanned Animals', 'Food For Sharks'", ThinkProgress.org, accessed June 17, 2016.

External links[]

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