Israellycool

Down Under Punditry in the Middle East

October 26th, 2006

Separated at Birth

';

Aussie Dave

Former member of the Australian Government’s Muslim Advisory board, Iktimal Hage-Ali, and Sopranos actress Jamie-Lynn DiScala.

 

Sphere: Related Content

admin

An Australian immigrant to Israel, Aussie Dave has been blogging since early 2003.

No tags for this post.

5 Responses to “Separated at Birth”

  1. Gravatar

    I’m not sure what your point is here. Jamie-Lynn, who has reverted to using here “maiden” name, Sigler, since her separation from her agent/husband A.J. DiScala.

    Jamie-Lynn’s mother was not born Jewish, and the nature of her purported conversion to Judaism leaves open the question whether Jamie-Lynn is a true daughter of Israel.

    I’m personally opposed to all forms of miscegenation, yes, that means “race-mixing.” I take pride that there has never been any intermarriage in my Ashkenazi Jewish family; and therefore, I have a pure lineage back to the Holy Family: Avraham, Sarah, Isaac, Rivkah, Jacob, Rachael, and Leah.

  2. Gravatar

    I’m not sure what your point is. It is a Separated at Birth post, not a social commentary.

  3. Gravatar

    OK, you want a true Daughter of Zion, here’s something to get you going about who was separated at birth from whom: Emmanuelle Chriqui.

    http://www.usherinthemix.com/wallpaper/itm_wallpaper_2_1280.jpg

    As for me, I don’t care. What I care about is from where people get their inspiration. Did you know about how Jamie-Lynn sought help for her eating disorder? Yeah, it was from Judaism, ok? As it is, I’m not too keen on people who identify as “culturally Jewish” only, whatever that means. At least Jamie-Lynn Sigler DiScala doesn’t fall into that ilk.

  4. Gravatar

    I’m from Montreal; I know who Emmanuelle Chriqui is. But, being the Jewish purist that I am, I note that Emmanuelle, however beautiful, is of the Morrocan ilk; and, therefore, her being a true daughter of Israel is also open to question. It is a historical fact that the Jews of Ashkenaz resisted conversion; even chosing “death,” Kiddush Ha-Shem, over conversion at the time of the First Crusade (in the summer of 1096).

    http://jewishtidings.blogspot.com/

  5. Gravatar

    Congrats, you have scared a Raccoon. You’re weird.

Leave a Reply