UnPromisedLand: Israeli Parents Fight Back
JERUSALEM, Israel, October 19, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --
                                                                           Now that Hamas has freed Gilad Schalit,  thousands of Israeli parents are asking the Ministry of Welfare to  return their children being withheld from them by social workers. "The  welfare system uses a 'divide-and-conquer' method to break up distressed  families," says David Weisskopf, founder of the UnPromisedLand channel. (http://www.youtube.com/user/UnPromisedLand) The YouTube channel raises public awareness about ongoing corruption in the Israeli welfare system.
                                                                           One  of the victims, a retired elite air force pilot, alleges that social  workers kidnapped his infant son to put up for adoption. Such  allegations are nothing new. The most infamous case involved the  disappearance of 1,033 Yemenite children in the 1950's. Those families  maintain that social workers kidnapped and sold their babies to  childless couples.
                                                                           Another  victim complains that social workers took her newborn baby at birth.  According to a television interview, this mother alleges the social  workers used an older daughter's "misbehavior in school" to justify  taking away her newborn infant.
                                                                           "Instead  of diffusing family crisis, court-appointed social workers actually  make the problem much worse with a devastating impact on our children.  They isolate each victim by telling each one, 'You are the only  problem'," Weisskopf states.  In reality, the Ministry of Welfare  claimed 429,000 children were at-risk in 2010.  Though Israel has one of  the lowest crime rates in the world, social workers cut children off  from their biological parents 20 times more frequently than the most  dangerous cities in the United States.
                                                                           A native of Chicago;  Weisskopf has worked as a child welfare professional, consulted with  the director of the Illinois Department of Children & Family  Services, served as an advisor to the chairman of the Knesset Social  Welfare Lobby and was a licensed foster parent for some of the state's  hardest cases. All of which amounted to nothing in the Israeli welfare  system when it came to his own children.
                                                                           "During  the first year of my divorce proceedings, they only allowed me one hour  per week with my children.  If they could do this to me so easily, how  many others have they done this to?"
                                                                           Over  50,000 viewers have visited the UnPromisedLand channel on YouTube in  its first month.  The YouTube channel gathers stories from victims of Israel's  abusive welfare system. Weisskopf posted satirical videos using exerts  from his own real-life therapy session to reveal a glimpse of the  horrific treatment victims routinely face. "I wanted the audience to  laugh and hurt at the same time."
                                                                           The  UnPromisedLand channel links to a database of Israeli embassies for  viewers to write to their nearest Israeli embassy and find out why  donations from local communities get used to destroy Israeli families.  "International supporters have a right to know and Israeli embassies  have an obligation to Israel's supporters," says Weisskopf.  "Like Noam and Aviva Schalit, we are parents who call on the Israeli government to return our children."\
                                                                           Contact: R. David Weisskopf, c/o UnPromisedLand Channel, 2364 Jackson St., #202, Stoughton, WI  53585, +1-(608)-492-1477, loveisrael@mail.com
                                                    SOURCE UnPromisedLand
UnPromisedLand: Israeli Parents Fight Back -- JERUSALEM, Israel, October 19, 2011 /PRNewswire/ --