סיסי הגנרל המצרי שהפך לנשיא מצרים הוא יהודי ממוצא יהודי
דודו היה סייען וגם חבר בהגנה וחבר טוב של בן גוריון.
סבו של סיסי היה ממוצא מרוקאי ויהודי .נצר למשפחת גדולה ומכובדת של שושלת רבנים ספרדית ומרוקאית.
אימא של הנשיא סיסי יהודיה מרוקאית שמתפללת בבית הכנסת שמה מלכה שמתפללת בבית כנסת
הערבים ומלכי מדינות המפרץ ביחד עם נתניהו דחו לבחירתו של סיסי לנשיא מצרים
נשיא מצרים לא מתכחש למוצאו היהודי או שהוא יהודי
הוא טוען שהוא קום כל מצרי נשיא מצרים
https://crescent.icit-digital.org/articles/and-the-truth-shall-set-you-free
[size=41]Egyptian Journalist: Al-Sisi Has Jewish Origins[/size]
Egyptian journalist claims leading presidential candidate grew up next to former Israeli Defense Ministe
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/179906
[size=36]And the truth shall set you free[/size]
Egypt’s former defense minister and presidential candidate, Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, is Jewish, according to Egyptian journalist Saber Mashhour.
Mashhour’s comments were posted to the internet on April 20 and translated by the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI). He claimed that Al-Sisi grew up next to Israel’s former Chief of Staff and Defense Minister, Moshe Dayan.
This is the question that preoccupies the entire Egyptian people: Was Al-Sisi's mother Jewish?” said Mashhour.
“The secret service of the military rule sent all their media outlets to the neighborhood where Al-Sisi was born. The strange thing is that they did not meet Al-Sisi's mother or brothers. They only met Al-Sisi's relatives on the father's side. Al-Sisi himself did not refute the rumor that his mother was Jewish. All he said, in an interview with Al-Masry Al-Youm, was, ‘She is an Egyptian woman to the core, and she taught us to rely on Allah and accept fate. She would pray for Allah to protect me in everything,’” he added.
Mashhour further stated that “Al-Sisi was born in the Jewish Quarter. His father was an arabesque dealer who traded with his Jewish neighbors.”
Al-Sisi and former Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser, he claimed, are “one and the same. Both were raised in Khoronfish, in the Jewish Quarter.”
“If you look at the map, you can see that Al-Sisi and Abdel Nasser were neighbors,” claimed Mashhour.
“Al-Sisi's home is located at El Barkukia neighborhood, while Abdel Nasser's home was located in the Khamis Al-Ads neighborhood. The two homes are separated only by the Abu Taqiya neighborhood. Both are located in the Jewish Quarter.”
Not only was Nasser Jewish, claimed Mashhour, Dayan “lived right across from Gamal Abdel Nasser.”
“Gamal Abdel Nasser used to go out and play with his neighbor, Moshe Dayan. The map shows that the home of Moshe Dayan, the Israeli Minister of Defense who killed thousands of Egyptian soldiers, in the wars of 1948, 1956, and 1967, was located in the Khamis Al-Ads neighborhood, across from Abdel Nasser's. The home of Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi was located a few meters away,” he stated.
In another video recently released by MEMRI, spokesmen for both Al-Sisi and presidential candidate Hamdeen Sabahi advocated for putting the Israel-Egypt peace treaty to a votein a referendum.
Another recently released video showed a play which aired on Egyptian television and in which the Israeli Mossad was blamed for the Arab Spring.
Abdel Fattah Saeed Hussein Khalil El-Sisi (Egyptian Arabic: عبد الفتاح سعيد حسين خليل السيسى Ɛabd el Fattaḥ Saɛid Ḥesėn Xalil es Sisi[1], IPA: [ʕæbdəl.fətˈtæːħ sæˈʕiːd ħeˈseːn xæˈliːl əsˈsiːsi]; born 19 November 1954), is the sixth and incumbent President of Egypt, in office since 2014.
Sisi was born in Cairo and after joining the military, held a post in Saudi Arabia before enrolling in the Egyptian Army's Command and Staff College. In 1992 Sisi trained at the Joint Services Command and Staff College in the United Kingdom, and then in 2006 trained at the United States Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Sisi served as a mechanized infantry commander and then as director of military intelligence. After the Egyptian revolution of 2011 and election of Mohamed Morsi to the Egyptian presidency, Sisi was appointed Minister of Defence by Morsi on 12 August 2012, replacing the Mubarak-era Hussein Tantawi.
As Minister of Defence, and ultimately Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Armed Forces, Sisi was involved in the military coup that removed Morsi from office on July 3, 2013, in response to June 2013 Egyptian protests, called a revolution by its proponents. He dissolved the Egyptian Constitution of 2012 and proposed, along with leading opposition and religious figures, a new political road map, which included the voting for a new constitution, and new parliamentary and presidential elections. Morsi was replaced by an interim president, Adly Mansour, who appointed a new cabinet.
The interim government cracked down on the Muslim Brotherhood and its Islamist supporters in the months that followed, and later on certain liberal opponents of the post-Morsi administration. On 14 August 2013, police carried out the August 2013 Rabaa massacre, killing hundreds of civilians and wounding thousands, leading to international criticism.[2] On 26 March 2014, in response to calls from supporters to run for presidency, Sisi retired from his military career, announcing that he would run as a candidate in the 2014 presidential election.[3] The election, held between 26 and 28 May, featured one sole opponent, Hamdeen Sabahi,[4] saw 47% participation by eligible voters, and resulted in Sisi winning in a landslide victory with more than 97% of the vote.[4][5][6] Sisi was sworn into office as President of Egypt on 8 June 2014.
As-Sisi was born in Zagazig in Old Cairo on 19 November 1954,[7] to parents Said Hussein Khalili al-Sisi and Malika Titani.[8] He grew up in Gamaleya, near the al-Azhar Mosque, in a quarter where Muslims, Jews and Christians resided and in which he later recalled how, during his childhood, he heard church bells and watched Jews flock to the synagogue unhindered. Sisi would later enroll in the Egyptian Military Academy, and upon graduating he held various command positions in the Egyptian Armed Forces and served as Egypt's military attaché in Riyadh. In 1987 he attended the Egyptian Command and Staff College. In 1992 he continued his military career by enrolling in the British Command and Staff College, and in 2006 enrolled in the United States Army War College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.[9] Sisi was the youngest member of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF) during the Egyptian Revolution of 2011, serving as the director of military intelligence and reconnaissance department. He was later chosen to replace Mohamed Hussein Tantawi and serve as the commander-in-chief and Minister of Defence and Military Production on 12 August 2012.
Sisi's family originated from Monufia Governorate.[10] He is the second of eight siblings (his father later had six additional children with a second wife). His father, a conservative but not radical Muslim,[11] had a wooden antiques shop for tourists in the historic bazaar of Khan el-Khalili.[12]
He and his siblings studied at the nearby library at al-Azhar University. Unlike his brothers – one of whom is a senior judge, another a civil servant – el-Sisi went to a local army-run secondary school, where concurrently his relationship with his maternal cousin Entissar Amer started to develop. They were married upon Sisi's graduation from the Egyptian Military Academy in 1977.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19] He attended the following courses:
- General Command and Staff Course, Egyptian Command and Staff College, 1987;[20]
- General Command and Staff Course, Joint Command and Staff College, United Kingdom, 1992;[20]
- War Course, Fellowship of the Higher War College, Nasser Military Academy, Egypt, 2003;[20]
- War Course, United States Army War College, United States, 2006;[20]
- Egyptian Armed Forces military attaché in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia;[20]
- Basic Infantry Course, US[20]