Hezbollah and Ehud Goldwasser
Ehud Goldwasser was born in Nahariya on July 18, 1975. He finished his mandatory army service in the Givat Brigad's Tzabar Battalion. At the time of his abduction he was a reserve soldier and studying environmental engineering at the Technion.
He was abudcted by the terrorist militant organization Hezbollah. The ideological basis of Hezbollah is Khomeinism and its principle goal is the establishment of a pan-Islamic republic headed by religious clerics. This is the goal of its political force in Lebanon. With respect to Israel, its goal is the complete destruction of Israel as a Jewish state and to replace it with a republic of Islamic rule in which the Jews would have Dhimmi status. Hezbollah views the destruction of Israel and the liberation of Jerusalem as a religious obligation. It believes that any terrorist and violent means is justifiable to achieve its goal. The organization has no ethics and has been responsible for the killing and torture of people in its way and to achieve its goals.
We use as key words Hezbollah, Captured or Abducted, and Ehud Goldwasser. Hezbollah has two common Hebrew spellings. The best table used the key word Abducted. With the expected number of ELSs set to 200, the probability that a text from the ELS random placement text population would have as compact a table as that produced by the Torah text is 77/1,000.
We use as key words Hezbollah, The Abusher, Abducted or Captured, Goldwasser and the four ways of writing 5766. The best table used the key word captured and In (5)766. With the expected number of ELSs set to 200, the probability that a text from the ELS random placement text population would produce a table as compact as that produced by the Torah text is 9.5/1,000.
We use as key words Hezbollah, Captured or Abducted, Goldwasser, and two ways of writing Tamuz 16, plus Tamuz itself. With expected number of ELSs set to 200, the probability that a text from the ELS random placement text population would produce a table as compact as the best table produced by the Torah text is 2.5/1,000. However, that table is too large to display, having some 87 rows and 102 columns.