Britain – Clegg don’t like Israel

23/04/2010

http://www.thejc.com/comment-and-debate/mediawatch/30789/israel-doesnt-agree-nick

The great joy of being a third party in British politics is that the detail of policy pronouncements mostly goes unremarked in the media. The surge in Liberal Democrat support, after Nick Clegg’s winning performance in the first of the leadership debates, changed that.

There has been a concerted effort to examine every aspect of policy. When it comes to the Middle East the portents are not encouraging. Clegg is a long-term critic of Israel’s policies and led the charge to denounce Israel and impose sanctions during the 2009 Gaza war.

In an inflammatory opinion-page article in The Guardian in January 2009 he called on Labour to “condemn unambiguously Israel’s tactics” and called for an immediate arms boycott by Britain and the EU.

The language in the Lib Dems manifesto on the Middle East does not suggest that the party’s policies have changed very much over the last year. The party supports a two-state solution but goes on to condemn “disproportionate use of force by both sides”.

For those who don’t know, Nick Clegg is the leader of the Liberal Democrats in the UK, and is so far second in the election polls. Sadly, the Zionist lobby seems to be prominent in the Labour and Conservative parties, the latter winning the election polls, according to the Sabbah Report.

http://sabbah.biz/mt/archives/2010/04/17/israels-stooges-battle-for-british-votes/

We can already see how disastrously the US election turned out, not just for Americans but the rest of us also. “The US president is simply the voice of the Zionist parasite,” writes a friend in Norway. “It is sickening and frightening that Obama is seen toeing the Zionist line.”

“Zionism has the US administration and other western governments by the balls.”

Well, that’s certainly the way it looks. Last month Israel’s prime minister Netanyahu slapped America in the face by approving more illegal settlements during vice-president Joe Biden’s visit. What did Secretary of State Hillary Clinton do? She repeated the pathetic mantra: “We have an absolute commitment to Israel’s security. We have a close unshakeable bond between the United States and Israel and between the American and Israeli people”.


Clinton completed her surrender to the Israeli terror machine by sharing the AIPAC Conference platform with a triumphant Netanyahu.

Whereupon over half of America’s lawmakers topped Clinton’s performance by signing a letter committing to the US’s “unbreakable” bond with the racist regime.

Nine months earlier, speaking in a BBC interview, Obama said he believed the US was “able to get serious negotiations back on track” between Israel and the Palestinians. And when asked about Israel’s defiance when called on to halt construction of Jewish settlements in the West Bank, he urged patience. “Diplomacy is always a matter of a long hard slog. It’s never a matter of quick results.”

The fact is, diplomacy doesn’t work with the Israelis. Everyone knows the problem: Israel’s contempt for international law and UN resolutions. And now we see Obama’s contempt too. In this wobbly leader’s mind Israel is somehow exempt from the laws, conventions, codes of conduct and respect for the rights of others that apply to everyone else in the civilised world.

Telegraph editors moaned. I’ll make an Exposed! report on this later.


Palestine – 6 year old boy shot by settlement guards

22/04/2010

http://palestinesolidarityproject.org/2010/04/17/6-year-old-shot-by-settlement-security-in-beit-ommar/

Sa’ed Ahmed Abu Maria is just 6 years old and is a normal Beit Ommar kid who loves riding on his dads tractor. He was shot in the leg with a plastic coated steel bullet Wednesday afternoon by an Israeli settlement security guard who took offense at his father plowing the land his family have farmed for generations next to the Karmei Tsur settlement. Sa’ed is the son of Ahmed Abu Maria, a member of the Beit Ommar National Committee.

No reason can be found that might have provoked the settler into shooting young Sa’ed.

No warning was given that the guard was about to open fire. The wound could have been lethal if the bullet had struck a couple of feet higher but Sa’ed was lucky. Once the painkillers wear off Sa’ed will be in agony for days but, even if he doesn’t understand today why he was shot, he wont forget it was a resident of a settlement, built on land that would have belonged to him.

Late, but really a good presentation on Israel’s incompetence.


Flashback: anti-Arab Jewish terrorists are American heroes

22/04/2010

For those who don’t know who Rubin is, I can’t blame you, and I apologize to refering him to you – he was a key member of the JDL, and, following the steps of JDL member Baruch Goldstein, who killed 29 Arabs in Hebron in 1994, him, and Earl Krugel, tried to blow up a mosque and kill Darrell Issa a month after 9/11. Although the former is obviously Islamophobia, the latter is pure anti-Arab racism – Issa was a Christian Arab. He commited suicide while on trial, while Earl Krugel got killed by a Nazi in prison (you know you’re fucked when you’re placed 20 years in a Southern prison and you’re Jewish).

This is Rubin’s grave.

This isn’t in Israel, either. This is in California.

If we captured an Arab or Islamic terrorist in America and killed him in Gitmo, would we put a headstone and call him an ‘American hero’? Obviously not. So why does a Jewish terrorist who did literally the same thing get praised in a public cemetary?

This is just trash. Why, America?


We’re on Palestine Blogs!

22/04/2010

Palestine Blogs

Blog #320. Good news and it’ll hopefully help our small blog spring upwards into communication and news arounf the centre of Palestine. In other news, me and the blogger of soon to come database Israheil will be under communication, so look around for that.


Palestine – Gazans hope to visit detained Palestinians

21/04/2010

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-04/20/c_13258715.htm

GAZA, April 19 (Xinhua) — On Monday morning, Samir al-Bess, 50, and his wife, as usual, joined the weekly sit-in before the headquarters of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Gaza City, raising a picture of their eldest daughter Wafa, who has been detained in an Israeli jail for five years.

Al-Bess said he hasn’t seen his imprisoned daughter since Israel imposed a tight blockade on the Gaza Strip in June 2006, adding “I hope I could be able to visit her soon.”

Wafa al-Bess, an activist in Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party, was detained in June 2005 at Erez border crossing between northern Gaza Strip and Israel, as she was planning to carry out a suicide bombing attack by setting off her explosive belt.

Very depressing news.



Happy Birthday, Israhell!

20/04/2010

I hope a rocket hits your memorial.


Palestine – Peace activists arrested by Israeli troops

19/04/2010

Troops Detain Ten Peace Activists In Hebron

The peace activists accompanied several Palestinian farmers heading to their lands when the army attacked the activists and the famers and detained ten internationals.

Israeli settlers escalated their attacks against the residents and their lands in the Hebron area and several parts of the occupied West Bank, while Israeli soldiers failed to stop these attacks, and instead attacked Palestinians and peace activists.

Furthermore, soldiers prevented several international activists from entering Beit Ummar town, north of Hebron, and claimed that the town is a closed military zone.

Soldiers also obstructed a peaceful protests against settlements and against sealing the entrances of the village.

Soldiers also attacked several worshipers near the village’s mosque and fired dozens of gas bombs at them.

The army closed the main entrance of Beit Ummar three days ago, and is preventing and vehicles from entering or leaving the town.

Shoving itself in its own mud.



Deir Yassin’s inextinguishable fire

18/04/2010

Here’s a study from Dina Elmuti, a graduate student from the Masters in Social Work program at Southern Illionis University, Carbondale. For you who don’t know what Deir Yassin is, it’s a massacre against Arab civilians in the east of Israel which lead to the most important event in 1948; the nakba.

Thanks to Electronic Intifada for providing this.

“They will not criminalize us, rob us of our true identity, steal our individualism, depoliticize us, churn us out as systemized, institutionalized, decent law-abiding robots. We refuse to lie here in dishonor!”
Bobby Sands, Provisional Irish Republican Army

It’s as if the very moment I passed by Bab al-Amud or Damascus Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City, I was transported back in time to a forbidden place, a place I was forced to feel as though I was illegally trespassing through just by gazing at it, a place now belonging to others. “This place you talk about no longer exists. It’s been long gone.” That’s what they continue to say with such impunity and disregard, but those sentiments of deterrence wouldn’t stop me. They never had before, and they wouldn’t stand a chance now. I was determined to go back, to see it all again with my own eyes, to capture every sight so the memories would be engraved in my head forever, despite any and all pretentious constructions that would be made without our permission. Despite all the renovations and reconstructions to make it “their own,” it would always be Deir Yassin to me.

“Deir Yassin,” she says with a sadness, a sense of loss in her eyes each time she speaks of the atrocious day she lost her home. “Deir Yassin,” she says with a childlike innocence in her voice as she recalls sweet memories before her entire world was completely denatured by evil. “Deir Yassin,” the imperishable words of my grandmother continue to resonate with me each day for she made me promise to never forget, and that’s a promise I intend to keep to her.

I followed the imperiously-placed road signs leading to Givat Shaul until the memories began flooding back, one by one. With no place to park, I took the chance of leaving the yellow-plated car on the side of the road, near the abandoned blue fence so I would be able to step back in time on foot. In the cool breeze of that afternoon, standing on the ledge overlooking the Har HaMenuchot cemetery in scenic view of the Jewish Holocaust memorial, Yad Vashem, I inhaled deeply and digested the view of what was now known as Givat Shaul. As I stood there taking in the surreal surroundings of Mount Herzl and Yad Vashem, I was overcome by emotions as the tales of my grandmother soon came to life right before my very eyes.

“See right there,” she pointed behind me, “that was my father’s stone quarry, and there’s the grain mill.” For as long as I live, I’ll never forget the look on her face, the way her lips quivered, the way she tapped her tired fingers on her chest with such pride, and the high pitch in her voice as she spoke with such nostalgia. As a little girl, she played house with her friends at the nearby monastery surrounded by fig, almond and apple trees, just as any child would do, oblivious to the tragedy that awaited them. At eight years old though, her childhood was no longer one free of trauma and injustice. In less than a day, she was forced to leave everything she had ever known behind, taking nothing with her but the clothes on her back. Sixty-two years ago, she had once called this place home. This was home, and without her knowledge, her permission, or her right, it was all taken away. Someone else callously decided it was no longer hers to claim. The thought of that still makes me feel as though I’ve been kicked repeatedly in the stomach.

It’s difficult to return to Deir Yassin without suddenly becoming transfixed by the blatant ethnic cleansing and hypocrisy lying on the very ground once belonging to the native Palestinians who called this very ground home less than seven decades ago. Chilling tales and memories have allowed Deir Yassin to live on in the hearts and minds of countless worldwide, allowing it to be deemed as so much more than just a name associated with death, destruction and pillaging. Deir Yassin will continue to resonate as a lesson of resilience and determination to never forget.

Before walking back to the car and bidding my farewell to Deir Yassin once again, I stood on the ledge overlooking Mount Herzl with the hope of trying to absorb and digest all that I had seen that day. Standing there captivated by all that I had taken notice of this time, I couldn’t help but feel as though my blood began to boil. Looking onto the grand, monumental view of Yad Vashem erected to honor those who so unjustly lost their lives in the Holocaust, I stood on the land where my own family too lost their livelihoods and lives so unjustly without so much as a marker to honor them. A mile away from Deir Yassin sits a memorial to commemorate the victims of the Holocaust, to remind the world of the inhumanity that took place with such impunity. Today, it continues to remind the world of the atrocities that took place with a timeless, ubiquitous message of “never to forget man’s inhumanity to man.”

I can’t help but feel as though the overwhelming irony is shamelessly mocking me as I stand there on the other side of Yad Vashem in Deir Yassin, where a massacre took place 62 years ago. I stood there honoring those whose names don’t appear in a museum, whose voices are rarely, if ever, heard in the media, and whose legacies are insolently ignored and omitted from textbooks and classrooms, rendering them invisible to so many in the world. Standing there, I wonder if those who visit the museum look over to the other side and even know what occurred there some 60 years ago, whether or not they question what happened, and whether or not they feel any sympathy like they do for their own. Deir Yassin carries with it such magnitude, for it is not just the story of a massacre, but the story of two peoples — the victims and the victims of those victims — whose fates allowed them to be conjoined on stolen land.

Wiped off the post-1948 maps of Israel, Deir Yassin can never and will never be wiped out of the minds of Palestinians worldwide, those under occupation and those in the diaspora. No matter how the maps and signs are altered, I will always find a way back to Deir Yassin, because it is my moral responsibility to return and keep its legacy alive. This is where I come from. This is where my family, who are still alive and well to remember, suffered. This is where injustice took place, and I will never forget. After all, it was Simon Wiesenthal who said that “hope lives when people remember,” when observing the suffering of the Jews at the hands of injustice. Likewise, the suffering of the Palestinians deserves to be dignified as well. As any people who have been subjugated and oppressed, Palestinians too will hold on to their relentless refusal to concede and forget.

Despite all the agony, anguish and traumatizing memories that have echoed with her throughout her life, my grandmother’s eyes still light up just at the sound of hearing Deir Yassin. Today, this place that’s been associated with such pain and suffering to so many continues to instill such pride and joy in her. I’ve never known such strength and resilience, but I hope to learn from it every single day.

So, today, I commemorate the 62nd anniversary of the Deir Yassin Massacre. Commemorating Deir Yassin is not to create a sadistic exploitation of the suffering of a people. It is a reminder to us all that injustice did take place there, and that it is our responsibility to remember that the atrocities and intolerance we see and hear about today had their inception with Deir Yassin. Deir Yassin, which catapulted the Nakba, our catastrophe, is an undeniable marker of unabashed injustice, and it will continue to deter any prevarication and the notion that “ignorance is bliss.” Deir Yassin signifies that Palestinians existed and still exist, and we will never give up without a fight.

David Ben Gurion, Israel’s first prime minister, was mistaken when he arrogantly asserted that “the old will die and the young will forget,” for he underestimated the indomitable will of the Palestinian people. Despite heartache, pain and suffering, we will never relinquish a dream so imbedded in our hearts and minds. Yes, the old may die, but the young will never able to forget, and to paraphrase Bobby Sands, “our revenge will be the laughter of our children,” those who will carry on this dream and fight for justice. This dream will live on in the hearts of generation after generation; it is an inextinguishable fire burning inside our hearts, and what we say today will be our lifelong commitment to it.