Thursday, April 30, 2009

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

According to the Bible, Falestin was given to them by God.

Abraham stayed a long time there;

” And Abraham sojourned many days in the land of the Philistines.” Ge 21:34

David got protection there;

“But David kept thinking to himself, “Someday Saul is going to get me. The best thing for me to do is escape to the Philistines. Then Saul will stop hunting for me, and I will finally be safe.”" 1 Samuel 27:1

More righteous than Isaac;


“king of the Philistines looked out of a window and saw Isaac fondling Rebekah his wife. So Abim’elech called Isaac, and said, “Behold, she is your wife; how then could you say, ‘She is my sister’?” Isaac said to him, “Because I thought, ‘Lest I die because of her.’” Abim’elech said, “What is this you have done to us? One of the people might easily have lain with your wife, and you would have brought guilt upon us.” (Genesis 26:6-11)

Palestinians are the Judges of Israel;


“These were the nations: the Philistines (those living under the five Philistine rulers), all the Canaanites, the Sidonians, and the Hivites living in the hill country of Lebanon from Mount Baal-hermon to Lebo-hamath. These people were left to test the Israelites – to see whether they would obey the commands the LORD had given to their ancestors through Moses.” Judges 3:3-4

“And he judged Israel in the days of the Philistines twenty years.” Jud 15:20

Israel Given to the Palestinians;


“And Samuel said to him, “The LORD has torn the kingdom of Israel from you this day, and has given it to a neighbor of yours, who is better than you.” 1Samuel 15:28, and (jos 13:1)

Israel Sold To Palestinians;

“And the anger of the LORD was kindled against Israel, and he sold them into the hand of the Philistines and into the hand of the Ammonites” Jos 10:7


Hope this helps people see that the bible itself as well, rejects their version of favor of God.

Equal to Israel;

“Do you Israelites think you are more important to me than the Ethiopians ?
” asks the LORD. “I brought you out of Egypt, but have I not done as much for other nations, too? I brought the Philistines from Crete and led the Arameans out of Kir” Amos 9:7






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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Tell Congress to help humanitarian workers get into Gaza and to suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel

20 days into the Gaza crisis and the humanitarian crisis there gets worse each day. 398 women and children are dead, another 4700 injured, 750,000 lack access to water and one million are without electricity. Each day that passes guarantees more innocent civilians will suffer. Tell Congress to act swiftly to help humanitarian workers get into Gaza and to suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel.

Tell Congress to help humanitarian workers get into Gaza and to suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel



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Sunday, April 19, 2009

The reasons behind the assassination of Ahmad Yassine

Ahmad Yassine, the spiritual leader of Hamas, was assassinated by the direct order of Ariel Sharon and carried out by Apache helicopters. This should not be analyzed as only the assassination of one person.
The reasons behind the assassination of Ahmad Yassine
There is no doubt that the Zionist regime had specific reasons and purposes for carrying out the assassination of Shaykh Ahmad Yassine. Shaykh Ahmad was born in the village al-Jawar near Asqalan. This village, along with many other villages, was occupied by Jewish forces in 1948. At that time, Yassine moved with his family to Gaza. Yassine started his resistance after completing his studies at Al-Azhar University. He was arrested numerous times by the Zionist regime before he was finally assassinated. He was sentenced to 13 years in prison in the year 1983 and was released two years afterwards. In 1989 he was arrested again and sentenced to 15 years in prison and was released in a prisoner swap in 1997. He lost his sight while resisting and at the time of his martyrdom his body was extremely fragile. Despite his fragile body he was considered the charismatic leader of Hamas. He was also loved by the rest of the Palestinian political parties. He held the second place of affection amongst the Palestinian people after Arafat. The Zionist regime wanted to strike Hamas, a group that takes responsibility for most of the martyrdom missions performed in Palestine, by murdering their founder, Shaykh Yassine.

Another reason behind the assassination was that the Zionist regime wanted to destroy the balance of the Palestinian political groups after the retreat from Gaza. In the opinion of the Zionist regime Palestinian groups such as Hamas, Jihad, and even the Quds Martyr Brigades – the military wing of Fatah – did not cooperate at all. This gap of strength must be filled. There was a gap of strength in the region because Egypt did not accept controlling it, the weakness of the PLO, and the inability of international organizations. Zionist sources announced that Yassine was assassinated at a time when the mentioned groups were on the verge of making an agreement over the control of Gaza. They then quoted members of Hamas. For example, they quoted Nasir Rayan, one of the top members of Hamas, as saying: “Hamas has a program for controlling Gaza after the retreat.” Sharon predicted that after the assassination of Yasin Palestinian groups, especially Hamas, would take severe revenge and then Sharon would be able to announce the insecurity of Gaza and the retreat would be cancelled. One of the points that must be observed is that this prediction did not actualize. In opposition to the prediction the assassination of Yassine did not create a third intifada.

Yassine was a father figure for all of the members of Hamas. He was the spiritual leader of Hamas. But, that does not mean that the Palestinians will not be able to find another leader like him.

At the end it must be said that the Zionist regime assassinated him by continuing their policy of assassinating Palestinian leaders. Shaykh Ahmad Yassine was 68 years old at the time of his martyrdom.



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Sunday, April 12, 2009

Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) Continue Systematic Attacks against
Palestinian Civilians and Property in the Occupied Palestinian Territory
(OPT) and Continue to Impose a Total Siege on the Gaza Strip

• IOF killed two activists of the Palestinian resistance in the Gaza Strip and one civilian in the West Bank.

• 16 Palestinian civilians, including two children and two journalists, were
wounded by IOF gunfire in the West Bank.

• 9 of these civilians were wounded by IOF and Israeli settlers in Kherbat Safa area, north of Hebron.

• IOF conducted 26 incursions into Palestinian communities in the West Bank.

• IOF arrested 52 Palestinian civilians, including 8 children, in the West Bank and 10 fishers in the Gaza Strip.

• IOF conducted a wide scale incursion into Kherbat Safa area, north of Hebron.

• IOF occupied 8 Palestinian houses, and reclassified them as military sites.

• IOF have continued to impose a total siege on the OPT and have isolated the Gaza Strip from the outside world.

• IOF troops positioned at military checkpoints in the West Bank arrested 9 Palestinian civilians.

• IOF have continued measures aimed at the creating of a majority Jewish
demographic in East Jerusalem.

• IOF demolished two Palestinian houses in Jerusalem.

• A Palestinian house in the old town of Jerusalem was seized.

• IOF have continued settlement activities in the West Bank and Israeli settlers have continued to attack Palestinian civilians and property.

• IOF ordered the demolition of a number of houses in Hebron.

• Israeli settlers seized 4 shops in the old town of Hebron.

Story





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Friday, April 10, 2009

The apartheid analogy

The apartheid analogy

It is perhaps understandable that some advocates of Palestinian rights look at the "apartheid label," in its comparative sense, as a politically useful tool. The struggle of the South African people for justice and equality reached a certain sacred status in the 1980s and '90s when the anti-apartheid struggle reached its zenith. The reverence with which activists and non-activists alike look to the righteousness of the South African struggle, and the ignominy of the colonial apartheid regime, are well placed. Black South Africans fought against both Dutch and British colonization for centuries, endured countless hardships including imprisonment and death, and were labeled terrorists as the powers of the world stood by the racist apartheid regime. They remained steadfast in their struggle, raising the cost of maintaining the apartheid system until South African capital found it no longer profitable and white political elites found it impossible to maintain. The comparison is further enhanced due to the relationship between the respective Palestinian and South African liberation movements, the Palestine Liberation Organization and the African National Congress, as well as the unabashed alliance between Israel and the South African apartheid regime, which remained strong even at the height of the international boycott against South Africa.

A further impetus for confining the "apartheid label" to a comparison with South Africa is that the commonalities and similarities between the liberation struggles of South Africa and Palestine are quite stark. Both cases involved a process of settler-colonialism involving the forced displacement of the indigenous population from most of their ancestral lands and concentrating them in townships and reservations, dividing the colonized community into different groups with differing rights, strict mobility restrictions that suffocated the colonized, and the use of brutal military force to repress any actual or potential resistance against the racist colonial regime.

Both regimes have enjoyed the impunity that results from full US and European support. Accompanying these and countless other similarities are a host of uncanny details common to both cases: both regimes were formally established in the same year -- 1948 -- following decades of British rule; approximately 87 percent of the land was off limits to most of the colonized population without special permission, and so on. While we speak here in the past tense for South Africa, this still applies to present-day Palestine.

As the Israeli apartheid label has gained ground, some have adopted the approach of describing the differences between the two regimes, albeit for various purposes. In general, Israel has not legislated petty apartheid -- the segregation of spaces such as bathrooms and beaches -- as was the case in South Africa. However, Israeli laws form the basis of systematic racial discrimination against Palestinians. The 1.2 million Palestinian citizens of Israel (approximately 20 percent of Israel's citizens) do indeed have the right to vote and run in Israeli elections while the Black community in South Africa, for the most part, did not. The South African version of apartheid's central tenet was to facilitate the exploitation of as many Black laborers as possible, whereas the Israeli version, although exploiting Palestinian workers, prioritizes the forced displacement of as many Palestinians as possible beyond the borders of the state with the aim of eradicating Palestinian presence within historic Palestine. South African visitors to Palestine have often commented on the fact that Israeli use of force is more brutal than that witnessed in the heyday of apartheid, thus leading several commentators to adopt the position that Israel's practices are worse than apartheid and that the apartheid label does not go far enough. Read more



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Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Galloway's Gaza mission runs into protests

George Galloway's high-profile mission to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza has run into controversy, just as his convoy reaches the final leg of its 5,000 mile journey.

Egyptian activists who had been planning to welcome Galloway's Viva Palestina trucks as they cross from Libya into Egypt today will instead be staying at home, after allegations surfaced that Galloway was planning to take part in official receptions with the unpopular Egyptian government, despite having recently called for it to be overthrown.

Rumours that Galloway had agreed to meet Ahmed Ezz, a steel magnate who is a close associate of President Hosni Mubarak and has been caught up in several corruption scandals, caused an outcry among groups opposed to a president Galloway has dismissed as a tyrant.

The mile convoy of 110 vehicles left England on 14 February and travelled through Europe and North Africa. Egyptian opposition groups had been preparing a "red carpet" welcome for Galloway and his caravan, impressed at the British MP's forceful denunciations of Mubarak's stance on the Gaza crisis. The Egyptian government largely refused to open its Rafah border crossing with Gaza during Israel's recent 22-day military assault on the area, prompting Galloway to declare that the "dictatorship" of Mubarak was "jointly responsible for the murder of every Palestinian who has died these last two years".

Earlier this week, Saad el-Katany, an MP for the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, said Galloway's arrival and the issue of aid for Gaza had united Egypt's fragmented opposition movement. "Egyptians across the political spectrum welcome the European convoy," Katany said in a statement. The sentiment was echoed by Abdel Gelil Moustafa, a co-ordinator for Kefaya, the country's largest secular opposition force, who promised public receptions for the convoy at each of its stops in Egypt.

But yesterday the opposition mood soured after accusations that Galloway had planned to co-ordinate with the ruling NDP party and take part in a welcoming ceremony featuring Ezz. In a statement on its website, the Egyptian Popular Committee for the Support of the Palestinian People - an umbrella organisation of opposition groups - said it was cancelling its plan to receive Galloway's convoy.

Some activists are claiming that Galloway was allowing the aid convoy to be used as a propaganda stunt by a repressive government. Hossam el-Hamalawy, a prominent opposition blogger, labelled Viva Palestina an "ass-kissing carnival". Source



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Sunday, April 5, 2009

90,000 Palestinians are Homeless

At least 90,000 Palestinians have lost their homes as a result of Israel's war on Gaza, Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, has told the European parliament in France.

Abbas told politicians gathered in Strasbourg on Wednesday that Israeli blockades and illegal settlement expansion have continued, and called for Israel to answer for its activities.

"We should no longer deal with Israel as a state above the law, above all accountability, above international law," Abbas said.

"We should put an end to this policy. Israeli leaders should be held accountable for their violations of international and humanitarian law," he added, to applause from European parliament members.

Abbas' speech came shortly after he held talks with the president of the European parliament.



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Scholars Say Attack on Gaza an Abuse of Human Rights

Scholars Say Attack on Gaza an Abuse of Human Rights

Israel's recent assault on Gaza by land, sea and air against the backdrop of its control over the territory was a disturbing violation of Palestinians' human rights, speakers at the symposium said.

As far as I know, this is the first time that a civilian population has been locked into a war zone and denied the option of becoming refugees.

By Ajay Singh

BESIDES UNDERDEVELOPMENT and strife, Gaza and Tijuana have little in common. Yet the two places have been widely juxtaposed in a question that has figured in the U.S. media's coverage of the Gaza conflict: What would the United States do if rockets rained on it from Tijuana?

It's "completely false" to compare an attack from Mexico — or, for that matter, Canada — with the spectacle of rockets fired from Gaza into Israel, noted English Professor Saree Makdisi, an expert on the Israel-Palestine conflict, at a Jan. 21 symposium on campus. "In the analogy, it's never pointed out that we, of course, do not occupy Tijuana or Ottawa."

Israel's recent assault on Gaza by land, sea and air against the backdrop of its total control over the region since 1967 was a disturbing violation of Palestinians' human rights, speakers at the symposium said. Titled "Human Rights and Gaza," the well-attended public event was held at the Broad Art Center and sponsored by the Center for Near Eastern Studies and the International Institute.

Much of the public debate about the Gaza conflict has centered on whether or not Israel's offensive was disproportionate to the rocket attacks on Israeli territory by the militant Palestinian group Hamas.

"That immediately puts Israel in the position of defending itself against provocation from Hamas," said Richard Falk, a visiting professor of global and international studies at UC Santa Barbara. A United Nations Special Rapporteur on Human Rights, Falk is also the author of "Achieving Human Rights," a book published by Routledge last fall.

But the notion that Israel acted in self-defense, "falsifies in fundamental ways the interaction between Gaza and Israel," Falk added, explaining that before Israel launched its offensive on Dec. 27, Gaza was subjected to an 18-month blockade that denied Palestinians "fuel, food and medicine and brought them to a point of near-collapse."

Moreover, the siege of Gaza amounted to "a form of collective punishment prohibited by the Geneva Conventions and a grave breach of international humanitarian law that is itself a war crime," said Falk, adding: "That's left out of the public understanding of how this conflict emerged." Read entire Article




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Thursday, April 2, 2009

West Bank, Palestine: Israeli soldiers kidnap a security officer in Tulkarem, three residents in Bethlehem

West Bank, Palestine: Israeli soldiers kidnap a security officer in Tulkarem, three residents in Bethlehem

IMEMC & Agencies:

Palestinian security sources in Tulkarem city, in the northern part of the West Bank, reported that Israeli soldiers kidnapped on Thursday morning one member of the Palestinian Intelligence. Three more residents were kidnapped in Bethlehem.

The sources added that several military jeeps invaded the Tulkarem city, and surrounded a number of neighborhoods while soldiers broke into and searched several of homes.

Later on, soldiers kidnapped Ra’ed Wasfi Zahran, 35, after breaking into his home and searching it causing excessive damage. Zahran was taken to an unknown destination.

In Bethlehem District, soldiers kidnapped on Wednesday at night and Friday at dawn three residents In Bethlehem, Beit Sahour and Beit Fajjar.

Troops broke into a number of homes and searched them, before kidnapping the three residents.

The three were identified as Mohammad Fuad Zboun, 25, from Al Fawghra neighborhood in Bethlehem, Abdullah Issa Sh’ebat, 23, from Beit Sahour, and Taher Saber Deriyya, 23, from Beit Fajjar town, west of Bethlehem.

Source



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November 29- Mark it down

In 1977, the General Assembly called for the annual observance of 29 November as the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People (resolution 32/40 B). On that day, in 1947, the Assembly adopted the resolution on the partition of Palestine (resolution 181 (II)). In resolution 60/37 of 1 December 2005, the Assembly requested the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People and the Division for Palestinian Rights, as part of the observance of the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People on 29 November, to continue to organize an annual exhibit on Palestinian rights or a cultural event in cooperation with the Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the UN. It also encouraged Member States to continue to give the widest support and publicity to the observance of the Day of Solidarity. Click Here

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