Dissident Voice | by Gilad Atzmon / July 30th, 2014 IDF’s colossal defeat in Gaza this week leaves Israel and Israelis with just three political and personal options: 1. Mass expulsion – ethnic cleansing of the entire Palestinian population from territories controlled by Israel. Such action may sound unreasonable or even phantasmic, but it is […]
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Justice and Peace as Defined by the Jewish State ~ by William A. Cook
By William A. Cook at Sabbah Report Dec 6, 2012 “As for the rights of Jewish people in this land, I have a simple message for those people gathered in the General Assembly today, no decision by the U.N. can break the 4,000-year-old bond between the people of Israel and the land of Israel.” (Ron […]
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Exodus countdown from Israel
PressTV – Wed Sep 7, 2011 2:22PM – By Ismail Salami A beleaguered land which has been usurped and populated by the Zionist Jews for decades is now on the brink of being evacuated of its occupants. The ‘land of milk and honey’ has turned into that of bitter gall for the Israelis who no […]
Continue readingNakba day in Gaza
18 May 2011 | International Solidarity Movement, Gaza Nakba Day. The day of the Catastrophe. A day to mark the ethnic cleansing of 800,000 Palestinians from their homes. A day to remind themselves and the world, that one day, they will return to their homes, that they have not forgotten their land. Today marked 63 […]
Continue readingHamdan: 63 years of forced migration, yet Palestine is still in memory
[ 15/05/2011 – 03:44 PM ] BEIRUT, (PIC)– The rallies that intend to march on the 63 anniversary of the Nakba towards border areas in Palestine and some Arab countries would prove that 63 years of forced migration did not make the generations forget about their Palestine, director of Hamas’s foreign relations Osama Hamdan said […]
Continue readingTen facts about the Nakba
IMEU, May 1, 2008 Palestinian women walk through the Nahr el-Bared refugee camp in Lebanon in 1951. (UNRWA) “We thought it would be a matter of weeks, only until the fighting died down. Of course, we were never allowed to go home.” Nina Saah, Washington, DC “My family’s farm of oranges, grapefruits and lemons, centuries […]
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