Click here to find out all the countries that voted to recognize Palestine: http://en.avaaz.org/s/mambab
Click here to find out all the countries that voted to recognize Palestine: http://en.avaaz.org/s/mambab
Israeli students at Haifa University danced and chanted “Death to the Arabs” at a rally on Sunday to support Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip.
Now in its sixth day, the assault which began when Israel violated a tenuous ceasefire, has killed more than 90 Palestinians among them two dozen children, including members of the al-Dalu family which lost four young children and six adults when their home was flattened by an Israeli bomb.
The video clip shows hundreds of students singing “Hatikva,” the Jewish supremacist national anthem of Israel. At the end of the clip multiple voices can be heard chanting “mavet la’aravim,” Hebrew for “Death to the Arabs.”
Hate leaders welcomed on campus
According to the Israeli publication Magazine Hamoshavot student leaders said some 1,300 people participated in the rally which was called to “support the State of Israel” and the army.
In attendance were extremist leaders such as Knesset member Michael Ben-Ari, who has been at the forefront of inciting violence and racial and religious hatred, extremist Knesset member Arye Eldad, and violent settler activist Baruch Marzel. Marzel was prevented by security from coming on campus, according to Magazine Hamoshavot.
Flags were distributed to students by members of the far-right anti-Palestinian campus group Im Tirzu.
Call for expulsion of Arab students
A specific goal of the rally appears to have been not just to “support” the state and the army as they slaughter people in Gaza, but specifically to incite against Palestinian students at the university, who had held an anti-war rally last week.
Anti-Palestinian activists and websites spread rumors and false accusations that the Palestinian students had held a minute of silence for Ahmad al-Jabari, the Hamas military commander whose extrajudicial execution by Israel set off the current escalation.
These accusations provided an opportunity for anti-Arab incitement and calls for expulsion:
“We came here to say that Haifa University is not a branch of Balad,” [Knesset member] Ben-Ari told Magazine Hamoshavot. “Haifa University is a Jewish and Zionist university.” And [Knesset member] Eldad said: “if the State of Israel finances the university, it cannot finance its enemies, or people who identify with its enemies at a ceremony at the university. This is intolerable.” He added: “they come here to express their identification with a mega-killer, a man who was executed by Israel.” He proposed “that the university arrange buses for them to Gaza, so they can sit in the mourning tabernacle and participate personally in the family’s grief.” He then added that “no return transportation needed to be organized.”
Balad is the party of Palestinian Knesset member Haneen Zoabi, who unlike extremists Ben-Ari and Eldad, was banned from speaking on the Haifa University campus two years ago when Palestinians wanted to commemorate the Nakba.
90 percent of Israeli Jews support Gaza attack
As the bombs fall on Gaza, incitement to violence and racism has been common by prominent Israeli public figures. An opinion poll by Haaretz showed that more than 90 percent of Jewish Israelis support the attack on Gaza.
Nothing genocidal about that. [/sarcasm]
Mitt Romney says he wasn’t criticizing Palestinian culture at a fundraiser in Jerusalem on Monday.
Palestinian officials accused the Republican presidential candidate of racism for suggesting that culture helps explain the economic disparity between Israelis and Palestinians
On Tuesday, Romney told Fox News that he wasn’t specifically talking about Palestinian culture and doesn’t plan to during the campaign.
He’s downplaying a series of perceived missteps and instead blaming the media. Romney says reporters are more interested in “finding something to write” than about reporting on the economy and national security threats.
Israel released a member of the Palestinian national soccer team on Tuesday after holding him in jail without trial for three years, during which he staged an intermittent four-month hunger strike in protest, Palestinian officials said.
Mahmoud al-Sarsak, 25, alleged by Israel to have been active in the Islamic Jihad militant group, received a hero’s welcome on his return home to Islamist-ruled Gaza.
Soccer legend Eric Cantona and other international figures had signed a letter drawing attention to Sarsak’s plight. Sepp Blatter, president of world soccer’s governing body FIFA, also wrote to the Israeli soccer authorities to seek their help.
(via mohandasgandhi)
Palestinian and Palestine solidarity activists took to the streets in Chicago, Washington and New York City on February 8, calling for freedom for Khader Adnan. They taped their mouths and bodies with the Twitter hashtag “#Dying2Live” representing Khader Adnan, carried Palestinian flags and signs reading “Dignity over Food.”
All photos and videos produced by organizers in Chicago and Washington, DC:
Photos of Chicago’s demonstration:
(via peaceful-wanderer)
Ten Palestinian children were killed and twenty others were wounded, the condition of eight of them very serious, in an appalling traffic accident near Ramallah on Thursday.
Local sources said that the school bus was carrying schoolchildren when a huge truck rammed into it head-on, causing it to turn turtle.
They said that the accident took place on the main road between Jaba and Ram villages to the south of Ramallah, adding that the bus caught fire.Palestinian Red Crescent society sources said that most of the casualties were evacuated to hospitals, but added that a number of bodies were still stuck inside the bus.
(via peaceful-wanderer)