Diary about peace and freedom

Freediary Diary about situation in Palestine from 2 very different view. One of us lives in secure and peacefull Finland and the other in occupied Palestine. Our goal is to spread this blog to all over the world for people to see and understand the real situation and the warcrimes and crimes against humanity by Israel. If you agree with us, please help us and forward our blog. Thank you for your support!

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Alghawi Family and the Unreadable Connection to the Land By/ Mohamed Suliman

Alghawi Family and the Unreadable Connection to the Land
By/ Mohamed Suliman





"I feel like I am guilty because I am not able to do anything for my children. I lost everything." stated Maisoun Algawi, sitting at the street in front of their newly-seized house. "Ramadan is supposed to be a month of happiness as well as stability where families gather at the iftar; where a family can spend their time together. I promised my children to buy them food, toys, and new clothes, but now, I have to take them to my neighbor's house. Over there, they can shower and I can wash their clothes." She added desperately.

Alghawi family, a seven-member-family, continued to show their unequalled steadfastness to the, I assume, fragile-looking settlers of their home as ever. Since their home has been seized on August 2nd, Alghawi family took refugee to no where but the street – the nearest spot overlooked by their home, where they believe they will be most relieved, most intimate than no where else. However, they relish the bittersweet feeling each time they come across the view of their home surrounded far and wide by the Israeli soldiers while some robot-looking bodies wander up and down their colorless home.

Naser Algawi, the householder, is 38 years old. He was born in this house. His father Abdul Fatah, 82 years old, has been living in the house since 1956 when it was built by the UN and Jordanian government as part of a temporary housing complex for refugees of the 1948 war. He and his family are determined not to give in at any cost though his wife uttered some words of depression: 'Now my house is seized, I have changed my views of the future," she said shaking her two-year daughter's bed.

As part from the jeopardizing policy, the Israelis continue seizing the Palestinian's houses in 'East Jerusalem' along with ridiculous claims: these houses are theirs, demolishing other houses, and building new apartments trying to root their rootless and baseless existence on this land. Alghawi family was one of latest families that were afflicted by these base measures, yet what makes their story outstanding is the way they choose to challenge the occupation and its measures. There is no point in describing the way this family has taken up confronting the occupation since their clinging to the spiritual connection with their home is far beyond any description.

For the 28th day in a row, Abdul fatah Alghawi and his family are still proving that not by seizing homes, the occupier can gain the love of a land. Neither by demolishing its homes nor building others; he can obliterate its original identity. Not by hoisting Israeli flags above our homes, it will be theirs. And not in the least by distancing Alghawi family 150 meters away from their home, they will give up yelling: 'This land is mine; this home is mine'. As the Palestinian poet, Tamim Albarghouthi said: ' In Jerusalem, there is everybody, but nobody is in Jerusalem other than YOU'.

Ultimately, The Palestinians will continue to love their land, praise it, poetize it as their beloved, and their land will love them so longs as they can smell its sand, flavor its orange, hear its plashing waves, and draw it on panels, draw it in their hearts.
__________________

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Israeli jets bombed a northern Gaza Strip building on Sunday morning

Gaza – Ma'an – Israeli jets bombed a northern Gaza Strip building on Sunday morning.

No casualties were immediately reported.

The overnight airstrike "was in response to a Qassam rocket fired from Gaza into Israeli territory on Saturday morning," the country's military said in a statement to Ma'an.

Israel claimed the building had housed the entrance to an underground tunnel. "The tunnel was intended to be used for an infiltration into Israeli territory in order to execute a terrorist attack against Israeli citizens or IDF [Israel Defense Forces] soldiers."

The statement went on to say that the building allegedly housing the entrance to the tunnel was located at about a kilometer and a half away from the border fence in the north.

The latest attack came amidst increasing violence in the besieged coastal strip.

A homemade projectile fired from northern Gaza struck an open field in the western Negev on Saturday. Hebrew news sources reported that it landed in the Sdot Negev Regional Council area in southern Israel, causing no injuries or damage.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the attack, which was thought to be in retaliation for an Israeli airstrike early Tuesday morning that killed three Palestinians and injured nine others.

The Israeli military said that attack came in response to mortar fire from Gaza.

According to Israeli sources, Palestinians fired two or three mortar shells from northern Gaza at the Zikim military base, south of the city of Ashkelon, on Monday night. One Israeli soldier was reportedly injured in the head when he dove for cover.

The An-Nasser Salah Ad-Din Brigades, the armed wing of the Popular Resistance Committees (PRC), said that they fired four mortar shells at Israeli forces operating in an area called Al-Amour, near the Sufa border crossing on Monday.

Israeli soldiers shot two Palestinians in northern Gaza, killing one, on Monday evening. The shooting took place in the Al-Atatra area north of Beit Lahiya. Israeli military sources told reporters two "suspicious" persons had approached the border with Israel and ignored warning shots.

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:(

BERLIN - The Obama administration has agreed to Israel's request to remove East Jerusalem from negotiations on the impending settlement freeze.

According to both Israeli officials and Western diplomats, U.S. envoy to the Middle East George Mitchell has recognized the fact that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu cannot announce a settlement freeze in East Jerusalem. The officials said the U.S. will not endorse new construction there, but would not demand Jerusalem publicly announce a freeze.

Netanyahu presented a proposal on Wednesday for resolving the ongoing Israeli-American dispute over construction in the settlements. In a meeting with Mitchell, Netanyahu suggested a temporary freeze, reportedly for nine months, on construction in the West Bank, a government source said.
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Netanyahu also said that Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas' reported willingness to meet with him was "a positive first step."

The Americans are slated to respond to Netanyahu's proposal at a meeting in Washington next week between Mitchell and two Israeli officials: Netanyahu's envoy, attorney Yitzhak Molcho, and Defense Minister Ehud Barak's chief of staff, Brig. Gen. Mike Herzog.

Mitchell himself will return to Jerusalem in the second week of September with the goal of finalizing an agreement.

The new Israeli proposal will exclude some 2,500 housing units on which construction has already started.

Additionally, in special cases where it is necessary to keep "normal life," Netanyahu wants to be able to erect public buildings in the settlements - mainly kindergartens and schools.

Finally, Israel wants the freeze to have a clear "exit plan." In Israel's view, the freeze is a confidence-building measure that must be matched by reciprocal steps from the PA and Arab states. If these fail to materialize, Israel wants an American guarantee that it will not oppose renewed building.

Following their meeting, Mitchell and Netanyahu issued a brief joint statement saying that "good progress" had been made, and the talks would continue.

However, the statement also included that the two "agreed on the importance of restarting meaningful negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians and working toward a comprehensive peace, and that all sides need to take concrete steps toward peace."

At his press conference, Netanyahu reiterated that good progress had been made at the meeting, but said some issues remained unresolved. The goal, he said, is "to strike a balance" that would meet the settlers' basic needs while also enabling peace talks to resume.

Responding to Palestinian reports that Abbas had expressed willingness to meet with him at next month's UN General Assembly session in New York, Netanyahu said that if Abbas "is behind this declaration, that would be progress. This is a positive thing, a positive first step."

Until now, Abbas has refused to meet with him unless he first imposes a total freeze on settlement construction.

Netanyahu said he is willing to discuss all the well-known final-status issues, such as Jerusalem, borders and the refugees, but also intends to raise issues of his own - primarily the demand that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a Jewish state and that any agreement explicitly declare the conflict over and bar any further claims.

"We also have core issues, and the issue of recognition is core, in my view," he said. "If we insist on the recognition, there will be a peace agreement."

Netanyahu is scheduled to meet German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday for talks on efforts to reach a peace agreement in the Middle East.

The premier met with German head of state Horst Koehler on Wednesday, after talks with Mitchell in London.

On Netanyahu's agenda are garnering European support for a tougher stance against Iran and reaching a deal on settlement construction in the West Bank, the cessation of which is a key Palestinian precondition for going back to the negotiating table.

Netanyahu is due to meet German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier in the morning before being greeted by Merkel in the chancellery in the afternoon.

Merkel preceded the visit by calling for a greater readiness for compromise on Netanyahu's part, in an interview with German television.

Merkel told the N24 broadcaster on Wednesday that "we shouldn't let the window of opportunity pass," and renewed calls for the so-called two-state solution to be implemented.

"The time is absolutely right. Let us do everything to use it," Merkel said.

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We Know Something the State Department Doesn't

We Know Something the State Department Doesn't



August 27th, 2009

As the Obama Administration presses forward on its so far fruitless efforts to get Israel to freeze its illegal settlement building in the occupied Palestinian West Bank and East Jerusalem and end its criminal siege of the occupied Palestinian Gaza Strip, it seems at a loss on how to proceed or how to exert any effective pressure on Israel to achieve these goals.

Take, for example, this exchange last week between a reporter and State Department spokesperson Ian Kelly on the issue of Israel's discriminatory treatment of U.S. citizens of Palestinian heritage:

QUESTION: A follow-up on the PA-only stamp issued by Israel to U.S. citizens going into Israel, just to follow up on that. I saw that you guys released --

MR. KELLY: Yeah.

QUESTION: -- something. You said that you're engaged with the Government of Israel. Just more clarification. Have you complained to them about this specifically? Have you asked them to stop issuing it to your U.S. citizens, and do you consider it a violation of the Oslo Accords?

MR. KELLY: Oh, well, the latter - the latter issue that's, I think, something that I probably would want somebody else to pronounce on if it's a violation of the Oslo because I'm not familiar enough with the Oslo Accords to be able to make a judgment one way or the other.

As our note said last night, we have made it quite known to the Israeli Government, and this is, I think, really on the diplomatic level, that we expect all American citizens to be treated the same regardless of their national origin. And this kind of - these kinds of restrictions we consider unacceptable. And I'd refer you to the Israeli Government for - in terms of their --

QUESTION: So you don't know if they're going to stop doing it or not, or if you specifically asked them to stop issuing these specific stamps?

MR. KELLY: We have told them that we think this is - that we cannot accept this kind of practice.

QUESTION: Do you know at what level - do you know if - how many Americans have complained to the U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem? How --

MR. KELLY: No.

QUESTION: -- serious you consider this?

MR. KELLY: No. I'm not aware of the kind of numbers of - the number of people who have complained. Libby.

QUESTION: Different topic.

QUESTION: Wait, wait. Can I - can we go back? First of all, what does that mean we cannot accept this kind of practice? You also can't accept, you know, continued building of settlements, and they seem to be doing that.

MR. KELLY: Yeah.

QUESTION: So what exactly does that mean?

MR. KELLY: Well, it means that this kind of practice is something that the U.S. Government believes should not be done. This is not --

QUESTION: Yeah, but you say we can't --

MR. KELLY: -- something that we can accept.

QUESTION: But it's not - you have to accept it, if that's what they're doing.

MR. KELLY: Well --

QUESTION: What are you going to do if they don't stop?

MR. KELLY: We will continue to protest.

QUESTION: But that won't make any difference --

QUESTION: That - I mean, it's not a question of whether you can accept it or not. They're doing it.

MR. KELLY: Yeah.

QUESTION: So?
MR. KELLY: It is what it is. We don't like the practice.

May we be so bold as to offer you some advice, Mr. Kelly? If the United States doesn't like Israel's practices, then we should exert pressure on Israel to change its behavior. And the quickest and most effective way to do so is by ending U.S. military aid, which is misused by Israel in violation of U.S. law to kill and injure Palestinian civilians and sustain Israel's illegal occupation of the Palestinian West Bank, East Jerusalem, and Gaza Strip. Unfortunately what seems so obvious to us hasn't yet registered with the Obama Administration, which is why we need to organize to educate and build political support to put this policy option on the radar screen of our elected representatives.

Join nearly 1,300 people from 49 states (c'mon North Dakota, we know you're out there!) who have received an organizing packet from us filled with fact sheets, petitions, postcards, and stickers-everything you need to go out and organize in your community to build support for ending U.S. military aid to Israel. Sign up today to receive your organizing packet by clicking here.

We can't do this important organizing work without resources. Each organizing packet costs us about $10 in printing and shipping costs. If you value the crucial organizing work we're doing to challenge U.S. military aid to Israel, then please make a generous tax-deductible contribution to us today by clicking here.
Click here or on the map to the left to check out our interactive Google Earth map showing the locations of our nearly 1,300 organizers working to challenge U.S. military aid to Israel.

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My Dearest of the dearest friends is back (~o❤‿❤)~o

Welcome back my Dearest friend, nice to see you again! Nice to read your thoughts too!

Soma say it's somehow calm now in Gaza, I see that in West Bank the old game is still going on.. No peace there, not even on this sacred month..

I read about the news a while ago, that Israeli soldiers are taking organs from dead Palestinians.. That would not surprise me.. That news was all the way in Sweden, in their news paper..

Tell me my friend, how is West Bank now? Still road blocks all over? Still raiding villages? Capturing people? Killing?

It's so nice to see you around again, I truly missed you alot!!

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Palestine will be free - Maher Zain

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Home Sweet Home

It's been a couple of days since I got back home, to Palestine. It's strange how with all this traveling I almost forgot what "practically" it is like to be here, at the same time I can still remember every smell, every corner, every person and every land. The first month of my life out of Palestine I used to wake up every night at exactly 2:00 am because this is the usual time when Israeli soldiers enter our village, today and after almost a year away from home I woke up at 2:06 am but this time for a real event and not because of a biological clock. Four Israeli jeeps have entered our village. I woke up on the sound of the gun shots, at the beginning they were all the sounds of Israeli arms, then the shouts of some kids throwing stones and whistling rose up. When you hear that here, you hold your hands together close to your face and you pray with closed eyes and a smile hardly painted, it's the sound of resistance!

Usually and in about less than 30 minutes from now, some kids walk in the streets with drums to wake up people for sohour as it is ramadan, I don’t think they will be able to do that today, but even if they couldn’t do it everyone is already awake. All of the kids who were throwing stones are back to their homes now, I saw how they walk in the streets talking to each other about what happened and when we asked them "eash fe?" (what is going on?) they only said; "don’t worry, everything is going to be ok"… and that was enough for me. The ambulance passed by them in a very quiet way trying not to be a target in case the Israelis came back.

At this moment the recitation of Quran [surat Al-Emraan] continues from the minarets of all four mosques around us , with a loud sound that over comes all this, comforting us and reminding us of the hope that never dies. This is our Ramadan, this is our Palestine … and i'm back home, loving every step I take on this land and looking forward for the next!

و رجعنا يا فلسطين!

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Gaza is silent now

Its Ramadan now. Gaza has been quiet after the Israelis left from there. Its nice. My friends there are studying and their life is somehow normal as what they know it.
Still many things are wrong. Like all the supplies for repairing their homes, medical supplies and daily things, but atleast they have peace now from killing! I hope it lasts :)

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Email from freegaza

August 23, 2009

A year ago, 44 of us saw the coastline of Gaza in the distance, after 30 hours of traveling across the Mediterranean Sea. We were jubilant. We had made it to Gaza. We had actually made it to Gaza. We had really, really made it to Gaza.

We had MADE IT TO GAZA.

From a distance, the shore looked like stalagmites had sprouted across the landscape. Every piece of sand, every section of pier, every chunk of rock was occupied by people. Thousands of Palestinians greeted us, blowing whistles and cheering and high-fiving each other. At first, just one small boat came out to greet us. Then every kind of vessel swarmed around our two small fishing boats, boys jumped in the water retrieving the balloons we had inflated, stuffing them inside their shirts and tying them onto their small boats. The balloons said FREE PALESTINE with a dove and an olive branch on them. They were in the colors of the Palestinian flag... white, red, green and black. Once we saw the shoreline, many of us had started to blow the balloons up, dropping them onto the deck of the boats, a small pool of bouncing color ready to be set free

On the sides of both boats were banners in English and Arabic... WE ARE COMING and END THE OCCUPATION

We motored into port, the flags of 17 countries flying from the halyards, the Palestinian flag the highest of them all.Fishermen climbed onto our boats trying to shake our hands and hug us. At one point, we worried that the boats would tip and toss us all into the port, but, just as our Greek partners had said, these boats were sturdy, even if they were not pretty.

Our seasickness disappeared. Our worry that we would be stopped by the Israeli Navy was gone. Most of us had not slept, and we no longer cared. Some of us women tried to comb our hair and put on lipstick, then realized no one minded that we looked haggard and messy. We had arrived.

The Palestinians of Gaza were overjoyed to see us. They had been waiting three weeks for us. They had waited 41 years for internationals to visit. And they had waited 60 years for Palestinians to return to Gaza without going through checkpoints, immigration and humiliation by Israeli and Egyptian authorities.

Much has been written over the past year about our dedication and determination to get to this small enclave, shut off from the rest of the world by Israel's draconian blockade. None of that was on our minds or in our hearts that day. For all of us, Palestinian and International, August 23, 2008 will be a day that none of us will ever forget. If we get discouraged, we pull out that memory. When our boats were rammed by the Israeli navy, we remember that day. When our boat was hijacked and our passengers kidnapped and thrown into prison by the Israelis, we are more determined to continue our missions.

We will return. We will come back. We will never forget.

Greta Berlin
Co-Founder, The Free Gaza Movement
www.freegaza.org

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About

This is a diary born out of concerns of a never ending misery of Palestinian people trying to survive in conditions where they have no human dignity, no oppertunity to ordinary life, no daily life supplies, things that some of us don't think about much...A diary of 2 friends bonded with freedom, and looking for spreading the truth. [As my friend from Palestine is unavailable to write att the moment, I will try to cover the Palestinian view by copying news and interviewing my other Palestinian friends and asking them to write stories too] A gate to the land of Palestine, where freedom is a dream, and truth is hard to be seen. Help us to spread the truth by spreading this blog. Thank you for your support.

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