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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Al-Sammuni

It all started on January, 5th 2009, around two in the morning, the 8th day of a ferocious war the 'Israeli Defense Forces' (IDF) waged against heavy-populated Gaza strip of more than (one million and a half) Palestinians packed in three-hundred-and-sixty square kilometers of the coastal area, south-east of Palestine– now, known as 'The Palestinian Territories'-- and claimed the lives of more than fourteen hundreds of civilian residents. This was but another brutal episode in the long series of a well-performed twenty-two episodes of a tragic, really tragic, play spitefully called 'Operation Cast Lead'. Its heroes, or anti-heroes in a time utter confusion prevailed, are the Palestinian children, women, elderly people, and resistance while its anti-heroes are three: two men and a woman; they nodded the tragedy in the first place and then nodded off, not even questioned in the least.

We headed toward Al-Zaitoon Camp, east of the Gaza Strip to listen to Helmi Al-Sammuni, twenty-seven narrating what apparently has turned out to be nothing but a sad story to be recalled with all its minute details each time some foreigner or Arab journalist, seeking some word-press or other world-wide award, comes over to take some pictures at one of the richest areas across the region in terms of photography. This sad story we also, not so differently, came to refresh in the memory of a bereaved Helmi who, in the wake of this tragedy, lost his father, his mother, his wife, and his only five-month-old son.

We arrived. It was around three in the afternoon of an unexpectedly-hot sunny day of February 14th. Helmi, alongside with Abu Taleb, forty-four, was working on a new small tent to erect right opposite what he described as 'the crime scene'. "This spot is where twenty-nine of my relatives were killed, the same day, the same hour, the same spot," said Helmi in a journalist-like style, pointing at an approximately twenty-square-meter open piece of land. Shaking hands with us, Abu Taleb said jokingly in an old-Palestinian-refugee dialect: "ktab jdeed Ah? bas halmara bedoon ajaneb. ahsan bardoo ha-ha tfadaloo tfadalo" Another book, ha? But this time, no foreigners, that is better; come on inside" Abu Taleb directed us into the half-erected tent.

Before January 3rd, the neighboring areas to Al-Sammuni Family of Abu-Jarad and other places thereabout were being so heavily bombarded at night that as the night slipped by, the family members would slowly but surly have stopped being apprehensive about what was going on about the area. This exact situation persisted for the five past nights of the war; and meanwhile, the family members had unconsciously become familiar with it in the long nights of a cold winter of that year. On January 4th, however, around two in the morning, the family members, who had inhabited a three-storey building, now the only building still standing, sensed a looming danger as the continuing bombarding drastically intensified around the area, and the sounds of drones overhead mingled with numerous others of warplanes dropping bombs, artillery firing, and Apaches shelling penetrated their ears all night long. Helmi says: "We didn't sleep all night long because of the continuing firing, and the children kept crying the whole night while sticking to their mothers."

Helmi and his family were staying in the third floor when it was hinted that it was, then, a threatening situation and to spend the night right there in the third floor, being the top floor, would make a great danger, and Helmi and his family were in jeopardy. For that reason he decided to move down to the ground floor which was already jam-packed with more than one hundred members of an extended family.

Long dreadful hours passed by. A new morning. But, Helmi started his day in a way he would have given half of what he owned to avoid it. Some guy whom, to my surprise, Helmi could not recognize— but, he would definitely be one of his relatives – was calling out to him from a neighbouring ground house that his apartment on the third floor was now burning up and he would better rush to put the fires out, the apartment he had evacuated just a few hours ago. Helmi was not grateful, though. And this time he would have given everything he owned to avoid it, not the fire burning his apartment, but him tying to extinguish it.

"ya zalama ana basob mayya we en-nar betzeed" "I was pouring water, and that damn fire was just increasing. The more water I poured, the more the fire grew. I was totally confused and didn't know what to do." narrated a wide-eyed Helmi. Poor Helmi hadn't a clue what a phosphorus bomb could do. He, like anyone in his position, could not figure it out that chemically one particle of Oxygen in water would actively interact with phosphorus and that would produce phosphorus pentoxide, more fire, to burn! That would produce more fire to burn the bodies, the flesh, of innocent people like Helmi, his wife, his five-month son, his father, and his mother. This is precisely how an evil policy is defined. That was a nasty policy; a mischievous exploitation of your one refuge and turning it into your bloody and cruel death.

"Water!" Helmi asked for some water and stopped to drink. I knew what he exactly asked for.

Desperately, Helmi left his apartment burning down and headed back down to the ground floor when on his way back, and through a gap in one of the house's half-knocked-down walls, he stole a look: an army of soldiers swarming down across the area and another surrounding their building.

Hemi's heart sank.

He rushed all the steps down to hide inside the apartment on the ground floor. As soon as he made it into the apartment, the door was shot open again as the soldiers were shouting at them some Hebrew words which later came to mean 'get out of the house'. Hemi's father, Abu-Salah, was the first to get out, followed by Helmi, his brother, Salah, before all of them were driven out of the house with the soldiers pointing their guns at them. "My father talked to them in Hebrew and told them we are civilians and hadn't any kind of guns inside the house," He said.

Most of the members of Al-Sammuni family are farmers and peasants; the feed upon agriculture and live in what is far more like a farm than a real house, regardless of the misleading description of a 'three-story-building'. The green scenery is even still visible now all around their tents and little chambers. They had not the least involvement in any kind of military action. Nor did they have any political affiliation with either Hamas or Fateh or any other political faction. They didn't stock arms which belong to Hamas inside their houses. Nor did they launch rockets onto Israel. They are mere peasants and farmers. And they made it clear they are none but civilians. As such, Al-Sammuni family would have been the last thing to cause to the Israelis any kind of trouble whatsoever. The war claimed to destroy Hamas destroyed a mere farmer called Wael Al-Sammuni. It took away the life of cute Resqa, his daughter as it took away the life of little Fares, his son. That is possibly a complex equation you; and me, too, need some while to absorb: the equation of "Destroy Wael; destroy Hamas"

The fragile-looking soldiers, as Helmi put it, gathered all the family members, more than a hundred persons including all women and children, and directed them into the house of Wael Al-Sammuni which less than fifty meters away from the three-story building on the other side of the back street-- As Helmi was telling us the story, Wael was all by himself smoking a cigarette right outside the tent, next to him on a standing brick was a big mug of dark Arabian coffee. He must have enjoyed it.

Wael's house, already described as 'the crime scene' by Helmi, was where all of them were packed to stay throughout the day. It was now mid-afternoon. And there were almost a hundred of them. It looked as though they were fated to have their day of judgment a little while earlier. Oh, Day of Judgment!

"We moved into the house as ordered, and we sincerely thought they are not going to harm us because they knew that none of us was a militant, and we had no weapons stocked inside the house as they inspected it thoroughly" Helmi thought, loudly!

"NO! You were absolutely mistaken, brother!" I thought- to myself.

As the family members were wholly herded inside, tens of soldiers encompassed the house blocking their way from reaching food, water and even from using toilets. Loud explosions were constantly heard nearby. Commotion took over the place while the little children panicky cried. And their mothers were in no better condition that their children were. Afterwards, after what seemed to be ages of horror, night fell, just to make matters worse. "It was like adding more fuel to the fire." becoming-eloquent Helmi stated. "We had tried all the night to call the ambulance service but to no avail. Not until Mahmoud, my cousin, got an answer, but they told us that we are in a closed security zone, and that they can't reach us." Helmi got pale as he said this, I assure you. Meanwhile, the kids were now quiet as they gathered to their supper, home bread dipped in tea; although the kids almost certainly did not like their supper so much, they must have found an outlet in having it since it was the only activity where they could successfully forget about their fears, even if for moments.


It got darker and darker until it was impossible for them to see each other.


Baaam! Booo! Baaaam! Wheeeee Boooom!


Wheeee Boooom!






Boooom


Wheeeeee ….. Bam




The night passed slowly, very slowly.

Seven in the morning of Monday, the January 5th 2009. Wael, and his cousins, Salah, Iyad, and Mohammed made up their minds to cross the threshold into the small one meter-wide 'garden' to the inside of the walls. Not to launch rockets obviously, and not to throw the soldiers with stones either, but to collect some woods: some woods that would help them light a small fire and make it possible for them to cook, or rather make some hot tea for the morning meal- this time it'd bread dipped in hot tea. The four courageous men carefully stepped outside the door and went on collecting woods as fast as they could, but not fast enough to escape a first shell that directly targeted them. The shell hit Mohammed straight in the head, and he immediately dropped dead to the ground. Wael, Iyad, and Salah ran off under a heavy shelling that seemed to be coming from everywhere, but they could make it into the house. Mohammed later chanced to be achieving what some disgusting graphite, perhaps were then being gently drawn on the walls of the three-story house on the other side by the soldiers occupying it, harbingered," One dead! 999, 999 to go!"

Dirty Dogs!

Meanwhile, it seemed that all hell brook loose while heavy firing continued indiscriminately targeting who was inside and the helicopters overhead shelled ceaselessly for more than a half-hour.

As I was jotting down my notes, I glimpsed Wael get up and step inside the tent. I could tell he wanted to take part narrating the events. "ya zalama Wallah masameer banat kalb betlef fe jesmi kanat" "Damned nails flew in every direction after each shell and I felt them tear my flesh from inside," Suddenly Wael broke in, uttering his first words in anger. "It was horrible. I was stumbling at bodies, vision was blocked with heavy smoke, and crying was coming from here and there. How could I describe it to you? It was just horrible." he continued, shooting me a biting smile.

Well, it was just horrible.

Things calmed down, and vision got clearer: blood, bodies lying all around the spot, children tumbling and crying at their mothers' bodies…

"I was hysterically trying to call the ambulance service, civil defense, or anyone who could get us of there, but each time I got the same answer, "there is no way we can reach you." And so, we had only once choice before us." said Helmi, in a curiosity-arousing style. Wael and the others had only one choice left to them. And they helplessly clang to it.

Wael, Iyad, Salah, Helmi, and many others who were fortunate enough to miraculously escape a close death just to drag their lives for a few more days, hours, or perhaps moments as was the case with Iyad, carried their wounded children, wives, and whoever they could on their arms, and, not wasting their counted breath, opted to break the shackles of their fears. Raising white flags, they stepped out of the house to meet their silly death; hopefully, in case they had another narrow escape, time would save them to reach the closest hospital and those on their arms still had the capacity to produce another breath. It was almost a half-kilometer away from the main street of Salah Ed-Din. As they walked on, the soldiers were taking their positions at the top-floor of the three-storey building and higher points elsewhere. All of a sudden there came the sound of straight shooting that seemed to be targeting them when Iyad immediately fell to the ground. From this point starts the story of Iyad. A man. A daring, unflinching man in his late-twenties who lost every thing but a willful courage through which he resolved to save others' lives, although he'd already lost his. But uncontrollable ruthless power crushed him mercilessly. And he died like a man, like a real man.

Wael, who was hurrying alongside Iyad when he was shot, plainly by snipers stationed on the three-story building narrated what happened, "I was running besides him carrying my daughter on one hand, and my son on the other, both badly bleeding when Iyad's mobile rang. All I knew, then, is that Iyad was lying on the ground, still embracing Nagham. I could not stop because the shooting continued targeting him,"

In fact, the soldiers did not target Iyad to kill him.They didn't want him dead because if they did, they could have killed him on the spot, or at least they would have targeted his head, chest, anything, but not his leg! And to the extent that it would disassociate form the rest of his body. These sly soldiers thirsted for more blood; they desired to torture Iyad. They admired the view of him crawling. Yes, he crawled. He crawled not for his life but to save the life of little Nagham. When every body was gone, the scene was clear, and Iyad was all by himself on the spot; still crawling, the soldiers had the courage necessary to get out from behind the barricades they had erected to protect themselves form probably some invisible arms Al-Sammuni family had hidden somewhere. They got to Iyad, tied his hands and legs, which had not separated from his body yet, with metal wires, and got back to their positions getting ready to enjoy some last moments of Iyad crawling before he was dead. How defenseless those soldiers were!— Or is it 'how calculating they were!'– Oh, yes, this was perhaps a precautionary measure in case he'd rise and attack them by some miraculous power. Why should they get back to their positions? Why should they hide themselves behind vast barricades and mounds? Why should they deny themselves the pleasure of the view being watched from some closer distance?

Anyway, Iyad died. but, Nagham lived.

From As-Shifa' hospital, Al-Hilal hospital, Al-Quds hospital and others, Helmi, Wael and the other lucky ones were calling out for the Red Crescent, Red Cross, and whoever else they appealed for to rescue the injured and to get out the corpses of their relatives from under the rubble of the unfortunate house of Wael.

"It is a closed security zone …"

Not until the forth day came, the twelfth day of the war, January 9th, the ambulances were allowed to get through to the 'closed security zone' and 'rescue' the injured. Perhaps everybody inside was dead by then. None would have a chance to rescue after four days under the rubble. Many were still breathing, however, and they are still today— Most of them were little kids; some were now playfully running outside the tent; others were asking Saleh to take photos of them, and others were listening to their story from Helmi.

Eight days later, the war ended and the lucky ones could get back to their 'houses'.

"We started pulling out the dead bodies from under the ruins and carrying them ourselves since there was no cars or ambulances. One after the other that we even started to lose count of the bodies" Helmi said half in jest.

Twenty-nine members of Al-Sammuni family lost their lives in the wake of Gaza War. Some lost their fathers, mothers, wives, husbands, sons, daughters, cousins, nephews, nieces, grandparents, and grandsons. Two or more bodies had to be buried in the same grave due to the fact that Gaza residents, then, suffered a severe lack of graves only similar to Gaza's present-day lack of drinking water, food, gas, fuel, building materials, stationary, and other basic needs.

The Story of Ahmed Al-Saummi. (as told by his brother Mohammed, twelve years)

On the early morning of the fist day of the tragedy of Al-Sammuni family, a four-year-old Ahmed had to enjoy his usual breakfast— I believe there is no need to mention what kind of breakfast he had to have— singing what he used to daily listen to on 'Toyor Aljannah' (Birds of Heaven) and reciting 'Qul Howa Allahu Ahad' (Say: He is Allah, the One and Only)— some verses from the Quran— in a fashion that of a four-year-old child when, out of the blue, came the dreadful sound of powerful knocking at the door mixed with the harsh voices of soldiers shouting in Hebrew and coming from outside which would obviously mean 'open up!'. Ahmed's father, Atiyya, fourty-four years, had his children and wife clam down, got to the door and opened it. Attiya could speak Hebrew due to the fact that he was one of a large number of Palestinian workers who used to work inside Israel before the second uprising. "They asked him something in Hebrew which we didn't understand at first, but later I knew it was about who the owner of this house is, and my father told them that this house belongs to him," Mohammed said. "Then, I saw the soldier in front point his gun towards my father and he just shot him dead right in the head." hastily uttering his words, Mohammed continued. Attiya died. And his children began crying wildly—almost hysterically. Little Ahmed, however, wouldn't see his father being killed before his eyes and do nothing about it. Mohammed narrates, "My brother, Ahmed, came up to them and asked them loudly amid waves of wild crying, "Why did you kill my father?"-- presumably in a child-like manner.

It must have been harsh on them. Little-Ahmed-confronting-the-Israeli-soldiers must have been a punch on the nose, a knock-out, for, if not the whole 'IDF' and those present at the scene, at least, for that gypsy who killed his father in cold blood— I wonder at this moment if this 'cold blood' would serve the meaning right. They should have killed him. And they did. 'The same day, the same hour, the same spot' as Helmi had put it earlier. Right next to his father.


written by, Mohamed Suliman

February, 20th

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Free Gaza publishes some books about Palestine

On February 1, 2010, The Free Gaza Movement opened an Amazon account with eight of the best books and novels written about Palestine since Edward Said’s brilliant memoir, Out of Place was released in 1999. These books seldom see the light of Oprah or get a display in bookstores. The authors are Palestinian, Israeli and Jewish and all write about the dispossession and ongoing ethnic cleansing of a people who have paid a heavy price for the founding of the state of Israel.

Each book costs between $10.00 ad $20.00, and you not only support wonderful authors and passionate storytellers, but 15% of every sale will go to help keep our boats afloat.

Please consider buying as gifts and as support for Palestine. Go to www.freegaza.org, and on the home page in the lower left-hand corner is the Amazon link. Click on any book, and its description, cost and details will be there.

For your consideration, we have copied some of the information about eight diverse books and listed them from most recent back to 1999.

Gaza Beneath the Bombs, Sharyn Lock The Israeli offensive in Gaza was described by Amnesty international as "22 days of death and destruction." Sharyn Lock's eye-witness account brings home the horror of life in Gaza beneath the bombs.

Lock went to the Gaza strip as volunteer, thinking the greatest danger she faced was sneaking past the Israeli sea blockade in a fishing boat, but soon after her arrival Israel attacked Gaza's 1.5 million inhabitants by land, air and sea. With others from the International Solidarity Movement, Lock volunteered with Palestinian ambulances, assisting them as they faced overwhelming civilian casualties. Her candid and dramatic blog from Gaza gave the world an insight into the conflict that the mainstream media -- unable to enter Gaza – couldn’t provide and a view of a people who face their oppression not only with courage but with humor.

My Father Was a Freedom Fighter, A Novel, Ramzy Baroud More than a tribute to his father, this book is a chronicle of the bravery and resiliance of the Palestinians of Gaza. Seen through his father’s eyes as he became a refugee fleeing to Gaza from his home in what is now Israel, the book haunts the reader about what could have been.

As Noam Chomsky writes about this novel, “Ramzy Baroud's sensitive, thoughtful, searching writing penetrates to the core of moral dilemmas that their intended audiences evade at their peril. Few are spared his perceptive eye, and only the morally callous will fail to respond to his pleas to look into the mirror honestly, to question comforting beliefs that protect us from facing our elementary responsibilities, and to act to remedy the terrible misery and injustice that he exposes to our view, as we surely can." -- Noam Chomsky

Mornings in Jenin, A Novel, Susan Abulhawa In this richly detailed, beautiful and resonant novel examining the Palestinian and Jewish conflicts from the mid-20th century to 2002, Abulhawa gives the terrible conflict a human face. The tale opens with Amal staring down the barrel of a soldier's gun—and moves backward to present the history that preceded that moment. In 1941 Palestine, Amal's grandparents are living on an olive farm in the village of Ein Hod. Their oldest son, Hasan, is best friends with a refugee Jewish boy, Ari Perlstein as WWII rages elsewhere.

But in May 1948, the Jewish state of Israel is proclaimed, and Ein Hod, founded in 1189 C.E., was cleared of its Palestinians... and the residents moved to Jenin refugee camp, where Amal is born. Through her eyes we experience the indignities and sufferings of the Palestinian refugees and also friendship and love. Abulhawa makes a great effort to empathize with all sides and tells an affecting and important story that succeeds as both literature and social commentary.

Witness in Palestine, A Jewish-American woman in the Occupied Territories, Anna Baltzer Anna Baltzer, a young Jewish American, went to the West Bank to discover the realities of daily life for Palestinians under the occupation. What she found would change her outlook on the conflict forever. She wrote this book to give voice to the stories of the people who welcomed her with open arms as their lives crumbled around them. For eight months, Baltzer lived and worked with farmers, Palestinian and Israeli activists, and the families of political prisoners, traveling with them across endless checkpoints and roadblocks to reach hospitals, universities, and olive groves.

Baltzer witnessed firsthand the environmental devastation brought on by expanding settlements and outposts and the destruction wrought by Israel s separation barrier, which divides many families from each other, their communities, their land, and basic human services. What emerges from Baltzer's account is a compelling and inspiring description of the trials of daily life under Israeli occupation.

The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine, Ilan Pappe, In his latest work, renowned Israeli author and academic Pappe does not mince words, accusing Israel of ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity beginning in the 1948 war for independence, and continuing through the present. Focusing primarily on Plan D (Dalet, in Hebrew), conceived on March 10, 1948, Pappe demonstrates how ethnic cleansing was not a circumstance of war, but rather a deliberate goal of combat for early Israeli military units led by David Ben-Gurion, whom Pappe labels the "architect of ethnic cleansing."

The forced expulsion of 800,000 Palestinians between 1948-49 was part of a long-standing Zionist plan to manufacture an ethnically pure Jewish state. Framing his argument with accepted international and UN definitions of ethnic cleansing, Pappe follows with an excruciatingly detailed account of Israeli military involvement in the demolition and depopulation of hundreds of villages, and the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Arab inhabitants. Pappe argues that the ethnic cleansing of Palestine continues today, and calls for the unconditional return of all Palestinian refugees and an end to the Israeli occupation. Without question, Pappe's account will provoke ire from many readers; importantly, it will spark discussion as well.

Married to Another Man, Israel’s Dilemma in Palestine, Ghada Kharmi, Two rabbis,visiting Palestine in 1897observed that the land was like a bride,"beautiful,but married to another man". By which they meant that, if a place was to be found for Israel in Palestine,where would the people of Palestine go? This is a dilemma that Israel has never been able to resolve. No conflict today is more dangerous than that between Israel and the Palestinians. The implications it has for regional and global security cannot be overstated. The peace process as we know it is dead and no solution is in sight.

Nor, as this book argues, will that change until everyone involved in finding a solution accepts the real causes of conflict, and its consequences on the ground. Leading writer Ghada Karmi explains in fascinating detail the difficulties Israel's existence created for the Arab world and why the search for a solution has been so elusive. Ultimately,she argues that the conflict will end only once the needs of both Arabs and Israelis are accommodated equally. Her startling conclusions overturn conventional thinking-but they are hard to refute.

The Lemon Tree, An Arab, a Jew and the Heart of the Middle East, Sandy Tolan, Tolan offers listeners an easy-to-follow journey through a maddeningly stubborn conflict that has infused global politics since the 1940s. Based on his 1998 NPR documentary, Tolan personalizes the Arab-Israeli conflict by tracing the intertwined lives of a Palestinian refugee named Bashir Al-Khairi and a Jewish settler named Dalia Eshkenazi Landau. The pair is connected through a stone home in Ramla, now part of Israel. Built in the 1930s by Bashir's father, the Al-Khairi family was forced to flee during the violent formation of Israel in 1948. The Eshkenazis, Holocaust survivors from Bulgaria, became the new owners.

After 1967's Six Day War, Bashir showed up and Dalia invited him in and began an intense dialogue that's lasted four decades. Tolan's evenhanded narration imparts the passion of both sides without slipping into impassioned delivery. One of Tolan's most moving passages chronicles Dalia’s 20-mile trip to Ramallah to visit Bashir. Their seemingly simple conversation, rendered with just the right amount of heart, crystallizes and humanizes the positions of each side.

Out of Place, A Memoir, Edward Said, Those expecting an account of Said's intellectual development will be disappointed; apart from the final 50 pages, which deal with Said's education at Princeton and Harvard, Out of Place is, as Said himself says, primarily "a record of an essentially lost or forgotten world, my early life."

It is this carefully disclosed record that accounts for Said's deeply ambivalent relationship with both his family and the Palestinian cause. Composed in the light of serious illness, Out of Place is an elegantly written reflection on a life that has movingly come to terms with "being not quite right and out of place."



--
Greta Berlin
www.freegaza.org

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By Randall Kuhn

As Israel's air force began bombing Gaza in late December, its defense minister asked us to "think about what would happen if for seven years rockets had been fired at San Diego, California from Tijuana, Mexico."

Within hours, scores of American pundits and politicians had mimicked Ehud Barak's comparisons almost verbatim.

On 9 January, US House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and House Minority Whip Eric Cantor ended an opinion piece by saying, "America would never sit still if terrorists were lobbing missiles across our border into Texas or Montana."

But let's see if our political and pundit class can parrot this analogy:

Think about what would happen if San Diego expelled most of its Hispanic, African-American, Asian-American and Native-American population, about 48 percent of the total, and forcibly relocated them to Tijuana?

Not just immigrants, but even those who had lived in the United States for many generations. Not just the unemployed or the criminals or the America haters, but the school teachers, the small business owners, the soldiers--even the baseball players.

What if we established government and faith-based agencies to help move white people into their former homes? And what if we razed hundreds of their houses in rural areas and, with the aid of charitable donations from people in the United States and abroad, planted forests on their former towns, creating nature preserves for whites to enjoy?

Sounds pretty awful, huh? I'm sure I'll be called anti-Semitic for saying this. However, I'm Jewish and the scenario above is what prominent Israeli scholars say happened when Israel expelled Palestinians from southern Israel and forced them into Gaza. But this analogy is just getting started.

What if the United Nations kept San Diego's discarded minorities in crowded, festering camps in Tijuana for 19 years? Then, the United States invaded Mexico, occupied it for 40 more years and began to build large housing developments in Tijuana, where only whites could live.

And what if the United States built a network of highways, connecting American citizens who voluntarily (and illegally) moved to Tijuana, to the United States?

And checkpoints, not just between Mexico and the United States, but also around every neighborhood inside Tijuana? What if we required every Tijuana resident, refugee or native, to show an ID card to the US military on demand?

What if thousands of Tijuana residents lost their homes, their jobs, their businesses, their children, their sense of self worth to this hypothetical occupation? Would we be surprised to hear of a protest movement in Tijuana that sometimes became violent and hateful?

After all that think about what would happen if, after expelling all of the minorities from San Diego to Tijuana and subjecting them to 40 years of brutal military occupation, we just left Tijuana, removing all the white settlers and the soldiers.

Only instead of giving them their freedom, we built a 20-foot tall electrified wall around Tijuana. Not just on the sides bordering San Diego, but on all the Mexico crossings as well.

And say we set up 50-foot high watchtowers, with machine gun batteries, and told them that if they stood within 100 yards of this wall we would shoot them dead on sight.

And if four out of every five days we kept every single one of those border crossings closed, not even allowing food, clothing, or medicine to enter.

And what if we patrolled their air space with our state-of-the-art fighter jets but didn't allow them so much as a crop duster. And we patrolled their waters with destroyers and submarines, but didn't even allow them to fish.

Would we be at all surprised to hear that these resistance groups in Tijuana, even after having been "freed" from their occupation but starved half to death, kept on firing rockets at the United States? Probably not.

What might actually surprise us would be if the majority of people in Tijuana never picked up a rocket or a gun or a weapon of any kind. If the majority, instead, supported against all hope negotiations toward a peaceful solution that would provide security, freedom and equal rights to both people in two independent states living side by side as neighbors.

This is the sound analogy to Israel's military onslaught in the Gaza Strip.

Maybe someday soon, common sense will prevail and no corpus of misleading analogies abut Tijuana or the crazy guy across the hall who wants to murder your daughter will be able to obscure the truth.

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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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  • http://www.mideastcouncil.org/
  • http://www.nimn.org/
  • http://www.pal-arc.org/first.html
  • http://www.palestine-family.net/
  • http://www.palestine-info.info/
  • http://www.palestinecampaign.org/index2b.asp
  • http://www.palestinefilm.org/
  • http://www.palestinehistory.com/
  • http://www.palestinelife.com/
  • http://www.palestinercs.org/
  • http://www.palestineremembered.com/
  • http://www.pcwf.org/
  • http://www.playgroundsforpalestine.org/homepage.php
  • http://www.prc.org.uk/
  • http://www.rachelcorrie.org/
  • http://www.rachelcorriefoundation.org/
  • http://www.rachelswords.org/
  • http://www.rememberthesechildren.org/
  • http://www.scottishpsc.org.uk/
  • http://www.stopthewall.org/
  • http://www.thestruggle.org/index.htm
  • Jews against the occupation
  • Medical Aid for Palestinians
  • Rebuilding alliance
  • US Campaign to end the Israeli occupation

Video links

  • Checkpoint
  • Jenin Jenin
  • Look Into My Eyes - song
  • Occupation 101
  • Palestine is Still the Issue
  • Peace, Propaganda, and the Promised the land
  • Rachel Corrie
  • The Iron Wall
  • The Killing Zone
  • The Wall of Hate
  • Tradegy in Holyland, the second uprising
Mississippi Jones Act Lawyer

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