Fred1new
- 06 Jan 2009 19:21
Will this increase or decrease the likelihood of terrorist actions in America, Europe and the rest of the world?
If you were a member of a family murdered in this conflict, would you be seeking revenge?
Should Tzipi Livni and Ehud Olmert, be tried for war crimes if or when this conflict comes to an end?
What will the price of oil be in 4 weeks time?
In The Land of the B
- 18 Apr 2010 11:33
- 1532 of 6906
Jews have lived there since biblical times.............why do you think the bible refers to "Israel"?
Yes, a homeland for the Jews on a tiny sliver of their ancestral land in the midst of 22 Muslim states. What a terrible thing according to your anti-semitic prejudice..........the land of Israel was divided up between Jews and Arabs by the UN to be fair.
"I don't care what religion the people who live in Israel believe in. It is not relevant and not important." Not to you living in your fantasy land, but it does to the people, both Muslim and Jewish, who live there. But of course they don't matter to your left-liberal anti-semitic ethos. You don't think you're anti-semitic..........no, neither was Eichmann...just "objective", huh?
Some people hate Arabs or Muslims. I don't, not in the slightest.
Some people don't like this Israeli government, including me.
Some people hate Jews.
I can tell the difference........I don't see those who disagree with the Isreali government as being automatically anti-semitic I don't tar them with that brush.
There are those here who plainly are anti-semitic and one of the markers is those who deny Jews a homeland of their own in their ancestral country (shared with the Palestinian population as indeed it already is, though you would say it is predominantly Jewish - so what, 22 Arab countries are predominantly Muslim, nothing wrong with that).
Let me tell you something, what you and your sort think doesn't matter a toss.
Israel will continue to exist and prosper, despite you and your type.
Maybe because of you and your type........try thinking about that.......if you can.
Haystack
- 18 Apr 2010 13:18
- 1533 of 6906
I am not anti-semitic. I am anti-Israel. I would feel the same if it was full of French people, Christians, Hindus etc. the Bible has no bearing on the problem. You might as well decide land distribution by the use of other works of fiction. You could use Treasure Island or a book about fairies. I am sure Israel will prosper, but I don't have to suppoert their behaviour. They persecute the Palestinians and cause them to live in squalor, they are building illegally on land that belongs to others, they have claimed Jerusalem for their own. The religious right parties hold the coalition Israeli governemnt to hostage and cause stupid policies. Not surprising that the Palestinians fire rocket at Israel and attack the illegal settlements.
In The Land of the B
- 18 Apr 2010 18:16
- 1534 of 6906
"I am anti-Israel"
Have you been to Israel? Spoken to lots of different people? Thought not. Understand anything about the country or its people other than your prejudices?
Don't bother answering. It's quite obvious.
"I am anti-Israel"
How ludicrous that sounds.
I am anti-Pakistan..
I am anti-Wales.
I am anti-Nigeria.
I am anti-India.
I am anti-China.
I am anti-foreigner.
I am antediluvian.
I am ignorant.
OK. Got the message.
Chris Carson
- 18 Apr 2010 18:24
- 1535 of 6906
I'm anti Kopites, but life goes on! Sorry this thread needs a wee bit of humour eh, far to serious.
Haystack
- 18 Apr 2010 18:25
- 1536 of 6906
Just anti the behaviour of certain countries. Not many. Zimbabwe, Israel, China, North Korea, Iran and a few others. Not the people (although some of them), but the governments of those countries. It is ignorance to style all ani-Israel comments as anti-semitic. That particular attitude never did have any credibility. I have Jewish friends who are anti-Israel. I was speaking to a parent of one of my son's friends the other day. Both parents are Jewish, but the father is a non-believer and very anti-Israel. His wife is pro-Israel. You will find plenty of prominent Jews on the internet who are anti-Israel.
Certainly too serious. Maybe we need a few anti Christian jokes or anti god jokes.
Haystack
- 18 Apr 2010 18:34
- 1537 of 6906
Plenty of orthodox Jewss are against Israel's policies in Palestine. Look at this web site
http://www.nkusa.org/
Fred1new
- 18 Apr 2010 19:42
- 1538 of 6906
ITL.
In general I concur with what Hays has written.
Like Hays, I am an atheist, do not believe in there is any god given right, or that Hebrew mythology gives any real bases for the establishment of the State of Israel.
(Otherwise, I being a Pagan, would claim England back for the Welsh and administer the English as I saw fit. Mind we do that already.)
However, the State of Israel has been established and is generally recognised it. To revoke the actions, which led to its formation, would probably be impossible and not gainful, even if it were possible.
But I suggest you read the initial British statement, which is below, regarding the policies regarding the formation of a state for Jews and pay attention to part I have put in bold.
I, like many others, do not consider that the Israeli administrations under influence of the Zionist zealots and far right wingers, have not complied with the intentions or mandates place on them by the United Nations and International law.
I am not defending Arabs or Palestinian terrorist or military actions, but see the actions of Israel as disproportionate, and the annexing of land and the confiscation of Palestinian land as part of their ongoing provocation.
Also, the Israeli administration of the Arab borders, and the limitations place on the functioning of Arabs in Gaza, I would consider criminal and against humanitarian principles.
Again, the use of murder squads (Mossad) to carry summary executions is illegal and murder.
At the end of the day, there will have to be compromise on all sides and eventually, they will have to sit around a table and talk and negotiate their way to a peace.
(It happened in Ireland, it will eventually it will happen in the Middle East, hopefully without increasing the murders being carried out by either side.)
Are far as me being anti-Semitic is concerned, those who know me would be unlikely to come to that judgement and I was not conscious of being anti-Israeli or for that matter any nationality.
Having said that, I am aware that I am not very enthusiastic, when regarding some of the features of different cultures and ethnic groups.
Similarly, I am not very enthusiastic about the values within some families in Welsh, English, Muslim or Catholic communities. That is my right.
I do admit, since I initiated this thread, that I have become more aware of the positioning by a certain number of posters, and surmise that some seem to be members of a Jewish lobbying group.
Unfortunately, I find their presentations as uncouth, and they do little to advance the cause of Israel, but ceased reading their postings a long time ago.
Those contributions were not argument, and I found them to be alienating.
The unfortunate response the sort posting is to group all Jews and Israelis together as one and the same.
I have not done so, and realise many Israelis and Jews would be offended by their presentations.
Israel needs friends, not blind support. Friends should be allowed to criticise, when they think it justifiable to do so..
==================================
From Wikipedia
The Balfour Declaration of 1917 (dated 2 November 1917) was a formal statement of policy by the British government stating that
"His Majesty's government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country."[1]
The declaration was made in a letter from Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Baron Rothschild (Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild), a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland, a Zionist organization. The letter reflected the position of the British Cabinet, as agreed upon in a meeting on 31 October 1917. It further stated that the declaration is a sign of "sympathy with Jewish Zionist aspirations."
================================
PS.
I would be interesting to know the background or "pressures" leading up to the negotiations.
(Edited Bold in wrong positions.)
Haystack
- 18 Apr 2010 21:31
- 1539 of 6906
During World War I, the British sought Jewish support in the fight against Germany. This and support for Zionism from Prime-Minister Lloyd-George[19] led to foreign minister, Lord Balfour making the Balfour Declaration of 1917, stating that the British Government "view[ed] with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people"..."it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine".
The British invasion force, led by General Allenby, included a force of Jewish volunteers (mostly Zionists), known as the Jewish Legion.
In The Land of the B
- 18 Apr 2010 22:45
- 1541 of 6906
"I do admit, since I initiated this thread, that I have become more aware of the positioning by a certain number of posters, and surmise that some seem to be members of a Jewish lobbying group."
Oh my God, here we go again, a Jewish world wide conspiracy......you two, fred1new and haymaker, are so typical of your left-liberal-self-righteous motor mouths. You are the sort of arrogant, supercilious, intolerant, self-opinionated people who form the hinterland of the nazis and the anti-semites.
As for the folk with Muslim sounding names here, they are the honest straightforward (with the exception of fahel's one diatribe which he seems to regret) people I may disagree with but whom I respect. They see their fellow Muslims in Palestine suffering and without a nation of their own and I sympathise with them. The sooner the Palestinian extremists are prepared to compromise and negotiate and stop their attacks, the sooner the two peoples have a chance of a lasting settlement and peace in their lives; and the sooner the religious nutters on both sides become isolated and lose support.
Haystack
- 18 Apr 2010 22:59
- 1542 of 6906
'In The Land of the B'
LOL
"The sooner the Palestinian extremists are prepared to compromise and negotiate"
How about the sooner Israel stop building on land that is not their own and oppressing the Palestinians.
You have me wrong if you think I believe that I believe that there is a Jewish conspiracy. I see the problems with Israel as having nothing to do with Jews. It has to do mainly with Zionists and religious zealots. It could be any group of people. I think you are suffering from some sort of paranoia if you think that people who are anti-Israel are anti-Jewish. I am certainly anti-religion and see it as doing tremendous harm across the globe and that applies to almost all religions. The exception might be Jains, who are pretty peace loving from my experience.
Your attitude is a pretty common one. If anyone dares to bad mouth Israel then up comes the cry of "anti-semite".
It is exacly the same as when people complain about the behaviour of a country that just happens to be mainly Muslem. The cry then is "anto Islam". It is the same stupidity.
The cry "anti Islam" is usually bred of poor education, what is your excuse?
fahel
- 19 Apr 2010 13:01
- 1543 of 6906
In The Land of the B.
I am not a Muslim I am a Christian, and I do not support any terrorist act or killing not from Hamas or Israel or anyone else which both are using the same method. you hear the news how many kids, women sick people are killed everyday, direct or indirect, (indirect while they are waiting to cross from a place to another to go to hospitals or to go to their home). This is considered killing if you keep a pregnant lady wants to deliver, and they are banned on purpose by Israeli as they leaves her waiting not allowing her to cross for few days to go to a few minutes away hospital to deliver lot of them they die with their kids in this way. is that a terror or is that Israeli rights.
I have my father house deed I still hold it till now, which is taken by Israeli and they live in it, same as my mother house and land. which is no more for us. I went there and saw the house still exist my mother house is demolished, street and other huge building is build over it. I met Arabs lives in Israel in their old houses. their old houses barley stands as they are not allowed to fix anything the municipality does not give them the authority to fix, windows broken old doors do not close electricity lights all down they even cannot change the electricity bulbs.
I am not against any religion or any living kind I am against the abuse of power which is used to take the other rights and be theres, against killing against terror act against taking the other homes and lands.
Gausie
- 19 Apr 2010 13:30
- 1544 of 6906
" and I do not support any terrorist act or killing not from Hamas or Israel or anyone else which both are using the same method"
Your evenhandedness is admirable. Well done you!
A cynical man might say that given the above it's somewhat surprising that we've never seen you condemn any Hamas murders, missiles or suicide bombs on this thread - neither in Palestine, Israel, nor the rest of the world. That cynical man might go on to surmise that your claim of evenhandedness is yet more of your inane and incessant bullshit, and that you remain as bigoted, racist and partisan as you revealed yourself to be a few weeks back.
fahel
- 19 Apr 2010 15:05
- 1545 of 6906
Excellent 10 minute interview with HELEN THOMAS, the longest-serving member of the White House Press Corps.
Paul Jay asks her about her first question for President Obama.
She asked President Obama to name all the countries in the Middle-East that have nuclear weapons. President Obama avoided the question by claiming that he does not want to "speculate".
Thomas claims that knowledge of Israeli nukes is very public in DC and Obama's
answer shows a lack of credibility. She explains the importance of this question
for U.S. policy in the region.
Finally, she confides that she has not been called on by the President since that day, but that if she does, she will ask him whether or not he has found any more
information about nukes in the Middle-East since their last encounter.
Click here:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article25089.htm
fahel
- 19 Apr 2010 15:08
- 1546 of 6906
Alarming Racism In Israel
By Stephen Lendman
4-12-10
Mossawa means equality, the Mossawa Advocacy Center promoting it for Israel's Arab citizens - about 1.5 million, comprising 20% of the population. Established in 1997, it "strives to improve the social, economic and political status of (Israeli Arabs), while preserving their national and cultural rights as Palestinians." It also promotes gender equality "in all spheres of society."
Its September 29, 2009 press release headlined the "High Follow-up Committee for Arab citizens (an organization representing Israeli Arabs) call for a general" October 1 one-day work stoppage to protest deteriorating conditions they face, and Israel's failure "to bring justice to the families of the 13 Arab victims that were killed by security forces during the events of October 2000," the start of the second Intifada.
The Committee asked all Arab institutions, organizations and businesses to honor it in opposition to Triangle and Negev area home demolitions; Galilee and Triangle area settlement building; discrimination in allocating resources; police violence, intimidation, racial, and political incitement; and the right of Arab citizens "to exist and live in dignity in their historic homeland."
Mossawa Center Calls the Current Knesset the Most Racist in History
A March 21 Jack Khoury/Dana Weiler-Polark Haaretz article headlined the above accusation, saying Mossawa's report shows "that in 2008 there were (12) bills (not 11 Haaretz reported) defined as racist," followed by 12 more in 2009, specifically against Israeli Arabs. Report authors Lizi Sagi and Nidal Othman said:
"There has never been a Knesset as active in proposing discriminating and racist legislation against the country's Arab citizens."
They accused right-wing MKs of being "unhindered via proposed legislation," many in violation of Supreme Court rulings, including cosmetically altering illegal bills to get them passed. Others trying to harm Arab citizens, segregate them from Jews, and "even call for the expulsion of the (entire) Arab population."
Further discriminatory measures target services, benefits, and imposing a year's imprisonment for anyone publishing or saying something that would "bring contempt upon or discomfort to the country."
Transportation Minister Yisrael Katz wants road signs traditionally in Hebrew, Arabic and English changed solely to Hebrew to erase their historic identity. But doing so violates the Supreme Court's recognition of Arabic as an official Israeli language.
Other measures target those who can buy land and the so-called Nakba law, watered down from its original version to exclude imprisonment, but including a provision to withhold public funding for any state-supported body holding Nakba commemorations. Arab school curricula exclude its mention, and outright banning it denies Israeli Arabs their collective identity, memory, and right to freely express opinions, especially about something this important.
The Incitement Law threatens prison for anyone denying Israel's existence as a Jewish, democratic state, and the proposed Loyalty to Israel Law rescinds citizenship for anyone unwilling to pledge it. Still another measure bans demonstrations near public officials and service provider homes as well as others responsible for public welfare. It's one step short of prohibiting all demonstrations critical of government policies.
The Prevention of Inflation Law includes provisions denying protections and care for asylum seekers, and long prison terms for convicted "infiltrators" and human rights activists helping them. Other measures affect free expression, housing, political involvement, and Bedouin rights in so-called unrecognized villages, the home for tens of thousands living under appalling conditions, compounded by involuntary dispossessions to Judaize the Negev and Galilee.
Mossawa Center's 2009 Racism Report
It began saying "almost every day" another Israeli Arab is victimized by racist actions. Mossawa documented 271 cases in various categories, confirmed by media and police reports. "Most documentation refers to events," not individuals, but their total number far exceeds the events mentioned.
Mossawa was alarmed that Occupied Territory (OPT) abuses have incrementally crossed the Green Line. Since the second Intifada's onset (after Ariel Sharon's provocative September 28 Al-Aqsa Mosque visit), few Israeli - Arab citizen confrontations occurred until Acre, Galilee's October 2008 violence. Incidents now "create separation between communities that used to" coexist peacefully. As a result, Israeli Arab citizens face disruptive social, economic and cultural futures.
Besides Acre, organized groups attacked Arab civilians in Jerusalem, Tiberias, Nazareth Illit, Carmiel and other cities - suggesting more to come unless measures are taken to curb it.
Specific Mossawa Findings
From 2000 through 2008, 42 Arab Israelis were killed. Only once was a police officer indicted and convicted, sentenced only to six months in prison for murder. Another accused officer still serves, "receiving support" from his commander.
Since trials of two officers began in 2006, judges have delayed ruling, six months after proceedings ended. As a result, 13 families of initial Intifada killings await justice despite clear Or Commission recommendations (established to investigate them) not implemented by the Attorney General.
Two Jews who killed Arabs were admitted to mental hospitals and declared unfit to stand trial. Four years after Natan Zadah killed four Arabs, investigations continue. After his death, 15 Shefaram residents were arrested on suspicion of their involvement. Four East Jerusalem Palestinians were killed after being repeatedly shot "even after they were clearly paralyzed." No investigation was conducted.
Police attacked and injured 17 Israeli Arabs, a 300% increase since 2008. During the Gaza war, police intensified violence and arrested 700 Arab citizens. Yet a small number of them were indicted.
Jewish civilians were involved in most racist incidents (about 70), up tenfold from the previous year. Most targeted Arabs and involved attacks and property destruction. The October 2008 Acre incidents resulted in over 80 people evacuated from their homes, most after being "repeatedly injured." Despite making arrests, police "failed to prevent massive confrontations" and didn't arrest youths involved in Acre and Carmiel attacks.
Knesset members, other public figures, and rabbis were involved in 29 racist incidents, especially during the Gaza war, and in the run-up to elections through mass media reports. The Central Elections Committee (CEC) took no action.
The New Israel Fund and Football Union reported 39 racist incidents during contests, not against Arabs but dark skinned targets - compared to 32 recorded 2008 cases. Another 15 incidents of "racial profiling and discrimination in services" were reported, showing a drop because courts now fine business discrimination on the basis of race.
The Supreme Court, however, hasn't addressed airport profiling.
Ten cases of religious discrimination were reported, included cemetery destruction and holy book burnings.
The 2008 Knesset introduced 12 discriminatory bills, and the Supreme Court failed to disqualify the 2003 temporary Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law, renewed every six months. It makes West Bank and Gaza Palestinians ineligible for residency permits if they marry an Israeli citizen, a measure harmful to thousands of families yearly.
Israeli Arab leaders have been systematically delegitimized. "Israeli political leaders, the government, the police and government legal advisors use the demographic threat to force their political positions on Arab minority leaders," including prohibiting their visits to regional states that don't diplomatically recognize Israel. Also forcing them to accept Israel as a Jewish state to qualify as MKs, or in other words, renounce their own heritage.
Arab leaders violating these terms are investigated to persecute and delegitimize them. During the Gaza war, police and security services made numerous arrests as a warning to local Arab leaders. In addition, for the third time since the early 1990s, the Central Elections Committee (CEC) disqualified two Arab political parties from participating in national elections. Though the Supreme Court overruled the decision, the Arab community got a chilling message, suggesting harsher measures to come.
Jews as well experienced racism, specifically Russian and Ethiopian immigrants as well as gays.
Summary of Mossawa's 2008 and 2009 Racist Incidents
-- police violence since October 2000 killing Arab Israelis: in 2008, 41; in 2009, 42;
-- other police violence against Arab Israelis: in 2008, 6; in 2009, 17;
-- Jewish civilian attacks against Arab Israelis: in 2008, 7; in 2009, 70;
-- racial incitement: in 2008, 27; in 2009, 29;
-- religious discrimination: in 2008, 8; in 2009, 10;
-- discrimination in public services: in 2008, 26; in 2009, 15;
-- football related racism: in 2008, 32; in 2009, 39 through March;
-- delegitimizations of Israeli Arab political leaders: in 2008, 15; in 2009, 23;
-- racist Knesset bills: in 2008, 12; in 2009, 12; and
-- discrimination against Russian and Ethiopian immigrants as well as gays: in 2008, 6; in 2009, 14.
Totals: in 2008, 180; in 2009, 271.
Mossawa was alarmed that Israeli Arabs are increasingly being persecuted like Occupied Palestinians - perhaps one step short of facing targeted killings, much greater dispossession rates, mass incarcerations, and torture. They're already denied rights afforded solely to Jews.
Civilized societies accept all citizens as equals, or are supposed to. Israel rejects that standard, including for disfavored Jews, shunned for more privileged ones the way America treats minorities, the poor, disadvantaged, undocumented Latino immigrants called illegal, and Muslims persecuted as terrorists.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.
http://prognewshour.progressiveradionetwork.org/
http://lendmennews.progressiveradionetwork.org/
Fred1new
- 19 Apr 2010 15:17
- 1547 of 6906
Fahel.
Thank you.
It is an informative posting.
fahel
- 19 Apr 2010 15:40
- 1548 of 6906
Fred1new,Haystack,
I thank you both for your previous postings and your understanding, I know that you will be blamed by others and even using bad names who has the opposite views they always uses this strategy. keep and defend your right writing your own belief and views.
fahel
- 19 Apr 2010 15:51
- 1549 of 6906
I received the following email,showing letter sent to the President Obama.
Quote
Mr. Barack Obama
President
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, D.C.
Subject: Mr. President: I Need My Money Back!
As an American Tax payer who part of his hard labor is deducted annually since over 45 years to give for free as a grant, as annual donations, to the largest recipient of American Foreign Aid, to Israel, I need my money back along with the compounded interest going back 45 years.
On February 23 and March 7th, 2010, I was, as an American Tax payer, whose country gives most generously and unconditionally to Israel, I was denied entry to the Occupied Palestinian Territories, my place of birth, by the Israeli Occupying authorities. As I frequently visit the Occupied Territories to assist duly registered business enterprises, specifically Financial Banks, in the development of their businesses, I was denied entry for the sole excuse of frequent visits that duly stamped by the Israeli immigration authorities.
Somehow, Mr. Obama, I feel you would, as an Afro-American most relate to me in my plight of discrimination and denial of basic human rights. However, my plight, Mr. President, remains a miniscule in comparison with the enduring plight of the average Palestinian in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
Mr. President, my plight is further accentuated by a wrenching sense of a sad irony; of the travesty of the position of our Government that while professes strict adherence to human rights, I am denied entry to my place of birth, the place where I had grown up until the age of adulthood, until the age of 18, as hordes of American Jewish settlers, mostly recent immigrants, move in droves to occupy illegal settlements right next to my hometown, Nablus, in the West Bank, Nablus. As known to you, Mr. President, these new American Jewish immigrants enjoy full right of entry, residency, and, according to the Israeli Apartheid Law of Return, as immigrants of the Jewish faith, granted automatic right of Israeli citizenship with all the attendant equal social benefits accorded long-time Jewish Israeli residents. Thats the kind of Apartheid Israel where my tax money is going. Thats the discriminatory Israel, Mr. President, that your government elects to look the other side when it violates the very basic principles of human rights that our great American constitution stands steadfast in defending.
Mr. President, it all started on December 15, 1966, nearly 44 years ago, when I first left my home town, Nablus, in the West Bank, to pursue my University Education in the U.S.A. It never occurred to me, then, six months before the start of the Six-day June 5, 1967 war that my home town, then part of the Sovereign Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, would be occupied by the Israeli forces. Even then, I thought, to my great naivety, Mr. President, that the Geneva Conventions would be observed and that it would be totally inconceivable that I would be denied the right to return to my home town, my place of birth, for the simple technical problem that when the Israelis moved to occupy my city I was not there to be counted in the Israeli arbitrary and ad hoc system of deciding right of residence and the Right of Return of absentee students.
A few years ago, Mr. President, while made to wait at the Israeli immigration booth at the Allenby Bridge Crossing of the Jordan Valley, I jotted on November 6, 2006, the following down deep-heartedly felt musings:
Upon arrival at the booths of the Israeli immigration at King Hussein/Allenby Bridge at the Jordan Valley, the first challenge to one's sanity and self-composure pops unattended and most defiantly. Teen age, near 18 years of age, Israeli officers scattered over six to seven booths, command over the process of determining the eligibility of a visitor for admission into Historic Palestine and the occupied territories.
As I was questioned by a Russian-born of these teen-age officers, and as she intermittently reached to her other Ethiopian (Flasha) companion teen-age officer sharing the same booth for clarification inquiries over some details, my mind wandered, took a long trip to a recent past. Mind over body maintained full control over this most defying anomaly.
Here two recent teen-age immigrants from far away lands to my homeland, place of birth, question and determine my eligibility, a sixty years old native, for a short visit of my homeland.
As the teen-ager Russian born officer continued the cross examining of the purpose of my visit, the place, persons and addresses of my destination, I did a little fast calculation as to how far back I belong to the place of birth these two alien teen-agers grilling me with absurd questions to determine if they should allow me entry. I fast-tracked part, a small part, of my genealogy as committed to ready memory. I began: Rajai - Rafiq - Ali - Munib - Darwish - Hussein - Yaseen - El-Masri. That fast-tracked recollection amounted to over 300 years of ancestry that I knew and at times visited their graves in my hometown in Nablus. Compounding my irking the realization that according to an official documented Family Tree of the Masris, my family goes back to at least 600 years of uninterrupted existence in Palestine. This, mindful of the fact that during the rule of 1400 years of Islamic Caliphate, residents of the empire were never hindered in their movements and selection of residence in the expanded realm of the Caliphate. Here I am before two teen-age recent immigrant Jewish officers screened for eligibility to enter my birthplace as a visitor.
Dear Mr. President, for two months now, I tried every possible legal channel to relate my case to and request their intervention to solving this problem. Most disappointedly, the office of the American Consul General in Jerusalem brushed the case aside as thats a Sovereign Israeli matter they can not do anything about it. When I faced him, on the phone, with the fact that Israel enjoys a unique and exceptionally privileged treatment of the U.S. Government, and that Israel applies selectivity and discriminatory rules favoring Jewish Americans, the U.S. Consul General never responded.
Mr. President, I know that you could do nothing about my plight as a Palestinian American, and to that effect nothing to alleviate the plight and the enduring suffering of the hundreds of thousands, rather millions, of other Palestinians as a result of the U.S.A.s UN-Evenhanded policies as amply highlighted in a recent report by General David Petraes, however, it is my rightful claim, Mr. President, that as a tax payer whose part of his hard labor goes in aid to Israel, and as an American who is discriminated against by the Israeli authorities, I need that part of my money back with a compounded interest stating since over 40 years.
Respectfully,
Rajai Masri
Unquote.
Camelot
- 19 Apr 2010 18:58
- 1550 of 6906
what a load of tosh
Fred1new
- 19 Apr 2010 19:08
- 1551 of 6906
Camelot.
Brilliant response.
You must need a lie down after that effort.
Suggest you reread it, think and then consider why there is such a problem between many Arabs and some Israelis.