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Who would not slap a soldier after years of trauma and direct assaults? — an interview with Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb
The Jewish political map is far from a monolith. Anti-Zionist, pro-Palestinian lefty Jews have gained prominence and attention due to public relation successes on the international arena as well as the Netanyahu government’s escalation of anti-Democratic legislation, targeting of human rights’ groups, persecution and expulsion of African refugees, and its endorsement and collaboration with neo-fascist, anti-Semitic forces worldwide.

Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb is a congregational rabbi for 45 years and an advocate for Palestinian human rights since 1966. She serves on several boards dedicated to human rights and is a visual and performing artist. Rabbi Gottlieb recently returned from The Sumud Winter Tour sponsored by the Holy Land Trust. In this interview, Gottlieb shares her impressions as a Rabbi, woman and activist.


You have been traveling to Palestinian towns and villages as an organizer and non-violent activist since 1966 and have just returned from a trip to Palestine/Israel. What were some of the changes you witnessed?
The most profound change I encountered was that many Palestinians confidently declared that the word ‘occupation’ no longer describes the reality on the ground, and instead referred to it as ‘annexation’.

An occupation implies a limited time frame. Annexation describes the true motivation for use of military force, home demolitions, administrative detentions and denial of resources, which collectively lead to the removal of Palestinians from their homes and into ghettos or reservations. In other words, ethnic cleansing and the judaization of the land of ‘Greater Israel’, which has always been the goal, is almost complete. This translates as the end of the fantasy of the two-state solution that has been used as cover to carry out this objective. While this is not a new insight, it is clearer than ever.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) is viewed almost universally as a corrupt agency whose individuals line their pockets with foreign money. Since the PA has been unable to translate any potential diplomatic achievements into political gain, many people believe the PA should step down and allow the true dismal reality of life for Palestinians to be revealed to the whole world.

What were one or two particularly touching or impressive experiences you had during your trip?
The trip I helped design with Holy Land Trust was unique in that several Palestinian Bedouins traveled with us throughout the trip. One moment of joy: four of our friends were able to pray at Al Aqsa for the first time, as well as go to the beach in Haifa.

However, while we were in Jerusalem one of the men was stopped because he was wearing a hoodie: it was raining and cold, and yet he was stopped by several soldiers who questioned him. “You look suspicious,” they said. “Why are you wearing a hoodie?” At that moment several of us saw what was going on, and we came to support our friend. While this seems inconsequential, it represents the daily assault on Palestinian human dignity for reasons that some Americans can recognize: wearing a hoodie or walking while Palestinian is dangerous.

After decades of oppression, Palestinians have adopted and created new means of coping. Please provide an example that inspired you.
We visited the Tamimi household while Ahed and her parents were at court. Janna Jihad, Ahed’s closest friend, has been making videos of her experience since the age of 7 in order to record what life under Israeli military rule is like for children. We were all inspired by her passionate articulation of her own life and the life of those around her. Many young Palestinians have become fearless in the face of Israeli brutality and refuse to be silenced. Their use of social media is inspiring and should remind all of us to make space for their voices.

What is your impression of the reaction to Ahed Tamimi’s slapping of an Israeli soldier?
The response to Ahed Tamimi’s slap by many Jewish people reveals the sexist and racist attitudes, beliefs and behaviors that impact a large portion of the Jewish community. The vile accusations against this child are stunning. Their purpose is to flip the script on Palestinian suffering and blame the victim instead of assuming responsibility.

I wonder: who would not slap a soldier after years of trauma as a result of recurring night invasions, administrative detentions with no possibility for justice or a fair hearing, daily destruction of village houses, and direct assaults, one of which targets your cousin in the head?

Israeli soldiers invade and scream in a strange language, push and shove with an assault rifle, destroy personal objects in homes, and kidnap and hurt friends and loved ones. And some people complain about Ahed’s slap?!

No one in her family had to teach her about Israeli behavior. But they did teach her how to resist with steadfastness for her own dignity. I recognize the reason for that steadfastness. It is the only way to resist victimhood, the only way to counter the assault and demand change.

The militarism that has become deeply embedded in Israeli society does not serve the future health of either Israelis or Palestinians. Human rights must supersede militarism. There is no other way forward.

What is your perspective on human rights as a Jewish activist and leader? Does sexism play a role in the oppressive narrative you confront?
My witness is forged from values I absorbed as a young Jewish woman in relationship to what I saw with my eyes and heard with my ears while living and traveling in the land with two names: Palestine-Israel. As one of the first female-bodied people to inhabit a role exclusively held by men, the role of rabbi, I never felt comfortable with conventional attitudes about anything. I knew I had to question the contentions of those enjoying top dog privilege in the world’s racial, religious and gender hierarchies because their description of reality did not match my experience of sexism or racism.

I grew up mentored by rabbis who in the sixties actively resisted American apartheid. They often linked African American civil rights as a Jewish ethical responsibility in light of the world’s silence during the Holocaust. I absorbed a clear message: ‘Never again’ is intersectional. ‘Never again’ covers all people across all boundaries who suffer state sanctioned and community collaboration with violations of human rights.

Being a feminist witness has always been a challenge, given the entrenched sexism and racism within many Jewish and US institutions. After over four decades of on the ground experience, I am still surprised and appalled by sexist stereotypes that are used to discredit the obvious state of brutal oppression in Palestine.

Many Jews do not want to confront a reality that challenges them in the ways that the #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter campaigns challenge male and white America, respectively. People in privileged positions don’t want to surrender their status, even if it means allowing horrible abuses of human rights to continue with impunity.

The reality of Jewish pro-active ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in Greater Israel exists. As we approach the 70th year of active annexation of Palestinian lands and the accompanying assault on Palestinian people, how many Jewish congregations will sponsor a Nakba memorial ceremony, much less pursue an active agenda for Palestinian human rights?

How do you view Israeli society and its link to Jewishness? Does Israel represent you?
The idea that the value of Jewishness depends upon an exclusive association with a specific geographical space is for me, a troubling outcome of the establishment of the State of Israel. This notion has resulted in the forced expulsion and continuing disenfranchisement and ghettoization of Palestinians.

Traditionally, various expressions of rabbinic Judaism were based on ethical ideas and ritual practices, not geography. Love your neighbor as yourself and the value of human dignity are the greatest principles of Torah.

In the contemporary period, all nation states, including Israel, must be held accountable to an adherence to human rights. This is the outcome of the tragedy of the Holocaust: states must observe human rights as defined by The Universal Declaration of Human Rights along with the treaties that have arisen from the Declaration. If states violate human rights, they should be made to pay a price by their citizens and by the International Court of Law.

Indeed, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is also a measure for Jewish tradition itself. In this regard, Israel as a nation state is failing miserably. A state that claims to be a democracy, but offers rights and privileges to one group of people living under its rule on the basis of religious/ethnic identity, while denying those same rights and privileges to another group of people living under its rule practices a form of apartheid as defined by the UN ESCWA report (2017). This is exactly the situation for Palestinians living under Israeli rule.

The majority of Jewish Israelis are perfectly happy with this arrangement. They agree to send their children to the military to enforce this arrangement. This is not a reality I can identify with as a human being or as someone who identifies as a Jewish person. Rather, this is a reality I must resist.

How is Zionism perceived today in your community in the United States and what has changed in recent years?
Zionism is a failing ideology for many younger Jewish people. They see the oppressive conditions facing most Palestinians under the banner of Zionism and are frustrated by the mainstream community, which is in denial of the oppression of Palestinians by Israel. I believe this trend will continue as the gap between what Zionism claims and what it practices widens.

Expelling African refugees, bellicose actions toward Iran, and awareness of brutal occupation policies will further erode the legitimacy of Zionism for young people. The close identification of Netanyahu with Trump does not help. With the end of the two-state solution, the next generation will have to reimagine the geography of the holy land as a space that can support two peoples in their love of the land.

Where do you find hope? What is the method of resistance to Israeli oppression and apartheid that you choose to engage in?
The majority of Palestinians support Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) as the most effective nonviolent tactic to exert international economic pressure on Israeli policies. BDS should not be criminalized and neither should activists who support similar campaigns. There is no better way for activists to non-violently struggle for policy and institutional changes that result in an end to illegal annexation of Palestinian homes and land.

Palestinians who struggle every day to remain on their land and in their homes deserve our passionate and unrelenting support. Everyone who cares about Palestinian survival needs to find a way to support specific villages and projects. The best way is to join an organization already engaged in solidarity work. These days I support Holy Land Trust, a Palestinian-led organization based in Bethlehem, which is committed to forging a future grounded in equity and justice, as well as coexistence. I am inspired by the generations of Palestinians who have never given up on their dream to remain in the land as a free people. Freedom, equality and justice for Palestinians are the only paths to peace for both peoples.
http://mondoweiss.net/2018/02/assaults- ... -gottlieb/
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High-profile actors, artists, athletes, and activists join Dream Defenders in supporting Ahed Tamimi
Editor’s Note: Today, the civil rights organization Dream Defenders released the following open letter in support of Ahed Tamimi, who trial starts tomorrow.

On December 15th, 2017, 15-year-old Mohammad Tamimi was shot in the face by an Israeli soldier while participating in an unarmed protest of Trump’s Jerusalem declaration. Just minutes later, his 16-year-old cousin Ahed rose up to protect her family’s home after two armed soldiers invaded her yard. For over 50 years, the Israeli army has stationed itself on Palestinian land in order to enforce its violent military occupation of the West Bank. Ahed stood her ground and asked the soldiers to leave. When they refused and tried to use her property as a base from which to shoot at protesters, she slapped one of them.

Ahed was arrested a few days later in the middle of the night. Her cousin Noor and her mother Nariman were also arrested. All three have been indicted by Israel’s military court, which has a 99.7% conviction rate and lacks basic fair trial protections. Ahed has been denied bail and her trial will begin February 12th. Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have called for her release.

In the US, we know all too well what it’s like to be oppressed simply because you exist, because you refuse to give up your fight for freedom. Last year, a Dream Defenders delegation of artists traveled to Palestine to bear witness to life under Israel military occupation and met the Tamimi family in their village of Nabi Saleh. Songs and stories of struggle were shared, from the US to Palestine. The Tamimis spoke about their daily lives — the Israeli army patrolling and shooting into their streets as their children play, Israeli settlers stealing their water. The delegation learned that every year hundreds of Palestinian kids across the West Bank are arrested and detained by Israeli soldiers and police who kick, punch, and beat them. Torture is routinely used to get signed confessions from children, mainly on charges of stone throwing.

While our struggles may be unique, the parallels cannot be ignored. US police, ICE, border patrol and FBI train with Israeli soldiers, police, and border agents, utilizing similar repressive profiling tactics to target and harass our communities. Too many of our children quickly learn that they may be imprisoned or killed simply for who they are. From Trayvon Martin to Mohammed Abu Khdeir and Khalif Browder to Ahed Tamimi – racism, state violence and mass incarceration have robbed our people of their childhoods and their futures.

In a bold move to protect Palestinian children like Ahed from widespread abuse by Israeli forces, Rep. Betty McCollum of Minnesota introduced an unprecedented bill last November entitled: Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act. The bill has 22 co-sponsors and counting.

We the undersigned call on all US representatives to sign this bill and protect the lives and childhoods of Palestinian children.

The Tamimi family stands up to Israel’s brutality because they believe Palestinians, like ALL people, should be free. Dream Defenders stands with them and all Palestinians in their righteous struggle. Now, and always, we commit to building a more just and loving world for us all.

#FreeAhed #nowaytotreatachild

SIGNATORIES
Danny Glover
Jesse Williams
Michelle Alexander
Rosario Dawson
Tom Morello
Angela Davis
Michael Bennett
Alice Walker
Vic Mensa
Talib Kweli
Angela Rye
Cornel West
Patrisse Cullors
Marc Lamont Hill
Alicia Garza
Tunde Adebimpe
Gary Clark Jr.
LisaGay Hamilton
Emory Douglas
dream hampton
Robin D.G. Kelley
B Mike
Tef Poe
Kam Franklin
Michael McBride
Jasiri X

http://mondoweiss.net/2018/02/activists ... upporting/
#14888654
A closed kangaroo court? What have the Zionists got to hide?

A teenage Palestinian protester filmed slapping and kicking two soldiers outside her home has appeared before an Israeli military court to face various charges including assaulting security forces, incitement and throwing stones.

Ahed Tamimi, who turned 17 in jail last month, arrived on Tuesday morning for the first day of what could be a months-long trial, in what has become a symbolic case in the battle for international public opinion.

Palestinian 16-year-old Ahed Tamimi is the latest child victim of Israel’s occupation.
The judge ordered a closed-door hearing and ejected a large group of journalists who had gathered at the Ofer military base, despite a request by Tamimi’s lawyer for the media to be able to observe proceedings.

Tamimi’s supporters say the incident in December occurred soon after she discovered Israeli troops had seriously wounded her 15-year-old cousin, who was shot in the head with a rubber bullet during a stone-throwing clash.

Arrested in the middle of the night and since denied bail, Tamimi could face years in prison for what prosecutors argue was a criminal offence. She faces 12 charges, some of which date back to 2016.

Tamimi’s father, Bassem, said on Tuesday that he arrived at trial “with no good expectations, because this a military court, and it’s part of the Israeli military occupation”.

Some of Israel’s critics have said the case epitomises its brutal approach half a century after its forces captured the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem.

Tamimi comes from the village of Nabi Saleh, where regular protests from its several hundred residents have often ended with stone throwing. Since her early years, she has become an international poster girl for the anti-occupation movement. Rights groups have called for her immediate release.

“As an unarmed girl, Ahed posed no threat during the altercation with the two Israeli soldiers who were heavily armed and wearing protective clothing,” said Magdalena Mughrabi, Amnesty International’s deputy director for the Middle East and Africa.

“Yet again the Israeli authorities have responded to acts of defiance by a Palestinian child with measures that are entirely disproportionate to the incident in question.”

Hysteria over how the world perceives Tamimi, who comes from a family with a long history of both peaceful and violent resistance against the occupation, has spread across both societies.

The footage of Tamimi led to the teenager being hailed as a hero by some Palestinians, who saw her as standing up to Israel’s occupation of the West Bank.

One senior Israeli official recently revealed he had asked a parliamentary committee to investigate whether the blond, blue-eyed Tamimi family were “real” Palestinians.

Some Israeli politicians have applauded the restraint of the two soldiers while others have demanded a heavy-handed punishment for what they see as a brazen attack.

“She is not a little girl, she is a terrorist,” said the culture minister, Miri Regev, before the trial. “It’s about time they will understand that people like her have to be in jail and not be allowed to incite to racism and subversion against the state of Israel.”
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skinster wrote:Occupied people have a legal (and moral) right to defend themselves against the terrorism that is an occupying military force.

Of course "the court", the illegal court that's violating international law merely by existing, is going to crucify Ahed, because it has a 99% conviction rate.

This is Israel:

Who is this lying piece of filth? I watched 40 seconds. She claims "Israel bombs the shit out of Gaza every couple of years." That would mean that Israel has bombed the shit out of Gaza about 25 times since 1967. This is a disgusting lie. Israel's human rights record must be fantastic if those that hate Israel have to resort to such bare faced and pathetic lies.
Last edited by Rich on 17 Feb 2018 22:27, edited 1 time in total.
#14889873
Yes, Abby Martin is making that shit up and Israel didn't bomb Gaza in its 3 operations of ethnic cleansing in the last decade alone. Who would make that shit up? What kind of asshole, Rich, would make that shit up? :excited:

UN Slams Israel for Jailing Ahed Tamimi
Israel is violating the international Convention on the Rights of the Child by detaining a Palestinian teenager for slapping an Israeli soldier, UN human rights experts said on Tuesday.

After an incident in which she slapped an Israeli soldier, Ahed Tamimi, 17, appeared before an Israeli military court on Tuesday.

The UN experts called for her release, saying that future hearings should be held in strict accordance with international legal standards.


“The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Israel has ratified, clearly states that children are to be deprived of their liberty only as a last resort, and only for the shortest appropriate period of time,” said Michael Lynk, the special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967.

“None of the facts of this case would appear to justify her ongoing detention prior to her trial, particularly given the concerns expressed by the Committee on the Rights of the Child about the use of pre-trial detention and detention on remand,” Lynk said.

Tamimi has been held in detention since she was arrested at her home by Israeli soldiers last December when she was 16. Four days earlier, she was filmed physically confronting Israeli soldiers on her family’s property in Nabi Salah, in the occupied West Bank.

On January 1, Tamimi was charged with a number of offenses under Israeli military law, some stemming from the December incident, and others dating back to last April. The court ruled that she should remain in detention until the end of her trial, due to reconvene in early March.

“Tamimi was arrested in the middle of the night by well-armed soldiers, and then questioned by Israeli security officials without a lawyer or family members present. This violates the fundamental legal guarantee to have access to counsel during interrogation,” said Jose Guevara, chair of the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention.

The UN experts also said that “her place of detention — Hasharon prison in Israel — [is] in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention which states that the deportation of protected persons from occupied territory to the territory of the occupying power, or to that of any other country, is prohibited, regardless of the motive.”

“Figures from Palestine show that Israel detains and prosecutes between 500 to 700 Palestinian children in military courts annually,” Lynk noted.

“We have received reports that these children are commonly mistreated while in detention, subjected to both physical and psychological abuse, deprived of access to lawyers or family members during interrogation, and tried under a military court system in which there are significant concerns regarding independence and impartiality, and which has a worryingly high conviction rate,” he said.

The experts also called on Israeli authorities to respect and ensure basic due process rights, with particular attention to the rights and protections afforded to children, and re-emphasized their call for Tamimi to be released in line with these protections.
http://www.palestinechronicle.com/un-sl ... ns-rights/
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Surprised to see this in The Washington Post....

Israel’s decision to put a Palestinian teen on trial could come back to bite it
OFER, West Bank — Slouching in her chair and mouthing messages to her friends and family from under a cascade of strawberry-blond curls, Ahed Tamimi in many ways appears to be an everyday teenager.

But the tussle of television cameras and photographers that crowded in for a shot of her in the dock of a small Israeli military court in Ofer for a bail hearing last month was a reminder that she is far from it.

Ahed, who recently turned 17, was arrested after a video of her slapping and kicking two Israeli soldiers who had entered her front yard went viral last year. On Tuesday, after nearly two months in detention, she went on trial on 12 charges, including assault of a soldier and incitement.

Although no one was seriously hurt, the Israeli military is keen to make an example of her to deter other young Palestinians from fighting back against the Israeli occupation, her lawyer says. However, a lengthy public trial looked set to raise her profile and highlight human rights concerns surrounding the detention of minors in Israel.

In what rights groups and her lawyer said they suspected was a deliberate effort to try to prevent that, the military judge ejected all journalists and observers from the first trial hearing on Tuesday.

The judge ruled that it was in Ahed’s interests, even though her lawyer argued that it was not.

“The court decided to close doors because they said they don’t think it’s good for Ahed,” said defense lawyer Gaby Lasky. “I think the decision of the court is because the court decided what is good for the court. They understand that people outside Ofer military court are interested in Ahed’s case. So the way to keep it out of everybody’s eyes is to close the doors.”

Already a poster child for the Palestinian cause, her arrest has propelled her to new levels of fame. Images of her standing hands on hips and staring down an Israeli soldier were plastered on London bus stops calling for her release.

Jim Fitzpatrick, an Irish artist famed for his iconic two-toned painting of Che Guevara, painted her as Wonder Woman. She has been compared to Rosa Parks and Joan of Arc. An Israeli musician even likened her to Anne Frank.

Her family says letters and messages of support have flooded in from across the region and the world.

Bassem Tamimi, her father, says his daughter’s arrest came just when the Palestinians needed a new source of inspiration.

“It’s the moment of Trump, the moment that nobody knows what to do,” he said. “The people in the Arab countries and the Palestinians are bored of seeing a victim all the time. Now they see a small child slapping the face of the occupation.”

Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and a White House they see as favoring Israel more than ever, has fueled frustration among Palestinians. Regular clashes have broken out in the West Bank between demonstrators and Israeli forces, which, although not large after 50 years of occupation, have been persistent.

But also a factor in her international fame, her father says, is Ahed’s blond hair and blue eyes.

“They don’t like to see a white girl as a victim,” he said. “They see their children; they see themselves.”

Early media attention
For some, it appeared too convenient to be true. Ahed has been a regular in Internet videos for years. Demonstrations take place in her village of Nabi Saleh, in the occupied West Bank, every week, with residents priding themselves on their peaceful resistance, although they regularly descend into stone throwing and clashes. The villagers accuse Israel of stealing their land and spring for a nearby settlement.

Ahed grabbed media attention at age 11, when she shouted at Israeli soldiers after they detained her brother, raising her fist.

Michael Oren, an Israeli deputy minister and former ambassador to the United States, said that with the family rising in prominence, a probe was launched by
a parliamentary subcommittee three years ago, to see whether they were real or actors picked for their Western looks. It’s a phenomenon he describes as “Pallywood.”

“Pallywood can be a very serious threat to us,” he said. “We looked at the Tamimis. Among the questions were: Are all these children Tamimis? Are they being directed?”

He said the findings were inconclusive. He says that if children are being sent out by their parents to face off against Israeli soldiers, then it amounts to “child abuse.” He says if the trial raises her profile, it’s a price that needs to be paid. “I think there is a cost involved, but there is always a cost,” Oren said.

While Palestinians saw the video as a child standing up to her occupiers, many Israelis saw Ahed as a provocateur attempting to provoke a reaction — which the soldiers did not give. Those on the left lauded the soldiers’ restraint, but right-wingers called for action. Ahed was arrested in an overnight raid on her West Bank home on Dec. 19, with the Israeli military releasing video of her being led out of her house in handcuffs.

‘My generation is stronger’
In his home in Nabi Saleh, Bassem Tamimi said children are an important part of the Palestinian struggle.

“I’d like it if there was no occupation and let her to go and learn dance or ballet,” he said. “We don’t like to see our children face danger, but because there is no safe place, we must give them the ability to survive, we must train them to face their enemy in the future. We need them to be strong.”

He began organizing regular protests in the village in 2009. Above the television sits a portrait of Ahed’s uncle, who Bassem says was shot during a demonstration in 2012. Her 28-year-old cousin died after being hit by a tear-gas canister a year earlier, he says. The latest in the extended family to die was a 17-year-old distant cousin, who was the first Palestinian to die in clashes with Israeli forces this year.

“She was born into an environment of resistance,” he said of Ahed.

Marah Tamimi, 17, counts Ahed among her closest friends. She says her cousin would have liked to have been a soccer player, but because of the occupation they both plan to study law. They are among a generation of ­media-savvy young Palestinian activists who hope they can foster change.

“My generation is stronger,” she said, adding that they realize the power of a camera.

But although Ahed’s case may have drawn attention, it comes at a time of flagging support for the Palestinian cause in the Middle East. Regional protests following Trump’s Jerusalem decision lacked zeal.

Meanwhile, Israel has clamped down on access for pro-Palestinian activists. At a birthday party held for Ahed while she was in prison, only a smattering of international activists were present as candles spelling out her name were lit in tear-gas casings.

A powerful video
Even though the hearing will now be held in secret, unless her lawyer successfully manages to petition for it to be opened, rights groups say they hope the trial will shed light on Israel’s treatment of minors.

Ahed’s lawyer accuses the military of breaking the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child during her nighttime arrest and interrogation, during which she says Ahed was threatened. Her trial, like those for all Palestinians in the West Bank but not Israeli settlers, is being held in a military court. She was denied bail at her hearing last month, with the prosecution arguing that she was dangerous and posed a risk of absconding.

“The Israeli military supposes by arresting Ahed Tamimi they can silence their activism,” said Fadi Quran, a senior campaigner with the activist group Avaaz. “But although painful, it’s definitely put a spotlight on Palestinian children in detention.”

There were 352 Palestinian children held in Israeli prisons as security detainees at the end of last year, according to B’Tselem, an Israeli human rights organization. Although many may be detained for serious offenses, the group says the conviction rate of around 99 percent in the military courts is concerning.

Ahed’s charges date back almost two years, to when she was 15. Earlier that day another relative, 17-year-old Mohammed Tamimi, had been shot in the head by a rubber bullet. The incident left him in a coma, his family said, and he had part of his skull removed. Ahed’s family says that it was shortly after this that the soldiers entered their yard. Ahed shouted at them to leave, later kicking and hitting. Her 20-year-old cousin Nour Tamimi and mother, who were also in the video, were both later arrested and are also facing charges.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett has said Nour and Ahed should finish their lives in prison. Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, meanwhile, defended the then-16-year-old’s arrest in the middle of the night.

“Whoever goes wild during the day, will be arrested at night,” Lieberman said, describing it as an “important message.”

Lasky, Ahed’s lawyer, said Palestinians will be getting another message. “They can see in the video a child pushing heavily armed soldiers away from her house,” she said. “It’s powerful.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/is ... 332a41e1e5
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skinster wrote:Yes, Abby Martin is making that shit up and Israel didn't bomb Gaza in its 3 operations of ethnic cleansing in the last decade alone. Who would make that shit up? What kind of asshole, Rich, would make that shit up? :excited:

Only just over a thousand Palestinians were killed in the 20008 war. 30,000 died in 1 night when Dresden was bombed, but lets make it easy for the Gaza victim mongerers. Lets say a thousand dead equals "bombing the shit out of" That's one occasion. That lying piece of filth in the video claimed that Israel bombs the shit out of Gaza every couple of years. When were the other occasions?
#14889903
It's not a war when only one side has an army and there were not just the attacks on Gaza in 2008, but also in 2012 and 2014, the last of which killed over 2000 Palestinians. Today Israel bombed Gaza. There are predictions of another large-scale attack on Gaza, as a distraction from Nethanyahu's corruption charges.

Still, just because your understanding of politics is schizophrenic af, doesn't mean these things you suddenly hear about didn't happen, so before calling an excellent journalist "filth", one thing you can do before running your dumb fucking mouth is to look up what she's talking about that you disagree is happening because of, I guess your emotions. That stuff was well documented and very easy to find. Let me know if you need any help with that.

A civilian population imprisoned in a concentration camp were bombed like fish in a barrel in 2014. 550 children were murdered in their homes or returning from school or in hospitals or UN shelters where they were seeking refuge from the bombs, over 51 days, 3 summers ago. The only power plant in Gaza was destroyed and in the last week the 2 million people in that camp had just an hour's electricity in a day. And you're talking about Dresden? What the hell is wrong with you? :lol:
#14889927
skinster wrote:It's not a war when only one side has an army and there were not just the attacks on Gaza in 2008, but also in 2012 and 2014, the last of which killed over 2000 Palestinians.

The UNHRC estimated 174 Palestinians killed in the 2012, conflict, in no way can that be equated with "bombing the shit out of". That's at most twice in ten years. She lied. Israel does not "bomb the shit" out of Gaza every couple of years.
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