- 23 febr 2009
Palestine Music Video
(3:33) Palestine Music Video 1 x viewed
Massacres caused by Israelis:
The King David Massacre
The Massacre at Baldat al-Shaikh
YEHIDA MASSACRE
KHISAS MASSACRE
QAZAZA MASSACRE
The Semiramis Hotel Massacre
The Massacre at Dair Yasin
NASER AL-DIN MASSACRE
THE TANTURA MASSACRE
BEIT DARAS MASSACRE
THE DAHMASH MOSQUE MASSACRE
DAWAYMA MASSACRE
HOULA MASSACRE
SHARAFAT MASSACRE
Salha Massacre
The Massacre at Qibya
KAFR QASEM MASSACRE
Khan Yunis Massacre
The Massacre in Gaza City
AL-SAMMOU' MASSACRE
Aitharoun Massacre
Kawnin Massacre
Hanin Massacre
Bint Jbeil Massacre
Abbasieh Massacre
Adloun Massacre
Saida Massacre
Fakhani Massacre
Beirut Massacre Sabra And Shatila Massacre
Jibsheet Massacre
Sohmor Massacre
Seer Al Garbiah
Maaraka Massacres
Zrariah Massacre
Homeen Al-Tahta Massacre
Jibaa Massacre
Yohmor Massacre
Tiri massacre
Al-Naher Al-Bared Massacre
Ain Al-Hillwee Massacre
OYON QARA MASSACRE
Siddiqine Massacre
AL-AQSA MOSQUE MASSACRE
THE IBRAHIMI MOSQUE MASSACRE
THE JABALIA MASSACRE
Aramta Massacre
ERETZ CHECKPOINT MASSACRE
Deir Al-Zahrani Massacre
Nabatiyeh (school bus) Massacre
Mnsuriah Massacre
The Sohmor Second Massacre
Nabatyaih Massacre
Qana Massacre
Trqumia Massacr
Janta Massacre
24 Of June 1999 Massacres
Western Bekaa villages Massacre:
2008-2009 Cast Lead
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 24 febr 2009
Abdullah Nabeel Asleem, 16
Cause of Death: Shells from Israeli Air force F-16
More Details:
Truly it was painful time that the Gazans people were lived during the Israeli war on the district.
To escape the endless fear, Abdullah took his cousins to the roof to do something new rather than hiding all the time. They went up there to feed their little birds .
Suddenly Israeli Air force F-16 begun to hit this populated area. Abd Allah’s body flied away to the neighbors’ house because of the suddem explosion. All of his brothers and cousins died, but Abdullah and his brother Mahmoud were in serious injured.
Abdullah was in a coma, moved between hospitals in Gaza and Egypt till Feb 24. Later he came back to Gaza after he died.
His Dreams:
His mother says:" Abdullah was in his second year at the high school, but he didn’t intend to finish his education. He dreamed to learn the profession of cooling and air conditioning like his brother Mohammed."
Abdullah Tabil Shaban Eslim
http://fwd4.me/0j1q 28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 26 febr 2009
Jamal Abdul-Nasr Mustafa Fuqaha, 16,
of Tayaseer, near Tubas, killed by shrapnel to his face, chest and abdomen from an unexploded IDF ordinance, while having a picnic in the Yarza area, east of Tayaseer.
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 27 febr 2009
Nihad Mohammed Abu Kmail, 29
from al-Mughraqa village south of Gaza City, died of injuries he had sustained on 13 January 2009.
According to PCHR documentation, the victim had been traveling in a truck on the coastal road leading to Gaza City when IOF troops positioned to the south of Gaza City fired at the truck. As a result, Abu Kmail was wounded by a gunshot to the head.
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 3 mrt 2009
Dima Al-Rahel, 5
photo Al-Rahel Family 8 jan 2012
“The other children keep talking about Dima and the memories of both incidents. ‘We wish to die like Dima’ is what the children sometimes say to me because of all the stress and our poor living conditions.”
On 8 January 2009, at approximately 11:00, four missiles were fired at the house of Juma’a al-Rahel (45) in Beit Lahiya, injuring three members of the extended al-Rahel family: Basma (3), Dima (5), and Faten (41). Many of the extended family were inside the house at the time of the attack, as six of the al-Rahel brothers and their wives and children live nearby. Immediately after the attack, the families fled the area and sought refuge in Beit Lahiya’s UNRWA school. On 17 January 2009 the school was targeted with white phosphorus bombs, leaving Dima’s sister, Ansam al-Rahel (13), severely injured. After six weeks of fighting for her life 5-year old Dima eventually died of her wounds in an Egyptian hospital on 1 March 2009.
Saeed al-Rahel (35), the father of Dima and Ansam, remembers the day of the first attack vividly. “I was at home when an explosion took place and all the windows were broken. I got out of the house. I heard people screaming in the house of my brother Juma’a, nextdoor. My daughter Dima was there and I heard people screaming that she was wounded. Several more missiles struck Juma’a’s house and we fled from the area. Dima was taken to hospital. On 13 January she was transferred to Egypt. I went with her.”
Saeed’s wife, Nisreen al-Rahel (33), and their other children, Sunia (seventeen), Dina (fifteen), Ansam (13), Ahmad (11), Mohammed (6 ), and Ali (4), stayed in the UNRWA school in Beit Lahiya after the attack. Nisreen recalls: “we stayed in the school building from 8 to 17 January. It was winter and very cold. We didn’t have any mattresses. We had to use blankets as mattresses and it was very difficult, especially for the children. We didn’t have enough food. We also had to ask other people to give us water. There was no clean water.”
On 17 January 2009 the Israeli army bombed the school building with white phosphorus shells.
“Experiencing the attack on the school was more difficult for me than the attack on the house. At the moment that the bombing of the school started I was in a classroom with my children. The bombing started around 5:00am and it was dark. I heard Ansam cry ‘I am wounded in my head’. The firing of bombs was very intensive.” Ansam was severely injured in the head, she lost her hair in the place of the injury and the scars get infected from time to time as parts of her skull are missing. “She is still suffering because of her injuries. At school she loses consciousness when she is active,” say Nisreen.
Saeed remembers the moment he found out about the bombing of the school: “Before I went to Egypt I stayed in that same classroom with my family. I saw the attack on the television when I was in Egypt and I recognized the classroom. There was blood on the floor. When I called to my family, no one wanted to tell me how my daughter Ansam was doing.”
When Nisreen and her remaining children moved back to their house after the offensive they found it badly damaged and their livelihood destroyed. “Shortly before the war I bought cattle. We had 2 oxen, 17 goats and dozens of rabbits. I kept them next to our house. I took out loans to buy them,” explains Saeed. “When our family returned to our house after the war they found all the animals killed by shrapnel. Only one goat was still alive but he also died after a few days. Now I am stuck with many loans. I can barely provide for the treatment of my daughter Ansam. I was even arrested by the police because I cannot pay back my loans to people. With a complete lack of money I am also not able to repair the severe damage that was done to the windows and walls of our house.” Cardboard and blankets serve to protect the family from the nightly and winter cold.
The events of January 2009 have had a profound impact on the psychological wellbeing of the Saeed, Nisreen, and their children. “It has been very difficult for me because I lost one of my daughters and another one was badly injured. I remember Dima when I see girls going to school,” says Nisreen. “The other children keep talking about Dima and the memories of both incidents. ‘We wish to die like Dima’ is what the children sometimes say to me because of all the stress and our poor living conditions.
Saeed noticed changes in his children too. “Ansam holds a lot of anxiety and stress since the war. One time I called her and she started screaming and threw a plate at me, screaming to leave her alone. I am her father and she is afraid of me.” Nisreen adds: “Ahmad’s scores were badly affected after the war. He used to be an excellent student. Now he even has problems in reading. He also suffers from bedwetting.”
Fear seems to have become a part of daily life for the family. ”The children, like me, are always afraid when they hear drones or firing. When we hear it, we all sit in a single room,” says Nisreen. The fear of another attack is never far from Saeed’s thoughts either: “I am afraid that another war will come. When people talk about it I feel afraid. When I hear drones in the area, I leave the house. I get afraid that they will target us again.”
8 jan 2012 PCHR submitted a criminal complaint to the Israeli authorities on behalf of the al-Rahel family on 9 September 2009. To-date, no response has been received.
http://fwd4.me/0jxo
Dima Said Ahmad al-Zahal, 5,
of Beit Lahya, Gaza, died of wounds sustained Jan. 7 in an IDF attack on Beit Lahya.
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 4 mrt 2009
Khaled Harb Khaled Sh'alan,23
resident of Gaza city, killed in Gaza city, by a missile fired from a helicopter. He was the object of a targeted killing. Killed while riding in his car.
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 5 mrt 2009
Wasim Hassan Hussein Mansur, 20
Ibrahim Hassan Da'ud Bamba, 24
Mahmoud al-'Abed Saleh Hammad, 27
residents of al-Maghazi R.C., Deir al-Balah district, killed in al-Maghazi R.C., Deir al-Balah district, by a missile. Members of the military wing of Democratic Front. Killed while at an observation point with other armed men east of the refugee camp.
28 apr 2012, 22:30 , Respect -
Maria 7 mrt 2009
Mahmoud Sami Hassan Fatuah, 27
resident of Gaza city, killed in Beit Lahiya, North Gaza district, by a missile. Member of the military wing of Islamic Jihad. Killed while riding in a car after firing rockets at Israel.
28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria 11 mrt 2009
Fayez Faris Ata, 17,
of Deir abu-Mashal, near Ramallah, killed by IDF gunfire to his abdomen and hand while throwing stones at Israeli vehicles traveling on a settler bypass road west of Deir abu-Mashal.
28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria 11 mrt 2009
(3:05) Captain of Israeli Airforce says Israel is Commiting War Crimes (WAS CENSORED!) ...For What?
19 mrt 2009
Israeli soldiers say killing of civilians 'allowed' - 19 March 09
(3:32) Israeli soldiers say killing of civilians 'allowed' - 19 March 09 2 x viewed
Israel's army is accused of war crimes after more than 1,300 Palestinians were killed in the war on Gaza.
In interviews published by a leading Israeli newspaper, Israeli soldiers say killing Palestinian civilians and destroying their homes was allowed in Israels rules of engagement during the war.
20 mrt 2009
'Cold-blooded murder' of Gaza man's daughters
(3:13) 'Cold-blooded murder' of Gaza man's daughters - 20 Mar 09
For the families of those killed in Israel's war on Gaza, an investigation into Israeli war crimes may not heal the pain, but it could go some way in the search for justice.
Khaled lost his two daughters in the conflict. They were just two and seven years old.
28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria 21 mrt 2009
Why children are the first casualties of war in Gaza
January 1: A wounded Palestinian child screams as she arrives to the Al-Shifa hospital after an Israeli air strikein Gaza City. Photograph: Fadi Adwan /Getty Images
In war, everyone dies: men, women, children, civilians and fighters, the innocent and the villains. Every death is ugly and sad. But the dead bodies of children drop us into a deep pit of shame and sadness: they make us angry, vulnerable and hopeless.
As I am writing, 315 children have died in Gaza in the last 19 days. Most probably, more will have died by the time this is published. About a third of the dead and injured have been children.
The dead children in Gaza take me back two years, to Israel's last war, with Lebanon. Again, it was the children who were dying. I remember seeing seven children lying together on a filthy brown blanket - next to the bodies of their relatives and parents - after their house, in the village of Qana, was bombed by Israeli planes. They all had acquired the monochrome beige colour of the debris they had been buried under all night. They had a look of astonishment, agonised confusion, their lush lips twisted, their mouths stuffed with dirt. But they looked peaceful even in the ugliness of their death.
All dead children look alike, that's the thing - even those mangled and disfigured by a Baghdad car bomb. They look asleep, not dead, just asleep after a long night of bombing and shelling.
There is no mystery as to why so many die in these wars: there are lots of children in Gaza - half of the population are children - so when you start bombing residential areas, they die.
Walk in any alleyway, refugee camp or slum in the Middle East and you will see them in their dozens, alive, and annoying: screaming, shouting and running around; chasing each other between cars, legs and push carts; gathering around any scene, a car with a flat tyre, a street scuffle - or just happily engaged in stone throwing matches. When these streets are hit, those annoying children are the first to die.
The families will grieve - and they will never forget. Last week, the day when four rockets were fired from south Lebanon towards Israel, I saw a Lebanese woman with a white headscarf sitting on the edge of her son's grave, just under a kilometre from the Israeli border. The grave, made of marble, its edges painted in green, was fenced by few bushes of red roses still wet from the early morning rain. The woman's sunken eyes were filled with tears; she cried and talked to her son Ali in the grave. "I didn't see you when you died Ali, they took you to the hospital and buried you and I wasn't there, right Ali?" She wiped her face and the marble with tissues and cried more. "May Allah burn the hearts of those who killed you like they burned my heart."
"I cry for every dead son in the world," she told me.
"Everyone, even if he was a Jew. I don't want him to die. I am a mother and I know."
http://fwd4.me/0jOS 28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria Israel's War on Children - Part 1a
WARNING: It contains graphic and disturbing photos, drawn from a variety of sources
Murdering Children for Sport
The Jewish Holocaust Against Arab Children
Small Palestinian children burning to death, following the phosphor explosives bombardment by Jewish soldiers on their school.
The world needs to be awakened to Israel’s deplorable and reprehensible slaughtering of the citizens of Gaza, and their practice of deliberately targeting children, and to condemn this internationally in the strongest possible terms. The war crimes committed by the Jews in Israel are almost unimaginable to most of us.
The photos attached to this article are graphic and sickening. It is almost impossible to believe that human beings are capable of such evil and callousness as that being perpetrated daily upon the civilians in Palestine.
White Phosphorus shells
We present photographic evidence to counter outrageous denials of one of Israel’s more reprehensible actions: the use of White Phosphorus shells as a weapon against Gaza's civilian population.
White Phosphorus
The Jewish military, the Israeli government, and the (largely Jewish-owned and controlled) Western media have all conspired to deceive the world and supress this information.
Jewish forces repeatedly fired artillery and phosphor shells into densely populated residential areas, knowing that such imprecise weapons would kill and injure civilians.
new weapon dime bomb
According to Amnesty International, "The scale and intensity of the attacks were unprecedented, even in the context of the increasingly lethal Israeli military campaigns in Gaza in previous years."
White Phosphorus
During Operation "Cast Lead" Israeli forces made extensive use of white phosphorus,in residential areas. Homes, schools, medical facilities and UN buildings – all civilian objects – took direct hits.
"Everything caught fire. My husband and four of my children burned alive in front of my eyes; my baby girl, Shahed, my only girl, melted in my arms."
The Children of Palestine: A Photo Essay on Israel’s War Crimes in Gaza
Palestinian women protesting against the Jews' deliberate targeting of children and families.
Jewish Israeli Child Killers: Documentary Proof: From Research by Michael Hoffman and other sources
We have here some text taken from various news reports, along with some very graphic photos of the horrors that the Jews in Israel are inflicting on the entire civilian Arab population of Palestine.
Israel would like the world to believe that the pictures of these children serve as further indictment and evidence of Hamas terrorism.
What a clever propaganda ploy: blame the deaths of women and children on the enemy.
There is commentary on one of Israel’s more reprehensible lies: the use of "human shields" by the Palestinians.
The Jews try to tell the world that Hamas is using their own people as human shields so that, when the photos of mangled babies, children and women arrive over the news wires, it can all be blamed on Hamas, not on Israel’s bombs, which are blasting Gaza’s hospitals, mosques, universities and homes into oblivion.
But Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch claim there is no evidence whatever that Hamas has ever done this, but they have presented considerable documented evidence that Jewish soldiers do in fact use Palestinians, primarily children, as human shields.
"Ali Murad Abu Shaweesh was 12 when Israeli soldiers shot him in the back.
Ali was killed on the same day in June, 2001 that Sharon refused to let the Israeli foreign minister, Shimon Peres, meet with Yasir Arafat, yet his death also went unnoticed by American television news.
Ali Murad Abu Shaweesh
But not entirely unnoticed, since the Israeli soldiers, who taunted the Palestinian boys over loudspeakers outside the Khan Yunis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, goading them to come out and throw rocks, did so under the gaze of Chris Hedges, a reporter for the New York Times.
Ali Murad Abu Shaweesh
"Children have been shot in other conflicts I have covered - death squads gunned them down in El Salvador and Guatemala, mothers with infants were lined up and massacred in Algeria, and Serb snipers put children in their sights . . in Sarajevo.
But I have never before watched soldiers entice children like mice into a trap and murder them for sport," Hedges wrote. His account, coolly factual yet full of passionate intensity, was written not for his own paper but for Harper's Magazine, which sent Hedges to Gaza on his vacation." The Nation, March 11, 2002
Killing children is no longer a big deal
A Palestinian child with all his limbs blown off, most likely by a DIME explosive fired by Jewish soldiers. These are experimental explosives created by the US and likely sold to Israel. They create violent short-range explosions with this effect. How would you feel if this were your child?
From Haaretz Oct. 17, 2004; by Gideon Levy
"The plain fact, which must be stated clearly, is that the blood of hundreds of Palestinian children is on our hands."
Fares Udah, 13
Oct. 29, 2000: A Palestinian boy, Fares Udah, 13, confronts an Israeli tank, during an Israeli attack on the outskirts of Gaza City.
According to the boy's mother, Enaam Udah, 41, her son survived the encounter with the tank only to be shot dead by the Jews a week later.
More than 30 Palestinian children were killed in the first two weeks of Operation Days of Penitence in the Gaza Strip (beginning September 30, 2004). It's no wonder that many people term such wholesale killing of children "terror."
Whereas in the overall count of all the victims of the intifada the ratio is three Palestinians killed for every Israeli killed, when it comes to children the ratio is 5:1.
According to B'Tselem, the human rights organization, even before the current operation in Gaza, 557 Palestinian minors (below the age of 18) were killed, compared to 110 Israeli minors.
Palestinian human rights groups speak of even higher numbers: 598 Palestinian children killed (up to age 17), according to the Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group, and 828 killed (up to age 18) according to the Red Crescent.
Take note of the ages, too. According to B'Tselem, whose data are updated until about a month ago, 42 of the children who have been killed were 10; 20 were seven; and eight were two years old when they died.
The youngest victims are 13 newborn infants who died at checkpoints during birth.
With horrific statistics like this, the question of who is a terrorist should have long since become very burdensome for every Jew everywhere, especially those living in Israel.
Severed head of a 4-year-old Palestinian "terrorist" buried in rubble after an air attack by Jewish forces in Gaza. Name victim: Doha al-Dayeh.
Yet it is not on the public agenda. Child killers are always the Palestinians, the soldiers always only defend us and themselves, and the hell with the statistics.
The plain fact, which must be stated clearly, is that the blood of hundreds of Palestinian children is on our hands.
No tortuous explanation by the IDF Spokesman's Office or by the military correspondents about the dangers posed to soldiers by the children.
No dubious excuse by the public relations people in the Foreign Ministry about how the Palestinians are making use of children will change that fact.
An army that kills so many children is an army with no restraints, an army that has lost its moral code.
As MK Ahmed Tibi (Hadash) said, in a particularly emotional speech in the Knesset, it is no longer possible to claim that all these children were killed by mistake.
An army doesn't make more than 500 day-to-day mistakes of identity.
No, this is not a mistake but the disastrous result of a policy driven mainly by an appallingly light trigger finger and by the dehumanization of the Palestinians.
Shooting at everything that moves, including children, has become normative behavior.
Iman Alhamas
Even the momentary mini-furor that erupted over the "confirming of the killing" of a 13-year-old girl, Iman Alhamas, did not revolve around the true question.
The scandal should have been generated by the very act of the killing itself, not only by what followed.
Two dead Palestinian children, one burned to a crisp by phosphor, the other blown apart by a grenade or DIME bomb fired by Jewish soldiers.
Iman was not the only one. Mohammed Aaraj was eating a sandwich in front of his house, the last house before the cemetery of the Balata refugee camp, in Nablus, when a soldier shot him to death at fairly close range. He was six at the time of his death.
Kristen Saada was in her parents' car, on the way home from a family visit, when soldiers sprayed the car with bullets. She was 12 at the time of her death.
The brothers Jamil and Ahmed Abu Aziz were riding their bicycles in full daylight, on their way to buy sweets, when they sustained a direct hit from a shell fired by an Israeli tank crew. Jamil was 13, Ahmed six, at the time of their deaths.
Muatez Amudi and Subah Subah were killed by a soldier who was standing in the village square in Burkin and fired every which way in the wake of stone-throwing.
Radir Mohammed from Khan Yunis refugee camp was in a school classroom when soldiers shot her to death.
She was 12 when she died. All of them were innocent of wrongdoing and were killed by soldiers acting in our name.
At least in some of these cases it was clear to the soldiers that they were shooting at children, but that didn't stop them. Palestinian children have no refuge: mortal danger lurks for them in their homes, in their schools and on their streets.
Not one of the hundreds of children who have been killed deserved to die, and the responsibility for their killing cannot remain anonymous. Thus the message is conveyed to the soldiers: it's no tragedy to kill children and none of you is guilty.
A Palestinian father, carrying his dead child after another Jewish air attack. Note the child's left side, arms and legs, and part of his head, all blown away by another DIME weapon. Who are the "terrorists"?
Death is, of course, the most acute danger that confronts a Palestinian child, but it is not the only one.
According to data of the Palestinian Ministry of Education, 3,409 schoolchildren have been wounded in the intifada, some of them crippled for life.
The childhood of tens of thousands of Palestinian youngsters is being lived from one trauma to the next, from horror to horror.
Their homes are demolished, their parents are humiliated in front of their eyes, soldiers storm into their homes brutally in the middle of the night, tanks open fire on their classrooms.
And they don't have a psychological service. Have you ever heard of a Palestinian child who is a "victim of anxiety"?
The public indifference that accompanies this pageant of unrelieved suffering makes all Israelis accomplices to a crime.
Even parents, who understand what anxiety for a child's fate means, turn away and don't want to hear about the anxiety harbored by the parent on the other side of the fence.
Who would have believed that Israeli soldiers would kill hundreds of children and that the majority of Jews would remain silent?
Even the Palestinian children have become part of the dehumanization campaign: killing hundreds of them is no longer a big deal.
Israeli Soldier Gets 49 Days for Murdering Palestinian Teen
A dead Palestinian child, shot in the face by a Jewish soldier - who was sentenced to 49 days in jail for "violating rules" on killing children - i.e. being photographed while doing it.
An Israeli soldier who shot and killed an unarmed Palestinian teen-ager in the Gaza Strip has been sentenced to 49 days in jail for violating the army's rules on when a soldier can open fire, the army said Sunday.
The Palestinians have repeatedly accused Israeli troops of war crimesand atrocities against civilians, but punishments meted out to Jewish soldiers have been extremely rare.
The soldier fired a .22-caliber rifle, hitting 14-year-old Issa Ibrahim al-Amur in the stomach as he was walking near a Jewish settlement in the Gaza Strip on Feb. 3.
Al-Amur later died of his wounds. The soldier was identified as Daniel Stempler by an Israeli newspaper, Kol Hair.
''The soldier will serve out his sentence in a military prison," the Israeli army said in a statement. Source: Associated Press-NY-Feb. 25, 2001
Shooting Arab Kids: Just Business as Usual for the Israeli Army
Carried by her grandfather, a dead Palestinian child, with her legs blown off by a Jewish mortar during Operation "Cast Lead" in Gaza.
On March 13, 1998 an Israeli soldier was photographed in Hebron, aiming his assault rifle at a group of Palestinian children, a few of whom were "armed" with stones.
The Israeli army (IDF) routinely shoots Palestinian children in the head.
This shooting spree has transpired since the 1980s, with a dearth of sustained outcry from the "international community" or the Western media, who do not consider it terrorism.
Imagine however if the soldier in the photograph was a German and the children he was taking aim at were Jewish, would his act then be considered terrorism? Of course!
Or what if the soldier had been a white southerner in the U.S. and the children in the photo were American black youths? Would the soldier's aim be considered terrorism? Certainly.
The Palestinians boil with rage in the face of this double standard.
There can be no doubt that Palestinian children are a sub-human species in the eyes of the West.
The Israeli troops can gun them and their parents down with near impunity and the West treats it as business as usual, the "inevitable result of sectarian hostilities."
But when the Palestinians take revenge on the Israelis for these murders, by bombs or others means, suddenly the whole machinery of condemnanion and outrage is brought to bear on the Palestinian killers of Israelis.
Everyone is expected to "speak out" and "not be complacent" in the face of the "terror attacks on the Jewish people."
This sly racism informs the establishment's reporting of the Middle East.
Arab blood is cheap. Israeli army terrorism against Palestinians is met with overwhelming complacency in America. When Israelis shed the blood of Arab children, the West shrugs.
Another Palestinian child, horribly burned by phosphor bombs fired on Gaza by the Jews. The child died soon after.
These heinous attacks on children, part of an endless cycle of tragedy, can be averted only when the Jewish aggressors who have stolen the Palestinians' land and shot thousands of them to death, begin to treat them as human beings with inviolable human rights.
The murder of adult Palestinian civilians and Palestinian children must cease being business as usual.
It is state terror pereptrated by the Israeli government and made possible by American tax dollars, weapons and munitions.
Let us have the courage and integrity to call it terrorism and condemn it in the halls of Congress and the columns of our newspapers as forcefully as we condemn the crimes of Hamas against Jewish civilians.
Otherwise our talk of human rights and safety for Israelis is little more than hypocritical racism; a cover for Israeli supremacy--concern only for the suffering of a "Master Jewish Race" and not for the native Arab semites. Such behavior is the real "anti-semitism."
Yet Another Palestinian Child Gunned Down by Israeli Jews
Another beautiful Palestinian baby killed when Jewish soldiers shelled his home in the middle of the night.
BEITUNYA, West Bank --Israeli motorists sprayed a group of Palestinian high school students with bullets from American-issued assault weapons on Thursday, Sept. 17, killing one youth and wounding another, witnesses and doctors said.
The eyewitnesses said the motorists shot without provocation. The shooting occurred around noon in the West Bank village of Beitunia.
Witnesses said about 10 high school students were walking along the main road on their way home from school when a vehicle with Israeli license plates pulled up near them.
The passengers rolled down their windows and began firing from a pistol and an assault rifle, said Raed Abdel Rahman, 17, one of the students who escaped injury. "Everybody started to jump and take cover," said Rahman.
A Palestinian father mourning his dead child, only weeks old, shot dead by a Jewish soldier.
A high school student who was also on the scene, Hassan al-Qadi, told reporters, "They were shooting randomly."
The wounded were taken to nearby Ramallah Hospital. Iyad Rahwa Qarabsi, 17, a high school senior described as an outstanding student, was shot in the stomach.
He died at the hospital about an hour later, according to Ramallah hospital director Shauke Harb.
A doctor described the cause of death as bullet wounds from an M-16, an American-made, military assault rifle that Israeli settlers and soldiers carry.
15 year-old Mahmoud Issa Jabarin was in stable condition; also with a stomach wound, hospital officials said.
At the family home, Qarabsi's mother collapsed on the floor and wept over the murder of her teenage son.
"My beloved, you didn't come home with your schoolbooks today!" she sobbed.
Ibrahim Murar, the principal of Beitunya's 700-student Palestinian high school said, ""He was one of the very best students in the school. School was more important to him than anything else."
After being held in custody for three days, the Jewish gunman, Avshalom Ladani, 35, a member of the West Bank settlement of Dolev, was released by Israeli authorities. Ladani immediately joined a party at a Jerusalem hotel where he was feted as a hero.
Another 2-year-old Gaza child with his body blown to bits.
"We call on all [Jewish] residents to view Avshalom's behavior as upstanding citizenship," declared an advertisement placed in Israeli newspapers by the Yesha Council, a settlers' group.
The ad said the Jewish killer was being "persecuted."
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu refused to condemn the shootings of the Palestinian students.
According to the Sept. 21 Washington Post, "His aides pleaded extenuating circumstances..." They said the killer had been "provoked."
Israeli officials said the shooting was not an act of Jewish terrorism; they termed the settler's action merely "carelessness," and "violence that was disproportionate."
"This sounds to me like it was really an act of self-defense, if perhaps a careless one," said David Bar-Illan, an adviser to Netanyahu.
A second Israeli gunman remains at large.
A 10-year-old Palestinian child shot and burned to death by Jewish soldiers - punishment for "throwing stones".
This is the second shooting within two days in which Israelis killed or wounded Palestinian youths.
On Tuesday, Sept. 15, a Jewish settler shot and wounded 16-year-old Mohammed Musa Dweik in the Palestinian village of Zatara.
In America, one of the most zealous supporters of the gun-toting Israeli settlers and their right to automatic weapons banned in the U.S., is Brooklyn Congressman Charles E. Schumer.
Schumer helped promote and pass the the Federal government's assault weapons ban, which outlawed the sale to the American people of 19 types of semiautomatic weapons, many of which are possessed by Israeli settlers.
Schumer has stated, "I have made it (gun control) one of my life's works..."
Except in Israeli-occupied Palestine.
Israeli Soldiers Murder 13 Year Old Palestinian Boy
If you found your child dead, shot in the head by a Jewish soldier while playing outside your house, would you want to retaliate and become a "terrorist" too?
The mother of Samer Karameh weeps in her home in Hebron, Palestine, over the bullet-ridden corpse of her thirteen year old son, who died on March 17, 1998, after being shot in the head by Israeli soldiers, during protests against the murder on March 10 of three Palestinian construction workers.
Hundreds attended Samer's funeral. Ahmed Karameh, his 23-year-old cousin, declared: "They killed him in cold blood."
No Israeli government action was taken against the Jewish soldiers who murdered the 13 year old.
"Israeli soldiers can kill Palestinians with impunity. They take innocent lives and get away with it." Hanan Ashrawi, Palestinian spokeswoman
Elsewhere, Israeli army (IDF) and Border Police commanders met with Palestinian reporters in Hebron yesterday to discuss the events that led to the shooting of eight Palestinian journalists March 13 by the IDF.
IDF Hebron Commander Col. Yigal Sharon said the soldiers and Border Police were unable to discern that those they were shooting were journalists because of conditions at the scene.
Sharon said he would do everything in his power to enable journalists to cover Hebron and advised them to avoid standing among Palestinian protestors (because the IDF shoots them at will).
9-year-old Palestinian boy shot to death in his home by Israeli Army
The boy, Obei Darraj, age nine, was killed on Friday March 2, 2001 in his family's home, in El Bireh. The little boy was watching his father paint the wall of a brother's bedroom when gunfire crashed through its window, and hit the child in the chest.The Israeli army took credit for the killing, saying: " The gunfire came in retaliation to Palestinian shots aimed at the Psagot settlement" (Ha'aretz, March 4, 2001).
Only Jewish Children's Lives Count
A Palestinian child with his head blown away by a Jewish military high-powered weapon. Do you think this father wants retaliation? Would that make him a "terrorist"?
The world perpetually mourns the death of one Jewish child at the hands of the Nazis, Anne Frank.
She is commemorated in several books, eight separate movies and documentaries (including one now in production by Steven Spielberg) and countless shrines and museums.
Will the thousands of Arab children who have been slaughtered by the Israelis since 1948 be remembered by the West?
Will there be a single memorial, or will the memory of the atrocities against these "un-Chosen" people be extinguished?
All people must present and disseminate this evidence until the conscience of the West can be awakened from its Jewish supremacist slumber.
Until it commemorates all the victims of all the holocausts, including those perpetrated by Jews.
Jewish Soldiers Shoot for the Head
A dead Palestinian child, shot in the head by a Jewish soldier.
Many small young boys were shot by cowardly Jewish while they were playing in front of their homes.
This is the story of one of them; his name was Khaled Waleed.
He was playing next to his home in Balata district, east of Nabulis town, and some Jewish soldiers aimed at him and shot him in the head.
Another 12-year old Palestinian, Muhind Nizar Muharb, was killed April 23 in Khan Yunis refugee camp, in the Gaza Strip.
Most of the 68 Palestinians killed and hundreds wounded by Israeli gunfire during demonstrations against the opening of the Hasmonean Tunnel in September of 1996 were shot in the head or chest.
A list of the dead published by the Jerusalem Media and Communication Center, citing medical sources, showed all but one was killed by a bullet to the head or chest.
Over half were by headshots, with most of the casualties killed by a single shot, the Palestinian health ministry said in a report quoted by the daily Al-Ayyam.
Around 60 percent of the 1,665 injured were wounded by shots to the head or chest, the same report said.
Israeli Army Uses Live Ammunition, Not "Rubber Bullets" on Palestinian Civilians
This beautiful baby was shot in the heart by a Jewish sharpshooter. Note how carefully he centered his aim.
Press Release - September 25, 1996
B'Tselem urges the Israeli government to direct its security forces to cease immediately the widescale use of live ammunition against Palestinian demonstrators and to refrain from deploying large military forces in heavily populated areas in the Occupied Territories.
In a violent confrontation today in Ramallah, the Israeli Army (IDF) reinstituted a policy that failed time and again and led to bloodshed.
This is the policy of deploying large numbers of troops in heavily populated Palestinian communities, and the widescale use of live ammunition.
Since implementation of the peace agreements began, a certain degree of separation between Israeli security forces and the Palestinians had developed, resulting in a substantial reduction in the number of casualties.
The actions taken by the security forces today will likely cause the situation to deteriorate, and return confrontation between them and the Palestinian population to a level of violence reminiscent of the intifada.
In handling the recent demonstrations of ultra- orthodox Jews, the Minister for Public Security, Abraham Kahalani, urged police officers to act with restraint, and to refrain as much as possible from using force when dispersing demonstrations.
This policy must also be implemented when dealing with Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. Israel's security forces must act in an unbiased manner when handling demonstrators, giving no consideration to their nationality or religion.
Israeli Army Opens Fire on Children's Playground
A little Palestinian girl shot in the head by a Jewish soldier. She died soon after this photo was taken.
Ibrahim Al-Mugrabi weeps over his 11-year-old son, Khalil Ibrahim, who was slain in the Rafah section of the Gaza ghetto after the Israeli army strafed the boy's playground with machine gun fire.
Khalil Ibrahim al-Mugrabi, 11, was shot in the head and killed July 7, 2001 near Rafah in the Gaza ghetto.
Two other Arab children playing with him were wounded, one seriously, after the Israeli army sprayed machine gun fire at a crowd of Arab children.
The children were gunned down by Israeli soldiers from a Jewish guard tower as they were playing.
Doctors said the dead Palestinian boy was shot in the head and that a 10-year-old boy was seriously wounded with a gun shot to the stomach.
A third Palestinian boy, age 12, was injured less seriously.
Mohammed Abu-Shikadem, 29, who was nearby when the shootings took place, said that a group of some 30 children were playing near the refugee camp when he heard a burst of machine gun fire from the Israeli guard tower.
"Two of the children fell in front of my eyes," Abu-Shikadem said.
"In the Old City of Hebron, (March 15, 2001), Israeli soldiers lobbed a stun grenade into a schoolyard during an elementary students' demonstration.
The students were throwing stones at Israeli cars, Israeli officials said.
Six students suffered moderate or light wounds, including burns, broken bones and blisters, Palestinian officials said.
The Israelis said five Palestinian children had experienced 'light impact injuries from the grenade.'
"The army sees the removal of children from the circle of violence as extremely important," an Israeli army statement said.
The army will "continue to act against anyone trying to compromise the security of Israeli citizens," it said
28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria Israel's War on Children - Part 1b
.
Israelis Kill Baby Girl and School-Teacher, Wound Ten other Children in Refugee Camp
Lying in a bloodied schoolyard, this is all that's left of a 4-month-old Palestinian girl whose body was blown away. How would you feel?
Palestine, May 7, 2001; Israeli troops shelled homes in Khan Yunis Refugee Camp and fired large-caliber machine guns, killing a 4-month-old baby girl and wounding 24 civilians. Doctors said 10 Palestinian children were among the injured.
One Israeli cannon shell hit the shack of the Hijo family in the refugee camp, instantly killing 4-month-old Iman Hijo, with shrapnel tearing a hole into the infant's back.
The girl's 19-year-old mother, as well as three brothers and sisters, were wounded, including 18-month-old Mahmoud Hijo, was in intensive care at Nasser Hospital with shrapnel wounds, doctors said.
The slain infant's uncle, Wael Hijo, carried the girl's body from the hospital's autopsy room to the X-ray department.
In the emergency room, Iman's 7-year-old aunt, Dunya, sat on a bed with a dazed look on her face, her frilly white-and-green dress pulled up above scraped and bandaged legs.
"They killed the baby," Dunya said, then burst into tears.
Israeli troops also fired on the refugee camp's Khaldieh School in the West Bank, killing a Palestinian school-teacher.
Source: N.Y. Times, March 16, 2001, p. A-10
Group prayers for Palestinian children and babies killed by Jewish soldiers in Operation "Cast Lead". Do you think these parents were terrorists before these killings of their children? Do you think they are now?
"Six Palestinian children suffered burns on March 15, 2001 when Jewish soldiers threw a stun grenade into a West Bank schoolyard.
The Jews began new violence after making a pledge to ease the blockade on Gaza.
Doctors in Hebron said three of the six children sustained burns to the head, hands and back and the other three were suffering from blisters and shock. "Why did they throw the grenade into the yard? This is only a provocation,' said teacher Mohammed Hawaismah as parents carried children out of the school and into ambulances.
Source: Reuters, March 15, 2001
And Now, a Fetus;
An 8-year-old Palestinian boy shot in the head by a Jewish soldier. The child died, of course. How much longer will you keep silent about the atrocities committed by the Jews in Israel? How much longer?
From Haaretz; May 15, 2007, by Gideon Levy
Memorial posters decorate the walls of the Rafidiya government hospital in Nablus, covering earlier posters of countless young people who have been killed.
But this poster is like nothing we have seen before: a fetus covered in its own blood, its tiny head blown up by the bullet that struck its mother, and the caption - "Who gave you the right to steal his life?"
The killing of the unborn child, Daoud, by Israel Defense Forces troops raises a series of moral, legal and philosophical questions.
Is the killing of a fetus manslaughter? Is it murder? And how old is the victim?
But all these questions are dwarfed by the woman lying stunned and injured in the maternity ward of the hospital in Nablus, in agony, with all kinds of tubes attached to her, refusing to answer a single question.
A Palestinian father carrying his dead terrorist child, shot in the head and throat by Jewish soldiers. How much longer will you remain silent?
It is obvious that Maha Katouni is still in a state of trauma. Wounded in the abdomen, she lies in bed, her elderly mother by her side.
The tube in her nose makes it hard for her to speak.
She is 30 years old and was in the seventh month of pregnancy, a mother who got up in the middle of the night to protect her three small children, sleeping in the other room, from the bullets that were whistling by outside.
As soon as she got out of bed, the bullet struck her. Bleeding, she fell on the nightstand by her bed.
Maha survived, but Daoud - as she and her husband planned to name their son - was removed from her womb with a bullet wound to the head.
"And babies?" a reporter once asked an American soldier who had taken part in the My Lai massacre in the Vietnam War. His succinct answer was just as chilling as the question. "Babies." And now, a fetus.
A 10-year-old Palestinian boy shot in the head by a Jewish soldier. Who are the terrorists? Why do you support Israel?
The day before, I had been in Soweto, near Johannesburg, South Africa, accompanied by the Palestinian ambassador to the UN, Riyad Mansour.
We were comparing the horrors of apartheid to the Israeli occupation in the territories.
The next afternoon I was here, in the Rafidiya maternity ward, standing before the bed of the wounded Maha, who had lost her baby.
The sister of Palestinian mother-to-be Maha Katoumi cleans her face at the intensive care unit in Rafeedia hospital, in the West Bank city of Nablus, May 11 2007.
The biggest hospital in the territories is practically deserted, barely functioning. It has been this way for two months now.
Like the other hospitals in the West Bank, Rafidiya accepts only emergency cases, because of the economic boycott of the Palestinian Authority.
This also prevents the workers here from being paid. Only 20 of the hospital's 168 beds are currently occupied, and only about a third of the hospital's 380 staff members show up for work.
In the emergency room we saw just one patient, who had arrived that morning.
The rest of the beds were empty. In the past two and a half months, the workers have received just NIS 1,500 per person, from funds provided by the European Union.
Hospital director Dr. Khaled Salah says that the staff and patients don't come to the hospital because of the difficulties in getting to Nablus and the cost of the trip, which has risen significantly because of the checkpoints.
A Palestinian father with his son, shot in the head by a Jewish sniper, while playing on the roof of his house. Do you think this man will become a "terrorist" now? Would you?
The Hawara checkpoint and the Beit Iba checkpoint, the two checkpoints on the city's outskirts, are relatively deserted, because of the difficulty in getting past them.
Maha lies in bed, her eyes closed. A green headscarf covers her head. Her skin is ashen. Every once in a while she opens her eyes but then quickly closes them again.
Once in a while she also murmurs a few words in a feeble voice and then goes quiet again. How are you? Silence.
Maha is a resident of the Ein Beit Ilma refugee camp on the outskirts of Nablus.
She is married to Rifat, a 36-year-old school janitor, and the couple have three children: Jihad, 10; Jawad, 7; and Jad, 3.
Two uncles and her mother watch over her, not budging from her bedside. For the father of the family, it's too hard to be here. He's still in shock.
A grieving father, carrying his horribly phosphor-burned child. If this were your child, what would you do?
Last Wednesday was an ordinary day in the Katouni household.
The father went to work, the kids went to school, and in the evening everyone went to bed - the parents in their bedroom and the three children in their room in the third-floor apartment.
Shortly after two in the morning, Maha was startled awake by the loud sounds of gunfire from the street.
She didn't even manage to turn on the light when she got up to run to the kids' room next door, to reassure her three little boys and keep them from getting scared.
The gunfire was very heavy. The window of her room was open and her bed was close to the window.
Maha got out of bed, took one step, and then the bullet struck her in the lower back. She fell onto the nightstand.
Another bullet struck the nightstand. Soldiers from the Nahal patrol battalion were standing on the roofs of the surrounding buildings.
"Wherever we are sent - to there we go," the poet Yaakov Orland once wrote in "The Nahal Anthem," sung by the Nahal entertainment troupe, which also sang "The Song of Peace."
Rifat rushed to call an ambulance.
Another group funeral for Palestinian children killed when Jewish soldiers shelled their homes. Israeli Jews killed hundreds of Palestinian children during their Operation "Cast Lead". Most were targeted killings, not "collateral damage".
The children, who had awakened, were hysterical, especially the youngest, 3-year-old Jad, at the sight of the blood trickling from the front and back of their pregnant mother, who lay wounded on the floor.
The bullet had struck her from behind, passed through the fetus' head and the mother's intestines and exited through the abdomen.
Maha Katoumi's mother Umm Ibrahim says that her son, who tended to Maha, could see through the hole in her abdomen that the fetus had been wounded in the head and was dead.
Family members say that about 45 minutes went by before the ambulance from the Medical Relief organization was permitted to approach.
In the meantime, Maha's mother, Umm Ibrahim, tried to leave her home nearby to come to her daughter's aid.
Umm Ibrahim says that when she tried to leave her house there was gunfire; she hurried back inside. "It's a miracle that I was saved," says the woman in the white headscarf.
A Palestinian child burnt to a crisp by the Jews' use of phosphor in Gaza. This is what Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and Ethan Bronner of the New York Times, calls "humane and appropriate" treatment of children in Palestine.
She could not reach her injured daughter and would not see her until two hours later, in the hospital.
The pain is written all over Maha's face. One of her brothers somehow managed to cross the line of fire and get to her house; he tried to stanch the gaping wound in her stomach with a towel.
Her husband, Rifat, was paralyzed with shock. Umm Ibrahim says that her son, who tended to Maha, could see through the hole in her abdomen that the fetus had been wounded in the head and was dead.
The gunfire finally subsided at around three in the morning and they were able to take Maha out to the street, carried by her brother and the paramedic from the ambulance that had parked in the nearby alley.
The brother says that on the way to the hospital they were stopped twice by soldiers, who wanted to check the wounded woman's identity and to make sure there were no wanted men hiding in the ambulance.
Maha was barely conscious when she reached the hospital, but her mother says she understood right away that she had lost the baby.
The family says the IDF enters the camp nearly every night and that there is almost always gunfire.
Umm Ibrahim managed to get to the hospital at four in the morning, when her daughter was in the operating room and the dead fetus had already been removed.
Dr. Ihab Shareideh was the surgeon who was summoned to the hospital in the middle of the night to operate on Maha. He says that her recovery has been more difficult and slower than usual, not only because of her injuries, but because of her traumatized mental state.
Fortunately, not many blood vessels were injured, so the delay in getting her to the hospital did not cause further damage. It is too soon to gauge the extent of the damage to her digestive system, or to say whether she will be able to get pregnant again.
The fetus died as a result of the bullet that penetrated its brain on the way to the mother's intestines.
A Palestinian baby girl, burned to a crisp and with her limbs blown away by a Jewish soldier firing phosphor explosives. Who is the "terrorist here?
The anesthesiologist, Dr. Iyad Salim, a resident of nearby Hawara, roams the hospital corridors.
On his cell phone camera is a video of the operation and the removal of the fetus. So close to being a fully developed baby, with a bullet wound to the head.
The memorial poster shows the fetus bleeding from the head. The image is unbearable.
They were going to call him Daoud, after an uncle, and also after a resident of the camp who was killed.
At home they had everything ready: new clothes, diapers and a crib passed down from his older brothers. Daoud was buried in the camp cemetery.
Only a few close family members attended the funeral of the unborn baby.
At press time, no response had been received from the IDF Spokesperson's Office.
Photo captions reprinted from a Gaza newspaper. These appear daily.
How much longer can a people endure such barbaric atrocities? How long will it take for the world to face openly the monstrosity of the Jewish state that not only permits, but encourages, these actions?
Israelis Kill 13 Year Old Boy;
As his father attempts to shield him, Jewish soldiers shoot at 12 year old Mohammed Al Doura. He was killed shortly after this photo was taken.
As his father attempts to shield him, Jewish soldiers shoot at 12 year old Mohammed Al Doura. He was killed shortly after this photo was taken.
The Islamic equivalent of the American Red Cross, the Palestinian Red Crescent Society (PRCS) offers emergency medical services in occupied Palestine.
Emergency medical technician (EMT) Bassam Balbeisi was shot and killed as he tried to rescue the boy, Mohammed Al Doura, and the boy's father, shown under fire in the picture above. (The Jewish soldiers killed the boy on Sept. 30, 2000. The father was shot and wounded).
Israelis Kill 13 Year Old Boy
Little Ahmed Ghanem bids a final farewell to the remains of his big brother, Mahmoud, 13, in the village of Sara in the West Bank. Mahmoud was shot in the head March 10, 2002 by Israeli troops, west of Nablus.
Jewish soldiers open fire on an ambulance;
A father rescuing the dead body of his 2-year-old child, whose lower limbs have been blown off, by a Jewish DIME explosive.
. . in the Jenin refugee camp and killed a doctor, 57 year old Khalil Suleiman. Three medics and a nine year old girl were wounded in the Israeli army attack.
Commenting on the preceding Israeli army "raids" of March 4, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon stated: "Anyone wishing to conduct negotiations with Palestinians must first hit them hard...We must inflict heavy losses on their side." Source: Los Angeles Times, March 5, 2002
Jewish Soldiers Murder 12 year old boy;
Mohammed Houmeduk, 12, shot and killed in cold blood Dec. 18, 2001 in the Khan Younis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip, by Israeli soldiers.
Jewish Soldiers Murder Two Palestinian Boys: a 2 year old and a 13 Year Old;
Hebron, Dec. 10, 2001. Editor's note: We have no post-mortem photo of the two year old victim, Burhan Sidir. The Israelis blew him apart. His head was found in the street. His legs were in different places. Two brothers, aged 8 and 10 were also seriously injured in the Dec. 10 Israeli attack.
A Palestinian father, carrying his 4-year-old child, shot in the head by a Jewish soldier who was "only following orders".
Jewish Soldiers Target and Kill 3-year-old old boy;
Zahra Sidir said her son Burhan's third birthday was to be March 27. "Can you think of a crime uglier than this?" she asked. "A targeted person? My two year old son?"
Israeli explosive kills 5 school children;
On Nov. 22, 2001, five Palestinian school boys ages 7 to 14 were on their way to classes in the Gaza strip when they were killed by a booby-trapped bomb planted on the path to their school by the Jewish military.
Israel "....places explosive charges where children are likely to pass and then claims that only the other side practices terrorism?" - Gideon Levy,"On The Way To School," Ha'aretz, Nov. 26, 2001. Also cf. NY Times, Dec. 11, 2001, p. A12
These are not terrorist acts? The settlers who attack anyone they can get near, burn down olive groves, attack Palestinian kids on the way to school, throw fire on Palestinian houses. Israeli Air force dropping one tone bombs in Gaza residential neighborhoods.
Israelis Murder 13 Year Old Palestinian Boy;
The sister of 13-year-old Mohammed Abu Libda, who was shot to death by Israeli troops, cries during his funeral as her brother's body is brought home in southern Gaza, September 9, 2001
Palestinian children killed when Jewish soldiers shelled their home with artillery. The pregnant wife died, too.
Israelis Murder 11 Year Old Palestinian Boy;
The remains of Mohammed Zurub. Jewish soldiers shot dead the 11-year old Palestinian boy in the Gaza ghetto on August, 23, 2001. Haaretz newspaper reported: "Witnesses said that Mohammed Zurub was shot in the heart after throwing stones at IDF (Israeli) troops."
Israelis Murder 14 Year Old Palestinian Boy;
The body of Mohammed Abu Arrar, 14, is caressed by a relative prior to burial. The boy was shot to death in the Gaza ghetto by Israeli soldiers, August 19, 2001.
Israelis Murder 8 Year Old Palestinian Girl;
Israeli soldiers shot this eight-year-old Palestinian girl, Sabreen Abu Sneineh, in the head, in Hebron, Aug. 12, 2001
Israelis Murder Two Palestinian Brothers;
Two Palestinian brothers, Bilal Abu Khader, 8, and Ashraf Abu Khader, 5, were killed in the West Bank town of Nablus, July 31, 2001 by Israeli helicopter gunships, which rocketed the center of a Palestinian population center in the middle of the day. Six other Palestinians were killed during the Jewish-sponsored assassinations.
A Palestinian father, grieving over the bodies of his three children, killed when Jewish soldiers fired tank rounds into their home. Names victims: Issa-Ahmed-Mohamed Samouni jan 5 2009
Israeli Settlers Murder Three Month Old Palestinian Baby;
The body of murdered 3-month-old Palestinian infant Diya Tmaizi, center, is flanked by murdered Palestinian civilians Mohammed Hilmy Tmaizi, 20, right, and Mohammed Salameh Tmaizi, 22, left, in the West Bank village of Idna, near Hebron.
The Palestinian baby and the other civilians were shot and killed, and at least four other Palestinian civilians were injured late Thursday, July 19, 2001, near Idna. According to Israeli radio, a Jewish "settler" group took responsibility for the murders.
Israelis Murder Palestinian Family: Mother and three children;
The body of Mohammad Abu Kweik, 8, is lifted from the carnage after the Mitsubishi pick-up truck he was travelling in was bombed by Israeli forces in the West Bank Palestinian ghetto of Ramallah, March 4, 2002.
Six Palestinian civilians, including the boy's mother, Bushra Kweik, 38, and two sisters, Bara, 14, and Aziza, 16, were killed when Israeli troops bombed their truck after their mother had picked them up from school. The car behind them was also hit. The man the Israelis were attempting to assassinate was not in either vehicle. Two Palestinian children, ages 4 and 16, were killed in the second vehicle.
There are many reports, by individuals and by UN and other human-rights agencies, documenting the claims that the Jews in Israel refuse passage to ambulances after their devastating air raids in Gaza. Also, there are repeated documented claims that the Jews attack the ambulances and often kill the passengers - including the injured patients and the resident doctors.
9-year-old Palestinian boy shot to death in his home by Israeli Army;
The boy, Obei Darraj, age nine, was killed on Friday March 2, 2001 in his family's home, in El Bireh. The little boy was watching his father paint the wall of a brother's bedroom when gunfire crashed through its window, and hit the child in the chest.The Israeli army took credit for the killing, saying: " The gunfire came in retaliation to Palestinian shots aimed at the Psagot settlement" (Ha'aretz, March 4, 2001).
A beautiful Palestinian baby, shot in the head by Jewish soldiers. The child is dead. How much longer will you remain silent? If you're Canadian, send this page to Stephen Harper so he can see what it means to be "Israel's best friend in the world".
The Jews bomb Gaza, then refuse to admit ambulances;
On Sept. 30, Bassam, 45, attempted to get his clearly-marked ambulance to the boy and father, but was shot in the chest and killed by Israeli soldiers. Mr. Balbeisi is from Gaza city and leaves behind a wife and 13 children.
Jewish Soldiers attack a child's funeral rites;
Jewish soldiers opened fire on Palestinian demonstrators at the funeral of a slain Palestinian. At least ten other Palestinians were injured. (Source: Ha'aretz, April 24, 2001)
27 December. Amid thousands of images of civilian casualties of the Jewish airstrikes in Gaza, the solemn stare of one child appears to have stood out more than any other. Newspapers and broadcasters across the world selected the image of a young girl looking into a camera lens outside the Shifa hospital hours after a Jewish air strike.
Epilog
The photos you have seen on this page represent only a very small sample of our collection.
Frankly, we don't have the stomach to continue reproducing these, and can only marvel at the courage of the Palestinian people to have survived the uspeakable cruelty and barbarism of the Jews in Israel for so many decades.
Only the other day, we read a report of a new degradation created by the Jewish military to practice at their checkpoints.
When a Palestinian couple approach the checkpoint, a Jewish soldier gives the wife a "security examination" by fondling her breasts while her husband is forced to watch.
If that doesn't provoke a reaction, said soldier will then take out his penis, display it to the wife and then urinate all over the husband's shoes.
Then, when the man retaliates, the soldier's companion shoots him dead. Such nice folks. God's Chosen People.
The list of atrocities, of humiliations, offences, committed by the Israeli Jews, would require a 24-volume encyclopedia. It is our fervent belief that such a publication should be created so the world would never forget the unforgivable sin of turning the other way in the face of such injustice.
And if we had the power, we would make people like George Bush, Barrack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Tony Blair, Stephen Harper, and many more, read every page and write an exam on every chapter. Sadly, that is unlikely to happen.
The Series: Israel's War on Children
The Jewish Holocaust Against Arab Children
This is a set of 3 articles, dealing with the tragedy in Palestine today, specifically with the targeted deaths of Palestinian children by the Jewish military in Israel. It is an attempt, hopefully not in vain, to bring these events to the attention of more of the world.
The inhumanity of the Jews' brutality and savage treatement of Palestinian children must be brought to consciousness in all countries, until the groundswell of public opinion cannot be ignored.
It is not enough to put pressure on the Jews to cease their insane killing of small children. Those who have perpetrated these atrocities must be brought to justice.
PLEASE forward this page to anyone you know who might be receptive, and who might care about what is happening in Palestine.
The first article is a photo-essay documenting the atrocities being committed against childlren by Israeli Jews. It contains graphic and disturbing photos, drawn from a variety of sources.
The second article is a photo-essay based on news reports of the brutal arrests, interrogation and torture of Palestinian children.
The third article is also a photo-essay documenting the almost absolute destruction the Israeli Jews have wrought on Palestine's educational system - targeting and deliberately destroying hundreds of schools, the universities, even the Ministry of Education in Gaza.
http://fwd4.me/0x7J...Read more 28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria Israel's War on Children - Part 2 - Revenge
Brutal Interrogation of Young Palestinians
Jewish soldiers assaulting Palestinian children and their parents on the way to school.
The boy, small and frail, is struggling to stay awake. His head lolls to the side, at one point slumping on to his chest.
"Lift up your head! Lift it up!" shouts one of his interrogators, slapping him.
But the boy by now is past caring, for he has been awake for at least 12 hours since he was separated at gunpoint from his parents at two that morning.
"I wish you'd let me go," the boy whimpers, "just so I can get some sleep."
During the nearly six-hour video, 14-year-old Palestinian Islam Tamimi, exhausted and scared, is steadily broken to the point where he starts to incriminate men from his village and weave fantastic tales that he believes his tormentors want to hear.
This rarely seen footage seen by The Independent offers a glimpse into an Israeli interrogation, almost a rite of passage that hundreds of Palestinian children accused of throwing stones undergo every year.
Israel has robustly defended its record, arguing that the treatment of minors has vastly improved with the creation of a military juvenile court two years ago. But the children who have faced the rough justice of the occupation tell a very different story.
"The problems start long before the child is brought to court, it starts with their arrest," says Naomi Lalo, an activist with No Legal Frontiers, an Israeli group that monitors the military courts. It is during their interrogation where their "fate is doomed", she says.
Assault, strip and humiliate. Jewish soldiers preparing a Palestinian teenager for a brutal interrogation.
the soldiers smashed in the front door of his house one night. He and his older brother emerged bleary-eyed from their bedroom to find six masked soldiers in their living room.
Checking the boy's name on his father's identity card, the officer looked "shocked" when he saw he had to arrest a boy, says Sameer's father, Saher.
"I said, 'He's too young; why do you want him?' 'I don't know,' he said".
Blindfolded, and his hands tied painfully behind his back with plastic cords, Sameer was bundled into a Jeep, his father calling out to him not to be afraid.
"We cried, all of us," his father says. "I know my sons; they don't throw stones."
A Jewish soldier taking a 10-year old Palestinian child for interrogation. The child will be tortured and may not see his parents for days.
In the hours before his interrogation, Sameer was kept blindfolded and handcuffed, and prevented from sleeping.
Eventually taken for interrogation without a lawyer or parent present, a man accused him of being in a demonstration, and showed him footage of a boy throwing stones, claiming it was him.
"He said, 'This is you', and I said it wasn't me. Then he asked me, 'Who are they?' And I said that I didn't know," Sameer says. "At one point, the man started shouting at me, and grabbed me by the collar, and said, 'I'll throw you out of the window and beat you with a stick if you don't confess'."
Sameer, who protested his innocence, was fortunate; he was released a few hours later. But most children are frightened into signing a confession, cowed by threats of physical violence, or threats against their families, such as the withdrawal of work permits.
When a confession is signed, lawyers usually advise children to accept a plea bargain and serve a fixed jail sentence even if not guilty.
Pleading innocent is to invite lengthy court proceedings, during which the child is almost always remanded in prison. Acquittals are rare.
"In a military court, you have to know that you're not looking for justice," says Gabi Lasky, an Israeli lawyer who has represented many children.
There are many Palestinian children in the West Bank villages in the shadow of Israel's separation wall and Jewish settlements on Palestinian lands.
Throwing stones at a tank is a serious crime in Israel.
Where largely non-violent protests have sprung up as a form of resistance, there are children who throw stones, and raids by Israel are common.
But lawyers and human rights groups have decried Israel's arrest policy of targeting children in villages that resist the occupation.
In most cases, children as young as 12 are hauled from their beds at night, handcuffed and blindfolded, deprived of sleep and food, subjected to lengthy interrogations, then forced to sign a confession in Hebrew, a language few of them read.
Israeli rights group B'Tselem concluded that, "the rights of minors are severely violated, that the law almost completely fails to protect their rights, and that the few rights granted by the law are not implemented".
Israel claims to treat Palestinian minors in the spirit of its own law for juveniles but, in practice, it is rarely the case.
For instance, children should not be arrested at night, lawyers and parents should be present during interrogations, and the children must be read their rights.
Palestinain children are often used by Jewish soldiers as "human shields", handcuffed and blindfolded, as part of the interrogation and intimidation procedures.
But these are treated as guidelines, rather than a legal requirement, and are frequently flouted.
And Israel regards Israeli youngsters as children until 18, while Palestinians are viewed as adults from 16.
The Jewish government and military are determined to crush every semblance of resistance or defiance, no matter how small. Lawyers and activists say more than 200 Palestinian children are in Israeli jails. "You want to arrest these kids, you want to try them," Ms Lalo says. "Fine, but do it according to Israeli law. Give them their rights."
In the case of Islam, the boy in the video, his lawyer, Ms Lasky, believes the video provides the first hard proof of serious irregularities in interrogation.
In particular, the interrogator failed to inform Islam of his right to remain silent, even as his lawyer begged to no avail to see him.
Instead, the interrogator urged Islam to tell him and his colleagues everything, hinting that if he did so, he would be released. One interrogator suggestively smacked a balled fist into the palm of his hand.
By the end of the interrogation Islam, breaking down in sobs, has succumbed to his interrogators, appearing to give them what they want to hear.
Shown a page of photographs, his hand moves dully over it, identifying men from his village, all of whom will be arrested for protesting.
Ms. Lasky hopes this footage will change the way children are treated in the occupied territories, in particular, getting them to incriminate others, which lawyers claim is the primary aim of interrogations.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamim Netanyahu, proud to defend the Jews' treatment of Palestinian children as "appropriate and humane".
The video helped gain Islam's release from jail into house arrest, and may even lead to a full acquittal of charges of throwing stones.
But right now, a hunched and silent Islam doesn't feel lucky. Yards from his house in Nabi Saleh is the home of his cousin, whose husband is in jail awaiting trial along with a dozen others on the strength of Islam's confession.
The cousin is magnanimous. "He is a victim, he is just a child," says Nariman Tamimi, 35, whose husband, Bassem, 45, is in jail.
"We shouldn't blame him for what happened. He was under enormous pressure."
Israel's policy has been successful in one sense, sowing fear among children and deterring them from future demonstrations.
But the children are left traumatised, prone to nightmares and bed-wetting. Most have to miss a year of school, or even drop out.
Israel's critics say its policy is creating a generation of new activists with hearts filled with hatred against Israel. Others say it is staining the country's character. "Israel has no business arresting these children, trying them, oppressing them," Ms Lalo says, her eyes glistening. "They're not our children. My country is doing so many wrongs and justifying them. We should be an example, but we have become an oppressive state."
Child detention figures
700,000 The estimated number of Palestinian children detained and prosecuted in Israeli military courts since 2000, according to a report by Defence for Children International Palestine (DCIP).
91 Percent of children blindfolded at some point during their interrogation and detention.
87 The percentage of children subjected to some form of physical violence while in custody.
62 The percentage of children arrested between 12am and 5am, by kicking in the door of their homes and apprehending them in the dark.
12 The minimum age of criminal responsibility for Palestinian children, as stipulated in the Military Order 1651.
http://fwd4.me/0x7l 28 apr 2012, 22:31 , Respect -
Maria Israel's War on Children - Part 3
In Gaza, the Schools are Dying Too
The Jewish War on Palestinian Children and Society
Photostory: Israel attacks UN school in Gaza Read More
The Israeli government has clearly instructed its military to target and destroy all educational institutions in Gaza, as part of an overall plan to eviscerate the social structure of Palestine and its people. This article is part of that story.
As evidence: During Israel's Operation "Cast Lead", more than 280 schools and kindergartens were destroyed in Gaza in less than 3 weeks by the Jewish military. Also rendered unusable were Gaza University and the Islamic University.
Jewish military forces directly and intentionally bombarded the UNRWA school which was sheltering more than 1,300 people. Gaza's American school was similarly destroyed by intensive bombardment with white phosphor munitions. Countless children were killed.
Beit Lahia United Nations Agency school where children were killed in a a massive targeted assault by Jewish bombs and artillery on 17 January.
On 17 January 2009, Israeli forces bombed a school run by the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees (UNRWA) in Beit Lahiya in Gaza.
Around 1,600 Palestinians from the northern Gaza Strip, mostly families including young children, sought refuge at the school to escape Israeli air strikes that were targeting homes in densely populated areas.
Many children were killed in the attack and many more wounded by the white phosphorus bombs fired at the school.
The bombing was not an isolated incident of Israel targeting UN institutions and personnel since it launched a military siege against the Gaza Strip in 2008.
The Jews regularly target Palestinian schools. In another attack, at least 43 civilians were massacred on 6 January as they took shelter at the al-Fakhoura school in Jabaliya refugee camp.
Palestinian soldiers inspect the damage at an elementary school in Gaza City after Jewish forces targeted and destroyed it in an air raid.
UN personnel have been shot and killed as they attempted to conduct relief operations in the Gaza Strip.
Tons of desperately needed aid were destroyed on 15 January when Israeli forces shelled the UNRWA warehouse in Gaza City with what is suspected to be white phosphorous.
A new word emerged from the carnage in Gaza this week: "scholasticide" – the systematic destruction by Israeli forces of centres of education dear to Palestinian society, as the ministry of education was bombed, the infrastructure of teaching destroyed, and schools across the Gaza strip targeted for attack by the air, sea and ground offensives.
"Learn, baby, learn" was a slogan of the black rights movement in America's ghettoes a generation ago, but it also epitomises the idea of education as the central pillar of Palestinian identity.
The American school in Gaza, at the beginning of the phosphor explosives bombardment by Jewish soldiers. A senseless and deliberate attack on a school filled with children.
There is a traditional premium on schooling steeled by occupation, and something the Israelis "cannot abide, and seek to destroy".
This is according to Dr Karma Nabulsi, who teaches politics at St Edmund Hall, Oxford.
"We knew before, and see more clearly now than ever, that Israel is seeking to annihilate an educated Palestine," she says.
The Palestinians are among the most thoroughly educated people in the world.
For decades, Palestinian society – both at home in the West Bank and Gaza, and scattered in the diaspora – has put a singular emphasis on learning.
Small Palestinian children burning to death, one with his legs blown off, following the white phosphor explosives bombardment by Jewish soldiers on their school..
After the expulsions of 1948 and after the 1967 occupation, waves of refugees created an influential Palestinian intelligentsia and a marked presence in the disciplines of medicine and engineering across the Arab world, Europe and the Americas.
"Education is the most important thing – it is part of the family life, part of your identity and part of the rebellion," says Nabulsi.
"Everyone knows this, and in a refugee camp like Gaza, every child knows that in those same schooldesks sat your parents and your grandparents, whose tradition they carry on."
Schooling and university studies are the fabric of life despite, not because of, circumstances.
Shell-shocked students standing in the ruins of the American school in Gaza, shelled with phosphor explosives by the Jewish military. Palestine's schools are regularly targeted.
Every university in the occupied territories has been closed down at some point by Israeli forces, many of them regularly.
However, the closures and arrests of students (more than 300 at Birzeit university in Ramallah, says Nabulsi) only strengthens the desire to become educated.
In the current offensive, Israel began attacking Gaza's educational institutions immediately.
On only the second and third day of air attacks last week, Israeli planes wreaked severe damage in direct strikes on Gaza's Islamic University.
The main buildings were devastated, destroying administrative records, and, of course, ending studies. The Ministry of Education has been hit twice by direct hits from the air.
A young student stands by the body of her dead classmate, on a bloodied floor after an attack on her school by the Jewish military in Gaza.
The Saturday of the ground invasion was the day on which most students in Gaza sit their end-of-year examinations.
In the majority of cases, these had to be abandoned, and it remains unclear whether they can or will be sat again.
Other schools were also attacked – most notoriously the UN establishment in the Jabaliya refugee camp where at least 40 people were massacred.
On Sunday, another Israeli air strike destroyed the pinnacle of Palestinian schooling, the elite and private American International School.
This is where the children of business and other leaders went, among them Fulbright scholars unable to take up their places in the United States because of the Israeli blockade.
A UN worker inspecting the bloodied ruins of an elementary school in Gaza City after Jewish forces targeted it with white phosphor munitions.
The school was founded in 2000 to offer a "progressive" (and fully co-educational) American-style curriculum, taught in English, from kindergarten to sixth form.
The Jewish military claimed it was the site, "or near the site", from which a rocket was fired. A night watchman was killed in the destruction of the building.
The chairman of its board of trustees, Iyad Saraj, says: "This is the most distinguished and advanced school in Gaza, if not in Gaza and the West Bank.
I cannot swear there was no rocket fired, but if there was, you don't destroy a whole school." He adds: "This is the destruction of civilisation."
The school has no connection to the US government, Saraj says, and many of the 250 who graduate from it each year go on to US universities.
In a staging area near Israel's border with Gaza, a Jewish soldier prays to his god for blessings, prior to launching another artillery bombardment on a Palestinian school.
"They are very good, highly educated open-minded students who can really be future leaders of Palestine."
Young Palestinian musicians are playing in Daniel Barenboim's celebrated East-West Divan Orchestra, bringingPalestinian and Israeli musicians together to play a prestigious concert in Vienna.
Palestinian authorities say that music schools in their communities and refugee camps are "not just educating young people, but helping them understand their identity".
Nabeel Abboud Ashkar, a violinist based in Nazareth, adds: "And the Jews are not necessarily happy with that."
Ramzi Aburedwan, who runs the Al-Kamandjati classical music school in Ramallah, agrees.
He says, "What the Israelis are doing is killing the lives of the people.
Scattered residents watch helplessly as fire consumes what little remains of another elementary school destroyed by a devastating arial attack in Gaza.
Bring music, and you bring life. The children who played here were suddenly interested in their future".
In a recent lecture, Nabulsi at St Edmund Hall recalled the tradition of learning in Palestinian history, and the recurrent character of the teacher as an icon in Palestinian literature.
"The role and power of education in an occupied society is enormous. Education posits possibilities, opens horizons.
Freedom of thought contrasts sharply with the apartheid wall, the shackling checkpoints, the choking prisons," she said. This week, following the bombing of schools in Gaza, she says: "The systematic destruction of Palestinian education by Israel has countered that tradition since the occupation of 1967."
He cited "the calculated, wholesale looting of the Palestinian Research Centre in Beirut during the 1982 war and the destruction of all those manuscripts and archived history."
"Now in Gaza," she says, "we see the policy more clearly than ever – this 'scholasticide'. The Israelis know nothing about who we really are, while we study and study them. But deep down they know how important education is to the Palestinian tradition and the Palestinian revolution. They cannot abide it and have to destroy it."
http://www.bearcanada.com/fae/israel/gazaschools.html