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Slouching Toward A Palestinian Holocaust
Richard Falk is Professor Emeritus of International Law and Practice at Princeton University, Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of California at Santa Barbara and United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories.
18 months ago Falk wrote of his pain as he, a Jew, was "compelled to portray the ongoing and intensifying abuse of the Palestinian people by Israel through a reliance on such an inflammatory metaphor as 'holocaust.'
Update Jan 14 2009 Gaza death tolls passes 1,000, more than 300 are children.
Slouching Toward A Palestinian Holocaust
07 July, 2007
The suggestion that this pattern of conduct is a holocaust-in-the-making represents a rather desperate appeal to the governments of the world and to international public opinion to act urgently to prevent these current genocidal tendencies from culminating in a collective tragedy.
As the death toll in Gaza passes 400, it is clear that the Genocidal tendencies have come to the fore. Israel's impunity under America's geopolitical umbrella... means that there is little assurance that any sort of protective action in Gaza would be taken.
Prophetic words....
Update 07Jan2009 the death toll has passed 600.
Update 12Jan2009 the death toll in Gaza has passed 850, including more than 250 children.
Falk was detained in Israel in December 2008 when he arrived to fulfill his mandate as the United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories to investigate the human rights conditions affecting the civilian population.
You can read Falk’s personal account of his 15 hour detention and deportation here:
My Expulsion from Israel
Complete article
Slouching Toward A Palestinian Holocaust
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?-- William Butler Yeats, The Second Coming
There is little doubt that the Nazi Holocaust was as close to unconditional evil as has been revealed throughout the entire bloody history of the human species. Its massiveness, unconcealed genocidal intent, and reliance on the mentality and instruments of modernity give its enactment in the death camps of Europe a special status in our moral imagination. This special status is exhibited in the continuing presentation of its gruesome realities through film, books, and a variety of cultural artifacts more than six decades after the events in question ceased. The permanent memory of the Holocaust is also kept alive by the existence of several notable museums devoted exclusively to the depiction of the horrors that took place during the period of Nazi rule in Germany.
Against this background, it is especially painful for me, as an American Jew, to feel compelled to portray the ongoing and intensifying abuse of the Palestinian people by Israel through a reliance on such an inflammatory metaphor as 'holocaust.' The word is derived from the Greek holos (meaning 'completely') and kaustos (meaning 'burnt'), and was used in ancient Greece to refer to the complete burning of a sacrificial offering to a divinity. Because such a background implies a religious undertaking, there is some inclination in Jewish literature to prefer the Hebrew word 'Shoah' that can be translated roughly as 'calamity,' and was the name given to the 1985 epic nine-hour narration of the Nazi experience by the French filmmaker, Claude Lanzmann. The Germans themselves were more antiseptic in their designation, officially naming their undertaking as the 'Final Solution of the Jewish Question.' The label is, of course, inaccurate as a variety of non-Jewish identities were also targets of this genocidal assault, including the Roma and Sinti ('gypsies'), Jehovah Witnesses, gays, disabled persons, political opponents.
Is it an irresponsible overstatement to associate the treatment of Palestinians with this criminalized Nazi record of collective atrocity? I think not. The recent developments in Gaza are especially disturbing because they express so vividly a deliberate intention on the part of Israel and its allies to subject an entire human community to life-endangering conditions of utmost cruelty. The suggestion that this pattern of conduct is a holocaust-in-the-making represents a rather desperate appeal to the governments of the world and to international public opinion to act urgently to prevent these current genocidal tendencies from culminating in a collective tragedy. If ever the ethos of 'a responsibility to protect,' recently adopted by the UN Security Council as the basis of 'humanitarian intervention' is applicable, it would be to act now to start protecting the people of Gaza from further pain and suffering. But it would be unrealistic to expect the UN to do anything in the face of this crisis, given the pattern of US support for Israel and taking into account the extent to which European governments have lent their weight to recent illicit efforts to crush Hamas as a Palestinian political force.
Even if the pressures exerted on Gaza were to be acknowledged as having genocidal potential and even if Israel's impunity under America's geopolitical umbrella is put aside, there is little assurance that any sort of protective action in Gaza would be taken. There were strong advance signals in 1994 of a genocide to come in Rwanda, and yet nothing was done to stop it; the UN and the world watched while the 1995 Srebrenica massacre of Bosnians took place, an incident that the World Court described as 'genocide' a few months ago; similarly, there have been repeated allegations of genocidal conduct in Darfur over the course of the last several years, and hardly an international finger has been raised, either to protect those threatened or to resolve the conflict in some manner that shares power and resources among the contending ethnic groups.
But Gaza is morally far worse, although mass death has not yet resulted. It is far worse because the international community is watching the ugly spectacle unfold while some of its most influential members actively encourage and assist Israel in its approach to Gaza. Not only the United States, but also the European Union, are complicit, as are such neighbors as Egypt and Jordan apparently motivated by their worries that Hamas is somehow connected with their own problems associated with the rising strength of the Muslim Brotherhood within their own borders. It is helpful to recall that the liberal democracies of Europe paid homage to Hitler at the 1936 Olympic Games, and then turned away tens of thousands of Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi Germany. I am not suggesting that the comparison should be viewed as literal, but to insist that a pattern of criminality associated with Israeli policies in Gaza has actually been supported by the leading democracies of the 21st century.
To ground these allegations, it is necessary to consider the background of the current situation. For over four decades, ever since 1967, Gaza has been occupied by Israel in a manner that turned this crowded area into a cauldron of pain and suffering for the entire population on a daily basis, with more than half of Gazans living in miserable refugees camps and even more dependent on humanitarian relief to satisfy basic human needs. With great fanfare, under Sharon's leadership, Israel supposedly ended its military occupation and dismantled its settlements in 2005. The process was largely a sham as Israel maintained full control over borders, air space, offshore seas, as well as asserted its military control of Gaza, engaging in violent incursions, sending missiles to Gaza at will on assassination missions that themselves violate international humanitarian law, and managing to kill more than 300 Gazan civilians since its supposed physical departure.
As unacceptable as is this earlier part of the story, a dramatic turn for the worse occurred when Hamas prevailed in the January 2006 national legislative elections. It is a bitter irony that Hamas was encouraged, especially by Washington, to participate in the elections to show its commitment to a political process (as an alternative to violence) and then was badly punished for having the temerity to succeed. These elections were internationally monitored under the leadership of the former American president, Jimmy Carter, and pronounced as completely fair.
Carter has recently termed this Israeli/American refusal to accept the outcome of such a democratic verdict as itself 'criminal.' It is also deeply discrediting of the campaign of the Bush presidency to promote democracy in the region, an effort already under a dark shadow in view of the policy failure in Iraq.
After winning the Palestinian elections, Hamas was castigated as a terrorist organization that had not renounced violence against Israel and had refused to recognize the Jewish state as a legitimate political entity. In fact, the behavior and outlook of Hamas is quite different. From the outset of its political Hamas was ready to work with other Palestinian groups, especially Fatah and Mahmoud Abbas, to establish a 'unity' government. More than this, their leadership revealed a willingness to move toward an acceptance of Israel's existence if Israel would in turn agree to move back to its 1967 borders, implementing finally unanimous Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338.
Even more dramatically, Hamas proposed a ten-year truce with Israel, and went so far as to put in place a unilateral ceasefire that lasted for eighteen months, and was broken only to engage in rather pathetic strikes mainly taking place in response to Israeli violent provocations in Gaza. As Efraim Halevi, former head of Israel's Mossad was reported to have said, 'What Israel needs from Hamas is an end to violence, not diplomatic recognition.' And this is precisely what Hamas offered and what Israel rejected.
The main weapon available to Hamas, and other Palestinian extremist elements, were Qassam missiles that resulted in producing no more than 12 Israeli deaths in six years. While each civilian death is an unacceptable tragedy, the ratio of death and injury for the two sides in so unequal as to call into question the security logic of continuously inflicting excessive force and collective punishment on the entire beleaguered Gazan population, which is accurately regarded as the world's largest 'prison.'
Instead of trying diplomacy and respecting democratic results, Israel and the United States used their leverage to reverse the outcome of the 2006 elections by organizing a variety of international efforts designed to make Hamas fail in its attempts to govern in Gaza. Such efforts were reinforced by the related unwillingness of the defeated Fatah elements to cooperate with Hamas in establishing a government that would be representative of Palestinians as a whole. The main anti-Hamas tactic relied upon was to support Abbas as the sole legitimate leader of the Palestinian people, to impose an economic boycott on the Palestinians generally, to send in weapons for Fatah militias and to enlist neighbors in these efforts, particularly Egypt and Jordan. The United States Government appointed a special envoy, Lt. Gen. Keith Dayton, to work with Abbas forces, and helped channel $40 million to buildup the Presidential Guard, which were the Fatah forces associated with Abbas.
This was a particularly disgraceful policy. Fatah militias, especially in Gaza, had long been wildly corrupt and often used their weapons to terrorize their adversaries and intimidate the population in a variety of thuggish ways. It was this pattern of abuse by Fatah that was significantly responsible for the Hamas victory in the 2006 elections, along with the popular feelings that Fatah, as a political actor, had neither the will nor capacity to achieve results helpful to the Palestinian people, while Hamas had managed resistance and community service efforts that were widely admired by Gazans.
The latest phase of this external/internal dynamic was to induce civil strife in Gaza that led a complete takeover by Hamas forces. With standard irony, a set of policies adopted by Israel in partnership with the United States once more produced exactly the opposite of their intended effects. The impact of the refusal to honor the election results has after 18 months made Hamas much stronger throughout the Palestinian territories, and put it in control of Gaza. Such an outcome is reminiscent of a similar effect of the 2006 Lebanon War that was undertaken by the Israel/United States strategic partnership to destroy Hezbollah, but had the actual consequence of making Hezbollah a much stronger, more respected force in Lebanon and throughout the region.
The Israel and the United States seemed trapped in a faulty logic that is incapable of learning from mistakes, and takes every setback as a sign that instead of shifting course, the faulty undertaking should be expanded and intensified, that failure resulted from doing too little of the right thing, rather than is the case, doing the wrong thing. So instead of taking advantage of Hamas' renewed call for a unity government, its clarification that it is not against Fatah, but only that "[w]e have fought against a small clique within Fatah," (Abu Ubaya, Hamas military commander), Israel seems more determined than ever to foment civil war in Palestine, to make the Gazans pay with their wellbeing and lives to the extent necessary to crush their will, and to separate once and for all the destinies of Gaza and the West Bank.
The insidious new turn of Israeli occupation policy is as follows: push Abbas to rely on hard-line no compromise approach toward Hamas, highlighted by the creation of an unelected 'emergency' government to replace the elected leadership. The emergency designated prime minister, Salam Fayyad, appointed to replace the Hamas leader, Ismail Haniya, as head of the Palestinian Authority. It is revealing to recall that when Fayyad's party was on the 2006 election list its candidates won only 2% of the vote. Israel is also reportedly ready to ease some West Bank restrictions on movement in such a way as to convince Palestinians that they can have a better future if they repudiate Hamas and place their bets on Abbas, by now a most discredited political figure who has substantially sold out the Palestinian cause to gain favor and support from Israel/United States, as well as to prevail in the internal Palestinian power struggle.
To promote these goals it is conceivable, although unlikely, that Israel might release Marwan Barghouti, the only credible Fatah leader, from prison provided Barghouti would be willing to accept the Israeli approach of Sharon/Olmert to the establishment of a Palestinian state. This latter step is doubtful, as Barghouti is a far cry from Abbas, and would be highly unlikely to agree to anything less than a full withdrawal of Israel to the 1967 borders, including the elimination of West Bank and East Jerusalem settlements.
This latest turn in policy needs to be understood in the wider context of the Israeli refusal to reach a reasonable compromise with the Palestinian people since 1967. There is widespread recognition that such an outcome would depend on Israeli withdrawal, establishment of a Palestinian state with full sovereignty on the West Bank and Gaza, with East Jerusalem as capital, and sufficient external financial assistance to give the Palestinians the prospect of economic viability. The truth is that there is no Israeli leadership with the vision or backing to negotiate such a solution, and so the struggle will continue with violence on both sides.
The Israeli approach to the Palestinian challenge is based on isolating Gaza and cantonizing the West Bank, leaving the settlement blocs intact, and appropriating the whole of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. For years this sidestepping of diplomacy has dominated Israeli behavior, including during the Oslo peace process that was initiated on the White House lawn in 1993 by the famous handshake between Yitzhak Rabin and Yasir Arafat.
While talking about peace, the number of Israeli settlers doubled, huge sums were invested in settlement roads linked directly to Israel, and the process of Israeli settlement and Palestinian displacement from East Jerusalem was moving ahead at a steady pace. Significantly, also, the 'moderate' Arafat was totally discredited as a Palestinian leader capable of negotiating with Israel, being treated as dangerous precisely because he was willing to accept a reasonable compromise. Interestingly, until recently when he became useful in the effort to reverse the Hamas electoral victory, Abbas was treated by Israel as too weak, too lacking in authority, to act on behalf of the Palestinian people in a negotiating process, one more excuse for persisting with its preferred unilateralist course.
These considerations also make it highly unlikely that Barghouti will be released from prison unless there is some dramatic change of heart on the Israeli side. Instead of working toward some kind of political resolution, Israel has built an elaborate and illegal security wall on Palestinian territory, expanded the settlements, made life intolerable for the 1.4 million people crammed into Gaza, and pretends that such unlawful 'facts on the ground' are a path leading toward security and peace.
On June 25, 2007 leaders from Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and the Palestinian Authority met in Sharm El Sheik on the Red Sea to move ahead with their anti-Hamas diplomacy. Israel proposes to release 250 Fatah prisoners (of 9,000 Palestinians currently held) and to hand over Palestinian revenues to Abbas on an installment basis, provided none of the funds is used in Gaza, where a humanitarian catastrophe unfolds day by day. These leaders agreed to cooperate in this effort to break Hamas and to impose a Fatah-led Palestinian Authority on an unwilling Palestine population. Remember that Hamas prevailed in the 2006 elections, not only in Gaza, but in the West Bank as well. To deny Palestinian their right of self-determination is almost certain to backfire in a manner similar to similar efforts, producing a radicalized version of what is being opposed. As some commentators have expressed, getting rid of Hamas means establishing al Qaeda!
Israel is currently stiffening the boycott on economic relations that has brought the people of Gaza to the brink of collective starvation. This set of policies, carried on for more than four decades, has imposed a sub-human existence on a people that have been repeatedly and systematically made the target of a variety of severe forms of collective punishment. The entire population of Gaza is treated as the 'enemy' of Israel, and little pretext is made in Tel Aviv of acknowledging the innocence of this long victimized civilian society.
To persist with such an approach under present circumstances is indeed genocidal, and risks destroying an entire Palestinian community that is an integral part of an ethnic whole. It is this prospect that makes appropriate the warning of a Palestinian holocaust in the making, and should remind the world of the famous post-Nazi pledge of 'never again.'
Crowd Power
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Heritage
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (33)
at 11:59 on January 1st, 2009
Sometimes we become what we hate. Look at Bush taking some conveluded stand against a dictator and then in the end he defies the constitution and you've got Cheney saying that basically anything a president does is legal. I can think of examples of becoming what I hate in my own life, too. I wonder if it has something to do with the idea of not being able to change something unless we accept it. So if we dislike an element of others we take it in ourselves and act it out to correct a situation. Sort of as if a person or cultures greatest weakness lies in what they make themselves out to be.
at 15:39 on January 17th, 2009
at 12:31 on January 1st, 2009
Unfortunately, there are protests all over the world but those who are perpetrating the crimes against Palestinians are paying no heed because they are enjoying the unflinching support of the US. So all the peace-loving people of the world should join hands against not only Israel but also against the US to compel the two countries to stop genocide of Palestinians and give them their due rights for establishing a lasting peace in the world. If this did not happen, the whole world will have to pay the price.
at 12:34 on January 1st, 2009
Good post Heritage!
This could be said for a couple of conflict zones around the Globe today.
at 13:49 on January 1st, 2009
Someone needs to look up holocaust.
400 people killed in a week, 80% milkitary, is far from a holocaust.
Yet, it is bad and the blame is on Hamas.
at 13:59 on January 1st, 2009
"is far from a holocaust."
The Oxford English Dictionary, Clarendon Press, 2nd ed.Oxford 1989, vol.VII p.315 sect c.'complete destruction, esp. of a large number of persons; a great slaughter or massacre' citing examples from 1711, 1833, and 1883 onwards.
If this massacre was taking place in your town/city (Orlando), would you say that?
at 15:07 on January 1st, 2009
And if bombs were raining down on your house weekly and the police didn't come and your neighbours laughed, you would do what exactly?
What is happening in Gaza is terrible? No doubt. But the word holocaust is -- well -- overblown.
Too bad Darfur couldn't get this kind of attention. I wonder what that would be called?
at 15:46 on January 1st, 2009
If Orlando was firing missiles at Miami I would say they deserved it.
Slaughter is putting people in ovens.
Shooting at people who shot at you first is self defense.
If Hamas fires at Israel then hides among civilians, civilians will be killed.
It is bad in Gaza, very bad. Innocent people are dying.
Hamas shot first.
Blame Hamas.
-----------------
I am blaming Hamas for starting this current war.
I am not taking sides in the over all Israel/Palestine dispute.
at 16:11 on January 2nd, 2009
You are really stuck on root causes- are you a cause and effect kind of believer? Because, for you everything must be as simple as cause and effect; go find some more definitions; maybe concentrate on the definition of economic recession, 3 quarters no growth- well how the hell did this past economic breakdown happen when there was a fake economy. Go find that in the Oxford Dictionary.
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poor oligarch (not verified)at 15:51 on January 1st, 2009
More today from United Nations Special Rapporteur for Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Professor Richard Falk, 1-1-2009
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poor oligarch (not verified)at 15:56 on January 1st, 2009
Correction, actually published 27-12-2008, original source
http://www.unhchr.ch/huricane/huricane.nsf/view01/F1EC67EF7A498A30C125752D005D17F7?opendocument
at 22:26 on January 1st, 2009
Poor Oligarch,
Thank You!
Heritage
More from Falk's statement:
Source: unhchr.ch
at 17:50 on January 1st, 2009
People , in general , get what they deserve. Supporting a crime / criminal is a more serious offence than the crime itself.
What Hamas does is, fire rockets hiding from schools and hospitals. What is this "innocent" people of Gaza is doing ? They envision the death of an "infidel" (who is an equally innocent israeli who is just struggling for his daily bread) and the half acre of land in heaven and 20 virgins that god going to allocate the terrorist who launches the rocket. May be, by supporting this "act of jihad" the "innocent" also may get a share on this ( a nominal 10% share on each booty).
Agent
at 22:04 on January 1st, 2009
"People , in general , get what they deserve. "
Now there is a statement that could come back to bite one. Painting with such a broad brush would cover all involved in this and past conflicts. I wager there are many Israeli and Palestinian families who would take great issue and greater offense with that statement.
What we are seeing in Gaza is a total breakdown of responsible leadership by every party involved - foreign and domestic.
That this situation ever existed is an indictment of past generations. That it continues to exist is the shame of our generation - no matter where you stand on the issue.
As for Holocaust, a blind, reckless and stupid disregard for human dignity and life is a much different issue than planned mass murder. It is a word bandied about far too much in the Middle East and not nearly enough in Africa.
at 20:46 on January 1st, 2009
Holocaust- not- Why is it that the rest of the Arab World will not step up to the plate for the Palestinian cause: Because it deflects attention from their own domestic troubles so they have someone to blame- Israel. It is a shame all of this has to happen, yet when an irresponsible political actor such as HAMAS continues to want to induce firing rockets at a state that has economic reason to exist, unlike HAMAS controlled Gaza, with 70% of their population under 17 years of age, and with no reason or aspiration to make something economically viable of themselves in this world where its official religion is now capitalism. Why not just fire rockets into a safe place with sound infrastructure: Israel, and be a martyr?That is the easy way out.
People seem to forget that when the world boycotted Israeli organic produce in the early 80's, their largest export- they overcame this crisis with knowledge, and built a world class high- tech industry that is now one of their most profitable exports. Always, facing the prospect of war.
Palestinians have a world- class diapora who is highly educated and could easily gain respect and worldwide crediblilty as a peaceful state to be trusted, moreover, it's amazing how irresponsible Palestinian leadership is. Arafat, before he died, never left his fortune which he robbed from Palestinian Aid monies to his people; he left it to his wife and daughter in Paris- locked in Switzerland to use at there discretion. What a crock of a freedom fighter!
Gaza is no holocaust- HAMAS has brought this on itself along with their crock of Arab cronies who deflect their domestic struggles onto the US and Israel so their people can protest their frustrations on a lack of responsible Arab infrastructure.
Europeans committed a far larger exercise in genocide in both North and South America as settler societies, what about today's Africa? Look what Islamic Sudan via Arab sponsorship is doing in Darfur. What about the 35 million Kurds who have no state, yet Turkey, Iran, Russia, and Iraq have been far worse to them than the Israelis have ever been to the Palestinians.
Furthermore, the Levant- and the Southern Syrian district where Palestine/ Israel is located has been rooted in bullshit biblical conflict for the past 3000 years.
Israel defends itself because it has something worth defending, so far Palestinians have never been content on finding anything else better except promoting and sponsoring their own demise, and they can thank their wonderful Arab neighbours for being such responsible advocates only helping them to promote war and destruction for their own selfish interests.
Get a life HAMAS- work to become world citizens, it's funny that you cannot gain the trust of anyone but your corrupt useless neighbours, and even then that rarely works. Quit stirring the pot and hit the books. You don't see Canadians shooting rockets into the US because they won't buy our lumber anymore.
Palestinians have more in common with Israelis than you think and all have a 'desire for peace.' Palestinians have already lost 6 wars with the Israelis with the aid of the greatest frustrators: their Arab League conterparts; Israelis fought back right after having the shit beat out of them in Europe; they came to Southern Syria with nothing to lose. Let us pause for a moment and then ask ourselves, why are these two nations who are basically rejects from their contemporaries fighting each other- when in fact everyone who lives in that region is basically cut from the same mold growing up in the same environment with identical fears, identical struggles, and identical foodstuffs; all of the things that solidify and unify a polity.
at 21:46 on January 1st, 2009
Hi Lee,
Nowhere in your comment do you mention the root cause of the violence.
Occupation. Israel's brutal 40+ year Occupation of Palestine. This omission is common.
Ignoring the elephant in the room will not make it go away.
Heritage
at 23:02 on January 1st, 2009
Ignoring the elephant in the room will not make it go away.
Really..?
It is amazing that you dont see the valid points raised by Lee and try to address any one of it. Brutal occupation, eh ? Where was this concern when a dozen or Arab countries (directly or indirectly) amazed armies and attacked a small nascent nation. If the Arab armies have won any one of those wars, what would they have done to the people of Isreal? Let us run our imagination wild - really wild.
Agent
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YardenVatikai (not verified)at 23:53 on January 1st, 2009
Deflecting the argument again?
This in The Guardian is good on hasbara.
See the light, ticketiboo.
at 13:04 on January 2nd, 2009
Sababa, Yofi, Kol B' Seder- thank you.
at 07:57 on January 2nd, 2009
Yes, this conflict is terrible. Yes, it needs to end. Here is a novel strategy that Hamas should try. Stop the rockets. Stop the violence. Passively resist. Urge the people to pull a Gandhi. Urge those in the West Bank to do the same. Israel would be rendered powerless. Within five years, there would be a Palestinian state. Continue this path and this path continues.
As for root causes, let's just say they began at about the same time our ancestors fell out of the trees and started claiming little pieces of the earth for themselves. To convince the others that a particular piece of earth was theirs, some creative one came up with the idea of the Sky Monkey giving them this divine piece of land. Those who believed got a bit, those who didn't got hit on the head. Pretty soon, other groups found their own Sky Monkeys and King of the Sky Monkeys.
40 years ago is no root cause (By the way others would say 60 years). It is a cause. It is suffering. But don't expect any country, to put up with being shelled. Imagine if the Taiwanese aboriginal groups -- who have suffered over the years -- decided to start shelling Taiwanese villages?
at 14:03 on January 2nd, 2009
Where else did you plan on letting the "elephant" reside after WWII- I guess you are probably European, or North American. Your profile says you live in Taipei: If you are Chinese you have ethnic discriminated diaspora all over Asia: and what the hell are you doing in Tibet! Are you too in a glass house throwing stones like me and everyone else- anyway- your comment only re- assures me after years of growing up as a descriminated against marginalized group in society, that the brutality out of this so called "Occupation" was created to defend a tough group who had already been sacrificed at the alter of genocide and were well on their way to be sacrificed on the alter of attrition and assimilation. It sure would be nice to have one nation worldwide, but let's face the facts not the ideal. Where would you have put the Jews, Africa? Where no one in the world recognizes the absolutely inhumane conditions existing there, and the multiple amount of genocidal activities that happen as we speak. How do you like Hutu's and Tutsi, currently on the brink of another civil war in Congo- oh, I forgot, they don't concern the wealth at stake on the world radar, because what use are they...
Ignoring the fact that during World War II the Palestinian Grand Mufti of Jerusalem consorted with Hitler to keep practicing the Final Solution only demonstrates this:
The rest of you hypocrite European fucks all hate Jews subconsciously whether you like it or not- I am a product of listening to people mutter anti- Semitic racial epithets under their breath all the time just because the metaphor of Shylock has carried itself into every literary masterpiece in European literature. At least we have a place to go and all die together on top of Masada when ya'll decide the time is right, because everywhere else it happens anyway for the same reason Christianity made the Jews killers of Jesus and made them practice usury so they can finally kill us off by attrition and make us shame ourselves into assimilation submission.
Moreover, what the hell doyou have to say about the new Crusades happening through the CIA and the USA- Euro Alliance Armies infiltratrating every culture in this world to maximize their economic utility, oh, shit- that was a Jewish idea, to raise money for Israel right... The internet- the greatest assimilation tool ever, run by whom- obviously the Americans under the sponsorship of Israel and its illuminati bretheren........
You forgot about the Ottoman Elephant that used to live there, and how society used to be in lower Ottoman Syria. And PS: take Bernard Madoff with you to use as evidence of what your knowledge of a Jew is, cause I want nothing to do with him.
LL.
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Mike Keane (not verified)at 09:52 on January 2nd, 2009
Israel has become a mirror image of the Nazi regime that it uses for sympathy on the international stage. Even the dogs on the street know this.
at 09:55 on January 2nd, 2009
Mike Keane
If you believe that your dog is better educated than you are.
at 12:28 on January 2nd, 2009
It's one thing to discuss and debate and even condemn, but at least show some degree of knowledge about what you are saying. Nazis? Dogs with knowledge of history and current international affairs?
Mike Keane, if you want to condemn Israel's actions, go ahead. But have some perspective.
at 13:07 on January 2nd, 2009
Mike Keane- The proctologist called, he found your head!
at 02:38 on January 7th, 2009
at 10:06 on January 2nd, 2009
I see the Hamas propaganda machine is hard at work here.
at 13:56 on January 2nd, 2009
Ya think?!*%#
at 01:28 on January 3rd, 2009
And the Israeli Propaganda is not? I wonder, Israel the Angel and Hamas the Devil is that not what Israel keeps on saying over and over wile bombing the hell out of Gaza.
at 11:28 on January 3rd, 2009
yes, and...