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#al-husseini
matan4il · 4 months
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Amin al-Husseini docu: part 1
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Last
Not that long ago, I mentioned in one of my daily update posts, Amin al-Husseini, the Nazi collaborator, Arab religious leader that shaped the Israeli-Arab conflict more than any other person. I pointed out that there is an EXCELLENT docu series on Israeli TV, which covers Middle Eastern leaders hostile to Israel, and the fascinating ep they did on this man. It's available online and for free, but only in Hebrew, with no English subs.
Well... guess what? I'll do it in fragments, but I want to translate this ep, and then add the subs. Here is part 1:
(for all of my updates and ask replies regarding Israel, click here)
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secular-jew · 1 month
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Modern Islam = repackaged Nazism and needs to be understood in this context.
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One cannot escape the unfortunate conclusion, especially when reviewing the evidence presented here, that al-Husseini was very much in touch with Hitler, Goering and Himmler, sharing finer details such as the exact method of operation of the camps. Whether he was anything more than an ally and associate is another matter. All three Nazis were certainly above the rank of Eichmann, the minute taker of Wannsee, and thus higher-up in the chain of command. Hitler was surely aware that the Nazi policies of involuntary euthanasia were essentially aimed at achieving the same goals as his putative ally, al-Husseini, and geared towards cementing ties with Hitler’s allies in the Middle East, many of whom shared the Third Reich’s own political objectives, ‘killing two birds with one stone’ as it were.
It is an utter embarrassment to advocates of Palestinian maximalism (to date no Freedom Charter) to witness how such collaboration with the Nazi regime has been simply swept under the table in an ongoing campaign to sugar-coat and sanitise events — first by denying that the Holocaust even happened, and then by claiming that since al-Husseini was ‘never a part of the German high command’, the Palestinian ‘could not possibly have had any influence over events’, and further, that he was ‘merely a religious leader and refugee’.
These brazen assertions are not born out by the historical record which shows that al-Husseini proceeded to organise and commit a special division of Waffen SS troops comprising former Ottoman soldiers from Bosnia, nor do they outweigh his later political involvement in the All-Palestine Government in Gaza, established on 22 September 1948, during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War — ostensibly to govern the Egyptian-controlled territory in Gaza.
In this respect, al-Husseini as President of Gaza 1948–1959, and thus a politician, was very much the forerunner and precursor to the political events and situation we see today, one in which the history of Western Palestine under the Ottomans is pursued by the international community to the exclusion of the rights of Jewish Palestinians.
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conociendoelislam · 1 month
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Conflicto entre #Israel y #Palestina
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eretzyisrael · 2 months
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by Barry Shaw
Did Hamas really think they were setting out to conquer Israel on that day?
Or was there intent to display a tradition of murder, torture, rape and humiliation of Jews that would shock the world and impress the Middle East?
Mahmoud Abbas, he who claims that Jews are defiling the Temple Mount with their filthy feet, he who decreed that any Arab selling land to Jews will be executed, he whose land must be Judenrein, he who incites and pays Arabs to murder Jews in his dastardly “Pay to Slay” reward scheme. Can anyone honestly suggest that this man, educated at a Moscow University in Holocaust denial, is not an antisemite?
The umbilical link is on the voice recording of a Hamas terrorist on an Israeli kibbutz on 7 October who excitedly called his parents to tell them, “I’m talking to you from a Jewish woman’s phone. I killed her and I killed her husband. I killed ten with my own hands! Dad! Ten, With my own hands. Ten! Their blood is on my hands.”.
He didn’t say “Israeli” in Arabic. He said “Jewish.” He proudly told his parents that he had killed ten Jews and received their blessings.
Think of the money he, or his family, is entitled to from Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority.
Is this the man that the US Administration really believes should be the leader and agency to replace Hamas in Gaza? Is that the best they can come up with?
And, as for you Americans, have you noticed that the ones marching on your streets screaming “Death to Jews!” “Gas the Jews!” Allah Akbar!” are the ones who also campaign for Palestine with the genocidal chant “From the River to the Sea,” a lethal slogan calling for the genocide of Jews?
Can anybody doubt that Arab Palestinism is not about the genocide of Jews?
Can anyone doubt that the threat of Arab Palestinism has not spread globally as it did in the days of al-Husseini, as we witness Jewish students barricading themselves in libraries on their campuses, or Jewish families living in fear behind bolted doors in the West?
Paul Kessler, a 69-year-old Los Angeles Jew, was clubbed on the head and killed by a bullhorn wielding Palestinian Arab professor in Los Angeles. The reason he was killed was because he held an Israeli flag.
That should have been a Jewish Lives Matter moment, but it wasn’t. American Jews don’t have the gumption that African Americans do.
He may have been the first fatal Jewish victim of Arab Palestinism in America, but he won’t be the last. There are antisemitic incidents every day in the “land of the free.”
One thing we Jews have learned throughout our history. It begins with words, but it never ends there.
God help us! Literally!
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chateaucat · 5 months
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Jumana al-Husseini
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deborahdeshoftim5779 · 8 months
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Israeli-American journalist Caroline Glick gives her take on the recent controversy concerning Yad Vashem director Dani Dayan. In this video, she explains the key role that Jerusalem Mufti Hajj- Amin al-Husseini played in the Nazi Holocaust and subsequently as a leader of the Palestinian national movement.
Caroline Glick points to Dani Dayan's refusal to hang a picture of al-Husseini meeting with Adolf Hitler in 1941 in the Yad Vashem museum, as he confirmed during an interview with Haaretz in 2022. This refusal, she argues, is political-- even though Dayan claimed he would not hang the picture because that request was political.
This is information that western pro-Palestinian self-described allies will never mention (nor will the mainstream media), as it exposes precisely why Palestinian terrorists and leaders (who are often one and the same) have consistently rejected peace in favour of war, even if their own people suffer as a result.
When you understand the depth of al-Husseini's hatred for the Jewish people (he condemned groups of European Jewish children to death by preventing them from being transferred to Mandatory Palestine) and the admiration with which he is held by subsequent Palestinian leaders, there's simply no way to heap the blame on Israel, or even the territorial dispute over the West Bank, for there being no Palestinian state. There's also simply no way to separate anti-Zionism from antisemitism either, once you understand why al-Husseini is revered to this day by Palestinian leaders and presumably many Palestinian civilians.
And, unfortunately for UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese, there's no way to equate Arab suffering during the 1948 War with the Holocaust by claiming they are both defining events. The displacement of Arabs between 1947-1949 came as a direct result of the Arab desire to destroy the Jewish State and kill its citizens, and al-Husseini was one of those who urged that desire, which is precisely why he was supportive of Hitler's extermination plan in 1941.
There's also no way to accuse European Jews of colonialism, either. While al-Husseini was in Iraq, he incited a massacre of the Jews in Farhud in 1941, the very year Hitler planned his 'Final Solution'. Glick says that around 900 Iraqi Jews were murdered. Over the next few decades, over 800 000 Jews would be persecuted and violently expelled from Arab lands in plain violation of the Balfour Declaration. Many of those Jews naturally moved to Israel. This is why today, a slight majority of Israelis are descendants of Jewish exiles to neighbouring lands.
Holocaust education can only succeed if the whole truth is told. While we live in an age where people are constantly demanding that such-and-such a history be re-examined in light of modern views, it's strange to see the director of Yad Vashem conceal vital facts for fear of causing offence.
Glick says that Dayan isn't even a scholar of the Holocaust; it appears his appointment was political.
Perhaps it is time for Yad Vashem to find a director who will tell the truth without fear.
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dirjoh-blog · 6 months
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The meeting between Haj Amin al-Husseini and Adolf Hitler.
It is often claimed that Amin al-Husseini was a major player in the Holocaust, this not entirely correct. However, Hitler and Amin al-Husseini had the same aim, the eradication of all Jews. Amin al-Husseini{aka Husseayni) was the Mufti (chief Muslim Islamic legal religious authority) of Jerusalem under the political authority of the British Mandate in Palestine from 1921 to 1937. Scholars often…
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naipan · 4 months
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Die Geschichte islamistischer Terrorgruppen in Palästina ist eng mit der  Muslimbruderschaft verwoben.
Vor fast vierzig Jahren gründete die Muslimbruderschaft einen dschihadistischen Ableger, die Hamas. Beide Gruppen haben bis heute vor allem ein Ziel: die Vernichtung Israels
Muslimbruderschaft. Die globale islamistische Massenbewegung sollte weder als konservativ-islamisch noch als demokratiekompatibel verharmlost werden.
Hasan al-Banna. Gründet 1928 in Ägypten die Muslimbruderschaft mit dem Ziel, das Kalifat wiederzuerrichten und die islamische Weltherrschaft einzuleiten.
Amin al-Husseini. Großmufti von Jerusalem, Verbündeter Hitlers und Oberhaupt der Bruderschaft in Palästina; leitet ab 1920 Pogrome gegen die jüdische Bevölkerung.
Hamas. Das Oberhaupt der Bruderschaft, Scheich Ahmad Jassin, gründet den dschihadistischen Ableger der Muslimbruderschaft 1987, um Israel zu vernichten.
(…) Die Muslimbruderschaft wurde 1928 von Hasan al-Banna gegründet, um das unter Kemal Atatürk abgeschaffte Kalifat  wiederzuerrichten und die britische Präsenz in Ägypten zu beenden. Fernziel war die Errichtung einer islamischen Weltherrschaft. Ihr militärischer Arm stand unter dem Befehl des Großmuftis von Jerusalem, Mohammed Amin al-Husseini, einem engen Verbündeten Adolf Hitlers. Der von Antisemitismus durchdrungene „Kampf um Palästina“ wurde zum wichtigen Motor beim Aufstieg zu einer globalen Massenbewegung. In Ägypten wurde die Muslimbruderschaft 1954 verboten, viele Mitglieder wanderten nach Europa aus. 1987 gründete die Bruderschaft die  Hamas mit dem Ziel der Vernichtung Israels. Mit der Hamas wird es weder Frieden, Zusammenarbeit noch eine Zweistaatenlösung geben können.
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xtruss · 1 month
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Unpack The Past!
Nelson Mandela, (Born: Rolihlahla Mandela 18 July 1918 Mvezo, Cape Province, South Africa, Died: 5 December 2013 (Aged 95) Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa) The Keffiyeh and South Africa's Palestine Embrace! Ten Years After the Anti-apartheid Icon Passed Away, His Embrace with Yasser Arafat (Born: Mohammed Abdel Rahman Abdel Raouf Arafat al-Qudwa al-Husseini, August 1929 Cairo, Kingdom of Egypt – Died: 11 November 2004, Clamart, Hauts-de-Seine, France) and His Donning of the Keffiyeh Remain Powerful Symbols of South Africa's Special Warmth Towards Palestine 🇵🇸.
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matan4il · 3 months
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Amin al-Husseini docu: part 3
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Last
A bit of background on Ezra Yachin, since the relevant parts of his life story are not really covered in the docu:
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He was born on June 11, 1928 in Jaffa, in Israel, back when it was under the British Mandatory occupation. His father was an Israeli Jew, descendant of a family who returned to Israel from Syria, while Ezra's mother was an Egyptian Jew, who moved to Israel after her marriage to his dad.
Not long after the marriage, the family moved to Jerusalem, first to the Old City, and later to Yemin Moshe (the Old City of Jerusalem became far too crowded, and Jews, who were the biggest of the 3 religious groups there at the time, started building new neighborhoods outside the Old City walls, now considered historically significant. The first was Mishkenot Sha'ananim in 1860, and Yemin Moshe was the second, in 1891).
Ezra was 1.5 years old during the 1929 anti-Jewish Arab riots, his family was besieged by an Arab mob, and it hid in one room, but then baby Ezra started crying. The mob heard the baby's sobs, and started breaking in, but then one of the rioters threw a rock at the window, which missed its target and ended up bouncing back from the wall, injuring the man who threw it. The mob got scared, evacuated the injured rioter, and dispersed. Later, a mob gathered again outside the family home, but then an old Arab woman shouted that it was a waste of time going after the poor Jews of this neighborhood, and she led the mob away, to where she claimed she knew the rich Jews live.
At the age of 15, Ezra joined one of the 3 Jewish undergrounds, the Lehi, and his tasks were to glue the underground's posters to the walls of homes around Jerusalem, as well as to try and get intel about the British from his work at the postal office. His friend, 17 years old Alexander Rubowitz, was kidnapped by British police on May 6, 1947 when caught on his way to glue posters for the underground. He was taken by car to the Yehuda desert, and murdered there. His body was never found, but there is a confession from his murderer, Captain Roy Farran, which was ignored by British authorities. Ezra's testimony can be heard in a documentary about Alexander, A Mandate to Murder (currently only available online in Hebrew). This is an underground poster asking where is Alexander Haim Rubowitz:
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Ezra fought in Israel's Independence War, including in the "Death Rooftop" battle for the Jewish Quarter, during which he sustained an injury to his right eye, and a shrapnel penetrated his skull. He was rushed into a surgery that lasted almost a full day, during which his cerebrospinal fluid continuously leaked out. He miraculously survived and made a full recovery, other than losing his eye.
He still lives in Jerusalem, and over the years has published 10 books, including Death in Chains, about the Jewish underground members who were killed by the British without a trial.
In Oct 2023, he volunteered to serve in the army again at the age of 95, becoming Israel's oldest reservist ever.
(for all of my updates and ask replies regarding Israel, click here)
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channeledhistory · 2 months
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Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi (2014-2019)
Abu Ibrahim al-Hashimi al-Qurashi (2019-2022)
Abu al-Hasan al-Hashimi al-Qurashi (Feb'22-Oct'22)
Abu al-Hussein al-Husseini al-Qurashi (2022-2023)
Abu Hafs al-Hashimi al-Qurashi (since 2023)
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eretzyisrael · 2 years
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heplev · 10 months
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Der Mufti von Jerusalem drohte Juden zu ermorden – kaum 48 Stunden, nachdem er den Briten versprach friedlich zu sein
Elder of Ziyon, 7. Juli 2022 Im April 1921 traf sich der britische Hochkommissar für Palästina, Herbert Samuel, mit Amin al-Husseini, der ihm versicherte, er unterstütze die britische Herrschaft und würde hart daran arbeiten, dass die Dinge friedlich bleiben. Samuel sagte: Ich traf Haddsch Amin Husseini am Freitag [8. April] und diskutierte mit ihm recht ausführlich die politische Lage und die…
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autismserenity · 21 days
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Someone on Reddit made the mistake of saying, "Teach me how this conflict came about" where I could see it.
Let me teach you too.
The common perception is that Jews came out of nowhere, stole Palestinian homes and kicked Palestinians out of them, and then bombed them for 75 years, until they finally rebelled in the form of Hamas invading Israel and massacring 22 towns in one day.
The historical reality is that Jews have lived there continuously for at least 3500 years.
There are areas, like Meggido iirc, with archeological evidence of continuous habitation for 7,000 years, but Jewish culture as we recognize it today didn't develop until probably halfway through that.
Ethnic Jews are the indigenous people of this area.
Indigeneity means a group was originally there, before any colonization happened, and that it has retained a cultural connection to the land. History plus culture.
That's what Jews have: even when the diaspora became larger than the number of Jews in Israel, the yearning to return to that homeland was a daily part of Jewish prayer and ritual.
The Jewish community in Israel was crushed pretty violently by the Roman Empire in 135 CE, but it was still substantial, sometimes even the majority population there, for almost a thousand years.
The 600s CE brought the advent of Islam and the Arab Empire, expanding out from Saudi Arabia into Israel and beyond. It was largely a region where Jews were second-class citizens. But it was still WAY better than the way Christian Europe treated Jews.
From the 700s-900s, the area saw repeated civil wars, plagues, and earthquakes.
Then the Crusades came, with waves of Christians making "pilgrimages to the Holy Land" and trying to conquer it from Muslims and Jews, who they slaughtered and enslaved.
Israel became pretty well depopulated after all that. It was a very rough time to live there. (And for the curious, I'm calling it Israel because that's what it had been for centuries, until the Romans erased the name and the country.)
By the 1800s, the TOTAL population of what's now Israel and Palestine had varied from 150,000 - 275,000 for centuries. It was very rural, very sparsely populated, on top of being mostly desert.
In the 1880s, Jews started buying land and moving back to their indigenous homeland. As tends to happen, immigration brought new projects and opportunities, which led to more immigration - not only from Jews, but from the Arab world as well.
Unfortunately, there was an antisemitic minority spearheaded by Amin al-Husseini. Who was very well-connected, rich, and from a politically powerful family.
Al-Husseini had enthusiastically participated in the Armenian Genocide under the Ottoman Empire. Then the Empire fell in World War One, and the League of Nations had to figure out what to do with its land.
Mostly, if an area was essentially operating as a country (e.g. Turkey), the League of Nations let it be one. In areas that weren't ready for self-rule, it appointed France or Britain to help them get there.
In recognition of the increased Jewish population in their traditional, indigenous homeland, it declared that that homeland would again become Israel.
As in, the region was casually called Palestine because that was the lay term for "the Holy Land." It had not been a country since Israel was stamped out; only a region of a series of different empires. And the Mandate For Palestine said it was establishing "a national home of the Jewish people" there, in recognition of "the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and to the grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country."
Britain was appointed to help the Arab and Jewish communities there develop systems of self-government, and then to work together to govern the region overall.
At least, that was the plan.
Al-Husseini, who was deeply antisemitic, did not like this plan.
And, extra-unfortunately, the British response to al-Husseini inciting violent anti-Jewish riots was to put him in a leadership role over Arab Palestine.
They thought it would calm him down and perhaps satisfy him.
They were very wrong.
He went on to become a huge Hitler fanboy, and then a Nazi war criminal. He co-created the Muslim Brotherhood - which Hamas is part of - with fellow fascist fanboy Hassan al-Banna.
He got Nazi Party funding for armed Muslim Brotherhood militias to attack Jews and the Brits in the late 30s, convincing Britain to agree to limit Jewish immigration at the time when it was most desperately needed.
He started using the militias again in 1947, when the United Nations voted to divide the mandated land into a Jewish homeland and a Palestinian one.
Al-Husseini wouldn't stand for a two-state solution. He was determined to tolerate no more than the subdued, small Jewish minority of second-class citizens that he remembered from his childhood.
As armed militias increasingly ran riot, the Arab middle and upper classes increasingly left. About 100,000 left the country before May 1948, when Britain was to pull out, leaving Israel and Palestine to declare their independence.
The surrounding nations didn't want war. They largely accepted the two-state solution.
But al-Husseini lobbied HARD. And by mobilizing the Muslim Brotherhood to provide "destabilizing mass demonstrations and a murderous campaign of intimidation," he got the Arab League nations to agree to invade, en masse, as soon as Britain left.
About 600,000 Arabs fled to those countries during the ensuing war.
Jews couldn't seek refuge there; in fact, most of those countries either exiled their Jews directly, confiscating their property first, or else made Jewish life unlivable and exploited them for underpaid or slave labor for years first.
By the time the smoke cleared and a peace treaty was signed, most of the Arab Palestinian community had fled; there was no Arab Palestinian leadership; many of the refugees' homes and businesses had left had been destroyed in the war; and Israel had been flooded with nearly a million refugees from the Arab League countries and the Holocaust - even more people than had fled the war.
That was the Nakba. The one that gets portrayed as "750,000 Palestinians fled or were expelled!" in the hope that you'll assume they were expelled en masse, their beautiful intact homes all stolen.
Egypt had taken what's now the Gaza Strip in that war, and Jordan took what's now the West Bank - expelling or killing all the Jews in it first.
(Ironically, Jordan was originally supposed to be part of Israel. Britain, inexplicably, cut off what would have been 75% of its land to create Jordan.
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Even more inexplicably, nobody ever talks about it. I've never seen anyone complain that Jordan was stolen from Palestinians. Possibly because Jordan is also the only country that gave Palestinian refugees full citizenship, and it's about half Palestinian now.
Israel is nearly 25% Arab Palestinians with full citizenship and equal rights, so it's not all that different -- but the fundamental difference of living in a country where the majority is Jewish, not Muslim, probably runs pretty deep.)
Anyway: that's why Palestine is Gaza and the West Bank, rather than being some contiguous chunk of land. Or being the land set aside by the U.N. in 1947.
Because Arab countries took that land in 1948, and treated them as essentially separate for 20 years.
Israel got them back, along with the Golan Heights and the Sinai Peninsula, in the next war: 1967, when Egypt committed an act of war by taking control of the waterways and barring Israel from them. It gave the Sinai back to Egypt as part of the 1979 peace accords between Egypt and Israel.
Israel tried to give back the Gaza Strip at the same time. Egypt refused.
Palestine finally declared independence in 1988.
But Hamas formed at about the same time. Probably in response, in fact. Hamas is fundamentally opposed to peace negotiations with Israel.
Again: Hamas is part of a group founded by Nazis.
Hamas has its own charter. It explains that Jews are "the enemy," because they control the drug trade, have been behind every major war, control the media, control the United Nations, etc. Basic Nazi rhetoric.
It has gotten adept at masking that rhetoric for the West. But to friendlier audiences, its leaders have consistently said things like, "People of Jerusalem, we want you to cut off the heads of the Jews with knives. With your hand, cut their artery from here. A knife costs five shekels.  Buy a knife, sharpen it, put it there, and just cut off [their heads]. It costs just five shekels."
(Palestinians were outraged by this speech. Palestinians, by and large, absolutely loathe Hamas.
It's just that it's not the same to say that to locals, as it is to say it where major global powers who oppose this crap can hear you.)
Hamas has stated from the beginning that its mission is to violently destroy Israel and take over the land.
It has received $100M in military funding annually, from Iran, for several years. Because Iran has been building a network of fascist, antisemitic groups across the Middle East, in a blatant attempt to control more and more of it: Hezbollah in Lebanon. The Houthis in Yemen.
Iran has been run by a very far-right, deeply antisemitic dictatorship for decades now, which pretty openly wants to take down both Israel and the U.S.
Last year, Iran increased Hamas's funding to $350M.
The "proof of concept" invasion of Israel that Hamas pulled off on October 7th more than justifies a much bigger investment.
Hamas has publicly stated its intention to attack "again and again and again," until Israel has been violently destroyed.
That is how this conflict came about.
A Nazi group seized power in Gaza in 2007 by violently kicking the Palestinian government out, and began running it as a dictatorship, using it to build money and power in preparations for exactly this.
And people find it shockingly easy to believe its own hype about being "the Palestinian resistance."
As well as its propaganda that Israel is not actually targeting Hamas: it's just using a literal Nazi invasion and massacre as an excuse to randomly commit genocide of the fraction of Palestine it physically left 20 years ago.
Despite the fact that Palestinians in Gaza have been protesting HAMAS throughout the war.
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inklingm8 · 3 months
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@elenajones23 first of all, who are you, a non Jew to lecture me about what my religion does or doesn’t allow? Who are you to tell me, as someone who doesn't practice the same religion, that I can or cannot do things?
The Torah isn’t a simple set of guidelines and commands, it’s far more complex than that. It has different interpritations, so saying the torah doesn't allow it is blatantly false. The name "Zion" (Promised land) is mentioned 154 times.
“It isn’t your land and it never was your land” bullshit.
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We absolutely do have a land, if we don't, then why do we have holy sights in Jerusalem? Why are names like "Jaffa" and "Haifa" Hebrew?
The land of Israel is where my ancestors came from, it is where they lived, it is where they had a connection to, and it is where they suffered under the romans and were exiled.
We were never welcomed in Europe, we were never welcomed in the rest of the middle east.
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These are ancient scrolls called the "Dead sea scrolls" which are a set of ancient Jewish writings dating from the 3rd century BCE.
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This is all of what remains of our ancient temple, this is what it once was:
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The first temple is Solomon's temple, the second one is Herod's temple, which was destroyed in 70CE by the romans. centuries later, the Muslim caliphates built the Al Aqsa mosque which was built on top of our temple mount. Today, the west wall is all we have left of this historic holy place.
The name "Palestine" was given to the land of Israel by roman colonisers who exiled most of us from the land of Israel, took many of us slaves, and scattered everyone else through western Europe (Some moved further east).
Now about the Nazis = Zionist argument. The Nazis originally made a deal with German Zionist Jews (The Haavara agreement) to bring about a mass migration from Germany to Israel, it should be mentioned that this was because Hitler and the Nazis wanted a Jew-Free Europe, not because the Nazis supported Zionism.
This deal was criticized by both Nazis and Zionists. Zionist criticised it because it made a deal with the devil, and the Nazis criticised it because it went against their philosophy.
The Nazis were extremely antizionist, the belief that they were Zionists is soviet cold war propaganda to demonise the state of Israel and the broader Jewish community. They believed that Jews were biologically incapable of running their own state and were too inferior. Hitler had a "Palestinian" friend (Amin al-Husseini) who campaigned in Berlin, fought for a Palestinian state, and even CONTRIBUTED TO THE HOLOCAUST. They also lead a boycott of Jewish businesses in "Palestine".
So, you're wrong. So very very wrong. You can try to lecture me about the history of my own people and religion all you want, but you're wrong.
Please, kindly fuck off and read a history book. Please attend a Synagogue service and learn more about our religion before you come spewing false bullshit about it.
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