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#general allenby
gundamfight · 1 year
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feral-ballad · 11 months
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Fadwa Tuqan, tr. by Mohammed Sawaie, from Tent Generations: Palestinian Poems; “At Allenby Bridge”
[Text ID: “Yes, my humanness bleeds, my heart / drips rancor, my blood is poison and fire.”]
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jewishvitya · 4 months
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Haaretz did this:
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The full thing is under the cut, in case this link is paywalled for other people. The actual text has blocked out portions as well, to highlight what it's like to report on cases of administrative detention.
Highlights:
Like all administrative detention hearings, it was held in-camera, to obscure the fact that detainees' lawyers do their job without access to the facts of the case. Even the few details that are not secret are prohibited for publication. The administrative detention order was approved in full for a period of six months
And
In the past, it was considered, at least officially, a measure reserved for the most extreme of cases. This hypocritical position has always been false, but now there is no longer any need to save face. According to the Israeli army's own data, almost 5,000 arrests were made in the West Bank in the past eight months. These are very conservative numbers, as they don't include the many thousands arrested and released without being indicted.
The data shows that administrative detention, this so-called extreme of extremes, is now the norm. According to Israeli Prison Service numbers, Israel now holds 7016 people who have not yet been convicted in its jails – either awaiting trial or under administrative detention. Of these, 4,299 – more than 60%! – are held without charge or trial. And all that is without saying a single word about the torture, hunger and humiliation to which all Palestinian prisoners held by Israel are subjected these days.
Administrative detention is based on secret suspicions, secret evidence and no charges being brought. To conceal its inherent absurdity, hearings are held in-camera and away from the public eye. As such, even the little that is revealed to the defense remains prohibited for publication.
On the morning of October 29, after a short farewell to his wife Nariman and their kids, Bassem Tamimi left his home in the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh, north of Ramallah, and started heading east toward the Allenby Bridge. He was on his way to visit relatives in Jordan he had not seen in a long time. A little after 11 A.M., Nariman received a message saying, "The secret police asked for me. I'll write when it's over." And then, shortly after 3 P.M., a call: "I am being arrested. They're coming to take the phone. Have to go. Bye."
This, unfortunately, was not Bassem's first encounter with Israeli law. His village, Nabi Saleh, has waged a multi-year campaign of civil resistance against land grabs and settlement expansion. As a prominent activist, he was incarcerated repeatedly for his role as a protest leader, part of Israel's attempt to quell dissent.
In the evening, the phone rang again. The woman on the line introduced herself, saying she lived in Silwan and was currently at the Hadassa hospital in Jerusalem. She then went on to say that Bassem was there, surrounded by soldiers. He was taken there after his blood pressure soared dangerously. Nariman could faintly hear Bassem's voice over the line saying, "I'm fine, don't worry, everything's good." After a few more hours, at night, that same woman sent a picture of Bassem in the ER, undergoing a checkup; his hand bound with ziptie cuffs. That was the last time Nariman heard from him. Save for a single short lawyer visit before Eid al-Fitr in April, no one has been in contact with him since.
Four days after his arrest, police ████, ████ ████: "███████ ███ ████ █████ ███ ████████, ██████, █████? "███████ ███ ██████: "████ ███ ██████." And that was that. Eight days later – the maximum time afforded to the authorities by article 33 of Israel's military law in the West Bank before a detainee must be presented before a judge (who also is a soldier in uniform) – a six-month administrative detention order was issued, which did not suggest any specific allegations, but rather only a very general statement regarding ███████ ██ █ ███████ .
Eleven more days later, the Kafkaesque proceedings of judicial review over the order took place. Some of it was held ex-parte between the soldier-judge and the Shin Bet. Like all administrative detention hearings, it was held in-camera, to obscure the fact that detainees' lawyers do their job without access to the facts of the case. Even the few details that are not secret are prohibited for publication. The administrative detention order was approved in full for a period of six months, until April 28.
Administrative detention, however, is not really bound by the limits of time, and can be extended indefinitely. And indeed, as the six months passed, a new six-month order was signed, citing the same meaningless cause of ██████ ████ █ ██████ ██ █. This time however, and unlike the state of affairs in almost any other administrative detention case, the defense had a pretty good insight into the details of the case. Administrative detention is such a mundane phenomenon in Israeli military courts, that , , , .
A few hours prior to Bassem's arrest, Israeli forces arrested █████ █ ████ █ ██████ ███ █████ █ ████████ ███ ███, Bassem's friend from their days together in Israeli jail at the beginning of the millennium. Then too, under administrative detention. ██████ ███ █████ █ ███ ████ ███ ███ ██████ █ ██ █████ █ ███ █████ ███ ███ █ ███ ███ ████, █ ████ ███ ███ ████ ███ ████ █ █ ███ █████ ██ ██ ██ ██ ███ ████ █ ███ █████ ███ ███ █████ ███ ████ █ ███. █████ ███ ███ █████ ███ █████ █ ███, █████ ███ ███ ███ ███ ███ █████ █ ████ ███ ███ ████ ███ █████? █ █████ ██ ███ ███. ██ ███ ██ ███ █ ██ █████ ███ ███ ██████ ███ █████ █ █████ ███ ███ ██████ ███ █████.
█ ████ ███ ███ ███ █████ ███ █████ █ ████ ████ ███ ███ ████ ███ █████ █ ████ ██ ███, ██████ ███ █████ █ ███ ████ ███ ███ ████ ███ █████ █ ██ ███ ███ ███ ███ ██ ███ ███ █ "██████ ███ ███ ████ ███ ████ █ ██████ ███ ███? █████ ███ █████ █ ████ ███ ███ █████ ███ ████ █ ███████ ███." ███ ██████ ███ ████ █ ███ ███ ███ ██ ███ █████ █ ██████ ███ ███ 25 ███ ██ █████ █ ███████ ████, long after the administrative detention order against Bassem was reviewed and approved by the court, ██████ was unconditionally released.
On his release, ██████ contacted Nariman and told her what had happened, thinking that his release must also mean Bassem should soon follow. This is how the defense learned the details it knows, and not through discovery by the prosecution. Even though there is no gag order on ██████ ██████'s case, discussing its details in conjunction with Bassem's administrative detention is prohibited for publication. Despite everything that was revealed – and that is the nature of administrative detention: there can always be more hidden evidence, secret, almost mystical – Bassem is still being held under administrative detention even now. Almost two weeks after the hearing, ███ █ ██ ██████ ██████ ████████ █████ █ █████ █ █████, the judge partially confirmed the second administrative detention order against Bassem in violation of military law provisions, ████████ ████ █ ███ █ ███████ ███ █ ████████.
Like Bassem, thousands more are held captive by Israel under administrative detention. In the past, it was considered, at least officially, a measure reserved for the most extreme of cases. This hypocritical position has always been false, but now there is no longer any need to save face. According to the Israeli army's own data, almost 5,000 arrests were made in the West Bank in the past eight months. These are very conservative numbers, as they don't include the many thousands arrested and released without being indicted.
The data shows that administrative detention, this so-called extreme of extremes, is now the norm. According to Israeli Prison Service numbers, Israel now holds 7016 people who have not yet been convicted in its jails – either awaiting trial or under administrative detention. Of these, 4,299 – more than 60%! – are held without charge or trial. And all that is without saying a single word about the torture, hunger and humiliation to which all Palestinian prisoners held by Israel are subjected these days.
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girlactionfigure · 6 days
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🟪 TUESDAY morning - events from Israel  
ISRAEL REALTIME - Connecting to Israel in Realtime
▪️OPPOSITION LEADER MK YAIR LAPID.. Yesh Atid party, spotted in Washington, DC meeting with Barak Obama, after meeting with US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.
.. Lapid to US Sec State Blinken: "Israel will not be able to recover from the bloody impact, 101 abductees have been in danger of their lives for 346 days. Don't let Hamas get away with evading returning hostages. We will provide a safety net (meaning the opposition votes will offset coalition parties who would vote against a deal) to bring the kidnapped home. No extremist parties will be allowed to overturn a deal within Israel.”
▪️POLITICAL RUMORS.. rumors and leaks continue to swirl over whether MK Sa’ar and his small opposition party, a break-away from Likud 5 years ago, will join the coalition.  The latest from the rumor mill: The security portfolio to Sa'ar - Minister in the Prime Minister's Office to MK Elkin - Deputy Foreign Minister to MK Sharan Hashakal - New Tikva party will be independent for now (will not immediately re-merge with Likud).
.. (Ch. 14) The details regarding Gideon Sa'ar are already closed.  Alternative source: The negotiations are close to closing, there are still a number of small issues remaining.  Another source: Sa'ar will have a veto on the promotion of legal reform.
.. (Ch. 14) Likud officials are preparing to thwart the return of Gideon Sa'ar to the government.
▪️AMMO THEFT.. Huge theft from an IDF base in the south - 18 containers with military equipment were broken into, a huge amount of ammunition was taken. (Ch. 14)
▪️ISRAEL RETURNS TERRORIST BODY.. to Jordan, from the Allenby crossing attack that killed 3 civilian workers.
▪️RED ON RED - JENIN.. Arab reports, the security forces of the Palestinian Authority, abducted and arrested tonight the senior Hamas operative in the Jenin Tha'er Lahluh Brigades, known as "Abu Sanad".  Violent gunfights broke out between Hamas and PA forces.
▪️TERROR WIFE?  Arab reports, the army arrested Abla Sa'adat tonight in the city of El Bira in Ramallah, the wife of the secretary of the Popular Front in the Territories, Ahmed Sa'adat, who has been imprisoned in Israel since October 2001 for his part in the murder of Minister רחבעם זאבי, hy”m
▪️HOUTHIS WARN.. against an attack against Yemen following the launch of the missile at Israel.
▪️HOUTHIS CLAIM.. "The US offered to recognize our rule in exchange for the cessation of attacks."
▪️US SEC DEFENSE TO ISRAEL.. Austin to Def. Min Gallant: Israel must give the talks (with Lebanon) time to succeed, escalation will have devastating consequences.
▪️UN SEC GENERAL - ISRAEL BAD.. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said that "nothing justifies the collective punishment" imposed by Israel on the population of the Gaza Strip "who experience unimaginable suffering".  In an interview with the French news agency AFP, Guterres claimed: "It is clear that we all condemn the terrorist attacks of Hamas, as well as the kidnapping of the hostages, but the truth is that nothing justifies the punishment. The collective of the Palestinians, and this is what we see dramatically in Gaza."
♦️COUNTER-TERROR - SHECHEM.. clashes that developed in the Balata camp in Nablus tonight, between IDF forces who arrived to make arrests, and local terrorists who tried to prevent the arrests, unsuccessfully.  Casualties reported among the terrorists.
⭕3 rounds of HEZBOLLAH ROCKETS at northern towns overnight.  Significant damage in Menara.
✡️A brief daily word of Torah: Truth reveals God’s Oneness in the world. - Sefer Hamidot, Rebbe Nachman of Breslev
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jaggedwolf · 1 year
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I watched Lawrence of Arabia last night, and man, that was an experience
- yes, I watched it because of Uncharted. Now I'm just surprised there were no camels in Uncharted 3! More annoying to animate?
- I knew nothing about this front of the war before watching the film
- Forever have very mixed feelings about biopics. There's a socially accepted leeway with the facts that only sometimes works for me. (E.g. I still quite like Hamilton and think it's well-constructed, even if it plays with the timing of Angelica's marriage or his son's death vs Burr's election. Whereas even the description of the changes in that Cumberbatch Turing film enraged me.)
- when it comes to accuracy of individual portrayals, as expected, it fell on the dislike side. I don't know, I will always think it unfair to take a guy who sobbed after having to execute someone to resolve a dispute between two tribes, and make his movie version be bloodthirsty and say "I enjoyed it."
- it works better when you take each person as a generic representation of the forces at play. Lawrence is all the British officers involved directly in the Arab Revolt, Allenby is British High command, Faisal is all higher Arab leaders. Feels unfair when you use their real names though. (Apparently the real Allenby's family was quite upset with his depiction.)
- maybe that's why the one character who is not a real specific person was my favorite, Ali, who never forgets (and never will forget) Lawrence's words on the Arabs as a people. With the power of Omar Sharif's sad eyes, he really works as someone for Lawrence to bounce off of and to bitterly disappoint.
- it is a very pretty movie - the scene where Ali appears first as a speck in the distance before resolving into detail is gorgeous, and you get a real sense of how vast the desert is compared to people
- lmao the only sound a woman makes in this film is ululating
- RIP those poor kids
- Lawrence the character is baller. There's the moment you realize that his dorky affect within the British base in the first scenes isn't someone who is only book smart, but is someone whose focus is very limited, and the things that don't matter to him, really don't matter
- probably will end up reading Seven Pillars of Wisdom and some other history book about the revolts, would take a rec on the latter
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Peter O'Toole, Sir David Lean, and "Lawrence-Editor-for Life" Anne Coates at sound-dubbing session in London studio. At top, Peter, Annes, and Sir David look over script. At center, Lean and O'Toole watch restored scenes which require new voice tracks. At bottom, O'Toole re-dubs dialogue for the restored "Seduction" scene. Harris's L.A. assistant Jude Schneider had previously organized lip-reading experts to interpret the dialogue "spoken" on restored scenes with missing sound tracks.
***
Peter O'Toole and Jack Hawkins
Lawrence of Arabia (1962) directed by David Lean
Peter O'Toole as T. E. Lawrence
Jack Hawkins as General Allenby
Lawrence: The best of them won't come for money; they'll come for me.
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wanderersrest · 4 months
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The Getter Robo Armageddon Experience
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I finally watched Getter Robo Armageddon for the first time. This also my first foray into Getter Robo in general as well, and I have a couple thoughts:
If anyone was to approach me and this theme started playing, I'd run away.
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Also really love that Kei shares a voice actress with Allenby Beardsley, which is great considering Go shares a voice actor with the King of Hearts, Domon Kasshu.
Getter Robo Armageddon is great, especially if you love hot-blooded mecha series like Mobile Fighter G Gundam, Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann, The King of Braves GaoGaiGar, or Mazinger Z. I don't really have much more to say about it that others haven't already said. I'm looking forward to eventually dipping my toes more into Getter Robo in the future!
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renee-writer · 11 months
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Israel's 9/11 - Nothing has Changed, It's still about a NAME
I studied the three major religions which have been in conflict since 632AD when forces from Muhammad conquered the Holy Land. When the last caliphate - Ottoman Empire - was driven out of Israel (Christian forces from England led by General Allenby) the Palestinian conflict over the land escalated. Britain gave up being a mediator and the United Nations divided the ancient land. Wars began - 1948, 1967 and 1973 - 50 years before today's war. The central flashpoint of the conflict has been the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, as it still is today. The war ultimately has been about THEOLOGY - not land, not oil, not even human rights. As Christians rush to their rapture charts and any minute timelines, Ezekiel 38 is one of the first books to prove we are in the last days, because it seemingly points to Iran (Persia) and the mysterious Gog (must be Russia). However, we must go first to Ezekiel 36, which acknowledges that God Himself would bring back Jews to their land of promise from the four corners of the earth. However, its not to rebuild a third physical Temple and re-establish the Law, but as Ezekiel 36 says; its "for the sake of His Name." Isaiah 40:26 inspired me to put this verse on my first book - in Hebrew, English and Arabic - because there is only one NAME ABOVE ALL NAMES. Terrorists would love to stop both Jews and Christians and prevent the "two sticks" becoming one.
Ezekiel 36 - King James Version
22 Therefore say unto the house of Israel, thus saith the Lord God; I do not this for your sakes, O house of Israel, but FOR MINE HOLY NAME"S SAKE, which ye have profaned among the heathen, whither ye went.
23 And I will sanctify my great name, which was profaned among the heathen, which ye have profaned in the midst of them; and the heathen shall know that I am the Lord, saith the Lord God, when I shall be sanctified in you before their eyes.
26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh. 27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them.
28 And ye shall dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers; and ye shall be my people, and I will be your God.
32 Not for your sakes do I this, saith the Lord God, be it known unto you: be ashamed and confounded for your own ways, O house of Israel.
Us Christians are called to show them Jesus. Scripture says that Jews will see their Messiah when they become jealous for what they see in the Church ... when the "fullness of the Gentiles" comes in - not a quantity but a maturity, a completed Bride made ready for our King Jesus. Until then the Last Days doom and gloom ministers may have to wait a long time. We have too much to learn about the "Kingdom on earth as it is in Heaven."
Gary L. Nob via Facebook
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ruminativerabbi · 8 months
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Rage and Regret
Dear Friends,
One of the surprises Jerusalem offered up to us shortly after we bought our apartment and began to explore the neighborhood was a peaceful cemetery just a few blocks from our street in which are interred 79 Indian soldiers who served with the Egyptian Expeditionary Force during the First World War, as well as the bodies of 290 Turkish prisoners-of-war who died while in British captivity. So it is a strange place, that cemetery: a Hindu burial ground in which are also buried hundreds of Muslims who fell far from home and who had to be buried somewhere. There are no individual graves; the British apparently decided to bury the dead in two mass graves, one for the Hindus and one for the Muslims. Facing stone monuments record the names of the dead.
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We’ve walked by many times; Joan’s cousin Rina used to live just down the road. It’s a peaceful place, a quiet place. But it never fails to strike me how strange the whole concept is: hundreds and hundreds of young men who died in a war fought basically over nothing at all in a distant place and who were then shoveled into a common pit (why do I think white soldiers would have been buried in separate graves?) and left to sleep in the earth in a place that none of them would ever have thought to call home.
Walking by that place never fails to re-awaken in me my recollection of Joan’s and my visit to the Beersheva War Cemetery, the resting place of more than 1200 soldiers from the U.K., Australia, New Zealand, and India. It’s also a peaceful place, well-tended, verdant, and well watched over by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. But what is shocking about the place are the stones themselves: row after row after row featuring the graves of young men, some just teenagers, who died on the same horrific day in 1917. It was a terrible day, too. By the beginning of October in 1917, the British forces under the leadership of General Edmund Allenby were well entrenched along the Gaza-Beersheba road with the intention of seizing Beersheva from the Turks. By the end of the month, all was ready. And on October 31, the battle was joined. The attack was led by the 800 men of the 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade, brave souls who leapt on horseback over the Turkish trenches and continued on into Beersheva, while other branches of the army attacked the Turkish legions from the side. In the end, the attack was successful and the Turks were soundly defeated. In many ways, in fact, the tide of war turned against the Ottoman Turks at Beersheva. And, indeed, before a year passed, the war was over and Turkish Palestine, wrested from the Ottomans, was handed over by the League of Nations to the British.
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But the cemetery has its own story to tell. Now shady and peaceful, the silence is more ominous than calming as you enter through the shady gate and come across row after row after row of young men who died, all of them, on October 31, 1917. The place is well worth visiting, but what the experience yields, or at least what it yielded in me, was a deep sense of sorrow, of loss, of the true tragedy of war. Young men who should have been planning their lives, their weddings, their careers, their futures…instead dead as part of the incomprehensible madness that was the First World War and planning nothing at all other than an eternity of moldering far from home in someone else’s soil.
That many of the dead at Beersheva were veterans of Gallipoli only makes the story even more tragic and more poignant. (I saw Peter Weir’s film, Gallipoli, when it came out in 1981 and still remember the harrowing effect it had on me. If any readers are still laboring under the delusion that war can be glorious, Gallipoli really is a must-see.)
And that brings me to Gaza. To most, Gaza is a strip of land that has been ruled over by too many different foreigners since its glory days as ancient Philistia. The Romans, the Crusaders, the Mamelukes, the Turks, the Egyptians, and the Israelis all tried their hand at governing the place; I get the sense from my reading that all of the above couldn’t leave fast enough once the opportunity presented itself. (And, yes, I know there are people in Israel now demonstrating in the streets in an attempt to provoke the government into re-establishing Jewish settlements in Gaza. Those people, with all respect, are living in a self-generated dream state fully divorced from reality.)
But Gaza has its own Jewish dead to consider. And I do not mean by that to reference the fallen of the current IDF campaign.
There was a very touching piece in the paper the other day about Israeli troops coming across Jewish graves in Gaza. And, indeed, the Gaza War Cemetery, established in 1920, contains the graves of over 3000 British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in the First, Second, and Third Battles of Gaza. And some of those soldiers were Jewish, which fact was duly recorded on their tombstones. I suppose the idea was that the IDF soldiers felt a sense of kinship with the Jewish soldiers buried in that place, which is almost an ordinary thought, but somehow the story—by Troy O. Fritzhand, which I read in the Algemeiner (click here)—affected me in a less expected way as well.
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I understand the logic behind the Israeli war against Hamas. I have no trouble with Israel going to war with the forces of evil, with people whose hatred of Israel and its Jews expressed itself on October 7 with almost unimaginable barbarism and Nazi-style brutality. Nor do I have any trouble with the notion that, when fighting a war against evil, the only true sin is to lose. I hate the thought of civilian casualties. But I also understand that the fact that the hostages have been held now for more than 120 days means that time is running out. All that, I get. But part of me feels the weight of tragedy pressing down as I read the news day after day.
I hate Hamas for having started this war. I grieve daily for the 1200 Israelis murdered, maimed, and raped on October 7. I can’t stop thinking about the 225 IDF soldiers who have died so far in this terrible war. And I think about the Hamas soldiers too—each a victim of his own fanaticism and willingness to die as part of an army of terror, but each also once an innocent babe who could have grown up to live a peaceful, productive life, who could have brought joy instead of unimaginable misery to the world. And, of course, I think also of the civilians of Gaza, people who, yes, put Hamas into power and who are now paying the awful price for that colossal error of judgment, but the large majority of whom could surely not have imagined October 7 and its aftermath.
To know with certainty that you are on the right side of a war does not make the war less tragic. Nor does it make it any less crucial that you win. But the tragedy feels overwhelming. I wasn’t alive when the Allies carpet-bombed Germany, but I think I would have felt the same way about the 600,000+ civilians who died during those bombing campaigns, which number includes about 76,000 children. The Allied leadership did what they perceived to be necessary to win the war, which they did. But my response to the civilian death toll is not censorious outrage, but deep sadness. How can the Germans have made us do that to them? How can the Japanese have created a situation in which Hiroshima was imaginable, let alone actually doable? And how can Hamas have created this situation in which the only way to rescue our hostages is to go in on foot to find them and liberate them from their captors’ control? The civilian deaths in Gaza are, in my opinion, all on Hamas. But that doesn’t make them less tragic.
And those are my emotions this week: weariness (because I am so tired of this burden of worry and anxiety), outrage (because what kind of people can have thrust this upon us?), terrible sadness (because of the children of Gaza, all innocents, who are paying the terrible price for their parents’ bad decisions), resolve (because if not me, then who?), and, despite everything, hope (because the God of Israel neither slumbereth nor sleepeth, and surely, at least eventually, light always wins out over darkness).  I continue to pray, even more fervently than in the past months, for peace, for resolution, and for victory. I’m feeling the burden of it all. I suppose we all are. But the mitzvah of pidyon shvuyim, of redeeming those held in captivity, is key here: defeating evil is the means, but bringing the captives home is the goal. And that’s what I’m praying for, day in and day out.
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dnickels · 1 year
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I do not want to post a screencap because I am terrible at faces and no one will agree with me. But there's a guy in this scene of Allenby with the EEF generals and one of the extras looks exactly like Obama and I cannot handle it.
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Video
📺Lawrence Of Arabia (1962) | Full Movie | Vintage Movies
Lawrence of Arabia the Movie is a 1962 British epic historical drama film.  It is based on the life of T. E. Lawrence and his 1926 book Seven Pillars of Wisdom. The story is about the British adventurer and soldier, T E Lawrence, and his experiences in Arabia during the First World War. According to Rotten Tomatoes,   "A supremely engrossing film, Lawrence of Arabia makes one forget that it runs nearly three and three-quarter hours: and sends one out haunted and shaken." The film gets an excellent rating of 94%. The Cast Peter O’Toole (T.E. Lawrence) Alec Guinness (Prince Feisal) Omar Sharif (Sherif Ali) Anthony Quinn (Auda Abu Tayi) Anthony Quayle (Colonel Brighton) Jack Hawkins (General Allenby) Claude Rains (Mr. Dryden) José Ferrer (Turkish Bey) Academy Award nominations (* denotes win) Picture* Lead actor (Peter O’Toole) Supporting actor (Omar Sharif) Art direction (color)* Cinematography (color)* Direction* Editing* Music* Sound* Writing Never Miss An Upload, Join the channel: https://cutt.ly/MrPsClassicTV
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ao3feed-ds9 · 2 months
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Star Trek: Mercenary
https://ift.tt/Xbcsi8P by TheodoreHawkwood Following the Dominion War of 2375 former Starfleet officer, Carl Allenby, rethinks matters after fifteen years on the mercenary path. Can a man truly return home? Words: 1040, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English Fandoms: Star Trek: The Next Generation, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Rating: Teen And Up Audiences Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Categories: F/M Characters: Ro Laren, Original Male Character(s), Original Female Character(s), Simon Tarses, Sam Lavelle, Jenna D'Sora
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feral-ballad · 11 months
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Fadwa Tuqan, tr. by Mohammed Sawaie, from Tent Generations: Palestinian Poems; “At Allenby Bridge”
[Text ID: “Bitter I became, my taste murderous / my hatred is fearsome, bottomless, / my heart is stone, sulfuric, a fountain of fire / a thousand Hend under my skin, / the hunger of my hatred / its mouth agape, nothing but their livers / satisfies the hunger taking root in my body. / Oh, this fearsome, kindled hatred, / they killed love in the depth of my heart. / They turned the blood in my veins / into pus and tar.”]
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lightdancer1 · 4 months
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I think it a point worth restating:
The first Muslim claim to Jerusalem is the same claim that the Greek civilization in a Christian form it deposed had. The Yarmuk and Gaugamela have equal legitimacy, if Muslims are the indigenous culture of the region then they supplanted an indigenous culture. If the Greeks they displaced are imperialist colonizers then a religion imposed by soldiers is innately colonialist because it replaced a Christian and Zoroastrian Aramaic and Farsi speaking world with an Arabic Islamic one. Nobody 'voluntarily' adopts a new language, it is always forced by means more or less overtly imperialist, whether or not people have the historical awareness enough to realize this is what happened.
The claim deposed by General Allenby in 1918 at Megiddo was won by the same means by the armies of the Ottoman Sultan, who went against the heirs of Sultan Baibars, eraser of the Crusader states. At the time the three sub-provinces of what would later be termed Palestine were eastern Mamluk zones. As a result of this battle, where the heroic legions of Baibar's successors were butchered by cannons much like they would be again by Napoleon, showing the signal inability of Mamluks to accept the implications of why they were semi-loyal servants of the Ottomans in the first place, the region later merged into Mandatory Palestine became Ottoman territory for 402 years.
And so the question. If winning a battle made Abdulhamid II and the genocidal murder-gang called the Committee of Union and Progress the rightful masters of Jerusalem, why does this only apply to the empire whose conquest unraveled in another conquest and when is the statue of limitations on conquest met?
This is one of the reasons why trying to apply a logic suited to understanding the history of the Americas breaks down very hard in the region where empire begins at the dawn of humankind's experiments in civilization in the hubristic and grandiloquent boasts of the lords of Sumer and Agade of being 'lords of the four corners and all the world.'
Either empires and the identities they spawn as their bastard offspring or legitimate or there's never been any coherent ethnocultural identities in the region, only a sequence of fallen empires and rising and falling religions loosely superimposed into a historical narrative. To grapple with this is to grapple in turn with one of the simplest realities of history. Not every culture comes close to sharing the same narratives or experiences, and projecting the ideal self-image of one culture onto the vastly different experiences when Selim the Grim is a founding father of a 400-year world which was much younger than Ottoman rule of the Balkans, as compared to a world started by James Polk's blundering horde ripping apart the semi-functional and badly wounded Mexico of the Age of Santa Anna.
Some principles, if held to be universal, render entire elements of histories and cultures incoherent and impossible to describe unless one is willing to admit that the history of the Middle East is not that of Europe, or China, or India, or Central Asia, or the Americas, or the Australian continent and that different regions should be treated respectfully, and differently, with awareness the underlying faultlines are also distinct.
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🟨 SATURDAY after Shabbat - events from Israel  
ISRAEL REALTIME - Connecting to Israel in Realtime
Shavua Tov - blessings for a good week, success for our soldiers, and safe and healthy return of our hostages
▪️INFILTRATOR ARRESTED - RAMAT GAN.. Police arrested a 49-year-old Arab in Ramat Gan Friday who was posing as an Israeli citizen. During the inspection, the suspect, who tried to escape, was found with 4 cell phones, a checkbook, a fake ID, an IDF fighter's card, pepper spray and cash. Arrested.
▪️HEZBOLLAH PUSHING THE ATTACK STORY.. Ibrahim Mousawi, the member of Lebanon’s parliament on behalf of Hezbollah, in an interview with Al Mayadeen channel regarding "Hezbollah's attack on the 8200 base":  "What Al Mayadeen channel published is accurate - we verified it with our sources inside Palestine and outside.  If Israel was so successful in intercepting Hezbollah missiles in the act of revenge for the assassination of Fuad Shukr, then why was the commander of 8200 forced to resign?"
🔷LEBANESE EVAC.. Sources in Lebanon: Residents of the "second line" villages in southern Lebanon have begun evacuating to the north.  The correspondent of the Egyptian Al-Qahara network in southern Lebanon reports that Lebanese residents have begun to evacuate from villages located on the second line in southern Lebanon (not villages near the border but slightly north of them). 
▪️PROTEST - JORDAN.. larger protest demanding the return of the body of the terrorist who murdered 3 Israelis at the Allenby crossing.
▪️THE NEW HARDENED SCHOOL.. Walls are twice as thick as normal, doors do not open directly to the outside, glass protects against ballistic hits, windows are not accessible to students, and shelter areas in the yard. The new Torah elementary school in Sderot is an architectural attempt to normalize the nightmare, create a school that is a complete protected space rockets.  https://bit.ly/3MHcZ7D
▪️AID TAXES.. IDF coordinator COGAT General Aliyan is expected to stop the use of Gazan merchants to transfer aid to Gaza, after it became clear that Hamas is collecting millions from them, taxing aid at 20%, money that goes to rebuilding the terrorist organization.
♦️GAZA AIRSTRIKE (1).. Two buildings used by Hamas in Gaza City's Sheikh Radwan neighborhood, close to a school used as a shelter, were bombed by Israeli fighter jets earlier today, the IDF says.  The military says the buildings were used by Hamas for attacks and to manufacture weapons.  Demolished.
♦️GAZA AIRSTRIKE (2).. The IDF carried out an airstrike against Hamas operatives in a command room within a former school in Gaza City. Hamas was using the Shuhada al-Zeitoun School to plan and carry out attacks against troops and Israel.  The school has been serving as a shelter, Enemy media report several casualties.  The IDF  accuses Hamas of systematically using civilian sites for terror and civilians as human shields.
♦️GAZA GROUND ATTACK.. Troops have killed more than 100 terrorists during operations in the Tel Sultan neighborhood of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, the IDF says. Amid the operations, soldiers located rocket launchers, weapon caches, and other terror infrastructure.  Captured.
⭕19 rounds of ROCKETS and SUICIDE DRONES from Hezbollah over Shabbat, including multiple attacks on Safed, Rosh Pina, Meron areas.
.. Over Friday night there was 60 rockets in 3 barrages.
⭕HAMAS fires MID-RANGE rockets at ASHKELON over Shabbat.
.. The IDF spokesman published a directive for the evacuation of the neighborhoods of Sheikh Zayed, Manshiyeh and Mashrou Beit Lahiya in northern Gaza, following the latest rocket launch at Israel.
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Episode 8.16 Jerusalem Bluegum 16
It never stops does it? The Holy Land is in the news now as it was in 1917. We take a look at the fall of Jerusalem and the entry of General Allenby into the city marking the start of just over 30 years of British rule. Oliver Hogue, a 10th Light Horse trooper and a local bystander tell the story of the attacks leading up to the surrender of Jerusalem and how Allenby entered the old city on foot.
Check out this episode!
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