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Palestine Before And After - By Sherri Muzher - Foreign Affairs - Nairaland

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Palestine Before And After - By Sherri Muzher by Afam(m): 12:30pm On May 28, 2008
From my inbox - read and enjoy

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Palestine Before and After - by Sherri Muzher

"People are tired of hearing about it," a friend once told
me matter-of-factly about the Middle East conflict. Tell
me about it.

As a first-generation American of Palestinian descent, I
can vouch that nobody is more tired of this conflict than
Palestinians. But many of us don't have the luxury of
flipping the channel or ignoring what is happening to our
relatives and friends.

Palestinians with serious illnesses in Gaza are denied
access to medical care. More than 150 have died and
children are being stoned on their way to school by Jewish
settlers.

We do what we can but it never feels sufficient. And though
we're 100 percent Semitic, the usual tiring label of "anti-
Semite" is thrown at us for speaking out against the
injustices.

This month marks the 60th anniversary of Israel's creation
and the dispossession of the Palestinians from their land.
I'll save the history lessons because the realities have
even been acknowledged by Israeli historians, most recently
by Professor Ilan Pappe in 2006 with his book, "The Ethnic
Cleansing of Palestine."

Instead, I'd like to focus on the Palestinian people.

Denying their humanity has taken on many forms in the
Israeli PR arsenal — from employing pop culture to paint
Palestinians as terrorists at conception to the media's
glorification of Israel's birth.


In recent years, pro-Israeli commentaries claim our parents
don't love us. Apparently, my parents' years of love and
sacrifice illustrate they never read the Palestinian manual
for parents.

Sarcasm aside, it all makes strategic sense: Dehumanize
Palestinians or deny their heritage long enough that any
action against them doesn't seem so outrageous, even if
they are expulsions at gunpoint.

Consider that Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said in
1969 in an oft-repeated statement, "There is no such thing
as a Palestinian." Too bad she didn't read up on history
because there has been a collective consciousness of their
unique identity for millennia. The ancient Canaanites
weren't called Palestinians, but neither were the
Mesopotamians called Iraqis or the Celts called Irish or
British. Still, the roots are unquestionable and run
eternally deep, from archeological finds to folktales.

Another example of whiting out the Palestinian heritage
is using the term "Israeli Arab." I've never heard of a
generic Arab race — every Arab has a specific heritage,
be it Palestinian, Lebanese, Algerian, etc. Think of
Latin America, where they all speak the same language
(Spanish, except in Portuguese-speaking Brazil) and most
share the same religion (Roman Catholic). In the Arab
world, they all speak Arabic and most are Muslim.
Nonetheless, each country has its own dialect, foods
and customs. Mexicans and Argentines differ, as do
Palestinians and Egyptians.

And within each Arab nation, there is even more diversity —
from distinguishable dialects and expressions, to being
able to identify the region a Palestinian woman came from
by the intricate embroidery on her traditional dress.
Palestinians have always had a rich and vibrant culture
that is all their own, before and after Israel's creation.

There is no question that Palestinians have taken a
bruising with poorly made leadership decisions and
factional fighting in recent years. But what has remained
steadfast is their fierce embrace of identity and their
resilience. This is true not only of Palestinians in
Palestine but those of Palestinian descent in the diaspora.

Whether it was the election of Tony Saca to the presidency
in El Salvador or respected fiscal conservative U.S. Sen.
John Sununu being singled out for praise by Time magazine
or Dr. Motia Khaled Al-Asir being awarded the British
Empire Medal by Queen Elizabeth II, those of Palestinian
descent continue to make their mark around the world.

It is worth repeating that the Jewish Torah teaches us
that man was created in God's image. The Palestinians
have never been absent from this equation.

Sherri Muzher is director of the Michigan Media Watch in
Woodhaven, Mich.
Re: Palestine Before And After - By Sherri Muzher by 4Him1(m): 4:31pm On May 28, 2008
Palestinians with serious illnesses in Gaza are denied
access to medical care. More than 150 have died and
children are being stoned on their way to school by Jewish
settlers.

This is odd:
- Palestinians with serious illnesses in Gaza shld be able to recieve medical care IN GAZA . . . why then is the PNA collecting billions of dollars in aid and then crying when Palestinians (who do not recognise Israel on any map of the middle-east) are denied entry to Jewish hospitals. Is it fair to accuse America of denying a Mexican access to medical care maintained by American taxpayers? 
Why can't Gazans go to Egypt, Syria, Iran or Jordan for medical care?
- There are no jewish settlers in Gaza so just who is stoning these children on their way to school? Have Gazans forgotten so soon the daily rockets fired at school children in Sderot?

This month marks the 60th anniversary of Israel's creation
and the dispossession of the Palestinians from their land.
I'll save the history lessons because the realities have
even been acknowledged by Israeli historians, most recently
by Professor Ilan Pappe in 2006 with his book, "The Ethnic
Cleansing of Palestine."

Illan Pappe is no historian, that much is acknowledged by those who are not blinded by Arab imperialism. There once existed a "palestinian land" but contrary to propaganda trumpeted here those "palestinians" were Jews up until 1948. A reference point - the jewish Jerusalem Post used to be called the Palestinian Post up until 1948.

Consider that Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir said in
1969 in an oft-repeated statement, "There is no such thing
as a Palestinian." Too bad she didn't read up on history
because there has been a collective consciousness of their
unique identity for millennia. The ancient Canaanites
weren't called Palestinians, but neither were the
Mesopotamians called Iraqis or the Celts called Irish or
British. Still, the roots are unquestionable and run
eternally deep, from archeological finds to folktales.

This is simply an invention of the Egyptian Yassir Arafat and has no historical basis. Arabs are NOT related to the ancient Canaanites who by the way are the descendants of Ham (a son of Noah). Arabs are descendants of Ishmael according to biblical history so just how has the writer of this article come to his distorted conclusions?

It is worth repeating that the Jewish Torah teaches us
that man was created in God's image. The Palestinians
have never been absent from this equation.

What is even more deserving of repeating is the fact that the Palestinian qu'ran teaches that jews are apes and pigs who should be destroyed from the face of the earth.

Of course "liberal" palestinian writers such as the above prefer to serve us a dish of propaganda spiced with 1.2% of truth.

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