To my dear Israeli friend:
Back in February 2002, in Tigne, France,
we ended up in the same group together
taking ski lessons. That was when our
friendship began. We had all been
introduced by our first names, and then
off we went with our instructor and five
others to ski in the beautiful Alps.
We hit it off from
the first moment. We laughed, we failed,
we encouraged each other, and finally we
sat in a little restaurant somewhere
overlooking the lovely Alps and drank
hot chocolate, having our lunch. We
started chatting and you introduced
yourself: “I
am Keren from Israel.”
I replied, “I am Hind from Syria.”
We looked each other curiously as this
was the first time I had met an Israeli,
and it was also your first time meeting
a Syrian. But we were surprised and
happy to find that we have nearly the
same accent when we speak a foreign
language, we have the same color eyes.
We were almost cousins, yes, we were
enemies back home, but definitely it was
too late now we had already become
friends.
I remember that we sat together and
discussed politics every evening après
ski, and we discussed together a peace
plan. We were both suffering and in pain
from the wars in our region, we were
from the same generation, we vaguely
remember the 1967 war, but we do
remember the tragedy and suffering our
people have to go through in the time of
war. We remembered as adolescents the
1973 war, and the conflicts.
Then we got to talking about a plan for
peace between our two countries, and how
you could come and visit me in Damascus
and we would go together and ski in the
Golan, and I go to visit you with my
family to see the holy sites of
Jerusalem. We talked about real peace,
with economic exchange, tourism and
trade. We both want recognition, we both
want stability and we both want
security.
Days, month passed, we kept in touch, we
wrote each other regularly, we both got
hurt when Israel started building “The
Wall”, we both felt pain when civilians
on both sides were dying, we both felt
pain during the Lebanese war, the
missiles killing Israelis and Israel’s
destruction of the infrastructure of
Lebanon, not to mention cluster bombs.
But your father’s letter to me at the
end of last summer was so beautiful -
full of hope to all our people, both
Arabs and Israelis. He made me cry.
Well, my friend, the fortieth
anniversary of the 1967 War is coming,
almost our age, and we do need lastly to
listen to our hearts and put pressure on
our governments to bring to an end to
war once and for all. We need to mount
efforts together to make peace happen:
security, recognition and stability for
you, and the full Golan returned to
Syria.
And in a beautiful ski lodge in the
Golan Heights, après ski we can have the
hot chocolate, or perhaps homos in
beautiful old Damascus and in gorgeous
old Jerusalem.
My love to you and to your family.
61 Responses to the Article
Mounir A. F. AbdelNour
Says:
June 2nd, 2007 at 10:42 am
Those lines from
Hind Kabawat express honestly and
sincerely the feelings of a whole
generation of proud arabs who would have
spent their entire life dreaming of a
just peace. A generation who has carried
all along an olive branch and has
received in response bullets and gun
fire..A generation deceived but who
apparently did not lose hope.
Just peace will come about if there were
more than one Hind Kabawat on both
sides.
Mounir AbdelNour
sitelkoul
Says:
June 3rd, 2007 at 3:18 am
Finally, we are starting to realize that
a peace can happen thru talks. We tried
all other versions, did not work. This
is the beginning of a new, peacufull
era. I am for it.
Thank you Hind for making this page. I
know it took more than we think to put
the idea into action.
Hopefully, all in favor should
participate to supprot your idea.
Another proud person from the
region:Lebanon.
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 3rd, 2007 at 7:15 am
Thank you Mounir and Sitelkoul, for your
kind words, a real peace should happen,
it is an emergency calls for all sides.
Ignoring the other sides would lead us
to more wars and destruction.
Mr. Israeli
Says:
June 3rd, 2007 at 10:50 am
Dear Hind,
Your writing is indeed moving. Although
I was only 4 years old in the 1973 war,
I do remember the sirens, and I do
remember not seeing my father for some 6
months during which he was stationed in
the Sinai. But what I remember even more
vividly, is my reaction, and that of
people all around me, when I was 8 years
old in 1977, during Sadat’s surprise
visit to Jerusalem. All of us were
crying. All of us realized what was
happening, and could not hold back our
emotions.
As I wrote in some of my other responses
in this Blog, I’m convinced the same
would happen again if Bashar came to
speak before our Knesset, or Ehud before
yours. That’s all it would take, and I
can almost guarantee an instant change
in the prevailing atmosphere of fear and
distrust. Unfortunately, even our
“democratic” system is not strong enough
to pressure our leaders into discussions
with Syria. Like in many European
nations (and very much UNLIKE in the
U.S.), the people here tend to trust
government too much, and it is quite
rare to see truly massive demonstrations
anywhere. Few rare exceptions include
during Menachem Begin’s rule in 1982
(demonstrating against our presence in
Lebanon), and follwoing Rabin’s
assassination in 1995 (showing support
for his way).
It is therefore up to the two leaders
themselves, not their constituents, not
their parties, not their ministers, not
their advisors. It is up to them
directly, to stand up and take the
chance. Like Bill Clinton recently
remarked: “… peace between Israel and
Syria is only 90 minutes away…” I happen
to strongly believe in it. It is not
only every Israeli’s dream to eat Kubbeh
in Damscus, but to one day feel safe and
complete, and human again. We all need
it, for our sake, and for our children’s
sake. In’shalla, we’ll all live to see
the dream become a reality.
Alex
Says:
June 3rd, 2007 at 2:05 pm
Dear Mr. Israeli
I used to live in Egypt when Sadat
visited Israel. I was 12. I actually got
to see prime minister Begin, president
Carter, and president Sadat.
First, I will tell you about something
that Shimon Peres said during his
interview on a
PBS documentary
that I found very funny. Apparently when
Sadat’s plane was landing and when it
reached the area near the lineup of
Israeli leaders waiting to greet Sadat,
suddenly one of the leaders had a scary
thought … what if this whole thing is a
trick? what if when the door of the
plane will open and instead of the
smiling Sadat, they were going to be all
machine gunned by a few Egyptian
soldiers?
That’s why they were all looking very
worried for a minute .. until Sadat
emerged, no surprises.
Now back to your confidence that a visit
by Bashar to Jerusalem would have the
same effect that Sadat’s visit had. I
agree to some extent. But unfortunately
that won’t happen … not yet. Sadat was
promised in advance that he will be
eventually getting the full Sinai …
Assad got no such promises yet. Also,
Sadat was treated with much more respect
at the time… he was artificially
portrayed like one of the most
brilliant, courageous, and wise world
leaders… Assad in comparison, was
subjected to the opposite type of PR
campaign … when a Syrian opposition
leader is sentenced to 5 years in jail,
president Bush and President Chirac both
make sure to talk about it to the press
to make the Syrians look like thugs.
If Assad is to ever visit Jerusalem
(which is unlikely) there are ways to
prepare for such a visit in advance. We
are seeing the inverse process from
Washington and Tel Aviv.
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 3rd, 2007 at 2:53 pm
I agree with Alex, the visit to
Jerusalem is unlikely under all the
International pressure on Syria.
Our life as Peace builders and human
rights activists in Middle East are very
hard. when Israel and U.S Government not
the people), are not being a good
example in respecting the human rights
law and violating the human rights in
living and let others live. Killing the
Civilian in Palestine, the Clusters
Bombs in Lebanon, and the War in Iraq,
are all an examples of violating Peace
and human rights.
Believe me, we are all opposing any
killing for any civilian in Israel or in
the U.S, we condemn the suicides bombs,
or any suicide attacks. We all need to
put pressure in all our Governments in
Middle East to stop the killing. Stop
the killing of each others is the right
road to start our peace.
I am asking all parties to stop the
killing and think of a bright future for
our children in peaceful Middle East.
Diala
Says:
June 4th, 2007 at 3:00 am
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åÐÇ ÇáãÝÊÕÈ ÝÑÏ ãä ÚÇÆáÊäÇ.
Yazan
Says:
June 4th, 2007 at 4:08 am
Diala,
I do agree in every sense of the word,
that the creation of Israel is one of
the most immoral misconducts of foreign
policy, and one of the most painful
remnants of colonialism.
BUT, Israel is here now. Some of them
are 4th and 5th generation. I can not
see how its fair to kick them out.
Regardless of all the atrocities that is
taking place, no body can argue that
Israel in its current form is much worse
than apartheid… but on the other hand,
we are condemned to live together, and,
its not that hard, for heaven’s sake
have we forgot how much we have in
common with them? We are both Human. how
does that not matter…
I personally, would like to believe in a
rosy future, I’d like to advocate a
one-state solution… I can’t see any
other real solution…
This middle east has seen a lot of
people come and go, we were not the
first people here, and the israelis wont
be the last, thats one of the things
that make this land what it is. We
always manage to reconcile with
ourselves.
Israel has a lot to do, because, even in
a normal case, when u move into a
neighborhood, u have to get along with
the neighbors. In Israel’s case, its
much more complicated, we have refugees
that need to go back to their homes as
well, we have lands, we have bitter
memories that we need to forget, they
have got a lot to do… but I would never
stand against a gesture, regardless how
small it is…
SyriaComment » Archives » Introducing
the Creative Forum: Commemorating the
Golan Heights
Says:
June 4th, 2007 at 11:59 am
[…] Kabawat imagined what it would be
like for Syrians and Israelis to be good
[…]
Mr. Israeli
Says:
June 4th, 2007 at 3:07 pm
Guys, I suggest we do not continue to
discuss history and the ongoing Israeli
abuse of human rights, as it would
certainly NOT bring us any closer to
peace. I can promise you, that for every
example of Israeli abuse, I can bring up
two examples of Syrian abuse towards it
own people. This is not going to work if
we’re to step into the boxing ring, and
start dealing punches. We should search
for the humane sides which we all do
share. We must find the way to identify
with one another’s concerns, and to
begin the seemingly-impossible path to
mutual empathy. I know how tempting it
is to go back to blaming one another -
it’s so much easier… But we mustn’t. Not
anymore.
More Proud Syrian
Says:
June 4th, 2007 at 11:00 pm
It sounds that Hind has determined the
future of the “occupied Golan” throgh a
hot chocolate cup in a fancy skiing
event. What a lovely dreamy peace
agreement. Hot chocolate made her and
her friend to forget the still hot blood
sheded by Israeli armey. We talk as it
is so simple to give up a land that has
been forcebly “raped” by a bunch of
migrant people who came all the way from
Russia, Africa and the US. Hind needs to
better read history and judge the future
upon. Why forget a 40 years of opression
and occupation? if Hinds barely remember
the 1967 and 1973 wars, so we go for an
easy process of peace. I shall say that
most Syrians would disagree with Hind’s
unfair peace agreement (which I call it
“giving up” agreement) on a warm moment
mixed with hot chocolate and romantic
views. Peace for Land, and nothing less!
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 12:12 am
My dear friend more proud Syrian:
I guess you did not read my letter in
full; obviously, you immediately judge
me and put me in the category of the
naive who drink hot chocolate in a fancy
skiing event and just dream about Peace.
I did say: “security, recognition and
stability for you (Israel), and the full
Golan returned to Syria.
Full Golan returned is the land right?
It is peace for land.
I believe strongly in Justice Peace,
opposing the killing by the Israelis
army, opposing the terrorist acts, the
suicide bombs, and call for peace in
return to our land. Security for Israel
the full returned of Golan for Syria.
I want fair peace without forgetting my
Palestinian brothers and sisters,
Also, I am not going to spend my years
discussing the return of our land, our
right etc… And doing nothing about it.
Stand up with me and oppose the killing,
oppose the blood shaded by the Israelis,
the killing of the civilian by the
suicide bombs.
And call for Peace. Security for Israel,
and the full returned of the Golan to
Syria.
My friend it is a dreamy peace, but who
say it is forbidden to have a dream in
better tomorrow.
I know the history very well, and I know
that Fair Peace is better than sitting
around and feeling sorry and angry. And
spend another 40 years in blood and
death.
Thank you.
sitelkoul
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 1:55 am
As I read the comments I agree with all
the writers. Now, What to do is a big
question. We should start- How to
do-question. If it only takes 90
minutes! that is easy. I think the
neighboring countries should solve this
issue themselves without interference
from outside.
We need a To Do list from both sides to
agree and apply for immediate action,
peacefully. If Berlin wall came down
peacefully, then we have Hope!
Alex
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 4:17 am
Sitekoul,
I agree with your suggestion.
You start : )
I will think
of my to do list in the mean time. Maybe
tomorrow I’ll write it.
LattakiaBoy
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 6:56 am
If Mr Israeli is correct in his
assumption that Israeli leaders have a
free hand in deciding the fate of the
Golan without much opposition from their
people, then making peace should be 90
minutes away. Bashar has asked to start
the peace process, so there is the
Syrian will to begin. Now, the formula
in my humble opinion should be the full
return of the golan with some partial
right for Israel to its water source (
agreement on future water usage is very
important.) Syria must have no military
presence in the Golan, with Police
handling security issues. Israel may not
keep its military posts on Jabal il
Sheikh ( Mt Hermon). As a good will
gesture, Syria may begin this process by
returning the remains of Elie Cohen the
Egyptian Israeli spy. It would mean alot
for Israelis and Syrians would have
nothing to lose form that act.
How is that for a start, please add or
comment on anything.
PS. Hind, shoukran 3a hal Niqash!
dkmy
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 8:27 am
“The creation of Israel is one of the
most immoral misconducts of foreign
policy, and one of the most painful
remnants of colonialism”. I wonder about
that statement. I seem to recall that
modern Syria itself is a colonial
creation. What exactly makes the
colonially created modern Syria morally
superior to the colonially created
Israel? It’s morally superior ruling
Baath party? It’s years of moral
intervention in Lebanon? As an Israeli,
I am tired of being accused of being
immoral by people who claim to be
morally superior to me. Let’s put these
accusations aside. They lead only to
more resentment and misunderstanding. I.
as an Israeli, am not morally superior
to any Syrian citizen. Yet I am
definitely not any less. I long for
peace as much as any of you, but fear
that as long as violence, on both sides,
is considered a legitimate tactic in
this conflict, we will never see the end
of it. Accusing Israel of being “one of
the most immoral misconducts of foreign
policy” is violent to the extreme.
Matan
Says:
June 5th, 2007 at 11:53 pm
let’s just blame the Brits and French
for everything!
Who signed the Sykes Picot agreement,
shafting the Arabs? them. Who gave the
Balfur declaration, and then reversed
their position, breaking their promise
to the Zionists while Jews were being
persecuted all over Europe? Them. Who
left the Middle East in shambles,
leaving a huge mess and a bunch of
puppet royals? THEM!
Let’s find a common cause to vent our
anger, then sign a peace treaty already.
![]()
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 6th, 2007 at 4:38 am
My dear Israelis friends:
Again, Olmert let you down; yesterday he
refused the peace talk with Syria.
Have the courage of my Jews friends in
Toronto and Say” No” not in our name.
My Jews friends in Toronto, boycotts
Indigo book store because the owner sent
money to support the Military in Israel.
We support the entire donation to
Israel, school, hospitals, etc…. but not
to any military. Just imagine that
instead money paid for the military in
Afghanistan, Israel, Iraq, Lebanon paid
to construct the countries and build
school and Hospitals to benefit the
people in Middle East from all
religions.
Be Peace builders, and demonstrate in
Israel, and tell Olmert” not in our
Name” we refused the war and we want
Peace not War.
I am sure many of the Syrian people will
support you in your demonstration
against Olmert, who is refusing all the
peace gestures. Just say it “Not in your
name”.
Yazan
Says:
June 6th, 2007 at 11:34 am
dkmy,
I never said that any Israeli is morally
inferior to a Syria. My whole post was
in fact saying that we are both humans,
and that should matter the least.
Now about the creation of Israel.
Yes my friend, it is an immoral conduct
of international politics. Syria has
been a geographical and social unit
throughout at least 2000 years, Syrians
were always called Syrians, they
identified themselves as such,
regardless of their other ethnicities or
religions, or or…
Nobody BROUGHT Syrians here, kicked out
some indigenous population and placed
them in their place… does that not make
a difference?
I can not say I understand the grave
feeling of being prosecuted for
thousands of years because of a
religion. And I, by all means, is
disgusted at what humans can do. But at
the very same time, I can never
understand such a treatment to the
Palestinians… being a victim does not
give you that right. And I know that you
will backfire, and I agree, there is
nothing sacred in someone blowing
himself in a nightclub… but you really,
honestly, think he wouldve done that if
you had given him any other option? [And
I am in no way endorsing that nor
legitimizing it]… You have the upper
hand. You can give these people their
land, and their lives back… at least
whats left of it.
Matan
Says:
June 6th, 2007 at 9:24 pm
yazan- I will not argue Mid-east
geopolitics with you. I will, however
say this: They gut that blew himself in
a nightclub had a choice: NOT to blow
himslef up in a nightclub. I want to
emphasize that I am for a return to the
1967 borders for a full comprehensive
peace. You should know, that by
legitimizing suicide bombing, you are in
partly responsible for the occupation
too! if the Palestinians have accepted
compromise in 1935,1939 and 1947 there
would have been no occupation. If the
palestinians would adopt a non violent
form of resistence they would have a
state in a month. Tops.
Alex
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 12:11 am
Matan,
I agree that non-violent resistance is
highly effective… I wish the
Palestinians had a Gandhi type of
leader.
But the problem is that for the longest
time, Israelis have been electing the
most hard line prime ministers. Prime
ministers Sharon, Netanyahu, or Olmers
are not the type that offer compromises
to Palestinians who demonstrate
peacefully.
Basically they don’t have a charismatic
and wise leader, you only elect right
wing leaders who do not give your Arab
neighbors much hope.
And if Mr. Olmert’s current government
collapses, we will likely end up with
Netanyahu?
dkmy
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 3:23 am
Yazan,
To deny that Jews have a bond to
Palestine is to deny history. We did not
descend upon this land randomly, kicking
out it’s indigenous people for no
apparent reason. There is something so
extreme and misleading in these views -
what can you possibly think of these
people that just descended from nowhere
and kicked everybody out? As Matan says,
we have consistently agreed to proposals
to share this land and were denied again
and again. But I realize that you are
trying to understand and be
compassionate and I am grateful for
that. I disagree with Alex regarding his
evaluation of our past PM’s. Rabin died
for his attempts at making peace, and
his premiership was one of the bloodiest
times in Israel, when bus loads of
people were blown up almost on a monthly
basis - all this during the creation of
the Palestinian authority. PM Barak
tried again in camp David. Nothing came
out of it but more extremism and
violence. We desperately need pragmatic
leaders on the Palestinian side -
leaders who understand that the wild
eyed Islamic utopia will not happen.
There will be no greater Palestine. We
will not ship ourselves back off to
Russia. I have spent some time reading
Hamas’ constitution - a foul, racist
hate tract filled with the same old
accusations of world Jewry dominating
the media, finance etc. Great stuff for
“Der Strumer”, but not a pragmatic
solution for the Palestinians. I agree
with Matan. I am for a return to the
1967 borders for a full comprehensive
peace. But tell me, will Hamas accept
that Israel will no longer be regarded
as a Waqf?
Alex
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 3:47 am
dkmy,
But I specified Sharon, Netanyahu and
Olmert, no?
I wish you would elect another Rabin …
an
Abba Eban
… that’s the point I’m trying to make.
I used t like Mr. Barak, but sadly I
think he messed up the Syrian and
Lebanon track… read president Clinton’s
book.
Yazan
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 8:22 am
dkmy,
I am not trying to judge you, but,
anyway you look at it [religiously,
historically, or geopolitically] you
didnt have more right to this land than
the palestinians. You are connected to
it, through history, and religion, they
are too…
How exactly do you expect someone to
share a state that says “A Jewish
State”… How extreme is that?
dont get me wrong, i am all for a
bi-national state, I believe in sharing,
i believe in co-existance… but
seriously? dont you think, naming a
state The Jewish state is racist to the
other occupants of this land [just as
much as naming my country Arab Syria,
is… but thats another discussion that i
dont want to go into now…]
Bottom line, forget all that, fast
forward, now, here…
How many Israelis do u think i meet
everyday, over the net, or in starbucks,
or in just any random bookstore… take
another guess of how many of them think
it is their absolute “historical” right
to keep the golan heights?
You tell me, what kind of peace is that
offering me?
Unlike the palestinian track, The Syrian
part is very, very obvious, and if you
really cant get it since Geneva then its
really sad.
Give back the Golan until 1967 borders,
for a comprehensive peace [And I can
confidently say that 90% of syrians
genuinely believe in this, can you say
the same thing about israelis?]. It’s
painfully simple, yet, Barak decided to
bail on it in Shepperd’s Town.
The Arab summit suggested that you go
back to the 1967 borders in return for
comprehensive peace, your PM snubbed it.
dkmy
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 8:55 am
Yazan,
I agree with the fast forward part. In
the here and now, I would agree to
returning the heights for comprehensive
peace tomorrow. As simple as that. The
new generation of Israelis, and I’m
talking about people born around the Yom
Kippur war, are fed up. The old
political elites on both sides have led
us to war and devastation for 40 years.
Enough. I agree with the problem of
defining Israel as strictly a Jewish
state. But I feel that we must move on.
I don’t know if you’ve read The
Economist’s leader on the six day war in
their last issue, but it defines the
conflict as “self defeating madness”. I
couldn’t agree more. We need courage to
stop this insanity. I must say that this
sort of dialog gives me some hope.
Yazan
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 10:59 am
dkmy,
I agree that we have been “blessed” with
leaders from hell… regardless, I am glad
we can find such middle ground that we
can base a solution for the REAL
[Israel/Palestine] problem on…
One of our greatest play writers [Saadallah
Wannous] said once,
Peace, needs, requires, Fundamental
change in Israel’s social and political
structure on one hand, and in the Arab’s
on the other hand.
He also said, “We are condemned with
hope…”, We are condemned to think, that
at some point, both sides WILL change,
because of necessity to survive…
I hope we can do it for better reasons.
This is a documentary thats about him,
and the conflict through him. I highly
recommend watching it, its far from
propagenda, and gives you a human
insight into our side, I think we need
that, on both sides.
http://zozo2k3.blogspot.com/2007/05/blog-post_20.html
cheers
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 7th, 2007 at 11:55 pm
Dear all:
I agree with dkmy this dialogue will
give us all hope. Thank you Yazan, Alex,
Matan, for keeping the dialogue alive.
Building bridges is always better from
building walls.
robert
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 5:12 am
yes, indeed great to hear all these
opinions on this post and the others on
this site.
few things bother me. i have the feeling
that most of the syrians here are from
the US or CANADA, which are different i
guess and do not represent the average
syrians and her opinions.
however, can anyone translate Diala’s
post? thanks
as to all the proud syrians. what is the
idea in highlighting that you are proud?
what wouldnt you? isnt that the default?
do i have to represent my self as a
proud israeli? - i just wonder does it
has any meaning?
i am still worried, as i read posts here
and at the others on this website, in
which people describe the israelies as a
bunch of russians/germans/other
europeans/americans/arabs united by
their religion who arrived here and make
problems. we are the aparthheid, we are
the one who humiliate the palastineins,
while syrians are so nice people. they
do not control lebanon with fear,
killing its leaders? they dont support
hizballa and hama, instead of
negotiating with israel? these are
legitimate actions.
you are saying that syria been here all
the time. also israel. we left it 2000
years ago and no one been here. no
nation called palastinians. there were
different leaders here: british/turkish/english
againa and what ever. there were
differnt people here, including few jews
mainly in jerusalem. most of the so
called palastinians are arabs who were
brought by the english from lebanon and
the neighbors to build their ports and
other projects, or moved for many
reasons. thats it…, but i think that the
palastinians deserve Gaza and the west
bank. the question is when will you
accept it that we deserve our land?
at 48 we started the indeendence war? or
was it all the arab world started a war
on the first morning of our existence?
you are telling that we should retun the
lands to the palastinians. you are
criticizing Ariel Sharon (i dont support
him), but he returned Gaza. what
happened since then? the hama kills the
Phatach. they kill children. old people,
women - believe me they are worse than
the occupation..
why dont they care about their people?
their future? what dont they rebuidl
Gaza and show some stability to the
world. that it will be worth to return
the west bank. why do they make us fell
that it will be a major mistake to move
on in withdrawing from the west bank?
however, note that i am peace believer.
i am for returning the Golan. i am for
giving back the west bank. east
jerusalem requires a more sophisticated
solution.
and i want to snowboard in lebanon
![]()
believe me, not more than 10-15 years,
after we all tired enough to compromise…
the question is how much blood will it
take. it will be great - just amazing!
robert
DJ
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 8:00 am
Robert;
First of all not all Syrians here are
those who are now living in Canada and
the US, and even if they are, you are
getting a fair sample of what an average
Syrian(s) would say, so don’t worry
about that…
Now you said:
”but i think that the palastinians
deserve Gaza and the west bank. the
question is when will you accept it that
we deserve our land?”
Deserve your land in what sense? And
what land exactly? The recent Arab
summit initiative already implies your
right to exist within your borders of
4th June 1967….what else did you infer
from it?
on the other hand, if your people (I
insist, people not politicians) are
really relying on peace as their long
term interest, why isn’t anybody from
your end discussing the endless
settlements in west bank and Jolan?
Isn’t time for your people to make the
hard choice of relinquishing these
settlements and find alternatives for
people to live in?
Hind Kabawat
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 8:22 am
I wrote the letter and the comments from
the old City of Damascus, and yes, many
Syrian will support me in calling a Fair
and Justice Peace with Israel.
And as proud Syrian, yes, we are very
proud of our country, our nation and our
good people.
We are a nice people, and we don’t agree
of killing the Palestinian, Israelis or
Lebanese.
We oppose the killing of anybody, or
interfering in other country’s policy.
Robert, accusation and generalization is
not a good way to start a peace my
friend, or even to start a good dialogue
among nation.
Albert
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 8:25 am
To all you well meaning people who are
posting here, especially the few
Israelis who are struggling visibly to
maintain a patena of reasonablenes and a
pseudo quest for “peace”, you all forget
one undeniable postulate for peace and
that is: For peace to be viable and to
survive, it must be fair and honourable
to both sides. Honourable to the ones
who have suffered egtregiously at the
hands of the ones that perpetrated the
crimes and carried out the atrocities
over the connected and vile decades. It
is this justice that needs to be
addressed before any viable peace can
take root. For without redressing the
historical crimes, there can be no
peace.
It is stated by dkmy that: “To deny that
Jews have a bond to Palestine is to deny
history. We did not descend upon this
land randomly, kicking out it’s
indigenous people for no apparent
reason. There is something so extreme
and misleading in these views - what can
you possibly think of these people that
just descended from nowhere and kicked
everybody out? As Matan says, we have
consistently agreed to proposals to
share this land and were denied again
and again.” How vulgar and how racist an
opinion that is that he states. How
obcene and how devoid of any historical
truth it is. How repulsive and
egregiously and patently false it is.
For INDEED, the jew did descend on
Palestine to decimate its population and
to drive them out. No less than ben
gurion, Sharett, Lord Moin , Rothchild
and other zionist leaders have stated
openly that there there can be NO land
of Israel as long as the Palestinians
are there.
To deny history as dkmy denies it and
denies in a most obscene and racist way
is to deny the humanity and legality of
the Palestinians that the Jew has
desimitated over the decades. To deny
the humanity of the Palestinas that the
Jew has driven forcibly out of their
homes, villages and farms to make way
for the arrogant racist European hordes
that came to replace them like some mad
conquering vulture swooping in on its
intended prey.
It is the height of absurdity and the
abrogation of reason, fairness, legality
and human compassion to accuse your
victom of NOT cooperating in the 1930,s
to allow the criminal access to your
homes and land. It is the height of
racist arrogance that a Jew can accuse
the Palestinians of bringing ion their
own destruction by not agreeing to
simply kneel down and kiss the ass of
the Europeans who flooded into their
lands with the intent of taking them.
How absurd one can be when they
regurgitate the neauseating filth about
what that Ukrain born/Miwaukee school
teacher and mass murderess, Golda Maei
said: “Its not as though Palestine was
populated. palestine was a land without
a people and the jews were a people
without a land,” The obfuscation of
history by the Jew is noted and recorded
for all to see when it suites their
purpose.
How neauseating and illigitame is the
argument that “we are coming back home
to the land we left 2,000 years ago” as
though the passage of time means nothing
and as though the people of the land
that have been there for all those
centuries and did not leave, meant
nothing. The inportant thing is that the
Jew is now coming back.
How can one prove ancestral connection
with Palestine that spans the passage of
20 venturies when the overwhelming
majority of European Jews are descendant
from the Khazars of Russia and have
never had a connection to palestine?
The behind the scenes arm twisting that
went on prior to the creation of the
racist state of Israel is galling for
one to read, and to see the extent to
which western powers were bought and
paid for by the Rothchilds of the world
and the imperialist hubris and racism of
the US and the UK in disregard for the
Palestinians as human.
I can go on forever listing the litany
of crimes throught the entire 100 years
of the 20th century: crimes that HAVE to
be addressed and reconciled with justice
for its victoms for any lasting peace to
take hold.
We then see the damnable absurdity of of
a dkmy who attacks Hamas for its
allegedly racist and violent charter. he
is a LIAR! For if indeed he can read
Arabic, and NOT read the Israeli
translations by MEMRI, then he would
even be nore guilty because he would
then be KNOWINGLY lying. Hamas has NO
such agenda and their agenda is simple:
Justice for the Palestinians and the
right of return, that everyu other
people anywhere in the world have, to go
back to their homes that were stolen.
Yes, there should be peace and there
should also be justice. israel has to be
made to redress the wrongs it has and
continues to conduct as it oppresses the
Palestinians and treats them like
animals.
Its wonderful that Hind Kabawat found
“friendship” with a jewess over a cup of
hot chocolate. Yet she truly found
nothing but a paliative and scratch an
Israeli just under the skin and you will
find out that 99% of them believe the
Arabs are sub human and that they have
the right to continue their illegal and
obscene occupation……… as Obscene, as
racist as having “JEW ONLY” roads for
the Israeli illegal settlers on the West
Bank.
Peace, YES!……. But peace with JUSTICE
first and punishment for the criminals.
I am a Palestinian that years for peace
and yet i do NOT want peace at any
price, since I do NOT believe that
illigitamacy mellows with age like wine
and that crimes become acceptable with
the passage of time.
Would the jews of the world forgive the
Nazi’s for they allegedly did against
them? NO! Then why are you expecting the
Palestinians to forgive the Jews for
what they did to us, that for us is just
as murderous and more than what the
Nazi’s did top them.
Peace by all means: but peace with
Justice first.
dkmy
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 12:38 pm
Albert,
Here are 6 choice quotations from your
reply (and I appreciate the use of “the
jew”, “the jewess” etc. Nice de-humanising
touch there.)
1.” …the arrogant racist European hordes
that came to replace them like some mad
conquering vulture swooping in on its
intended prey.”
2.” …when they regurgitate the
neauseating filth about what that Ukrain
born/Miwaukee school teacher and mass
murderess, Golda Maei”.
3.”…she truly found nothing but a
paliative and scratch an Israeli just
under the skin and you will find out
that 99% of them believe the Arabs are
sub human and that they have the right
to continue their illegal and obscene
occupation”.
4. “… when the overwhelming majority of
European Jews are descendant from the
Khazars of Russia and have never had a
connection to palestine?”
5. “… to see the extent to which western
powers were bought and paid for by the
Rothchilds of the world and the
imperialist hubris and racism of the US
and the UK in disregard for the
Palestinians as human.”
6.”…the jew did descend on Palestine to
decimate its population and to drive
them out”.
I will not even comment on these
passages. They speak for themselves.
Now for your accusation that I am a
liar.
Here is the link to the decidedly
english version of the Hamas charter,
taken from Yale Law school’s “Avalon
project”:
http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/hamas.htm.
Here is article 13 from this charter:
“Initiatives, and so-called peaceful
solutions and international conferences,
are in contradiction to the principles
of the Islamic Resistance Movement.
Abusing any part of Palestine is abuse
directed against part of religion.
Nationalism of the Islamic Resistance
Movement is part of its religion. Its
members have been fed on that. For the
sake of hoisting the banner of Allah
over their homeland they fight. “Allah
will be prominent, but most people do
not know.”
Now and then the call goes out for the
convening of an international conference
to look for ways of solving the
(Palestinian) question. Some accept,
others reject the idea, for this or
other reason, with one stipulation or
more for consent to convening the
conference and participating in it.
Knowing the parties constituting the
conference, their past and present
attitudes towards Moslem problems, the
Islamic Resistance Movement does not
consider these conferences capable of
realising the demands, restoring the
rights or doing justice to the
oppressed. These conferences are only
ways of setting the infidels in the land
of the Moslems as arbitraters. When did
the infidels do justice to the
believers? ”
Here is article 22:
“For a long time, the enemies have been
planning, skillfully and with precision,
for the achievement of what they have
attained. They took into consideration
the causes affecting the current of
events. They strived to amass great and
substantive material wealth which they
devoted to the realisation of their
dream. With their money, they took
control of the world media, news
agencies, the press, publishing houses,
broadcasting stations, and others. With
their money they stirred revolutions in
various parts of the world with the
purpose of achieving their interests and
reaping the fruit therein. They were
behind the French Revolution, the
Communist revolution and most of the
revolutions we heard and hear about,
here and there. With their money they
formed secret societies, such as
Freemasons, Rotary Clubs, the Lions and
others in different parts of the world
for the purpose of sabotaging societies
and achieving Zionist interests. With
their money they were able to control
imperialistic countries and instigate
them to colonize many countries in order
to enable them to exploit their
resources and spread corruption there.
You may speak as much as you want about
regional and world wars. They were
behind World War I, when they were able
to destroy the Islamic Caliphate, making
financial gains and controlling
resources. They obtained the Balfour
Declaration, formed the League of
Nations through which they could rule
the world. They were behind World War
II, through which they made huge
financial gains by trading in armaments,
and paved the way for the establishment
of their state. It was they who
instigated the replacement of the League
of Nations with the United Nations and
the Security Council to enable them to
rule the world through them. There is no
war going on anywhere, without having
their finger in it. ”
I think all this speaks for itself.
For the last few days I have been
delighted by this forum and by the
mutual respect and understanding that I
have encountered here.
I am happy that albert’s post is the
exception, and not the rule.
Albert
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 2:03 pm
dkmy;
You are galling in your arrogance and
infuriating in your naivette.
I stand by every single word that I have
written and could have said more…. much
more.
Your response to what I said is a
mixture of hypocricy and sheer
childishness. By stating that you will
not argue or repond to what I said about
the Jews is cowardice in the extreme
since you simply have no response and
stating that you what I said speaks for
itself is the last refuge of a scoundral
who wants to appear superior by stating
that he will not sully his hands with
such filth.
But then again, your hands are already
filthy and driping with the Bloof of the
Palestinians, the Syrians, the Lebanese,
the Jordanians and the Egyptians, not to
mention the Iraqis as well.
As I said, save me the sophystry of your
“hurt” feelings.
The so called articles of the hamas are
NOT articles but statements and I am not
familiar with them, although I will look
at the Arabic form and see that in fact
that is NOT what they say and even IF
that is what they say, what is wrong
with it, in light of the murderous and
vile occupation and dispoiling of
Palestine? What would you expect, an
invitation to a tea party perhaps?
And, dkmy, the Jews did descend on
Palestine as a vulture intent on
decimating its population and to drive
them out in order to create your
glorified “Only democracy” in the Middle
East.
1) “The Zionists made no secret of their
intentions, for as early as 1921, Dr.
Eder, a member of the Zionist
Commission, boldly told the Court of
Inquiry, ‘there can be only one National
Home in Palestine, and that a Jewish
one, and no equality in the partnership
between Jews and Arabs, but a Jewish
preponderance as soon as the numbers of
the race are sufficiently increased.’ He
then asked that only Jews should be
allowed to bear arms.” and that, by the
dkmy, is when the Jerws were less that
4% of Palestine at the time.
2) By 1948, the Jew was not only able to
‘defend himself’ but to commit massive
atrocities as well. Indeed, according to
the former director of the Israeli army
archives, ‘in almost every village
occupied by us during the War of
Independence, acts were committed which
are defined as war crimes, such as
murders, massacres, and rapes’…Uri
Milstein, the authoritative Israeli
military historian of the 1948 war, goes
one step further, maintaining that
‘every skirmish ended in a massacre of
Arabs.’”
3) “During May [1948] ideas about how to
consolidate and give permanence to the
Palestinian exile began to crystallize,
and the destruction of villages was
immediately perceived as a primary means
of achieving this aim…[Even earlier,] On
10 April, Haganah units took Abu Shusha…
The village was destroyed that night…
Khulda was leveled by Jewish bulldozers
on 20 April… Abu Zureiq was completely
demolished… Al Mansi and An Naghnaghiya,
to the southeast, were also leveled. .
.By mid-1949, the majority of [the 350
depopulated Arab villages] were either
completely or partly in ruins and
uninhabitable.”
4)“Moshe Dayan, the celebrated commander
who, as Defense Minister in 1967, gave
the order to conquer the Golan…[said]
‘many of the firefights with the Syrians
were deliberately provoked by Israel,
and the kibbutz residents who pressed
the Government to take the Golan Heights
did so less for security than for the
farmland…[Dayan stated] ‘They didn’t
even try to hide their greed for the
land…We would send a tractor to plow
some area where it wasn’t possible to do
anything, in the demilitarized area, and
knew in advance that the Syrians would
start to shoot. If they didn’t shoot, we
would tell the tractor to advance
further, until in the end the Syrians
would get annoyed and shoot.
5)That Ben-Gurion’s ultimate aim was to
evacuate as much of the Arab … He
stated, “We took most of Palestine by
force from the Arabs and blamed the
victims for their losses”
6) An Israely by the name of Nathan
Chofshi residing in Tel Aviv, had this
to say about the creation of Ireal,
“Only an internal revolution can have
the power to heal our people of their
murderous sickness of baseless hatred
for the Arabs. It is bound to bring
eventual ruin upon us. Only then will
the old and the young in our land
realise how great our responsibility to
those miserable wronged Arab refugees in
whose towns we have settled Jews who
were brought from afar; whose homes we
have inherited, whose fields we now sow
and harvest; the fruit of whose gardens,
orchard and vinyards we gather; and in
whose cities that we robbed, we put up
houses of education, charity and prayer,
while we babble and rave about our being
the “People of the Book” and the “light
of the Nations.”
The vulgarity and obscenity of the Jews
in Israel and what they have done to the
Palestians is a crime that has its
stench reaching to high heaven, even
though there is NO god there to smell
it.
So spare me your sophystry and hurt
feelings and holier than thou attitude
that somehow you are so superior to me
because I state the obvious and I
mention the “elephant” in the room and
don’t make “nice” just to appear
reasonable.
I am more than reasonable and rational
when my rights and my grievences are met
and redressed, and NOT when they are
perpetually trampled on by a racist
society like that of Israel that knows
NO descency and has no ethics or honour
that one can trust in.
Remember dkmy, I am a Palestian and NOT
some easilly deluded American or
European that will fall for your
revisionist history and glossing over of
your crimes against humanity.
Maybe if you listen closely while you
sleep at night all comfortable in your
cozy bed, you just might hear anguished
cries that sound human. You just might
hear the screaming of a parent that just
lost its family in the middle of the
night to yet another Israeli counter
“terror” attack on the largest
concentration camp in the world, Gaza.
if you listen closely, you might hear
the pleadings of mothers and fathers to
feed their starving childeren or
medicines denied them to save lives and
to alleviate pain and suffering.
However, even if you hear them, I doubt
you will do anything about it, because
you are a “superior Jew” and legend in
your own mind, and after all, as so many
slogans carried by Jews in
demonstrations state… “The only good
Arab is a dead Arab”
We all want to embrace peace, dkmy! Yet,
my people have all too often discovered
that your peace is the peace of the
grave and the embrace of death for them.
First admit your henoius crimes, as you
demand others to admit them against
you…….. then redress them and compensate
us…….. then come to us and we will break
bread and have supper together.
Otherwise, may you drink from a poisened
challace, the very same one you forced
us to drink from for most of the last
century.
Albert
Says:
June 8th, 2007 at 2:50 pm
dkmy;
Here are some more quotes from your
lineup of Jewish Angels that might be
taken in context of whatever the Hamas
charter has to say and it cannot say
enough.
These quotes show the inhumanity and the
viciousness of Israel and the calamity
that befell the Palestinians and to whom
now the Israelis ascribe guilt for
bringing their tragedy onto themselves.
IF only they accepted partition of their
country as we accepted it.
Tell me dkmy, what people would accept
the partition of their country and to
give the majority of it to recently
arrived foreign settlers most of whom
entered Palestine illegally?
In any case, here is the Palestinian
reason for a charter:
“We must expel Arabs and take their
places.” — David Ben Gurion, 1937, Ben
Gurion and the Palestine Arabs, Oxford
University Press, 1985.
“There has been Anti-Semitism, the
Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that
their fault? They see but one thing: we
have come and we have stolen their
country. Why would they accept that?”–
Quoted by Nahum Goldmann in Le Paraddoxe
Juif (The Jewish Paradox), pp. 121-122.
“Jewish villages were built in the place
of Arab villages. You do not even know
the names of these Arab villages, and I
do not blame you because geography books
no longer exist. Not only do the books
not exist, the Arab villages are not
there either. Nahlal arose in the place
of Mahlul; Kibbutz Gvat in the place of
Jibta; Kibbutz Sarid in the place of
Huneifis; and Kefar Yehushua in the
place of Tal al-Shuman. There is not a
single place built in this country that
did not have a former Arab population.”–
David Ben Gurion, quoted in The Jewish
Paradox, by Nahum Goldmann, Weidenfeld
and Nicolson, 1978, p. 99.
“Let us not ignore the truth among
ourselves … politically we are the
aggressors and they defend themselves…
The country is theirs, because they
inhabit it, whereas we want to come here
and settle down, and in their view we
want to take away from them their
country.”– David Ben Gurion, quoted on
pp 91-2 of Chomsky’s Fateful Triangle,
which appears in Simha Flapan’s “Zionism
and the Palestinians pp 141-2 citing a
1938 speech.
“If I knew that it was possible to save
all the children of Germany by
transporting them to England, and only
half by transferring them to the Land of
Israel, I would choose the latter, for
before us lies not only the numbers of
these children but the historical
reckoning of the people of Israel.”–
David Ben-Gurion (Quoted on pp 855-56 in
Shabtai Teveth’s Ben-Gurion in a
slightly different translation).
“There is no such thing as a Palestinian
people… It is not as if we came and
threw them out and took their country.
They didn’t exist.”– Golda Meir,
statement to The Sunday Times, 15 June,
1969.
“How can we return the occupied
territories? There is nobody to return
them to.”– Golda Meir, March 8, 1969.
“Any one who speaks in favor of bringing
the Arab refugees back must also say how
he expects to take the responsibility
for it, if he is interested in the state
of Israel. It is better that things are
stated clearly and plainly: We shall not
let this happen.” — Golda Meir, 1961, in
a speech to the Knesset, reported in Ner,
October 1961
“This country exists as the fulfillment
of a promise made by God Himself. It
would be ridiculous to ask it to account
for its legitimacy.”– Golda Meir, Le
Monde, 15 October 1971
“We walked outside, Ben-Gurion
accompanying us. Allon repeated his
question, What is to be done with the
Palestinian population?’ Ben-Gurion
waved his hand in a gesture which said
‘Drive them out!”– Yitzhak Rabin, leaked
censored version of Rabin memoirs,
published in the New York Times, 23
October 1979.
“[Israel
will] create in the course of the next
10 or 20 years conditions which would
attract natural and voluntary migration
of the refugees from the Gaza Strip and
the west Bank to Jordan. To achieve this
we have to come to agreement with King
Hussein and not with Yasser Arafat.”–
Yitzhak Rabin (a “Prince of Peace” by
Clinton’s standards), explaining his
method of ethnically cleansing the
occupied land without stirring a world
outcry. (Quoted in David Shipler in the
New York Times, 04/04/1983 citing Meir
Cohen’s remarks to the Knesset’s foreign
affairs and defense committee on March
16.)
“[The Palestinians] are beasts walking
on two legs.”– Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin, speech to the Knesset,
quoted in Amnon Kapeliouk, “Begin and
the ‘Beasts,”‘ New Statesman, June 25,
1982.
“The Partition of Palestine is illegal.
It will never be recognized …. Jerusalem
was and will for ever be our capital.
Eretz Israel will be restored to the
people of Israel. All of it. And for
Ever.”– Menachem Begin, the day after
the U.N. vote to partition Palestine.
“The past leaders of our movement left
us a clear message to keep Eretz Israel
from the Sea to the River Jordan for
future generations, for the mass aliya
(=Jewish immigration), and for the
Jewish people, all of whom will be
gathered into this country.”– Former
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir declares
at a Tel Aviv memorial service for
former Likud leaders, November 1990.
Jerusalem Domestic Radio Service.
“The settlement of the Land of Israel is
the essence of Zionism. Without
settlement, we will not fulfill Zionism.
It’s that simple.”– Yitzhak Shamir,
Maariv, 02/21/1997.”(The Palestinians)
would be crushed like grasshoppers …
heads smashed against the boulders and
walls.”– Isreali Prime Minister (at the
time) Yitzhak Shamir in a speech to
Jewish settlers New York Times April 1,
1988
“Israel should have exploited the
repression of the demonstrations in
China, when world attention focused on
that country, to carry out mass
expulsions among the Arabs of the
territories.”– Benyamin Netanyahu, then
Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister, former
Prime Minister of Israel, speaking to
students at Bar Ilan University, from
the Israeli journal Hotam, November 24,
1989.
“The Palestinians are like crocodiles,
the more you give them meat, they want
more”…. — Ehud Barak, Prime Minister of
Israel at the time - August 28, 2000.
Reported in the Jerusalem Post August
30, 2000
