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JBB: An Artblog!
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Janaina Medeiros
d e v o n
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we're not kids anymore.
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todays bird

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AnasAbdin
Mike Driver

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@kaminyari
Yamamoto Takeshi (^-^*)ノ
late to the khr party but huge fan of gokudera and haru's big fat crushes on tsuna lmaoo
crying
here’s to a liberated palestine and an end to the occupation in 2024، إن شاء الله
its horrid that gazans have to post their private, painful moments of saying farewell to their dead families. its so fucking terrible they have to post it online instead of being allowed privacy - and all so that the west can see their suffering because it doesnt even believe them. and even when they show it openly, the west still lies and fabricates lies and fake narratives. they literally have to humanize themselves. what the fuck. how does this not fill you with anger
Support for Palestine should be unconditional by the way. Stop looking for the ways they're just like you (ex: gay, trans, neurodivergent, etc) and support them for the sole reason that theyre literally facing a genocide right now. This is what solidarity is.
As always, the Irish speak nothing but facts.
How many more innocent civilians have to be killed by Israel before you condemn that for it?
That is a genocide.
That this is a crime on all accounts.
And deserves to be punished to the full extent off the law.
ofc you can feel however you like about hamas specifically and still be unequivocally on the side of palestinian resistance but talking about hamas like it's some invasive occupying regime or some inexplicable evil terrorising palestine or even a religious hate group is both racist and completely inane. whatever your opinion on hamas, i urge everyone to actually consider the position of palestinians on the ground--if everyone you loved was killed by an airstrike while the world cheered on, who the fuck wouldn't join an organisation promising revenge and action, when the alternative is looking down at the barrel if vanishingly short life expectancy amid more airstrikes in an open air prison with a 47% unemployment rate. you might not think that hamas is good or right or correct, but you have to understand it as a response to the situation it exists in or you'll just end up uncritically accepting the islamophobic propaganda lines being used to fuel a genocide
israel is refusing to take back the hostages because they don't care about their citizens, getting back the hostages was never a goal in the first place (demolishing gaza is), and they don't want to deal with the hostages speaking up about their experiences and clearly contradicting all the "hamas are barbaric terrorists who mass rape women and behead children" bullshit
They also know the hostages will expose the truth- which is that, while there were outrageous killings of civilians by Hamas operatives, the IDF likely inflicted the majority of fatalities among both the kibbutzim and ravers (nothing like the sight of the planet's largest open-air concentration camp to make a party swing, I guess) with the usual undisciplined frenzy with which they conduct themselves.
Already reports have emerged from released hostages that the IDF forces went nuts. This is little surprise; it's their functional standard operating procedure, monstrous and excessive firepower to preserve IDF lives, and to hell with anyone else.
This incidentally is exactly how American police are trained, and little coincidence in light of the long-ignored links between Israeli security forces and American policing agencies, both tentacles of the same colonial kraken.
I completely believe the above statements, but i'm begging someone who can to link something that substantiates that money or most of the casualties from the rave were IDF soilders!! please and thank you!
i reblogged a post with the actual audio of the interview a few days ago but i can't find it so i'm assuming tumblr nuked it as they do with any post that debunks zionist propaganda, even searching it up by name hardly got any results on google so it's definitely being suppressed. i found this article that reported on the survivor who talked about her experience though
@toogether found a video of the interview!
every single country that has voiced support for israel's "self defense", every single politician, anchor, news outlet, zionist, and person baying for the blood of palestinians is complicit in genocide. (Oct. 17) a hospital was purposefully bombed today, killing 500 people (the death toll bound to climb as reports come in), and israel says "hamas" as a paper-thin flimsy excuse to justify murdering doctors, patients, and everyone sheltering there. western media pieces of shit will say "major loss of civilian life" in the face of real-time genocide like it was simply an unfortunate incident or natural disaster. like isarel didn't deliberately murder human beings. israeli historian and genocide scholar said this a textbook case of genocide. and the west still does nothing, and worse than nothing: aiding and generating propaganda to justify it. COMPLICIT. COMPLICIT IN AND PARTY TO GENOCIDE.
I don't know how many of you know this but Gaza's population is around 2 million people and about 80% are refugees. 1.7 million refugees. These people are descendants of Nakba survivors who were forced out of their original villages in what is now ""Israeli territory"". So Israel is not only carpet bombing a strip of land they caged 2 million people in but is massacring a population that is 50% children and 80% refugees.
Mahmoud Darwish, Unfortunately, It Was Paradise (trans. Munir Akash, Carolyn Forché, with Sinan Antoon and Amira El-Zein).
Moments from Palestine across generations and communities
(1) A Bedouin woman smiles in Jerusalem (1898-1914)
(2) Asma Aranki Holding a Child from Her Family at Their House, Birzeit (1948)
(3) Bedouin girls in Jericho (1918)
(4) An extended Palestinian family gathers in front of their house in the village of Beit Sahur, near Bethlehem (1918–35)
(5) From the Mount of Olives, a young woman looks out over eastern Jerusalem (1929)
(6) Ruth Raad, daughter of photographer Khalil Raad, in the traditional costume of Ramallah (1939)
(7) Standing in his neatly ironed shirt and shorts, George Sawabin poses for a studio photo (1942)
(8) Katingo Hanania Deeb, prepares to demonstrate in the 1936-1939 Arab Revolt -- which was a nationalist uprising by Palestinian Arabs against British colonial rule in relation to Palestinian independence and the land acquisition and pushout as a result of the mass Jewish immigration (1936)
(9) Young children walking home from school Beit Deqqo Village, the Occupied Palestinian West Bank, 1987
(10) Four young girls decorating vases in a ceramic workshop in Nablus (1920)
(11) A young Palestinian girl squints and smiles as she holds a jar on her head (1920-1950)
(12) The ancient craft of a Palestinian potter (1918-35)
(13) The mothers of Palestinian detainees' protest in Jerusalem (1987)
Source(s): The British Mandate Jerusalemites (BMJ) Photo Library, Palestinian Museum Digital Archives, The Jerusalem Story + Khalil Raad
Please support, share, cite, and (if financially able) fund these organizations and public storytellers for their rebellious histories and community work!
• Palestinian literature recommendations - small books with a big impact •
Here’s a few recommendations for short reads. If you’re looking for small books to help you reach your reading goal before the end of the year or for when you need a shorter read to suit your time, these are all fairly quick reads but very impactful.
All Palestinian literature. Most of these recommendations are short story collections and mostly translated from Arabic. They each show the different ways the Israeli occupation has affected Palestinians. From the start of the Nakba, to the blockaded Gaza Strip, to Palestinians refugees in the diaspora.
* Shatila Stories published by Peirene Press, nine contributors (Palestinian and Syrian): Omar Khaled Ahmad, Nibal AlAlow, Safa Khaled Algharbawi, Omar Abdellatif Alndaf, Rayan Mohamad Sukkar, Safiya Badran, Fatima Omar Ghazawi, Samih Mahmoud, Hiba Mareb. Translated by Nashwa Gowanlock
* Men in the Sun and Other Palestinian Stories by Ghassan Kanafani, translated by Hilary Kilpatrick
* The Sea Cloak and Other Stories by Nayrouz Qarmout, translated by Perween Richards
* Minor Detail by Adania Shibli, translated by Elisabeth Jaquette
* The Book of Ramallah edited by Maya Abu Al-Hayat, various translators
Have you read any of these? Are there others any you would add to the list or recommend me to read? The Book of Gaza is one I have on my radar that I want to read at some point.
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while y’all are advocating for a ceasefire - and you should be - we need to keep centered that while a ceasefire is necessary to stop the current genocidal attacks and get the food, water and medical supplies that palestinians urgently need to them as soon as possible, we CANNOT stop there.
a ceasefire is an important step that MUST happen but we cannot let it be the end. the world cannot turn away. because as soon as we do, israel will restart their genocidal campaign. a ceasefire is step one, but we MUST end the occupation. palestine MUST be free. there is no other option.
so please do continue to advocate for ceasefire, to protest and call your representatives demanding that they support it, but if it happens, do not become complacent. we cannot stop until the occupation ends and palestine is free.