tv [untitled] June 24, 2021 11:30pm-12:00am +03
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has been devastated by the covey. 19 pandemic. the one on 18th makes the front line work risking their lives to treat the sick. and very the one i was 0. ah, the hello barbara are in london with the top stories on al jazeera, a canadian 1st nations group says it's found more than $600.00 unmarked graves at the sight of a former residential school for indigenous children. the catholic church ran to school in the sketch. one province between 18991997. an indigenous leader has called the findings a crime against humanity. this follows the discovery of 215 unmarked graves at another residential school in a western province. this is not
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a mass grave sight. these are on mark graves. over the past years, the oral stories of our elders of our survivors and friends of our survivors have told the stories that new these burials were here of heart. he say nearly a 100 people are still and accounted for after an apartment block collapsed in the us state of florida. at least one person has died and more than 30 have been rescued from the rubble. a wing of the 12 story building in search side, which is near miami beach, gave way and fell to the ground early on thursday. the mayor says that construction work was being done on the roof, but the cause of the collapse is not yet clear. florida governor ron de santis says it's possible that more victims could be found. he feels he is military as denied
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that it hit a busy market in t gray in an air strike, but it doesn't make targeting degree in rebel fighters in the area. health workers say that tuesday strike killed at least 64 people, including children, the u. s. and the u. n. say that they want a full investigation and a massacre in ne, booking a fossil in which at least a $130.00 people were killed, was mostly carried out by children. the government says, armed at 12 to 14 year olds, opened fire on residence in the village of solon and burned down the homes on the 4th of june. this is the worst attack the region is seen in years, even though it has been plagued by armed groups. moving across the for health officials say more groups have been using children in attacks over the past year. those are the headlines a more and all those stories on the al jazeera news, our interest on their half an hour coming up next to bruce 11, a rock and a hard place continues. they for watching by ah,
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ah, i cannot claim today that i'm respecting it because it's not possible to respect it . and the system which brings me in justice and when i organize lawyers, i try to show what we are a confronting is actually a very drastic and speedy transformation of our city. wherever we go. in this dutifully majestic damascus gate, we see ours of police station would say, comrades microscope that to watch and to monitor the youth and the people walking in the streets and to to get door. but i just want you to see that there are soldiers everywhere. there is a very ugly scene today into the snow, which i try not to beautify but to be indifferent to these ugly themes and to show
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what's left of the beautiful palestine and the treasures of the city. these are getting on and this is how he made his house and he never actually i mean we are here in the muslim quarter. you cannot fill in it. unfortunately, there is an occupation because before the occupation, alaska marks was open for everybody because i think the most difficult and the most challenging part of the occupation do use. what i want to do now is take you to the center of west
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jerusalem and just show you how the occupation is not part of the lives in the fossil people. here it is a visiting girl whom i'm originally from, from jerusalem. are you from where the so come visit the old homeland although design isn't played a role in that i was able to come here. you know, i'm like probably the revenue still unable to come here. you know, i thought the idea of israel was such a bad idea if we could accommodate with the palestinian. i really believe that we could find a way to live together and so on. graders are able to dismiss and they don't think about it. it's the land of israel that's it's in the bible. it's unproblematic, it's ours. we came back. you guys. palestinians are intruders. you know, and you know, this whole claim that actually isn't true,
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but the whole claim that there's are a gathered tie between the israelite and the hebrews of the bible and jews of today, you know, is what makes that tie. so you know, this is our land, just go back and look at the bible the and that's where your course gets a lot of support from christian fundamental. not just from the jewish community and abroad. i don't use the word palestinian. we talk about arabs in a very undifferentiated way. we never use the word occupation. you don't talk about settlement their community. you don't talk about settlers, their jewish residents of community. so the whole language has fantasize everything . if you talk to people, what is the occupation, where is the occupation? what does the palestinian people wouldn't know what the hell you're talking? and that's where israel has really one. it's insulated people so much from the political reality, that's 100 meters away. and so in that sense, israel women,
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because it takes the whole issue of palestine off the table for it is right. they don't even think about it. okay, so we have to back up. all right, okay, great deal. ah, the you know, assuming the but it, if you of this electrical argument issue mad is included in the blessing and in the promise of the multiplication, this is biblical to the problem is if you try and you do succeed in having an ideology imposed on politics or mixture than just mixture of, of, and this is by the way for all christians, muslims, and jews does not forget, it was own more than 1400 years ago in the 638 approximately. he allowed the jews back in july. so they were prohibited from living in jerusalem for 5 centuries,
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1970 demolished the modal can quarter to expand the area in front of the western war. the doors demolishing everything. historical buildings, including them also including school. and they have ultimately used graders to so that they would level that man ah, i do this with, by the idea that we have well defined quarters all the way from to wed street. you have basically major christian sites in families, for example, who live in the christian court just when you see christian course. but also of course it doesn't sound like to be on the list of. i said, my name is irma named after i'm out of the pub or the for the city and christian
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from one of the main christian families of jerusalem. i was named after much as many to the beautiful relationship, answered the beautiful fowler and has expressed with his encounter with my mother's breast had our christian name. but her name is let me because my mother referred me so we became brother and sister, brother with sisterhood. that is not to be on a lot, you know, line. it's a milk message from roman time. they had the strategy that divide and conquer and the british and implemented the 30 g very one me. we came down from the neighborhood that i live in good infrastructure, the new u. s. embassy, and then you drive down. first thing you get is a police station, a border police. that kind of clarifies from this point on, we need to be in control and then you drive through the neighborhood. but because there's a settlement here, the settlement behind this,
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then you see there's good infrastructure, there's lights, the sidewalk, and then the entrance to the settlement comes. and just after that, and there's no sidewalk you're in the neighborhood and you really see the and the fact that nobody cares about the infrastructure from that point on. because really it's about infrastructure for jewish population. that is really planned to have a minimum people here as possible to be able to keep the jewish majority. and if you want to be a jerusalem, that is, i don't know worth living in for everyone in it. then it has to be one that has 3 of those concepts of racism. but 3 of them i grew up in a kind of classic sinus left household. so growing up,
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knowing that way again for the patient, but having no idea what the patient is for me, one of those like a hum moments of understanding what those consequences are, was actually years ago. a sister this younger 10 years younger than me. and we were on this trip with different families, it was just me and her and then different random israeli families. and we were together for a week, and there was a dinner and we're all talking about, you know, whatever small talk and i was $22.00 at the time. someone asked me, what did he do in the military, which is the normal is really small talk conversation. and just before i answered, i saw my sister kind of her face turning into the really like the we have to get into this argument again. like, does it have to be like this every time? can we just not just be normal? you know, and that's part of what? being a dissident in different ways. mean it's saying no, we can't ever just be normal. mm.
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oh i, i live in society at the default, right? so, so choosing to step out of that is, is choosing to be different and to define yourself that different. and it has different consequences that are beyond prison. it's choosing to be an outsider. that is the problem there. it's just a feeling of spare and it's and it's heavy and sure. but it's nothing. right? i did that for a few months. palestinian sit in prison before they're even convicted in most cases just for the duration of the trial and for years on when they are sentenced. right . don't you think that these measures make the people of general since the safer but building was checkpoint more like a military police see we live in
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a state of fear and we are told to continue to be afraid regardless of what the reality is. i think that this is very strong within disraeli mentality. i mean security, we need to be strong, we need to have and we need to be all was in control and so on. it's also very evidence within the education system, the holiday system, and so on. even when you ask is valley officials, what is it about the wall that had to do with security like israeli security officials say very clearly, the wall doesn't prevent people from coming in. inequality is inherent part of the city, 40 percent, almost of the city or not citizen the, of the state. they don't have the, the right to vote to be elected. but more importantly, they can lose that. like that's what kind of looks like. and because that's what the state looks like, leverage that is the key thing we need to create. it's putting resistance. and we can hope that that resistance will be popular and will not be armed and things of
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the sort. when we talk about boycott campaigns. but i just know campaigns is about creating different frameworks of power that policy and have to leverage to tell israel you want this to end. you want this to change. ok. let's go to the table. let's talk about what you give for that. that's not the discussions happening today . ah, the 1st thing that struck me really the heavy weight of history that everyone here bears that somehow feels that you know, people who live in jerusalem come through time and through their lives just to carry the burden of its history. ah many, it is true, some face pressure and a threat to,
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to move out. but if i can take the opportunity of this interview and speak through you directly to them, i would say despite the cost and despite the difficulties do not give up. never given. because palestinians are not people who are coming through this land, just just renting their apartments or their houses for a short period of time before they move on. they are part of this land, they're part of this landscape. one of our pete and pounders of sabine is bishop desmond to, to from south africa. and the, as the famous saying that says it's an elephant, the stepping on the mouth and you leave it for the elephant and the most to figure out your thing. the side of the elephant, and this is, i think most of us understanding is we feel that the mission and community observing us while we are on the margins and we need help with asking help. and you're right to do that. you're absolutely right to, to,
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to demand that from the international community. not just last for in any context. this would never be an association between equals so how much should we wait as palestinians, or can we wait? we feel we are drowning their own. we refuse to drown. i think that's the that's the question that you posting and have to answer. and hopefully we will. mm . welcome to the president of the buffer. i think it's always good to see you on the continent. this is not really, it's pete. so we call it installed africans preventative off of evidence, but it's the present. and it's amazing of an embassy. we see the occupation, part of what we supposed to be doing is hosting palestinians to our home. most
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palestine is i can host them at by this. part of all was fatality is to hold people at rest. and also as part of the primitive work. but we are denied fundamentally south africa. we actually eat what was called the peachy arctic trout. those that imposed partied came together and we really alliance with common principles. and i think palestinians have to realize they have more in common than that which divides them into thinking. we call those so called tell us that we, we're a people know line up to meet us. people want to benefit from our experience and even the international communities. and i would name countries who have asked us to engage palestinians across the board. but don't you think that russia community, when it comes to south africa, the regime was racist and it had to go away. and there was trunk solidarity when it comes to us, palestinian,
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it seems as well has impunity. she had the masters of our own destiny at the end of the d. yes, it is true. international solidarity did play a role, an important role in terms of bike or sanction, and whatever else. and i solution of apartheid south africa, but it wasn't the south african collective who took to the streets. the palestinians have to work is a collective. you're going to have a math movement in gauging is really a party. and we engage people in terms of the common values that we have in terms of dignity, in terms of human rights, in terms of democracy. and these common values would bring us together underneath the golden dime of today that has to be respected is the foundation instead of the will mount mariah. and yes, there is something there today like to see got some every religious jew believes that one day in the future will be the 3rd temple were told that by our
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prophets was seen, the deserts bloomed the getting the gods we have returned home. but there was something in the hands of god. so the 3rd temple itself very much in the same position that abraham attempted sacrifice. isaac with the 1st temple was of king solomon. and the 2nd temple will also be the surgeon. but there's some things a hand by god, not in man's hand. having a jew go to the temple mount today to pray, to walk around the whole these place the jewish people in a place that mohammed never visited. the 1st temple existed 1700 years before the dome of the rock was even built. some things the process that we left to god has begun with the tunnel thing. you know, it's nothing to do with the table man's any one tunnel and it's a parallel to the wisdom all nothing to do with the temperament itself. it's absurd hysteria from the and it will be both concerned about the illegal arrow building on
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the temple mount. that's a disgrace, and yet they've managed to get away with the huge boss on the temple mount destroying things with sick and general period. that's something that should be discussed not what the jews do walking on the outside of the general mouth. with by the jewish people has some responsibility to act in a certain way and according to the laws that were given by the bible itself, it's very difficult for me to know exactly today. as many rabbis found it, difficult to know exactly what was the specific thing the god was angry with the jews about the people that know the future of profits and foods. and i'm neither ah,
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one of my favorite places to be healing jerusalem without a doubt is this casual, the old roman road that used to look like that is twice in israel. christian for muslims anyway. we're not talking about sovereignty. can compromise on sovereignty. no one hands away their home lives. this is not a multicultural democratic side. this is not another strain or america or friends. so english. no, it is a jewish type. the jewish people ah . so we are now in the county still pm, which translates to the church of the resurrection. every the very early in the
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morning, the muslim families will open the doors of the church because the churches are divided by different cushion denomination. and there was a dispute on who should have the key in the door. so they divided the church. but when it came to the consensus, the agreed on on the muslim feminine. they knew the family was respected. just look, i know, i mean i was for the thing and both you as efficient and i as a very, very tiny minute. you know, when we are, you know, where it just like this is, this is not our space in the past. we used to worship in this church. the church is the center of the world because of the importance of the empty tomb of christ. for some centuries, we have been forced to make space for pilgrims and foreigners,
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and we were moved to one of the churches outside the complex of the church of that as erection. the same thing at the last put example. notice would be unit in the way it didn't just go through the model can gate, but there are restrictions on muslims, even those who have no idea what ship my nephew and my new dream is to come to jerusalem. they don't have a 3rd of their dream is to come to the church of the holy guys that they are trying to do die east jerusalem. you are the only one that can save the city, and if you will not do it is now a fear that in the future will not be nothing to save because they said to live in the working secretly systematically. and they are taking everything they can. so you should do something immediately in the cities and their
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risk. ah, i was one of the founders of a settlement in the guys us 3 net setting mixer, li, me with this. and i was one of the founders of necessary me. it's incredible lay field during these days. so fraud to be effective, there it takes. who are the 2 years before i realize that something it doesn't work. each ideology has the price and the price that we are paying for their ideal g of the great israel is, is to match this to match. oh,
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i meant after arrive, i enter it into the army a go to the army because they said that this is my role. zionist shoed. go to the army and fight for the country. knocked over 72, he, you know, the young people war started. 2 weeks after a i was injured in front of the dirt egyptian army in see night. it was in, in the hospital for several months. when i start to look around me and to see people dying him, they all speak. and not there is that they lose their sons or sans they lose their fathers. then
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a started to process debt if they can me from the right thing to, to the left, the, to the zionist left at the beginning and after then to do de none the value nice left. this is the place where i am now. it was very hard to me to leave my writing friends. i change my mind, but they couldn't change my social group and it takes one year before i say ok, no more right wing. it's easier to change your mind done to change your social environment you. i was alone in this, in the country. we've been traveling for a week and we've seen one on the ground in general. it's miserable. you've met the politicians, they say there is no hope. you meet the united nations, they say literally, there's nothing we can do. if it's up to you,
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we must remain resilient. we must overcome justice for the palestinians and end of the occupation joined the civil society of the city and community initiatives like economy can sanction kind of major thing, occupation like b d. s and so on. we cannot give in to the power, is that a decision makers and allies, the trump, and the powerful in the world? we must come together. we always, not only for us or for jerusalem, holy place for religion, but for the future generation. empires come and go. but the people remain, and this is the story with what has happened throughout every empire blue cross. they have disappeared and became ruined. but the people still stand here.
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the the there were waterfalls again in a row. however, the made rain fairly new south wales near the bash months worth in a day on that frontal system which is now edging slowly eastwards, taking its reign monday through queens and giving you a dry day new south. well, but it's a change of type. you'll notice we're down to the low teens now. and that breeze is like to bring more crowded rain through victoria some parts and new south wales. so little drive further west, and as yet up in the northwest, australia is mostly dry, but i think the season might see it an awful lot wet as a change in the weather type, which she gives australia
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a wetter winter. but all this weather tends to head off through to new zealand as well. that's why it's taking a moment. and in west pacific, which is currently active, we have not yet tie food. but tropical storm champ, which is heading north, was to join. what are the seasonal rains is rather ragged band that goes back towards the south china, given hong kong wet time that's drawing up. now, there are cause a good number of thunderstorms forecast to follow up through the yangtze and eventually back into japan. the plum range, if you'd like, the tool come together and she's a very wet sunday. but on saturday, the focus is probably back in china. and beijing, or at least the environs might be particularly wet. the across the world, young activists and organizers around them are motivated and politically and gauge . we were the one who had life on what was going on. and the way the move means to
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me did the generation change is al jazeera is looking at the fresh ideas for the transformation of global politics. the day we do the work of making sure that our voices are heard coming soon on al jazeera. ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello, and barbara sarah. this is the al jazeera news. i would live from london. thank you for joining us. coming up in the next 16.
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