tv The Bottom Line Al Jazeera October 7, 2024 4:00am-4:31am AST
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the width of the hello on side of hyatt us and the top stories on alex's era. at least 10 people have been injured and know the news. roll off the rockets from southern nothing on hit the is ready port city of haifa. it's the 1st time the center of the city has been hit since the war on gauze assaulted a year ago. cctv cameras captured the moments of the huge explosion. it's just all right, fire and throughout the city. the strikes damaged cause roads as well as buildings or han has moved from the lebanese comfortable babies. hezbollah has
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a deed released the statement within the past hour. it said that they sent over the body one, a medium range missiles that they were aiming towards the common air base in high fun. they didn't say what they've hits off to, they had struck, they weren't talking about any civilian casualties. they did say they were aiming towards military infrastructure as they have so often said they've done well aiming these missiles towards israel. they also said that they were aiming for at another base in type various, we know that one person has been injured that, but they said the reason why they aimed at the hyphen in the 1st place was because all these ready massacre of civilians on that. any soil and the reason why they ended type there is, was because of the mascot of palestinians. for more on this mohammed gym, june reports from jordan's comp. it's all online and that's because he is ready to government his bond on the 0 from reporting in his row. now this is, as you said,
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a strategic city. it is a port city is the largest city in northern israel high, but you have a population about 300000 people. you have a military presence. and of course, at a time when it's rarely prime minister, benjamin netanyahu has continued to defiantly state that the actions that these really military is taking that they are making of the country safer. this is going to be raising a lot of questions amongst is released as to how exactly the iron don't the much vaunted iron dome air defense system. and israel was not able to intercept these 5 rockets the landed in central heifer at a time of such a heightened security. meanwhile, is rudy strikes of once again been hissing bay with southern suburb of da. here it talks followed a warning from his roles, military for residents to leave the area. these radio army says it's talking thing has vall assets also in the area. israel has also targeted the city of the back in the book called valley and the eastern 11 on the lots,
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its place around 500 meters from the temple of the jupiter. it's one of the largest temples built by the romans and unesco world heritage site is roseman, bossman says going so it has now carried on for one year, getting almost $42000.00 palestinians. virtually the entire population of garza has been displaced many, multiple times. hundreds of people in the north have been forced to flee as is ready, forces begin a ground assault. the families have been taking most of the buildings they can and leaving on fits these, ready all the kinds. how much is regrouping and rebuilding and for sponsor in jamalia or someone who witnessed the tax. there's lots of new to has moved from the come is another heavy errors right? just right now you have to come out of the hospital,
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which is definitely belated area such as this as is arriving to come out of the hospital right now. here is a, a look to baby right now. as a calculator, say, there is a women's discount inside the situation here. nothing goes, thread is a char waiting guys. the is right, the ami intensified is from the beginning. the volumes killed many people including women and children, and john on this. so the entire somebody had been killed by this right now. i mean delta north attacks and killed too many people, more than 20 civilians are still on the right now as the is right on the killed everyone move in in that area. while i'm talking to you right now, the a 5 to just lined up close. i want to be those areas right now. the
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british monday. but lives is only like moving between tyrell and jerusalem, where his once remains throughout these industrial life he who was edward w. so in the literature, professor who spent so much of this feeling out of place, yes, he knew how bright he was. he knew how valuable he was. he knew how well he's spoken, how brilliant that he read. as i say, a scarlet and an old man man, this person, you know, very few. academics can do that. um, but i mean, you know, he, he didn't live in thomas dunn quite in foot. you know, he is his life doctor. this last name was in new of course he travelled a lot of other things he, he realized that he was the voice of the people. the edwards begin swapped. edu mean they did so many know that you said that it's ok to
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a swap. and by the way, a bit easy and let the young and then a cone. and matthew was on the level of the in mendota heights village. and with that empty genocide of fee and the one that that may have been as simple as the n. as in edward faith can feel for you to the i'm you can see the the fear when you the my and it was when we were mcqueen. when we shudder the women, she's the side was diagnosed with leukemia in 1991 put forth the disease for over a decade during which time he wrote his own account to his childhood and youth. once he combed his memo, the, the main reason for this memo is of course to bridge the issue distance and time
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and place between my life today and my life. then the several years ago i received what seemed to be a fatal medical diagnosis. and therefore, it struck me as important to leave behind a subjective account of the life i live. as a record of an essential last or forgotten world. edward saw you just started writing out of place in may 1994 while he was recovering from chemotherapy for his leukemia. it took him 5 years to complete. ready the book is both the biography of his early years and the outer world, and then in the us at school and university, and a metaphor for the lives of millions of kind of studies with their sense of exile and alienation. it is both a personal experience on the statement on behalf of
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a home people who would i was to a, b, b, b, b, be able to go to the, for the well as if i process it. when the shop associates, color b, i succeed in writing is a cut out and it's a lot so, so it's going to be only monday to see what it is. so we're going to man, uh we, after he is in the corner shape and what, what, how to give you the. so what kind of, what campus, if the student you saw being out of place as a psychological state of things you saw being out of slick place as a physical characterization he saw out of place as well. so moving a reflection on being out of place to place being palestine the
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1st of november 1975 into a well to do christian palestinian family in jerusalem. and the market neighborhood of toby had served in the us army in the 1st world war, getting the family american citizenship in 1990. what do you set up a station of a business with his cousin in cairo? that meant the family would spend a good deal of time travelling between jerusalem and cairo. for the next few years, the little man, philistine and lumina laughed, set out a little pin. and that'll mean that puts general den on ken uh, miss dean and the id channel. stomped the month, the mouse i'm and show him henry canyon. west virginia 2 on cancel. ness can use to
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share the they had to be i the whole way mchenry showed and know them. to me. my head was a vanessa not pulled on the i had a check, i cannot, couldn't that still up see them the most of what we saw last day of the re on the all of us being while uh can, can edward the most most, most of the move and that's the outcome. i'm not the support that much can in all families and vent their parents and children give each of them a story, character fate. and even the language there was always something wrong with how
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i was invented and meant to fit in with the world of my parents and for sisters. whether this was because i constantly misread my part or because of some deep flown in my being. i could not tell for most of my early life sometimes i was in transit and proud of it. at other times, i seem to myself to be nearly devoid of any character, a tall, timid on certain without will. yeah, the overriding sensation i heard was of always being out of place the law, how i know the edward a i so i left off see to oh we we did or be me in the body of the house that we're i'm oh is
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yeah. can you do the 11 bustle? we can, we're as she, oh, basically behind the sitter, tired to michigan. i'm having a gift that you can love to offer genders who have who knew of janice. oh, but doing a better job because that okay, well we can. yeah. i mean, he's been yeah, i mean has the best mckenna, who can very mind me a call him hash, who the young edwards learned the piano and his love of music gave him an escape. both family and from school. he was an intelligent pupil, but sometimes misbehaved. edward grew up, playing and listening to our room and west classical music to recordings on the ground. the phone of the great composers on finest performers will say
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i've had little kid. yeah, i mean that, and it, or it will say i was kelly you showed when the and executive was 9 on the cell. say, say i do not have some upcoming getting him one. not only does that loans like other palestinians of his generation edward. so huge became a living example of exile his army life in egypt to coincide with the 2 monks who was events in the middle east of the 1940s. when in 1948, the british left palestine and the new state of israel was fined. hundreds of thousands of palestinians were forced from their homes and homeland the 12 year old edward getting tired, didn't yet know how a knock, the catastrophe,
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who later influenced his life and career. what overcomes me now is the scale of dislocation, our family and friends experienced and of which i was scarcely conscious, essentially annoying, witness. and 1948 the it was through. i'm going to be that i 1st experience palestine as history and cause it was also she who communicated to me the solutions of being without a country or a place to return to but i couldn't really comprehend the tragedy that had fallen them, nor could i piece together all the different narrative fragments to understand what had really happened in palestine. the the palestinian cause was always deep seated and edward fades intellectual.
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emotional i was in a physical life. i. and that is what, what reason such an extraordinary scholar and intellectual was that she was always connecting different aspects of his life. she never compartment to lies to know the many academics for whom you know, the, the private, the personal is one aspect of their life and the intellectual. the professional is another aspect with advertising, there was an integration of all aspects of, of, of, of being often 1948. that's a huge family. couldn't go back from cairo to jerusalem. western use of them had become almost entirely, is wally. but edwards didn't stay in egypt long. he was expelled from school and
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sent to the east coast of america to boarding school. his 1st year of and massachusetts started contradictory feelings and the 15 year old of low self esteem, alienation, but also the ration. the new york's tremendous scale, it's hiring the silent anonymous buildings, reduced one to an in consequential item. making me question, but i was to all this my totally unimportant existence, giving me an eerie but momentary sense of liberation for the 1st time in my life. elusive lea, almost imperceptibly, palestine would appear and then quickly disappear in our new york lives or not since the america chemistry, which is behind the list of i don't know that has to be in the bottom kind of what
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the new m a cabinet is that it will have my la, we went from i n, we realized that the, the outage and see, well i'll, well you can if i, if i live in step by the way back i make the, the teenage edward sewing. i attended the elite northfield motor home school. they found a tough, a got top grades, an entry to princeton university in new jersey, where he got his bachelor's degree. he then won a scholarship to harvard university. or do you spend 5 years and got his masters and ph. d in english literature in 1963 not in front of him when i asked him up to head to offend and, and show it to him. but if at all, is that what i can are you doing? um, an actual math. i'm high. i think somebody had to move to head to what i can actually i had a sauce ready and i had made some,
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i have my current rub. i'm gonna suck off a menu key. yeah. why shot and i've so a lesson majors, i'm gonna have to copy and i'll put something in the who, who missed them or not. i that know i had even had, it could be that the officer harvard, dr. edwards. so he joined columbia university in new york city as a member of the faculty of english and competitive literature where he stayed until his desk in 2003. columbia is one of the top 8 i v lead universities in the us were many leading politicians, economists and public figures have graduated. columbia also helped to loan shed woodside into the refined world of academia and literary criticism. no, not yet as a middling specialist in the west or public support of the comma standing in
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the midst of a place where i'm sitting right now used to be um, edward sites office. his secretary used to sit in one of the rooms. um, you know, down this down this hall and the room that you see here, almost everything is as it was when, when he was here, the end of the, the book, the this book, this gloss bookcase. this desk was so edwards or that chair was um, edwards. and um, this was um, there's a, an office with a lot of history. so he's in devon. might have remained purely literally. and his connection with the outer world simply a family didn't know to be for events in the middle east. in 1967, between the 5th and the 10th of june,
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is moving forward and defeated the combined on of egypt, syria and jordan. the 1967 changed the mass of the middle east and still hampers the peace process today. but it also had a profound effect. and so in the year 9 to 67 was a devastating year for me and everything i had grown up with i was in america by the time i was alone. being in new york, there was a sense of time for elizabeth, which appeared for the 1st time and not just amongst the jewish, but amongst everybody where you would walk down the street and people would say, are we doing? and it was always understood that was, is real, you know, poke you little states about to be over whelmed. by winning this tremendous victory was no longer the same person after 1967. the shock of the war drove me back to where i had all started the struggle over palestine. the appeal was formed in the
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mid sixties and begun to be represent recognized as a representative posted in cause. but after the $67.00 war and for the attitudes change, norbish us policy change. the, if you take a look at the media coverage, there's a spike in the 1967 which would remain very high. the coverage of israel is higher than almost any other countries incident. and this became a leading issue in american political life internationally as well. and edward was of course, affected by the image is quite true, and he said that his direct engagement and involvement in the issue really traces from 1967 by 715. i left that i found that what am i to get this house 15? somebody in a gun? no, you didn't use it and that's a whole then a much more than and who in for less than the. yeah. well then then what can i done?
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and then uh, so it goes to my feeling and, and hey, a little stuck the land for them often. not often who i'm unicorn uh, allowed to measure less of my not been doing a so as i said at the uh, every level of i live in the you need a new say one. yeah. cool and visit months and not. and what kind of understand they have. i saw huge preoccupation with the our world begun to manifest itself in his academic literary criticism and polemical writing. he began to study in the cultural per trail of arab peoples and place it in writing . the visual lines and media explored the relationship between the enlightenment, which under pins much of western high culture and philosophy and colonialism.
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this led to the publication of his most influential oriental. this in 1978, a work often considered to have forced westerners to re examine their perceptions of the salon. the this book grew in ways i hadn't for seen and then suddenly became something much more. it became the whole history of the representation of the other. i think it was one of the 1st books to try to do that the, the book was in just the scholarly thing, but also explained cliches had been used to govern the colonial state. the book was very original, innovative, and perceptive and acute study of the way in which the
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others, the east is in this case. the oriental countries were depicted, interpreted and understood in the scholarly literature of the west. the review lot of the but also in general culture. but what it did was open it open minds to a willingness many people at least to consider their own biases, predilections, passes police and ask them whether these were distorting and modifying or interpretation of other cultures. and website and then and then we started madison . well, when i'm looking at the finance conditioning, it was to shop. is it, how does she, if i had a cobra, a labrador to assist the items that would be
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a be activated shop while the people, whether or visited our shop? what, what, what am i had the, the city of the has it has it has the in the months only speak to the g. well, it a, it was about say it at the front of the pacific budget when, when the west side or they were kind of dissatisfied, multi did in showing how the west has misled itself in its literature, its novels. i was the 1st time we saw a western speaking intellectual pa, student who tried to show us the folly of oriental, his paintings or intellect, literature. the hours always have to be represented as is aging round the sullen, lifeless people who long see needed western helped and raised them to the heights of civilization. and edward got left across very well. and oriental is, i mean he,
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he spotted that from the start. i think the often, i mean, all the emphasis it became as a study in itself in united states off to you. right. that so he's influential writing found him almost superstar status in some of us academic circles. and he was a leading figure in a group of elite intellectual palestinian americans that begun to emerge in the mid seventies and eighties. their aim of creating a new image of the palestinians. and the american mind provoked huge hostility in pro is rarely new york, especially as saw he'd continue to attack is really violations of human rights of palestinians and condemned us policy. on the middle east, prominence, palestinians came under attack from both sides. from the far right jewish defence linked to the j d l, and from other muslims,
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as male all photo king of temple university and philadelphia, and his wife were stamped to death at their home. by a blacklist edward said himself was attacked, his office at columbia was torched, under white wing jewish magazine dumped him, the professor of talbot, a label that followed him for the rest of his life. the to israel seeks to deliberately silence the truth. launching a war on journalism targeting, which is 0 banning own operations in israel on shutting down our bureau in jerusalem. this is not just about the snack on journalism. it's an attack on the world's right to know. the truth must be protected and heard. and the stories of real people must be told. journalism is not
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a crime oppressing it is through centuries of expulsion and persecution, audiology was form that was the appropriate jewish identity facilitate the creation of israel and frame it within the western world order. in the 3 part series, the big picture charts, the rise of the still religious states from an imperial proxy to an indispensable colorado of the west and examines how this alliance has granted design this project, global and punitive. civic picture. how israel one, the west part one on the jersey to we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to places that others can know. as far as i said, i'm going all the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference on counting the cost as geo political tensions wise in the middle east . what stick you cannot make cost for the reach of a surprise financial stimulus in china,
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but we'll back revive it. slowing economy plus is in pop we facing if a mobile currency crisis. charging the cost on al jazeera, the a hello on side of fibers, and don't have the top stories on al jazeera. at least 10 people have been injured in northern israel, off the rockets from southern lebanon, hit these ready port city of haifa. it's the 1st time the center of the city has been hit since the war on gauze assaulted a year ago. c, c t, v. cameras captured the moment of the huge explosion assess of a ride sirens throughout the city. the strikes i'm is cause roads and buildings how much i'm doing reports from jordan's comp. so online, and that's because these rated government has bind $1.00 to 0.
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