tv Israelism Episode 1 Al Jazeera October 30, 2024 4:00am-5:01am AST
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special coverage in what could be the most globally consequential race of the white house in modern times, the us selections on the houses, the the, this is all to 0. i'm telling you navigate over the check on your world headlines is really military has killed at least 19 palestinians and an attack on bait lie. yeah, in northern gauze, on an air strike targeted 3 residential buildings. at least 30 people are reported to be stuck under the rubble and rescue teams or trying to find survivors. northern gaza has been under as really siege for more than 3 weeks. that attack happened to hours after another strike killed a police $93.00 palestinians in the same area. at least 25 were children or strikes
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had a 5 story building, sheltering dozens of forcibly displaced families. the spokesman for the us state department describe the attack as horrifying officials and 11 on saying is really strike on the southern china sarah font has killed at least 10 people, mostly women and children. earlier. israel targeted the suburb of how did sites on the outskirts of sight on that attack, killed the police 7 people, and wounded more than 20 people. there. say that is really army, gave no warnings before the strike. this is the now we were sitting and all of a sudden we had the messiah. when it hit the building, it came down. then a 2nd, me silence it. and the 2nd building came down and the one next to it to they have no mercy. and the no face with just one week until the us presidential election. the candidates are on a final post to and over undecided voters coming. harris has given her closing arguments in washington for knowing that her opponent donald trump,
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is obsessed with revenge. and his own personal interest, she spoke at the same spot where a trump address supporters before the attack on the us capital. in january 2021. sunday, one of the elected donald trump would walk into that office with an enemies list. when elected, i will walk in with it to do list of what i will get done for the american people. and i will work with everyone, democratic republicans and independents to help americans for working hard and still struggling to get ahead. meanwhile, donald trump is holding a campaign events in allentown, pennsylvania, and that's a key battleground state in the upcoming votes. on november, the 5th, he's accused his rifle of being launched on immigration for the past 9 years. we
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have been come all as important criminal migrants from prisons and jails. insane asylums and mental institutions from all around the world, from venezuela to the congo or the congo is supplying lots are taking them out of the jails. they're all putting up the jails. do you know that vin as well, and crime is down 72 percent, you know, why? because they're criminals are being taken into the united states of america, a permanent trump allies. these bannon has been released from prison after serving a form on sentence for contempt of congress. he was a key adviser to the former president's 2016 election campaign. bannon was convicted after refusing to testify to a congressional committee investigating the january 6th riots mirror. a russian attack on the ukrainians that have car keefe has left at least 4 people dead. the mayor assess 6 others were wounded and a medical center damaged car keepers,
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ukraine, 2nd city, and lies around 30 kilometers from the russian border. it's been a frequently targeted by air strikes. several people have died after a mass of hailstorm triggered flash floods in southern spain. the leader of valencia, regions at a number of bodies have been found. people have been advised to stay indoors and avoid non essential travel. argentina as largest public workers union has called for a 36 hour strike. in the capital bonus, i raise thousands, marched against a wave of austerity measures, introduced by president type, gave me lays government air rail and subway workers say they're struggling with low wages as they face job and budget cuts. those are the headlines on al jazeera coming up next. it's is realism. thanks for watching. the,
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the 1st time i've been to new york state. i met so many nice people. jewish americans will tell me things like we like you, but we don't like palestinians, even though i'm the only palestinian they know of course around that time i would take it personally. but then you come to realize that people do not know they know nothing about the sign in the housing is or have no idea about what policies are going through the
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coming into the house 9 for the 1st. and i remember asking people, what do you think should i do it? and the response that i always got was, you know, you're going to be killed the, as a curious young person like what is this thing that is so horrifying that you can't bear to let me see it the like, is it that bad the me
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found in the depths of my family's house, the i found some of my hebrew humor textbooks from elementary school. he saw oh, shows seem my is around congratulations to simone zimmerman for winning the israel jubilee contest. february 1990. i was 7. i had like a pretty traditional jewish upbringing. i grew up in l. a. i went to a jewish state school kindergarten through the end of high school into 2 issues, group jewish can i, family in israel. i lived in israel in high school on an exchange program. the israel was just treated like a core part of being that you so you didn't prayers and you did is around
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the israel something that i feel so passionately about like it's you know it's, it's my greatest passion and everything. israel. i became a jewish educator after my daughter started cuba school started teaching 2nd grade during the years i did 4th grade also and just to be able to start them on this wonderful journey. i mean, if you, but it's gets in your blood and leave teach is real. if the day school very well. we introduced them to the food into the music, into the culture in addition to the history and the geography. figure out which
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one is the israeli flag? draw a circle around every time you see the symbol of the state of israel. try your own symbol of the state of israel. we also celebrated holidays, obviously. so konica is really independence. all of it together have separate as real in judaism. i don't know. i can't. you know, some people i think can, to me it's the same. you can't separate it is real, is judaism and judy as an, as israel. and that is who i am and that is my identity. and i think every single thing that i experienced a long my life has melted into that like that was never you know, a divide for me. the i grew up in a conservative jewish households in atlanta, georgia. israel was a central part of everything we did in school, the,
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my elementary middle school as well as my high school. both had organized trips to israel, which was touted as one of the most important things you could do. the when i visited israel to the 1st time when i was 8 years old, i put a note in the co tell it in the western well saying that one day i hoped to live in israel and prosper the every one of our kids should be going over not for 10 days, for a minimum of a semester or a year. every time i send somebody over to israel to come back, all of a sudden they feel totally different about what they are as jews. when i was a teenager and i went to israel,
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it was amazing to me to travel in this place where hebrew was a language that i finally got to speak on the street with people and were jewish heroes. the st are named after them for planting seats. that eventually are going to blossom the does the average congregant understand that i'm teaching them to become zine is probably not, but it is part of my mad this so to speak. i learned about israel as this great miracle of jewish history for thousands of years. we were persecuted and israel is the place that you can go to be safe. my grandfather's family made it to israel. his immediate family worth some of the only ones who escaped the holocaust . many american jews. if not most people i know has family or friends that live in
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israel. israel is the insurance policy. it's still today. a jew doesn't have to worry. whereas you're going to go, god forbid, even here. know a holocaust survivor will say to you could never happen again. oh, i was born in poland. 1940. not a good place for jewish kids to be born. my parents were separated. my father went through a series of camps who knows why i survived and above them and a half jewish chairman parish. and so it's really became very, very significant in my life, even though 6000 miles away. i probably visited israel over a 100 times in my lifetime, you know,
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as reset. now my grand daughter is there for 2 weeks at high school. i did have many friends in israel growing up and every time i would visit israel, i felt closer and closer. the then jewish summer camps would always bring a big contingency of israel is to try to drive is really culture within the camp and connect to the american jews to is really culture the. so when i was in high school, i went on this 2 issues trip to israel, and one of the programs we did was called because not where we spent a day pretending to be soldiers and the israeli army. we were army uniforms and stuff like that was just sort of a normal part of what our childhood looks like. the
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summer camp in the middle of the night, they would wake us up and take us out. sometimes that was to pull pranks. and other times, i remember doing military games using the command because that stuff sneaking around . so any time the commander who was one of our counselors said, was that stuff we would all get on the ground, made a game out of simulating being in the military and sneaking around and having to be a part of that on youth programs that i participated in, in israel, oh, you can spend a whole week on and is really army base wearing army uniforms and going through a sort of simulation of basic training. and that's where some people, you know, learn, shoot guns for the 1st time. it's not just regular military games,
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it's specifically using is really military commands. often with this really counselor is giving them when you're a young kid that really drills it into that. this is something important and i want it to be a part of that. we often talked about the ways that you could be a good supporter of the jewish people. one was to join the army and the other was to go become in israel advocate. they were even clubs within school to work on advocating for israel. in my high school, sent a delegation to the a pack conference, a pack, the american israel public affairs committee. there was a feeble hotel to congress, which legislation affecting israel. they lights and which they don't. the bond between the united states and this room is unbreakable, today,
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unbreakable tomorrow. unbreakable for a pack is just the thing that you do like going to the a conference is just sort of seen is like a community event. here with us today are leaders from across the pro israel community, including a foxman i learned a long time ago. there is no way you can say no to a but you know, i don't know to what extent want anybody makes a difference. i try to make a difference. jewish education is still a major priority for the future and certainly relationship days for help. the if you were to ask me, you got a $100000000.00. how would you change the future of american choose? i would make trips is real available to any jew rescheduled. wanted to go make that
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experience. you're doing good now it's 12 birds, right? the you do, you to be are so just a bronze and we love and knowledge and conviction ready to sway public opinion in use, right? the learning about the quote unquote conflict is something that is part or programming as something that you have to learn how to defend israel from the lives that other people are saying. and you have to be able to tell people the truth.
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by the time i got to college, i had teachers who said to me, people hate israel, people are attacking israel. people don't know the truth about his role and where are the only people who actually know the truth about his role. if you're a jewish college student, hello, is your central address for jewish life on campus. as a freshman, i remember walking into hello, it was one of the 1st places i want when i got to campus, it's a place where you can go for meals to meet other young jewish people. pro is rod because he is a central part of how they work to engage jewish. young people, the as the director of engagement and programs said hello, this campus happens to be very proactive for as real. a lot of people have a passion, a lot of people love is real and there's a lot of advocacy here on campus and lots of different ways, lots of different groups. how did you become involved in advocacy? if it is, you know, that kind of get to just because a new campus,
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i didn't really know where to go. and i really did find a lot of friends here. i came here on and off, but then when i went in the birth rate trip and kind of got some of the stuff tom jack and all that or got to know people a lot better and just gotten to is where a lot better. i came back and i do that, i want to a lot more myself into to allow that usually the on campus. and just as real advocacy in general on birth right? we had is really, so i'll just let us throughout the entire trip. you're so much and you learn the reason that this or it's just the feeling that i don't think any of us could ever imagine that my job is doing, is there any program on campus and that relates to a jewish events. cultural political sort is really events. uh, cultural political. i would say name a university in america. we probably have a person there. i like to talk about the army law because that's an experience that
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i lived through. and i have a lot of personal stories that couple of students this again i'm, i'm thinking about joining the idea of one day. so my 1st thing is saying them, are you sure? because it's not an easy this, it's not an easy decision. that being said, it will probably end up being the most meaningful experience that you ever go through. you're going to tell your stories about it. one of our former young m series just graduated into the air force. and that's the greatest gift you can get. you know, and, and we actually have that quite a few of our former students joined the idea. amazing. i mean, just amazing music kids, these are 1819 year old like something at the end of the 7 years. all you have like us to do find your sense of purpose. all my friends are so proud of me and they understand this something now like i have to do almost 10 percent of my graduating
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class that my jewish high school showing that he is really army. and i had many friends from my summer camp news group to join the army as well. the part of the coming part of is really, society is to join the military. when i was in high school, i told my parents, i don't even need to apply to college because i'm gonna just join the is really military and make of the living as well. i honestly have self for many years that i fit in better and is rarely society than i do in american society. even before i moved there and i wanted to defend what i saw as my country. so when i enlisted, i was a my gift, which is a heavy machine gun nest during my basic and advanced training,
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and then they put me on a light machine gun. we were training for training for strategy to conquer hilltops and congress open spaces. one week was focused on urban warfare in close quarters and that was simulated in what looked like air of housing. after the 7 months of our training, we were in deployed to the west bank, the, our missions included working in 2 different check points. patrolling villages on foot in full gear and bullet proof vests. we would go into apartment buildings,
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go up to the roof and make sure that we could be seen so that we could make our presence found the we wanted them to know that we were watching. that was the goal of the mission. the we would set up what's called a check post, which is a check points that is situated at a major intersection at check points, we would stop people create a traffic jam check their id is check their trunks every day on their way to work or on their way to visit their family to keep them on their toes essentially. and they being palestinians even though israel was a central part of everything we did in the score,
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we never really discussed the palestinians. the it was presented to us that israel was basically an empty wasteland. when the jews arrived there were some errands there and they said there was no organized people. they had really treated the land poorly. yeah. they're, they're palestinians and they just want to kill us all and want us to leave land. i just don't think i have any conception of anything about what it means to be a palestinian. besides that, it means that you're a person who chose she is, or once the coaches, it was always presented to us that the arabs only no terrorism
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the ever since i came back from the states i, i realize is that the best way to help people understand the reality impose on us by the state of israel is for them to be that the one thing that i want to give the rest of my life for is to help people understand the reality that is going on in palestine. i grew up all of my life in this occupation. i grew up in bethlehem in palestine to be honest, i do have my days where i wake up and look in the mirror and ask what is going on and, and what can i even do today to change any thinking the situation i remember from the youngest is growing up with my parents, phone this morning. b o is telling me not to go up to go on the street. have to play on the street because of the soldiers themselves or sexual 1st experience with
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a soldier is down, right? you know, especially within your house or your family's house later tonight, look at the most to work after. my 1st experience with the soldiers. as a child was an experience that put the fear in the like. this will be we have only 10 minutes to take our belongings and leave the office so they can shut it down towards victory for the government. get this one of those containing refugees, the coming, the actions of israel's government. the military invitation has been described as the closing of the policy
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on marian shaheen. and i've been making films about since 2006 when i moved there and 2005 thousands, we recovering from the 38. your occupation by israel. people were hopeful that their lives would improve, their dreams have been destroyed. and all that remains on account of the loss. garza shadow dreams on l. g 0. we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to the places that others can. all i want to hear god by the parties on purpose has the time and it's to go live on the go live to work. another story that may not be mainstream the, the way that you tell the story is what can make
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a difference. and i'm told stories from asia and the pacific on now to see if the this is all just or i'm getting obligate over the truck on your world headlines. the is really military has killed the police, 19 palestinians in an attack on bad law. here in northern garza, an error strike targeted 3 residential buildings. at least 30 people are believed to be report stuck under the rubble rescue teams are trying to find survivors. northern garza has been under is really siege for more than 3 weeks. that attack happens hours after another strike killed at least $93.00 palestinians in the same area. at least 25 where children air strikes had a 5 story building,
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sheltering dozens of forcibly displaced families. us officials in lebanon saying is really strike on the southern tunnel sort of fund has killed at least 10 people, mostly women and children. earlier israel targeted the suburb of how to cite the on the outskirts of sight on that attack, killed at least 7 people and wounded more than 20 people there. say that is really army gave no warnings before the strike for what i see for nowadays we were sitting and all of a sudden we heard the messiah. when it hit the building, it came down. then a 2nd, we saw it and the 2nd building came down and the one next to it too, they have no mercy and no face. with just one, we come to the us presidential election. the candidates are on a final push to win over undecided voters. pamela harris have given her closing arguments in washington, warning that her opponent donald trump, is obsessed with revenge and his own personal interest. meanwhile,
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donald trump is hilda riley in allentown, pennsylvania. it's a key battleground states and the upcoming votes. on november, the 5th, he accused his rival of being likes on immigration. a russian attack on the ukrainian city of car keepers left at least 4 people dead. the mayor says 6 others were wounded and a medical center damaged. car keepers, ukraine, 2nd city in lies around 30 kilometers and the russian border. it's been frequently targeted by air strikes. several people have died after a mass of hailstorm triggered flash floods in southern spain. the leader of valencia regions set a number of bodies have been found. people have been advised to stay indoors. those are the latest headlines on al jazeera up. next we go back to is realism. thanks for watching. bye bye. for now. as the
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youngest is growing up with my parents, souls warning b o is telling me not to go up to going to street have to play on the street because of the soldiers. and this of course, my 1st experience with the soldier is down. right. you know, especially within your house or your family's house, late at night. they love to work after my 1st experience with the soldiers as a child was an experience that put to fear in an american jewish soldier, talking to my father and yelling at him and shouting it to him, which of course with a child they feel very ashamed and insulted, and then my father, cuz i want him to, we are american citizens as well, to,
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to him in an american accent that asked him where he was from. and then the soldier was almost like, shocked by this, by this question. because for his mind that it was to say, it is really just people that he's talking to an american and it's all in life from chicago. and then this, this reality that like even as a child, i remember this, this, this american soldier who just moved here to be part of an army to play cowboys and indians who comes here from new york or from chicago. and the, this is what makes like an 18 years old. it was 10 days for free in palace. one wasn't a foreigner. and it's ok. how superior right to the right of the population.
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because somebody stole them. it's this is our labs. this is ours. that's what was conveyed to us the and got disney that people look at 1000 and palestinians from the point of view of the oppressor. not from the point of view of the press the i think what i knew about who was in israel before the state was created is basically there were some jews always there and most jews weren't exile. we'd always here and to go back the, the idea that there were native inhabitants that lived there was not even part of my frame of reference the or the
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franklin that was carried out by the founders of the state of israel. my mother's family were expelled from the largest palestinian city pre 1948, which was the city of yeah, 5 my father was a new born at that time. he was carried by his family. they ended up in bethlehem waiting for the address piece to come to an end, so they would be able to go back home for us. none of those people were ever allowed back home. my father's family wasn't jerusalem up until 1948. when the what happened, he was shot by sniper and was killed on the spot. his children actually dragged his body down and buried it in the courtyard of the house. a few days later, when did you wish for courses took over this neighborhoods. they demanded the all
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the non jews of that neighborhood via the was the biggest mess exit is percentage wise of the people from the land in modern history, the ethnic cleansing of palestine. that our macbeth catastrophe is a tragedy. ok fast or be that hit almost every single palestinian family, nearly $750000.00 victims traumatizing an almost every possible that the nearly 70 percent of the land established day became under the control of the states of his route. but also, as i told him that we were told it was a land without a people for people to find
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a land. and we came back from the ashes of the holocaust. the state of israel was birth. the rights of the people that lived here does not exist in that narrative. and other than us being an obstacle, the macbook continues. it started in 1948 and continues until this the, the in 9067. the state of israel managed to complete its control over palestine by taking over the 33 of the west bank and the director of cause of the page. here's the good stuff, more maps of greater 0 that's the sort of, you know, the whole in, we're always taught that the whole land was ours. mean, you know, that's sort of what they teach us the after the,
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my 267 war is real. put a very forceful, very violent military force to dominate and control the life of the palestinians that continues until the state the the, the imitation of is re the control. busy over the land of palestine is complete colonization of the the rest of the building homes for those who are born to jewish families. and also they want to sing the homes of those were born for palestinian family. the part of sentience kicked
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out from their homes, confiscated by stuff. there's no hard feelings. my house and someone else can. no. does this a massive movement to confiscate land to build settlements to expands solomons before we were even fully trained, we were deployed to protect settlements. it was all for the security of the settlements. the federal filled up provide recommend with the dosage raise, living in different colonies, and settlements throughout the region. and those individuals are subject to is very simple. why do you have our seniors living within the exact same directory as our subject dentist, brand new ministry law? and american citizen comes here,
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he has more rights then i would have my entire life the the we are in the west bank where in the quarter said settlements this is one of the road blocks that kind of ensure that the cars get check. see that no terrace are coming in i lived in america and then i came back to 0 by myself of age of 17 to serve in the army. and there are elements what i was told that you how does the elements that don't accept our presence here, but those it's just tough for them. it's a great vision coming to fruition in our time. and there's nothing going to stop us
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the from the day you are born. you live in day in day, out, day in day, out without experiencing a day of freedom. promising is have to be forced to live in cages. so i, um, i'm is really born and raised as a youngest, really growing up my grandparents lived in the center of jerusalem. the battle for jerusalem at least 26 people are reported dead people i knew were injured and killed. and from a very young age, i knew i'm going to be joining the military. i was never in the palestinian house
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to live barge into one in the middle of the night. the one thing that i did routinely was a mission where you are order is take over palestinians, families home and use that house as a military points, no warrant. you don't call in advance. it's the military occupation. and during my service, there were many moments where i saw myself acting violently, and there were a moments of a shame that we can obtain any palestinian just because he looks as us in the wrong way. that's the system that's based on violence. oh, the 2nd
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the security, the security is about security is a security supplement for the when i was stationed in the west bank one day, one of my commanders came and grabbed me and one other soldier and said, there is a detainee at the hole. while i check points, and we need to go pick him up and bring him to the detention center that's in the base. when we got there, the palestinian d cheney who was maximum in his early twenties, was sitting on the curb with his hands tied behind his back with a zip ties and blindfolded we got to the detention
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center within the base and right outside there were about 8 soldiers waiting for us they size come big grabbed the detainee from our hands and threw him to the ground while he's still blindfolded in hands tied behind his back. and they started kicking him for a good few minutes. i was responsible for this man's well being. i was responsible to bring him from the check point to the detention center. that was my job. and right outside the fence of the dissension center, they grab him from me and they started meeting him as i i felt responsible. but my commander wasn't saying anything. so how could i say anything the entire time that this was happening?
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a military police officer was standing just inside the fence watching smoking a cigarette. as soon as these guys were done checking this palestinian man, the military police officer tossed his cigarette and came, brought him inside the detention center. the and i didn't even speak up and i didn't speak up and that's just one of many stories that i have from my time in the west bank. and so it's many years for me to really come to terms with my part in it. the only after i got out of the army did i begin to realize that the stuff that i did in the day today just from
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working and checkpoints, controlling villages. that in and of itself was immoral palestinians in the west bank, even though their lives are controlled by the state of israel from morning noon and night are not even c, a radically citizens of the country in which they live. you see in some way what non democracy looks like up close when people look at the west bank today and say, this isn't a part of the system. it's not just throwing out a war policy any lives under a different legal system then. and there's really subtler living nexstar the you see on the grounds or speech the past due means what understand this is a process that their conversation part by the gene. i remember crossing that
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checkpoint into bethlehem, and before this i had been very much opposed to ever using the word apartheid which seems to live night in the difference just by crossing this wall. change that for me and, and, and send the serving and serving. and these where the army is obviously one way of supporting israel. but there's also another modern battle that is happening on campuses each and every single day in your standing in the front of it. and how mean the, is there any government needs or a people of thank you for that? and that's why they put me here probably for that. so uh, there's a lot of p, i to be me this universities think god is fairly
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a political but i've heard all over the place how universities are these hop as an anti semitic advantages real work. remember very vividly, i was sitting in my dorm room with a friend of mine. we got a phone call that an anti, as earl bill was being introduced in the student government, we both in on the way called our parents both got sense talking points and then we went into the student government meeting the, the student center at the university of california berkeley calling on campus
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officials to divest from companies that supply weapons that israel uses and its occupation of the palestinian territories. your siding with the policy is on is really costs and you're conflict. there's just no question about it. i just knew it was this bad thing that i had to fight my services if you were trying to make me feel marginalized on my own campus. and i remembered, oh, of us thinks, well, you shouldn't boy kind of israel because it's applying a double standard. and you shouldn't a boy because these are all because it's unfair to single out his room. i remember the we're a we're needing the human i still remember you have these palestinian students who get up and said, you know jewish students, you are crying about feeling silence and marginalized. you know,
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my aunts and cousins didn't sleep for weeks while bonds were falling overhead and gaza. what do you have to say that if divestment is hostile, then then where do we begin to describe the hostility of a military occupation? i was thrown into all these conversations where people were throwing round all these words that i never heard before, occupation settlements apartheid ethnic cleansing. i just never heard anyone use any of these terms before. i thought i knew so much about israel, but i didn't really know what anybody was talking about when they were talking. all of these things i remember coming to hello and saying, why are we answering calls to new students questions? i felt really embarrassed by it because mostly i felt like we weren't doing a good job, refuting their arguments. do we not have an actual counter argument besides like rocket symbols, to enter the answers i'm it isn't people people. i couldn't get an answer
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from anybody. and that was really disturbing for me when there are these people called post indians, who thinks it is their own wields, all this power over their lives and don't have right, don't have water. what like literally what is this? how is this happening? how do i, how do i respond to that? people that have a problem. israel does a good chance. they're misguided in some way that everyone has the freedom in israel and you can have a new religion if you could do whatever you want in israel. but only those around in the middle is a lot of miss, like a lot of it's a lot of this information. so that comes from misinformation. some of that comes from ignoring. so that comes from lives. and it's very hard to deal with that in any kind of a positive way when they're coming from such a place of not understanding. but the reality is the situation when they just have
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this in their, in their head the, all this misinformation and all these life. and so how pro palestinian has become pro the social justice i wanted to know answers from within my own community. and nobody could answer those questions for me. oh is it that i am like the best the jewish community has to offer? i've been through all of the trainings all the program and i don't know what the occupational so i don't know what the settlement so essentially got to a point where i found myself wanting answers to the questions that palestinian students were asking. and so in letting me on a process of trying to configure those things out for myself, what is this thing that is so horrifying that you can't bear to let me see it? the
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summer after my freshman year i went to palestine and i knowingly cross the line for the 1st time the i don't think i realized the extent to which what i would come to see on the ground with really shocked me and verify me the what we've been told is that the only way that jews can be safe is if palestinians are not safe. and i guess the more i learned about that, the more i came to see that as
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a lie for american just coming here and listening to us and hearing us and seeing our humanity and understanding that we are not just out of sitting in bunkers, planning the next attack against israel's that we do have a desire to live in peace and to have our freedom into the walk in our streets. indeed, our restaurants and we have, it's crazy that i have to say this, that we are real human beings, that this one to survive and live in like all other people in this world the we decided to bring the crisis of american jewish department, israel to the doorsteps of jewish institutions to force that conversation in public, [000:00:00;00] the
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israel is duties and in judaism is israel. many american cheese are raised with a one sided view of israel. this is our land. that's what was conveyed to us found in the depths of my family's house, but the tide is shifting as younger. jewish americans learn the reality about these rails treatments of the palestinians. i was never in the palestinian house to live barge into one in the middle of the night. it's a military occupation is right. it is every episode to analysis era the bolts of the gulf waters is still represented by all the southern states being fairly warm. but this is proper winter coming in their, their weather to come together. you develop jaren's, thunderstorms. and that's going to be the case. again, we used to that and they could be really big because a contrast across temperature wise, this is nice and warm. 20 some most eastern states, and that's a single figures further west with the coast star in the cascades or, and the rocky mountains. that's wednesday on thursday. the same process continues.
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therefore, you drop a 10 degrees and for example, chicago has the showers go through all the thunder storms go through is cutting down in texas too. but this is incoming, yet more winter for north western states and british columbia, a pretty wet in central america, from the time across the small onto the caribbean. charles, at any time of day, certainly is a daily event, with a steady breeze blowing them in a heavy rain, possibly for the south. and i'm thinking of costa rica in panama. i'm be, i'm not into columbia, but these oper 10 sho flesh flat stones. i have to say not affecting much of mexico . i'm unfortunately not affecting much of preseyada. we would like to see vault the mall. there's bit more of a bloom on wednesdays, full cost of animals on tuesday on monday. and these are useful stones sciences that though it's hot since young, nice and warm knowledge and teen or a weekly look at the world's tough business stories. what is
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a great cost in the united states? main for the rest of us from global markets and economies, should that vivian to ask if people have sent an lifetime working? that's part of the answer to understand how it affects the nights. counting the cost on jersey or the civilians in northern dogs. the search for survivors in the aftermath and is really bombing raids that kills more than a 100 people in one day. the, you're watching out a 0 life for my headquarters and don't find any navigate to also ahead or rescue operation is underway inside on in southern lebanon officer and is really straight
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