Nasser Alja'fari d'Al-quds illustre la nature expansionniste d'Israel (5/15/02)
VIDEO - L'AUTRE MONDE - De la Shoa au Nakba Day - Histoire d'un devoir de mémoire sélectif
Feeling the Hate in Tel-Aviv (Sequel to the video youtube censored)
Israël: adoption d’une loi interdisant la commémoration de la "Nakba"
Le parlement israélien adopte les lois « Nakba » et « Ségrégation »
Israël veut tuer la mémoire palestinienne
The Nakba Law deepens apartheid in Israel
Israel Passes Law Against Mourning Its Existence
Israel criminalizes commemoration of the Nakba
L'occupation interdit le livre "Identité" qui parle de la Nakba
War on Palestinian Memory: Israel Resolves Its Democracy Dilemma
Israel Begins Witch Hunt against Palestinian Educators, Pupils who Honored Land Day
When the victims are unworthy then holocaust denial is approved
Once again, the United States is applying significant pressure on Israel to advance the Middle East peace process. Not satisfied with Israel’s freeing of over a hundred Palestinian terrorists with blood on their hands, Israel is called upon, once again, to accept the 1967 armistice lines, better known to informed Mideast observers as the “Auschwitz Lines”, as the basis for a starting point to the peace talks.
Ceux que le PDG de la B'nai Brith appelle "des observateurs informés", c-à-d ceux qui qualifient les vieilles frontières israéliennes de 1967 de "frontières d'Auschwitz", ce sont LES POLITICIENS ET ANALYSTES SIONISTES ISRAÉLIENS LES PLUS EXTÉMISTES! C'est connu dans la société israélienne que ceux qui tiennent ce discours en Israël ce sont les politiciens les plus à droite (incluant également plusieurs analystes qui se disent "de gauche" mais qui suivent quand même les idées radicales pro-colonisation normalisées par la droite).
Tourism minister tells Ynet that 'no gestures should be made prior to talks'; objects to discussing 1967 borders, dubbing them 'Auschwitz' borders.
Landau: 1967 lines are 'Auschwitz borders
Tourism Minister Uzi Landau called pre-1967 lines "Auschwitz borders" ahead of Sunday's cabinet meeting. Landau's comments, quoting a well-known turn of phrase by former foreign minister Abba Eban from 1969, came after US Secretary of State John Kerry visited the region and called for a treaty based on pre-1967 lines with land swaps.
Lieberman: The Conflict with the Arabs Has No Solution
He said that
Israel must not agree that the negotiations be conducted on the basis of
the pre-1967 borders, reminding that the late former Minister Abba Eban
“called them Auschwitz borders" due to the fact that they would
guarantee Israel’s destruction. In addition, said Lieberman, it is
important to make clear to the PA that "there will be no construction
freeze. Not in Jerusalem and not in the Jewish communities in Judea and
Samaria."
The
Simon Wiesenthal Center commended President Obama's call for further
democratization in the Arab world but expressed deep disappointment that
he called for Israel's return to the pre-June 1967 borders.
"Auschwitz" Borders: A term coined by Israel's Foreign Minister Abba Eban who warned that a return to pre-1967 Six Day War borders would be Auschwitz borders for Israel.
"Auschwitz" Borders: A term coined by Israel's Foreign Minister Abba Eban who warned that a return to pre-1967 Six Day War borders would be Auschwitz borders for Israel.
Minister Landau: Yes, They're Auschwitz Borders
Tourism Minister stands behind his statement opposing a return to pre-1967 lines.
Israeli Minister: A Palestinian State is not the Solution
The meeting with Tourism Minister Uzi Landau took place a day after he publicly quoted the well-known maxim of former Foreign Minister Abba Eban, "The '67 borders remind us of the borders of Auschwitz."
These words were uttered by Landau at the beginning of a government
meeting that took place on Sunday (May 26) and were widely quoted in the
news broadcasts. (...)
Isn't the Holocaust comparison somewhat exaggerated? After all, the president proclaims the vision of two states, and allows us to understand that he and the prime minister are in agreement … (...) Former Foreign Minister Abba Eban used that expression in 1969. Dozens of years have passed since then …
"That doesn't make these borders less Auschwitz-like. Before '67, they didn't have Katyusha rockets and missiles to the extent owned today by Hezbollah in the north and Hamas in the south that constitute a strategic threat to Israel. One thing must be clear: A Palestinian state is not the solution."
Israel's Post-Traumatic Society
To Understand Israel, Understand the Holocaust
Given this state of affairs, one can certainly fathom the distrust that
Israelis have in their surroundings. Their fear of a second attempt to
exterminate them is certainly understandable, as is the term “Auschwitz
borders,” coined by legendary Foreign Minister Abba Eban [1966–1974] in
reference to a return to the 1967 borders. A nation which experienced
that less than a hundred years ago will have a hard time shutting
themselves up in a country that is just nine miles wide, especially
given the fact that there are hundreds of millions of Muslims stirring
behind those borders, and that some of those Muslims refer to the Jews
as “the descendants of apes and pigs,” call openly for jihad and refuse
to come to terms with the existence of a Jewish entity in the historic
land of Israel.Isn't the Holocaust comparison somewhat exaggerated? After all, the president proclaims the vision of two states, and allows us to understand that he and the prime minister are in agreement … (...) Former Foreign Minister Abba Eban used that expression in 1969. Dozens of years have passed since then …
"That doesn't make these borders less Auschwitz-like. Before '67, they didn't have Katyusha rockets and missiles to the extent owned today by Hezbollah in the north and Hamas in the south that constitute a strategic threat to Israel. One thing must be clear: A Palestinian state is not the solution."
Israel's Post-Traumatic Society
To Understand Israel, Understand the Holocaust
Reckless Rites: Purim and the Legacy of Jewish Violence
(Elliott Horowitz), Intro:
Au printemps 2004, Jeffrey Goldberg rapportait dans le New Yorker une série de troublants entretiens qu'il avait récemment mené avec les colons juifs en Cisjordanie et à Gaza. «Les Palestiniens sont Amalek», déclare Benzi Lieberman, président du Conseil des colonies. «Nous allons les détruire», poursuit Lieberman, "Nous n'allons pas les tuer tous. Mais nous allons détruire leur capacité de penser en tant que nation. Nous allons détruire le nationalisme palestinien."
IN the spring of 2004,(...) Jeffrey Goldberg reported in the New Yorker about a series of disturbIing interviews he had recently conducted with Jewish settlers in the West Bank and Gaza. "The Palestinians are Amalek," he was told by Benzi Lieberman, chairman of the Council of Settlements. "We will destroy them," Lieberman continued. "We won't kill them all. But we will destroy their ability to think as a nation. We will destroy Palestinian nationalism."