THE ABSURD TIMES
Above: LATUFF points it out, summarizes, everything. There is also a photograph of Bibi, See if you can tell which is which.
Perhaps the
Disgusting Times would be a better title these days. Israel has long been the single most offensive agent and primary
antagonist to sanity since 1948 and now it continues. The only surprise is seeing some more sane opposition in other
countries.
What has
been happening is summarized very well in the interview below. We can add that the party in Florida's
satellite feed was not simply "lost," as mentioned, but the manner of
termination clearly indicates deliberate action on someone's part in support of
the genocide in Israel today.
We can only
add a few inanities here: during all of this, Israel complained of rising
"anti-Semitism" in Europe and demanded that all countries crack down
on it. Perhaps the most direct way
would be to force every European to wear a Beanie or be punished. For course, we can ask what causes this
rising anti-Semitism, but the answer is too obvious.
The
overwhelming of U.S. Citizens are simply too stupid to think about this
seriously. A recent discussion on one
of the "liberal" outlets talked about Carter's scandal of
Iran-Contra. Now if a liberal outlet, so
called, is so stupid and uninformed, what does one expect from FOX or the
others? (For the record, it was Reagan
and Ollie North behind that. Carter did not invade Panama, either. However, typing up all of the stupidities
and misinformation in our media is simply and idiotic waste of time and an
impossible task.
So, let's
simply go to the interview:
TUESDAY, JULY 8, 2014
"Incitement Starts at the Top": After Arab Teen’s Murder, Israeli Gov’t Accused of Fueling Hatred
The threat of an Israeli assault on the Gaza
Strip comes amidst heavy unrest in the West Bank and in Arab towns inside
Israel following the killings of a Palestinian teenager and three teenage
Israelis. The Israeli teens were abducted while hitchhiking near the West Bank
settlement where they lived. Their bodies were found last week, after more than
two weeks of Israeli raids throughout the West Bank that saw more than 200
Palestinians arrested and more than a dozen killed. In an apparent act of
revenge right after the Israeli teens’ bodies were found, a Palestinian
teenager named Mohammed Abu Khdeir was abducted near his home in East
Jerusalem. His dead body was found shortly after, showing signs he was burned
live. On Monday, Israel said it had arrested six suspects and that three have already
confessed. While Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other top
Israeli leaders have condemned the killing, Khdeir’s death followed calls for
vengeance from Israeli political leaders as well as in marches and on social
media. We are joined by two guests: Ali Abunimah, co-founder of The Electronic
Intifada and author of the new book, "The Battle for Justice in
Palestine," and Miko Peled, a peace activist and author of "The
General’s Son: Journey of an Israeli in Palestine." The book’s title refers
to a unique family history: Miko’s father, "Matti" Peled, served as a
general in the 1967 war and later became a peace activist, calling for Israel
to withdraw from the territory he helped to capture.
TRANSCRIPT
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in
its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: Miko Peled is our guest, coming up. This is Democracy Now!,
democracynow.org, The War and
Peace Report. He’s an Israeli peace activist and writer. His father was an
Israeli general. He’s the author of The
General’s Son: Journey of an Israeli in Palestine. His father was an
Israeli general who ultimately became a peace activist, saying that Israel
should give back the territories that he helped to capture in 1967. I’m Amy
Goodman, with Aaron Maté. Miko is with us in Jerusalem.
Can you talk about the Israeli soldiers that
are amassing along the Israeli border—the Gaza border?
MIKO PELED: Yeah, hi. You know, I have to say, hearing Mohammed Omer
and his description from Gaza—you know, he’s only about 45 minutes away from
me. I’m sitting here in Jerusalem in an air-conditioned room, plenty of light,
plenty of water, no shortages of any kind. And this horrendous, horrendous
reality that he’s describing, that is about to become worse as the result of an
impending Israeli ground invasion, is a direct result of the criminal siege
that Israel has been imposing on Gaza for years now, putting 1.6 million people
in a cruel and inexcusable—under a cruel and inexcusable siege.
But I think it’s important to take a look at
this in a larger context. I think one of the problems is people look at all
these—at the current state of affairs as though it’s isolated. Israel has been
bombing and killing people in Gaza since it created the Gaza Strip in the early
1950s. On a regular base, Israel goes in and kills civilians in Gaza. This has
been going on for six decades. Of course, it’s getting worse. The technology is
getting better. And the casualty count is getting worse. But this is part of a
larger issue, a larger problem. And the problem is that people equate the
Palestinian response to Israeli violence and to Israeli aggression as
terrorism, instead of realizing that this is an act of resistance. The
Palestinians have been the subject of oppression and violence by Israel from
the very beginning that the state of Israel was established. This is why we
have a Gaza Strip. This is why we have hundreds of thousands of refugees in the
Gaza Strip and other places. These people were forced out of their home as a
result of an act of terrorism, which created the state of Israel in 1948. These
people have been resisting, and they’ve been resisting in other places, mostly
by nonviolent means. Of course, the more violent, the more the armed struggle
gets a lot more media, but mostly by nonviolent means. They have been part of a
brutal oppression for six decades.
And what we see today is, of course, the
result of one straw that literally broke the camel’s back, and we see uprising
in places that we haven’t seen before, like, you know, inside Palestinian
communities inside Israel. These are Israeli citizens. And Israel planning to
go in and kill more Palestinians, knowing full well they’re going to be burning
more Palestinian children, just like the one who was burned by these four or
five individuals who were not soldiers, but Israeli military has been doing
this for decades. This is nothing new. And I think it’s important to take a
look at this not as an isolated issue, not as an isolated incident, but as part
of a larger issue that has to be resolved, has to be resolved so that Israelis
and Palestinians can move forward finally.
AARON MATÉ: Miko Peled, you were arrested recently at a protest in the
West Bank, protesting the occupation. You’re one of a group of Israelis who
regularly takes part in these kind of solidarity actions. Has the brutal
killing of Mohammed Khdeir done anything to raise discussion about the
settlements, about the fact that this occupation is continuing and Palestinians
are subjected to these types of—this type of brutality every day?
MIKO PELED: I think it only has done so in that the foreign press is
suddenly interested again. But in terms of the discussion on the Palestinian
side, this is nothing new. This particular brutal case of murder is really
nothing new. I mean, Israel—what do you think happens when Israel drops tons of
bombs from the air on Gaza? Children get burned.
The issue of the
settlement is also one of these absurd issues that people talk about, knowing
full well there can be no change. Israel will never stop building cities and
towns wherever it likes, everywhere in the Middle—everywhere in what Israel
considers the land of Israel. And so, this whole debate of settlements and no
settlements, again, has to be taken in a larger issue. Israel has been building
settlements on occupied Palestinian land since 1948, since the state of Israel
was established. You know, the entire country is occupied Palestine. And it’s
time to wake up and talk about it like this. This whole debate about the
occupied Palestinian territories being only part of the country and the
settlement problem being only part of the country is absurd. Palestinian towns
within Israel, Palestinian towns where Palestinians who are Israeli citizens
reside, have settlements all around them, and all of these settlements are not
considered settlements because they’re within what is considered proper Israel,
but these are all built on Palestinian land. And Palestinian towns within
Israel are shrinking and getting smaller, their resources are declining, and
their landmass is disappearing. So we have a larger issue here.
And, you know, I
protest, others protest. Of course, Bil’in, where I was arrested last
time—quite brutally, I have to say—is, has become the Mecca of the nonviolent
resistance, and people from all over the world come and visit there. Yet the
Israeli army shows up. They shoot amounts of tear gas that are obscene. They
shoot shot grenades at point blank, pointing them at people. And then, of
course, I stood there, and I was talking, or at least trying to talk, to one of
the commanders, and at one point he got angry, pushed me around and then
proceeded to detain me and arrest me. But, you know, my story is nothing. I get
to go home at the end of the day. We have thousands of Palestinian prisoners in
Israeli jails, the vast majority of whom have never been charged with acts of
violence, which of course represents the Palestinian resistance. And these are
the people that we have to be talking about. These are the people who have to
be released.
The siege on Gaza has
to be lifted. If Israel doesn’t like the Qassam rockets coming out of Gaza,
Israel knows what to do, because this is a response to the Israeli occupation.
This is the response to the Israeli brutal oppression of Palestinians for
almost seven decades. So, again, it’s important to put this in perspective and
not to treat this like it’s an isolated issue. And again, Mohammed Omer is 45
minutes away from me, and he has no access to clean drinking water. Families
don’t know what to do once the bombs start falling. They have no shelters. They
can’t escape. Israel has locked them in this massive prison. And I don’t know
what kind of expectation there is that the Palestinians would just sit there in
Gaza and not respond, and not respond with any kind of violence. You know,
being as ineffective as these Qassam rockets are, at least they’re some
expression of anger and some desire to be noticed.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re also joined in Los Angeles by Ali Abunimah, the
co-founder of The Electronic
Intifada, author of the new book, The
Battle for Justice in Palestine. Ali, can you talk about the situation at
this point—the soldiers amassed along the border of Gaza right now, the bombing
that’s going on of Gaza, Israel setting up this operation—they call it
Protective Edge, saying that they are responding to rocket fire coming from
Gaza?
ALI ABUNIMAH: Good morning, Amy. I’m very happy to hear the context and
analysis of both Mohammed Omer and Miko because this has been totally missing
from the mainstream media in this country and even, sadly, from progressive
media for so long. But I think it’s so important to respond to this Israeli
claim, which we heard in the news at the beginning of the show from the Israeli
spokesperson, Peter Lerner, that Israel is just responding. And this talking
point is repeated ad nauseamby
Israel and its apologists in the media. I mean, just look at the numbers from
the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs on protection of
civilians. The reason this is happening now, in addition to everything we
heard, is that the number of Palestinians killed by Israel since the start of
this year is about triple the number in the same period as 2013. And it’s grim
to talk about human beings in terms of statistics, but just up to the end of
June—so, not even including the horrifying slaughter that we just heard about
from Mohammed and that has occurred in the past few days—until the end of June,
Israel had killed 31 Palestinians since the beginning of the year. That
compares with 11 in the same period last year, so three times as many
Palestinians killed, 1,463 injured. Why do we never hear that? We only hear
about the rockets coming, which Miko talked about.
And this is happening,
Amy, at a time when there is unprecedented—and I would even say genocidal—incitement
against Palestinians. For example, the statement from the up-and-coming
political star in Israel, Ayelet Shaked of the Jewish Home party, which is in
Netanyahu’s ruling coalition, who actually issued a call for genocide of the
Palestinian people on June 30th. She declared that the entire Palestinian
people is the enemy. And she justifies their destruction, including, quote,
"its elderly and its women, its cities and its villages, its property and
its infrastructure." And she said that Israel would be justified to
slaughter Palestinian mothers because they give birth to little snakes. I wish
I could say that that was an extreme or outlying expression of opinion in
Israel, but she got something like 5,000 likes for that statement on Facebook.
And we’re hearing this kind of incitement from Avigdor Lieberman, the foreign
minister, from every—virtually every Cabinet minister, and of course the chief
inciter, Benjamin Netanyahu, who is now pretending to be against violence,
pretending to console the family of Mohammed Abu Khdeir, the latest lynching
victim of Israel and its occupation.
AARON MATÉ: Well, Ali, I wanted to get your response to Netanyahu.
Speaking over the weekend, he vowed to punish those responsible for Mohammed
Abu Khdeir’s death.
PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: I know that in our society, the society of Israel, there
is no place for such murderers. And that’s the difference between us and our
neighbors. They consider murderers to be heroes. They name public squares after
them. We don’t. We condemn them, and we put them on trial, and we’ll put them
in prison.
AARON MATÉ: That’s Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowing to
punish the killers of Mohammed Khdeir, but in doing so, also drawing, Ali, some
sort of moral high ground. Your response?
ALI ABUNIMAH: Where does one begin with that? This is the leader of a
government that has killed more than 1,400 Palestinian children, including this
year seven, 1,400 just since 2000. And Israel sanctifies these murderers. It
treats them as heroes. It incites them. Netanyahu is the chief inciter. And the
notion that Israel brings them to justice is just absurd. There is no case, in
practically in living memory, of an Israeli being brought to justice for the
killing of any of these 1,400 children. On May 15th, two Palestinian children
were shot dead by snipers, and it was caught on camera. Everyone saw it. They
were hunted like animals. It’s almost two months later. Has anyone been
arrested? Do we know the names of the killers? Well, I’ll tell you, Israel
knows the names of the killers, but they’re not telling, because they’ve placed
a gag order, a censorship order, on that case.
The only reason
Netanyahu was forced to make that cynical statement is because of the media
attention that the case of Mohammed Abu Khdeir, who was lynched to death, who
was burned alive, got—and his cousin Tariq Abu Khdeir, a U.S. citizen, brutally
tortured on television. I mean, a question for Netanyahu I wish somebody would
ask—Tariq Abu Khdeir—and I understand we’re going to hear from his aunt in a
minute—was tortured on camera. We saw it. He was tortured. He was fined and put
under house arrest, the 15-year-old boy, never having been charged with
anything and having been tortured. Have the torturers who beat him up been
arrested? Has Israel even announced that they were suspended from their
positions? Of course it hasn’t. Does Israel go and demolish the homes of
Israeli soldiers or settlers who attack Palestinians? And the figures from the
U.N., by the way, show that attacks by settlers on Palestinians and their
properties have been going through the roof in recent years. And this is all
unchecked violence.
Netanyahu incites. The
incitement starts from the top. And it’s not just against Palestinians. It’s
against Africans. It’s against what they call leftists, anyone who criticizes
their government. The chant is—the chant in the streets of Israel, in Tel Aviv,
in Jerusalem, in other places, is "death to the Arabs, death to
leftists." And the incitement comes from Netanyahu.
AMY GOODMAN: Ali Abunimah, we want to thank you very much for being
with us. Miko Peled is still with us in Jerusalem, the Israeli peace activist
and writer whose father, Matti Peled, was an Israeli general, military governor
of the Gaza Strip and member of Parliament. Miko Peled is the author of The General’s Son: Journey of an
Israeli in Palestine. Before we go to Tariq Abu Khdeir’s aunt in Tampa,
Florida—Tariq, by the way, grew up in Tampa, born in Baltimore, the young man
who was beaten by Israeli soldiers in East Jerusalem—I wanted to ask you, Miko
Peled, about your own family’s journey. Your father, a famous Israeli general
and considered Israeli war hero, ended up saying that Israel should withdraw
from the territories back to the 1967 line. Why the change?
MIKO PELED: I think the change came as a result—and again, I tried to
record it in the book, in The
General’s Son—as a result of, first, his experience as military governor in
Gaza in the mid-1950s, when Israel occupied Gaza, and then when he saw that by
occupying the entire country, and Israel is—it will, in fact, become a
binational state and will have to enforce a brutal military force and a brutal
military occupation upon the people, who are inevitable to—who will inevitably
resist, because we are going to be a foreign occupation. So he felt that the
right thing to do—and he said this immediately after the 1967 war was over, in
the very first meeting of the Israeli high command—that we now have an
opportunity to solve the Palestinian problem peacefully by negotiating with the
Palestinians based on what we know today is called the two-state solution—a
Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza with East Jerusalem as its capital.
As he was saying these
very words—this is the very last day, the very last moments of the 1967 Six Day
War—the Israeli military was already forcing hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians out of the West Bank, destroying cities and towns and villages in
the West Bank, and building massively for Israeli Jews only in the West Bank,
which is exactly what they did prior to 1967 in the rest of Palestine, which
had become Israel. So, he retired from the military a year later, and he
dedicated his life, or the remainder of his life, the second half of his life,
I should say, to this idea of an Israeli-Palestinian peace.
The problem was that
nobody on the Israeli side was interested. In terms of Israeli thinking, in
terms of the Zionist ideology, which is the foundation of the state of Israel,
there cannot be any compromise on the land of Israel because it belongs to the
Jewish people. You know, the law in Israel says that over 90 percent or 95
percent of the land in Israel is only—only Jews are permitted to purchase land
on over 95 percent of the land here. So Palestinians, who are the indigenous
people of the land here, are prohibited from buying, purchasing land here, if
they like. So, this is a reality that he was trying to combat, but, of course,
on the other side, there was nobody listening. In terms of Israeli thinking,
Zionist thinking, the land is ours; the Palestinians are either going to have
to live with Israeli domination, or they can leave.
And what, in essence,
has happened is, Israel has given Palestinians two choices: either to
completely surrender or to resist. And this has been going on for some almost
seven decades. And now we see the results of that. But the things, the very
things that he said in that very—on that very last day of the war in 1967,
every single thing that he said actually came to be. Israel is a brutal
occupying power. It is not a Jewish state. It is a binational state, because
Israel governs the entire country, and there are two nations that live here,
albeit in an apartheid regime where one nation has all the rights and the other
nation is subservient and lives under a terrible, oppressive regime.
AMY GOODMAN: Miko—
MIKO PELED: And this is exactly what he was hoping to avoid.
AMY GOODMAN: Miko Peled is joining us from Jerusalem, again, an Israeli
peace activist who was just arrested in the West Bank. His father, the famous
Israeli war hero and general, Matti Peled, who ultimately called for the very
land he had been responsible for capturing, among other Israeli military,
saying that it should—Israel should withdraw.
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TUESDAY, JULY 8, 2014
"Absolutely Unjustifiable": Aunt of US Teen Decries Brutal Beating by Israeli Forces Caught on Video
Over the weekend, video emerged of the beating
of Tariq Abu Khdeir, the 15-year-old Palestinian-American cousin of murdered
Palestinian teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir. Footage shows him being severely
beaten by Israeli officers after being detained during protests over his
cousin’s murder. Tariq says he was watching demonstrations in East Jerusalem
when he was seized. The video shows him lying on the ground as the officers
repeatedly beat him with batons. Tariq has been placed under house arrest
pending an investigation into potential charges of assaulting a police officer.
He lives in Tampa, Florida, but is in East Jerusalem for the summer visiting
his family. He was with his cousin Mohammed just moments before he was
kidnapped and murdered last week. In a statement, the State Department said it
was "profoundly troubled" by the assault, calling for a "speedy,
transparent and credible investigation and full accountability for the apparent
excessive use of force." We are joined from Tampa by Tariq’s aunt, Suhad
Abukhdeir. "This is absolutely unjustifiable," she says of Tariq’s
beating. "You have three uniformed men, in full combat gear, against a
15-year-old."
TRANSCRIPT
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in
its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re also joined by Tariq Abu Khdeir’s aunt right now in
Tampa. Now, Tariq is the 15-year-old Palestinian-American cousin of the
murdered Palestinian teenager Mohammed Abu Khdeir, who was killed in apparent
retaliation for the murder of three Israeli teenagers. Video emerged over the
weekend of Tariq being severely beaten by Israeli officers after being detained
during protests over his cousin’s murder. Tariq said he was watching
demonstrations in East Jerusalem when he was seized. The video shows him lying
on the ground as the Israeli officers repeatedly beat him with batons. He was
left with facial bruises, severely swollen eyes. Let’s turn to Tariq Abu Khdeir
in his own words.
TARIQ ABU KHDEIR: I was actually brutally attacked from the side and heard
somebody screaming. They came and attacked me, and I actually went unconscious,
and I woke up in the hospital.
REPORTER 1: Why did they attack you?
TARIQ ABU KHDEIR: I don’t know. That’s why I ran.
REPORTER 2: They said that you were throwing stones, something like
this.
TARIQ ABU KHDEIR: No, I jumped the fence, and I tried to run away, because I
just saw somebody running at me, so I tried to run away.
AMY GOODMAN: So, Tariq Abu Khdeir, the young man you just heard—if
you’re listening on the radio, he has two black eyes—has been [placed under
house arrest pending an investigation into potential charges of assaulting a
police officer] in East Jerusalem. He actually lives in Florida but is in East
Jerusalem for the summer visiting his family. He was with his cousin Mohammed
just moments before Mohammed was kidnapped and murdered last week. In a
statement, the State Department said it was "profoundly troubled" by
the assault, calling for a "speedy, transparent and credible investigation
and full accountability for the apparent excessive use of force."
Joining us now from
Tampa, Florida, from PBS studios WEDU, is Suhad
Abukhdeir. She is Tariq’s aunt, as well as a relative of Tariq’s slain cousin,
Mohammed.
Welcome to Democracy Now! Thank you so much for joining us. Our
condolences. Can you talk about what you now understand is happening with Tariq
and what happened to Mohammed?
SUHAD ABUKHDEIR: Thank you for having me. What I understand now is, like
you were saying, he’s on house arrest and has to pay a fine, which I think is
very ridiculous, because after what he’s endured, we should be the ones
compensated at this time. As far as Mohammed, we’re still in mourning. You
know, the whole city of Shuafat is in mourning, because it’s such a close-knit
family. Even the non-Abu Khdeirs in that village have grown up with the Abu
Khdeir family for several generations. So everybody feels with us at this time,
and we’re still in mourning.
AARON MATÉ: Suhad, I wanted to get your response to Micky Rosenfeld.
He’s a spokesperson for the Israeli police. He said Tariq was one of six
Palestinians arrested, three of them carrying knives, after a clash in which 15
Israeli officers were injured. And he said Tariq was part of this rally where
hundreds of rioters, many of them masked, hurled at the Israeli forces pipe bombs,
Molotov cocktails, fireworks and stones. What’s your understanding of what
Tariq was doing at this protest?
SUHAD ABUKHDEIR: First of all, when you’re inside your house and you’re 15
years old and you hear a commotion downstairs, it’s kind of hard to stay
inside. So you go down and you look, and you wonder, "What’s going on
here?" You know, and from a distance, he could see the protesting, but he
was nowhere near it. If there was that many protesters around him, where were
they when he was getting beat up? Wouldn’t they have intervened? Somebody would
have intervened. And to have all these weapons that they’re claiming, somebody
would have definitely intervened.
But as far as
everybody’s claims that the six that were with him had all these weapons, all
the weapons that they could have had in the world don’t even justify this
brutal attack, with nobody around him. You can see in the video nobody is
within the vicinity of Tariq. And this is absolutely unjustifiable. You have
three uniformed men that are in full combat gear, weighing at least 200 pounds
each, 150 pounds, against a 15-year-old who—
AMY GOODMAN: It looks like we lost, on the satellite feed, the aunt of
Tariq Abu Khdeir. She was describing what happened to him at the hands of
Israeli soldiers. The mother of one of the Israeli teenagers killed in the West
Bank last month has spoken out against the murder of Mohammed Abu Khdeir. This
is Rachel Fraenkel, Naftali’s mother.
RACHEL FRAENKEL: Even in the depth of the mourning over our son, it’s hard
for me to describe how distressed we were over the outrage that happened in
Jerusalem. The shedding of innocent blood is against morality. It’s against the
Torah and Judaism. It’s against the basis of our life in this country. The
murderers of our children, whoever sent them, whoever helped them, whoever
incited towards that murder, will all be brought to justice. But it will be
them and no innocent people. And it will be done by the government, the police,
the Justice Department, and not by vigilantes. No mother or father should go
through what we are going now, and we share the pain of the parents of Mohammed
Abu Khdeir. The legacy of the life and death of Naftali, Eyal and Gilad is a
legacy of love, of humanity, of national unity.
AARON MATÉ: That was Rachel Fraenkel, the mother of Naftali, who was
one of the Israeli teens who was murdered in the West Bank last month. We are
joined still in Jerusalem by Miko Peled. Miko Peled, the mother here of a
murdered settler emerging as a voice of peace, your comments on that?
MIKO PELED: Yeah, I don’t think she’s emerging as a voice of peace at
all. I think if she wanted to be recognized as a voice of peace, she would
condemn, completely condemn, all Israeli violence towards the Palestinians.
Ever since these three boys went missing, the Israeli military has gone
completely mad. The Israeli soldiers have been marching through Palestinian
towns and villages like Roman legions, destroying everything in their path,
destroying homes, beating children, arresting, torturing. Countless have been
killed, of innocent civilians have been killed. This has been complete madness.
And if these parents were really interested in calming things down, they would
tell Netanyahu to pull back his troops, to stop bombing Gaza, to relieve the
people of Gaza of this brutal and inexcusable siege. People living 45 minutes
from me, and they don’t have—they can’t have water fit for drinking or the most
basic medicines, not to mention any way to deal with the horrific attacks that
they’re subjected to right now. So, if anybody is really interested in calming
things down, this is where they need to point the finger. This is who they need
to be talking to.
Just yesterday, I
happened to be at the grave of one of the boys killed on the 15th of May, Nadim
Nuwara. And to listen to his father, Siam, speak at the gravesite of this
17-year-old boy, all he asks for is justice. All he asks for is justice, you
know? And to compare that, to juxtapose that with the madness going on in the
streets here in Israel and the madness that the Israeli military has been
subjecting the Palestinians is just unbelievable.
AMY GOODMAN: Miko Peled, we want to thank you for being with us,
Israeli peace activist, writer. His father was the Israeli general, Matti
Peled. Miko Peled is the author of The
General’s Son: Journey of an Israeli in Palestine.
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licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.
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