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A home invasion on Steroids – Part one of two



 

The story of this unusual home invasion is still being talked about today. It started out as a simply criminal act, but morphed into a complex series of acts, with far reaching social implication and involving a myriad of political and enforcement figures, organizations and even individuals.

You may think this is a product of a science fiction story, but this is real.

It started several years ago in a suburban housing complex where a gang of thugs, were terrorizing a minority of long time residence. Relatively new to the complex, these thugs claiming to be members of a clandestine neighbourhood watch, never the less were embraced by the majority because of the whisper campaign directed against the smaller group of residence. Slurs such as “snitch”, government agitators and drug dealers were banded around to convert the fence sitters and harden further the converted. Several vicious attacks were perpetrated against the smaller members in some cases causing fatalities. Eventually the media got a hold of situation, started a series of campaign geared to alert, and embarrass the municipal government who up to that point would rather bury their collective heads in the sand than to do the right thing.

Apparently these vigilante gangs of thugs were connected to the government as a lobbyist group AND to the local police force as distributor of narcotics to the immigrant young members of the housing complex. The ostracized members though not vocalizing their outrage against these series of activities by the police and the councillors, decided instead to form their own committee, where they proceeded to agitate for better and alternative representation

The subsequent attention caused outrage across the city with voters calling for the government to do something or resign from office. Fearful of the bad publicity and the potential for exposure and eventual criminal charges the councillors sent the police in to the complex to calm the community. The vigilante group, in reality a drug gang, was heavily armed against outside influence (read other gang take over) and to enforce their position within the community. A series of raids and arrests, including a few shoot outs caused injuries on both sides.

After a week of raids and arrests, the gang was neutralized (though not completely wiped out) and the government hailed as decisive and courageous in protecting the interests of the more vulnerable members of society. Yet there were others who derided them for their obtuseness and the long term obfuscation which led to an eventual series of unfortunate events. With in a week after the gang of thugs was neutralized the question of what to do with the ostracized members became a hot topic on the streets and the in council chambers of City Hall. After several public debates and private sessions with the housing complex group an agreement was reached amongst the councillors that the best way to prevent future difficulties was to relocate them to another complex farther north of the city in a more remote farming community. Logistics where laid out, preparations made and the relocation set about… except for the rise of NIMBYISM (Not In My Back Yard) a phenomenon of ethnocentrism and circle the wagon mentality and fear rose up amongst the rural population. Pressure was put on those who represented the rural communities; votes were changed denials of ever agreeing to such a move splashed across the evening newspapers and on the noon, six o’clock and 11:00 clock news.

Desperate to end this political hot potato, the Mayor with the advice of several councillors with input from a developer organization, decided to force relocate the group to another housing complex, not as populated or as upscale as their previous, but one with rich real estate potential, neighbouring a yuppie enclave crying out a long time for some sort of re-gentrification from the “disease” of low income elements, who were affecting their property value.

Are you following the story so far?

Long term residents in the new complex were moved about to make room for the new residents. It was a nightmare of epic proportion. Two or more single families with no connection to each other except for being complex residences were moved into a small family dwelling. Homes were confiscated, claimed to be crack dens or abandoned and turned over to the new residents. Ignoring the cries of the aggrieved the government proclaimed the rightness of their program informing all it was necessary to prevent further abuse of this minority group. The mayor then went further by seeding committee representative status on the minority group even going as far as giving them special voice (read lobbyist) powers and giving them special “tools” to ensure their maintenance of group status quo.

Since then the low income group has been trying to advocate for as voice on counsel and for new political powers and proper allocation of resources for their children and the families displaced in the original relocation. Eventually verbal disagreement and frustrations boiled over into physical altercations, with the young members of the original members smashing the windows of the newer members. In retaliation the police was called in to assist the newer members in identifying the youth and or “ring leaders” who were subsequently arrested or injured in incremental raids and aggressive police tactics.

By this time you are wondering what backwards political organization or “third world” dictatorship did I draw this story from. Let me assure you the story is real, the names have been changed to set up the punch line. In order to bring the story full circle, let’s engage in a bit of addition and subtractions. I will draw a two column table to illustrate in panoramic view of the story in its entirety.

The Home invasion story

The original housing complex

Old Europe

The ostracized group

European Jews

The gang of Thugs

Germany and the Nazis

The City and Police force

America and England

The drugs pushed

European nationalism and white Supremacy

The Police raids

WW2

The relocation efforts

The attempted relocation of the European Jews

The NIMBY group

Other European countries

The New Housing Complex

North East Africa – Later Called Middle East after the Suez Canal

The low income residence

The so called Arabs

The Yuppies

White Supremacy and European colonialism

The special voice for the relocated group

The Zionist powers based on the “right of white” privileges for the American/European Proxy in North East Africa

In “Our Roots Are Still Alive” by The People Press Palestine Book Project “. The British mandated relocation, “pogroms forced many Jews to leave Russia. Societies known as, ‘Lovers of Zion,’ which were forerunners of the Zionist organization, convinced some of the frightened emigrants to go to Palestine. There, they argued, Jews would rebuild the ancient Jewish ‘Kingdom of David and Solomon,’ Most Russian Jews ignored their appeal and fled to Europe and the United States. By 1900, almost a million Jews had settled in the United States alone.”

If you are a rational human being and you take the element of the bible or Torah out of this geopolitical arena, the Zionist state of Israel, the “great Satan” America and her mother Europe, have no intelligent discourse to submit to explain the phenomena of the so called “middle east” dilemma that is causing horrific death and destruction, setting back civilization for 100 of years.

The Zionist position is that they showed up in Palestine century to reclaim their ancestral homeland. Jews bought land and started building up the Jewish community there. They were met with increasingly violent opposition from the Palestinians due to anti-Semitism. Forced to defend themselves, they fought to preserve their culture and to stave of extension. According to Israel this same situation continues up to today.

This explanation is simply not true. The Zionist movement, from the beginning, set out on to completely dispossess the indigenous Arab population so that Israel could be a wholly Jewish state. Land bought by the Jewish National Fund was held in the name of the Jewish people and could never be sold or even leased back to Arabs (a situation which continues to the present).

The Arab community strenuously opposed further Jewish immigration and land buying because it posed a real and imminent danger to the very existence of Arab society in Palestine. Because of this opposition, the entire Zionist project never could have been realized without the military backing of first the British and then the American. The Arab population of Palestine, has occupied this area since the seventh century A.D. (Over 1200 years)

Zionism was based on a colonialist world view that the rights of the indigenous inhabitants didn’t matter (the stories from the African Continent, Asia, South America in fact every where outside of Europe documents this). The Arabs’ opposition to Zionism wasn’t based on anti-Semitism but rather on a totally reasonable fear of the people being driven off their ancestral lands.

The Zionists after WW2 had a strong desire to establish a place where Jews could be masters of their own fate. The mythic “land without people for a people without land” as proposed by the colonialists was already home to 700,000 Palestinians in 1919.

In 1516, Palestine became a province of the Ottoman Empire, but this made it no less fertile, no less Arab or Islamic. Despite the steady arrival in Palestine of Jewish colonists after 1882, it is important to realize that not until the few weeks immediately preceding the establishment of Israel in the spring of 1948 was there ever anything other than a huge Arab majority. For example, the Jewish population in 1931 was 174,606 against a total of 1,033,314.” Edward Said, “The Question of Palestine.”

In the book “Palestine and Israel: A Challenge to Justice,” John Quigley wrote that. The aim of the [Jewish National] Fund was to redeem the land of Palestine as the inalienable possession of the Jewish people. As early as 1891, Zionist leader Ahad Ha’am wrote that the Arabs “understood very well what we were doing and what we were aiming at.” Theodore Herzl, the founder of Zionism stated, “We shall try to spirit the penniless Arab population across the border by procuring employment for it in transit countries, while denying it employment in our own country. Both the process of expropriation and the removal of the poor must be carried out discreetly and circumspectly”. At various locations in northern Palestine Arab farmers refused to move from land the Fund purchased from absentee owners, and the Turkish authorities, at the Fund’s request, evicted them. The indigenous Jews of Palestine also reacted negatively to Zionism. They did not see the need for a Jewish state in Palestine and did not want to exacerbate relations with the Arabs.

According to Don Peretz in the book, The Arab-Israeli Dispute, “Before the 20th century, most Jews in Palestine belonged to old Yishuv, or community, that had settled more for religious than for political reasons. There was little if any conflict between them and the Arab population. Tensions began after the first Zionist settlers arrived in the 1880′s…when [they] purchased land from absentee Arab owners, leading to dispossession of the peasants who had cultivated it.” In “Bitter Harvest,” Sami Hadawi stated that, “During the Middle Ages, North Africa and the Arab Middle East became places of refuge and a haven for the persecuted Jews of Spain and elsewhere…In the Holy Land…they lived together in [relative] harmony, a harmony only disrupted when the Zionists began to claim that Palestine was the ‘rightful’ possession of the ‘Jewish people’ to the exclusion of its Moslem and Christian inhabitants”.

Jewish attitude towards Arabs when reaching Palestine was further highlighted in “Bitter Harvest.” By a quote from Zionist writer Ahad Ha’am; “Serfs they (the Jews) were in the lands of the Diaspora, and suddenly they find themselves in freedom [in Palestine]; and this change has awakened in them an inclination to despotism. They treat the Arabs with hostility and cruelty, deprive them of their rights, offend them without cause, and even boast of these deeds; and nobody among us opposes this despicable and dangerous inclination.”

The British Mandate Period
1920-1948

In the book The Question of Palestine, Edward Said stated that “the Balfour Declaration, made in November 1917 by the British Government…was made (a) by a European power, (b) about a non-European territory, c) in flat disregard of both the presence and wishes of the native majority resident in that territory…[As Balfour himself wrote in 1919], ‘The contradiction between the letter of the Covenant (the Anglo French Declaration of 1918 promising the Arabs of the former Ottoman colonies that as a reward for supporting the Allies they could have their independence) is even more flagrant in the case of the independent nation of Palestine than in that of the independent nation of Syria. For in Palestine we do not propose even to go through the form of consulting the wishes of the present inhabitants of the country…The four powers are committed to Zionism and Zionism, be it right or wrong, good or bad, is rooted in age-long tradition, in present needs, in future hopes, of far profounder import than the desire and prejudices of the 700,000 Arabs who now inhabit that ancient land,’”

Britain‘s high commissioner for Palestine, John Chancellor had recommended total suspension of Jewish immigration and land purchase to protect Arab agriculture. He said ‘all cultivable land was occupied; that no cultivable land now in possession of the indigenous population could be sold to Jews without creating a class of landless Arab cultivators’… Of course the British Colonial Office rejected the recommendation.

In 1919, the American King-Crane Commission spent six weeks in Syria and Palestine, interviewing delegations and reading petitions. Their report stated, “The commissioners began their study of Zionism with minds predisposed in its favour…The fact came out repeatedly in the Commission’s conferences with Jewish representatives that the Zionists looked forward to a practically complete dispossession of the present non-Jewish inhabitants of Palestine, by various forms of purchase.

The Zionist land policy was incorporated in the Constitution of the Jewish Agency for Palestine, land is to be acquired as Jewish property and the title to the lands acquired is to be taken in the name of the Jewish National Fund, to this end that the same shall be held as the inalienable property of the Jewish people. The provision goes on to stipulate that the Agency shall promote agricultural colonization based on Jewish labour. The effect of this Zionist colonization policy on the Arabs was that land acquired by Jews became extra-territorialized. It ceased to be land from which the Arabs could ever hope to gain any advantage. The Zionists made no secret of their intentions, for as early as 1921, Dr. Eder, a member of the Zionist Commission, boldly proclaimed, “there can be only one National Home in Palestine, and that a Jewish one, and no equality in the partnership between Jews and Arabs, but a Jewish preponderance as soon as the numbers of the race are sufficiently increased.” He then asked that only Jews should be allowed to bear arms. Even if nobody lost their land, the Zionist program was unjust in principle because it denied majority political rights. Zionism, in principle, could not allow the natives to exercise their political rights because it would mean the end of the Zionist enterprise.

A nationalist revolt

In 1936-9, the Palestinian Arabs attempted a nationalist revolt, David Ben-Gurion, recognized its nature. In internal discussion, he noted that “in our political argument abroad, we minimize Arab opposition to us, but he urged, let us not ignore the truth among ourselves. The truth was that politically we are the aggressors and they defend themselves. The country is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away from them their country, while we are still outside.” The revolt was crushed by the British, with its usual and considerable brutality. In 1948, at the moment that Israel declared itself a state, it legally owned a little more than 6 percent of the land of Palestine…After 1940, when the mandatory authority restricted Jewish land ownership to specific zones inside Palestine, there continued to be illegal buying (and selling) within the 65 percent of the total area restricted to Arabs. Thus when the partition plan was announced in 1947 it included land held illegally by Jews, which was incorporated inside the borders of the Jewish state. And after Israel announced its statehood, an impressive series of laws legally assimilated huge tracts of Arab land (whose proprietors had become refugees, and were pronounced ‘absentee landlords’ in order to expropriate their lands and prevent their return under any circumstances.

Statehood and Expulsion 1948

The Arab states declared war immediately after the State of Israel was founded in May. Fighting continued, almost all of it within the territory assigned to the Palestinian state causing about 700,000 Palestinians to flee or were expelled in the 1948 conflict. The Arab League hastily called for its member countries to send regular army troops into Palestine. They were ordered to secure only the sections of Palestine given to the Arabs under the partition plan. But these regular armies were ill equipped and lacked any central command to coordinate their efforts. Jordan’s King Abdullah promised the Israelis and the British that his troops, the Arab Legion, the only real fighting force among the Arab armies, would avoid fighting with Jewish settlements. Western historians later record this as the moment when the young state of Israel fought off “the overwhelming hordes’ of five Arab countries. In reality, the Israeli offensive against the Palestinians intensified.” This then became the urban myth leading to the so called invincibility of the Jewish Army.

Ethnic cleansing of the Arab population of Palestine

Edward Said, in the book “The Question of Palestine,” quoted Joseph Weitz who was the director of the Jewish National Land Fund and had declared on December 19, 1940 that , “’It must be clear that there is no room for both peoples in this country, the Zionist enterprise so far has been fine and good in its own time, and could do with ‘land buying’ – but this will not bring about the State of Israel; that must come all at once, in the manner of a Salvation (this is the secret of the Messianic idea); and there is no way besides transferring the Arabs from here to the neighbouring countries, to transfer them all; except maybe for Bethlehem, Nazareth and Old Jerusalem, we must not leave a single village, not a single tribe’…There were literally hundreds of such statements made by Zionists.

Israel historian, Benny Morris in speaking of the “Righteous Victims” also stated… “Following the outbreak of 1936, no mainstream (Zionist) leader was able to conceive of future coexistence without a clear physical separation between the two peoples – achievable only by transfer and expulsion. Publicly they all continued to speak of coexistence and to attribute the violence to a small minority of zealots and agitators. But this was merely a public pose. Ben Gurion summed it up thusly: “With compulsory transfer we (would) have a vast area (for settlement)…I support compulsory transfer. I don’t see anything immoral in it.” According to Morris, Ben-Gurion clearly wanted as few Arabs as possible to remain in the Jewish state. He hoped to see them flee. He said as much to his colleagues and aides in meetings in August, September and October [1948]. But no [general] expulsion policy was ever enunciated and Ben-Gurion always refrained from issuing clear or written expulsion orders; he preferred that his generals ‘understand’ what he wanted done. He wished to avoid going down in history as the ‘great expeller’ and he did not want the Israeli government to be implicated in a morally questionable policy…But while there was no ‘expulsion policy’, the July and October [1948] offensives were characterized by far more expulsions and, indeed, brutality towards Arab civilians than the first half of the war

The Issue of Palestinians leaving their homes voluntarily during the 1948 war

Israeli has largely relinquished the claim that the Palestinian exodus of 1948 was voluntary. In official circles there were concessions that the Arab population fled as a result of Israeli action – whether directly, as in the case of Lydda and Ramleh, or indirectly, due to the panic and of similar actions (such as the Deir Yassin massacre) inspired in Arab population centers throughout Palestine. However, even though the historical record has been reluctantly set straight, the Israeli establishment still refused to accept moral or political responsibility for the refugee problem it- or its predecessors – actively created. The BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) monitored all Middle Eastern broadcasts throughout 1948. The records, and companion ones by a United States monitoring unit, can be seen at the British Museum. There was not a single order or appeal, or suggestion about evacuation from Palestine, from any Arab radio station, inside or outside Palestine, in 1948. There is a repeated monitored record of Arab appeals, even flat orders, to the civilians of Palestine to stay put. Ben-Gurion’s ultimate aim was to evacuate as much of the Arab population as possible from the Jewish ones. To achieve his purpose most decisively, the destruction of whole villages and the eviction of their inhabitants…even if they had not participated in the war and had stayed in Israel hoping to live in peace and equality, as promised in the Declaration of Independence.

During May 1948, ideas about how to consolidate and give permanence to the Palestinian exile began to crystallize. Some of the acts perpetrated on the inhabitants of that region included the deliberate destruction of Arab villages to prevent return of Palestinians. Earlier, on April 10, Jewish army units took Abu Shusha, the village was destroyed in one night. Khulda was levelled by Jewish bulldozers on April 20… Abu Zureiq was completely demolished… Al Mansi and An Naghnaghiya, to the southeast, were also levelled. . By mid-1949, the majority of the 350 Arab villages were either depopulated, in complete or partly in ruins or uninhabitable

The first UN General Assembly resolution–Number 194- affirming the right of Palestinians to return to their homes and property, was passed on December 11, 1948. It has been re-passed no less than twenty-eight times since that first date. Whereas the moral and political right of a person to return to his place of uninterrupted residence is acknowledged everywhere, Israel has negated the possibility of return and systematically and judicially made it impossible, on any grounds whatever, for the Arab Palestinian to return, and be compensated for his property, or live in Israel as a citizen equal before the law.

Is there any justification for this expropriation of land?

“The fact that the Arabs fled in terror, because of real fear of a repetition of the 1948 Zionist massacres, is no reason for denying them their homes, fields and livelihoods. Civilians caught in an area of military activity generally panic. But they have always been able to return to their homes when the danger subsides. Military conquest does not abolish private rights to property; nor does it entitle the victor to confiscate the homes, property and personal belongings of the non-combatant civilian population. The seizure of Arab property by the Israelis was an outrage.” Sami Hadawi, “Bitter Harvest.”

Israel, the terrorist proxy of a terrorist America.

After Israel was admitted to UN it promptly then reneged on the conditions under which it was admitted.

Israel for the first time on 27 April 1949, accepted the principle of repatriation of the Arab refugees and the internationalization of Jerusalem, when the Palestine Conciliation Committee was successful in getting a signed joint protocol on the framework for a comprehensive peace. Walter Eytan, the head of the Israeli delegation stated, “My main purpose was to begin to undermine the protocol, which we had signed only under duress of our struggle for admission to the U.N. Refusal to sign would…have immediately been reported to the Secretary-General and the various governments.”

The fate of the Palestinians refugees

The winter of 1949, the first winter of exile more than seven hundred fifty thousand Palestinians families huddled in caves, abandoned huts, or makeshift tents, mere miles away from their own vegetable gardens and orchards in occupied Palestine now called the “State of Israel.” .At the end of 1949 the United Nations finally acted. It set up the United Nations Relief and Works Administration (UNRWA) to take over sixty refugee camps from voluntary agencies. It managed to keep people alive, but only barely.

August 8, 2006 Posted by | African Culture, News and politics, Social Issues & Business Stuff | Leave a Comment

   

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