Komentuje prof. Szewach Weiss*

IP: *.crowley.pl 29.03.05, 21:13
Polakow zginelo 3mln, polski majatek rowniez zostal zrujnowany
60lat bylismy pod sowieckim butem.
KTO NAM ZA TO ZWROCI. CZY TYLKO DLATEGO ZE NIE JESTESMY KOLEJNYM STANEM USA
JAK IZRAEL WSZYSCY MOGA SIE OD NAS DOMAGAC!!!!
    • olewin Re: Komentuje prof. Szewach Weiss* 29.03.05, 22:00
      PAnie szewach .... JEst Pan mało znany jeśli wogóle niezauważany w Israelu ..
      Czy fakt że mimo iż skończył się panu immunitet ambasadora Israela w Polsce a
      mimo to nadal przebywa Pan w naszym "antysemickim" kraju nie jest wymownym
      dowodem na fałszywość Pana osoby ??!
    • shoovar Re: Komentuje prof. Szewach Weiss* 29.03.05, 22:42
      In Jerusalem, home to nearly 200,000 Palestinians, families are facing the
      acquisition of their property by the state of Israel in a legal maneuver that
      would annul Palestinian ownership of over 50% of the area of East Jerusalem. In
      July 2004, the Israeli High Court decided in secrecy to implement the Absentee
      property law in East Jerusalem. Just this week, the decision was published. The
      immediate consequence of implementing the Absentee property law is the
      confiscation of land and property owned by Palestinians living in other areas
      of the West bank. Since it is nearly impossible for a Palestinian in the West
      Bank to get a Jerusalem ID, Palestinians whose property is being confiscated
      have little legal standing to appeal their cases. The Absentee Property Law was
      first established in 1950, when the government of Israel used it to claim
      ownership of the property of the 700,000 Palestinians who fled the country in
      the 1948 war, and redistribute that property to Jewish immigrants to Israel.
      Families who lost their property located in what is now Israel in 1950 are
      looking at this move by the Israeli governement as a similar "land-grab" to
      further disenfranchise the Palestinian people.
      • shoovar a jak im zrekompensujecie ? 29.03.05, 22:52
        This month, the 56th anniversary of the Palestinian "Nakba" (Catastrophe), when
        one people gained a homeland and another lost theirs, I was thinking of a home
        in Jerusalem.

        It was the residence occupied by former Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir -
        author of the famous quip that "the Palestinian people did not exist" - when
        she was Israel's labor minister. It was also the family home built in 1926 by
        my grandfather, Hanna Ibrahim Bisharat, "Papa" to all of us.

        I went to visit our home for the first time in 1977. Although he was a
        Christian, Papa named the home "Villa Harun ar-Rashid," in honor of the Muslim
        Abbasid Caliph renowned for his eloquence, passion for learning and generosity.
        Painted tiles with this name were inset above the second floor balcony and over
        a side entrance.

        When Papa first built the home in what became known as the Talbiyya quarter of
        Jerusalem, few other residences existed nearby. As I grew up, my father regaled
        me with tales of his boyhood exploits in the surrounding fields and orchards.
        Two of my uncles were born while the family lived there; one uncle succumbed to
        pneumonia in Villa Harun ar-Rashid. The young boys went to school up the road
        at the Catholic-run Terra Sancta College. My uncle Emile told me of a wager he
        made with his younger brother, George (for whom I am named), that he could not
        stand on a swing on the front porch and swing with no hands - with predictable,
        but fortunately mild, consequences.

        The wall enclosing the front yard was a fledgling design effort by my father's
        twin, Victor, later a successful architect in the United States, whose
        buildings helped galvanize the urban renewal of Stamford, Conn.

        Beginning of the end
        My grandparents eventually suffered a reversal of fortunes, and in the
        early '30s, leased the house to officers of the British Royal Air Force,
        expecting to return in better times. Frescoes on the interior walls were
        plastered over to accommodate the tastes of the British officers. My family
        moved a short distance to a more modest house. Little did anyone appreciate at
        the time that the move signified the family's final departure from Villa Harun
        ar-Rashid.

        A sense of foreboding gripped many Palestinians in the years leading up to the
        wars in the region. Under the gathering clouds of unrest, my father and uncles
        came to the United States to study, while Papa shifted his business activities
        to Cairo. Thus, the family was outside Palestine on May 14, 1948, when Israel
        declared independence and war with the Arab states commenced. Our fortunes were
        better than most of the 750,000 other Palestinians who were driven out or fled
        their homes in terror during the fighting.

        Villa Harun ar-Rashid was picked by armed Zionist groups for the commanding
        view it offered from its roof. No blood was shed in taking it, as the British
        officers simply handed over the keys to the underground Israeli militia Haganah.

        Like most Palestinian families, we were subsequently stripped of the title to
        our home through a law passed by the new state of Israel called the Absentee
        Property Law.

        Villa Harun ar-Rashid was divided into several flats. During the 1960s, Golda
        Meir occupied the upper flat. Anticipating a visit from U.N. Secretary-General
        Dag Hammerskjold, some claim, she ordered the sandblasting of tiles on front of
        the house to obliterate the "Villa Harun ar-Rashid" and conceal the fact that
        she was living in an Arab home.

        When I went to Jerusalem in 1977, I had only a photograph of the home and a
        general description of its location from my grandmother. It was summer, hot and
        dusty, and I paced back and forth through the neighborhood, inspecting each of
        the houses, occasionally asking for directions. All the street names had been
        changed to those of Zionist leaders and figures from Jewish history, and the
        hospital that my grandmother had described as a landmark apparently no longer
        existed.

        As I was resting against a wall in the shade, I saw a home that resembled
        Papa's. As I hurried across the street, I could just make out the name in the
        tile: Villa Harun ar-Rashid. I guess Golda's sandblasters had been a little
        rushed....
    • Gość: uosiu Jak wprowadzić w Polsce powszechny antysemityzm? IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 29.03.05, 23:00
      • sawa.com Re: Jak wprowadzić w Polsce powszechny antysemity 30.03.05, 09:34
        w komentarzu do informacji o liczeniu w Izraelu majatku polskich Żydów ego69
        napisał:
        Jakim prawem, państwo Izrael, liczy majątek ludzi, którzy nigdy nie byli jego
        obywatelami ? Czyżby zaczęło obowiązywać kryterium RASOWE ? 1. Państwo Izrael
        powstało po II wojnie, w momencie Zagłady, takiego państwa nie było na świecie.
        2. Spadek po ofierze Holocaustu należy się SPADKOBIERCOM, a nie gminom, państwu
        Izrael, czy organizacjom międzynarodowym (kto im dał prawo do występowania w
        imieniu ofiar, jeżeli ofiary i spadkobiercy nie żyją - czyżby znowu było czuć
        smród rasizmu). 3. Jeżeli nie ma spadkobierców, spadek przechodzi na własność
        państwa, którego obywatelami były ofiary, czyli państwa polskiego. 4. Lex retro
        non agit - zasada wymyślona 2000 lat temu. Na koniec warto się zastanowić jaki
        chaos wywołałoby upowszechnienie zasady że spadek po Kowalsky'm z Chicago
        przejmuje organizacja polonijna z Tobolska, tylko dlatego, że mają polskie
        pochodzenie ?

        Pan Weiss w swoim (nacjonalistycznym) zaślepieniu traci poczucie
        przezwoitości.A jeśli jeszcze się doda, że sam pochodzi z rodziny bodajże z
        Borysławia obecnie leżącego w granicach Ukrainy. To wobec takiej jak powyższa
        wypowiedź nie wiadomo czy się śmiać czy płakać.
    • kemoki Re: Komentuje prof. Szewach Weiss* 30.03.05, 10:42
      to ja juz niewiem ten caly holokaust jest naszą winą czy co moze wyplacmy
      jeszcze afryce jakąś kase za to ze czolgi niemieckie jezdzily po ich pustyni
      niemcy niszczyli wszystko w kolo a my mamy za to placic
    • Gość: hazz Re: Bezczelność i Hucpa! IP: 195.117.255.* 30.03.05, 13:28
      Jakim prawem majątek obywateli Polski miałby trafić do Izraela? A może majątek
      żydów mających polskie obywatelstwo umierających bezdzietnie w izraelu
      przejdzie na własność Państwa Polskiego?
    • Gość: opat Re: Komentuje prof. Szewach Weiss* IP: *.radom.cvx.ppp.tpnet.pl 30.03.05, 14:36
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