Tag: Gaza

  • Gilbert Goh: Global Charitable Organisations Deserve Support

    Gilbert Goh: Global Charitable Organisations Deserve Support

    Supported the emboidery work of this handicapped Palestinian refugee woman at Musawat Saida.

    The Palestinians are great with their hand-sewn emboidery work and its a pity there is a lack of marketing effort to sell them abroad.

    The refugee emboidery market is a great money-churning goldmine that remains very much untapped and we are trying our best to assist in this area.

    Moreover, for the refugees themselves, its great to earn one’s keep than sitting at home and wait for handout. The emboidery sewing can also be done at home with minimal interruption to their household chores as most refugee women also tend to look after the children themselves.

    The wealthy international charitable bodies these days are stretched to the limits with their funding resources and many local NGOs suffer from this reduction in funds.

    The idea of a social enterprise model whereby NGOs self-fund themselves from selling their own hand-made products takes more eminence now.

    However, its still difficult to change the mindset of NGOs here as they are used to easy access to funds contributed from the European charitable organisations.

    But such days are truly numbered…and my fear is that some noble charitable organisations may need to close down soon due to a lack of funds.

     

    Source: Gilbert Goh

  • Israeli Anger At UNESCO Motion Condemning Aggressions at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    Israeli Anger At UNESCO Motion Condemning Aggressions at Al-Aqsa Mosque

    The United Nations cultural and heritage body, Unesco, has condemned Israel’s “escalating aggressions” regarding the holy site in Jerusalem’s Old City, known to Muslims as al-Haram al-Sharif and to Jews as the Temple Mount, prompting a furious reaction from Israeli politicians.

    A resolution passed on Thursday denied the importance of the site to the Jewish faith by referring to it and the al-Aqsa mosque only by their Muslim names, the politicians said.

    The site has been a flashpoint between Muslims and rightwing Jews over the past two years in particular, although tensions in the vicinity stretch back decades.

    The resolution was backed by 24 countries, with six opposing it and 26 abstaining. The US, UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Estonia voted against the resolution; Russia and China were among those backing it.

    While affirming the importance of the Old City to all three monotheistic faiths – Judaism, Islam and Christianity – the resolution failed to acknowledge Jewish connections to Temple Mount/al-Haram al-Sharif, Israel said.

    The al-Aqsa mosque – the third holiest site in Islam after Mecca and Medina – and the iconic Dome of the Rock stand on a plaza on the eastern edge of the Old City, and are under the control of an Islamic trust called the Waqf.

    The Western Wall, below the concourse, is regarded as the holiest spot in Judaism as the last remnant of the temple that once stood there. Jews can visit the plaza above the wall, but are forbidden by law from praying, reciting religious texts or entering Muslim holy sites there.

    The resolution said Muslims’ freedom of worship was being curtailed by “escalating aggressions and illegal measures”. It deplored the “continuous storming of al-Aqsa mosque and al-Haram al-Sharif by the Israeli rightwing extremists and uniformed forces … [and] forceful entering by so-called ‘Israeli Antiquities’ officials”.

    Ultra-Orthodox Jews praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem

    In March 2015, a leaked EU report said tensions over al-Haram al-Sharif/Temple Mount were partly to blame for a spike in violence, including shootings and stabbings, over the previous six months.

    Uri Ariel, a rightwing minister in the Israeli coalition government, called on Israel to respond to the Unesco motion by stepping up activities at the site.

    “Especially now, it’s on us as a government to act in defiance of these decisions and to strengthen the Temple Mount and the Jewish presence on the site holiest to the Jewish people – the Temple Mount,” he said in a letter to the prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu.

    The Labour party leader, Isaac Herzog, wrote on Facebook: “Unesco betray their mission, and give a bad name to diplomacy and the international institutions. Whoever wants to rewrite history, to distort fact, and to completely invent the fantasy that the Western Wall and Temple Mount have no connection to the Jewish people, is telling a terrible lie that only serves to increase hatred.”

    Before the vote, the British Jewish organisation Yachad, which campaigns for an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land and for a two-state solution, condemned the resolution as “an inflammatory denial of Jewish history” which “serves only to set back the cause of peace in the region by playing into the hands of those on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict who see it as a holy war”.

    The motion was submitted by the Palestinians supported by Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar and Sudan.

    A similar resolution in April passed with 33 votes to six, and was supported by a number of European countries led by France. This time France abstained amid a heavy lobbying campaign by Israel.

     

    Source: www.theguardian.com

  • Kapal Dalam Misi “Women’s Boat To Gaza” Ditahan Tentera Israel

    Kapal Dalam Misi “Women’s Boat To Gaza” Ditahan Tentera Israel

    KUALA LUMPUR: Tentera Israel menahan kapal layar, Zaytouna-Olivia, bersama tiga anak kapal dan 10 aktivis wanita termasuk wakil tunggal Malaysia, Dr Fauziah Mohd Hassan, dalam misi ‘Women’s Boat To Gaza'(WBG), semalam (5 Okt).

    Humanitarian Care Malaysia (MyCARE), dalam kenyataan malam semalam (5 Okt), mengesahkan kapal itu, yang dalam perjalanan menuju ke Gaza, ditahan pada pukul 2.58 petang waktu tempatan (8.58 malam waktu Malaysia/Singapura).

    Kapal Zaytouna itu dijangka akan ditunda oleh tentera Israel ke Pelabuhan Ashdod, menurut kenyataan itu.

    Dr Fauziah bersama anggota misi bantuan kemanusiaan WBG itu mengikuti misi mencabar sekatan Israel ke atas Gaza setelah laluan darat ke negara yang dizalimi itu dikepung dan laluan masuk dari sempadan Mesir-Gaza di Arafah, turut ditutup.

    Delegasi wanita dari negara lain adalah dari Tunisia, Israel, Algeria, Kanada, Turki, Amerika Syarikat, Sweden, Ireland, New Zealand dan Australia sebagai tanda solidariti kepada rakyat Palestin.

    Pelayaran WDB bermula pada 8 malam, 14 September lalu (waktu tempatan Barcelona) dari pelabuhan Vell dan berhenti di Ajaccio, Perancis (bagi pusingan pertama) pada 19 September sebelum meneruskan perjalanan ke Messina, Itali (pusingan kedua).

    Justeru, MyCare akan mengadakan satu sidang media berhubung perkara itu hari ini (6 Okt).

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Ustaz Noor Deros: Mengapa Tiada Palestine Dalam Google Maps?

    Ustaz Noor Deros: Mengapa Tiada Palestine Dalam Google Maps?

    Sedang kita sibuk cari pokemon, Google telah hilangkan nama Palestine dari Mapsnya dan menggantikannya dengan nama Israel.

    Sila cari di Google maps.

    Ini pengumuman mereka bahawa tak lama lagi bermulalah pembinaan Haikal.

    Geopolitics tak boleh dipisahkan daripada eschatology.

    Dan cuba fikir, kenapa banyak sangat cerita tentang Yahudi dalam Al-Quran?

     

    Source: Noor Deros

  • Gaza ‘Spiderboy’ Seeks To Storm Guinness World Records

    Gaza ‘Spiderboy’ Seeks To Storm Guinness World Records

    GAZA CITY — Mohammed al-Sheikh is only 12 and feels trapped in Gaza but he dreams of a Guinness world record for a series of stunning backflips and his almost unbelievable body contortions.

    Mohammed, just 1.37m tall and weighing 29kg, can bend his body in seemingly impossible ways, throwing his feet over his shoulders with reckless abandon or jumping into a spider-like pose.

    His antics earned this young Palestinian from the Gaza Strip the nickname of “Spiderman”, a mantle which fills him with pride.

    Mohammed found fame just after a devastating war in Gaza with Israel that left over 2,000 Palestinians dead in 2014.

    Despite the 50-day conflict interrupting his training, he appeared on the TV show Arabs Got Talent in Lebanon, where his body-bending act won 14 million votes.

    Though he didn’t win, he now hopes to writhe his way into the Guinness Book of Records from his home in the Tel al-Hawa area of southern Gaza City.

    Mohammed can perform four acrobatic moves better than anyone else on earth, his coach Mohammed Lubbad, 26, insists.

    In an email seen by AFP, Guinness accepted his bid for a record entitled: “Most full body revolutions maintaining a chest stand in one minute.”

    In the video submitted as evidence, Mohammed lies on the floor with his chest pressed into the ground.

    His legs then spin around at 360 degrees — his feet touching the ground at every angle in a feat of amazing dexterity.

    AN ‘EXTRAORDINARY GIFT’

    He achieves it 33 times in a minute, four more than the current record of 29, raising hopes he will be crowned in the coming weeks.

    For his mother Hanan, he is already a “world champion,” but now he must “show his extraordinary gift and exceptional strength in world competitions”.

    At these words, Mohammed, perched on the coffee table, drags his back legs over his shoulders, picks up a glass with his toes and drinks from it.

    But for Mohammed, even more than records he dreams of wriggling out of Gaza.

    The hardest thing, he says, is not contorting his body into unbelievable shapes — though Israel’s 10-year blockade of the strip means he can only learn via YouTube videos.

    The hardest challenge for a boy who wants to travel the globe is to “get out of Gaza when all the borders are locked”.

    LOCKED IN GAZA

    “Many Arabs and people across the world support me by clicking ‘Like’ on my videos on Facebook, and it makes me sad not being able to meet and interact with the world because of the blockade,” Mohammed said.

    His coach tried to channel the talents of young Gazans by opening a training centre for unusual sports including parkour, the urban acrobatics in vogue in Gaza.

    But after a year, he ran out of money and had to close — to the devastation of the young boys and girls who practised there.

    “By leaving Mohammed in Gaza we bury a unique talent,” said Mr Lubbad.

    After the final of Arabs Got Talent, he was offered a training contract abroad including support for 10 years, with coaching to help him qualify for Arab and international competitions.

    But his family refused, saying Mohammed was too young to live abroad without them.

    Today, even if he impresses his classmates, his mother, 48, insists it should not undermine the education of the youngest of her eight children.

    So he is left with escapism — braving danger carrying out stunts on the back of a camel or a horse galloping on a Gaza beach, to the amazement of flabbergasted onlookers.

    There, he said, he feels “free”.

    “I’m in the air and there is no blockade.” AFP

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com