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Palestinians Commemorate Nakba In Annual Mourning Ritual (PHOTOS)

By MOHAMMED DARAGHMEH 05/15/12 08:33 AM ET AP

RAMALLAH, West Bank — Palestinians on Tuesday marked their mass displacement that followed Israel's creation with a blend of sadness and hope, stopping in their tracks for a mournful siren but also flashing victory signs and carrying banners proclaiming their right of return.

Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled or were forced from their villages during the war that established the Jewish state in 1948, an event they commemorate every year as their "Nakba," or catastrophe.

Today, surviving refugees and their descendants number several million who are scattered across the globe, many still living in squalid camps in the West Bank, Gaza Strip and surrounding Arab countries.

Saadat Jaber, 62, said he has passed on the story of his family's uprooting from what is now the Israeli city of Lod to his offspring.

"I still have hope," Jaber said as he marched with thousands of others to the center of the West Bank town of Ramallah. "Now Israel is a great power, but there were empires in history that collapsed and people that were oppressed by these empires took back their rights."

In three West Bank areas north and south of Jerusalem, dozens of Palestinian stone-throwers clashed with Israeli troops who fired tear gas and rubber-coated steel pellets. The Palestinian Red Crescent said 30 people were hurt by the rubber bullets and dozens suffered from tear gas inhalation.

The 64th anniversary of the Nakba comes after nearly two decades of failed efforts to negotiate the terms of a Palestinian state with Israel.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have been unable to find enough common ground to renew talks that broke down in 2008. Abbas says Israel must halt settlement construction on occupied land sought by the Palestinians. Netanyahu says talks should resume without preconditions.

The Nakba Day commemorations highlighted the political disagreements between Abbas and his main political rival, the Islamic militant Hamas, which seized Gaza from him in 2007.

Abbas seeks a state in the West Bank, Gaza and east Jerusalem – territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast War – but has been vague on the fate of the refugees.

Israeli-Palestinian negotiations never got down to details on the issue, though there is broad opposition in Israel to a mass resettlement of Palestinians, which would rob Israel of its Jewish majority.

In a Nakba Day speech late Monday, the Western-backed Abbas referred to ending Israel's occupation of the lands captured in 1967, saying that "no matter how strong and aggressive, it will be removed."

Hamas' founding charter calls for Israel's destruction and return of all refugees. While some Hamas leaders now raise the possibility of a state alongside Israel, they won't say whether they consider this to be a temporary arrangement.

In Gaza City, Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas said that "our message to the refugees is that we will not give up the right of return ... We will not accept any project that abandons the right of return or affects our sacred rights to the homeland."

In Ramallah, the seat of Abbas' self-rule government, thousands marched to the city's central Manara Square. During a one-minute siren, many stood at attention and flashed V-for-victory signs.

In the biblical town of Bethlehem, hundreds of school children wearing black T-shirts with 1948 printed on them marched through the streets, waving black flags that read "64 years of Nakba."

Clashes between Palestinian stone-throwers and Israeli troops erupted at Rachel's Tomb, an Israeli enclave in Bethlehem, and at the Ofer and Qalandia checkpoints near Jerusalem.

In Hamas-run Gaza, some 3,000 Palestinians marched to the local U.N. office. They carried banners reading "We shall return" and listing the names of their original villages. Haniyeh and several Hamas security officials ran a two-kilometer (1.5 mile) race that ended at the Palestinian parliament.

On an upbeat note, Palestinians celebrated the end of a weekslong hunger strike Monday by hundreds of Palestinians held by Israel. The fate of prisoners is a deeply emotional issue; nearly everyone here has a neighbor, friend or relative of who spent time in an Israeli jail.

The prisoners obtained better conditions, including more family visits and limits to a controversial Israeli policy that can imprison people for years without charge. Israel extracted pledges by militant groups to halt violent activities, and by negotiating an end to the strike with the help of Egypt, prevented the potentially explosive scenario of prisoners dying of hunger.

___

Associated Press writers Ibrahim Barzak in Gaza City, Gaza Strip, and Dalia Nammari in Ramallah, West Bank, contributed to this report.

Loading Slideshow...
  • A young man with his face painted in the colours of the Palestinian flag participates in a rally in Gaza City on May 15, 2012 to mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Palestinian women paint a mural with the word in Arabic that reads, 'We will return' in Gaza City on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians and Arab-Israelis marked Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian woman sits outside her home in the Shati Palestinianrefugee camp in Gaza City on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians and Arab-Israelis marked Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian woman tries to stop Israeli riot policemen from detaining her son (unseen) in the east Jerusalem Arab neighborhood of Issawiya on May 15, 2012 as Palestinian protesters clashed with Israeli security forces during demonstrations marking Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948.(AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Palestinian youths throw stones at Israeli policemen during protests in the east Jerusalem Arab neighborhood of Issawiya on May 15, 2012, marking Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian boy readies to throw a flaming molotov cocktail towards Israeli soldiers deployed at the entrance of the al-Aroub Palestinian refugee camp, just north the West Bank town of Hebron on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (HAZEM BADER/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian man walks past a mural painting on the theme of Nakba in the West Bank city of Jenin on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians and Arab Israelis marked Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. Arabic writing on the wall reads: 'The right of return is sacred'. (SAIF DAHLAH/AFP/GettyImages)

  • An elderly Palestinian man walks past Israeli soldiers deployed at the entrance of the al-Aroub Palestinian refugee camp, just north the West Bank town of Hebron on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (HAZEM BADER/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian woman paints the word in Arabic that reads, 'Returning' as designs a mural in Gaza City on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians and Arab-Israelis marked Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MOHAMMED ABED/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian youth, holding a national flag, flashes the V-sign for victory during a protest in the West Bank city of Nablus on May 15, 2012 to mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (JAAFAR ASHTIYEH/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Palestinian youths burn Israeli flags the east Jerusalem Arab neighborhood of Issawiya on May 15, 2012 as Palestinians protested to mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Palestinian boys throw stones towards Israeli soldiers deployed at the entrance of the al-Aroub Palestinian refugee camp, just north the West Bank town of Hebron on May 15, 2012, as Palestinians mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (HAZEM BADER/AFP/GettyImages)

  • A Palestinian boy wears a scarf with the colours of the Palestinian flag during a rally in Gaza City on May 15, 2012 to mark Nakba day, which commemorates the exodus of hundreds of thousands of their kin after the establishment of Israel state in 1948. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/GettyImages)


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RAMALLAH, West Bank — Palestinians on Tuesday marked their mass displacement that followed Israel's creation with a blend of sadness and hope, stopping in their tracks for a mournful siren but a...
RAMALLAH, West Bank — Palestinians on Tuesday marked their mass displacement that followed Israel's creation with a blend of sadness and hope, stopping in their tracks for a mournful siren but a...
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Sam Adamson
Stands for what's right
08:58 AM on 05/29/2012
Indeed, it is so sad to see people regretting they were not able to massacre their neighbors, deny them their rights, throw them to the see and take their property over six decades ago.

Heartbreaking. Really.
A Jew with a View
Act justly, love mercy, walk humbly
01:05 AM on 05/19/2012
"The reason for the victory of the Zionists was that the roots of Zionism are grounded in modern Western life while we (the Arabs) for the most part are still distant from this life and hostile to it. They live in the present and for the future, while we continue to dream the dreams of the past and to stupefy ourselves with its fading glory” - Constantin Zureiq, prominent and influential Syrian Arab intellectual and one of the first to pioneer and express the importance of Arab nationalism.
11:15 AM on 05/19/2012
So what part of iving in the present and future involves invoking 3000 year old claims on land ownership and expelling the population living there based on their religion?
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BGosh
Certifiably Fatwahfiable
12:40 PM on 05/19/2012
So what you're saying is that people shouldn't live where they wish to and work very hard to get there.

What little you comprehend about the more than 150 years of diplomacy that led to the creation of Israel shouts clearly.
A Jew with a View
Act justly, love mercy, walk humbly
06:34 PM on 05/19/2012
No one is being expelled based on their religion. However, there is plenty of evidence and praise for prohibiting Jews the right to buy land. There goes all the claims about how life was so good for the Jews under Muslim rule. And I suppose you are fine with that like whites refusing to sell homes to blacks.

In recent articles, plenty of light has been shed on the sultan's refusal to sell land in Palestine to Zionists, prior to World War II. After turning down the offer, Abdulhamid famously refused to meet Mizray Qrasow, the Jewish banker who had offered to pay off the Empire's debts and build a navy in exchange for the right to buy land in Palestine. Abdulhamid - according to the Arab and Turkish version of events - told one of his aides, "Tell those impolite Jews that I am not going to carry the historical shame of selling holy land to the Jews and betraying the responsibility and trust of my people!" (his "people" being Muslims, not Arabs as he was a Turk).
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LH21Ak01.html
02:01 PM on 05/18/2012
the Palis did some bad choises in 1948... they trusted others to do their job for free and end up with nothing for the next 60 or more years... they went to war without really fighting and left their houses without any real fight. only 3000 of them were killed in that war.
10:34 AM on 05/18/2012
Why boycott countries which are genocidally slaughtering their people's, jailing or killing them for merely protesting their destitution and lack of freedoms,killing women for being 'immoral, and gay people for being, well, gay.

Why boycott undemocratic countries that offer no free votes,free  media or speech,or free judiciary.

Why boycott countries such as China or Turkey who's occupations are condemned by most western states

Why boycott regions that carpet bomb their neighbours and whose Charter call for their neighbours complete annihilation,reminiscent yes of Hitlers Final Solution, or their near neighbours who just want to drive those of a different religious persuasion 'into the Sea' and claim their entire country

Why boycott countries that threaten to nuke almost daily the very existence of another nation state, completely against all democratic and moral conventions

Why boycott theocracies,autocracies and dictatorships who deny any democracy and often perpetrate mass murder on their populace.

Why boycott countries that perpetrate forcibly expulsion of minorities, condemn them to dhimma status,take away their basic rights and humanity,torching their places of worship on a daily basis

Why boycott a country that murders those who dare to convert away from Islam or apartheid states that refuse entry to any People of the Book

No no no. Let's boycott Israel a true democracy a light to the nations. A thrice confirmed legal entity where all are equal under the law and a Muslim woman sit in judgement at the seat of the Israeli Supreme Court the highest judiciary in the land
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sonic hedgehog
A true word needs no oath
03:22 PM on 05/18/2012
There is no mention of any boycott in this article, what the heck are you talking about? Write your whining in related articles next time.
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03:52 AM on 05/18/2012
For several decades Israel has packaged their propaganda for an American audience who consider historical knowledge to be an esoteric academic pursuit. This has enabled them to achieve a remarkable level of revisionist history and freely employ mendacious denial of obvious historical facts. The internet has eroded this ability resulting in more of a spin effort attempting to define these inconvenient facts are being taken out of context or exaggerated.

In Israel they raise their children on rabid nationalism with the 'never again' foundation. Mix in some rationalized racist perspective and you can simply take the position that whatever we did or do is OK and FKKK what the world thinks.
These two somewhat contradictory narratives result in Americans showing up in the promised land naive, uninformed and feeling surprised at a rather cold welcome. The Israeli youth look down on them for their ignorance and provincial gullibility. But thanks for the support schmuck.
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NorthernBorder
04:47 AM on 05/18/2012
Lets not forget that establishing a new country with immigrants from a thousand lands there was intential exageration ( oh well propaganda internal) - this has occured in all new countries ( I know only Africa). I think that we are pretty mature on this. We do drive on Allenby after all. Amos's daughter prof of history at TA University said we are like the old Hazer in E Europe with a common middle ground in the center and people living all around with hundreds of doors opening toward the same center - she said no where else in the world has this occured ( some not yet open)
( I wrote the above cause I was looking for an opportunity to write it)
10:37 AM on 05/18/2012
For several decades Palestinans are most Arab rejectionist countries have packaged their propaganda for a European ans muslimaran audience who consider historical knowledge to be an esoteric academic pursuit. This has enabled them to achieve a remarkable level of revisionist history and freely employ mendacious denial of obvious historical facts. The internet has eroded this ability resulting in more of a spin effort attempting to define these inconvenient facts are being taken out of context or exaggerated.

In Palestine and right across the middle east they raise their children on rabid nationalism with the 'Israwl is Arab foundation, no Jews in the neighbourhood' Mix in some rationalized racist perspective and you can simply take the position that whatever we did or do is OK and FKKK what the world thinks.
These two somewhat contradictory narratives result in Europenas and arabmuslima showing up in the promised land naive, uninformed and feeling surprised at a rather cold welcome.

The Arab Palestinian youth look down on them for their ignorance and provincial gullibility. But thanks for the support infidel
02:33 AM on 05/19/2012
Europeans and Muslims consider historical knowledge an esoteric pursuit? You've obviously not met many Europeans. Please don't confuse us with Americans (of whom I've met plenty).
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11:41 PM on 05/16/2012
May 15th, 2012

European Union foreign ministers at a meeting in Brussels slammed Israel for threatening the viability of a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.

Their three-page statement released Monday condemned the increased growth of settlement building, and the eviction of Palestinians and demolition of their homes in eastern Jerusalem. It also expressed concern over settler violence.
08:51 AM on 05/17/2012
Arab foreign ministers at a meeting everday slam Israel for existing

When votes and oil beat morals and demoncracy in the ME is it any wonder the European surrender monkeys kow tow to the lies and hatred emanating from their hardcore Muslim populace
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09:21 AM on 05/17/2012
Oil and "hard core Muslim populace" Yep, that's clearly got to be it. :)))
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erehwon2
09:08 AM on 05/17/2012
From Commentary magazine:

"In an interview with Charlie Rose this week, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the Palestinians’ refusal to negotiate unless Israel freezes settlement construction is unjustified, because their claim settlements are stealing the land needed for a Palestinian state is pure “propaganda.” How so? Because “after 44 years, the whole Jewish settlement in the whole West Bank together doesn’t cover even two percent of the area.” Is this mere propaganda on Barak’s part – a lie meant to downplay the devastating impact of Jewish settlement? Actually, Palestinians put the figure even lower: In an interview with the Arabic radio station As-Shams two weeks ago, chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat​ said that based on an aerial photograph provided by European sources, the settlements cover only 1.1 percent of the West Bank.

"So if settlements cover only 1.1 percent of the West Bank, why does the entire West deem them the main obstacle to peace? Because admitting that settlements aren’t the main obstacle to peace would force it to confront an unpalatable truth: that the real obstacle to peace is Palestinian unwillingness to accept a Jewish state in any borders."

http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2011/11/17/settlements-obstacle-to-peace/
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09:36 AM on 05/17/2012
Now that you spin-er, mention it... I don't know why Palestinians pretend that settlements, settlers or IDF hegemony are an issue. Clearly a pretense. On the other hand, it still doesn't explain why a freeze is such a political problem for Netanyahu.
10:40 AM on 05/18/2012
The true obstacle to peace: refusal to accept the Jewish state of Israel ANYWHERE in the region

Enough of this 'illegal settlements' twaddle
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NTT
Fighting rants with facts
05:59 PM on 05/16/2012
>>>"Palestinians on Tuesday marked their mass displacement that followed Israel's creation"

Wrong. The flight of Palestinian Arabs started in 1947, before Israel's creation. It neither started nor ended on May 15, 1948. Setting the "Nakhba" day on that date is not an expresion of mourning, but a provocation. It is not only anti-Israel, but also anti-peace.
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01:02 AM on 05/17/2012
A document found in 1985 in the papers of Aharon Cohen called "The Emigration of the Arabs of Palestine in the Period 1/12/1947 – 1/6/1948" - produced by Israeli Defence Forces Intelligence Service states that 391,000 Palestinians had been expelled. The report concludes: "It is possible to say that at least 55% of the total of the exodus was caused by our [Haganah / IDF] operations and by their influence". In addition, "the effects of the operations of dissident Jewish organizations 'directly [caused] some 15 percent ... of the emigration'.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1948_and_After#The_Causes_and_Character_of_the_Arab_Exodus_from_Palestine:_The_Israel_Defence_Forces_Intelligence_Service_Analysis_of_June_1948
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NTT
Fighting rants with facts
08:25 AM on 05/17/2012
Don't make things up: "was caused by our operations and by their influence" does NOT mean "had been expelled". By far the majority fled before the Haganh/IDF advance. Their flight "was caused by our operations", in that respect.

Both Jews & Arabs fled from the areas of military operations & especially from the areas about to be occupied by the enemy. Jews who did not flee (see Jerusalem's Jewish Quarter, the Etzion villages) were either killed or forced to flee. Not one was allowed to remain. Practically all Jews were forced to flee their homes in Arab countries. In contrast, many Arabs stayed put & were granted full Israeli citizenship.

In further contrast, while Israel fully integrated the Jewish refugees the Arabs subject the Arab refugees to an apartheid regime: they & their descendants were refused citizenship, arbitrarily segregated from the rest of the population (from which they would otherwise be indistinguishable), forced to live in sordid camps, deprived of employment, denied civil & political rights, etc. The viciously inhuman Arab apartheid must cease.
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Cynthia Rays
peace in the valley seeker
01:40 PM on 05/16/2012
In 1967 Palestinians and Syrians were again ethnically cleansed from the territories conquered by Israel. Rabin was the hero then removing people from their villages, some who had been expelled from 1948 Israel. Settlements replaced the bulldozed villages.
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NorthernBorder
09:56 PM on 05/19/2012
Have you taken your meds against delusions.
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01:36 PM on 05/16/2012
A censorship board composed of five Cabinet members prohibited former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin from including in his memoirs a first-person account of the expulsion of 50,000 Palestinian civilians from their homes near Tel Aviv during the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.

http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F70813FC3F5410728DDDAA0A94D8415B898BF1D3