Monday, January 21, 2013

Hatikva in Nakba


Hatikva (The Hope) is Zionist entity’s national anthem. It was weitten by Naftali Herz Imber, a Jew poet – and put to music in the early 1880s – like the notorious The Protocols of Zion. The peom goes as:
“In the Jewish heart
A Jewish spirit still sings,
And the eyes look East
Toward Zion
Our hope is not lost,
Our hope of two thousand years,
To be a free nation in our land
In the land of Zion and Jerusalem”
Nakba or ‘Catastrophe’ was the mean to achieve Zionists’ Hatika in 1948 by mass deportation of million of native Muslim and Christian Palestinians.
Jonathan Cook in his May 17, 2005 article exposed the cunning nature of some prominent Israeli leftist Jew intellectuals (Uri Avnery and others), who shed tears on Palestinian Holocaust carried out by fellow Zionist and their collaborating Orthodox Jews since 1948.
“Most of Israeli progressive Jews were not driven by a sense of justice or believe in equality and coexistence between Jews and Arabs inside Israel, but by their own fears that the country might be defeated in the war and overrun by hostile Arab armies. A public record of having sided with the Arabs, they hoped, might save them,” – Fouzi el-Asmar in his book ‘To be an Arab in Israel’.
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