If you think you don’t know much about Nakba, watch this video.

If you think you know everything about Nakba, watch this video.

Jews, the “wandering” tribe, were the refugee makers then, as they are now. They leave those whom they reduced to despair and homelessness to be dealt with and cared for by the Goyim, as seen in this video. The Goyim, then as now, respond with “charity” instead of justice, as if the refugees were the victims of some natural disaster, not of deliberate violence by known aggressive and ruthless perpetrators.

The Sands of Sorrow

ACKNOWLEDGMENT
The above podcast comes from We Hold These Truths, where it was accompanied by the following announcement: 

North America Nakba Tour, April 5 – June 5, 2016
The Exiled Palestinians
Palestinians from the Camps in Lebanon

On May 14, 1948, as Zionist leader David Ben Gurion was proclaiming a Jewish state in Palestine, his heavily armed troops seized the ancient Palestinian Arab town of al-Zeeb and drove out most of the inhabitants. 17-year-old Mariam Fathallah was one of them. She and her young husband, Mohammed Atayah and their families were forced to flee to Lebanon, along with most of the town. By the end of the year, the 4,000 year old community had been leveled to the ground. More than half the Arab Palestinians in Palestine were killed or expelled and more than half of the cities, towns and villages of Palestine were made to disappear, a crime that Palestinians call al-Nakba (the Catastrophe).

Mariam, now 85 years old and respectfully known as Umm Akram, has spent the last 68 years in crowded, makeshift refugee camps in Lebanon. She has raised three generations in the same camps, all waiting to return to their home in Palestine. She has lived through five Israeli invasions of Lebanon, as well as the 1976 Tel al-Zaatar camp massacre that killed more than 2000 of the refugees there.

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