Podcasts about nabi saleh

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Best podcasts about nabi saleh

Latest podcast episodes about nabi saleh

Revue de presse française
À la Une: les otages français du Hamas

Revue de presse française

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2023 5:01


C'est à la Une du Parisien Dimanche : les photos des huit Français otages du Hamas. On les voit souriant, enfants, adolescents et jeunes adultes, posant pour la photo à une époque heureuse. « Ne les oublions pas », s'exclame le Parisien Dimanche qui veut « mener le combat contre l'oubli ». Qui sont-ils ? « La plupart étaient des militants pour la paix », explique Roy Zichri, dont le petit frère Ohan, 9 ans, a été enlevé avec sa mère et ses grands-parents. « Nous ne demandons rien d'autre que de retrouver nos proches, témoigne-t-il. Il le sait, ajoute le journal, à l'étranger, les images de Gaza sous les bombes ont éclipsé l'attention portée aux otages. » Pour donner de la chair, à ces photos de disparus, le Parisien Dimanche a écrit quelques lignes sur chacun d'entre eux. L'un est « un enfant merveilleux », l'autre « une adolescente sensible avec une âme d'artiste »,un autre encore un « passionné de football ».Les otages français, il en est aussi question dans le Journal du Dimanche, qui a interrogé Sébastien Lecornu, le ministre des Armées de retour d'une tournée qui l'a mené « au Caire, à Abu Dhabi, Ryad, Doha et Tel Aviv ».« Il a tenté, explique le JDD, de peser de tout le poids de la France, pour obtenir la libération de nos otages. Avez-vous des bonnes nouvelles ? », lui demande le journal. Mais le ministre est, évidemment, sur la réserve, expliquant : « Nous nous devons d'être efficaces, et vous comprendrez donc l'indispensable discrétion à adopter sur le contenu exact de mes différents échanges. »À la Une de l'Express : Élisabeth BadinterLa philosophe fait la Une de l'hebdomadaire, avec cette phrase : « Pour la première fois depuis 1945, beaucoup de Français juifs ont peur au point de se cacher. » Et elle accuse : « Nous avons laissé l'islamisme prospérer, faire de l'entrisme à l'école, dicter sa norme dans certains quartiers et impressionner les esprits partout. Les islamistes radicaux ont été plus malins que nous. Et aujourd'hui on a peur. » Face à l'augmentation des actes antisémites, notamment en France, la philosophe n'est guère optimiste lorsqu'on lui demande s'il est encore temps de reprendre la main, elle répond : « J'ai peur qu'il ne soit trop tard, mais ce n'est pas une raison pour baisser les bras. »Un pessimisme qui contraste avec l'espoir, si ce n'est l'optimisme, de Zeruya Shalev, « grande voix de la littérature israélienne, précise l'Obs. Elle vit à Haïfa, et a donné rendez-vous à l'envoyé spécial de l'hebdomadaire, dans un restaurant tenu par une Palestinienne, Rola, qu'elle serre dans ses bras. Après le 7 octobre, raconte Zeruya Shalev, tout a volé en éclat. Mais nous sommes nombreux, néanmoins, à vouloir la paix en Israël. Il faut poursuivre le dialogue. Je continue à avoir de l'espoir ». Même si elle n'a aucune confiance dans le gouvernement actuel. « Benyamin Netanyahu, nous a mené à la catastrophe. Nous devons nous débarrasser de lui. »Rien ou presque, dans les hebdos, sur la guerre à GazaIl est vrai que les journalistes étrangers n'ont pas le droit de rentrer dans l'enclave palestinienne. Mais ils peuvent encore se rendre en Cisjordanie, c'est ce qu'a fait l'envoyé spécial de M, le supplément du Monde, qui est allé dans le village de Nabi Saleh, « dont tous les habitants sont des membres de la famille Tamimi. Une tribu dont chaque génération se mobilise contre la colonisation israélienne. La plus célèbre d'entre eux, est la militante palestinienne Ahed Tamimi, connue pour avoir giflé un soldat israélien, lorsqu'elle avait 16 ans ». C'était en 2017. Elle avait été condamnée à huit mois de prison. « Elle a aujourd'hui 22 ans, et elle a été arrêtée le 6 novembre, accusée "d'incitation au terrorisme". Les Tamimi ont toujours su rendre leur engagement très médiatique », précise l'Obs qui ajoute : « Bilal, l'un des cousins d'Ahed, "filme tout". Ses images sont postées sur la chaîne YouTube, et parfois consultée par des millions d'internautes. » Il s'agit de « récolter les preuves des violences commises par l'armée ou les colons, et immortaliser leur contestation », précise l'hebdomadaire.Y a-t-il un risque de conflit mondial ?Sur cette question, le Figaro Magazine fait dialoguer le chercheur Frédéric Encel, et l'écrivain Amin Maalouf. Le premier ne croit pas « à une grande régionalisation du conflit au Proche-Orient, et encore moins, à une guerre mondiale ». Le second parle d'une « nouvelle guerre froide, dont les développements sont nombreux ». Amin Maalouf cite notamment « le conflit entre la Russie et l'Occident, qui n'est pas engagé directement contre elle mais qui aide l'Ukraine ». Il cite aussi « le conflit en Afrique sahélienne, où la Russie a contribué à déstabiliser les alliés de la France et des États-Unis, à tel point qu'on ne sait plus au Soudan, en Libye au Mali, au Niger ou au Burkina Faso, qui est l'allié de qui ».

Ethnically Ambiguous
We Are Still Anti-Genocide

Ethnically Ambiguous

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2023 51:22 Transcription Available


In episode 325, the girls continue to talk about the genocide happening in Palestine.  FOOTNOTES: House votes to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib over her Israel-Hamas rhetoric in a stunning rebuke Rashida Tlaib's statement on her silencing UPDATE: It has been discouraged by a lot of prevalent Palestinian Orgs (including SoCal SJP), for Muslims/Arabs/Brown and Black folks to protest here. It is a Zionist trap that threatens our movement more than it does good. Below is the reasoning. PLEASE READ AND SPREAD. the nakba in 1948 and the nakba in 2023  today is a new Nakba! Thousands of people in Gaza are leaving the city. Washington Post Anti-Palestinian Cartoon I wanna put this on my timeline. I think most of us are tired with the “are you condemn Hamas”. We all can relate to this guy. (referenced by Shereen at 11:45) If you're wondering why the West doesn't seem to show enough help and empathy towards Palestinian people, it's deeply rooted in racism. Western media unapologetically dehumanizes Arabs and anyone who doesn't fit the 'white with blue eyes' stereotype. This is the core issue; they don't see us as humans. (referenced by Shereen at 31:05) Palestinian journalist Mohammad Abu Hasira killed in Israeli strike on Gaza To kill a family: The loss of Wael Dahdouh's family to an Israeli bomb Reporting from the middle area, I was going to buy my grandma water and an Israeli air strike hit a house near by. motaz, bisan and plestia have become part of israel's hitlist now. the terrorist state has made its intentions clear in jpost, declaring them as hamas members. Latin America ramps up condemnations of Israel's attack on Gaza An Al Jazeera digital investigation found no grounds to the Israeli forces claim that there is a Hamas tunnel under Gaza's Sheikh Hamad Hospital  What Every American Should Know About Gaza Press conference holding up lifeless child's body to show the death and destruction Exposed: Hamas's propaganda team Doctors Without Borders nurse interview with Anderson Cooper This is Doctors Without Borders, a decades-old global NGO that delivers medical aid to people in conflict, telling the world that “no place in Gaza is safe from brutal and indiscriminate bombing” by Israel. Palestinian children in Gaza hold a press conference outside Al Shifa hospital, speaking English so the world cannot pretend not to understand them: “We come now to shout and invite you to protect us; we want to live, we want peace… we want to live as the other children live.” Did the New York Times just call the Nakba— the mass expulsion and dispossession of Palestinians— a migration? Israel Quietly Pushed for Egypt to Admit Large Numbers of Gazans Palestinian doctors in Gaza in a message to Israeli doctors About 100 Israeli doctors sign an open letter demanding that the Israeli occupation army to bomb hospitals in #Gaza. Israel arrests Palestinian activist Ahed Tamimi in occupied West Bank raids Israeli forces just arrested Ahed Tamimi in the village of Nabi Saleh in the occupied West Bank. Bassem Tamimi, Ahed's father, was arrested by Israeli forces on Oct 29 while traveling to Amman. The family only learned today he's being held in Ofer Prison under administrative detention for 6 months, meaning no charge or trial.  Ahed was already imprisoned once for eight months when she was only 16 for confronting occupation soldiers after her cousin was shot in the head with a rubber bullet. Last year, she was wrongfully portrayed as Ukrainian, showing liberal hypocrisy about who has the right to resist Fact Check-Video of young girl confronting a soldier has nothing to do with the Ukraine conflict Ahed Tamimi: 'I am a freedom fighter. I will not be the victim' Quotes from Zionist Israeli Prime Ministers over the years Kmart removes controversial Christmas 'Ham-mas' bag from sale after complaint from Australian Jewish Association Israeli Knesset Passes Draconian Amendment to the Counter-Terrorism Law Criminalizing “Consumption of Terrorist Publications” Belgium wants sanctions against Israel for Gaza bombings - deputy PM The deputy Prime Minister of #Belgium is saying it is time for sanctions against #Israel. #moreofthis The blast killing hundreds at a hospital in Gaza is deeply wrong. I grieve for each person lost. There's no excuse for the deaths of people seeking care and those who treated them. International law is clear: Innocent civilians must be protected & have access to humanitarian aid. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

This Is Palestine
Ahed Tamimi: A Palestinian Girl's Fight for Freedom

This Is Palestine

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 11:26


Host Diana Buttu speaks with renowned Palestinian youth activist Ahed Tamimi about her new book, They Called Me A Lioness: A Palestinian Girl's Fight for Freedom, co-written with Palestinian-American journalist, Dena Takruri. The powerful memoir shares Ahed's courageous life story, from growing up in the Palestinian town of Nabi Saleh to being brutally imprisoned by the Israeli military at only sixteen-years-old for protecting her home and family from Israeli soldiers. Listen to this episode to learn more about Ahed's journey and how this powerhouse Palestinian women duo came together for this compelling book.

This Is Palestine
A Palestinian Girl's Fight for Freedom

This Is Palestine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 17:29


For International Women's Day, we are thrilled to highlight the voices of powerful Palestinian women who are breaking barriers and inspiring change. Join host Diana Buttu as she speaks with award-winning Palestinian American journalist Dena Takruri about her book, co-written by renowned Palestinian youth activist Ahed Tamimi, "They Called Me A Lioness: A Palestinian Girl's Fight for Freedom." In this compelling memoir, Ahed shares her courageous journey from growing up in the Palestinian town of Nabi Saleh to standing up against the Israeli military at just sixteen-years-old. With raw honesty and unwavering determination, Ahed's story serves as a testament to the strength and resilience of Palestinian women. Tune in to this episode to learn more about their incredible journey and how they're paving the way for the next generation of women activists.

Ngaji Kita
Kajian Tafsir Q.S. Huud ayat 61-68 oleh Ustadz Cholid Mahmud

Ngaji Kita

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 39:09


Kajian kali ini (10/8) membahas Kisah Dakwah Nabi Saleh dengan kaum nya kaum Tsamud. Adanya mukjizat Unta betina serta akhir kehidupan mereka yang menentang dan menerima dakwah tauhid Nabi Saleh.

Cerita Riwayat
Kisah Nabi Saleh Dan Kaum Tsamud

Cerita Riwayat

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2021 17:07


Kisah Nabi Saleh dan kaum Tsamud - Ust. Abu Humairoh --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ceritariwayat/support

kaum kisah nabi saleh
Anwar Fuadi
SERIAL 25 NABI = NABI SALEH AS

Anwar Fuadi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2021 6:09


#nabisaleh #serialnabi --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/anwar-fuadi/support

serial nabi saleh
NUR ISLAM
Kisah Nabi Saleh AS dan Mukjizat Seekor Unta Betina

NUR ISLAM

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2020 7:22


Nabi Saleh AS adalah nabi dan rasul kelima yang patut diimani. Nabi Saleh berdakwah di Al-Hijr yang saat ini dikenal sebagai Madain Shalih, yakni Kota-kota Nabi Saleh AS, antara Arab Saudi dan Suriah. Beberapa rumah dan batu-batu diyakini sebagai peninggalan Nabi Saleh. UNESCO menetapkan peninggalan itu sebagai warisan dunia. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/andi-adi-anugrah/support

CODEPINK Radio
Episode 53: Palestine with Manal Tamimi and China is Not Our Enemy with Vijay Prashad

CODEPINK Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2020 55:21


Ariel Gold speaks with Manal Tamimi of the Palestinian village Nabi Saleh and Jodie Evans speaks with Vijay Prashad about China.

Ustadz Dr. Firanda Andirja, Lc, MA
Kisah Nabi Saleh 'Alaihissalam - Ustadz Dr. Firanda Andirja, M.A.

Ustadz Dr. Firanda Andirja, Lc, MA

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2020 64:37


Kisah Nabi Saleh 'Alaihissalam - Ustadz Dr. Firanda Andirja, M.A.

kisah ustadz ustadz dr nabi saleh firanda andirja
The Miko Peled Podcast
Bassem Tamimi from Nabi Saleh, Palestine

The Miko Peled Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2020 29:22


In our debut episode, Miko Peled speaks with Bassem Tamimi in person from his village of Nabi Salih. Bassem Tamimi is a prominent Palestinian leader from the village of Nabi Saleh and one of the leaders of the popular resistance movement. Many outside of Palestine know him as the father of Ahed Tamimi, who was famously incarcerated by Israel after she slapped an IDF solider. Miko and Bassem sat down after a community meeting to discuss the current state of Palestinian resistance and what a just future must contain for Palestinians.  About Miko Peled: Miko Peled aims to shine a light on under-reported Palestinian experiences through conversations with the brave human rights defenders doing the work on the ground. Miko is an Israeli-American author, writer, speaker, and human rights activist living in the United States. He is considered by many to be one of the clearest voices calling for justice in Palestine, supporting the Palestinian call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) and the creation of a single democracy with equal rights in all of historic Palestine.  www.mikopeled.com

Faith Collides
Peter Irvine – Gloria Jean’s Executive

Faith Collides

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2019 36:09


Peter Irvine grew up doing what he needed to do to make ends meet. Peter’s father had several odd jobs performing blue-collar work while his mother stayed at home. At 14 years old, Peter started working at an advertising agency because his family expected him to contribute to the household income, and Peter viewed his job as a something he had to do to pay the bills. But as Peter got older, his understanding of his faith grew, which he says challenged him to do his work better. In this episode, Peter shares how he began to apply Biblical principles to his role as National Media Director, how his church Hillsong encouraged him to have more vision in the workplace, and how his small group leader Nabi Saleh told him about the opportunity at Gloria Jean’s. Peter shares how the original Gloria Jean’s concept, a coffee chain that started in the US in 1979, needed to be tailored for the Australian market. It was a difficult start opening up the first stores, but once Peter and his partner Nabi got it right, the coffee chain grew to 300 stores in the first 10 years. And in 2015, they sold the business to a publicly listed company Retail Food Group for approx. 150 million US dollars. Peter is now an author, keynote speaker, author and consultant. He provides practical advice and resources on his website.     Special thanks for this episode: Peter and Sue Irvine, Brian Andrews, Farah Thalji, Michelle Haines and Ruth Ng   Support Faith Collides podcast with a review --->  http://bit.ly/FaithC0llid3s Faith Collides podcast is hosted by Grace Huang from Lux Mundi.  More information: www.lxmundi.com --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/faithcollides/support

Palestine Solidarity
Interview With Bassem Tamimi November 9, 2018

Palestine Solidarity

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2019 17:37


Bassem Tamimi is a grassroots activist, human rights defender and Amnesty International designated prisoner of conscience from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh. He is the father of Ahed Tamimi, who at 16 years of age, was sentenced to eight months in prison under a plea bargain in 2018.

USMARADIO
From the Red Sea to the Dead Sea: a Soundscape of an Occupation 2018

USMARADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2019 56:00


radioart106 @ USMARADIO program #110 length: 59 min. from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea: a Soundscape of an Occupation 2018 New Radiophonic compositions, Curated and Produced for Radiokunst-Kunstradio ORF Vienna, in the frame of the Nebenan - Erkundungen in Europas Nachbarschaft: Israel Serie. kunstradio.at/2018A/04_02_18en.html Image by Muhammad Jabali North Jordan Valley 2018 by Meira Asher There is a project by the Israeli state to make life intolerable for the Palestinians remaining in the Jordan valley, the West Bank, for the purposes of de-facto annexation of this land and its resources. This introductory composition is focused on the evacuation/demolition orders issued to the Palestinian communities by the Israeli Civil Administration. Voices: families of the North Jordan Valley, Guy Hircefeld, Meira Asher Lexical assistance: Liam Evans Thanks: Elisabeth Zimmermann, Susanna Niedermayr. * if you wish to help the Palestinian community at the North Jordan Valley, please contact me at: radioart106@gmail.com Soundinista Meira Asher is occupied with HR intervention, social documentary, radio art, and the expression/transition of traditional rhythms in/to contemporary music. Her work has been released on Crammed, Sub Rosa and Auditorium. Co-founder of the ‘bodylab art foundation' in The Hague (2001-2011), Lecturer at the University of Haifa, and producer of radioart106. In 2018 she will release a vinyl based on Antonin Artaud's last radio play ‘to have done with the Judgement of god' in the Hebrew language. The Sea That You Cannot See by Dganit Elyakim dedicated to Haitham Khatib How do you deliver a message of hope in our forlorn reality? Maybe the answer lies in the sea, which is completely indifferent to the nations that “rule” its beach shores, they rise and fall, like the sea waves. I asked my friends to describe the sea to their beloveds from the other side of the barrier, the ones who are prevented from approaching it. The actor, director and writer Mohamad Bakri described the sea to his friend Hassan; Hanan Zaid Elkilani, a young, emerging art student, portrayed the sea to her father's friend, Prof. Ahsan Eldick, from Nablus; Maya Felixbrodt (viola) played for the freedom fighters Ahed (16) and Nariman Tamimi from Nabi Saleh; Adaya Godlevsky (harp) dedicated her playing to the children of Palestine; and Samira Saraya painted the sea in words and sang for her family in the refugee camp in Jenin. Dganit Elyakim is a composer and an artist. Her music depicts various aspects of the human and digital paradigm. Her oeuvre includes chamber, vocal, and electroacoustic compositions, as well as music for theatre, dance, new-media and video. In 2016, she released her debut album “Failing Better”. Lecturer at Shenkar College and artistic director of “The Unbearable Lightness of Coherency” concert series. In 2018, she will be a guest artist at La Cité Internationale Des Arts in Paris and at Styria Artist in Residence in Graz. Lascia Vibrare: There's a Family Living by Eran Sachs Dedicated to Michael Zupraner At the center of this piece there is a field recording of a family, captured from a distance. On first listen there doesn't seem to be anything particularly special about this recording; but over the course of this reportage it becomes apparent that the act of documentation may register more than one might have initially suspected. Eran Sachs is a composer, improviser and sound-artist working in Jerusalem and Tel-Aviv. He has been playing his unpredictable analogue system - the No-input Mixer - both solo and in various collaborative projects. He was a member of the International Hyperion Ensemble, which revolves around the works of the Romanian composers Iancu Dumitrescu and Ana-Maria Avram. His work oftentime fuses the political and the sonic, drawing on the multilayered complex context of the unfortunate region in which he lives. An Audio Guide to Occupation_part01_A-D by Ma'ayan Tsadka an audio guide to occupation is a sonic archive, using found materials from the daily life in occupied Palestine. It makes use of minimum sound manipulations.Mostly isolating moments, categorizing, and at times layering. It is intended to be an ongoing documentation A. Means of Intimidation Israeli military night raid B. Means of Crowd Control Tear Gas The Skunk: Water Cannon C. Means of Killing Rubber-Coated Steel Bullets Live Ammunition Snipers Air Strike on Gaza D.Means of resistance Musician, composer and teacher Ma'ayan Tsadka, composes sounds for people, instruments, objects, buildings, metal rails, and more. Current activity and research topics include: underwater sonic-scapes, site-specific pieces, audio/visual pieces, and echo/resonance in musical, political, and social context: from the rhythms of protest chants, to a series of site-specific pieces which calls for active participation and challenges common musical hierarchies. Completed a DMA in music composition at UCSC, Currently resides in Jaffa and teaches at Haifa university. Special thanks to Meira Asher Image by Muhammad Jabali

Empire Files
Episode 72 - Abby Martin with Ahed Tamimi, a Spirit That Can't Be Jailed

Empire Files

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2019 19:37


Recently, the struggle for Palestinian human rights gained international attention surrounding a new icon of resistance--16 year old Ahed Tamimi. While in the West Bank in late 2016, Abby Martin interviewed Ahed Tamimi about her hardships and aspirations living under occupation and it becomes clear why her subjugators are trying to silence her voice. Her brother Waad and father Bassem also talk about their experiences with Israeli soldiers harassing their village and targeting their family. In this exclusive episode, Abby outlines the Tamimi family's tragic tale and unending bravery in the fight for justice and equality in Palestine and how the story of their village of Nabi Saleh is emblematic of the Palestinian struggle as a whole. Keep Empire Files independent and ad-free! Patreon: www.patreon.com/empirefiles GoFundMe: www.gofundme.com/keep-empire-files-going FOLLOW // @EmpireFiles // @AbbyMartin LIKE // www.facebook.com/TheEmpireFiles

The Palestine Podcast
The Palestine Podcast #28: Nery Ramati on ‘Palestinian Child Prisoners in Apartheid Israel's Prisons’

The Palestine Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2018 50:24


The Palestine Podcast showcases a selection of lectures, talks and interviews featuring leading experts and social justice activists active on the Palestine-Israel issue. Brought to you by the Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign. Click here to view all podcasts. Subscribe on your favourite platform! Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyStitcherAcastYouTubeDeezerTuneInPlayer.fmPocketCastsCastroRadio PublicBreakerBlubrryPodcast AddictPodbeanPodcast RepubliciHeartRadio jQuery(document).ready(function($) { 'use strict'; $('#podcast-subscribe-button-11212 .podcast-subscribe-button.modal-632417ae820c0').on("click", function() { $("#secondline-psb-subs-modal.modal-632417ae820c0.modal.secondline-modal-632417ae820c0").modal({ fadeDuration: 250, closeText: '', }); return false; }); }); ===== PP#28 - Nery Ramati on 'Palestinian Child Prisoners in Apartheid Israel's Prisons' [2018-04-18] - (Download here) INFO: On Wednesday 18th April 2018 - to mark Palestinian Prisoners' Day - Israel human rights lawyer Nery Ramati spoke in Dublin about the situation of Palestinian children under Israel's apartheid military court system. Every year, hundreds of Palestinian minors undergo the same scenario. Israeli security forces pick them up on the street or at home in the middle of the night, then handcuff and blindfold them and transport them to interrogation, often subjecting them to violence en route. Exhausted and scared – some having spent a long time in transit, some having been roused from sleep, some having had nothing to eat or drink for hours – the minors are then interrogated. Completely alone, cut off from the world, without a lawyer or other guardian present they are interrogated in manner that often involves threats, verbal abuse and physical violence. Its sole purpose is to get the minors to ‘confess' or provide ‘information' about others. They are then taken to the military court for a remand hearing. In the vast majority of cases, the military judges approve remand, even when the only evidence against the minors is their own confession. These military courts, which are only used to try Palestinians, have a 99.7% conviction rate and have been repeatedly criticised by human rights groups as failing to meet international standards for a fair trial. The facts and figures all demonstrate that the rights of Palestinian minors' are being regularly and systematically violated by Apartheid Israel. About the Speaker Nery Ramati is an attorney and partner in Gaby Lasky and Partners Law Office, a leading human rights office in Israel, specializing in freedom of expression and protest, and Ahed Tamimi's lawyers. He has been representing Palestinian, Israeli and international human rights and anti-occupation activists in Israel's military (Occupied Palestinian Territories) and civil (State of Israel) courts for almost a decade. Mr. Ramati has been representing leading human rights defenders and activists from the Palestinian villages of the popular struggle movement, such as Bi'ilin, Nabi Saleh, Beit Ummar, Qadom and others.  One of his most important achievements is raising the awareness worldwide on the issues of the ill-treatment of the Palestinian minors (children) in the military court system. Organised by Dublin branch of the Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign Disclaimer: The views expressed in this podcast reflect the opinions of the speaker(s) only and do not reflect the views of the Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign unless otherwise explicitly stated. Apple PodcastsGoogle PodcastsSpotifyStitcherAcastYouTubeDeezerTuneInPlayer.fmPocketCastsCastroRadio PublicBreakerBlubrryPodcast AddictPodbeanPodcast RepubliciHeartRadio

The Fringe
Palestine's Youngest Journalist 11 year old Janna Jihad

The Fringe

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2018 10:58


Guest: Jana Jihad, Youngest Palestine Journalist Host: Sara-Jayne King, Late Nights Topic: The Fringe: Palestine’s Youngest Journalist 11 year old Janna Jihad is South Africa 11 year old Janna Tamimi, counts herself among the youngest journalists in the world. A resident of the village of Nabi Saleh in the occupied West Bank, Janna, along with many other local children, regularly participates in demonstrations against the Israeli occupation. She began making videos of what was happening in her village when she was only seven. She is currently in South Africa to highlight the suffering of the Palestinian people.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Unsettled
Child Detention

Unsettled

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2018 37:29


“If every time a child does something we detain them, we destroy their future, we make them basically dreamless young men. This is how Palestinian children who go through the system become.” — Yazan Meqbil On December 19, 2017 Palestinian teenager Ahed Tamimi was arrested after slapping an Israeli soldier on her family's property. She was taken from her home in the middle of the night, interrogated without an adult present, and eventually signed a plea deal and was sentenced to eight months in prison. Ahed Tamimi became a symbol of Palestinian resistance, but she is only one out of hundreds of Palestinian children who face Israel's military court system every year. In this episode of Unsettled, we wanted to find out — On what grounds are children arrested? What actually happens to a child once they’ve been arrested? How does child detention impact both individuals and communities in the West Bank? We spoke to Ahed's father Bassem Tamimi, Palestinian student and activist Yazan Meqbil, and attorney Brad Parker of Defense for Children International-Palestine.  This episode of Unsettled was produced and edited by Emily Bell and Asaf Calderon. Music by Nat Rosenzweig and Monplaisir. Bassem Tamimi is a Palestinian activist from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh. Since 2009, Tamimi has been one of the leaders of protests in the village against the seizure of the local spring by a nearby settlement. Tamimi spent three years in administrative detention in the 1990s. While he was imprisoned twice between 2011 and 2013, Amnesty International labeled him a prisoner of conscience and wrote that he was "detained solely for his role in organizing peaceful protests against the encroachment onto Palestinian lands by Israeli settlers." Bassem is married to Nariman Tamimi and has four children, including 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi, who was arrested in December 2017 and currently serves an 8-month sentence.  Yazan Meqbil grew up in the West Bank town of Beit Ommar. Growing up, Meqbil became familiar with the ill-treatment of Palestinian children. In 2015, Meqbil joined the American Friends Service Committee and Defense for Children International-Palestine in filming the documentary Detaining Dreams. He has been on several speaking tours and engagements in the US since then advocating for the cause and raising awareness about Israel’s arrest, persecution, and mistreatment of an average of 700 Palestinian children every year. Meqbil is currently a rising senior studying Molecular Biology and Biochemistry at Goshen College, in Goshen, Indiana. Brad Parker is a staff attorney and international advocacy officer at Defense for Children International - Palestine. He specializes in issues of juvenile justice and grave violations against children during armed conflict, and leads DCIP’s legal advocacy efforts on Palestinian children’s rights. Parker regularly writes and speaks on the situation of Palestinian children, particularly issues involving detention, ill-treatment and torture of child detainees within the Israeli military detention system, and violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law. He leads DCIP's US Program and is a co-leader of the No Way to Treat a Child campaign in the United States and Canada. He is a graduate of the University of Vermont and received his J.D. from the City University of New York School of Law. RESOURCES Military Court Watch Annual Report 2016/17 Minors in Jeopardy, B'tselem, March 2018 Statistics on Palestinian minors in the custody of the Israeli security forces, B'tselem, May 2018 Unprotected: Detention of Palestinian Teenagers in East Jerusalem, B'tselem, October 2017 Order regarding Security Provisions [Consolidated Version] (Judea and Samaria) (No. 1651), 5770-2009 Israel's military courts 'humiliating charade' for Palestinians, Al Jazeera, February 2018 Separate and Unequal: Inside Israel's Military Courts, Where the Only Defendants Are Palestinian, Haaretz, March 2017 Defense For Children International - Palestine No Way To Treat A Child H.R.4391 - Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act Detaining Dreams Yazan Meqbil: Congressional Briefing - 50 Years of Occupation and Life for Palestinian Children Preview image: Ofer Military Prison, Israel. Photo credit: Christopher Michel, Wikimedia Commons.

Unsettled
Child Detention

Unsettled

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2018 37:29


“If every time a child does something we detain them, we destroy their future, we make them basically dreamless young men. This is how Palestinian children who go through the system become.” — Yazan Meqbil On December 19, 2017 Palestinian teenager Ahed Tamimi was arrested after slapping an Israeli soldier on her family's property. She was taken from her home in the middle of the night, interrogated without an adult present, and eventually signed a plea deal and was sentenced to eight months in prison. Ahed Tamimi became a symbol of Palestinian resistance, but she is only one out of hundreds of Palestinian children who face Israel's military court system every year. In this episode of Unsettled, we wanted to find out — On what grounds are children arrested? What actually happens to a child once they’ve been arrested? How does child detention impact both individuals and communities in the West Bank? We spoke to Ahed's father Bassem Tamimi, Palestinian student and activist Yazan Meqbil, and attorney Brad Parker of Defense for Children International-Palestine.  This episode of Unsettled was produced and edited by Emily Bell and Asaf Calderon. Music by Nat Rosenzweig and Monplaisir. Bassem Tamimi is a Palestinian activist from the West Bank village of Nabi Saleh. Since 2009, Tamimi has been one of the leaders of protests in the village against the seizure of the local spring by a nearby settlement. Tamimi spent three years in administrative detention in the 1990s. While he was imprisoned twice between 2011 and 2013, Amnesty International labeled him a prisoner of conscience and wrote that he was "detained solely for his role in organizing peaceful protests against the encroachment onto Palestinian lands by Israeli settlers." Bassem is married to Nariman Tamimi and has four children, including 17-year-old Ahed Tamimi, who was arrested in December 2017 and currently serves an 8-month sentence.  Yazan Meqbil grew up in the West Bank town of Beit Ommar. Growing up, Meqbil became familiar with the ill-treatment of Palestinian children. In 2015, Meqbil joined the American Friends Service Committee and Defense for Children International-Palestine in filming the documentary Detaining Dreams. He has been on several speaking tours and engagements in the US since then advocating for the cause and raising awareness about Israel’s arrest, persecution, and mistreatment of an average of 700 Palestinian children every year. Meqbil is currently a rising senior studying Molecular Biology and Biochemistry at Goshen College, in Goshen, Indiana. Brad Parker is a staff attorney and international advocacy officer at Defense for Children International - Palestine. He specializes in issues of juvenile justice and grave violations against children during armed conflict, and leads DCIP’s legal advocacy efforts on Palestinian children’s rights. Parker regularly writes and speaks on the situation of Palestinian children, particularly issues involving detention, ill-treatment and torture of child detainees within the Israeli military detention system, and violations of international humanitarian law and international human rights law. He leads DCIP's US Program and is a co-leader of the No Way to Treat a Child campaign in the United States and Canada. He is a graduate of the University of Vermont and received his J.D. from the City University of New York School of Law. RESOURCES Military Court Watch Annual Report 2016/17 Minors in Jeopardy, B'tselem, March 2018 Statistics on Palestinian minors in the custody of the Israeli security forces, B'tselem, May 2018 Unprotected: Detention of Palestinian Teenagers in East Jerusalem, B'tselem, October 2017 Order regarding Security Provisions [Consolidated Version] (Judea and Samaria) (No. 1651), 5770-2009 Israel's military courts 'humiliating charade' for Palestinians, Al Jazeera, February 2018 Separate and Unequal: Inside Israel's Military Courts, Where the Only Defendants Are Palestinian, Haaretz, March 2017 Defense For Children International - Palestine No Way To Treat A Child H.R.4391 - Promoting Human Rights by Ending Israeli Military Detention of Palestinian Children Act Detaining Dreams Yazan Meqbil: Congressional Briefing - 50 Years of Occupation and Life for Palestinian Children Preview image: Ofer Military Prison, Israel. Photo credit: Christopher Michel, Wikimedia Commons.

VOMENA at KPFA
VOMENA May 18, 2018

VOMENA at KPFA

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2018 59:16


The Way to the Spring: Life and Death in Palestine is based on journalist Ben Ehrenreich’s eye-witness account of life in the West Bank—in the village of Nabi Saleh and the cities of Hebron and Ramallah.

death palestine west bank hebron ramallah ben ehrenreich nabi saleh spring life
Delete Your Account Podcast
Taking the Mask Off

Delete Your Account Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2018 80:30


If you want to support the show and receive access to tons of bonus content, subscribe on our Patreon page for as little as $5 a month. Also, don't forget to subscribe, rate, and review the show on iTunes. We can't do this show without your support!!! Roqayah is out for the week, but returning guest-co-host Nora Barrows-Friedman fills her shoes and joins Kumars for a conversation with Ali Abunimah, co-founder and editor of The Electronic Intifada. Ali is also the author of The Battle for Justice in Palestine and One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse. We discuss several developments in Israel/Palestine since we last spoke to Ali, both on-the-ground and diplomatically around the world, and to what extent these changes are attributable to Trump. Ali shares the story of the Tamimi family, resisting the seizure of land in their village of Nabi Saleh for Israeli settlement construction. Multiple members of the Tamimi family have been killed in recent years as a result of their participation in weekly protests against the settlements. Not long after the near-death of 15-year-old Muhammad Fadel Tamimi, shot in the head with a "rubber" bullet, Ahed Tamimi, his 16-year-old cousin, lightly slapped one of two heavily armed Israeli soldiers as she attempted to remove them from her family's property. Video of the event went viral. Not long after, Ahed was arrested by the Israeli military where she now faces years in prison, and her family members have been targeted for arrest and abuse ever since. Ali talks about how Trump's Israel/Palestine policy agenda is largely in line with the increasing permissiveness for abuse and subjugation of Palestinians that has continued unaltered under Republican and Democratic presidents for decades. Ali posits that the salient difference between Obama and Trump is that Trump is "taking the mask off", dropping all pretense and revealing the ugly reality of Israeli apartheid and settler colonialism. We also talk about shifting public opinion on the question of justice for all Palestinians, particularly among young people, and why recent high-profile BDS victories have pro-Israel advocacy groups running scared, aligning more and more with far-right-wing governments and organizations. You can find Ali on twitter at @AliAbunimah. Find Nora at @norabf. A transcript for this episode will be provided upon request. Please send an email to deleteuracct @ gmail to get a copy sent to you when it is completed.

Watermelon Brigades
#3: Happy Birthday, Ahed Tamimi!

Watermelon Brigades

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2018 86:58


As Biggie says, birthdays was the worst days. In episode 03, Muna and Jams recount a birthday bash we threw for 17 year old Ahed Tamimi on the Global Day of Solidarity to Free the Tamimi Family. We talk about the Tamimis and the global reaction to “the slap heard around the world,” as well as the resistance village of Nabi Saleh, children in military detention abroad and kids here at home fighting for their lives in their own schools and streets. Plus we touch on the connections between the rise of racist fascism in the US with the current predicament of the ruling right in Israel. We also spotlight why the musician M.I.A. rules, recommend some delicious gift ideas fresh from Palestine and explain our tag line: Free Palestine, save Israel and defend the Americas. #FreeAhed Subscribe to the Watermelon Brigades podcast via iTunes, Stitcher, and Google Play.

Fumaça
Falastine Dwikat sobre a prisão de Ahed Tamimi

Fumaça

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2018 22:09


Em 1991, Israel assinou a convenção internacional sobre os direitos da criança da Organização das Nações Unidas. No seu artigo 37º pode ler-se “a captura, detenção ou prisão de uma criança devem ser conformes à lei, serão utilizadas unicamente como medida de último recurso e terão a duração mais breve possível”. Ahed Tamimi, uma criança palestiniana de 17 anos (tinha 16 quando foi detida), permanece presa desde a noite de 19 de Dezembro, quando soldados israelitas apareceram no seu quarto para a levar, depois de um vídeo que mostrava Ahed a dar uma bofetada a um soldado se ter tornado viral. O mês passado, um tribunal militar israelita decidiu mantê-la presa a aguardar julgamento sem data conhecida. Podem ser semanas, podem ser meses. Ahed está agora a ser julgada nos tribunais militares israelitas, tal como acontece a qualquer criança palestiniana que se encontre detida e ao contrário do que acontece a crianças israelitas. De acordo com a Defence for Children International, desde 2000, pelo menos 8000 crianças palestinianas foram presas e julgadas num tribunal militar israelita, não tendo variadíssimas vezes acesso a direitos básicos como o de poder estar com a família num claro desrespeito do direito internacional, e sofrendo, 3 em cada 4 crianças, de violência física durante a detenção, transferência ou interrogatório. O historial de desobediência a convenções das Nações Unidas por parte de Israel é já longo e, segundo Falastane Dwikat, ativista palestiniana com quem falamos hoje, “o sistema atual de apartheid israelita e o sistema de ocupação têm como objetivo esmagar os palestinianos e as palestinianas”. Incluindo crianças. Falastine falou-nos desde Ramallah, uma cidade palestiniana a 20 quilómetros de Nabi Saleh, a vila onde vive a família Tamimi, incluindo Ahed. Falastine tem sido uma das mais ativas pessoas na campanha #FreetheTamimis, estando presente nas variadíssimas ações de protesto não violentas contra a prisão da Ahed, Nariman (a mãe de Ahed) e outros membros da família Tamimi que tantas vezes foram presos. A prisão de Ahed, as acusações que enfrenta, a normalidade que é uma criança palestiniana ser detida indefinidamente e a ocupação israelita foram temas que abordámos na conversa que podes ouvir aqui. Texto, preparação, entrevista e captação de som: Ricardo Ribeiro Edição de som: Bernardo Afonso Support the show.

Palestine Remembered
Returning for 2018, Robert Martin speaks to Bassem Tamini about Nabi Saleh

Palestine Remembered

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2018


Welcome back to our listeners for the first Palestine Remembered programme for 2018.  Last November, Robert Martin went to the home of Bassem Tamini and spoke to him about Nabi Saleh, the Ramallah village the Tamini family have long called home, a town that has for years been at the forefront of the resistance to the Israeli occupation of their land.  

The Promised Podcast
The “From Sex Industry to Ex-Industry?” Edition

The Promised Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2017 64:40


Noah Efron, Don Futterman, and Times of Israel Ops & Blogs editor Miriam Herschlag discuss three topics of incomparable importance and end with an anecdote about something in Israel that made them smile this week. Looking to support the show? Learn how on Patreon. Nabi Saleh, 1:15 a.m. Al Jazeera published a video of IDF soldiers searching a West Bank Palestinian home. What, if anything, can we learn from it about the nature of the occupation and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict? Paper Trail (or in the Gloam with Yisrael Ha-Yom) There was a shocking disclosure that Prime Minister Netanyahu conversed lots with the owner and editor of Israel’s biggest newspaper, the free daily Yisrael Ha-Yom, before elections and many other important news events. Could this possibly be kosher? From Sex Industry to Ex-Industry? The courts and the Knesset have recently moved to squelch the sex industry: is this blessed feminism or cursed puritanism? Music: Daphna Recter Ha-Shir Al Ha-aretz Elohimim Yom Tov Thank You, with Tal Ne’eman