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Of the unspoken realities of forced displacement is the way the displaced cling to everything they brought with them from home.
They continue to wear the same now-tattered shirt they fled in, meticulously care for the only bag they managed to grab, and persist in using the same shoes, the same socks, the same glasses.. items that become lifelines to a home that feels increasingly distant.
A week ago, I thought I had lost my sunglasses, a pair I bought in Gaza City a couple of years ago.
As I walked down the street, absent-minded and weeping silently, I promised myself I wouldn't buy another pair from my area of refuge.
The loss felt like a piece of my identity slipping away, a scent of my home fading. My heart ached physically.
In a final act of hope, I called my family in the shelter, asking them to look for the sunglasses. "Yes, we found them," felt as monumental as the news that we’d be allowed to return home.
Over time, these attachments take on even stranger dimensions.
For the past nine months, I’ve refused to trim the tips of my hair as I used to do regularly back home.
I hadn’t really considered why until today. I realized I didn’t want to cut my "home hair" and let the "shelter hair" grow in its place.
From the Journal of Palestinian journalist Maha Hussaini
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#Al-Aqsa Flood
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Coming soon...scenes of a Zionist force being lured into a pre-prepared ambush in the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood, southwest of Gaza City
#Al-Aqsa_Flood
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Watch a Zionist force being lured into a pre-prepared ambush in the Tal al-Hawa neighborhood, southwest of Gaza City
#Al-Aqsa_Flood
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Today, the German judiciary ruled in favor of the Moroccan champion, and they will have to pay his salaries and force the club to return the player to continue with his club
Whoever chooses to stand by the truth never loses
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Update on (https://t.me/warfareanalysis/50620)
Progressive International has an article on how the coal embargo put on Israel by Colombia can become a model for countries around the world.
Building on Gustavo Petro, a coalition of Palestinian groups, under the banner of the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine, initiated a wider demand for a multilevel embargo against energy transfers that fuel Israeli genocide and apartheid over Palestinians. This included demands to end the transfer of energy to Israel, the purchase of Israeli gas, and the collaboration of energy companies in Israeli energy projects.
Most of Israel’s coal comes from Colombia and South Africa, two states committed to standing with the Palestinian people.
The two main companies responsible for extracting coal destined for Israel are the Swiss Glencore and the American Drummond, which supply more than 90 percent of the Colombian coal sent to Israel. Their coal extraction has damaging effects of its own, especially on the Afro-descendant and indigenous populations of the country’s Caribbean north.
They have been displaced from their lands, killed by toxic coal powder, and have had vital water resources, such as the Rancheria River, polluted and stolen from them. Environmental activists, tribal organizations, and trade unionists resisting environmental destruction have been consistently targeted and murdered by mining corporations and right-wing militias.
In their mobilizations, indigenous leaders drew parallels between their people’s struggles and the cause of Palestine, combining calls on Petro to cut trade ties with Israel with demands to hold mining companies responsible for their human rights violations in Colombia, as well as for enabling Israel’s genocide.
This mobilization brought about the monumental decision to suspend Colombian coal exports to Israel. States and international leaders who do not heed the call will remain complicit in Israel’s genocide of Gaza. An energy embargo is a crucial way to end this complicity — and for the global community to take a principled stand with the Palestinian people.
It is reported that Israel has enough coal reserves to cover its immediate needs. However, it will need to turn to other suppliers, like Australia, Kazakhstan, Russia, and South Africa to address the shortfall, and will likely be forced to pay more in premiums.
[RT]
Progressive International has an article on how the coal embargo put on Israel by Colombia can become a model for countries around the world.
Building on Gustavo Petro, a coalition of Palestinian groups, under the banner of the Global Energy Embargo for Palestine, initiated a wider demand for a multilevel embargo against energy transfers that fuel Israeli genocide and apartheid over Palestinians. This included demands to end the transfer of energy to Israel, the purchase of Israeli gas, and the collaboration of energy companies in Israeli energy projects.
Most of Israel’s coal comes from Colombia and South Africa, two states committed to standing with the Palestinian people.
The two main companies responsible for extracting coal destined for Israel are the Swiss Glencore and the American Drummond, which supply more than 90 percent of the Colombian coal sent to Israel. Their coal extraction has damaging effects of its own, especially on the Afro-descendant and indigenous populations of the country’s Caribbean north.
They have been displaced from their lands, killed by toxic coal powder, and have had vital water resources, such as the Rancheria River, polluted and stolen from them. Environmental activists, tribal organizations, and trade unionists resisting environmental destruction have been consistently targeted and murdered by mining corporations and right-wing militias.
In their mobilizations, indigenous leaders drew parallels between their people’s struggles and the cause of Palestine, combining calls on Petro to cut trade ties with Israel with demands to hold mining companies responsible for their human rights violations in Colombia, as well as for enabling Israel’s genocide.
This mobilization brought about the monumental decision to suspend Colombian coal exports to Israel. States and international leaders who do not heed the call will remain complicit in Israel’s genocide of Gaza. An energy embargo is a crucial way to end this complicity — and for the global community to take a principled stand with the Palestinian people.
It is reported that Israel has enough coal reserves to cover its immediate needs. However, it will need to turn to other suppliers, like Australia, Kazakhstan, Russia, and South Africa to address the shortfall, and will likely be forced to pay more in premiums.
[RT]
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🔻Warfare Analysis NEWS
Update on: https://t.me/warfareanalysis/49934
President Gustavo Petro has declared that Colombia will “suspend coal exports to Israel until it stops the genocide.”
[RT]
President Gustavo Petro has declared that Colombia will “suspend coal exports to Israel until it stops the genocide.”
[RT]
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May God protect you, Abu Osama
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