Salam dan Muhasabah Jumaat,
Di saat kita mampu makan dan minum, dikala kita bergaduh dan melenting pasal isu Tabung Haji dan GST, sahabat2 kita di Palestin terus merenung masa depan....
Hari ini 15 Mei dikenali sebagai Nakba Day. Ringkasnya, Hari Nakba adalah hari penderitaan rakyat Palestin kerana dihalau dari tanahair sendiri. Tidak mustahil ianya berlaku kepada kita bilamana ahli politik sangat sibuk berpolitiking, menambah kekayaan, meratah masa depan rakyat dan berkompang ke arah kemusnahan ummah. Rakyat pula berpecah sehingga ulama' diperlekehkan...Wallah'alam.
InsyaALLAH, KHM sedang berusaha untuk menguruskan Program Dana Iftar Ramadan ke Gaza dan Baitulmuqaddis. Moga ALLAH permudahkan...
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Source: Al-Jazeera.com
Each year on May 15, Palestinians across the world commemorate the Nakba (catastrophe), or the 1948 establishment of Israel that led to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians being displaced from their homeland.
The estimated 1.7 million Palestinians who carry Israeli citizenship and live in villages, towns and cities across the country are no exception. Each year, protests, marches, lectures and other events to mourn their ancestors' dispossession are held in Palestinian communities across Israel. Yet, since 2011, Israeli legislation has made mourning the Nakba publicly difficult for Palestinians and others in Israel. The "Nakba Law" authorises Israel's finance minister to revoke funding from institutions that reject Israel's character as a "Jewish state" or mark the country's Independence Day as a day of mourning. Although the Nakba Law has yet to be technically implemented, human rights groups and activists say it has a dangerous deterrent effect and is meant to intimidate Palestinians and others who view Israel's establishment as a day of mourning for Palestinians.
The estimated 1.7 million Palestinians who carry Israeli citizenship and live in villages, towns and cities across the country are no exception. Each year, protests, marches, lectures and other events to mourn their ancestors' dispossession are held in Palestinian communities across Israel. Yet, since 2011, Israeli legislation has made mourning the Nakba publicly difficult for Palestinians and others in Israel. The "Nakba Law" authorises Israel's finance minister to revoke funding from institutions that reject Israel's character as a "Jewish state" or mark the country's Independence Day as a day of mourning. Although the Nakba Law has yet to be technically implemented, human rights groups and activists say it has a dangerous deterrent effect and is meant to intimidate Palestinians and others who view Israel's establishment as a day of mourning for Palestinians.
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