Gaza City – Palestinians Mark Displacement in 1948 Mideast War

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    Palestinian women in yellow head scarves, the color symbolizing the Fatah movement, hold flags and others holding a key symbolizing the keys to houses left by Palestinians in 1948, during a rally marking the anniversary of the "Nakba", Arabic for catastrophe, in Gaza City, Saturday, May 15, 2010. The Nakba commemorations mark the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were driven out of their homes during the 1948 Israeli-Arab war. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)Gaza City – Bitter Palestinian rivals marched together Saturday in a rare show of unity as they marked 62 years of displacement in the war surrounding Israel’s creation.

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    Loyalists of rival groups Hamas and Fatah held Palestinian flags and a giant key symbolic of their hoped-for return as part of annual commemorations of what they call the “catastrophe,” or “nakba” in Arabic. The names of the villages and towns emptied during the war were written across the key, alongside the slogan “We will return.”

    The plight of the refugees — who fled or were driven from their homes during the 1948 Israeli-Arab war — is one of the most emotionally charged issues for Palestinians and Israel to resolve.

    Palestinian negotiators have demanded at least partial repatriation. Israel has refused, saying an influx of refugees would dilute Israel’s Jewish majority and threaten the existence of the state.

    Gaza’s Hamas rulers invited their Fatah rivals to participate in Saturday’s march, a rare gesture from the Islamic militant group since it seized Gaza and ousted Fatah forces in June 2007. In previous years, different Palestinian factions organized their own events, highlighting their inability to work together on key issues.

    No political speeches were made — an apparent nod to the fundamental ideological differences between Hamas and Fatah. Marchers also were asked not to raise the flags of their parties. Some Fatah women got around the ban by wearing yellow headscarves, the color of their movement.

    Some 4.7 million Palestinians refugees and their descendants are scattered across the West Bank, Gaza, Lebanon, Jordan and Syria, according to U.N. figures. About one-third still live in U.N.-supported refugee camps.
    Ultra orthodox Jewish men hold an Israeli flag in front of  Palestinian demonstrators, not seen, in protest against a rally marking the anniversary of the "Nakba", Arabic for catastrophe, in east Jerusalem, Saturday, May 15, 2010.  The Nakba commemorations mark the uprooting of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled or were driven out of their homes during the 1948 Israeli-Arab war. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)
    At the Gaza rally, marcher Amina Hasanat, 50, held up tattered documents she said showed her family owned a house and land in what is now the southern city of Beersheba in Israel. “They (the Jews) can go back to where they came from, and we will return to our homes and lands,” Hasanat said.

    In the West Bank city of Ramallah, hundreds of Palestinian motorists and pedestrians halted as a one-minute siren wailed to mark the anniversary. Smaller marches took place in other West Bank towns and in east Jerusalem.

    In Lebanon, the militant Hezbollah group, which fought a guerrilla war against Israeli forces until they withdrew from south Lebanon in 2000, said in a statement that “resistance and sacrifice” are the only way to retake Arab-claimed lands.

    “At the 62nd anniversary of nakba, we call upon all Arabs to keep the Palestinian cause alive in the eyes and hearts of all generations,” said Hezbollah, which also battled Israel in a 34-day war in 2006 that left some 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis dead.

    Egypt, meanwhile, opened its usually closed border crossing with Gaza on Saturday for the first time in 75 days to allow medical patients and Gazans with residency abroad to leave the blockaded territory. Israel and Egypt have been keeping Gaza’s borders largely closed since the 2007 Hamas takeover, but Egypt periodically opens its Rafah passenger terminal with Gaza to allow hardship cases to cross.
    Palestinian mourners carry the lifeless body of Fouad Abu Matar during his funeral in Beit Lahia, northern Gaza Strip, Saturday, May 15, 2010. Abu Matar, 78, was found shot dead next to the border with Israel, said Dr. Adham Abu Salmiyeh of the northern Gaza hospital Kamal Adwan. An Israeli military spokesman said forces confirmed shooting a man who approached the border fence on Friday evening. Israel has declared a swath of land on the Gaza side of the border as a no-go zone, and those approaching it risk getting shot by Israeli patrols. Israel says it's a security measure, to prevent infiltration and attacks by Gaza militants.(AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)
    Gaza’s Interior Ministry said some 8,000 Gazans had registered to leave during the scheduled four-day opening. By mid-afternoon Saturday, seven buses had crossed from Gaza into Egypt.

    On Gaza’s border with Israel, the body of a 78-year-old Palestinian man was found shot dead, said Dr. Adham Abu Salmiyeh of the northern Gaza hospital Kamal Adwan.

    An Israeli military spokesman said forces confirmed shooting a man who approached the border fence on Friday evening.

    Israel has declared a swath of land on the Gaza side of the border as a no-go zone, and those approaching it risk getting shot by Israeli patrols. Israel says it’s a security measure, to prevent infiltration and attacks by Gaza militants.


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    6 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    The Arabs are themselves responsible for nakbar. They ran from their homes in 1948, listening to their fellow Arabs who thought the Jews would be slaughtered and the spoils left for the pickings. G-d had other plans for the Jews. You can march to your heart’s delight…..you are a bunch of losers! Instead of creating a life for yourselves, you allow the crooked PLO bosses to keep you enslaved, poor and a pawn. You reap what you sow.

    Chardal
    Chardal
    13 years ago

    That is a very telling picture. Seventy years after rejecting a medina even the chareidim are holding up Israeli flags. Ashrei Shezachinu Likach!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    As usual Israel gets bad PR.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    A bounch of hypocrits. What about all the jews who were kicked out of all the arab countries.

    yanke
    yanke
    13 years ago

    Reply to #2
    It is so sad to see the words you are using when talking about a country that has cost the lives of thousands of jews physically and the lives of millions of jews who there nshumas have been cleaned from knowing anything about being Jewish.
    May hashem help you that we should be able to use the words you used Ashrei Shezachinu Likach! Very soon Iy”h