Yes you are right BIGOT my time 4 sure not
Posts by z
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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z
Realist said: I have no problem with jewish people (i have probably more jewish friends than you). LOL
do you? so go and ask your so called friends where are their bouby and zeyde (in Jewish Grand parent's ) are ? the were killed by nazi friends just like you
and you are the IDIOT so give it up
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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z
PARIS
French far-right leader Jean-Marie Le Pen was quoted as saying that the Nazi Occupation of France during World War II was not particularly brutal.
The National Front leader gave an interview to the small extreme-right paper Rivarol, which published the comments.
"In France at least, the German Occupation was not particularly inhuman, even if there were a few blunders, inevitable in a country of 550,000 square kilometers (220,000 square miles)," he was quoted as saying.
The politician's office confirmed the interview had taken place, but said it could not verify the exact comments, as no one had checked them against a recording. The remarks were published in the paper's Jan. 7 edition but did not come to wider attention until Wednesday.
CRIF, an umbrella group of French Jewish organizations, said it was "particularly shocked" by the comments. During the war, some 76,000 Jews, including 12,000 children, were deported from France, many to Auschwitz. Only 2,500 survived.
"These comments taint the memory of all victims of Nazism _ deportees and resistants, and the entire French population, which was subjected for more than four years to the most atrocious of occupations and humiliations," CRIF said in a statement.
Le Pen, 76, has a history of making remarks that jar France, and has been convicted of racism or anti-Semitism at least six times. Once he called the Nazi gas chambers "a detail of the history of the Second World War."
The National Front leader blames immigrants, especially from North Africa, for high unemployment. He wants to deport all illegal immigrants and tighten border controls.
Le Pen startled France and the world by qualifying for a one-on-one runoff against President Jacques Chirac in presidential elections in 2002. Horrified voters rallied behind Chirac in the second round, giving him a resounding 82 percent of the vote.
Realist +Le Pen = SHIT
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Welcome Newbies!!!!!
by kls inwe seem to be having on run on new members,,,,,,,yippie .
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welcome to all you newbies glad you decided to join us.
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z
I'm new here thx for all the info
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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z
the jews themselfs contributed to it by segregating themselfs from the rest of the population
did the or the were forced to?
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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z
realist
word for you you make me sick
Shalom
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197
The Holocaust - do we need to know?
by eyeslice inthis week in uk, there starts a new 6 week series to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the liberation of auschwitz.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctwo/listings/programme.shtml?day=tuesday&service_id=4224&filename=20050111/20050111_2100_4224_37699_50.
personally, i do not like cinema films about the holocaust and, therefore, have never watched things like shindler's list or the pianist.
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z
Realist
Bigot like you made the Holocaust
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Hello all you Newbies!!!!!
by kls ini see we are having a run on newbies and just wanted to say and welcome to you all.
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i don't know all your screen names and don't want to miss any so post and say hi.
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z
Hi all I'm here evrey days dont post but I it lots of info thx all
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Yasser Arafat died....years ago.
by Preston inhttp://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?sectionid=107&itemid=6585
yet again, yasser arafat is dying.
we thought he'd been killed back in 1982 when the israeli air force flew around beirut attacking apartment blocks and homes they thought he was visiting.
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z
Yasser Arafat: An obituary
Tovah Lazaroff, THE He dreamed of dying a martyr like his "brave" peace partner, Yitzhak Rabin.
But in the end, an isolated Yasser Arafat succumbed to a brain hemorrhage in a hospital, a week past the ninth anniversary of Rabin's assassination and long after their deal had collapsed.
In an interview with Al-Jazeera he once said he would opt for martyrdom over being killed or taken a prisoner. "I say to them ... Allah, give me martyrdom in . . . [ ], the place from which the Prophet Muhammad ascended to the heavens."
Famous for cheating death he survived an Israeli air raid on his PLO headquarters in Tunis in 1985 and a plane crash in the Libyan desert in 1992, only to die of an illness in a hospital bed after keeping the world guessing his fate for a week.
Absent from his last public appearance on Friday October 29, when he left his Ramallah compound, was the military uniform he typically wore. Instead he sat in his pajamas, with a wool cap on his head, as first he clutched his supporters and then kissed one of their hands.
The 75-year old leader rose to power as a terrorist, but captured world respect when he agreed to a peace deal with under the Oslo Agreement, best symbolized by the famous handshake on the White House lawn with Rabin
and former President William Clinton in September 1993. Arafat along with Rabin and Labor Party Chairman Shimon Peres all received Noble Peace Prizes in 1994 for their work on that agreement.His role as a peacemaker was short lived as both and the blamed him for the failure of once he rejected a land for peace
deal at in 2000."Sir, you hold personally the responsibility for the failure of the summit," told Arafat at the time.
With his stubble beard and trademark kaffia arranged to look like the map of , for more than four decades, - whether as a terrorist or a diplomat - Arafat was the symbolic figurehead of the Palestinian struggle for statehood.
"I come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter's gun," Arafat told the United Nations when he first addressed it in 1974 while wearing a
holster. His reliance on violence, but his pursuit of diplomacy alternately made him abhorred and lauded by leaders around the world.He courted both the former and the West. He made a career out of turning defeat into victory. After traveling around the world, his last three years were spent in growing isolation, confined by to a battle scarred compound in Ramallah. A recent AP photo showed him sitting writing alone on a chair in a room devoid of people and furniture.
Known also as Abu Amar or sometimes as "the Old Man," Arafat's formal name is Mohammed Abdel-Raouf Arafat As Qudwa al-Hussaeini. As a testament to his myth-making abilities, the exact details of his life are hard to pin down.
He always claimed as his birthplace, while documents show it was actually , a city to which his parents had recently moved. Some
biographers speculate that in spite of this, it's possible his mother could have returned to her parents home in for the actual birth.Following the death of his mother in 1933 from liver disease, Arafat lived in for nine-years in his uncle's home near the Western Wall. It was later torn down by after 1967 when it developed the area for worshipers. As a child Arafat understood that the Zionists fighting the
British for a state were his enemy. At age 13, he was sent back to to live with his father, but he did not lose his connection to the Palestinian struggle.Some biographers say that already at age 17, helped smuggle arms from into Palestinian. When war broke out in 1948, he temporarily left
his studies at what is now to join the fighting in .He received an engineering degree and worked briefly as a civil engineer in before turning to terrorism in hopes of crushing .
"Isn't it better to die bringing down your enemy than to await a slow, miserable death?" asked Arafat in 1969.
In the late 1950s he created Al-Fatah, an underground guerrilla movement that led attacks against . The Arab League joined it with other Palestinian groups when it formed the Palestinian Liberation Organization in 1964.
When Arafat became its chairman in 1969, it split from the Arab League and became its own independent organization. Under Arafat's leadership in the 1970s and through most of the 1980s, the PLO became synonymous with terrorism.
According Barry Rubin's biography of Arafat, the PLO committed more than 8,000 terrorist acts between 1969-1985. It was responsible for the deaths of more than 650 Israelis, 28 Americans and scores of people from other countries. Among its more memorable acts was the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes in in 1972, the attack on a school in Maalot in 1974 that led to the death of 21 school children. It also hijacked four planes in the 1970s and the Italian cruise ship, the Achille Lauro in 1985.
Israelis were not the groups only target. In 1971 the PLO assassinated the Jordanian Prime Minister Wasfi Tel. It kidnapped and killed US Ambassador to Khartoum Cleo Noel and Deputy Cheif of Mission Curtis Moore as well as a Belgian diplomat Guy Eid, in 1973. Still it failed in its plan to attack the embassy in in 1973 and to kill Jordan King Hussein in 1974.
In this midst of this violence, Arafat became the first representative of a non-governmental agency to address a plenary session of the United Nations
(U.N.) General Assembly. The PLO was soon an official observer at the UN.With both the Israelis and Arabs trying to kill him, Arafat always swore he had a nose for danger. In the 1960s, he heard Israeli soldiers coming for him and leaped out the widow. When he lived life on the run, he took nothing for granted when it came to his safety, and only ate food that had been inspected for poisoning.
It was a fear based in reality. In 1971, an
associate tried to poison his rice. Romantic alliances was rarely a topic of conversation. Initially his 1991 marriage to his secretary Suha Tawil was a secret. Their daughter Zahwa was
born in in 1995.His tactics of fermenting violent dissent against the Jordanian government forced King Hussein to chase him out of the country in 1971. became his next home, but he was driven out by in 1982. He lived in exile in until 1994, when under he was allowed into Palestinian areas for the first time in 26 years.
Even before , he made his mark in the diplomatic arena when in 1988, at a UN session, he renounced terrorism and accepted 's right to exist.
He stated that it was "the right of all parties concerned in the conflict to live in peace and security, including the state of , and and other neighbors."
He lost international credibility when he supported during the first Gulf War. But he regained it with . When the first Palestinian elections were held, Arafat was chosen as president of the newly established Palestinian Authority in 1996. His position became obsolete when by 2002 refused to deal with him after violence broke out following the failure
of .In an uneasy alliance, leadership was then split in 2003 between Arafat, who remained chairman of the PA and the post of a prime minister, held first by Mahmoud Abbas and than by Ahmed Qurei.
While blamed Arafat for the outburst of terrorist activity that killed more than 1000 Israelis, he still some of his retained his ties with peace groups and the Israeli left.
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's spokesman Ra'anan Gissin once said of Arafat, "he promised us the peace of the brave, but gave us the peace of the grave."
Information from "Yasir Arafat a Political Biography" by Barry and Judith Colp Rubin and "Arafat in the Eyes of the Beholder" by Janet Wallach and John Wallach was used in this report
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z
not to me