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Center for Palestine Studies
United States
Приєднався 4 лис 2013
The Center for Palestine Studies at Columbia University promotes the academic study of Palestine by supporting research, teaching, and intellectual collaboration among scholars within Columbia and beyond. The Center provides an institutional home for faculty, visiting scholars and students at Columbia across the academic disciplines. CPS also builds connections with scholars and institutions to strengthen the academic study of Palestine and Palestinians throughout the United States and around the world.
The Last Mamluk Library
"The Last Mamluk Library," A Lecture by Benedikt Reier, Centre for the Studies of Manuscript Cultures, University of Hamburg. Introduction by Brinkley Messick.
After some devastating decades, in the early nineteenth century Jaffa witnessed a flourish period. Abu Nabbut, the deputy governor of the Mediterranean town, fostered Jaffa’s fortification and attracted traders by investing in the economic infrastructure. Following his former master, Acre’s strongman Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar, he established a large-scale endowment complex to finance his endeavour. As a central part of this complex, Abu Nabbut built the Great Mosque (also known as Mahmudi Mosque) which included a madrasa and a book collection. In this lecture, we will zoom in on the Great Mosque’s library. Based on a combination of different source material, we will trace its foundation, see what its former books have to say about their own history, and follow their trajectories until today. This, in turn, will reveal a largely unknown part of the history of books and libraries in Ottoman Palestine.
Benedikt Reier studied Middle Eastern History in Hamburg, Birzeit, and Berlin. He holds a PhD from Freie Universität Berlin/Berlin Graduate School Muslim Culture and Societies with a dissertation on biographical dictionaries in the Mamluk era. His research interests include historiography, history of archiving, book and library history, crusades, and the cultural and social history of bilad al-sham. He has published on the reception of jihad literature in the crusading period (Crusades) and on a 17th century Aleppine private library (Der Islam). He is currently working in Hamburg at the Centre for the Studies of Manuscript Cultures on the early-Ottoman sijillat of Jerusalem.
Brinkley Messick is Professor of Anthropology and of Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies at Columbia University. Writing and reading, considered as cultural and historical phenomena, have figured centrally in Brinkley Messick’s research on Islamic societies in both Arabia and North Africa. This work considers the production and circulation, inscription and subsequent interpretation of Arabic texts such as regional histories, law books, and court records. Messick has sought to understand the relation of writing and authority, events such as the advent of print technology, hybrid contemporary practices of reading, and local histories of record keeping and archiving. Much of this work dovetails with Messick's general interests in legal anthropology and legal history, and with his specific interests in Islamic law.
After some devastating decades, in the early nineteenth century Jaffa witnessed a flourish period. Abu Nabbut, the deputy governor of the Mediterranean town, fostered Jaffa’s fortification and attracted traders by investing in the economic infrastructure. Following his former master, Acre’s strongman Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar, he established a large-scale endowment complex to finance his endeavour. As a central part of this complex, Abu Nabbut built the Great Mosque (also known as Mahmudi Mosque) which included a madrasa and a book collection. In this lecture, we will zoom in on the Great Mosque’s library. Based on a combination of different source material, we will trace its foundation, see what its former books have to say about their own history, and follow their trajectories until today. This, in turn, will reveal a largely unknown part of the history of books and libraries in Ottoman Palestine.
Benedikt Reier studied Middle Eastern History in Hamburg, Birzeit, and Berlin. He holds a PhD from Freie Universität Berlin/Berlin Graduate School Muslim Culture and Societies with a dissertation on biographical dictionaries in the Mamluk era. His research interests include historiography, history of archiving, book and library history, crusades, and the cultural and social history of bilad al-sham. He has published on the reception of jihad literature in the crusading period (Crusades) and on a 17th century Aleppine private library (Der Islam). He is currently working in Hamburg at the Centre for the Studies of Manuscript Cultures on the early-Ottoman sijillat of Jerusalem.
Brinkley Messick is Professor of Anthropology and of Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies at Columbia University. Writing and reading, considered as cultural and historical phenomena, have figured centrally in Brinkley Messick’s research on Islamic societies in both Arabia and North Africa. This work considers the production and circulation, inscription and subsequent interpretation of Arabic texts such as regional histories, law books, and court records. Messick has sought to understand the relation of writing and authority, events such as the advent of print technology, hybrid contemporary practices of reading, and local histories of record keeping and archiving. Much of this work dovetails with Messick's general interests in legal anthropology and legal history, and with his specific interests in Islamic law.
Переглядів: 153
Відео
We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I
Переглядів 231Рік тому
A conversation held on March 23, 2023 with Raja Shehadeh and Rashid Khalidi about Shehadeh’s new memoir, "We Could Have Been Friends, My Father and I." Aziz Shehadeh was many things: lawyer, activist, and political detainee, he was also the father of bestselling author and activist Raja. In this new and searingly personal memoir, Raja Shehadeh unpicks the snags and complexities of their relatio...
Jumana Manna Master Class
Переглядів 3,1 тис.Рік тому
CPS hosted Jumana Manna on 9 December 2023 for a screening of her film FORAGERS (2022) and an artist talk. The event was co-presented by the Graduate School Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Foragers (2022) depicts the dramas around the practice of foraging for wild edible plants in Palestine/Israel with wry humor and a meditative pace. Shot in the Golan Heights, the Galilee and Jerusale...
Archiving Black Palestinian Solidarity: Visions of Liberation 1968-2021
Переглядів 2 тис.Рік тому
In honor of Black History Month, CPS is pleased to share, “Archiving Black Palestinian Solidarity: Visions of Liberation 1968-2021.” This video is a presentation of archival material on key moments of solidarity between Black American and Palestinian political movements from 1968 to 2021. It is an updated version of a work-in-progress started in 2018 by students and faculty at the Center for Pa...
A Flower From Every Meadow: The History Section of al-Nur Ahmadiyya Library in Acre
Переглядів 1402 роки тому
Endowed in the 18th-century in Acre by the notorious Ottoman governor of Sidon, Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar (d.1804), al-Nur Ahmadiyya Library was established as a part of the governor’s famous mosque-college complex inside the walled city. The recent discovery of this public library’s catalog reveals a relatively large holding of 1,800 volumes, a few of which survive in libraries around the world. T...
The Endurance of Palestinian Political Factions
Переглядів 1522 роки тому
A Palestine Library book talk with Perla Issa about her recent publication, The Endurance of Palestinian Political Factions: An Everyday Perspective from Nahr el-Bared Camp (University of California Press, 2021), moderated by Rashid Khalidi. palestine.mei.columbia.edu/events-spring-2022/the-endurance-of-palestinian-political-factions
Rethinking Statehood in Palestine: Self-Determination and Decolonization Beyond Partition
Переглядів 4772 роки тому
Palestine Library book talk with Leila Farsakh (University of Massachusetts Boston), editor of Rethinking Statehood in Palestine: Self-Determination and Decolonization Beyond Partition, published by University of California Press (2021). Moderated by Timothy Mitchell (Columbia University). For more info visit: palestine.mei.columbia.edu/events-spring-2022/rethinking-statehood-in-palestine-self-...
Parallax Haifa
Переглядів 1282 роки тому
Stories of Everyday Parallel Spaces and Times Parallax Haifa is a project by Lama Suleiman in development since 2018, that explores how Palestinians bear witness to and narrate their experiences of the past Palestinian urban landscape of Haifa before the Nakba. It is an audio collage of narratives of the city that wander through an as-of-yet unexplored territory of Palestinian history and lands...
When Politics are Sacralized
Переглядів 1852 роки тому
A Conversation with David Lloyd, Nadim N. Rouhana and Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian about the recent volume When Politics are Sacralized: Comparative Perspectives on Religious Claims and Nationalism (Cambridge University Press, 2021), moderated by Nadia Abu El-Haj. palestine.mei.columbia.edu/events-spring-2022/when-politics-are-sacralized-comparative-perspectives-on-religious-claims-and-nationalism
Producing for Radio
Переглядів 722 роки тому
A conversation with Paola Cossermelli Messina and Scott RC Levy, two practitioners at the intersection of theatre and sound arts, about what it means to tell stories for radio, from design to production. Opening remarks by Brinkley Messick and Q&A session moderated by Tom Casserly. From arts professionals looking to expand to a new medium to arts aficionados interested in hearing how radio play...
Palestine Is Throwing a Party and the Whole World Is Invited
Переглядів 1782 роки тому
A conversation with Kareem Rabie and Wassim Ghantous in celebration of Rabie's recent publication, Palestine Is Throwing a Party and the Whole World Is Invited: Capital and State Building in the West Bank (Duke Press, 2021). About Palestine Is Throwing a Party and the Whole World Is Invited: In 2008, Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad invited international investors to the first-ever Pales...
Love & Intimacy: Nayrouz & Serene
Переглядів 1203 роки тому
NAYROUZ SERENE In this episode, we meet Serene, 41, and Nayrouz, 39. Serene and Nayrouz met eight years ago through a mutual friend at Beit Zatoun in Toronto, a Palestinian cultural center that’s since shut down. While the two grew up in different countries, they share a historical connection to Marj Ibn Amer. In this interview, they discuss nostalgia as a curse, nostalgia as a result of love, ...
Love & Intimacy: Sharon and Lilly
Переглядів 953 роки тому
SHARON LILLY: In this episode, we meet sisters Lilly, 23, and Sharon, 25. Lilly and Sharon are Palestinian-Americans who are based in Haifa. In this video, they interview each other and discuss how experiencing racism as Palestinians in ’48 has inspired their need to love themselves, discovering yourself within your identity, the diversity of Palestinianness and the importance of individuality,...
Love & Intimacy: Tamara and Faiza
Переглядів 593 роки тому
TAMARA FAIZA: In this episode, we meet Tamara, 26, and her mother, Faiza, 64. Tamara grew up between the US and Palestine, while her mother has lived most of her life in Palestine. They are both based in Chicago, where this interview takes place. They discuss Tamara’s learned confidence from Faiza, sincerity in expression, Tamara finding love in someone who doesn’t tick all the boxes, maintaini...
Conflating Human Rights Advocacy with Terrorism
Переглядів 2613 роки тому
Israel’s Ministry of Defense designated six prominent Palestinian human rights organizations - Al-Haq, Defense for Children International - Palestine, Addameer, Bisan Center for Research and Development, Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, and the Union of Agricultural Work Committees - as “terrorist organizations” on Friday October 22nd, 2021. These organizations now face increased politi...
Conversation with Farah Nabulsi, Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian and Lila Abu-Lughod
Переглядів 6103 роки тому
Conversation with Farah Nabulsi, Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian and Lila Abu-Lughod
The Israeli Academy and the Palestinian Struggle
Переглядів 2683 роки тому
The Israeli Academy and the Palestinian Struggle
Of Waqfs and Worms: The Khalidiyya Through Its Manuscript Notes
Переглядів 1143 роки тому
Of Waqfs and Worms: The Khalidiyya Through Its Manuscript Notes
Love & Intimacy: Constantino & Marcelo
Переглядів 3043 роки тому
Love & Intimacy: Constantino & Marcelo
Nakba Today: A Conversation with Bashir Abu-Manneh, Sherene Seikaly and Nadia Abu El-Haj
Переглядів 5943 роки тому
Nakba Today: A Conversation with Bashir Abu-Manneh, Sherene Seikaly and Nadia Abu El-Haj
Disgusting. Calling the r*pe of women "creative". Unhinged hypocrite.
Arafat turned down Bill Clintons peace plan
I definitely agree with Khalidi about the Hegelian angle. The modern world is a world of nationalism and the I/P conflict is a reflection of this. Moses Hess, the first proto-zionist (and arch frienemy of Karl Marx) was a major young hegelian thinker.
Beautiful documentary. I LOVE the Palestinians so much. In fact, I’ve become obsessed with their inner and outer beauty. I am so concerned about their safety. have something controversial to say. At this point- a geno-side is taking place. Israel and American are much too powerful, and Hamas and PLO don’t seem to have negotiating room against such evil empires. Wouldn’t it be okay to encourage the Palestinians to reconsider leaving occupied Palestinian? Why do I say this? Well, in the late 1600’s, my ancestors were expelled from Scotland by a rival clan from England after a hard battle, called border clan battles. My ancestors fled to Ireland and then America. Now, I’m a descendant and myself and my Mother and Grandfather have done well for ourselves. We are happy. I’m in America and I’ve met Palestinian refugees here who also are happy. Yes they long for their homeland, as refugees. But their children and grandchildren and great grandchildren will be successful here. I know we shouldn’t encourage refugees to leave their homeland. But imo, Israel politicians are a special breed of evil, akin to Nazis. They wield enormous power over the world as we can see. I don’t believe Palestinians and their supporters can overcome this evil. At the peril of the babies and children, this fight is happening. Do they still want to keep resisting even if they are all exterminated? Drawing the parallel between my ancestors who fled Scotland and the current Palestinians resisting against their colonizers, wouldn’t the Palestinians be more successful if they fled and rooted elsewhere, as sad as that would be?
The truth will eventually overcome the lies you spread, beginning with the fiction of the so called Palestinian people
Where are I get this song?
Disgusting how these people try to paint hateful bigots and terrorist supporters as peaceful and loving
Great poem. But clearly an Arab poem because they lost Islamic rule and privilege. It also displays THEIR entitlement to THEIR land, erasing everyone else. That is the legacy of colonial occupation for 900 years during which because of Islamic rule Arabs had higher social status in what was an aparthied rule by a State that commited massive genocidal attrocities during this very time period. Jerusalem ethnicities were quartered in separate districts and had separate rules and taxes. Now that was an apartheid state. But by the 1940's Jews were the majority over Arabs in Jerusalem, Ottoman Emire was falling. Arabs from elsewhere started to immigrate to Jerusalem in fear of losing Islamic control as the Turks increasingly needed European support and losing their grip over occupied lands.
Wait now. You are talking like only ethnic Arabs are pre Israel Palestinians. This is not true. Everyone in Palestine was a Palestinian all ethnic peoples there were Palestinians including Jews. 100 percent . Arabs were the majority but by 1948, they were not or at least less than 85 percent.
Was it called Palestine, and did it have boundaries? Was it on any Ottoman maps? You didn't say if your map denotes Palestine? The place name Palestine did not refer to Arabs. It referred to the Holy Land, for centuries. It referred to the land of the Jews , Samaritans, ancient and new. Not to Arab Palestine. It was not an official territory under Ottoman rule.
AJ+ offers remarkably brilliant investigative reporting; it is compelling, comprehensive and compassionate. The journalism here is that which is absent in so many western journalist franchises and thankfully, you educate. In the United States, nearly all but Democracy Now just pander propaganda.
CPS--maybe stop by your comments section every so often and delete misinformation and hate speech. I tried to take the trash out, but who am I, but a mere civilian with a UA-cam account, sweeping up and paramecium and misc. ignorant gunk.
hello dear.. I am UA-cam marketing, SEO & Facebook marketing expert.. Do you need any service. & grow your channel.Want to grow your channel?
Glorifying the murder of innocent people 'used as art'. wtf
Art is subjective it's not always about glorification! Perhaps if one is privileged it may appear to one like this
So its better not doing . Cheira me a estupidez e provocação
Jew hating scum.
😂😂😂you were so brainwashed
Well said. I am a Palestinian historian, speaker, and lecturer of Afro-Arab heritage with West and North African ancestry. This summarizes my history and area of study perfectly. My research is in African-American and Muslim history.❤
Thank you all for sharing, your work. ❤️🙏🏻✌🏻🇵🇸🇮🇱🌎🌍🌏💙💛🌻🇺🇦🇷🇺🇸🇸🇸🇩✌🏻
Fishman …. Is grossly inaccurate More like a lier
I really wonder why Said’s critically important relationship with the hugely influential musician and conductor Daniel Barenboim wasn’t mentioned, as really the only relationship he had which was directly addressing the issue of getting young Israeli and Arab musicians together to form the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, an organization Barenboim continued to be closely associated with until his recent illness. And through which they wished to show young Arabs and Jews that they could cooperate and work together to make music, in order to show that they were more alike than unlike. As a musician myself, I became aware of Said through that relationship, which I thought was incredibly important and provocative in the best way possible, except that Barenboim has been virulently attacked by very influential Israeli politicians. This didn’t stop him, because he knew he and Said were correct. How could this be completely ignored in this remembrance??
ألله مام الميرووووو الاعزمة والافخمة والدلوعة سوو ماتش سقلت موهبتي واثرتني باني اجد نفسي مع مين رفاقي واتعلم من حدارة ورؤساء اميركا وهوشي منه وتولستوي والمهاتما (غاندي) محرر الهند!!!!!! والامبراتور الفرنسي العزيم ( نابليون بونابارت)
ألله مام الميرووووو الاعزمة والافخمة والدلوعة سوو ماتش خليلية ويتعشا الهولي خلايلة.......
ألله مام الميرووووو الاعزمة والافخمة والدلوعة سوو ماتش خليلية ويتعشا الهولي خلايلة....... ( اهل الجمال والشقف والازكية وماشيين عالشرع)
Love u Dana from Amman
Andalusia and Israel are two territories taken back from Muslims. Islam thinks it's supreme among the world’s religions and Jews are not equal to Muslims under Islamic law. And yet they now have self determination, autonomy and control in their ancient homeland, a homeland once ruled by Muslims. 😂😂😂
There Will be MIROOOO JASSER ( BIRZEIT ANGEL) THE PALESTINIAN AMERICAN 2 BE as Head of STATE of Palestine 🇵🇸
I've never heard anyone deny the fact that a territory exists called Palestine. That's certainly not an argument I've ever heard from, really anyone. I've heard arguments that the name was forced upon the land by Romans, which is true I think. I've heard arguments that "Palestinian" was never an ethnicity. Certainly people lived in Palestine and knew the name of the place they lived. But Palestine was considered part of greater Syria and the communities were not considered separate ethnicities. No different than the people of Damascus being any less or more Syrian than the people of Homs. Separate regional communities of Greater Syria, which Palestine was a part of. But that doesn't make the people living in Palestine a different ethnicity than those living in the rest of Syria. So I'm not sure it's getting to the root of the dispute really. At least, this spends a lot of time trying to prove something that no one is denying. This isn't like the Kurds, or Druze, separate ethnic identities living in lands with a different identity. That was never the case for Palestinians. Samaritans were always Samaritans living in Palestine. Their ancestral homeland. Their ethnic identity was specifically situated within the TERRITORY called Palestine at that time. As is the Jewish identity. But they both had names for that land that predated "Palestine", not even connected to the construct of Palestine the Romans created. Being proud of a place doesn't make the people living in that place an entirely different ethnicity either. People can be proud of their city, trying to bring people to their city. People consider themselves New Yorkers, but NY is in America, so they are Americans. If NYC broke away from the rest of the US, they would have to either choose to become citizens of that new NYC national identity, or remain American and move elsewhere. The NY Times is called the NY Times. The NY Post is called the NY Post. The Washington Post is called the Washington Post...... they are all American. Does that somehow prove New Yorkers are a completely separate identity than the rest of Americans? People from all over the US work at the NY Times.... not just from NY. They are all American first before New Yorkers or Washingtonians. How do I know that? Because New Yorkers regularly move to other places in the US and people from all over the US move to NY. Long time New Yorkers, who's ancestors have lived their for generations, might consider themselves New Yorkers, but are still American. NY isn't a completely separate ethnic or national identity and neither was Palestine in the context of Greater Syria and the Ottoman Empire.
Palestine today is Israel 🇮🇱. There never existed a state by that name.
Well British Palestine was inhabited by many ethnicities not just Arabs. Today's Arab Palestinians are ethnic Arabs not representative of the diversity of Ottoman or British. So the other ethnic Palesitinans remained in Israel, and no longer are they Palestinians.. Palestine was a place name not an ethnicity. Arafat changed it into a nationality and an Arab homeland for political spin. A construction of the 20 the century.
There was no such thing as Palestine in the sense that it is today No Arab Palestine. No Palestinian nationality or ethnicity, no nation, no government of Palestine. Palestinian nationalism is a 20th century construction.
@@Madmen604 Well yes, indeed. Every isreali is just as much "palestinian" as any 19 year old in Aza. For sure. I guess this only really matters in the face of arguments like "palestinins are the indigenous people" etc. But that's the problem with manipulative marxist jargon, it distorts meaning. They use the a definition that attaches indigenous status directly to the victims of european colonialism and self identification. So basically, if you start claiming some identity, it automatically belongs to you. So while 90% of people hear the word indigenous and think, a remnant of the oldest cultures and populations in the region, these marxist propagandists are using the term to mean, simply, the people who were living in a place when other people IMMIGRATED (not colonized) to that place. In which case every Hebrew in mandatory Palestin was indigenous on the same basis, because MORE Moslems immigrated to Pstine between 1850 and 1945 than Hebrews. Sorry for the shorthand, damn YT algorithm. Anyway, yea. The Arbs living there absolutely had the right to live there, the issue was, they were led by Arb supremcists who thought the land was divinely theres. Now, I get it, some think that is the Isreali argument, but its really not. If you read Herzl, Zionism was a largely secular endeavor. Of course Hertzl was an early variation. Israel can genuinely be considered the most successful example of indigenous decolonization in the history of humanity. The Zionists gave the Arbs every opportunity to live together in peace, but the Brits installed the future ACUAL Nasi, and Arb supremcist Husseini as Mufti in the 1920's, in order to try to scare away the zionists so the Brits wouldn't have to fullfill all their promises. Plus they were so heavily invested in the Arb world and dependent on the Suez, the Arbs had them by the nuts. Which is why every time the future Nasi, Arafats uncle and mentor Husseini, would lead a riot and massacre Hebrews, the Brits would fold to their demands, culminating in the white papers which officially turned Mandatory into an apartheid state for Hebrews. The Mufti of course would go on to have all his political rivals that supported a 2 state solution, assassinated, and allied the Arbs of Pstine with the Nasis in WW2. Where he would spent 5 years spreading Nasi propaganda in the Moslem world, helped create the Stasi and plan with good friend Eichman to bring the German camps project to Pstine, with Adolphs acknowledged approval. Which of course only failed because the Brits and the Soviets defeated the Germans in the east Mediterranean corridors. But if they hadn't, there would be no "Isreal" to speak of. I mean, honestly, it amazes me when some people suggest the Zionists are to blame and that they colonnized blah blah .... Its all ridiculous marxist revisionist history. 45% of Iseal was supposed to be ARB. The invitation was witten into the Isrealli DOI. (f the Arbs had just accepted they would have nearly been at a 50/50 split with the Hebrews IN the "Zionist state". THANK GOODNESS, that didn't happen. Because if it did they would have jean oh sided every Izreali Hebrew by now, along with their Druze, Bedouin, Arb Christian, Armenian, Syriac, Turkmen, Circassian, Greek, Samaritan.....Moslem....... "conspirators". Wow, Isreal is REALLY diverse huh? 🤣 I mean it's not like Isrealis speak the only continuous living indigenous Canaanite language, Hebrew, along with liturgical Samaritan, but they have the only continuous living Canaanite cultures and religions ..Hebrew culture is an indigenous "Canaanite" culture, meaning Judean Samaritan. Yes, I know the story of Joshua but there is no archaeological evidence for it. All evidence suggests the Izrealites were indigenous Canaanites, hill billy Phoenicians that mixed with every would be conquering passing through the land. Which happened to be from every single corner of the old world since they lived on the only land bridge between the three major civilization centers in Europe, North Africa and Mid East. Hebrew is basically a hillbilly dialect of Phoenician. El was the Canaanite solar deity. I mean, it stuns me when people can claim Judeans aren't indigenous to Judea. And the Falisteens had to appropriate the name just to create the illusion of equivalence. Zuheir Mohsen (1936 - 25 July 1979) was a Palestinian leader of the Syria-controlled as-Sa'iqa faction of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) between 1971 and 1979. "The Palestinian people does not exist. The creation of a Palestinian state is only a means for continuing our struggle against the state of Israel for our Arab unity. In reality today there is no difference between Jordanians, Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese. Only for political and tactical reasons do we speak today about the existence of a Palestinian people, since Arab national interests demand that we posit the existence of a distinct "Palestinian people" to oppose Zionism. For tactical reasons, Jordan, which is a sovereign state with defined borders, cannot raise claims to Haifa and Jaffa, while as a Palestinian, I can undoubtedly demand Haifa, Jaffa, Beer-Sheva and Jerusalem. However, the moment we reclaim our right to all of Palestine, we will not wait even a minute to unite Palestine and Jordan." James Dorsey, Wij zijn alleen Palestijn om politieke reden, Trouw, 31 March 1977:
@@jessereichbach588 exactly As for recognizing the state of Palestine. Here you have a failed state vowing to destroy it's neighbour, without stable responsible leadership, no clear boundaries, a 75 years history of self sabotage. And they won't,t recognize Israel. The Arab world is disengenuous when it comes to the table. Not able to trust a word. Marxist. I am really surprised there are still Marxists around Also not rational actors imo.
It seems very interesting. I'm going to buy it.
I've just read it. It is really eye-opening. The books is giving us a whole new perspective and makes one to deepen his knowledge upon the current conflict. Excellent work Mr Fishman. Greetings from Greece.
@@CaptainHarlock-kv4zt the old yishuv Jewish community was mostly Ashkenazi most people don’t know this
محلاكو، ومحلا البيت، بحبكو اشتقتلكو❤️
Free Palestine
Wonderful panel! Thanks for the organizers and the speakers.
Why don't you display the screen so that we may see what he is trying to show us ?
🇵🇸✌️
Thank you for posting this, and good luck with all your efforts.
Thank you!
I think it’s mind boggling that Israel can occupy 3+ MILLION people for decades, terrorize them and make their lives hell and they just get away with it ! Why in the year 2021 are Palestinians basically still crying out for their basic human rights ? The people of Gaza are literally in a open air prison for years and that’s scary! Israel needs to be held accountable it’s been too long. They hide behind this smoking mirrors of “antisemitism” , they just use that as a excuse to continue their reign of terror. Theres nothing Jewish about Zionism. Bottom line.
With US supporting Israel unfortunately nothing will change
Thank you Professor Khalidi, and congratulations too for being the first Edward Said Professor at Coulumbia.
Hello
Let’s convince UNESCO. Jordan has another monument. It will be as important as Petra or even more. There are interesting ruins and reliefs on the Black Desert, dated 8,500 years old. They can only be seen from planes, drones, satellites and helicopters. Archaeologists don't exactly know nowadays what they represent. These ruins really represent embryos of several species in different stages of development and will be able to shed light on the origin of the human being and our planet. When it will be officially confirmed by biologists, this discovery will be a delight for the eyes, shed light to the origin of humanity. Activate the subtitles in English: ua-cam.com/video/rikVfTbX2Mo/v-deo.html It contains the documentation with the Jordanian authorities about this scientific and archaeological discovery
T H A N K Y O U !
These people get compensated for land they never owned. Outrageous.
excellent presentation ..particularly by Claus Kress
The interview starts at 07:00
Thank you.
Why is the focus so much on Palestine with other areas? When we supposedly solved the Jew problem with Hitler, we focused on wiping out Nazis rule. If you want to give any attention to the Palestinian cause, you need to address Zionist (Hitler minus 1) rule over the Palestinians.
interesting stuff. great work Mohanad