The heroic doctor Mohammad Saber Qashqash, who appeared in the attached video climbing on top of a stretcher to resuscitate a young girl whose heart had stopped, ascended as a martyr after the IOF bombed his family's home in Beit Lahia in the northern #Gaza Strip. Glory to the martyrs.️IBRAHIMI MOSQUE MASSACRE \ 20 YEARS AGO. On the morning of February 25, 1994 – one year after the end of the First Intifada – American-Israeli terrorist settler Baruch Goldstein stormed the Ibrahimi Mosque in occupied Hebron and opened fire on Palestinian worshippers as they prayed peacefully, killing 29 and injuring 150. The massacre took place during the holy month of Ramadan as well as the Jewish holiday of Purim. Among the dead were children. The survivors of the massacre then beat Goldstein to death, bludgeoning his head with a fire extinguisher. Israeli forces shut the mosque’s gates and prevented worshippers from entering/exiting for medical attention. They also imposed dozens of checkpoints and barriers, separating the old town from the rest of the Palestinian city. Mass protests and clashes broke out across the West Bank, during which at least 26 more Palestinians were murdered. The occupation closed off the Ibrahimi Mosque for 6 months and ended up partitioning it, giving Israel “sovereignty” over 60% of it. Goldstein – who was born in Brooklyn and ‘immigrated’ to Israel in 1983 – served as a physician in the Israeli army and refused to treat non-Jews. He got involved with the extremist Kach party, headed by ‘ultranationalist’ Jewish terrorist, Rabbi Meir Kahane, who founded the Jewish Defense League and was responsible for terrorism on a global scale. Like his teacher, Kahane, Goldstein’s Zionism was “a strange mix of the secular and the religious.” He believed that Jews enjoyed a divine right to their ‘Promised Land’ and needed to use violence to claim it. 9 days before the massacre, a documentary filmmaker asked Goldstein how he reconciled his life as a physician with his calls for violence against Arabs. Quoting Ecclesiastes, he replied: “A time to kill, and a time to heal.” Israel likes to claim that Goldstein’s sentiment is a rare occurrence and thing of the past, but Itamar Ben-Gvir, current Israeli security minister, has his portrait hanging on his living room wall. Источник: Resistance News Network
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