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Monday, November 22, 2021

PALESTINA The Gateway to Jaffa - 1930 Palestine Photos by Dutch photographer Frank Scholten "Mr. Scholten was clearly fascinated by Palestinian culture, especially by the way Muslims, Christians and Jews lived together peacefully ."

Captions translated from Dutch to English 2021


Customs control ("gumruk" in Arabic). From Jaffa, Palestinian agricultural products were exported all over the world. Oranges of course, but also wine.


Daughters of Palestine", this photo reads. Not all Arabs are Muslims, some are Christians. But no less Arab or Palestinian for that. Scholten speaks of "Catholic natives"

Different types of bread

Fair!

Farmer with typical farmer's scarf (keffijeh). During a major uprising against the British a few years after Frank Scholten's journey, this will become the symbol of Palestinian national identity, supplanting the Fez as the most popular headwear

Friday Prayer

In Palestine, all kinds of nationalities lived together. The book contains photos of Indians, Africans, Europeans, etc. This African Palestinian is clearly at ease with the Ottoman Fez.

In the 1920s, Jaffa was booming, judging by the photos of construction workers at work.

Jaffa

Jewish craftsman

Jewish quarter. The (small) Jewish communities in Palestine lived peacefully with the Palestinians.

Last Supper for the sheep chosen for the Feast of Sacrifice 

Tanning

Lunch from a tanner

Melon harvest (and "hump")

Mosque with Corinthian columns.

Palestine was then still a British colony. Here the British gendarmerie clears the way for the High Commissioner who will pass

School

Soldier with banner. The author chose this photo to emphasize how graceful the Arabic script is.

The "congregation servant" sounds his trumpet to announce the Sabbath.

The Bedouins are a nomadic people who still live in Palestine today, but who have even fewer rights within Israel than the Palestinians.

The old port of Jaffa. This important Palestinian port city was largely destroyed in 1948 by Zionist militias. "Tel Aviv", the capital of Israel, was founded on the ruins.

The sailors of Jaffa rest, with fez (typical Ottoman hat for townspeople) and water pipe. Image reminds me of a film by Fellini (Roma or Amarcord), where they are eating on a tram track and have to stand up every time the tram passes.

Today Orthodox Jews still live in Palestine (Israel), descendants of these communities. They have nothing to do with the Zionists and are explicitly against the existence of the Israeli state.

Arab women with hookah. The woman on the left suffers from cataracts ("ophthalmia" apparently, according to the book).

Typical wooden "upper rooms". The Palestinian cities are often centuries old, these kinds of renovations were often the only way to create more space.

We used to make our own "kites" with my grandpa. This one looks a bit more complex

Young lad in "Friday clothes"

Frank Scholten   PALESTINA  The Gateway to Jaffa

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who shared it from

Last weekend I came across Jonas Adriaensens at a cafe in Ghent . He was carrying a big book under his arm that he found at a flea market, and had me browsing . In the end, he even gave me the book, with the intention that I could donate it to an organization that fights for the rights of the Palestinian people .

 

It concerns a unique book from 1930, when printed on 1000 copies, from a Dutch photographer, traveler and religious scholar named Frank Scholten . I had never heard of the book, there's a chance that there are hardly any copies of it . The book contains a treasure of beautiful "artistic photographs" (dixit the author) of life in Palestine a hundred years ago . Mr. Scholten was clearly fascinated by Palestinian culture, especially by the way Muslims, Christians and Jews lived together peacefully . He didn't know how meaningful his photos would become a century later...

 

Because these photos prove something the Israeli and Western colonists are trying to deny: that there was a prosperous country called Palestine before Israel was founded . Not a "country without a people", but a rich history of a prosperous Palestinian nation . A buzzing, multicultural and tolerant society even . They're powerful images, featuring indelible faces of real people .

 

I have been to Palestine three times and I feel deeply connected to the Palestinian struggle for dignity and justice . A battle that starts with acknowledging their existence, something the colonizers are so stubbornly trying to prevent . As I browse through this book, I look into the eyes of the Palestinian ancestors who live today between the illegal settlements, between barbed wire and checkpoints; or in the Gaza open-air prison; or those born just like their parents are in refugee camps that 70 years ago as "temporary" Designed by . The ancestors of the 4650 Palestinian political prisoners who, often without trial, have been locked up in brutal circumstances by the Israeli occupier . Ancestors of the ten thousand Palestinians murdered by the regime since 1948 . From the Nakba, over the Sabra and Shatilla genocide, to the nearly weekly victims of the Israeli occupation army . Like the young Mohammad Da'as, 15, who was shot dead last week .

 

The Pashtoons were not allowed to speak out about Israel’s establishment - replaced by Western powers who wanted to maintain a bridge head in the region after Arab colonies’ independence . Suddenly the Zionist occupiers were there, with tanks and planes, bombs and machine guns . Suddenly Palestinians were forcefully deported from their country . Suddenly they were told it was never their country . That they were uncultured barbarians, who had to take place for a "civilized people". These photos prove .

 

I will do my best to scan these photos correctly . Whoever wants them (digital) just let them know . I already have a destination in mind for the book itself, but @Jonas if you think about it, you'll definitely get it back 😉
 

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

Reclaim Armistice Day ... Armistice Day was created to be “a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated."

From Veterans for Peace

"Over one hundred years ago the world celebrated peace as a universal principle. The first World War had just ended and nations mourning their dead collectively called for an end to all wars. Armistice Day was born and was designated as “a day to be dedicated to the cause of world peace and to be thereafter celebrated." 

After World War II, the U.S. Congress decided to rebrand November 11 as Veterans Day. Honoring the warrior quickly morphed into honoring the military and glorifying war. Armistice Day was flipped from a day for peace into a day for displays of militarism.

Veterans For Peace has taken the lead in lifting up the original intention of November 11th – as a day for peace. As veterans we know that a day that celebrates peace, not war, is the best way to honor the sacrifices of veterans. We want generations after us to never know the destruction war has wrought on people and the earth.

Veterans For Peace has been celebrating Armistice Day almost since the organization's inception, with a few chapters doing yearly events. Since 2008, with the passing of an official Veterans For Peace resolution, it became a VFP national effort. Each year, chapters across the country "Reclaim Armistice Day" by pushing the celebration of peace into the national conversation on Veterans Day.

Veterans For Peace is calling on everyone to stand up for peace this Armistice Day. More than ever, the world faces a critical moment. Tensions are heightened around the world and the U.S. is engaged militarily in multiple countries, without an end in sight.  Here at home we have seen the increasing militarization of our police forces and brutal crackdowns on dissent and people’s uprisings against state power. We must press our government to end reckless military interventions that endanger the entire world. We must build a culture of peace."

 Please Go To The Original Link To Read More

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Outraged That Israel Designated 6 Palestinian Human Rights NGOs as "terrorist organizations"

"Defending human rights is a legitimate work and must be respected, not shut by flawed terrorism laws." #UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Association commenting on the Israeli decision to label #Palestinian human rights NGOs as "terrorist" groups. #FreePalestine

 

Olive Harvest in Palestine

Marvelous photo of a multi-generational Palestinian family’s olive picking in the occupied West Bank village of Duma. Photo credit- Omar Dawabsheh

Unknown little girl in Palestine Traditional Thobe Dress Holding freshly picked Olives

Olive Tree in Palestine

Falastine Tree


Old Photo of an Ancient Olive Tree in Palestine

Palestine- view from an olive tree


The Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU) is a non-profit organization that offers journalists facts, analysis, experts, and digital resources about Palestine and Palestinians.

Sorting Olives in Palestine

The tasty Palestinian traditional meal Manakish, consisting of dough topped with thyme, cheese, or ground meat, surrounded by olives

 & a poem from Palestine

The Second Olive Tree

By Mahmoud Darwish (1941-2008)

                                                                                       Translated from Arabic by Marilyn Hacker

The olive tree does not weep and does not laugh. The olive tree
Is the hillside’s modest lady. Shadow
Covers her one leg, and she will not take her leaves off in front of the storm.
Standing, she is seated, and seated, standing.
She lives as a friendly sister of eternity, neighbor of time
That helps her stock her luminous oil and
Forget the invaders’ names, except the Romans, who
Coexisted with her, and borrowed some of her branches
To weave wreaths. They did not treat her as a prisoner of war
But as a venerable grandmother, before whose calm dignity
Swords shatter. In her reticent silver-green
Color hesitates to say what it thinks, and to look at what is behind
The portrait, for the olive tree is neither green nor silver.
The olive tree is the color of peace, if peace needed
A color. No one says to the olive tree: How beautiful you are!
But: How noble and how splendid! And she,
She who teaches soldiers to lay down their rifles
And re-educates them in tenderness and humility: Go home
And light your lamps with my oil! But
These soldiers, these modern soldiers
Besiege her with bulldozers and uproot her from her lineage
Of earth. They vanquished our grandmother who foundered,
Her branches on the ground, her roots in the sky.
She did not weep or cry out.  But one of her grandsons
Who witnessed the execution threw a stone
At a soldier, and he was martyred with her.
After the victorious soldiers
Had gone on their way, we buried him there, in that deep
Pit – the grandmother’s cradle. And that is why we were
Sure that he would become, in a little while, an olive
Tree – a thorny olive tree – and green! 



 ~

Some Old photos of Historic Palestine Olive Harvest



Old photos of Historic Palestine Olive Harvest


 




Wednesday, October 13, 2021

Netflix Launches ‘Palestinian Stories’ Collection With Award-Winning Films- October 2021

  • Netflix will launch a collection of 32 films either helmed by Palestinian filmmakers or about Palestinian stories, including award-winning titles like ‘A Man Returned’ (عودة رجل) by Mahdi Fleifel; ‘Like 20 Impossibles’ (كاننا عشرون مستحيل) by Annemarie Jacir and ‘The Crossing’ (العبور), directed by May Odeh.

On October 14th, Netflix will launch the Palestinian Stories collection, showcasing films from some of the Arab world’s finest filmmakers. Available for members around the world, the collection includes a lineup of award-winning films by Palestinian filmmakers or about Palestinian Stories. The collection is set to launch with 32 films with more to be added over the next few weeks.

Featuring the works of prolific and critically-acclaimed directors like Annemarie Jacir, Mai Masri, Mahdi Fleifel, Susan Youssef, May Odeh, Farah Nabulsi and many more, the collection is a tribute to the creativity and passion of the Arab film industry as Netflix continues to invest in stories from the Arab world.... READ MORE

 As Always Please Go To The Original Link To Read The Article In Full

The Palestinian Stories Collection will be available to access by searching “Palestinian Stories” on Netflix.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

21st September International DAY OF PEACE ... Peace Begins With (*fill in the blank)

United Nations- Universal Declaration of Human Rights Preamble: "Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world"


 

 Peace Begins With (*fill in the blank)

*me

*kindness

*compassion

*justice

*beauty

*grace

*courage

*hope

Dove of Peace, 1949 by Pablo Picasso