Circulating footage online documents an Israeli settler demanding Israeli occupation soldier shoot Sara Aziz, a 15-year-old girl from the city of Nablus in the occupied West Bank, after alleging that "she's trying to attack the soldiers".
Sara, lying on the ground defenseless, was reportedly shot in the hand.
#Palestine #WestBank #AlMayadeen
@dailysneako Mohammad doesnt realize the fact that backing Assad was essencial to be able to support our brothers in Lebanon. Look what has happened now. We cant reach our brothers and sisters and israel is pushing them back to take over more of their land.
@Awk20000 just like bengvir, Asmongold recently has been recieving protection from getting banned on twitch/youtube/twitter. they gave him assurance that hes not gonna get banned while he is doing the hasbara.
he is taking AIPAC money. and he is being paid very well
@TehranTimes79 They are killing our children. They kill palestinian children, lebanese children. Children in Sudan.
They love to kill Children.
We dont want an eye for an eye. we demand enemies head for this.
@Meme_murf@Awk20000 first of all this is a west asian hand gesture.
second, Yahya Sinwar went against Evil itself and it is way to hard for retards to understand anytime soon.
Question is Why?!
let me tell you. because many of us just turned to be chickens. i want to be blunt, thats real. We are chickens who are afraid of death. We're not brave. We're not real muslims. We are not real men.
We need our hearts of Iron and revolt against injustice.
The most terrifying and horrific thing that has happened over the past two years is that the killing of children has become completely normalized, and perhaps even routine.
@propandco It is a war brother. I dont think if defending national interests and security has anything to do with democracy.
Look at the US. do the american people agreed to this war? of crouse not! and no one is calling the US a non democratic country just because trump started this war.
Before Karbala there was not only battle.
There was isolation.
There were letters.
There were promises.
There were people who agreed in private and disappeared in public.
Then came the moment where positions became visible.
Watching Ibrahim Al-Nabulsi’s final will, I thought of that lesson.
Not because history repeats itself literally.
But because every generation is tested by the same question:
What do you do when conviction becomes costly?
His message was not “remember me.”
It was: do not disappear.
Do not become comfortable.
Do not let fear make your decisions for you.
Karbala was never only about who remained standing at the end.
It was about who remained standing when standing became expensive.
History remembers sacrifice.
But it also remembers silence.
Every day is Ashura.
Every land has its test.