7 #Arab armies attacked #Israel in 1948 and asked the Arab inhabitants to move out while they eradicated Israel. But @Israel soundly beat them all and the Arabs who moved away were unable to come back. This is what the #Nakba circus and hoax is all about.
https://t.co/TzHfDqq7U1
Nakba "Displacement" - What Really happened?
In this video, 13 Palestinian Arabs discuss 1948 and why they Left their homes. Most were Promised by the 5 Arab Armies that they would soon Return after the Jews were exterminated.
This is quite a contrast from the Propaganda that the Jews forced the local Arabs to flee.
But the fact is many Arabs chose to not fight against the Jews and they stayed. 150,000+ Arabs chose not to flee (not "forced"). Now, those Arab descendants are the 2 million Arab-Israeli citizens.
On X, the pro-"palestine" crowd completely Ignores the War in 1948, the Victory of Israel over 5 Arab Armies, and even the entire year of 1948. "If we don't discuss it, it never happened." And the War was never Lost.. it continues even today (in their mnds).
Follow me, I Follow you! A safer way to make your Voice heard than Fighting in Gaza! Don't forget to Re-post.
This baby was born at 34 weeks. Still legal to abort in over ten states (including D.C.).
Jeremiah 1:5 - “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you…”
Made in the Image of God. No child should be aborted
At the Western Wall, Jerusalem, Israel A timeless beginning, in the most timeless place!
Following a beloved Jewish tradition, children who begin their formal Torah studies start with the third book of the Torah, Leviticus. This book teaches about the special offerings that were brought in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem.
To celebrate this milestone, a yeshiva in Israel took their young students to the Western Wall in Jerusalem. There, just steps from where the Holy Temple once stood, these children began learning about the offerings.
I like her!
A British woman yells at a Muslim: “Fuck off already! I’m sick of you! All of you, take your wives and kids and go back to your Islamic countries! Got it!!”
No more politeness. No more pretending. The people are done with the invasion.
Go home. All of you.
Antisemites in academia can continue to ignore Antisemitism, just like universities in Berlin did.
One day they will suddenly see the Albert Einsteins of our generation just slip away to other academic institutions, leaving others behind.
An Afghan girl cries:
“I wish God had never created women. Even animals can roam freely, but we are forbidden from stepping outside the house.”
The Taliban has permanently banned women from attending schools and legalized (sexual) slavery.
Zero protests by leftists or Muslims.
On This Day — June 10, 1977
Just three decades after the Holocaust — when the world closed its doors and left Jews to die on sinking ships and in sealed trains — the State of Israel rescued 66 Vietnamese refugees drifting helplessly in the South China Sea and made them citizens.
For the first time in nearly 2,000 years of exile and powerlessness, the Jewish people had sovereignty … and they chose to use it to save strangers.
In the middle of the vast ocean, a leaking wooden boat carried 66 terrified men, women, and children with no food, no water, and failing SOS signals ignored by ships from East Germany, Norway, Japan, and Panama. Death was closing in.
The Israeli cargo ship Yuvali, en route to Taiwan, spotted them. Captain Meir Tadmor radioed Haifa for instructions. Prime Minister Menachem Begin personally gave permission, and the Jewish crew took every soul aboard, fed them, clothed them, and diverted their voyage — sailing home to Israel.
When the ship arrived, Begin — whose parents and brother were murdered in the Holocaust — stood before the Knesset and declared with deep emotion:
“We Jews know what it is to be refugees. We know the agony of wandering the seas while the world looks away. For the first time in two millennia, we are no longer powerless wanderers. We are a sovereign nation — and therefore it is natural for us to give these people a haven in the Land of Israel.”
This first group of 66 was only the beginning. Between 1977 and 1979, tiny Israel — still absorbing its own Jewish refugees from Arab lands and the Soviet Union — welcomed more than 300 Vietnamese boat people in total, granting them full citizenship and a new life.
Many of these Vietnamese-Israelis went on to build beautiful, fully integrated lives in the Jewish state. Their children grew up speaking Hebrew, served in the IDF, started families with Israeli spouses, and thrived in professions ranging from business and policing to the restaurant industry — becoming a small but vibrant thread in the tapestry of Israeli society.
This was not politics.
This was the Jewish soul speaking.
After centuries of being the stranger, the outcast, the one no empire would shelter … the Jewish people were finally the ones with the power to open their gates. And they chose to remember.
UN watched Yezidis being massacred,kidnapped,raped and burned alive for refusing to convert to lsIam,but they didn’t help!
Nadia lost 6 of her brothers and she was kidnapped and raped by lSlS.
7K kidnapped, 2599 still missing.
10K were killed.
0 marches
"My name is Yahya Mahamid. I'm an Israeli, I'm an Arab, I'm a Muslim, and I am a proud soldier of the Israeli Defense Forces. I grew up taught to hate, but I fell in love in Israel. I'm proud to be a Muslim Israeli soldier."
Yahya, you are a light in the darkness. ❤️
It's hard to beat Israeli technology!
TEL AVIV, Israel - The Israelis are developing an airport security device that eliminates the privacy concerns that come with full-body scanners.
It's an armoured booth you step into that will not X-ray you, but will detonate any explosive device you may have on your person.
Israel sees this as a win-win situation for everyone, with none of this crap about racial profiling.
It will also eliminate the costs of long and expensive trials.
You're in the airport terminal and you hear a muffled explosion. Shortly thereafter, an announcement:
"Attention to all standby passengers,
El Al is pleased to announce a seat available on flight 670 to London.
Shalom!
Operation Wings of Dawn in full swing.
The descendants of one of the ten lost tribes of Israel, the tribe of Manasseh, returned to their long lost ancestral home, and were greeted by Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.
Welcome home🙏🏼💙
Hey Jasmine…
Black pilot here.
I think you missed the plot.
Then again, that’s becoming a pattern.
I graduated from West Point.
I went through Army flight school.
I learned to fly the AH-64 Apache.
I deployed to combat and flew 55 combat missions over Baghdad.
Nobody handed me a cockpit because of my skin color.
Nobody lowered the standards for me.
Nobody looked at me and said, “Let’s check a diversity box.”
That’s what people like you don’t seem to understand.
Suggesting that Black pilots, Black engineers, Black doctors, or Black leaders need special preferences to succeed is not empowering, it’s insulting.
I didn’t want a different standard.
I wanted the same standard.
And when you’re flying into combat, the American people don’t care what race the pilot is.
They care whether the pilot is qualified.
Merit isn’t racist.
Excellence isn’t discriminatory.
And reducing every achievement to skin color says far more about your worldview than it does about mine.
Hiram Bingham IV had a Yale degree, a Harvard law degree, and a prestigious family name.
He threw it all away to save 2,500 Jews.
June 1940. Marseille, France. With Paris fallen and the Vichy regime signing an armistice with Hitler, Article 19 sealed the fate of countless refugees: “surrender on demand” all those named by the Germans — Jews, anti-Nazis, artists, writers.
Tens of thousands flooded Marseille, the last escape port. They lined up at the U.S. consulate, desperate for visas.
Most diplomats followed State Department orders to delay, reject, and slow-walk applications under antisemitic pressure from Breckinridge Long. Many never got a second chance.
Hiram Bingham IV, 36-year-old Vice Consul, refused to comply.
Son of a governor, father of five, he signed visas as fast as he could — to Jews, Communists, socialists, artists, anyone the Gestapo hunted.
He accepted forged papers, typed affidavits, and kept going even after his boss threatened him and Washington demanded he stop.
Working with Varian Fry, he helped save Hannah Arendt, Marc Chagall, Max Ernst, Heinrich Mann, Lion Feuchtwanger, and countless ordinary Jewish families, orphaned children, and elderly refugees.
When needed, he hid people in his own villa and smuggled them to safety. He even paid from his own pocket.
In just ten months, Bingham issued 2,500 visas — an underground railroad run by an American diplomat.
The State Department punished him: demoted to Lisbon, then Buenos Aires.
He continued exposing Nazis in South America anyway.
Passed over for promotion, he resigned in 1946 at 42, with eleven children to support. He returned to a small Connecticut farm, worked odd jobs, and never spoke of Marseille — not to his wife, not to his children.
For 42 years, his heroism remained hidden.
He died in 1988 at 84, forgotten by the world. No major obituary. No recognition.
Then, in 1991, his son found a hidden bundle behind a chimney: documents, cables, and lists of the lives he saved. The family was stunned.
The papers went to the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. Survivors and their descendants came forward.
In 2002, Secretary of State Colin Powell posthumously honored him with the Constructive Dissent Award.
In 2006, the U.S. Postal Service issued a stamp in his name.
Hiram Bingham IV had every reason to follow orders. Instead, he broke them — knowing it would cost his career, his security, everything. While others obeyed and advanced, he chose what was right.
Today, tens of thousands of people owe their lives to one man’s signature.
A quiet hero who saved 2,500 souls and asked for nothing in return.
In Bangladesh, a Christian mother bravely confronted a horde of thousands of radical Muslims with a sword to defend her home and son as they attacked and threw stones at them.
Real courage.