Saturday, 17 November 2012


what is not revealed in western media esp UK,


BBC.LBC.etc 


its very toiugh in Gaza --except for the ruling elite-wealthy and middle classes!!


yasser arafats tutor was mufti of jerusalem



    1. Roots Club | Services | Restaurants | Catering Services

      www.rootsclub.ps/services.php
      Roots The Club Restaurant located in Gaza, Palestine Owned by Cactus for Development and Investment.
    2. Roots Club

      www.rootsclub.ps/
      Roots The Club Restaurant located in Gaza, Palestine Owned by Cactus for Development and Investment.
    3. Roots Club - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roots_Club
      Tom Gross posted a photo essay about the new As-Sadaka Gaza Olympic Swimming Pool and the Roots Club restaurant on his web page, alleging that " the ...
    4. Dispatch: Just how hungry is Gaza? - Telegraph

      www.telegraph.co.uk › News › World News › Middle East › Israel
      5 Jun 2010 – With its tastefully hung fairy lights twinkling above a patio bedecked with topiary, Roots is not your typical Gaza eatery. Snazzily dressed waiters ...
    5. Roots The Club - YouTube

      www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_puiuvWHQ4
      10 May 2009 – A unique blend of contemporary design and urban chic, Roots Club is an icon in the heart of Gaza City. This multi-use complex - which includes ...
    6. Humanitarian crises in Gaza - Roots club - What the media won't ...

      www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBN9TzP-zXc
      5 Jun 2010 – "In recent days, the international media, particularly in Europe and the Mideast, has been full of stories about "activist boats sailing to Gaza ...
    7. Images for roots in gaza

       - Report images
    8. A Taste of “Concentration Camp” GazaRoots Club | Israellycool

      www.israellycool.com/.../a-taste-of-“concentration-camp”-gaza-roots...
      22 Jul 2010 – Introducing the Roots Club, an icon in the heart of Gaza City.
    9. AFP: Israel points, ironically, to fancy Gaza restaurant

      www.google.com/.../afp/.../ALeqM5in1Yxul18eE4ioyDjeFuKJjxbdT...
      26 May 2010 – "In anticipation of foreign correspondents travelling to Gaza to cover ...menu and information for the Roots Club and Restaurant in Gaza," the ...
    10. Roots Restaurant in Gaza City, Israel & the Palestinian Territories ...

      www.lonelyplanet.com/israel-and...gaza.../gaza.../roots-restaurant
      Ranked #4 of 8 things to do in Gaza City by Lonely Planet travellers. By far the most expensive up-scale restaurant in GazaRoots is where important people ...
    11. Move To Gaza, Where The Living Is Easy By Lisa Goldman

      www.countercurrents.org/goldman270510.htm
      27 May 2010 – According to the Israeli government, life in Gaza is pretty luxurious. On the ... menu and information for the Roots Club and Restaurant in Gaza.

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    Biggest Palestinian shopping mall being built in Gaza

    www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?id=221934 - United States
    24 May 2011 – Three-story retail complex near Gaza City will be first of its kind in Palestinian territories; set to open in mid-June.
  1. Gaza Mall - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaza_Mall
    Jump to Shopping experience‎: Salah a-Din Abu Abdo, chair of the mall's board of directors, promised "attractive and competitive prices" in an effort to ...
  2. A nice new shopping mall opened today in Gaza: Will the media ...

    www.tomgrossmedia.com/mideastdispatches/archives/001127.html
    17 Jul 2010 – Above: a new mall that opened today, July 17. If there “are no building materials allowed into Gaza” how did they build this shopping center...
  3. Luxury mall opens in Gaza - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbKxiQbJ9U026 Jul 2010 - 55 sec - Uploaded by infolivetvenglish
    While Hamas continues to demand a full lifting of the blockade,Gaza Mall, the first ever shopping center in ...
  4. Shopping mall opens in Gaza - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=JvOAufwwnAo16 Sep 2010 - 2 min - Uploaded by AlJazeeraEnglish
    A brand-new air-conditioned shopping centre, offering 10 shops and a grocery store, has opened in the Gaza ...
  5. Images for shopping malls in gaza

     - Report images
  6. The good life in Gaza - Israel Opinion, Ynetnews

    www.ynetnews.com › Ynetnews › Opinion
    20 Jul 2010 – This past Saturday night, the Gaza Strip marked the grand opening of its new shopping mall, known as Strip Mall. So as the world continues to ...
  7. Gaza Mall Seeks to Make Statement of Resolve - The New York Times

    www.nytimes.com/2010/08/23/world/middleeast/23gaza.html
    22 Aug 2010 – Gaza, famous for its misery, has a shopping mall. It opened a month ago to considerable fanfare, with Palestinian television cameras trailing ...
  8. As the Israeli blockade eases, Gaza goes shopping - The Independent

    www.independent.co.uk/.../as-the-israeli-blockade-eases-gaza-goes-s...
    26 Jul 2010 – Ms Wahad was among the 3,700 visitors who flocked to Gaza's firstshopping mall in the eight hours after its televised grand opening, attended ...
  9. Starved Palestinians in Gaza City open New Shopping Mall ...

    www.faithfreedom.org/.../starved-palestinians-in-gaza-city-open-new...
    31 Jul 2010 – Starved Palestinians in Gaza City open New Shopping Mall. It is commonly believed the Palestinians in Gaza are starving and brutally ...
  10. Biggest mall in Gaza Strip opens its doors | GulfNews.com

    gulfnews.com/.../biggest-mall-in-gaza-strip-opens-its-doors-1.84074...
    20 Jul 2011 – Gaza: The biggest mall in the Gaza Strip opened its doors on Tuesday with ... over the size of the mall and the escalators rather than shopping.


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Zionism and Israel - Encyclopedic DictionaryHajj Amin al Husseini, (Haj Amin el Husseini) Grand Mufti of Jerusalem (Hussayni)   Definition


Hajj (Muhamed Effendi) Amin al Husseini, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem - (also Hussayni or Hajj Amin el Husseini) -(1895-1974) -- A radical pro-Nazi Palestinian and Muslim leader, scion of the influential Husseini family of Jerusalem. In WW I,  he fought for the Ottoman Turks as did many Jewish and Arab Palestinians but eventually changed sides.
With Aref el-Aref, Husseini was largely responsible for riots started in 1920 ("Nebi musa") . Husseini was jailed, but subsequently released and elected Grand Mufti of Jerusalem in an election rigged by Sir Herbert Samuel, the British High Commissioner, who thought to co-opt his radicalism.  Because of his position and family connections, the Mufti had access to about 200,000 pounds annually, much of which was used to finance terror campaigns as well as to advance his own position.
Haj Amin El Husseini - Palestinian leader and former Grand Mufti, reviewing Nazi Troops.
Palestinian leader, Former Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Hajj Amin Al Husseini, shown reviewing Nazi troops on the cover of the Vienna Illustrated (Wiener Illustrierte) magazine.

The "Grand Mufti" title was invented by the British. The Mufti used that title and several others, such as "eminence." The sheikh-and president of his former university, Al-Azbar in Cairo, noted:
In Islam, there are no "eminencies" and no "grand" muftis. Before Allah all men are equal, and it ill behooves a religious teacher to assume such redundant titles... A mufti is a teacher in Islam. And even to that title Hajj Amin should have no claim, for he has not finished a single course of studies here at the University. He owes his appointment to political influence and family connections. He is a politician.
Husseini's early attitude regarding Zionism was expressed as follows to a Jew named Abbady, a native of Palestine, who worked with him at one time:
Remember, Abbady, this was and will remain an Arab land. We do not mind you natives of the country, but those alien invaders, the Zionists, will be massacred to the last man. We want no progress, no prosperity. Nothing but the sword will decide the fate of this country.
He told an interviewer, Ladislas Farago:
The Jews have changed the life of Palestine in such a way that it must inevitably lead to the destruction of our race. We are not accustomed to this haste and speed, and therefore we are continually being driven into the background.
The British made Husseini head of the Supreme Muslim Council and gave him considerable resources. The head of the council was supposed to be elected every 5 years, but Husseini seized control and terrified others. He controlled the allowance of the council from the mandatory government, Muslim charity money and donations from abroad. He used these resources to buy patronage influence. As Mufti, Husseini initiated renovations of the Al-Aqsa and Omar mosques on the temple mount (Haram as Sharif) in order to build up the importance of Jerusalem as a Muslim holy place and Palestinian national symbol. These projects increased his prestige immensely in the Arab world and were a good way to raise funds from abroad and provide work, thus providing him with an additional source for giving out patronage.   He apparently instigated the riots of 1929. He took over leadership of the Arab Revolt (Great Uprising)  of 1936-1939, apparently funded by the Italian Fascist government or the Nazis. Count Ciano, the Italian Foreign Minister, stated in 1940 that the Italians had funded the Mufti for many years, and likewise the German Siecherheitsdienst (Secret Service) claimed that without their support, the Arabs could not have continued their resistance to the British in Palestine.
The Mufti formed the Higher Arab Committee and used the revolt to settle scores with rival Palestinian clans, murdering hundreds of leaders in 11 different clans. It is reported that he met with Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in September or October of 1937, when Eichmann visited Palestine for a day. Eichmann was investigating the possibility of deporting Jews to Palestine. Reportedly, the Mufti persuaded him against this scheme. However, it is not at all clear that the Mufti was still in Palestine when Eichmann visited. In September or October of 1937, following the murder of the British commissioner for the Galilee, Husseini and the entire "Higher Arab Committee" fled first to Lebanon and then to Iraq, where he engineered a pro-Axis coupOn May 10, 1941 the Mufti broadcast a Fatwa (religious ruling) calling for a holy war against the British. This speech was carried by Iraq and Axis radio stations. Typically, a major complaint in this Fatwa was that the British profaned the Al-Aqsa mosque and were out to destroy Islam:
In Palestine the English have committed unheard of barbarisms; among others, they have profaned the el-Aqsa Mosque and have declared the most unyielding war against Islam, both in deed and in word. The Prime Minister at that time told Parliament that the world would never see peace as long as the Koran existed. What hatred against Islam is stronger than that which publicly declares the Sacred Koran an enemy of human kind? Should such sacrilege go unpunished?
When the Iraqi coup failed, Hajj Amin Al-Husseini fled to Nazi Germany, along with Fawzi El Kaukji. In Germany, he broadcast for the Nazis. He lobbied extensively to prevent Jews from escaping Germany. In 1943, he was sent to Yugoslavia, where he organized the 13th Waffen SS division, known as the  Hanjar (Hansar, Handjar, or Handzar, meaning "saber") division. These Muslims were trained in Germany and officered by Germans. The incorporation of Muslims into the SS required changes in racist ideological propaganda, and also required that they be given special privileges, and not required to eat rations of pork or alcoholic beverages.
Heinrich Himmler wrote to their officers on August 6, 1943:
"...I hold all commanders and other SS officers, responsible for the most scrupulous and loyal respect for this privilege especially granted to the Moslems. They have answered the call of the Moslem chiefs and have come to us out of hatred for the common Jewish-Anglo-Bolshevik enemy and through respect and fidelity for he who they respect above all, the Fuehrer, Adolf Hitler. There will no longer be the least discussion about the special rights afforded to the Moslems in these circles....
Heil Hitler!
(signed)
H. Himmler".
Mufti - Nazism: Haj Amin el Husseini reviewing soldiers of his Hansar SS Division
Hajj Amin a Husseini reviewing a unit of Waffen-
SS Handsar Division that he recruited.
The division organized by Husseini was responsible for the murder of about 90% of Bosnia's Jews and destroyed numerous Serbian churches and villages. These  recruits were favorites of  SS chief Heinrich Himmler, who established a special Mullah Military school in Dresden.
The enthusiasm for Nazism, though widespread in Arab lands, was not general. About 6,000 Palestinian Arabs served with the British along with some 26,000 Jewish volunteers, and Muslims and Arabs from other countries served in the Allied forces as well. The Mufti tried to organize a Muslim Nazi army from Muslim prisoners of war, but was notably unsuccessful. Even among his own SS division there was apparently unrest. The SS had killed about 40 Muslims fighting with the Yugoslav partisans, including some who were relatives of those serving in the SS. This caused unrest and a small mutiny, as some Muslim SS troops were uninterested in killing Jews and others  in Yugoslavia and wanted to fight in Palestine.
According to testimony by Nazi war criminals, the Mufti's influence was critical to the German decision to annihilate the Jews of Europe.  At the Nuremberg Trials in July 1946, Dieter Wisliceny testified:
"The Mufti was one of the initiators of the systematic extermination of European Jewry and had been a collaborator and adviser of Eichmann and Himmler in the execution of this plan... He was one of Eichmann's best friends and had constantly incited him to accelerate the extermination measures. I heard him say, accompanied by Eichmann, he had visited incognito the gas chambers of Auschwitz."
Wisliceny also testified that after the Mufti's arrival in Germany he had paid a visit to Himmler and shortly afterwards (late in 1941 or early in 1942) had visited Eichmann in his Berlin office at Kürfurstrasse, 116. According to Wisliceny, Eichmann told him that he had brought the Mufti to a special room where he showed him maps illustrating the distribution of the Jewish population in various European countries and delivered a detailed report on the solution of the Jewish problem in Europe. Some of Wisliceny's testimony regarding Eichmann may have been self-serving as is claimed, but the evidence that the Mufti was an avid Nazi and was personally responsible for the mass murder of many Jews is not lacking, even without Wisliceny's testimony.
When the Red Cross offered to mediate with Adolf Eichmann in a prisoner-of-war exchange involving the freeing of German citizens in exchange for 5,000 Jewish children being sent from Poland to the Theresienstadt death camp, Husseini directly intervened with Himmler and the exchange was cancelled.
The Mufti's role in war crimes was well documented, but he escaped detention in France, where he was awaiting trial, evidently because the French sought to derail British plans for Palestine. He then orchestrated the Palestinian civil war against the Jews, in opposition to the UN partition plan. He organized Arab League support for the Palestinian cause, and explained to the British that the solution he would adopt for the Jewish problem in Palestine was the same one as that adopted in Europe - extermination. His Nazi associations did not prevent the Mufti from remaining a revered Palestinian leader.
The significance of the Mufti and his party in Palestinian society and in the history of Zionism and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict was critical and must not be ignored. The Husseini family massacred the moderate leadership of the  Arab  Palestinian community, leaving them largely without effective leadership, creating an ominous tradition of clan warfare, and firmly establishing the most radical sort of Jew-hatred as a major political element among the Arab Palestinians. Beginning in 1920, Husseini entrenched a tradition of Arab Palestinian pogroms against Jewish civilians, including non-Zionists, featuring the worst sort of atrocities against women, children and old men. This sort of violence also bred an unhealthy taste for revenge, as well as fear.  For the Zionists, the Mufti represented the threat of imminent genocide, and his leadership and statements gave the Zionists to understand that the war with the Palestinians was a take-no-prisoners us-or-them life or death struggle.
On the other hand, the Mufti's influence waned after the Israel War of Independence. For western consumption at least, Palestinians tend to ignore his Nazi affiliations rather than revel in it.  Feisal Husseini, his relative who held the portfolio for Jerusalem in the Palestinian National Authority, was a relative moderate, and other members of the Husseini clan are not necessarily allied with the ideology of Hajj Amin al Husseini.