Dean of Salisbury to mark the tragic event of Nakba
The very Reverend Nicholas Papadopulos is to address a ceremony at the Quaker Meeting House on 15th May in Salisbury to mark the tragic event of Nakba in the Middle East. Christians, Muslims and Jews will gather to mourn the event when Palestinians around the world mark the time when they were driven from their homes never to return. A report in the New Valley News says:
"Canon Jonathan Herbert, from the Hilfield Priory in Dorset, who will lead the service, said it was important to remember the Nakba. Three quarters of the population of Palestine left their homes during the fighting when the State of Israel was set up in 1948.
"But that was not the end of the story - the Nakba continues to this day. The descendants of those who did not leave are suffering under the brutal military occupation where every aspect of their lives is strictly controlled. Homes are routinely demolished to make way for illegal Israeli settlements on Palestinian land, soldiers burst into in the middle of the night to kidnap children who are alleged to have thrown stones.
"The youngsters are often kept in solitary confinement and made to sign confessions in Hebrew - a language they do not understand. Farmers have to get permits to access their own land - and the permits are frequently refused". He says he bore witness to these events when he served as a human rights monitor in Palestine.
For further details of this event contact Salisbury Concern for Israel Palestine. Most of this text taken from the New Valley News currently available around Salisbury.
Future event planned
In partnership with SCIP, we are in the early stages of planning an event to highlight the various reports by Human Rights Watch, B'Tselem and Amnesty of the Apartheid system being operated by the Israelis. This will be held probably in June and details will appear here once they are finalised.
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