Yeah! Let's give these barbarians some land in the holy land! Why not? What the world needs today is yet another Islamic shariah terrorist state!
Historical Fact: Palestinian terrorism and war crimes
September 1975
Men belonging to the armed groups of the Palestinian leaders George Habash executed all the Christian villagers from Beit Mellat in the north of Lebanon, who had fallen into their hands. Nayef Hawatmeh is a member of the DFLP and his group was recently removed from the list of terror groups by the Clinton administration so he could work with Arafat. Subsequently, Israel refused to allow him to enter Gaza as Israel considers him a dangerous terrorist.
September 3, 1975
At Deir Ayach in Northern Lebanon, a monastery transformed in 1947 into a school was twenty eight years later attacked by Lebanese and Palestinians. The school had 960 children (660 Muslims) who mainly were attending at no cost. Three monks aged, respectively, 60, 78, and 93, the sole occupants of Deir Ayach on that day were murdered. The veins of the blind Boutros Sassine's arms were severed. Antoine Tamini was slaughtered, decapitated, and burned. Hanna Maksoud was found in his room, his throat cut. The Christian villagers living around the school monastery fled, and the aggressors destroyed their village.
January 15, 1976
The Palestinians arrived at Kab Elias, an Islamic Christian village situated in the Bekaa. Some ten days later, 16 Christians were killed and another 23 were injured. Following that, we witnessed the exodus of the Christians towards Zahlþ, East Beirut and Jounieh.
At the beginning of January 1976
In Damour and Jieh, two Christian towns south of Beirut, the Palestinians and Syrians went so far as to cut the fingers of Christian children to ensure that they never would be able to pull a gun's trigger. In Damour, at least 300 inhabitants were killed and their churches profaned.
January 19, 1976
The village of Hoche Barada in the Bekaa was attacked by Palestinians and Muslim Lebanese and completely pillaged and destroyed.
In 1976
The Army of Arab Lebanon, founded by the Palestinians, attacked the city of Aintoura and destroyed it. The attack was led by the Lebanese officer Ibrahim Chahine.
In 1976
The Lebanese officer Samir Abou Zahr led the massacre perpetrated by the Army of Arab Lebanon on the Emir Bechir Barracks in Beirut. During this massacre, Lebanese soldiers and officers were murdered in their sleep.
In 1976
The Lebanese officer Mostapha Sleiman, a member of the Army of Arab Lebanon, led the massacre of the Lebanese population in the city of Chekka.
March 10, 1976
Officer Moiin Hatoum, member of the Army of Arab Lebanon led an attack on the Khyam Barracks. Over 30 Lebanese soldiers were killed.
March 1985
Exodus of tens of thousands of Christians from Iklim El_Kharroub and the eastern part of Saida. The Palestinians and Lebanese Druze laid siege to, pillaged and burned over twenty Christian villages. Walid Joumblatt, Yasser Arafat and Syrian officers, planned these massacres.
The holy land you say..funny you do not really seemed to interested in religion. in fact you seem interested solely in defending Israel in any and all situations and supporting NIST and 9/11 commission reports
so whats this talk of holy lands ?
Why do you always change the subject to 9-11 conspiracy BS like a troll?
tell me more about your faith and this holy land you speak of
Google is your friend:
Jerusalem has been the
holiest city in
Judaism and the ancestral and spiritual homeland of the
Jewish people since the 10th century BCE.During classical antiquity, Jerusalem was considered the center of the world, where God resided.
The city of Jerusalem is given special status in
Jewish religious law. In particular, Jews outside Jerusalem pray facing its direction, and the
maaser sheni,
revai and
First Fruits must be eaten in Jerusalem. Any expansion of the city for these purposes must be approved by the
Sanhedrin.[
citation needed] Also, when the
Temple in Jerusalem was standing, Jerusalem observed special laws regarding the
Four Species on
Sukkot, and the
Shofar on
Rosh Hashanah.
“ And God said: "Take now thy son, thine only son, whom thou lovest, Isaac, and go to the land of Moriah [Jerusalem];and offer him there for a burnt-offering upon one of the mountains [Temple Mount] which I will tell thee of." ”
—Genesis 22:2
Jerusalem has long been embedded into Jewish religious consciousness. Jews have studied and personalized the struggle by
King David to capture Jerusalem and his desire to build the
Jewish temple there, as described in the
Book of Samuel and the
Book of Psalms. Many of King David's yearnings about Jerusalem have been adapted into popular prayers and songs.
Jerusalem appears in the
Tanakh (
Hebrew Bible) 669 times and
Zion (which usually means Jerusalem, sometimes the
Land of Israel) appears 154 times. The first section, the
Torah, only mentions
Moriah, the mountain range believed to be the location of the
binding of Isaac and the
Temple Mount in Jerusalem, and in later parts of the
Tanakh the city is written explicitly. The Tanakh (or
Old Testament), is a text sacred to both
Judaism and
Christianity. In Judaism it is considered the
Written Law, the basis for the
Oral Law (
Mishnah,
Talmud and
Shulkhan Arukh) studied, practiced and treasured by
Jews and
Judaism for three millennia. The Talmud elaborates in great depth the Jewish connection with the city.
According to the Hebrew Bible, the First Temple, at the site known as the Temple Mount today, was built by King Solomon and finished in 950 BC,and Mount Moriah is where Abraham almost sacrificed his son and talked to God. When the Babylonians captured the city in 580 BC, they destroyed the temple and sent the Jews into exile. That is, all worshiping was practiced in the temple and only the temple. From the Babylonian capture, Judaism was codified. The Tanakh (Old Testament) laid the foundation for both Christianity and Islam.