As further background to what is being discussed in Australia, please go here.
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigrants. Show all posts
Friday, 20 July 2018
Alan Tudge's proposal for a migrants 'values test'
The video below is from The Drum this afternoon on Australia's national broadcaster, the ABC.
Saturday, 7 July 2018
From immigration cruelty to the shining light of Barmen
- 6 Jul 2018
- The New York Times International Edition
- BY TRIP GABRIEL
After immigration raid in Iowa, it’s church vs. church
Mainline Protestants cite Bible to rebut evangelicals’ support for crackdown
This article is from here. Go to that link for photos.
In the days after immigration agents raided a dusty concrete plant on the west side of Mount Pleasant, Iowa, seizing 32 men from Mexico and Central America, the Rev. Trey Hegar, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, got into an impassioned argument on his Facebook page. “The Bible doesn’t promote helping criminals !!!! ” a Trump supporter wrote. Mr. Hegar answered with Leviticus: “When a stranger resides with you in your land, you shall not do him wrong. The stranger who resides with you shall be to you as the native among you, and you shall love him as yourself, for you were aliens in the land of Egypt.” The Trump supporter came back with the passage in the Gospel of Mark about rendering unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and added for good measure: “Immigration laws are good and Godly! We elected our leaders and God allowed it.”
President Trump’s immigration crackdown has been promoted with biblical righteousness by senior members of his administration, including Attorney General Jeff Sessions. And in American heartland communities where the president is popular, the crackdown is often debated — by supporters and critics alike — through the lens of Christian morality.
In Mount Pleasant, a town of 8,500 in rural southeast Iowa that voted heavily for Mr. Trump, the president’s immigration policies created a sharp, unexpected fracture in the days after Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents descended, on May 9. Fault lines appeared among public officials, businesses and, especially, the town’s many churches.
“This whole immigration thing has been an abstraction,” said State Representative Dave Heaton, a Republican from Mount Pleasant. “It’s been on TV and in the newspapers. And all of a sudden it’s here in our town. Relationships and everything are all of a sudden up for grabs.” It was a few weeks before parentchild separations at the border exploded into the news, exposing divisions among faith groups nationally.
Mainline Protestant churches harshly condemned Mr. Trump for his policy of separating families. Evangelical leaders also deplored the separations, although they largely deflected blame away from Mr. Trump. The expressions of dismay helped to drive his eventual retreat from the policy, but they reflected the same interfaith divide that opened in Mount Pleasant over the workplace raid, another facet of the administration’s “zero tolerance” policy.
Mr. Hegar, a Texan who served four years in the Marines before attending a Presbyterian seminary, finally asked the Trump supporter he was debating on Facebook: “Which Scripture do we obey?” He answered himself: “The one from Jesus to ‘Do unto others’ is what we choose.” Mr. Hegar’s church on Walnut Street is across from the site of Mount Pleasant’s most popular event, a Labor Day festival of steam-powered tractors and other farm machinery. In the days and weeks after the raid, the church became a hectic crossroads for family members of the detained men and their supporters. Parishioners in a group called Iowa Welcomes Immigrant Neighbors raised $80,000 to help detainees’ families pay rent, utilities and legal fees. Members of other mainline Protestant churches, like Lutherans, contributed to the fund, as did Roman Catholics at St. Alphonsus, where a Spanish-language Mass is held once a month. Notably absent from the donor roll, though, were Mount Pleasant’s evangelical churches.
Mr. Hegar said he heard relatives of a detained man say that the pastor of the evangelical church they have attended for years had not called to ask if he could help them. “My heart breaks for that,” Mr. Hegar said. The town’s evangelical pastors, whom he knows, are compassionate individuals, he said, “but to see nothing, after something like this in their backyards — I’m shocked.” He attributed their silence to the strong political alignment between American evangelicals and Mr. Trump, who counts heavily on their votes. “The nationalistic politics and theology goes hand in hand now,” Mr. Hegar said.
Pastors of three leading evangelical churches in Mount Pleasant declined repeated requests over several weeks seeking comment for this article. One evangelical pastor who did agree to an interview in the days after the raid was Jim Erwin, the head of Wellspring Evangelical Free Church.
He said no one from the mainline churches had suggested he raise money; if they had, he said, he might have chipped in. But Mr. Erwin added that he believed the detentions were justified: “Because they’re breaking the law, I recognize the authorities do need to come in and do that.”
On a day in mid-May when the president referred to immigrants who join gangs as “animals,” more than 100 people crowded into the fellowship hall of the First Presbyterian Church, including about 25 wives and children of the detained men.
Walfred Urizar-Lopez, 15, said that he and his father, Elmer Urizar-Lopez, 41, fled Guatemala for their lives after a gang tried to recruit Walfred as a drug courier. His father had gone to the police, but their advice was to cooperate with the gang; his father refused. “The gang told my dad he has no idea what kind of problems he will have,” Walfred said at the church, speaking through a translator.
The arrest of his father in the factory raid left Walfred, a high school sophomore, alone in Mount Pleasant. In jeans and a flannel shirt, he thrust his hands into his pockets and fought back tears. “His situation right now, it’s very bad,” said Eneida Carillo, whose family, also from Guatemala, had taken Walfred in. She said a lawyer had told them that day that Walfred’s father would probably be deported.
Ms. Carillo began to cry. “As soon as his dad gets back, they will probably kill him,’’ she said.
Workplace raids like the one in Mount Pleasant were de-emphasized by the Obama administration, but they have been stepped up sharply under Mr. Trump. Experts say the raids are meant to deter immigrants from showing up for work or entering the country to seek jobs. Raids at 7-Elevens across the country in January and at a Tennessee slaughterhouse in April made headlines; scores of workers were detained at Ohio meatpacking plants in late June. No charges have been filed against the owners of the Midwest Precast Concrete plant in Mount Pleasant that was raided.
An ICE spokesman declined to comment, citing a continuing investigation. According to Robin Clark-Bennett of the Center for Worker Justice of Eastern Iowa, 23 of the 32 arrested men have been released on bond, three have been deported and five remain in jail facing criminal charges.
While emotions ran high at the meeting in the fellowship hall, not everyone in Mount Pleasant, nor even at First Presbyterian, sided with Mr. Hegar. “I agree with our president: our borders, we can’t open it to everybody,” said Rusty King, the church’s custodian, the following day. “We’ve got enough poor people here in Iowa that need help,” Mr. King said. “I work three jobs and still live paycheck to paycheck.” After an initial conversation with a reporter about immigration, he seemed to avoid follow-up calls and texts. But he had a granddaughter, Angel King, pass along a Facebook post written by a young man from Mount Pleasant that echoed Mr. King’s own views. “I can’t hold my tongue any longer,” Garrett Carlston wrote in the post on May 10, when supporters of the detainees were rallying at the Henry County Courthouse. “I feel bad for the families that are going to be torn apart by this but it’s hard for me to sit here and act like it isn’t the fault of the people who brought them across the border.” He wrote that the vigil-keepers lacked sympathy for American citizens. “What about the ones living in Mount Pleasant who couldn’t find a job because they were employing illegal immigrants instead?”
The view that immigrants take jobs from citizens or depress wages was a common one, but it was disputed by local business owners. The unemployment rate in Henry County is 2.9 percent, and many factories display “Hiring” signs. Gary Crawford, who owns Mt. Pleasant Tire (“We keep you rolling”), said he paid tire installers $16 to $24 an hour, with full benefits. “I know most of the people who run the factories,” he said. “They just can’t find help.” Mr. Crawford belongs to St. Alphonsus Catholic Church, and on the Sunday after the ICE raid, he heard Father Paul Connolly, with the detained men in mind, devote his homily to the good Samaritan, the exemplar of caring for strangers. “All of us were immigrants at one time,” the priest said.
From The Editor:
I reread this article and found that it reminded me of the plight of the Jews in Hitler's Europe. Although, I am not pleading any better for my country, Australia. We have been busy doling out our own share of misery through separation and imprisonment and inhumanity. I would like to remind people that there are people of many faiths and none who sheltered many of the Jews of Europe in Hitler's empire. However, in this paragraph, I would remind people of the Barmen Declaration and the great people who signed it. Clause 3 of the declaration says:
The message and order of the church should not be influenced
by the current political convictions.
So many Christians and denominations in 1930s Germany had strayed from the truths of the Gospels into realms of power and self-service. Few Christian denominations and leaders stood firm and fewer were able to shine a light on the correct path. As it was in the 1930s, this century is showing us - through the great journeys of refugees - who are those following the correct paths of faith. Those who are not following similar journeys and pathways will have questions to answer ... in this world or the next.
Thursday, 21 June 2018
Sanctuary Everywhere. Explore what a Sanctuary Meeting means.
What is a Sanctuary Meeting?
A Sanctuary Meeting is a Quaker Meeting that is committed to:
- Joining local initiatives to build a culture of welcome
- Building alliances with groups opposing racism
- Working with others to change the laws on destitution, detention, deportations and removals.
How a Sanctuary Meeting fulfills the commitments changes from area to area. Actions taken will vary in response to local issues, abilities and passions within the community, and the leadings of the Spirit. Here are some of the things that Sanctuary Meetings are supported to do:
- Building alliances with migrant or BAME-led anti-racist groups in your area, including by offering room grants.
- Holding at least one public meeting a year with other local groups, especially people with direct experience of being discriminated against by the border system.
- Lobbying local politicians. Use our Sanctuary Everywhere Manifesto to inform your demands.
- Offering accompaniment to people seeking sanctuary in negotiating 'everyday borders' such as healthcare and the education system
- Assisting campaigns that use direct action to resist deportation.
Monday, 4 June 2018
One Nation reads the nation wrong - as usual.
SENATOR FRASER ANNING
Fact check:
Are more than half of Australia's
working-age Muslims not in the workforce?
Posted about 11 hours ago
The claim
Independent Senator Fraser Anning has frequently used Twitter to campaign against those migrants and asylum seekers he claims come to Australia "for a life of permanent handouts".
Senator Anning, who represented Pauline Hanson's One Nation party until January 2018, has also praised Turnbull Government plans to tighten eligibility for welfare payments for recently-arrived migrants.
The Government has legislation before Parliament which would extend the waiting period for various welfare payments to migrants from two years to three years, while proposing to extend this to four years in the 2018 budget.
Senator Anning has told Parliament: "Free welfare and public housing attracts the very worst type of migrants: transnational parasites who travel not in search of opportunity, but in search of a free ride at everyone else's expense."
In keeping with his campaign against "so-called refugees who just want to jump on the welfare gravy train", Senator Anning tweeted on May 11: "It's no coincidence 56 per cent of Australia's working-age Muslims are not in the labour force."
It's no coincidence 56 per cent of Australia's working-age Muslims are not in the labour force.
Free welfare and public housing attracts the very type of migrants, transnational parasites who travel not in search of opportunity, but in search of a free ride at other’s expense.
Is Senator Anning correct? Are more than half of Australia's Muslims, who could be in the labour force, in fact, not in the labour force? RMIT ABC Fact Check investigates.
The verdict
Senator Anning is wrong.
Fact Check analysed data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS), which economics professor John Quiggin, of the University of Queensland, then verified.
The analysis showed 43 per cent of working-age Muslims were not in the labour force — significantly less than the figure of 56 per cent cited by Senator Anning.
It also revealed that the high Muslim non-participation rate — which compares to a national working-age non-participation rate of 24 per cent — is almost entirely due to the large number of Muslim women who are not working.
Getting the definitions straight
The ABS defines the labour force as the sum total of people aged 15 and over who are employed either full-time or part-time, as well as unemployed people who are actively looking for work.
People not in the labour force are considered to be those aged 15 and over and who undertake unpaid household duties or other voluntary work only, as well as people who are retired, those permanently unable to work and those who do not want to work.
It's worth noting that the ABS labour force definition comprises people aged 15 and over (that is, with no upper age limit). But it defines the working-age population as only those people between the ages of 15 and 64.
Fact Check has used the working-age definition to calculate workforce participation rates because Senator Anning referred specifically to "working-age Muslims".
Where did Senator Anning's incorrect number come from?
Asked for the basis of his claim, Senator Anning's media spokesman, Boston White, referred Fact Check to an opinion piece by economist Henry Ergas, published in The Australian on September 14, 2015.
In the column, Mr Ergas raised concerns about the religious composition of Australia's refugee intake. At the time, the Government had expanded its humanitarian intake by 12,000 places to accommodate refugees from Syria.
Mr Ergas argued that Middle Eastern Muslim refugees found it difficult to integrate harmoniously into Australia's economy and society because they brought with them religious hatreds.
In this context, he stated that "56 per cent of Australia's working-age Muslims [are] either unemployed or not in the labour force".
In doing so, he refers to two groups of Muslims: those who are unemployed (that is, in the labour force but seeking work) and those who are not in the labour force (that is, not in paid work and not seeking work).
When Senator Anning lifted this figure from Mr Ergas's column, he tweeted it, saying 56 per cent of working-age Muslims were not in the labour force.
In other words, he attributed the figure only to the latter group of Muslims referred to by Mr Ergas.
Regardless, as the column was written in 2015, data from the 2016 census would likely have rendered the number out of date.
Crunching the numbers
At the time of the last census, the population of Australia was 23.4 million, including more than 604,000 Muslims (2.6 per cent of the total).
There were 12.7 million Australians in the labour force, representing a participation rate of 65 per cent (that is, the percentage of all Australians 15 and over who were either in work or actively looking for work).
However, when focusing on the ABS's more narrowly-defined 'working age' population (that is, people aged 15-64), the participation rate for the general population is considerably higher — 76 per cent.
Fact Check used data collected in the 2016 census to calculate the workforce status of Muslims compared to the rest of the population.
The data indicated that working-age Muslims, compared to people claiming other religious affiliations, had the lowest workforce participation rate at 57 per cent, followed by Buddhists (70 per cent).
Fact Check created tables (below) using ABS data to provide a comparison of participation rates. As mentioned, the methodology was checked by Queensland University's Professor Quiggin.
The numbers were broken down further to show participation and non-participation rates for both men and women.
The figures show that the participation rate for Muslim women — at 42 per cent — was the lowest among both sexes.
Muslim women, as well as women who identified as Buddhist (65 per cent), were well below the national female working-age participation rate of 72 per cent.
For men, the picture was similar: Muslim men had the lowest participation rate at 70 per cent, followed by Buddhist men (77 per cent), both ranking below the national working-age male participation rate of 81 per cent.
Clearly, the very low participation rate for working-age Muslim women is reflected in the low participation rate for all Muslims.
Or, as Professor Quiggin told Fact Check: "The higher non-participation rate for Muslims is almost entirely due to lower participation rates for women."
Why do Muslim people have such a low workforce participation rate?
The inference contained in Senator Anning's Twitter claim and comments in Parliament are that a significant number of Muslim migrants are a burden on the Australian economy because they are not in work and rely instead on welfare.
However, Professor Quiggin said that although Muslims had the lowest workforce participation rate, it was worth noting that women who were not in the labour force, but whose husbands or partners were employed, would not be eligible for government benefits in most cases.
PHOTO: At 42 per cent, the participation rate of working-age Muslim women is well below the national rate of 72 per cent for females. (Flickr: Garry Knight CC.0)
An academic paper produced by Beth Cook, of the University of Newcastle, which examined the labour force experience of Australian Muslims, found that Muslims were less likely to participate in the labour force partly because they faced discrimination.
Ms Cook, formerly of the university's Centre for Full Employment and Equity, noted in her paper that a number of constraints affected workforce participation, such as poorer English language proficiency, employer attitudes and cultural and religious issues.
Referring to a 2005 UK study, Ms Cook wrote: "Religious beliefs may have a significant impact on the employment prospects of Muslims living in Western countries."
The UK study of mostly Muslim jobseekers indicated they were not prepared to work in some or all of the following situations:
- Places where alcohol was sold;
- Gambling establishments, or places in which the accrual of interest was promoted;
- Places where they were required to handle non-halal meat;
- Places where there was no time or suitable place to pray.
There were further restrictions for some Muslim women relating to:
- Observing hijab;
- Wanting to work in an all-female workplace;
- Not being prepared to work at night or in jobs that involved meeting the public;
- Islamic rituals, such as observing Muslim holidays and restrictions on shaking hands.
In her paper, Ms Cook said Australian Muslim women expressed a preference for Muslim-run childcare services and some had experienced pressure from their family to remain at home, with priority placed on caring for children or elderly relatives, rather than participating in the labour force.
In Australia, the highest female non-participation rates are among Muslims and Buddhists. Professor Quiggin noted that this most likely reflected cultural attitudes rather than specifically religious differences.
"It is likely that cultural differences of this kind will tend to fade in the second generation as has happened with earlier groups of migrants," he said.
Principal researcher: Sushi Das
@sushidas1
Sources
- Tweet by Senator Fraser Anning, May 11, 2018
- Tweet by Senator Fraser Anning May 13, 2018
- Hansard, May 20, 2018
- ABS 2016 Census Quickstats
- ABS media release, 2016 Census: Religion
- ABS 6202.0 - Labour force stats, PDF
- ABS 6202.0 - Glossary, Labour Force, Australia, Aug 2016
- ABS 6202.0 - Labour Force, Australia, Table 1, Mar 2018
- ABS 2071.0 - Census of Population and Housing: Reflecting Australia - Stories from the Census, 2016 — Religion
- Social Services Legislation Amendment (Encouraging self-sufficiency for newly arrived migrants) Bill 2018
- Migrant crisis: refugees must be prioritised on their beliefs, Henry Ergas, The Australian, September 14, 2015
- Labour force outcomes for Australian Muslims, Beth Cook, Centre of Full Employment and Equity University of Newcastle
- Barriers to employment for Pakistanis and Bangladeshis in Britain. Research Report No 360, Department for Work and Pensions, Norwich. Tackey, N. D., Casebourne, J., Aston, J., Ritchie, H., Sinclair, A., Tyers, C., Hurstfield, J., Willison, R. and Page, R. (2006)
Friday, 2 March 2018
The Bendigo (Victoria) Joss House Temple - an historic reminder of the Chinese participation in the historic gold mining days
One of Australia's oldest Chinese temples brings fortune and family, worshippers say
Updated 18 February 2018, 6:25 AEDT
Larissa Romensky
Visiting Vietnamese abbot Thich Giac Minh leads a family through the Joss House rooms. (Credit: ABC)
The Bendigo Joss House Temple was built to protect Chinese miners, and almost 150 years later is still used as a place of worship.
People often visit motivated by the need for change.
Some ask for wealth, some for children, while others pay respect to their ancestors or offer gratitude, and at Lunar New Year the numbers swell.
Joss House supervisor Darren Wright describes the temple as a Chinese church or chapel.
Unlike a regular church gathering, people attend on a needs basis.
"It's not like a western church where everyone shows up on Sunday morning," Mr Wright said.
Not aligned with any one religion, the temple reflects the many streams in Chinese religion based on three distinct philosophies — Taoism, Confucianism and Buddhism.
"We're talking about cultural systems of worship and prayer that go back here, in some instances, over 2,500 years," Mr Wright said.
The heritage-listed Joss House, with three small rooms, is considered an important part of Bendigo's Chinese history, and it is one of the few remaining buildings of its type in Australia.
Once considered a den of iniquity, Mr Wright said there were many amusing urban myths about the temple, including it being a gambling and opium den.
'There is a history to this place'
For Bendigo's Dennis O'Hoy, the temple has a long history dating back to 1860 when his grandfather arrived on the goldfields as a merchant.
His family remained one of the few in Bendigo after the White Australia policy of 1901 and the introduction of the Immigration Restriction Act, which limited non-British migration to Australia.
Born to Buddhists and Confucianists and sent to an Anglican school, Mr O'Hoy, also a Freemason, is a regular visitor to the Joss House.
While he finds the temple restful and peaceful with a "wonderful karma", a large part of his connection is in preserving the past.
"Just touching the brickwork there is a history to the place," Mr O'Hoy said.
A symbol of brotherhood, protection and commerce
Constructed in the 1870s, the Bendigo Joss House Temple was once part of the Ironbark Chinese Camp, where the miners were relegated to.
"They were viewed as competition and the government basically segregated them from the rest of the community by putting them into camps," Mr Wright said.
He said the Joss House was built out of a need for protection against discrimination, with the Chinese in need of a deity that would look after them.
The temple made from locally handmade bricks is dedicated to the deity Guan-Di, the god of war and prosperity, also known for bringing peace and justice to China.
"Guan-Di is a symbol of brotherhood, protection and commerce," Mr Wright said.
Fortunes change after visit
A few years ago, Bendigo surgeon Manny Cao was feeling desperate, but after a visit to the temple his fortunes changed.
Many of his financial projects had been struggling, so - at a friend's suggestion - Mr Cao offered some prayers at the main altar, and while driving home he received a call from his father about the successful sale of his house.
Since then many of his family members have visited and experienced good fortune.
The refugee who arrived by boat in Australia at the age of two was not raised in a religious household — his Vietnamese parents practised the philosophy of Confucianism, with an emphasis on ancestor worship.
"I believe in a philosophy in life, not necessarily a religion. It's good to have some sort of belief," Mr Cao said.
His six-weekly visits to the temple are not just about securing good fortune, but to offer gratitude.
"Just to thank the gods above for giving me what I've got," he said.
'Magically whatever we have asked for happens'
Wendy Tang and her husband Michael Lau had been trying to start a family for some time.
Making her way through the temple to the Ancestral Room, dedicated to the memory of ancestors, Ms Tang kneeled at the altar dedicated to Guan Yin, the Chinese goddess of compassion and mercy, and asked for a child.
Two weeks later the business developer of Chinese Vietnamese heritage was pregnant.
"Ever since then when we ask for something or if someone is not well, we go and visit and it gives us a sense of purpose," Ms Tang said.
"Somehow magically whatever we have asked for happens."
It is the spiritual connection to the temple through the ancestors that resonates most.
"It's been blessed by the people before us. Those people were also migrants … I'm just following those steps," Ms Tang said.
After initially passing off the building as a small shed, Ms Tang and her family now make the visit from Melbourne about five times a year.
Each time they bring fruit as a gift of respect, cleaning the plates first and making tea before visiting each altar in the temple where they offer their gifts.
On the first day of the new year with her family in tow, including her five-year-old daughter, Ms Tang will be asking for a second child.
'Dinner table' at the altar
While some people are happy to bring fruit, sweets, incense and even bottles of beer, one family once brought an entire roast pig as an offering to the gods.
"It's all for the gods — the gods get their nourishment from what people bring," Mr Wright said.
"An altar in a Chinese temple is like a dinner table to the powers that be."
When health sciences student Xiaoyu Liu, from Bendigo, visited the temple for the first time with her family, she brought incense.
She asked the gods to take care of her family, praying for their wealth and safety.
Overwhelmed by nostalgia, the smells of incense reminded the 20-year-old of her childhood temple back in China.
"That's the smell I always smelt," Ms Liu said.
While the Melbourne-based student is not religious, she plans on visiting more often.
Labels:
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White Australia Policy
Monday, 12 February 2018
...the son of the refugee will be a refugee too...
From Walid Mahmoud's Facebook post:
Before 70 years from now, the Zionist gangs occupied the state of #Palestine. It killed and injured thousands as well as migrated millions of innocent civilians from their native land to the neighboring countries.
In each single year, the Palestinians celebrate this sad anniversary with hope to go back to their land. We all know that the son of the refugee will be a refugee too since he is not going back to his original land he was expelled to leave.
So far, my grandfather is 80 and still tells about his immigration from Jaffa to Gaza in 1948. People migrated at that time to live in tents when #UNRWA undertook the responsibility to help and provide the required service for them till the crisis ends. " the Palestinian refugee crisis". Thus, there is no doubt that the mission of UNRWA ends only when the crisis of the Palestinian refugees comes to the end. All the international laws and organizations have undertaken the right of the return for the Palestinians.
Yesterday, one of the grandsons of the refugees set a tent, the same as it was used at that time, on the borders which separate between Gaza and the occupied Palestine. The grandson says that this tent is to make the world about the misery and pain that we are still living as refugees in Gaza strip.
What-so-called Trump, with his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, is trying to ignore this crisis.
How come for those who do not know the cause of the Syrian refugees talk about the Palestinian ones?
Muthana Al Najjar مثنى النجار , who set this tent, says this tent is peaceful and carries the stories of millions of the Palestinian refugees, who still believe in their right of return to the occupied.
This world has to know this very well.
Before 70 years from now, the Zionist gangs occupied the state of #Palestine. It killed and injured thousands as well as migrated millions of innocent civilians from their native land to the neighboring countries.
In each single year, the Palestinians celebrate this sad anniversary with hope to go back to their land. We all know that the son of the refugee will be a refugee too since he is not going back to his original land he was expelled to leave.
So far, my grandfather is 80 and still tells about his immigration from Jaffa to Gaza in 1948. People migrated at that time to live in tents when #UNRWA undertook the responsibility to help and provide the required service for them till the crisis ends. " the Palestinian refugee crisis". Thus, there is no doubt that the mission of UNRWA ends only when the crisis of the Palestinian refugees comes to the end. All the international laws and organizations have undertaken the right of the return for the Palestinians.
What-so-called Trump, with his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, is trying to ignore this crisis.
Muthana Al Najjar مثنى النجار , who set this tent, says this tent is peaceful and carries the stories of millions of the Palestinian refugees, who still believe in their right of return to the occupied.
This world has to know this very well.
I call for everyone who believes in humanity and peace to put the Palestinian cause is his/her priorities. This is my message to the whole world, the Arab and the west.
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