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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Muezzin's life lies sunk in a Gaza mosque's ruins
2006-12-01
Sympathy meter please....
BEIT HANOUN, Gaza (Reuters) - Hussein Kafarneh is a muezzin without a mosque. For nearly 30 years he led the traditional call to prayer at Beit Hanoun's al-Nasser shrine, one of the oldest mosques in Gaza, climbing the twisting steps to the top of the white stone minaret five times a day. His father did the same for 40 years before him.

Then, on November 3 this year, as Israeli forces pursued an offensive in Gaza, they clashed with Palestinian militants holed up inside and nearby the mosque, using it as cover.
Ah, yes. The "cloak of mosqueability". They can't get us in here.
A dramatic stand-off ensued, with Israeli tanks aiming their barrels toward the shrine and around 60 well-armed militants firing rounds back toward the Israelis.
Nyah-nyah! Nyah-nyah! We're in a mossssque!
The army decided that since the mosque was being used for military purposes it was no longer protected under the rules of conflict. Commanders sent in armored bulldozers to knock down its ancient walls, which dated to the 13th century.
Hey, wait a minute. Can the Zionists do that? Somebody look that up in the rule book. Hey! Hey!
"They came and they crushed it," said Kafarneh, sitting in the shadow of the mosque in Beit Hanoun's Martyrs Square, large mounds of brick and rubble lying behind him.
Too bad, pops. Keep your boys the fuck outta there next time.
The minaret, with its ornate gallery, still stands, but it is badly damaged and near collapse. It can't be climbed.

"For the first time in 28 years I have not made the call to prayer. I am just sitting here," said the 62-year-old, still looking slightly stunned by the weight of events. "If I had 20 sons, I would give them all for my mosque."
Yeah. That could be part of the problem.
Asked whether gunmen had used the shrine for protection as they fought Israeli troops, Kafarneh and his friends sitting on plastic chairs around him are quiet and then dismissive."There were gunmen, yes. But they weren't inside the mosque. They were nearby, in the buildings. Look, the buildings and the mosque are all together here," said one as the others nodded.
Ummmmmmm...well...maybe...kinda...well...INFIDEL!
On the day of the stand-off, Hamas, the Islamic militant group that runs the Palestinian government, said itself that dozens of its gunmen were holed up inside.
But....but...but...
It put out a call on local radio asking women to create a human shield around the shrine so the gunmen could escape. Just about all of them did, before the bulldozers rolled in.
We're trapped! Quick! Hide behind the women! It says in the rulebook that the Zionists can't fire at women.
For many people in Beit Hanoun the destruction of the mosque was symbolic of Israel's hardline policies in Gaza. They regard it as a Jewish aggression against Islam.Very few are willing to link the actions of the militants to the destruction of the building, even though it's very unlikely it would have been targeted if gunmen weren't hiding inside.
Wait a second. Are you sure this is Reuters? This reporter obviously needs to be pulled out for sensitivity training or something...
Others, though, are aware of the damage the militants frequently cause to their communities. "I am against them. No one wants them here. They come and fire rockets and we just know there will be problems," said Sheikh al-Shabat, 42, who teaches at the local university.
Wonder when he'll be shotdown in the street as a collaborator?
While not a militant sympathizer, Kafarneh also isn't willing to condemn them outright. He just wants his mosque back."Sometimes I just sit and cry," he says of the four weeks since the building was demolished.
That's okay, Pops. Maybe Wartnose will sneak you in a couple of mill to rebuild on his next money run.
Posted by:tu3031

#8  Wait a second. Are you sure this is Reuters? This reporter obviously needs to be pulled out for sensitivity training or something...

Needs to be pulled out for his own safety.
Posted by: gromgoru   2006-12-01 23:58  

#7  Tu was an early in-line specialist, I mistook him for Fred more than once, but that was a long time ago, things were different then, it was all yello at that time, none of this multi-hued stuff. Better now? Maybe, probably, but times were simpler then 12 comments was a comment riot, good times......
Posted by: Shipman   2006-12-01 18:11  

#6  excellent inlines, TU
Posted by: Frank G   2006-12-01 16:36  

#5  "If I had 20 sons, I would give them all for my mosque."

As tu3031 noted, "That could be part of the problem." The Palestinians are so besotted with hatred and genocide that they cannot see the trees of their own destruction for the forest of Islamic condoned violence. Beit Hanoun must serve as an ongoing model for all Israeli response to continued rocket attacks.

Some quotes from Golda Meir:

"Peace will come when the Arabs will love their children more than they hate us."

"We can forgive you for killing our sons. But we will never forgive you for making us kill yours."

Posted by: Zenster   2006-12-01 15:33  

#4  Ah, yes. The "cloak of mosqueability". They can't get us in here.

LOL!
Posted by: Icerigger   2006-12-01 15:30  

#3  Need the D-9 with the Mosque-B-Gone attachment graphic also....
Posted by: USN, ret.   2006-12-01 15:26  

#2  
Posted by: anonymous5089   2006-12-01 15:24  

#1  Go jooos, go !
Posted by: wxjames   2006-12-01 15:16  

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