Par Admin (Admin) le lundi 24 mars 2003 - 05h01: |
Par Mailroom (Mailroom) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 07h45: |
GALERIE DE CARTES POSTALES DE TUNIS OFFERTE PAR " BERTRAND "
A FREDDY GALULA....
http://freddygalula.free.fr
PS.. POUR HARISSA.COM..........FREDDY A BIENTOT..
Par Mailroom (Mailroom) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 07h48: |
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS
The Coalition for Jewish Concerns--Amcha bases its activities on the principle of Ahavat Yisrael, love of all Jews. Over the recent weeks and months there has been much debate in our community over how best to resolve the situation in Iraq. Now that the war has started, however, we believe it is important to stand behind the American Government during this time of crisis. The CJC-Amcha leadership therefore supports, with a heavy heart, the United States military action against Saddam Hussein.
The Rally for America*
Sunday, March 23rd
12:00 pm
42nd Street & Broadway
*Participating organizations include the American Conservative Union, the Christian Coalition of America, Coalition for Jewish Concerns--Amcha, Free Republic (New York Chapter) and many other organizations.
Par Anonyme (Anonyme) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 07h18: |
NOS KIFS
un kif pour moi, c'est l'odeur, mais aussi le parfum, le bonheur intérieur mais dans le plus profond de soi éveillant tous les sens, toutes les émotions....
Par Victoria (Victoria) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 00h23: |
Une descrition pittoresque du bon peuple de France manifestant :
http://www.proche-orient.info/xjournal_pol_der_heure.php3?id_article=11193
Par Djlachem (Djlachem) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 01h14: |
Par Davideden (Davideden) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 16h44: |
Alarm over rise in anti-Semitic incidents in Europe
Craig S. Smith, New York Times Saturday, March 22, 2003
Sevran, France -- Jeremy Bismuth is Jewish, though he doesn't wear a yarmulke or Star of David pendant or adhere to a Kosher diet or leave school early on Fridays in order to be home before sunset. Nothing identifies the young 15-year-old French boy as Jewish except his birth.
Yet because he is a Jew, he was attacked by a group of other children, mostly Muslim, at the private Catholic school he then attended. They dragged him into the school's locker room showers shouting that they were going to gas him as the Nazis had gassed Jews. He was beaten and flogged with a pair of trousers whose zipper scratched one of his corneas.
For Jeremy and his parents, the incident a year ago was the harrowing confirmation of a trend that many say has only gathered momentum since: a resurgent European anti-Semitism, coming not from its traditional source among Europe's right-wing nationalists, but from the Continent's growing Islamic community, egged on by the political left.
"The political climate is too pro-Arab, and since Sept. 11, it has become intolerable," said Michele Bismuth, Jeremy's mother at the family's home last week. She said her traumatized son would not leave the house for 10 days after the attack.
To some, such incidents, which have increased since the latest round of Israeli-Palestinian fighting began more than two years ago, represent the Middle East conflict brought to Europe, where sympathy for the Palestinian cause runs far higher than it does in the United States.
"Since the intifada began in 2000, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has been imported here," said the mother of another high school student who had a hood thrown over his head and was beaten to unconsciousness by a gang of Muslim youths calling him a "dirty Jew" outside a Paris high school two months ago.
The woman, talking nervously at a Kosher restaurant not far from the school,
said she feared the atmosphere would darken with the war in Iraq. "When they say 'America,' they think 'Israel,' and when they think 'Israel,' they think 'Jewish,' " she said. "Who is going to assure our safety?"
Swastikas, slogans and physical assaults against Jews in Europe have reached a frequency not seen since the 1930s when Fascism was on the rise. But in the vast majority of the cases today, the assailants are young Muslims of North African heritage whose parents emigrated to Europe in the 1960s and 1970s.
The greatest number and most violent attacks have come in France, which, with an estimated 6 million Muslims and 650,000 Jews, has Europe's largest Jewish and largest Muslim populations.
Some Jews have left France for Israel, driven as much by the deteriorating economic climate in Europe as they are drawn by solidarity with the Jewish state. According to Israeli government figures, 2,556 French Jews emigrated to Israel last year, double the number a year earlier and the most since the 1967 Mideast war.
Not everyone is willing to call the current wave of violence anti-Semitism. Henri Wajnblum, head of the Union of Progressive Jews of Belgium, said it was important to distinguish between anti-Semitic and anti-Israel actions. He and other members of his Brussels-based group have been visiting classrooms in Muslim neighborhoods to help explain the difference between Zionists and Jews in general.
But for Jews who have become targets, the distinction is a false one that masks the root problem -- a latent anti-Semitism that they say has created an environment in which a new strain of racism can thrive.
"In the popular imagination, Jews aren't sympathetic because they are identified with Israel and Sharon," said Sammy Ghozlan, referring to Israel's prime minister, Ariel Sharon. He is a retired police officer who operates a clearinghouse for information on anti-Semitism in France.
Many Jews are distraught, he said, after willfully believing that the hatred of Jews was erased in Europe by the traumatic accounting of anti- Semitism's toll at the end of World War II.
"There is a feeling that the honeymoon period is over, and that it's now impossible to say what will come," Ghozlan said. He said he had verified reports of 100 serious anti-Semitic incidents in Paris and its suburbs in the first three months of this year alone.
Jews say that much serious harassment goes unreported because the police register many incidents as simple vandalism or assault-and-battery even though they are clearly anti-Semitic. Worse, anti-Semitism risks entrenching itself in a generation of children for whom the language of bigotry has become the slang of the schoolyard.
The word "feuj" -- from the inversion of the French word "Juif," which means "Jew" -- is now playground standard, both as an insult against Jewish students and as a contemptuous adjective. Children say a pen that does not work is "completely feuj," for example, and slang based on the Hebrew salutation "mazel tov" is used in the same way.
Concerned that the war in Iraq could intensify the problem, France's Education Ministry last month launched a campaign to stamp out anti-Semitism and other types of racism in schools. Education Minister Luc Ferry acknowledged that verbal insults were becoming common.
"There is a real danger -- all the greater because today anti-Semitism is of a new type, coming from parts of society that are more acceptable than the extreme right: from Arabs and Muslims," Ferry said on state radio last month.
He introduced 10 measures to combat the problem, including the creation of a monitoring committee in Paris, the appointment of a team of mediators for the worst cases and the publication of a booklet to be distributed around schools.
But some schools have advised Jewish parents that they cannot protect their children from harassment and suggested that they change schools instead.
When Jeremy broke free from his tormentors in the shower, he ran for help to the teachers' lounge, but none of the faculty rose from their chairs to help the disheveled and distraught boy. Jeremy said it wasn't the first anti- Semitic incident he had experienced at the school, nor the last.
The director of the school, Robert Patrois, dismissed the incident as a schoolyard brawl between an Muslim boy and a Jewish boy "that brought out their 14-year-old vocabulary." In a telephone interview he grew irritated when asked whether the teachers had come to Jeremy's aide.
"Don't ask me to remember what they did," he said. "I didn't want to treat it as an anti-Arab or anti-Jewish incident. I treated it as fighting."
The Bismuths withdrew Jeremy from the school at the end of last year and enrolled him in a new school, although with some difficulty: His previous school records had disappeared.
"No one helped him," his mother said, sitting at a glass dining room table in a white stucco house that, until recently, housed Bismuth's optical shop and her husband's dental practice. They have closed both businesses and plan to leave France for good.
Par Akh (Akh) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 14h55: |
Salut tous le monde,
je suis en train de construire un site sur Hammam-Lif,cette merveilleuse ville alors je voudrais faire un appel à tous ceux qui ont habité hammam-lif de m'envoyer leurs souvenirs dans cette ville sur mon adresse email hamhama1@hotmail.com
merci d'avance
Par Lapid (Lapid) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 13h12: |
Tous les moyens sont bons pour s'approvisionner
Transferts entre pays du sud, équipements du nord détournés, les trafics sont organisés avec ingéniosité.
LE MONDE ECONOMIE | 17.03.03 | 17h50 Stockholm de notre correspondant
"Des produits chimiques dissimulés dans de l'aide alimentaire, des commandes passées aux quatre coins du globe pour ne pas attirer l'attention, un rideau de sociétés écran, de la contrebande d'uranium enrichi..."
Pour en savoir plus cliquer sur :
site recensant les programmes d'armements et les entreprise impliquées pays par pays.
site de l'Institut international de Stockholm pour la recherche sur la paix
Pour lire l'article dans son integrite cliquer sur le site de Le Monde, faire une recherche dans les archives de l'article : "Tous les moyens sont bons pour s'approvisionner" dans LE MONDE ECONOMIE | 17.03.03 |
Par Sibylle (Sibylle) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 10h20: |
Bonjour Slim,
Je suis très heureuse de te relire à nouveau.
Par Lapid (Lapid) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 11h38: |
La France a été un grand fournisseur d'armes de Saddam Hussein LE MONDE | 18.03.03 | 13h20
"Une dizaine de sociétés ont livré une panoplie allant des avions aux missiles, en passant par des radars et des équipements électroniques.
La France a été l'un des plus constants pourvoyeurs d'armes de Saddam Hussein, pendant les années 1980. Certains des matériels français livrés à Bagdad sont aujourd'hui encore en service, comme l'avion de combat Mirage F1, accusé par la Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) américaine de pouvoir larguer des armes biochimiques. Durant cette décennie et jusqu'en 1991, date de l'entrée en guerre de l'armée française aux côtés de ses alliés contre l'Irak, on estime que la France a fourni à Bagdad quelque 37,4 % de ses matériels militaires, devant l'ancienne Union soviétique (29,3 %). "
Pour en savoir plus Cliquer sur :
La France a été un grand fournisseur d'armes de Saddam Hussein
Par Slim (Slim) le samedi 22 mars 2003 - 00h37: |
Pour une fois que moi et Lapid soyons d'accord sur un point : La position de la France est bien ridicule, elle est deja hors jeu!
Bien que j'ai des sentiments tres mixtes par rapport aux bombardements car les enfants seront terrifies par ces bruits d'explosions, je ne peux m'empecher d'etre un peu excite de voir l'apres Saddam et d'esperer que ce conflit sera bel et bien le dernier de cette region, et que peut-etre, une nouvelle ere naitera la bas, une region qui avec l'aide Americaine pourra devenir un centre de culture, de recherches, de libertes, de droits des femmes/hommes, et d'expressions libres qu'elle n'a jamais connu auparavant. Que D-ieu protege les soldats Americain et la population civile Iraqienne, et que ce conflit se termine dans la semaine.
Je ne me fait pas d'illusions car ceux qui sont dans les administrations et qui ont representes le regime de Saddam seront toujours la, mais cette fois-ci, ils auront des comptes a rendre, et la population ne sera plus soumise a la peur journaliere, une peur qui l'etouffe et qui l'etrangle.
Par Maxiton (Maxiton) le vendredi 21 mars 2003 - 22h53: |
ON Y EST? ON NE SIFFLERA PLUS LA MARSEILLAISE
Les Maghrebins de France se sentent en phase avec l'opinion
Hostiles dans leur grande majorite au conflit qui vient de s'ouvrir en Irak, comme ils l'etaient il y a douze ans ˆ la premiere guerre du Golfe, les Maghrebins de France se sentent desormais en phase avec l'ensemble de l'opinion du pays. "Le Monde" a interroge, dans les banlieues et les centres-villes, de nombreuses personnes issues de l'immigration qui se reconnaissent dans les positions de la France. L'hostilite ˆ la guerre ne se traduit pas par un soutien ˆ Saddam Hussein, mais bien davantage par une inquietude pour les populations irakiennes. "Il n'y a aucune raison pour qu'il y ait des tensions en France", selon l'association DiverCite. Les representants de l'Islam de France, ont appele, jeudi 20 mars, leurs fideles a la "dignite". Le gouvernement a decide de mettre en place un plan Vigipirate renforce.
lire la suite sur www.lemonde.fr
H
Par Lapid (Lapid) le vendredi 21 mars 2003 - 22h16: |
Les Precieuses Ridicules :
"Chirac refuse de donner carte blanche à Washington pour l'administration de l'Irak"
........................................"La France n'acceptera pas une résolution tendant à légitimer l'intervention militaire et à donner aux belligérants américains et anglais les pouvoirs d'administration de l'Irak", a dit M. Chirac, au cours d'une conférence de presse à l'issue du sommet européen de Bruxelles."
.......................................................................................................
Pour en savoir plus :
Chirac refuse de donner carte blanche à Washington pour l'administration de l'Irak
http://fr.news.yahoo.com/030321/202/33wvj.html
Par Admin (Admin) le dimanche 23 mars 2003 - 07h52: |