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"The Many Saints of Newark" Disappoints – City Journal

Posted By on October 9, 2021

The Many Saints of Newark, the prequel to the beloved TV series The Sopranos that opened last week in theaters and on HBO Max, is the biggest film disappointment of 2021 so far. If The Sopranos paved the way to a new cinematic art formthe multipart, multi-season TV dramathe prequel seems to want to bury an entire genre: the ethnic mafia film.

Early Hollywood attempts at portraying Italian mafia were unimpressive. Francis Ford Coppola revamped the genre in 1972, with his first installment in The Godfather trilogy, a film he intended to be so authentic thatthe audience would smell the spaghetti. He succeeded in much more than that. Coppolas villains, painted in intense chiaroscuro, put a new twist on the perennial American interest in outlaws. This time, the malefactors were bound by ancient tribal loyalties into criminal organizations whose very existence spread like a cancer on American institutions. Many mobster films were made in the decades that followedfilms about the Cubans, the Jews, the Irish, the blacks, and, of course, more films about the Italians. All amoral men of different lineages, assembled on American land to do as they please.

It was the cinema of multiculturalismand assimilation. The storylines twist and turn around the process of integration, whether they showed Michael Corleone feeling discriminated against, and not without reason, by the WASP political establishment in Nevada, or the Irish-Italian sub mafioso in Martin Scorseses Goodfellas living in troubled marriage to a nice Jewish girl. The very existence of the genre requires a degree of tolerance and openness.

It also relies on a fairly sophisticated audience, one that understands that while antiheroes are interesting, and every culture has its own, the majority of Americans of all ethnic backgrounds are decent human beings. Ethnographic detail might be accurate, and the events portrayed in the film might be based in historical fact, but these characters dont represent the typical Irish-American or Cuban-American experience. Rather, its a dramatic rendering of a culture, devoid of patronizing overtones.

For a red-blooded American male, the target audience, these films were a natural way to learn about the various traditions that melted into the United States: show me your villains, and Ill show you mine. This project was premised on the idea that we all can get along if only we learn more about one another; to the extent that it worked, it was thanks to cultural phenomena largely independent from politically correct bureaucratic initiatives like Italian American Heritage Month or diversity trainings.

The meeting of cultures was reflected in the plot lines of the genre: the Irish mobsters making deals with the blacks and the Jews in HBOs Boardwalk Empire, for instance. A certain respectful distance and purity of bloodlines was typically observed, as Frank Pentangeli suggests in The Godfather Part II: Your father did business with Hyman Roth; your father respected Hyman Roth; but your father never trusted Hyman Roth.

The films showed tight-knit tribes zealously guarding their traditions in strange lands, but back in the real world, the rate of intermarriage was skyrocketing. Part of the appeal of this type of cinema was that it was dramatizing iconic characters from quickly disappearing ethnic enclaves. This Sicilian thing thats been going on for 2,000 years, in the words of Kay Corleonethe ethnic culture, tracing its roots to antiquity, whose heirs look, feel, and think in ways so different from the Albions seed that populated the North American plains, was merging into the Anglo-American democratic capitalist republic.

E pluribus unum is a tough sell in the post1619 Project America. Amid the Covid-19 lockdowns imposed in early 2020, our institutions abandoned multiculturalism in favor of wokeness. The woke view the United States as irredeemably racist, a nation founded to perpetuate the enslavement of blacks, and, after slavery was eradicated, determined to keep its citizens of African origin down at all costs.

There are plenty of reasons why the Sopranos prequel fails so miserably. Set in 1967, it shows the downfall of don Dickie Moltisanti, played by Alessandro Nivola. Michael Gandolfini, starring as the young Tony Soprano, mirrorshis fathers deliberative side-eye perfectly, but the screenplay is a mess. Composed of a handful of poorly integrated chains of events, it gives the impression that the filmmakers jammed together a seasons worth of episodes into a single feature-length movie. The characters are poorly developed, and plot lines fumble.

Worst yet, the visceral realism and cultural fidelity that made the genre what it was feels absent. Nothing about the film smells like spaghetti; the only inspired parts portray the black liberation struggle. This is not a revolutionary breakthrough in mob films. Black-liberation themes have taken center stage before, including in Coppolas 1984 classic The Cotton Club.

Whats new is the uncharacteristically unselfconscious self-righteousness. Dickie Moltisanti has a black business associate Harold McBrayer (Leslie Odom Jr.) who gets involved in race riots. Its impossible to read a man so engrossed in the most fashionable moral cause of the day as a villain. With a character arc that reverses that of Michael Corleone, who started as a war hero and ended destroying his daughter, McBrayer simply does not belong to the genre. In the world of the irredeemables, he is redeemed. If in the late twentieth century it was possible to show indisputably evil people occasionally doing something worthwhile, perhaps out of loyalty to their own tribe, or, in any event, elevating tribal loyalty to a virtue (see the Irish mobs arming of the IRA), in the moral universe of Black Lives Matter any and all tactics are justified in pursuit of racial equity. Multiculturalist cinema might have been morally relativist, but BLM cinema has its own moral compass. Whats good for black liberation is good for all humanity.

There is no room in this universe for peaceful coexistence of equally fascinating villains. Working-class sons of illiterate peasants who arrived to the New World speaking no English are seen as privileged whites who cant legitimately occupy a central position in any narrative. Under the 1619 mandate, there is no justification for making films about the Italian-American experience, let alone a film seemingly designed to showcase a new member of an Italian acting dynasty and extend the plot of a long-running series.

The 1619 idea is a jealous one. Not having much to offer aside from mass-produced silhouettes of a raised fistitself a Warholean derivative of early Communist propagandacultural revolutionaries cannot admit that Western civilization is great. The Godfather trilogy could not be conceived today, and neither could The Sopranos original series, which began with Tony proudly showing his daughter the church for which his father created baroque style sculptures.

I have yet to see woke filmmakers create convincing characters. So far, they excel at taking previously developed roles, usually played by white men, and assigning them to women and minorities. Special attention is paid to defying stereotypes, for instance, showing women as buff warriors. That approach cant work for mobster pictures.

In The Many Saints of Newark, black criminality is a product of historical circumstance, not malevolence. Typical mobster drama painted a far more nuanced picture of ethnic minorities. History and social pressures played a part in the formation of personalities, but so did the human capacity for evil. Coppola wasnt too concerned that he might be creating a stereotype of an Italian; he thought of the Corleone family as archetypal villains, and so did his audience.

What passes for villainy in 2021 hardly makes for compelling story. In our inverted moral universe, casual racism is the greatest sin. Thus, the family of the mafia don Dickie Moltisanti is scandalized by his use of the N-word. Meantimespoiler alert the man is guilty of fratricide.

With the zealous racialism of the BLM era supplanting multicultural calls for tolerance, the imperative to celebrate diversity has abated. American institutions outlived the Italian mafias: Las Vegas was once the plaything of criminal masterminds, but now its corporate-controlled. Critical Race Theory might be a more formidable enemy.

Katya Sedgwick is a writer in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Photo by Bobby Bank/GC Images

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"The Many Saints of Newark" Disappoints - City Journal

The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 10/7/221 ~ Governor Hochul Announces Funding to Protect Against Hate Crimes – ebroadsheet.com

Posted By on October 9, 2021

1691 The charter for the Province of Massachusetts Bay is issued.

1763 King George III issues the Royal Proclamation of 1763, closing Indigenous lands in North America north and west of the Alleghenies to white settlements.

1870 Franco-Prussian War: Lon Gambetta escapes the siege of Paris in a hot-air balloon.

1919 KLM, the flag carrier of the Netherlands, is founded.

1933 Air France is inaugurated, after being formed by a merger of five French airlines.

1940 World War II: The McCollum memo proposes bringing the United States into the war in Europe by provoking the Japanese to attack the United States.

1949 The communist German Democratic Republic (East Germany) is formed.

1985 Four men from the Palestine Liberation Front hijack the MS Achille Laurooff the coast of Egypt.

1988 A hunter discovers three gray whales trapped under the ice near Alaska; the situation becomes a multinational effort to free the whales.

1996 Fox News Channel begins broadcasting.

2001 The U.S. invasion of Afghanistan begins with an air assault and covert operations on the ground.

2008 Asteroid 2008 TC3 impacts the Earth over Sudan, the first time an asteroid impact is detected prior to its entry into earths atmosphere.

Births

1409 Elizabeth of Luxembourg (d. 1442)

1471 Frederick I of Denmark (d. 1533)

1635 Roger de Piles, French painter (d. 1709)

1879 Joe Hill, Swedish-born American labor activist and poet (d. 1915)

1885 Niels Bohr, Danish physicist and philosopher, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1962)

1917 June Allyson, American actress (d. 2006)

1943 Oliver North, American colonel Iran Contra

1952 Vladimir Putin, Russian colonel and politician, 4th President of Russia

1955 Yo-Yo Ma, French-American cellist and educator

Deaths

929 Charles the Simple, French king (b. 879)

1772 John Woolman, American preacher and abolitionist (b. 1720)

1849 Edgar Allan Poe, American short story writer, poet, and critic (b. 1809)

1894 Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., American physician, author, and poet (b. 1809)

1950 Willis Haviland Carrier, American engineer (b. 1876)

1956 Clarence Birdseye, American businessman, founded Birds Eye (b. 1886)

1991 Leo Durocher, American baseball player and manager (b. 1905)

2009 Irving Penn, American photographer (b. 1917)

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The BroadsheetDAILY ~ 10/7/221 ~ Governor Hochul Announces Funding to Protect Against Hate Crimes - ebroadsheet.com

October 2000 vs May 2021: How Palestinians defied fragmentation – Al Jazeera English

Posted By on October 7, 2021

Occupied East Jerusalem During the first eight days of October 2000, Israeli forces shot dead 13 unarmed young Palestinian men during mass protests inside Israel (referred to as the 1948-occupied territories by Palestinians).

Termed habbet October in Arabic meaning Octobers popular outburst the protests and confrontations came after the Israeli militarys killing and wounding of Palestinians in the 1967-occupied territories at the outbreak of the second Intifada, or uprising.

Amid decades-long, systematic Israeli physical, political and social fragmentation of the Palestinian people, the October protests and the Intifada marked a moment of popular unity between Palestinians in the 1948 and 1967-occupied territories.

Particularly after the 1993 Oslo Accords which unsuccessfully aimed to create a Palestinian state in the 1967 territories Palestinians inside Israel were left outside the equation of the Palestinian political project and underwent attempts by the Israeli government to pacify them through funding and over-policing while maintaining their political, social and economic marginalisation.

While several successful Palestinian popular outbursts have erupted since 2000 including among Palestinians inside Israel the protests and confrontations that swept the country from north to south in May 2021, termed habbet Ayyar (May outburst), marked an evident turning point in the relationship between Palestinians and the state, and in popular Palestinian mobilisation, analysts and activists say.

Ameer Makhoul, a Haifa-based political analyst and writer, told Al Jazeera while the protests in 2000 came to send a message that we are part of the Palestinian people and were characterised as support for the struggle of our people in the 1967-areas, the protests in May 2021 sent the message that we are one cause that we are stakeholders in this directly explaining they were not solidarity protests, but that Palestinians in Israel were on the frontlines.

Amid a quickly unfolding chain of events in late April and May mainly protests against Israeli plans to ethnically cleanse the Palestinian neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah in Jerusalem, days of violent Israeli raids and hundreds of injuries at the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound during Ramadan, and a bombing campaign on the Gaza Strip the fourth in 13 years Palestinians inside Israel mobilised, leaving the state with multiple open fronts.

By May 10, thousands emerged in at least 20 Palestinian towns in the 1948-areas, including smaller, lesser-known villages, in protests and confrontations described as unprecedented.

Residents closed roads, threw Molotov cocktails and rocks at Israeli forces, set fire to police cars, broke Israeli surveillance cameras, and removed Israeli flags from lampposts to replace them with Palestinian ones.

In major cities such as Haifa, Lydd and Ramle towns that were ethnically cleansed in 1948 and are home to a minority Palestinian population today matters escalated when armed Israelis, many of them hailing from the occupied West Bank, turned into street gangs that attacked Palestinian homes and carried out lynchings, which Makhoul described as an existential threat to the people.

On May 12, Israel declared a state of emergency in Lydd for the first time since 1966 and imposed a curfew on the city as the war on Gaza began to unfold. It also brought in reinforcements from the border patrol, a force that usually operates in the occupied West Bank.

According to Mossawa, a Palestinian rights group, police arrested more than 2,150 Palestinians by June 10 more than 90 percent of whom were Palestinians in Israel or in Jerusalem. Rights groups also documented the use of excessive force including live bullets, rubber-coated metal rounds, tear gas canisters, and stun grenades. Police were also found to torture Palestinian detainees in custody and turned a blind eye to attacks by Jewish gangs on Palestinian residents, in some cases working with them.

Palestinian resident Moussa Hassouna, 32, from Lydd was shot dead by a settler during the events, while 17-year-old Mohammad Kiwan was later killed by police in Umm al-Fahm. Thousands turned up for their funerals.

In 2000, Israel dealt with the Palestinians in Israel as it calls us as not being linked to the issues that take place in the West Bank or in other words, the issues of the Palestinian people, said Makhoul. Especially after Oslo, it attempted to separate and fragment the Palestinian people into sections, and to place the Palestinians in the 48 territories as being outside of the Palestinian cause.

What happened this year is that Israel dealt with us as a part of the Palestinian people, in the sense of its aggression towards us, he continued. In 2000, it tried to contain us more. Today, it tried to deter us with repression it considered the last confrontations a warfront.

Mohamad Kadan, a Palestinian writer based in Haifa, agreed. Israel was shocked by the shabab (youth) that took to the streets, which showed in the way the police interacted with them, he told Al Jazeera.

They (police) were frazzled it was obvious. In some cases, they ran out of metal shackles, so they brought plastic ones, said Kadan, adding Israels equation towards them is to terrify and instil fear.

What also distinguished the May protests from October 2000 was they were people-led, both during the initial protests, and the organising by youth movements that followed.

The popular decision to act in 2000 came from the political leaders from the Higher Follow Up Committee and not the people, said Makhoul.

Now, the decisions were people-led in every sense of the word. From youth movements, from peoples movements, from the popular committees in each town, he said.

Kadan described those who initially took the streets as stemming from the deep margins. They hailed from the poverty belts the people who dont see a future here, he said. The power and impact of these shabab were very evident it is the voice that was heard, and it should always be the voice that is heard.

Mohammad Taher Jabareen, a 29-year-old resident of Umm al-Fahm and one of the founders of the Umm al-Fahm Hirak (movement), told Al Jazeera the youth who took to the streets had nothing to lose.

They needed these protests to take them out of the atmosphere of familial problems, systematic policies against them including organised crime, house demolitions, land confiscation, financial restrictions, traffic tickets among other issues, which allowed them to break the fear barrier and take a stand to say enough is enough, said Jabareen.

Human rights groups have long documented the struggle of Palestinians in Israel, who number 1.8 million. Aside from Israels efforts to suppress their Palestinian identity over the years, the majority live in densely populated towns and with little access to land and resources most of which was seized from during and after 1948, for the benefit of Jewish settlers.

Since the Second Intifada, a new phenomenon of organised crime which residents say Israel is responsible for fuelling has become the number one problem facing the Palestinians inside Israel, and has taken hundreds of lives and has led to large protests.

The issue that catalyzed people to take to the streets, however, were Israeli attacks on Sheikh Jarrah and the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound, residents said.

Organised crime is one of the means through which Israel renders Palestinians in the 48-areas absent from the political scene, said Jabareen. Its like: Keep each other busy with your problems, and we will be free to act as we please with the Al-Aqsa Mosque and to impose space and time divisions.

On May 7 the holiest night of Ramadan Israeli police attempted to block several large busses on a highway carrying Palestinians from the 1948-areas from reaching the Al-Aqsa Mosque. When the passengers descended and began making their way on foot, Palestinians from Jerusalem went to escort them with their cars to the city, in what was hailed as a victory and moment of cohesion.

Kadan described the Old City and the Al-Aqsa Mosque Compound as the last fortress of Palestinian nationalism.

Sheikh Jarrah represents the past the uprooting and the Nakba while Al-Aqsa and the Old City represent what is still possible that there is still hope for Palestinian liberation, said Kadan.

Makhoul said the way that Al-Aqsa and Sheikh Jarrah moved Gaza, which then moved Jerusalem, showed these are issues for which there is full popular consensus.

Every Palestinian felt they had an individual and personality responsibility towards Sheikh Jarrah and Al-Aqsa, which Makhoul said also stems from the weakness of the Palestinian political leadership.

According to Kadan, many youth movements emerged after the initial confrontations with Israeli police, which later allowed for sustained unity between Palestinians in the 48 and the 67 areas.

Following the excessive force by Israeli forces and once the shabab got tired of confrontations, there came to be different forms of struggle, said Kadan, explaining that cells for movements grew in every town made up of youth who are active in universities, political parties and other forums.

Everyone began organising discussions over what happened in the previous days of intense confrontations, and what can we do going forward, continued Kadan, noting in addition to previously established movements such as Hirak Haifa and Hirak Umm al-Fahm, new youth movements began to form including in the towns of Shefa Amr, Kabul, Baqa al-Gharbiya, Kufr Kanna.

Voluntary committees also grew out of the May protests to respond to the local crisis, including a lawyers committee and a psychological support committee to help detainees in the Jerusalem and 48-areas.

This generation did not only put forward plans it started building alternatives. They saw that the political parties and the institutions the traditional ones like The Higher Follow Up Committee no longer had a role. They didnt know what to do, said Kadan.

On May 17, a youth-organised historic general strike across the 48 and 67 areas was declared under the slogan from the river to the sea, which Kadandescribed as a turning point for youth mobilisation.

There was an atmosphere whereby every town and village took upon itself to prepare for the strike youth started meeting each other, speaking, and organising activities on the day of the strike going around the streets to check that the strike is in place, giving out leaflets to people, organising lectures, interventions, seminars, said Kadan.

Among other initiatives, including a marathon in Jerusalem, youth movements in both the 48 and 67 areas simultaneously organised a Palestine Economic Week to support Palestinian economic power and boycott Israeli products.

Makhoul said the power of defiance is increasing day by day, steered by the role of youth and social media in the May 2021 popular outburst.

Social media is the new geography, said Makhoul. Today, the Palestinian people can act and treat themselves as one people, even if they are not all in their homeland, or if they cant meet in their homeland.

What distinguishes us today is that we realised that the world is our playing field first and foremost, and that Israel does not dictate the rules of the game, how we protest and struggle for our cause and people, and how we work towards achieving our peoples goals, he continued.

Makhoul said while Israel seeks to ruin the culture of resistance in the 48 areas, he believes it will have a bigger problem with the rising generations who dont pay mind to what Israel says and they are not deterred by it.

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October 2000 vs May 2021: How Palestinians defied fragmentation - Al Jazeera English

East Palestine park renovated to be more accessible to all kids – WKBN.com

Posted By on October 7, 2021

EAST PALESTINE, Ohio (WKBN) The East Palestine City Park has been renovated. Its now more accessible for children with wheelchairs or other mobility devices and also offers play options for children of all abilities.

Its called the Rainbow Dreamland Playground.

There are two new swings designed for children with disabilities, and theres an omnispinner that allows for an easy transfer from a mobility device and makes spinning fun for all children.

Theres a metallophone, which is similar to a large xylophone.

Also a chain bridge and older balance board were removed to make the playground accessible to all children.

Village Manager Mark McTrustry says the only part of the project not complete is a new pathway into the playground from the community center parking lot. McTrustry says he believes the path will be completed by the end of October.

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East Palestine park renovated to be more accessible to all kids - WKBN.com

Sympathy for Palestine in Congress has rarely been matched by action – The National

Posted By on October 7, 2021

A quarter of a century ago, when the two-state solution was still possible and we were optimistic that there was a path to get there, I was co-chairing Builders for Peace (BfP), a post-Oslo project launched by then vice president Al Gore. It was created to support the ongoing peace process by promoting economic development and employment in Palestine. As we repeatedly made clear, our goal was not to substitute economic progress for peace, but to create the prosperity and hope needed to sustain the process until the "final status negotiations" that were to occur at the end of a five-year transitional period.

After frequent trips to the region in those early years after Oslo, I became deeply concerned that things were not going well. New hardships were being created for Palestinians by the closures and expanded checkpoints Israel put in place after a Jewish extremist massacred Palestinians at Al Ibrahim Mosque. The brutal and demeaning behaviours exhibited by Israeli soldiers at checkpoints and in Hebron were deepening animosity. American businesses that had initially expressed interest in investing in Gaza or the West Bank gave up after realising that Israelis weren't interested in allowing Palestinians to freely import raw materials or export finished products. Nor were the Israelis allowing Palestinians access to resources in the territories.

Meanwhile, settlement expansion was continuing at a rapid pace. At one point, I met president Bill Clinton and he asked me how BfP was progressing. I told him that honestly, we weren't doing well at all. After relaying my observations and concerns to him, I said, "Since Oslo, Palestinians have become poorer, less employed, less free and have lost more land to settlements. They aren't experiencing the benefits of peace and are losing hope".

What troubled me most, I told the president, was that his negotiators were ignoring our entreaties to take seriously these Israeli-imposed impediments to Palestinian prosperity and freedom. They saw our work as a nuisance and a distraction from their "important peace negotiations". If this mind-set of ignoring Palestinian rights and the impediments being created by the Israelis continued, I warned Mr Clinton, Palestinians would lose trust in the United States, the process and the hope that they would ever be free of the occupation. President Clinton was upset by my report and asked me to write him a detailed memo, which I did. Nothing, however, was done to correct this downward spiralling trajectory, which has continued until the present day.

I have been prompted to write these reflections because of two recent developments. The first is a discussion taking place in Israel following the meeting between Israel's Defence Minister Benny Gantz and Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, followed by reports of Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's plan to "shrink the conflict" by offering economic palliatives to improve life for Palestinians under occupation. Instead of the Oslo formula of "land for peace" the "new" idea (actually, it's an old idea) is to exchange "economic benefits for security". This turns the initial logic of the peace process upside down. Instead of ending the occupation, the Bennett/Gantz proposition is to make life easier for Palestinians so they will accept its continuation. "Shrinking the occupation" is merely a cynical ploy to mask Israel's consolidating control over the lands occupied in 1967.

Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz recently met with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. EPA

The downward spiral has continued to this day

The second development that prompted me to recall what the US failed to do in the post-Oslo period is a bill, the "Two-State Solution Act" (TSSA), being introduced by a number of progressive members of Congress. It is difficult to find fault with much of what's in TSSA, other than the fact that what it proposes is 25 years too late to make a difference. It calls for making US aid to Israel conditional on there being no more expansion of settlements, which TSSA affirms are illegal, and violations of Palestinian human rights. These are all well-intentioned gestures, but as the saying goes, proposing them now is like "closing the barn door after the horses have all escaped".

TSSA ignores the realities that have been created by decades of US neglect that have allowed Israel to run roughshod over the occupied lands resulting in what Human Rights Watch calls an apartheid regime. There are well over 650,000 Israelis living in strategically located West Bank settlements. They are connected by Jewish-only highways and protected by checkpoints that carve the territory into pieces.

The TSSA may make its sponsors feel good that they've taken a principled stand for human rights, and I salute their courage; I know, after all, some pro-Israeli groups will make every effort to punish them. At the same time, I must also acknowledge the sad truth that a viable two-state solution is no longer possible given the immense settler presence in the occupied lands, placed in locations specifically designated to make it impossible to allow for an independent, viable Palestinian state.

Given that reality, it's pointless to try to give a transfusion to a cadaver that's been eaten up by cancer. And so, 25 years after I wrote my memo to Clinton, we have arrived at this sorry state of affairs. Israel, acting with impunity born of the neglect of Palestinian rights and the enabling hand of successive US presidents and Congresses, is proposing cynically to make Palestinian life better as it consolidates its hold over the occupied lands. Meanwhile, some members of Congress, thinking they are doing the right thing, are proposing a bill which will never pass that tries to save the two-state solution, which is beyond saving. Its all both sad and maddening. It didn't have to be this way.

Published: October 5th 2021, 4:00 AM

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Sympathy for Palestine in Congress has rarely been matched by action - The National

New Palestine man who recorded sickbed video urging others to ‘get the vaccine’ has died – IndyStar

Posted By on October 7, 2021

Indiana man wound up in hospital, wants everyone to get COVID vaccine

Mark Green, a COVID-19 patient regrets not getting vaccinated on Friday, Sept. 24, 2021, at Hancock Regional Hospital, Greenfield Ind.

Michelle Pemberton, Indianapolis Star

Leer en espaol

A week and a half ago, Mark Green summoned his energy to videotape a message urgingwhoever was listening to get vaccinated against COVID-19.

He died Oct. 1.

Green and his immediate family had decided against taking the vaccine, despite his own doctor's urging. When he caught COVID-19 and was subsequentlyhospitalized,Green felt it was important to urge others to take the vaccine.

When he shared his story with IndyStar on Sept. 24, the 58-year-old New Palestine man was sitting in a room in the critical care unit of Hancock Regional Hospital in Greenfield, tethered to a device that delivered oxygen to his lungs. Pausing frequently to catch his breath, Green said the vaccine had gotten caught up in politics and urged everyone to take it for their health.

At the time, 11 days into his hospital stay, Green appeared to be holding his own, even managing to joke and smile at his wife Amy, who sat by his side.

More: Why the Indiana National Guard is staffing hospitals and how that partnership works

In the prior months, Green and his wife Amy had considered whether or not to get the vaccine. Green was concerned that the vaccine was too new, that unknown side effects might crop up years down the road. He said it was unfortunate much of the debate had simply turned to Republicans being against the vaccine and Democrats being for it.

His doctor Robert Klinestiver, whom he saw for a lung condition, had urged him to take the vaccine. In August the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccinereceived final approval from the Food and Drug Administration. Green was still wavering when he fell ill about a month ago.

I didn't take the vaccine myself because I was scared, the unknown, what would happen two or three years down the road, Green had told IndyStar. Once I got sick, I kind of realized, it didnt matter what happens down the road. It matters what happens now."

'Go get the vaccine': New Palestine man hospitalized with COVID regrets his own decision

Earlier on in his hospital stay, Green told Klinestiver that he wanted to become a proselytizer for the vaccine. On Sept. 24, he summoned his energy and looked into the video camera of IndyStar photographer Michelle Pemberton.

"Go get the vaccine," he said. "You got to weigh the here and now or maybe never."

Fewer than 56% of Indiana residents eligible for the vaccine have been fully vaccinated, according to the state's vaccine dashboard.

Most of those hospitalized for COVID-19 are not vaccinated, said Indiana State Health Commissioner Dr. Kris Box earlier this week. Out of 315 Hoosiers hospitalized in the intensive care unit earlier this month, only nine were vaccinated.

All but 28 of the 246 Hoosiers who died from COVID-19 the week of Sept. 19 were unvaccinated. More than 90% of the total 334 vaccinated people who have died from COVID-19 since the vaccine became available were over the age of 65, with 79 being the average age of breakthrough deaths.

COVID-19 has taken the lives of more than 15,340 Indiana residents since the pandemic began in March 2020 and more than 700,000 people across the nation.

More: Woman who sued Ascension St. Vincent for not giving ivermectin drops lawsuit

Green was one of 23 people who died on Oct. 1, according to the state's COVID dashboard.

An autoparts manager, Green lived in New Palestine and was born in Beech Grove, according to his obituary. He loved to garden, listen to music, play with his 11 grandchildren and vacation on the beach. Before he fell ill, he was caring for his 88-year-old mother, who herself had had a bout of COVID-19.

His wife, five children, 11 grandchildren with another on the way, and mother survive him. As does a searing video, a heartfelt reminder for any who watch that those who do not get vaccinated against COVID-19 can wind up with severe disease or dead.

"The vaccine is what makes you healthy," Green told IndyStar. "You get the vaccine, its going to make you healthy, keep you healthy and not let this happen to you.

To make an appointment to get vaccinated, visit ourshot.in.gov or call 211. Many sites also accept walk-ins to be vaccinated.

Contact IndyStar reporter Shari Rudavsky atshari.rudavsky@indystar.com. Follow her on Facebook and on Twitter: @srudavsky.

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New Palestine man who recorded sickbed video urging others to 'get the vaccine' has died - IndyStar

Palestine’s ‘Cinema Bus’ Aims to Revive Art and Culture in Gaza – Al-Fanar Media

Posted By on October 7, 2021

Our Society avoids selecting films that clash with politics and religion, and chooses only films that serve the community and promote positive concepts.

Mahmoud Al-Harbawi Coordinator of the Cinema Bus project

Mahmoud Al-Harbawi, coordinator of the Cinema Bus project for Save Youth Future, said: Our Society avoids selecting films that clash with politics and religion, and chooses only films that serve the community and promote positive concepts.

Al-Harbawi defended the right of the Ministries of Culture and Education to choose films. The selection is made with great caution, through a committee assigned by the society to determine the list of films to be shown for the three target groups: children, teenagers, and youth, he said in an interview with Al-Fanar Media via Zoom.

In the past year, Save Youth Future has screened films in eight refugee camps in the Gaza Strip, which has a population of more than million, according to the latest official statistics.

Thanks to the encouraging response of the target groups and the Gazan communitys celebration of the project, Al-Harbawi said the organizers hoped to extend the project to all cities in Gaza, even if funding is cut off.

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However, El Far ruled out the idea of equipping an independent cinema hall in Gaza, due to limited financial support, and peoples preference for a mobile cinema that reaches everyone in their areas.

For her part, Ouf believes that the experiment will find support and welcome at the official and popular levels, as long as the content of the projects films fits the conservative nature approved by the authorities.

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Palestine's 'Cinema Bus' Aims to Revive Art and Culture in Gaza - Al-Fanar Media

In 2020, Palestine had its worst year in three decades. Will 2021 be worse? – The National

Posted By on October 7, 2021

For most of the world, caught in the grip of a pandemic, 2021 has been a year of inching painfully in the direction of progress. For Palestine, it has been a year of a few steps forward, many steps back.

Sunday saw a forward step, when Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas hosted Israels Health Minister, Nitzan Horowitz, in the West Bank. Mr Horowitz is now the second high-level Israeli official to meet Mr Abbas since the formation of Israel's new government, after Defence Minister Benny Gantz did so in August. After Sunday's meeting, Mr Horowitz posted on his Twitter account: "We have a shared mission: to preserve the hope for peace on the basis of a two-state solution.

A two-state solution would represent much more than a step; it would be a titanic leap forward. After more than seven decades of tragedy, it remains the most just and feasible end to the conflict. Unfortunately, Mr Horowitzs tweet is no indicator of a sea change. Palestinian and Israeli peace advocates, along with the majority of the international community, have long pushed hard for it, only to be pushed back by the conservative wing of Israeli politics.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Defence Minister Benny Gantz met in August. AFP

As Palestines dreams of sovereignty are dashed, its humanitarian situation only grows worse. On Friday, the UN agency in charge of helping Palestinian refugees, UNRWA, was forced to appeal for an urgent $120 million, as a result of what it called a "real existential threat to the organisation". The agency oversees education for 550,000 children, health care for thousands and other essential social services where there are populations of Palestinian refugees.

The US administration under Joe Biden has renewed its support of UNRWA to the tune of $235 million after its predecessor withdrew funding, but the agency's finances have been hit by a wider reduction in donations from other countries as the world struggles with the economic consequences of the pandemic.

Keeping Palestinian society moving is more important than ever, particularly after 2020, which the UN called the worst year for Palestinians in 30 years. Palestine's economy shrank by 11.5 per cent, and more than 66,000 of its people lost their jobs. The main cause of this is the pandemic, which will carry on being a burden for Palestine as it struggles to implement the many strategies needed to control the virus.

It is quite something if 2020 was the worst year during three decades of war, economic crisis and ongoing encroachment of Palestinian sovereignty. It highlights the need for more meetings such as August's between Mr Abbas and Mr Gantz, which are more than surface-level attempts to signal the end of the hawkish Netanyahu era. Today, new frameworks are in place to push real change; Yousef Al Otaiba, the UAE ambassador to the US, recently told The National that the Abraham Accords would continue to thrive under President Joe Biden.

If meetings do genuinely intend to make the situation better, then both parties must make a renewed and genuine push towards peace.

Published: October 5th 2021, 3:00 AM

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In 2020, Palestine had its worst year in three decades. Will 2021 be worse? - The National

Sacked UK professor: There is ‘campaign to silence supporters of Palestine’ – Press TV

Posted By on October 7, 2021

A University of Bristol professor who was sacked last week for his pro-Palestine comments says there is a campaign led by the Israeli regime to silence the voices insupport ofthe Palestinian cause.

David Miller, a professor of political sociology and a member of the School for Policy Studies at the University of Bristol, was speaking in an exclusive interview to Press TV on Tuesday, where he said he was shocked by what the British university had done.

Im feeling a bit shocked but I was kind of anticipating it, Miller said, four days after the university released a statement, saying the decision to terminate his employment with immediate effect was prompted by its duty of care to students and the wider university community.

I have been working for decades in higher education in this country and I never thought that making political comments at an external political meeting, when I wasnt at work, could possibly led to my sacking, Miller told Press TV, expressing disappointment at the decision.

There is a campaign led by Israel to silence all of those who would in anyways support Palestinian rights.

Press TV talks with Professor David Miller who was expelled from the University of Bristol over his support for the Palestinian people. pic.twitter.com/QpzRzdCtdc

The university had launched an investigation into the sociology professors pro-Palestine statements in March, in a case that sharply divided the campus. He had allegedly called for the end of Zionism and warned that some Jewish students were being used as political pawns by a violent, racist foreign regime.

The investigation, which included an independent report, considered the important issue of academic freedom of expression and concluded that his comments did not constitute unlawful speech. However, a disciplinary hearing of the university overruled the findings and concluded that he did not meet the standards of behavior we expect from our staff.

We have a duty of care to all students and the wider university community, in addition to a need to apply our own codes of conduct consistently and with integrity, the statement noted. Balancing those important considerations, and after careful deliberation... the university has concluded that Prof Millers employment should be terminated with immediate effect.

Prof. Miller went on to say that the university did not take into account what the probe panel had found that his comments did not constitute unlawful speech noting that it encouraged misreporting of what had happened. He said there is a sustained campaign led by the regime in Tel Aviv through pro-Israeli groups in the UK and other countries to silence all those who would in any way support the Palestinian rights.

The veteran academician warned that the campaign will make people in academia vulnerable to being sacked for making perfectly reasonable and lawful anti-racist comments.

The academic has been a long-time advocate of the Palestinian resistance movement and has on several occasions faced hostile attacks for his pro-Palestine and anti-Israel stance. In 2019, he was at the center of the storm for referring to the Zionist movement as one of five sources of Islamophobia, and showing a diagram linking Jewish charities to Zionist lobbying.

Pro-Israeli lobby at mark

His unceremonious ouster from the University of Bristol is a manifestation of the deep influence yielded by the pro-Israeli lobby in the UK. The scope of the investigation and the exact reasons to sack Prof. Miller have been kept confidential, though it is believed that the reasons go beyond his lecture. He lashed out at the university in his remarks on Saturday, saying it had embarrassed itself. He also accused it of bowing to a pressure campaign against him directed by Israel.

It has run a shambolic process that seems to have been vetted by external actors. Israels assets in the UK have been emboldened by the university collaborating with them to shut down teaching about Islamophobia. The University of Bristol is no longer safe for Muslim, Arab or Palestinian students, Miller, whose research specializes in how power self-perpetuates through lobbying and propaganda, was quoted as saying by the Guardian.

A campaign has also been launched in his support, which says it is appalled that the University of Bristol hadlaunched an unnecessary investigationinto Prof Miller's comments. Every academic and student in the country should be deeply concerned about this coordinated attack on academic freedom, it said in a statement.

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Sacked UK professor: There is 'campaign to silence supporters of Palestine' - Press TV

A feast for all five senses at the Palestinian pavilion – The National

Posted By on October 7, 2021

Follow the latest updates on Expo 2020 Dubai here

The sights, smells and sounds of Jerusalem are showcased at the Palestinian pavilion, which has opened to visitors at Expo 2020 Dubai.

Augmented reality goggles and scent-releasing urns evoke the atmosphere of the country, and an immersive visual experience mimics a traditional Palestinian feast.

These streets saw Prophet Jesus and Prophet Mohammed walking there, and many other scenes

The first exhibit in the pavilion recreates the feel of Old City of Jerusalem, with its narrow alleyways and decorative arches and screens. Stone slabs imported from the city complete the effect.

Illuminated pictures illustrate the busy bazaars where Palestinians make a living selling textiles and souvenirs, and where many bakeries sell the popular local bread.

One of the tour guides said the purpose of the exhibit was to transport the visitor to a regular Jerusalem street scene.

It's very normal when you're walking there to see a synagogue or church or a mosque because the three religions are constantly present, she said.

The streets are very narrow and that's because they're very old and very historic streets.

These streets saw Prophet Jesus and Prophet Mohammed walking there, and many other scenes.

Visitors then take an atmospheric elevator ride that simulates rising high above the bustling streets of Jerusalem.

Once on the rooftop a video shows the culture and creativity of the Palestinian people, including glass blowing, textile weaving and basket work.

After the visuals, visitors are invited to touch items which evoke Palestine's exports, such as salt from the Dead Sea, before moving into a spaces devoted to sight and smell.

Here, specially designed urns release the scent of flowers and fruits grown in Palestine, such as roses and oranges, and reality goggles provide tours of key sights from the Old City.

The final exhibit is an immersive visual experience illustrating a traditional feast, which whets the appetite of the visitor, before they conveniently discover the restaurant Mama-esh on the way out of the pavilion.

The eatery serves traditional Palestinian food, and already has six branches open in Dubai. but is likely to offer traditional manaesh flatbreads baked in an authentic wood fired stone oven.

Updated: October 5th 2021, 12:51 PM

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A feast for all five senses at the Palestinian pavilion - The National


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