Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Israelis help Syrian refugees in Europe


Israelis help Syrian refugees in Europe while Gaza Children Aspire to Murder Jews as brainwashing continues-1


An IsraAID worker walks alongside a Muslim refugee.

IsraAID Saves Drowning Refugees, Gives Relief Kits, Baby Carriers

"Then, because so many people were coming and going that they did not even have a chance to eat, He said to them, 'Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.'"  (Mark 6:31)

Since September 2, Israeli NGO IsraAID has had volunteers on the shores of Lesbos, Greece, to help refugees from Asia, Africa and the Middle East.  On Rosh HaShanah, they saved the lives of several women and children when a boat capsized and its engine exploded. "Some of the women, children and babies didn’t know how to swim and our staff immediately jumped into the water to help them, preventing them from drowning," said Shachar Zahavi, founding director of IsraAID: The Israel Forum for International Humanitarian Aid.  "After bringing everyone onto the shore safely, our medical team treated some of the sick and injured while our logistic team distributed food and water to the rest." 


IsraAID workers help rescue drowning refugees.

Up to 10 IsraAID volunteers have been working the refugee relief mission this month, with five more to arrive in Europe next week.  The group draws financial support from European Jewish foundations, as well as Gentile international aid agencies. "Our staff is overwhelmed but we cannot stop now, especially as more refugees are on their way," says Zahavi, whose team has provided shelter, sustenance, blankets, baby carriers, and relief kits with personal-hygiene items, warm clothes and maps "so the refugees know where to go." "Personally, I can’t stop thinking that the ones we saved will join the masses of refugees walking hundreds of kilometers to flee violence and conflict, all with barely the clothes on their backs.  I hope more people will join us in reaching out a helping hand," Zahavi said. At the seaside in Lesbos, "Day and night, IsraAID enters the water to help pull people to safety," the group states.  "Our medical team then treats them on the shore and we provide non-food and food items and helps direct them on their journey to safety."


An IsraAID worker distributes drinking boxes to refugees as they make
their way through Europe.

From Lesbos, the volunteers walked on Monday with thousands of refugees to the border of Hungary, which permitted refugees through the official crossing, despite the Serbia-Hungary border being closed.  Refugees then were expected to be taken by train to the border with Austria. The IsraAID Mobile Team that moved inland with the refugees has sought to provide "on-going humanitarian relief at strategic points of the journey," including distributing supplies and safety mechanisms for the people moving to Zagreb, Croatia, from Serbia. This past week, "IsraAID did a big purchase of supplies specifically for children, as it was clear, the children stuck at the border of Serbia/ Hungary are in stressful situation," a September 17 Facebook post reads.   "In close coordination with other agencies on the ground, IsraAID took the lead on providing child-friendly spaces." Child-friendly spaces in disaster-relief practice give children a sense of normalcy amid the context of a fluid disaster-zone environment in order to lessen trauma they experience.  The Israeli team provided "much needed refreshments for children clearly exhausted and struggling to cope with the elements"—with scorching sun and temperatures climbing into the mid-90s Fahrenheit.



A refugee happily receives from IsraAID a baby sling that will make the
flight to safety a little easier.

On Thursday, the team also intervened on behalf of 50-plus children that were hit by tear gas during a riot that broke out near a refugee camp where they were stationed. "We met with a father carrying two young girls under the age of five.  Both his girls were hit during the confusion.  In this case, the family thought the border was opened and got caught in the mess," IsraAID states.  "We helped to flush the eyes of children affected with water and carry them away from danger.  In all the confusion, the mother of the children was separated, causing more stress to the situation." The Israeli group has been providing more than 200 donated slings and baby carriers for parents who still have miles to walk, and have emphasized the need for these particular supplies on social media, telling Times of Israel, "The ball is rolling really fast.  We expect it to pick up even more speed." "Tonight on the border of Serbia-Hungary the IsraAID team saw just how critical a sling can be when you need to literally run to the border before it seals off," the group wrote on Facebook. According to University of Haifa Professor Arnon Soffer, the Chaiklin Chair in Geostrategy, "we are witnessing the beginning of a mass migration, such as the incursions of the peoples of the sea or the Huns."  "It is not a short affair that will pass quickly," Soffer said.
 
 
At least one eight year old Syrian girl died this weekend off the coast of
the Greek island of Lesbos in an incident involving the smuggler boat she
was packed on.
  
Hamas Uses Camps and TV in Child Brainwashing

"Now the earth was corrupt in God’s sight and was full of violence.  God saw how corrupt the earth had become, for all the people on earth had corrupted their ways."  (Genesis 6:11-12)

Hamas-affiliated programming confirms that child brainwashing continues in Gaza.

A recently aired Hamas children's show encouraged its young guests to make statements about "blowing up the Jews"; meanwhile, a video of a Hamas camp shows campers being trained with Iranian-made weapons. In a television show that aired September 4 on the al-Aqsa TV channel and was shared on September 16 by MEMRI with translation, the young female host encouraged a pre-teen Muhammad Ali Zakariya Al-Astal to share a poem his mother taught him: "Oh Jerusalem, I shall redeem you with my soul and my blood.  I shall liberate you from the Jews by means of the Al-Qassam Brigades, of course.  I bring glad tidings to our prisoners:  Salvation is near," he recited.


On a Hamas-affiliated children's TV program, a Gaza child recites a poem
promising to liberate Jerusalem from the Jews.  His mother taught him the
poem.

The host then asked Muhammad what he wanted to be when he grows up.  "A member of] the Al-Qassam Brigades," he said.  The boy sitting with him, Zakariya, gave a more common answer: "An engineer." "An engineer?  Why do you want to become an engineer?" the host asked.  Zakariya explained, "So that I can blow up the Jews." The Palestinian host, wearing a hijab with an innocent and friendly expression, corrected him with the politically correct doublespeak often used in anti-Semitic attacks:  "You want to blow up the Jews?  No, we want to blow up the Zionists.  You mean the occupation, right?" A young male guest host, Wissam, pitches in to encourage the boys:  "Keep waging jihad, and allah-willing, when you grow up, you will wage resistance against the Jews." "The occupation," the female host interjects again. "Bomb the occupation," Wissam says without missing a beat, "and the al-Aqsa mosque will be liberated."


The host corrects the child when he says that he wants to become an
engineer in order to blow up Jews, telling him that Palestinians want to
blow up Zionists, not Jews.

On a second front of indoctrination, Hamas has been working for years to train children in techniques of war and terror, with Israel portrayed as the enemy and as the target. Hamas has 50 camps in Gaza for the combat training of boys and girls divided into age groups starting as young as 12.  Other training has been allotted to age groups up through the age of 60. Founding director of the Center for Near East Policy Research, David Bedein, claims an enrollment in these combat-training camps of 15,000 children per year.  This summer, Al-Monitor listed an enrollment of 25,000 campers to be taught in the Palestinian cause and to receive combat training. "Despite the large numbers of Palestinians enrolled in the camps, some Palestinians such as Moustafa Ibrahim, a researcher at the Independent Commission for Human Rights (ICHR), warn against what they call the forced militarization of the next Palestinian generation," writes Palestine Pulse contributor Adnan Abu Amer.  "They worry that such action could lead to a mainstream culture of violence and give Israel excuses to target Palestinian children, who show up at these camps carrying weapons." "The goal of these military training camps is to train the vanguard for liberation: spiritually, intellectually and physically, to be ready and able to play its role in liberation," stated the Hamas movement's Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, which claims that the camps provide two weeks of training "in military techniques and in firing live ammunition," along with first-aid and rescue techniques. In the August 6 closing ceremony of the camps, Mahmoud al-Zahar, a co-founder of Hamas, said that “Hamas now has seven fighting brigades making up an army to liberate Palestine from the Israeli occupation, and each brigade includes several battalions.  Hamas today has a regular Liberation Army trained with the latest training methods.”
 
 
Gaza children are trained in warfare.

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