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" Aspettate e vedrete cambiamenti drammatici .."


yahuwah
Noble Member
Registrato: 2 anni fa
Post: 1142
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Il seguente articolo e' stato fatto nel "lontano" LUGLIO del 2010.
Leggetelo con molta attenzione, e che ognuno tragga le proprie idee a riguardo:

Ho un amico segreto. Egli è libico. Comunichiamo attraverso Twitter DM (messaggio diretto). Ero sospettoso delle sue motivazioni all'inizio e temuto di lui.
Nel corso del tempo ho imparato che egli è un uomo di famiglia premuroso con un debole per il popolo ebraico. Io non vengo a menzionare qui, il suo nome in modo che egli non soffra qualsiasi gioco dai nemici di Israele. Oggi mi ha inviato alcune notizie di speranze che Libia può ammorbidire il loro stand verso il popolo ebraico, almeno per quanto si visita il paese. Ecco ciò che è stato pubblicato oggi sul Medio Oriente Online,
( http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=40310 )
tra le altre notizie di anti-Israele. Questo è probabilmente un pezzo sottile e di propaganda, ma la cosa che è importante e struggente, è ciò che un uomo libico, che osa d'essere diverso, dopo che gli ho chiesto se era una storia recente, mi ha detto:

" Sì, questa è stata solo la scorsa settimana. Aspettate e vedrete cambiamenti drammatici, ben come diciamo che "il sangue mai diventa acqua", i nostri amati ebrei libici ritorneranno ed essere risarciti per ogni cosa. Sono felice per questo ..."

"Yes, this was only last week. Just wait and you will see dramatic changes, well as we say " blood never turn to water," our beloved Libyan Jews will get back and be compensated for every thing. I'm happy for this. P.S. The departure was on 1967 before Gad'dafi came 2 power 1969."

Fonte:

http://www.naomilitvin.com/2010/07/Libya-Jewish-leader-Goes-Home.html

Ma quante coincidenze pero' !!
E chi sara' mai questo " personaggio segreto " ????

http://www.middle-east-online.com/english/?id=40310
First Published: 2010-07-31

Libya Jewish leader goes home
Raphael Luzon takes mother, sister to visit birthplace in Benghazi after decades of exile.
TRIPOLI - A Libyan Jewish community leader who visited his birthplace for the first time since being forced to flee in 1967 said on Friday it felt like he was living a dream.

Raphael Luzon, who was driven out after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war and now lives in London, visited his birthplace of Benghazi, 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) east of Tripoli, with his sister and 83-year-old mother.

"We visited Benghazi and met our loved ones amid tears and great longing for friends we have never forgotten," said Luzon. It felt like he was "in a dream."

Luzon, who also met several Libyan officials during the visit, said he regretted not having had the chance to hold talks with the country's leader Moamer Gaddafi.

Libya's Jewish population, numbering tens of thousands, shrunk after the founding of the state of Israel in 1948. Most of the estimated 7,000 remaining Jews were evacuated after the 1967 war following anti-Jewish riots.

Gaddafi has said he would be willing to compensate Jews who left behind their properties in Libya.

"All the Jewish community (living abroad) is waiting for my return so I can tell them about the results of this visit," Luzon said, adding that he plans to make another return to Libya.

"All the Libyan Jews living in Palestine and Europe and America, and there are 110,000 Jews of them, yearn for Libya and wish to return, or just to visit," he said.

http://www.aolnews.com/2011/03/01/gadhafi-expert-warns-libyan-leader-will-fight-until-the-end/
Gadhafi Expert Warns Libyan Leader Will Fight 'Until the End'
Mar 1, 2011 – 12:48 PM

JERUSALEM -- The violence in Libya is worse than reported and Moammar Gadhafi will battle the opposition to the bitter end, says a native Libyan and Jewish activist who has met the dictator several times.

"Don't underestimate Gadhafi; he will keep fighting until the end," said Raphael Luzon, the head of the London-based Association of Libyan Jews. Luzon, who was born in Benghazi and remains in close touch with opposition leaders in Libya, told AOL News in a telephone interview that the bloodshed is much worse than has been reported and the death toll has already reached thousands.

Moammar Gadhafi
Amr Nabil, AP
Moammar Gadhafi, Libya's leader for more than 40 years, is battling a rebellion against his regime.
"Gadhafi remains strong in Tripoli, and each of his sons is also very strong," he said. "Everyone is now waiting for the next big assault, and we can expect a lot of bloodshed."

Luzon, a longtime journalist, said he did not believe that Gadhafi, whom he has met personally several times, would ever leave Libya the way Hosni Mubarak left Egypt. "He is a Bedouin, born in the desert, and the idea of honor is very important," he said. "Although some of his sons would like to leave the country and live the good life somewhere else, Gadhafi will either
be killed fighting or commit suicide. He won't leave."

According to Luzon's contacts in Benghazi and Tripoli, many areas have experienced shortages of food and medicine in the past 48 hours. His comments came as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations Susan Rice said that the U.S. will maintain political and economic pressure on
Gadhafi until he steps down.

Speaking on ABC's "Good Morning America," Rice said it was premature to talk about giving the Libyan rebels support, saying there isn't any clear-cut unified opposition yet. Luzon agreed, saying that almost 75 percent of the Libyan population is younger than 40, and that they do not know any ruler other than Gadhafi, who has been in power for 41 years.

But Luzon said he believes that a liberal, democratic opposition will emerge. "Most Libyans are very secular like Tunisians and Moroccans," he told AOL News. "They like the good life. I don't think we will see a religious opposition there."

Israeli officials are concerned that in Egypt, where the Muslim Brotherhood is strong, as well as in Tunisia, Morocco and Libya, militant Islamists could seize power. "The fear is that they will be hijacked, following the model of Iran, of Hezbollah in Lebanon and of Hamas in Gaza," Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon said today.

So far, the focus of the demonstrations in Libya and elsewhere has not been anti-Israel or anti-Jewish. But Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh today told a group of students at Sanaa University that "the wave of political unrest sweeping across the Arab world is a conspiracy that serves Israel and the Zionists.

are being directed by the White House, and the control center for destabilizing the Arab world is in Tel Aviv."

These comments are familiar to Luzon. He was forced to flee Benghazi in 1967 after an attack killed 18 Jews. In the 1930s and '40s, tens of thousands of Jews were living in Libya, and more than 25 percent of Tripoli's population was Jewish. But after the creation of Israel in 1948 and increasing anti-Jewish feeling, most left. Today no Jews are believed to be living in Libya.

_________________________________________________________

QUANDO LA VERITA' EMERGE DALLE FOGNE ?


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yahuwah
Noble Member
Registrato: 2 anni fa
Post: 1142
Topic starter  

http://www.naomilitvin.com/2010/07/Libya-Jewish-leader-Goes-Home.html

INCREDIBILE!!!

Dopo 2 ore o piu:

"Page not found
Sorry, the page you were looking for in the blog Naomi Litvin does not exist."

What so on????????????????????????????????????????????

Post pubblicato solo 3 ore fa su:
www.gadlerner.it
www.criticatestuale.ilcannocchiale.it
www.comedonchisciotte.org

puzza di bruciato?


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morpheo
Eminent Member
Registrato: 2 anni fa
Post: 26
 

Infatti puzza.... ma la traduzione?


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