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What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

What To Do When You're Stopped By Police - The ACLU & Elon James White

Know Anyone Who Thinks Racial Profiling Is Exaggerated? Watch This, And Tell Me When Your Jaw Drops.


This video clearly demonstrates how racist America is as a country and how far we have to go to become a country that is civilized and actually values equal justice. We must not rest until this goal is achieved. I do not want my great grandchildren to live in a country like we have today. I wish for them to live in a country where differences of race and culture are not ignored but valued as a part of what makes America great.

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

From Gaza, an Audio Diary of Despair - The New York Times

An Audio Diary of Despair

Israeli colonial Apartheid and Savagery. going on since 1948 backed by the United States

"In a series of voice memos sent via WhatsApp, Tasneem Ismael Ahel, 19, described the war unfolding around her in Gaza City.

Drone video from Oct. 11 showed damage in the Al-Rimal neighborhood of Gaza City, where Tasneem Ismael Ahel was raised. The 19-year-old has documented her life under Israeli bombardment in voice messages.By Nedal Ahmed Via Storyful

By Yousur Al-Hlou

Yousur Al-Hlou first met Tasneem Ismael Ahel in the aftermath of the 2021 war in Gaza. Since Oct. 7, she has been receiving dozens of her voice messages describing daily life under Israeli bombardment.

It’s 14 October. 11 a.m. I am feeling like I am dead already. But I am still breathing, just still breathing. I miss my old life. I used to be a clean, tidy girl. And everything here is not. I used to be having everything normal. I just want to live normal. I just want to shower normally. I just want to use bathroom normally. I can’t breathe normally here. Everything is getting worse.

Tasneem Ismael Ahel’s audio messages typically arrive all at once.

Sometimes there are 16 files. Sometimes there are 24. Sometimes there are just five.

The messages are often stuck, trapped for days in electronic transit because of a communications blackout imposed by Israel when it cut off electricity in Gaza, silencing voices from the besieged enclave.

That is, until a fleeting Wi-Fi signal appears.

A collection of WhatsApp messages.

For many Palestinians in Gaza, sporadic access to WhatsApp is one of the few outlets for sharing firsthand accounts of the war happening around them: raw reflections on death, despair and shattered dreams sent via audio messages from a territory under siege.

For two weeks in mid-October, Tasneem, a 19-year-old college student from Gaza City, documented how her hometown was transformed under Israeli bombardment, sharing daily updates with The New York Times in the form of an audio diary.

It’s 9 p.m. and a half. There is only me and Reema, my cousin, and my little sister, Youmna. The others are all sleeping right now. We are awake just to guard them. It’s our shift tonight. We are really tired; we are really very, very tired. We just want to sleep and we can’t. We can’t because we don’t know where and what and when they will bomb missiles. So I record these voice [messages]. And I know maybe it’s not my last voice. Maybe it’s my last voice. Maybe it will reach you, maybe it doesn’t.

Tasneem’s account offers a window into the unimaginable ways her daily life intersects with the horrors of war: her sister Malak’s somber birthday; the scarcity of feminine hygiene products; the killing of a friend; the desperate search for shelter under bombardment.

This round of fighting began when a Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7 in Israel killed at least 1,400 people, mostly civilians. In response, Israel’s military unleashed a bombing campaign on Gaza, subjecting Tasneem and residents of Gaza — half of them under the age of 18 — to an unprecedented number of deadly airstrikes for the territory.

Over 6,500 Palestinians have been killed so far, the Health Ministry in Gaza says.

A smiling Tasneem stands outside brown doors over which there is Arabic writing and a sign that says, “Faculty of dentistry.”
Tasneem wants to study dentistry abroad and to simultaneously pursue writing, painting and singing.via Tasneem Ismael Ahel

The war isn’t Tasneem’s first. Or her second.

It is, in fact, her fifth. And, she fears, this time around, she will die.

Tasneem is among a generation that was born under siege. Those conditions continue to trap her, her parents, her five younger siblings and nearly two million Palestinians in a sliver of land.

She has never set foot outside Gaza, and she fears she never will.

I don’t know why they bombed my favorite restaurants in Al-Rimal. They didn’t just bomb my favorite restaurants; they take me from my best memories. They steal my night, my routine, my skin-care routine, my drawings, my paintings. Or even, just sitting down and writing some stories about me, writing plans for the future.

Tasneem was raised in Al-Rimal, an upscale neighborhood in Gaza City, and attended one of its top colleges, Al Azhar University, until it was bombed in the first days of the war.

Despite the physical limitations imposed on her, Tasneem has always aspired for a life beyond the fence and concrete borders that surround her.

Her dreams for her future blend a dual passion for science and art: She wants to study dentistry abroad and to simultaneously pursue writing, painting and singing.

Tasneem smiles while posing with her hands under her chin and sitting at a table with red flowers. Another person’s hand can be seen holding a camera.
Tasneem poses for a photo near the Mediterranean Sea in Gaza. This is the teenager’s fifth war in the enclave.via Woroud Alqassas

In any other context, she would be a competitive candidate for an American Ivy League institution.

But with each war in Gaza, dreams, like buildings, often turn into rubble.

In the past two weeks, Tasneem and her family have had to flee their apartment and move in with her uncle. Parts of her neighborhood, destroyed in the war of 2021, have been flattened again, and her beloved university campus is now closed.

It’s the 13th of October, 9 p.m. The seventh day of this attack on Gaza. They hit our neighbor, killed people without even warning them. And the building collapsed. They are trying right now to find people under the rubble. It’s really scary because they were in the house next to us, and my dad was in the street with my uncle. I don’t want to lose anyone in my family. I really miss studying anatomy, physiology and the other subjects in my university. I was excited. I was full of dreams, full of hope. All of this was stolen from me in seven days.

Increasingly, Gaza City is transforming into a ghost town.

Israel has ordered the mass evacuation of residents north of the city — saying anyone who remains will be considered a “terrorist” — and hundreds of thousands of Palestinians have been forced to flee south.

Tasneem and her family have chosen to stay in the land of their ancestors. But it’s not just nostalgia that’s keeping them in the city that may become a front line in a ground invasion by Israel’s armed forces.

The southern region of the Gaza Strip has come under daily bombardment, too. And, at times, the roads have turned into a death trap for evacuees.

There are also more practical reasons for staying: Tasneem and her family cannot afford the cost of travel, nor can they guarantee they can find a place to sleep for the 16 relatives who are huddled into one apartment.

For now, at least, they’ve decided to stay. Even as the war seems to inch closer.

To hear that we should evacuate right now to the south from the north of Gaza Strip. My family, we are not going to anywhere. It’s Day 7 to this attack on Gaza and really, really I have a heart broken. My heart is broken because I am really missing my old house, everything, every corner in the house. I miss my bed or lying, just lying on my bed or in the living room, and not doing anything, just lying in my bed. I really miss this. I really miss my normal life before this missiles. Before this attack. It’s a tragedy. It’s a genocide.

On Wednesday, Tasneem described heavy bombardment outside her uncle’s apartment, a reminder of just how close Palestinian families live to the deadly explosions in Gaza.

On a rare occasion, Tasneem did not send an audio message. She resorted, instead, to brief notes written in her native Arabic.

5:23 p.m.: “We are under a ‘fire belt’ attack right now.”

5:23 p.m.: “Strikes are coming one after the other.”

5:24 p.m.: “We still don’t understand what is happening.”

5:24 p.m.: “We’re currently on the second floor of the building.”

5:24 p.m.: “It’s beyond horrifying.”

Neil Collier contributed reporting from Cairo. Christina Kelso contributed production from New York City, and Abeer Pamuk contributed production from San Francisco."

From Gaza, an Audio Diary of Despair - The New York Times

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