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  1. And so begins the “epic of the Palestinian people”: from the 1948 Nakba (“catastrophe”) — the great ethnic cleansing of the Palestinians from their homeland to make way for the state of ...

  2. The House passed a bill on Wednesday to label products from illegal Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank as originating from “Israel,” essentially recognizing Israel’s annexation and ethnic cleansing of the region in what opponents of the bill say is a “hateful” attempt to erase the very existence of Palestinians in Palestine.

  3. The Deir Yassin massacre took place on April 9, 1948, when Zionist paramilitaries attacked the village of Deir Yassin near Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine, killing at least 107 Palestinian villagers, including women and children. [1] The attack was conducted primarily by the Irgun and Lehi, who were supported by the Haganah and ...

  4. A Palestinian man stands in his home after it was torched by Israeli settlers in the West Bank village of Jit in August 2024. ... These include population transfer – a form of ethnic cleansing ...

  5. Echoing the “right-to-defend-itself” rationale it has employed in misrepresenting its similar ethnic cleansing campaign in Gaza, ... Perhaps Robert Koehler framed the Palestinian-Israeli conflict best (especially for Americans) when he wrote in the September 7 issue of Common Dreams, ...

  6. Ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from Palestine has been proceeding since 1948, but it has accelerated over the previous year. By Beverley Dight, Green Issue Co-editor. I recently wrote to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken: "It was wrong for HAMAS to kill civilians. It is wrong for Israel to kill civilians.

  7. www.christiancentury.org › interviews › palestinian-and-christian-violent-timePalestinian and Christian in a violent time

    Zionism directly resulted in the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians in 1948, the apartheid that currently exists in Palestine, and the genocide that’s now happening in Gaza. Many of the Jews who came to Israel before 1948 came as refugees: traumatized, stateless, and with nowhere else to go.