and initially mistakenly describing this is an ad, right of the which created a certain amount of confusion and panic. but describing how dozens of balloons had been detected, being launched from the north, with people being willing to stay away from them and to report them to the old style. recipes at north korean defect is living in the south. and other activists have regularly launched balloons over the years into the knolls carrying propaganda aimed at the north korean regime. the most recent of these launches was apparently just a couple of weeks ago. and the north has promised a, a response saying that it would be sending balloons of its own carrying what it described as waste paper and bills without going into exactly what that feels would be. but this has been so far this week, fairly acrimonious in terms of integrating relations that began on monday with a try lateral summit here being hosted by the south end involving china and japan, which didn't please north korea, which chose monday to launch a spice satellite, which failed to reach whole but with the rocket, disintegrating just off the launch backed into and then provoked a response from the south with a show of force with an ad drill involving it spiked the jets which has since been condemned by north korean leader kim jong. and as a dangerous publication run, mcbride, i'll just era so well, that's it for me and associates a for them. but you can always find much more on our website, including overlay says on garza l 0 dot com lane. it will have more few here on al jazeera, off to the stream. i'll see you often, the exist resist, ritz, hon. you may have had this child at the not the events which have been happening this month to month may. 15th 1948, the official day for commemorations with the recorded numbers killed and displaced . once again that throughout the occupied palestinian territories, i'm throwing lisman online is asking, is this not but 2 point? oh mary impulse. why and this is the stream, the to not, which means catastrophe and arabic refers to the ongoing mass displacement an ethnic cleansing of the indigenous palestinian people from the land by satellite communities with 75 percent of the population of gauze. almost 2000000 people now forced to be displaced. all we witnessing it's most violent shop to yet . what might this mean so the future of palestine have of them a lot, lot of them putting them in in 2 months ago. and so who knows in the heart of general a couple of issues with any general my readings a whole i'm on i think the last one. 0 no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, i haven't necessarily man man. and what we have going on in order to get the with a month after the and then he and hell out of that money instead of with the metro . so let me show you a little amount of bradley the original one. and i will have a guide live with him. it will limit that in the you will and i'm with somebody in when i will show that they will not have it isn't legit or not do not didn't really feel a lot of the maybe the associates follow the pull up the slow little work on the should be in the almost different oh the different them helping us of you with no. yeah. and that's enough even give you that you had a few minutes a yeah. i had to heavy it again. say oh the, the other one had gone away. she had and show a lot about the to, to discuss this ongoing by 3 protest any into each have their own story of displacement. that means a sell them is a jordanian palestinian. so make a, she joins us from an eye on them. it is a policy and you and also an industry to based in new york. i'm highly in size is a palestinian political analyst and he is joining us from cairo. thank you so much for being here with us. that in your film for high is based on real events and 1948 . why was it important for you to make a film about the neck? because because that is the, the, the, the cause of which we're seeing today, which we're witnessing the sign. and this event that not only the book on the effect of cm's, what has happened, but also in the out of warranty. and it shapes how the one that is today, edwin title and the 1st job and 2016. i remember it was like a table took about napa and i sent so much the distance and to make this, this only made me determined to tell the story on it from this. so neither then did so i'm forced on uh to make it. i'm not sure the story with the and i a you written and illustrated, a children's book about the promised and in family already living in a refugee camp in nablus, who are displaced off to the 1967 rule. why was important for you to tell this story of the 2nd major displacement of faxing palestinians? so my book, these olive trees follows my grandmother's story with a protectionist, whose name dr. and her displacement from novice and 1967 after her family had already talked to leave their home and hyphen 1948 upon the neck. but it was important for me to tell the story of my grandmother's display, but displacements that after the initial talk about 1948 for 2 main reasons. the 1st is that every post indian has a similar story. growing up in jordan, in a community of displace palestinians, i've never been confronted with having to justify and affirmed my identity and experience until i went to the rest of the college student. and i learned very quickly that this isn't unique to me and it's just part of the posting and experience and that they ask for. and for me, this book came out of an accumulation of these feelings and experiences telling my grandmother story was the natural place for me to start talking about palestine. because when i think about the post and you people think about how every palestinian has a grandmother story. the 2nd reason is that that of 1948 is not an event, but the process, the next president and, and my grandmother story never ended. members of my family and community have been displaced one way or another since the beginning stages of sinus colonization and continued to be to the stage. we see this in the and we see as in the west bank in jerusalem, families are separated and isolated by is really a personal policy is by an actual separation. while they are displaced by home demolition sports, evictions restriction to work and movements on sanitary conditions, incarceration and more. yeah. and murdered in cold blood community shot are bound to the american weapons. so to understand the process, we have to begin to understand the root of the struggle and why $3.00 and $4.00 generations later we continue to struggle. yeah. and, and holly your a, palestinian from gaza. so this is not a historical event for you. a tool. it's affecting you right now. can you tell me about the current experience of displacement and whether what we witness thing is what some people are calling the not for to point are yes it is. this be is stuck in the sense that uh, what top happen to for the it does for you happening again it's, we're already living the displacement. so 4 days. but we haven't been learning it. uh for the past 5 years of my colleagues have mentioned the displacement on the unfortunately the apart system does have divided people's families, except for the 1st amount has been happening for mentally for the last years. but cnn garza has some sort of just let speeding up the process. so what's the impact? but that's where i'm going to more or less a, you know, best must be patient. unfortunately, patient fault also in the personal level, i finally have experience not about $48.00. when my grandparents worked from the city of much to look into the historical on his son, within the southern part for historical bi, spend to go as they were working under under really most horse increments process during the war. the brother of my grandpa house passed away in a very similar tragic way. my father and my sister were to during this jim sidle with talking gauze. my father refused to leave, but i saw despite the force displacement from both apartments on the ended up tying up the mountain church and casa, because the prevent took me to come from necessity from getting into the church. the past for something and my sister likes my drive to the oh, great uncle has passed away as she was working on the 24th of april, from the north of the cost on to, to the software that are seeking. i appreciate and right now, like my grandparents, my mother is 0 and kind of wondering whether she could be back to gone or not. yeah, holly and 1st of all i want to say my sincerest condolences for your loss and the loss of your family members. of course lot of growing number of people are aware of the occupation of the palestinian people. not all will be aware of the colonial roots of this struggle and how the current on so in gaza is connected to an ongoing process of ethnic cleansing or produce, seen a highly has this explain a. this is a map of palestine and 1917 and this is it today to understand how we got here. these are a few key moments you need to know before the british mandate and palestine. jews made up about 6 percent of the total population in 1917. the british empire pledge to establish a national home for the jewish people in palestine and the zionist movement. encouraged mass migration of jewish settlers, mainly from europe and between 19181947. the jewish population in palestine grew from 6 percent to 33 percent in 1947. the un adopted resolution 181 which calls for the partition of palestine into error into a states. but the post indians and surrounding area of countries rejected this proposal and then in 1948 more than 750000 palestinians were expelled from their homes in order to create the state of israel. this was called the next, but also known as a catastrophe. israel ended up occupying 78 percent of historic palestine, and the remaining 22 percent was divided into what's now occupied westbank and the besieged because of strep. but 1948 wasn't the only time passed. indians were displaced during the 6 day war. in 1967, 300000 more palestinians were displaced and israel officially occupied all of historical palestine. and then in the 1990s came the oslo accords, where the occupied westbank was divided into 3 parts. throughout the 90s, in 2000 israel continued to displace palestinians primarily through legal settlements and land groups. today with israel's latest war on cause of over a 1000000 palestinians have been displaced, many of them forced to flee several times in more than 35000 killed cause their homeland strength many posted in say the next, but still ongoing. honey, we're seeing a mass displacement of people. yes. again now in gaza with these released housing decide there are so called voluntary migration of palestinians called to re colonize garza. and of course this construction of these will thompson to sign or what relationship do you see between these historical events and what's happening right now? you should should be very clear. i think that the society and this really political, the leads never recognize my on the brains on grief and justice desktop into my to 40 to depaula studios in a sense when you live in an adult and denial and a complete justification of crimes such as the cleansing, there's really no uh room for why you would have to repeat that again. not only that the never really repented to recognize that brief mistake of 48, but for some office readable additions on historical society healthy re, it's mentioned over time. the fact that the palestinians are opposing democratic co challenge for the jewish estate. and if you want to, to extend just a brand new a certain hers were policy on certain, i think there are under the demography is a trauma for you boss. you have to get rid of this demography, the abundance of different ways of seeing this within 48. and the way to do with restriction or who you could marry a good luck if you, if you don't. and the other it come out to marry. if i'm a student from all our people from all like an off night, but it's the or something cause rational restriction to ensure that the fee is balanced enough for which, which is state to exist. and then on the option to do such as smoking and such as the day when during the war, the 1st thing there is really is especially in the right thing. but then as well think of is definitely cleansing again. i'd have to correct something, but there mention such a thing as a phone from the immigration from casa, there's nothing voluntary about this trying, but in terms of restructuring the city, including supposed going, possibles, i'm going to chargers quoting malls and then say, well do is this will enter immigration i for anyone who's leaving jobs up today, this far even big fees, believe golf or not. but i'm truly leaving to are forced to leave to happen, especially if people are my people are leaving because they need access to education of is are leaving because they need access to flip others are leaving to deliver their own babies because of necessity of life. does not exist and because of course many courtney, it's whole. let's take a look at a clip from darrin's film for the ha, based on the true story of a promising young girl who survived the not for of 1948. who is she pays it for next best devices. the and the didn't. what was it like showing this film to the 1948 survivors and also why did israel trying to bomb the film? when i chose to send to them? i was never has actually and, but i was really a concern to me about the everything in the same as, as a, as, as the them to. and they, they, they said to the friend of mine to the scenes. and they told me about the smallest details to me, that was huge because i have the c authorizing these people because they the documentation dependent. they said those would have been on what forgot that i always have using these people and i wanted them to see the system and to add to the news, this experience, this trauma that we had from them. yeah. so what's really important for me because the thing that has been traveling around the world, the wisdom, it's an eye opener a for the one, but also it, which was made for these people who live this and this advice, this on my heart, that by the way, this is one of the i, there is one symbol which is a universal representation of palestinian displacement. and right, so we're ton, a reminder of that commitment. so that homeland, not the key of course. can you tell us about this symbol? i think for our families it's one of the only material things that a lot of people did that proves that they were there. if that makes sense. um, i think about this a lot with my work as an artist because a lot of what i learned from our elders and our community members about what happened to them is passed to us or early and they don't have much left of their lives before. because they were forcibly displaced. so the symbol of the key, like my grandfather has his key to his house, hung up in his house with a little clock, but he made but says, this is the key to my house in palestine. it's one of the only like physical things left or keeping the culture alive and preserving memories of the homeland is important. so many palestinians not least accounts are a central zionist miss. the palestine was a barren land waiting to be populated. susan victor do. samuel, her debt energy de la bled a. betsy head us that fee, i guess the death, but it's going to be at the beach in duel had the blood cut up. but he, i do this to me it, oh, what about but this? i have bill a quarter to study over fee $30.00. i'll get back with the check today. it'll be due. so what, how to bundle oh i see. but that gives you all know what to do because, but he had a credit at the bus with hoffers on about the a to i, but it should be the it in the door. okay, let me take a look. see if this is you, you just get the b. i'd had to throw it off it did it did walk into the the, i don't believe or she sort of said that in i was struck watching this. um that does this attendance on one hand to preserve these beautiful addresses that eventually then turns into a museum of polish indian culture. how do you balance keeping the culture live with preserving it in the face of these attempts to erase it? i think by like this was one of the things that i really want at some point for driving fun. how i wanted to make the whole thing happen in the room. but then i changed my mind and they don't like the 1st 20 minutes. and the last part of this is happening outside because i wanted to show and to, to expose the phones the them, and claim that it was. and i'm with all the people for people develop a lot. they wanted to show and that on and the people and the culture and heritage and the colors and that she was and, and, and this is jan. this long pet is fine. and, and actually i think the scenes until today there are whole, very, very, very, very am careful how to, to present this, the phone. you have an artist, but every person, you know, i see them going into these. uh um i can sort of the thing, but the patient is trying to, there is or even see. yeah. so we see them teaching that children, but young about this and the best even though the language if it's more of the details. and so i think it's, it's our duty, i would responsibility to do this and what we're doing um, because i think that the experience today are showing the whole world how no matter how, how no matter how far we've all heard from the sign. we fight on said we said we will never forget. um and we will then we will keep finding until we, when. well, that was one things i wanted to ask you about. i was palestinians. and now this past all across the well you can find palestinians and not in america, australia, europe, america. * how do you preserve this culture to keep it alive when you are dispersed in so many different parts of the world? yeah, so it's like i was saying a lot of what happened. so it has been passed down to us or at least and everything that i've ever learned has been orally relate to me because in 1948 we were stripped of everything material and restricted from building any sort of power or coalition. even before that, under british colonialism, and it's important that we use what platforms and resources are skills that we have to document our stories and histories. because that's one of the only things that directly counters is really archive of records and institutions. they will do mainstream accepted narrative because they will take power and therefore by default legitimacy. and i think a large part of the shift and the global respect about palestine has been, for example, the internet. we've posted the insurance pictures and videos of what happens to us . and that's part of countering the occupations narrative. and the propaganda that they've been doing for a 100 years now. and also like when we look at the college protests in the us, for example, like a lot of the students, they're entering globally recognize the seemed institutions and their protesting of disrupting the spaces and talking about what's happening to us and this trends heads because they're in these recognize the seems institutions who resisting the cultural, erase that a cause through displacement is out the cool of much of promising in dyersburg culture, including in this song by palestinian american rafa. sammy should black, cold, 48 miles are on the east coast in a long time. come in, but i think it was indigenous honey, palestinian man austin, very poorly represented in the resistance to occupation and displacement. but many men will feel a responsibility to protect the families in times of crisis. do you feel that palestinian men misrepresented when we are misrepresented as the rest of the city? and so i'm, i'm not sure if in particular, if i was to your model number for presented by st. doris, i a, i'm assumption in the western world generally as the reporting of our plan. this usually is that main slic
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