Western Champions of Hamas Death-Cult
"We, the undersigned, residing in so-called Canada, urge Canadian leaders...""[The expulsion of Ontario's NDP MPP Sarah Jama] exposes the bankrupt situational morality of Canadian politics in a settler colonial country that can only but support white settler politics elsewhere as the condition of its own existence."Partial contents of letter"What kind of organization would carry out such hideous violence against such obviously innocent people, and do it in the most cruel and odious manner and then willingly publicize it for all the world to see?""This is evil in its purest form, and that evil must be defeated."Canadian Federal Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre
Hamas shared a photo of a terrorist kidnapping a bloodied victim near the Gaza Strip. |
Dozens of Canadian academics and organizations signed a letter that denies Israeli women were 'sexually violated' by Hamas terrorists on that fateful day of October 7. Samantha Person, director of the University of Alberta's sexual-assault centre signed that letter among others, and was duly fired. The denial of video evidence of sexual violence committed by Hamas is a message so twisted it cannot be countenanced. Decency forbids it, even as committed antisemites celebrate it as just desserts.
"I unequivocally agree with the University of Alberta's decision to dismiss the director. All spaces, including university campuses, need to be safe for all.""Antisemitism of any kind must not be tolerated."Alberta Premier Danielle Smith
Yet that letter was endorsed by 41 organizations and 18 individuals from the "research community", and 30 from "civil society". Four from University of Alberta; a full professor in education; two assistant lecturers, one of whom is in women's and gender studies; and a post-doctoral researcher. According to the body of the letter, all Canadian political parties "dehumanize Palestinians, facilitating Israeli-led genocide against them".
Politicians who fail to demand an immediate ceasefire, must resign, according to the document. Israel released a one-minute, 28-second video of two young women desperately attempting to escape from an armed man in black, wearing the green Hamas headband. Edited together from security camera footage at Kibbutz Alumim, a collective farm of some 120 families located about a kilometre from the border with Gaza.
Attendees scatter as violence breaks out at the festival. |
The kibbutz is almost adjacent to the site of the Re'im music festival where Hamas operatives, some arriving by paraglider, slaughtered at least 364 young people from dawn onward. It was at this kibbutz that a gathering point had been conceived to receive festival survivors -- before it, too, was stormed shortly after 7:00 a.m. by Hamas terrorists. In the video shocked escapees gather at the compound's front gate. One woman sits on a curb, another comforts her.
Eight minutes later they all scramble at the sight of Hamas terrorists running to the gate with raised weapons. One of the terrorists breaks into a run toward two women, slower than the others as the group scatters in panic. Ten seconds on, the terrorist grabs a woman dressed in a flowing black skirt, grabbing her by her hair; a puff is seen, and she drops, dead. The second woman a few metres from the terrorist drops to the ground begging for her life.
The terrorist turns his attention briefly to aim several shots at others running away, then shoots the pleading women crouching before him in the head. Dozens who escaped the first massacres at the music festival were murdered along the roads or in neighbouring communities where they fled to find shelter. Dashcam videos from Oz Davidian, a farmer living nearby, circulated last week, informing the world that he rescued over a hundred survivors from the festival grounds, speeding through Hamas-held areas, picking up people in over a dozen trips back and forth at risk of his own life.
At one point, Davidian drove by a group of people he thought were Israeli paramedics and soldiers but were actually terrorists. |
That day of October 7, the Hamas terrorists had virtually unchallenged control of Route 232, large sections of Israel's southwestern highway. A lengthy stretch of roadway strewn with abandoned and burnt vehicles and dead bodies are seen from the footage from Davidian's truck. "You see piles of corpses on top of each other, as if they were together and had just been slaughtered" explained Davidian in translated narration.
One of the people he rescued thought he was a member of the Israeli security agency Shin Bet because of his remarkable actions amid the carnage. |
Kibbutz Alumim's fate was not as dreadful as Kibbutz Be'eri, almost destroyed. Its small security force co-ordinated an impromptu defence of the compound until the Israeli Defense Forces arrived just after midnight. Hamas massacred nine Thai workers and ten Nepali student labourers at Kibbutz Alumim. It is now evacuated, with a skeleton crew left to maintain the dairy herd.
A week following the invasion, barns were still smouldering from Hamas-set fires. Yet despite the carnage, and the evidence of sadistic violence in the rape and murder of 1,200 innocent civilians, the hostage-taking of 240 children, elderly, infirm, and soldiers, the world of academia and unions in Canada turns its back and revels in their version of events; the victory of 'resistance'.
The massacres were praised as "Palestinian anticolonial resistance" by University of Toronto professor and 'decolonization' expert Uahikea Maile. As for Kibbutz Alumim, its ownership of the land on which it sits predates the 1948 State of Israel. The land was bought from Arab landowners by the Jewish National Fund during the British era of control. It sits geographically in land designated Jewish in the UN original Partition plan.
Israeli farmer Oz Davidian (right) rescued about 120 survivors of the Hamas massacre at a music festival by driving back and forth to pick up as many people as he could while being shot at by the terrorists. |
Labels: Deaths, Hamas Butchery in Israel, Kibbutzim, Music Festival, Unions, United for 'Palestine', Western Academics
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