Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist

Hello dear .. My name is Abdul Rahman Halas, married to the martyred journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My journalist wife works for the Watan News Agency and we had a beautiful child named Karam. The real disaster began on Wednesday, May 31, 2024, when my wife, my child and I were surprised by a huge missile that fell on us and exploded in the place where we were, targeting the house we fled to and other neighboring houses

Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist

. At that moment, my journalist wife Alaa hugged our child Karam to protect him from the hell of the missile, but she turned into pieces and died immediately. My child Karam and I miraculously escaped certain death when the pressure of the missile threw me a long distance, which resulted in me being injured by numerous shrapnel and multiple injuries that led to severe fractures in my leg and damage to the nerves in my hand and foot and various shrapnel in different parts of my body

Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist

. My wife is a journalist covering the crimes of genocide against defenseless civilians in the Gaza Strip. With the intensification of the bombing and the scarcity of food and water, my wife and I struggled daily to secure food for our only child Karam, who was also suffering from severe fear because of The brutal bombing of the Gaza Strip.

Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist
Hello Dear .. My Name Is Abdul Rahman Halas, Married To The Martyred Journalist Alaa Al-Dahdouh. My Journalist

Now after the disaster that befell my family, I need your generous support to overcome my ordeal and pay for my treatment and surgeries. I need several surgeries outside the Gaza Strip that cost a lot of money, and I am in dire need of your tears and support.

Donate to Help me save myself and my child Karam, organized by Abdul-Rahman Hellis
gofundme.com
Hello dear .. My name is Abdul Rahman Hilles from Gaza Palestine,, married … Abdul-Rahman Hellis needs your support for Help me save myself

I am confident that after reading my sad story, you will sympathize with me and share with me and will not leave me and my child Karam alone.

Donate to me or share my campaign with your friends to donate to me

No matter how small your donation is, it means to me a chance for me and my child to be treated and to stay safe.

More Posts from Theinformalsomnol and Others

3 months ago

I've been wondering if the photo IDs I add are any good since I don't really have a person to ask about them. If there's anything I can improve on with them please say so!

11 months ago
On This Land Day, We Sow Seeds Of Resistance ✊🏽

On this Land Day, we sow seeds of resistance ✊🏽

STARVATION IS THEIR WEAPON

CULTIVATION IS OURS

We are launching a campaign to revive Gaza's agricultural sector and restore local food systems.

Support us in the first stage as we plant seasonal vegetables, fruits, and leafy greens.

Donate here

Note: select Revive Gaza Farmland campaign from the list of options and from the dropdown list in the donation confirmation page.


Tags
1 year ago

A pro-Palestine Jew on tiktok asked those of us who were raised pro-Israel, what got us to change our minds on Palestine. I made a video to answer (with my voice, not my face), and a few people watched it and found some value in it. I'm putting this here too. I communicate through text better than voice.

So I feel repetitive for saying this at this point, but I grew up in the West Bank settlements. I wrote this post to give an example of the extent to which Palestinians are dehumanized there.

Where I live now, I meet Palestinians in day to day life. Israeli Arab citizens living their lives. In the West Bank, it was nothing like that. Over there, I only saw them through the electric fence, and the hostility between us and Palestinians was tangible.

When you're a child being brought into the situation, you don't experience the context, you don't experience the history, you don't know why they're hostile to you. You just feel "these people hate me, they don't want me to exist." And that bubble was my reality. So when I was taught in school that everything we did was in self defense, that our military is special and uniquely ethical because it's the only defensive military in the world - that made sense to me. It slotted neatly into the reality I knew.

One of the first things to burst the bubble for me was when I spoke to an old Israeli man and he was talking about his trauma from battle. I don't remember what he said, but it hit me wrong. It conflicted with the history as I understood it. So I was a bit desperate to make it make sense again, and I said, "But everything we did was in self defense, right?"

He kinda looked at me, couldn't understand at all why I was upset, and he went, "We destroyed whole villages. Of course we did. It was war, that's what you do."

And that casual "of course" stuck with me. I had to look into it more.

I couldn't look at more accurate history, and not at accounts by Palestinians, I was too primed against these sources to trust them. The community I grew up in had an anti-intellectual element to it where scholars weren't trusted about things like this.

So what really solidified this for me, was seeing Palestinian culture.

Because part of the story that Israel tells us to justify everything, is that Palestinians are not a distinct group of people, they're just Arabs. They belong to the nations around us. They insist on being here because they want to deny us a homeland. The Palestinian identity exists to hurt us. This, because the idea of displacing them and taking over their lands doesn't sound like stealing, if this was never theirs and they're only pretending because they want to deprive us.

But then foods, dances, clothing, embroidery, the Palestinian dialect. These things are history. They don't pop into existence just because you hate Jews and they're trying to move here. How gorgeous is the Palestinian thobe? How stunning is tatreez in general? And when I saw specific patterns belonging to different regions of Palestine?

All of these painted for me a rich shared life of a group of people, and countered the narrative that the Palestininian identity was fabricated to hurt us. It taught me that, whatever we call them, whatever they call themselves, they have a history in this land, they have a right to it, they have a connection to it that we can't override with our own.

I started having conversations with leftist friends. Confronting the fact that the borders of the occupied territories are arbitrary and every Israeli city was taken from them. In one of those conversations, I was encouraged to rethink how I imagine peace.

This also goes back to schooling. Because they drilled into us, we're the ones who want peace, they're the ones who keep fighting, they're just so dedicated to death and killing and they won't leave us alone.

In high school, we had a stadium event with a speaker who was telling us about a person who defected from Hamas, converted to Christianity and became a Shin Bet agent. Pretty sure you can read this in the book "Son of Hamas." A lot of my friends read the book, I didn't read it, I only know what I was told in that lecture. I guess they couldn't risk us missing out on the indoctrination if we chose not to read it.

One of the things they told us was how he thought, we've been fighting with them for so long, Israelis must have a culture around the glorification of violence. And he looked for that in music. He looked for songs about war. And for a while he just couldn't find any, but when he did, he translated it more fully, and he found out the song was about an end to wars. And this, according to the story as I was told it, was one of the things that convinced him. If you know know the current trending Israeli "war anthem," you know this flimsy reasoning doesn't work.

Back then, my friend encouraged me to think more critically about how we as Israelis envision peace, as the absence of resistance. And how self-centered it is. They can be suffering under our occupation, but as long as it doesn't reach us, that's called peace. So of course we want it and they don't.

Unless we're willing to work to change the situation entirely, our calls for peace are just "please stop fighting back against the harm we cause you."

In this video, Shlomo Yitzchak shares how he changed his mind. His story is much more interesting than mine, and he's much more eloquent telling it. He mentions how he was taught to fear Palestinians. An automatic thought, "If I go with you, you'll kill me." I was taught this too. I was taught that, if I'm in a taxi, I should be looking at the driver's name. And if that name is Arab, I should watch the road and the route he's taking, to be prepared in case he wants to take me somewhere to kill me. Just a random person trying to work. For years it stayed a habit, I'd automatically look at the driver's name. Even after knowing that I want to align myself with liberation, justice, and equality. It was a process of unlearning.

On October, not long after the current escalation of violence, I had to take a taxi again. A Jewish driver stopped and told me he'll take me, "so an Arab doesn't get you." Israeli Jews are so comfortable saying things like this to each other. My neighbors discussed a Palestinian employee, with one saying "We should tell him not to come anymore, that we want to hire a Jew." The second answered, "No, he'll say it's discrimination," like it would be so ridiculous of him. And the first just shrugged, "So we don't have to tell him why." They didn't go through with it, but they were so casual about this conversation.

In the Torah, we're told to treat those who are foreign to us well, because we know what it's like to be the foreigner. Fighting back against oppression is the natural human thing to do. We know it because we lived it. And as soon as I looked at things from this angle, it wasn't really a choice of what to support.


Tags
1 year ago

In case you lost it - a link to the eSIM donation guide. Even if you feel sick and powerless, you can at least do this. And even if you really, really can't donate, you can always at least share this and remind others.

https://gazaesims.com/esim-purchase-tutorial/


Tags
1 year ago

Important!

Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!
Important!

After Israeli social media shared these videos and they got viral, they tried claiming these men were hamas members, THEY ARE NOT. They're civilians who were displaced with their families in shelters before Israeli soldiers abducted them.

Families are recognizing their brothers/fathers/grandfathers and sons by the videos shared here. They already executed a number of them.

As a Palestinian, this is the most painful, horrifying thing I had to witness. 63 days of bombing, killing a huge number of these men's families, you also abduct them and humiliate them while filming??? How can they take pride in this. This is genocide, this is holocaust 2.0 and I hope it hunts everyone who can put an effort to stop it but didn't.


Tags
  • m1kas0ra
    m1kas0ra reblogged this · 3 days ago
  • leovaldeeeznuts
    leovaldeeeznuts reblogged this · 1 week ago
  • doctorwho221990
    doctorwho221990 reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • sketched-ink
    sketched-ink reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • iphigenia-wailing
    iphigenia-wailing reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • killjoycatlady
    killjoycatlady reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • reduxskullduggerry
    reduxskullduggerry reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • slippingtotheviod2
    slippingtotheviod2 reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • venetiantruths
    venetiantruths reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • petewentzisblack1312
    petewentzisblack1312 reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • publicenemynumberone
    publicenemynumberone reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • algor-mo4tis
    algor-mo4tis reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • irlcharliekelmeckis4
    irlcharliekelmeckis4 liked this · 1 month ago
  • mar1n3tt3
    mar1n3tt3 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • mar1n3tt3
    mar1n3tt3 liked this · 1 month ago
  • slippingtotheviod2
    slippingtotheviod2 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • evensquirrellier
    evensquirrellier reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • evensquirrellier
    evensquirrellier liked this · 1 month ago
  • iphigenia-wailing
    iphigenia-wailing reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • petewentzisblack1312
    petewentzisblack1312 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • claramemesbadly
    claramemesbadly reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • eyeso0
    eyeso0 liked this · 1 month ago
  • treesbian
    treesbian reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • edgymcfries
    edgymcfries reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • tigersharksaolo111
    tigersharksaolo111 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • tigersharksaolo111
    tigersharksaolo111 liked this · 1 month ago
  • edgymcfries
    edgymcfries liked this · 1 month ago
  • fizzlerain
    fizzlerain reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • chiuihatemylife
    chiuihatemylife liked this · 1 month ago
  • kitabasis
    kitabasis reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • crtscreen
    crtscreen reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • noblegasxenon
    noblegasxenon reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • athena-the-undestructible
    athena-the-undestructible reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • reddbuster
    reddbuster reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • joblesstuesdayy
    joblesstuesdayy liked this · 2 months ago
  • wren-loves-plants
    wren-loves-plants reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • spiceynoodles606
    spiceynoodles606 reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • moon-soups
    moon-soups reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • 0rangecreamsicle
    0rangecreamsicle liked this · 2 months ago
  • theevilestvillainofthemall
    theevilestvillainofthemall reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • sunshine-moonshine12
    sunshine-moonshine12 liked this · 2 months ago
  • cauli-flawa
    cauli-flawa reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • wren-loves-plants
    wren-loves-plants reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • neon-draws-sometimes
    neon-draws-sometimes reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • sister-lucifer
    sister-lucifer reblogged this · 2 months ago
  • huntersulamaka
    huntersulamaka reblogged this · 3 months ago
theinformalsomnol - I like the funny robot game
I like the funny robot game

Tired Guy draws the Funny Robot(s) (and more now!) (pretty sure this is a multifandom page now, sorry people here for exclusively one thing) | he/they I think idk I'm too busy to find out | no reposting | not a minor

127 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags