Saturday, August 14, 2010

Sderot: for Second Class citizens useful for schmaltzy Israeli propaganda

The dregs of Israeli citizens - often newly arrived immigrants from Russian criminal prisons or other non White 'pure' with their brand new passports for the land of 'democracy for Jews', along with citizen-less Arab collaborators - are housed in Sderot. It's is mandatory that these residents are paraded before ALL foreign visitors and dignitaries to show the damage from the Gaza 'missiles' that occasionally hit a building.

It's on the same tour as the exceedingly profitable holocaust industry extraction building.

Amplify’d from levantnotes.blogspot.com

30 October 2007









Sderot - Sacrifice a Few Immigrants for The Cause?






Let's get these deadly Palestinian rocket attacks into perspective.

Israel has a policy of establishing front-line, development towns where brave, courageous Israeli colonists can confront the 'Arab Peril'.
Sderot is one such.
It was set up as a front-line town, and it gets attacked, as it was planned to be. That's why Sderot's population is half recent Russian immigrant, and half Sephardi (Moroccan and Persian Jews). Not a brave Ashkenazi or Sabra in sight
Sderot is useful as a subject for schmaltzy Israeli propaganda:


- The undeveloped Arab town of Beit Hanoun to the left, with its tiny peasant fields around.
- The New Town of Sderot, paid for by contributions by (mostly) American Jews or the US Government.
The first inhabitants of Sderot arrived in 1951 to what was then known as the Gevim-Dorot transit camp. Most of these residents were Kurdish and Persian refugees who lived in tents and shacks before building permanent structures almost four years later in 1954. In the 1961 census, the percentage of North African immigrants, mostly from Morocco, was 87% in the town, whilst another 11% of the residents were immigrants from Kurdistan. In the 1950s, the city continued to absorb a large number of immigrants from Morocco and Romania, and was declared a local council in 1958.

In the 1990s Sderot again absorbed a large immigrant population from the former USSR, and doubled its population in this decade. In 1996 it was declared a city. According to CBS, in 2001 there were 9,500 males and 9,700 females (about half the population of its Palestinian twin, Beit Hanoun)
How would you feel if a bunch of Russian immigrants were dumped in a brand-new town just a mile across an uncrossable border within your own homeland, and given huge subsidies as 'Jewish' immigrants, while you were left to rot in a prison?
Read more at levantnotes.blogspot.com
 

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