User:Tiamut: Difference between revisions
Black Kite (talk | contribs) m Protected User:Tiamut: Excessive vandalism ([edit=autoconfirmed] (expires 10:16, 29 January 2011 (UTC)) [move=autoconfirmed] (expires 10:16, 29 January 2011 (UTC))) |
no more silence for gaza & deleting some old drama |
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{{User:Tiamut/Header}} |
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<center><big>We see things not as they are, but as we are.</big></center> |
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The Prison Cell<br> |
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<center><small>[[H.M. Tomlinson]]</small></center> |
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It is possible... |
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<center>[http://www.counterpunch.org/barber06082010.html An Eye for an Eye]</center> |
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It is possible at least sometimes... |
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It is possible especially now<br> |
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To ride a horse<br> |
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Inside a prison cell<br> |
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And run away...<br> |
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It is possible for prison walls<br> |
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To disappear,<br> |
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For the cell to become a distant land<br> |
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Without frontiers:<br> |
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-What did you do with the walls?<br> |
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-I gave them back to the rocks.<br> |
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-And what did you do with the ceiling?<br> |
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-I turned it into a saddle.<br> |
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-And your chain?<br> |
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-I turned it into a pencil.<br> |
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The prison guard got angry.<br> |
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He put an end to my dialogue.<br> |
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He said he didn't care for poetry,<br> |
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And bolted the door of my cell.<br> |
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He came back to see me<br> |
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In the morning,<br> |
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He shouted at me:<br> |
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-Where did all this water come from?<br> |
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-I brought it from the [[Nile]].<br> |
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-And the trees?<br> |
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-From the orchards of [[Damascus]].<br> |
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-And the music?<br> |
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-From my heartbeat.<br> |
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The prison guard got mad;<br> |
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He put an end to my dialogue.<br> |
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He said he didn't like my poetry,<br> |
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And bolted the door of my cell.<br> |
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But he returned in the evening:<br> |
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-Where did this moon come from?<br> |
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-From the nights of [[Baghdad]].<br> |
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-And the wine?<br> |
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-From the vineyards of [[Algiers]].<br> |
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-And this freedom?<br> |
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-From the chain you tied me with last night.<br> |
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The prison guard grew so sad... |
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He begged me to give him back<br> |
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His freedom."<br></i></big> |
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</small>-Poems by [[Mahmoud Darwish]]</small> |
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*[[2006]] Former U.S. President [[Jimmy Carter]] releases his book, [[Palestine Peace Not Apartheid]]. |
*[[2006]] Former U.S. President [[Jimmy Carter]] releases his book, [[Palestine Peace Not Apartheid]]. |
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==Blocks== |
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I was blocked four times for [[Wikipedia:3RR]] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ALog&type=block&user=&page=User%3ATiamut&year=&month=-1] between February and September 2007. The first three blocks were a result of reports filed by [[User:Isarig]], who was edit-warring with me at the time, escaped sanction himself, [[Wikipedia:VANISH|vanished]] and then reappeared as [[User:NoCal100]], with a series of sockpuppets. The fourth block was based on a report I filed against [[User:Egyegy]], now banned for being a sockpuppet of [[User:Zerida]]. I though I had since learned not to be baited into edit wars, and to breathe and pause before restoring relevant, reliably sourced material deleted without much consideration for its usefulness. But I got blocked again in 2010 for forgetting that. Reminder to self and others: practically nothing disappears from Wikipedia's article history pages, so a little patience, discussion and perseverance usually allow for wrongs to be righted in due time. |
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===copied from a post by G-Dett at the [[Allegations of Israeli apartheid]] page (once named [[Israeli apartheid]] and currently named [[Israel and the apartheid analogy]])=== |
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"You are sad," the Knight said in an anxious tone: "let me sing you a song to comfort you.... The name of the song is called 'Haddocks' Eyes.'" |
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"Oh, that's the name of the song, is it?" Alice said, trying to feel interested. |
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"No, you don't understand," the Knight said, looking a little vexed. "That's what the name is called. The name really is 'The Aged Aged Man.'" |
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"Then I ought to have said, 'That's what the song is called'?" Alice corrected herself. |
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"No, you oughtn't: that's another thing. The song is called 'Ways and Means': but that's only what it's called, you know!" |
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"Well, what is the song, then?" said Alice, who was by this time completely bewildered. |
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"I was coming to that," the Knight said. "The song really is 'A sitting on a Gate': and the tune's my own invention." |
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Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass. |
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--G-Dett 22:10, 17 March 2007 (UTC) |
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Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Allegations_of_Israeli_apartheid" |
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And on that note, you should check this out: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Coroebus/Pallywood/Allegations_of_Israeli_Apartheid] |
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'''part two of my message to {{user|Abu ali}} and to all of you at Wikipedia who have felt the wrath of those seeking to censor the truth, no matter how much evidence you put in front of them, no matter how hard you try''' |
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{{Quotation|I don't know if you're Palestinian (''you here''). But I know that as a fellow human being, you share my pain at the state of the world. And I share yours. That's what moves me to write. My love for all people which begins with love for myself, then my neighbours, my people, and expands outward from there, everywhere. And if that's wrong, if passion is forbidden, and free-thought is dead, then let me die with them. For then, there is nothing in the world left to live for. [[User:Tiamut|Tiamut]] 20:54, 2 March 2007 (UTC) (Ahhh, the melodrama of our "Orient". Obviously passion and free-thought continue to live, and death is hopefully still way way off in the future. No need to worry, not planning anything crazy. Just thought I would clarify since once I read about this Palestinian guy at a University in Montreal that said he "was going to be famous one day", and the Zionist he was arguing with started shouting "So, you want to join Hamas?" assuming that he meant he wanted to become a suicide bomber. He was charged with making death threats, though the case was eventually dismissed after one of the witnesses admitted to writing both witness statements that were used against him and which were in fact identical. I know it sounds "conspiratorial", but it is actually true: [http://www.theconcordian.com/news/2003/03/19/News/Sphr-Member.Arrested.On.Campus-395043.shtml][http://www.montrealmuslimnews.net/nidal.htm][https://masses.tao.ca/pipermail/act-mtl/2004-June/000456.html] [[User:Tiamut|Tiamut]] 21:09, 2 March 2007 (UTC))}} |
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To all the truth-seekers and freedom-lovers out there: Keep up the good fight. [[User:Tiamut|Tiamut]] 04:20, 3 March 2007 (UTC) |
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==Things deleted from articles that I wish we could keep (if only I had a [[Wikipedia:RS]])== |
==Things deleted from articles that I wish we could keep (if only I had a [[Wikipedia:RS]])== |
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[[Kudna]]: The area was populated by the Shadfan family, who were forced to flee during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. All that remains of the Shadfan family is an old water well (that is said to have a special ability to cause women who drink from it to give birth to boys, rather than girls), a few ancient ruins (including a rock-made device for crushing olives), the remains of a fence, and their family cemetery. |
[[Kudna]]: The area was populated by the Shadfan family, who were forced to flee during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. All that remains of the Shadfan family is an old water well (that is said to have a special ability to cause women who drink from it to give birth to boys, rather than girls), a few ancient ruins (including a rock-made device for crushing olives), the remains of a fence, and their family cemetery. |
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==Once I gave up because== |
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The DYK showcase for a perfectly legitimate article under a perfectly legitimate name ([[Lydda Death March]]) was totally sabotaged. Out of process page moves, edit-warring, disgusting behaviour all around, and no one did anything to stop it. |
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Now I'm back ... because though the accurate naming of things is important to the exchange of information, the inverse also holds true, and as an information junkie - both a dealer and a user - I can't give up my fix. |
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==References== |
==References== |
Latest revision as of 20:12, 2 May 2021
The Prison Cell
It is possible...
It is possible at least sometimes...
It is possible especially now
To ride a horse
Inside a prison cell
And run away...
It is possible for prison walls
To disappear,
For the cell to become a distant land
Without frontiers:
-What did you do with the walls?
-I gave them back to the rocks.
-And what did you do with the ceiling?
-I turned it into a saddle.
-And your chain?
-I turned it into a pencil.
The prison guard got angry.
He put an end to my dialogue.
He said he didn't care for poetry,
And bolted the door of my cell.
He came back to see me
In the morning,
He shouted at me:
-Where did all this water come from?
-I brought it from the Nile.
-And the trees?
-From the orchards of Damascus.
-And the music?
-From my heartbeat.
The prison guard got mad;
He put an end to my dialogue.
He said he didn't like my poetry,
And bolted the door of my cell.
But he returned in the evening:
-Where did this moon come from?
-From the nights of Baghdad.
-And the wine?
-From the vineyards of Algiers.
-And this freedom?
-From the chain you tied me with last night.
The prison guard grew so sad...
He begged me to give him back
His freedom."
-Poems by Mahmoud Darwish
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why i joined wikipedia
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some sounds of my city
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N — new article For a running log of articles to which I feel I contribute, see this contributions subpage. Below, a summary of the work of which I am most proud. people: Tawfiq CanaanN ? | May ZiadeN | Mavia (queen)? | Faris OdehN places: Sharafat, East JerusalemN ? Jacob's WellN ? co-nom | Hittin? co-nom | Lajjun? co-nom |YaloN ? | Saffuriya | Jib (village)N| Nablus holy stuff: Greek Orthodox Church of the AnnunciationN ? | Mary's WellN | White MosqueN ? | AphecaN ? | Al-Aqsa Mosque | Nabi Musa | Thursday of the DeadN ? | Al-Azhar Mosque? near east: QedaritesN | Q-D-SN ? |Syro-Palestinian archaeologyN ? all things palestinian: Palestinian people | Palestinian fedayeen | Palestinian prisoners in Israel | Palestine | Postal history of Palestine | Place names in PalestineN ? | Palestinian costumes | Palestinian handicraftsN | Palestinian potteryN | Nabulsi soapN ? | Hebron glassN ? | Land Day | SumudN ? and more: Hafrada (strangely deleted during my absence, you can see it at User:Tiamut/Hafrada)| AtaabaN ? | Meleke
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a poem i originally posted at abu ali's talk page (though it's wikilinks continue to morph into new forms) I mean, how could we? How dare we?
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Some of the hooks from my DYKs for your reading pleasure
- ...that Tawfiq Canaan, a Palestinian physician and medical pioneer, was also known for his research on Palestinian popular heritage?
- ...that Theodosios (Hanna) of Sebastia is the second Palestinian Archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Jerusalem?
- ...that Aramaean treaty-making in the first millenium BCE, as documented in the Sefire inscriptions, included loyalty oaths that invoked magical rites with curses to befall any violators?
- ...that the Defense (Emergency) Regulations first enacted in British Mandate Palestine in 1945 were incorporated into Israel's domestic legislation in 1948 and remain in force to this day?
- ...that at the time of Roman rule in Palestine, the village of Um ar-Rehan, now located in the Barta'a enclave of the Seam Zone, held a hundred houses, a road system and a Roman bathhouse?
- ...that according to Greek mythology, Adonis was slain by a boar at the foot of the waterfall in Apheca in modern-day Lebanon?
- ...that the White Mosque is the oldest mosque in Nazareth?
- ...that Thursday of the Dead is a springtime feast day shared by Muslims and Christians in the Levant that involves colouring eggs, visiting the cemetery and distributing food to the poor?
- ...that the liwan, a long narrow-fronted hall or vaulted portal often open to the outside, has been a feature of Levantine homes for more than 2,000 years?
- ...that "Palestinian archaeology" can refer to a field of archaeological inquiry known as Syro-Palestinian archaeology, and more recently, to archaeological research conducted by Palestinians themselves?
- ...that since as early as the 10th century, Nabulsi soap, a traditional olive oil-based soap, has been exported across the Arab world and even to Europe?
- ...that Mavia was an Arab queen who in 378 AD personally led her troops out of southern Syria in revolt against Roman rule?
- ...that Moses, the first Arab Orthodox bishop, administered his duties while journeying with a nomadic confederation of Arabs in the fourth century?
- ...that the Hebron glass industry goes back to at least the thirteenth century?
- ...that the olive tree is the ultimate symbol of sumud, a key ideological theme among Palestinians since the 1967 war?
- ...that the village of Anasartha, located in Western Syria and today known as Khanasser, derived its water supply until 1975 from a 12-kilometre long Byzantine-era qanat?
- ... that Yalo, a Palestinian Arab village depopulated during the 1967 war, was identified by Edward Robinson as the site of the Canaanite-era city of Aijalon?
- ...that al-Karmil, an Arabic language newspaper first published in Haifa in 1908, was founded with the express purpose of "opposing Zionist colonization"?
- ...that Tarab Abdul Hadi co-founded the first Palestinian women's organization in 1929?
- ...that the ataaba is a traditional Arabic music form in which oral folk poetry is melodically improvised by a solo vocalist?
- ... that most of the place names in Palestine are Arabised words with ancient Semitic roots that were preserved by the local indigenous population, facilitating their identification with biblical sites?
- ...that the Semitic triliteral Q-D-S meaning "holy" has been used in ancient and modern Semitic languages since at least the 3rd millenium BCE?
- ...that K-B-D, a triliteral root meaning "heavy" that is common to all Semitic languages, appears in the Old Testament 376 times?
- ... that Jacob's Well (pictured) in Nablus is a site associated with Jacob in Jewish, Samaritan, Christian and Muslim tradition?
- ... that during the Crusader era in Palestine, the village of Kafr Lam (fortress pictured) was sold to the Hospitallers by the lord of Caesarea for 16,000 besants?
co-nominations
- ...that local legend in Lajjun, a district center in Palestine under the Abbasids, held that the spring that served as its primary water source sprang from a stone after Abraham struck it with his staff?
- ...that Hittin was a Palestinian village located near the site of the Battle of Hattin, where Saladin (pictured) defeated the Crusaders in 1187?
- ...that during the Crusader era in Palestine, the village of Kafr Lam (pictured) was sold to the Hospitallers by the lord of Caesarea for 16,000 besants?
- ...that Jacob's Well (pictured) in Nablus is a site associated with Jacob in Jewish, Samaritan, Christian and Muslim tradition?
nominations of the work of others
- ... that Nabi Shu'ayb, Arabic for "the Prophet Jethro", is used in English to refer to the site where Druze tradition holds he was buried?
Israeli Apartheid: A Chronology |
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Things deleted from articles that I wish we could keep (if only I had a Wikipedia:RS)
Kudna: The area was populated by the Shadfan family, who were forced to flee during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. All that remains of the Shadfan family is an old water well (that is said to have a special ability to cause women who drink from it to give birth to boys, rather than girls), a few ancient ruins (including a rock-made device for crushing olives), the remains of a fence, and their family cemetery.
References
- ^ Uri Davis (2004). "2". Apartheid Israel:Possibilities for the Struggle Within. Zed Books. ISBN 1842773399.
{{cite book}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|1=
(help) - ^ a b Farsakh, Leila. "Israel an apartheid state?", Le Monde diplomatique, November 2003
- ^ Ben Rafael, Eliezer (2002). Jewish Identities: Fifty Intellectuals Answer Ben Gurion. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 144. ISBN 9004125353.
- ^ a b McGreal, Chris. "Worlds apart", The Guardian, February 6, 2006.
- ^ "Israel Land Administration: General Info". Government of Israel.
- ^ Selfa, Lance (2002). "5". The Struggle for Palestine. Haymarket Books. pp. pp 76-7. ISBN 1931859000.
{{cite book}}
:|pages=
has extra text (help) - ^ Press Release SC/7895, UN Security Council, 14 October 2003
- ^ Adam, Heribert & Moodley, Kogila. op. cit. p. 23.
- Wikipedians interested in the State of Palestine
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- WikiProject Outlines participants
- Wikipedia good article contributors
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