🇵🇸 #Repost @palestinianyouthmovement with @use.repost ・・・ Demolitions on villages and water wells in Masafer Yatta have been ongoing for the past week, and further attempted expulsions are anticipated in the coming days and weeks. The people of Masafer Yatta are under direct attack as Israel attempts to seize their land to use as military training grounds. Swipe to read about the current situation, and help to keep #AllEyesOnMasaferYatta. Follow @youthofsumud and @masaferyatta for updates on the ground. #DefendMasaferYatta #OngoingNakba #FreePalestine #masaferyatta #humanrights #israeliapartheid #israel #israelicrimes #palestine #falastin #palestine🇵🇸 #anticolonialism #ethniccleansing #crimesagainsthumanity #jewsagainstzionism #jewsagainstapartheid #jewsforpalestine @humanrightswatch @humanrightscouncil @councilofeurope_humanrights https://www.instagram.com/p/CnPXWvTus5h/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
https://t.co/WXsMqpotCs@Nexo_Latino @NICOLASMADURO
¿Será algún día juzgado @Israel por sus violaciones contra #Palestina?🔗https://t.co/36rnkPsJRY🔗https://t.co/XBUbNyblI2 #GazaGenocide #IsraeliCrimes pic.twitter.com/IDYORwRU8E@JOEBIDEN🇮🇱🇺🇸🦎@NATO @ONU_es🔥💥@netanyahu pic.twitter.com/c2WzPGgKvJ
This bright young man, Omar Manna, was murdered by occupation forces during an IOF shooting spree near Bethlehem. He’s one of at least 212 Palestinians murdered by the IOF this year. And US tax dollars helped fund his execution. #Repost @theimeu with @use.repost ・・・ Omar Manna was a young baker from a neighborhood near the Palestinian city of Bethlehem. This morning, heavily-armed Israeli soldiers invaded his neighborhood where they began shooting at residents, killing Omar and wounding six others. Israel has killed at least 212 Palestinians killed so far this year, and Omar is the 15th Palestinian killed by Israeli soldiers in the last two weeks alone. The Israeli military is killing Palestinians like Omar on a daily basis—yet the US continues to send the Israeli military nearly $4 billion every single year. Video: Maha Hussein via Twitter #freepalestine #israelioccupation #israel #palestine #jewsagainstzionism #omarmanna #humanrights #usmilitary #uspolitics #apartheidisrael #jewsforpalestine #zionism #racism #colonialism #usforeignpolicy #israelicrimes #palestinewillbefree #zionismistreyf https://www.instagram.com/p/Cl1oj67OW1g/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Christian Zionism emerged as a distinct movement during the 19th century, although its theological roots can be traced back to earlier times.The origins of Christian Zionism can be found in the 16th and 17th centuries when various Protestant theologians, such as John Bale and Thomas Brightman, interpreted biblical passages to suggest a future restoration of the Jews to Israel. They believed that the fulfillment of these prophecies would occur before the Second Coming of Christ and saw the return of the Jews to the Holy Land as a necessary precursor to the end times.In the 19th century, the interest in biblical prophecy and the restoration of Israel gained momentum among Protestant Christians, primarily in Europe and North America. This coincided with the rise of the Zionist movement among Jewish intellectuals and activists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.Many Christian theologians, preachers, and organizations like the British and Foreign Bible Society and the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews actively supported the idea of a Jewish return to their ancestral homeland. They viewed it as the fulfillment of biblical prophecy and a necessary condition for the return of Christ.Key figures in the early Christian Zionist movement include William Hechler, a British clergyman who was a close confidant of Theodor Herzl, the founder of modern political Zionism. Hechler's theological beliefs were influential in shaping Herzl's ideas about the Jewish return to Israel.Christian Zionism also gained significant support amongst American evangelicals, especially during the 19th and 20th centuries. Evangelical leaders like John Nelson Darby, a prominent dispensationalist theologian, and Cyrus I. Scofield, who popularized dispensationalism through his widely read Scofield Reference Bible, played a crucial role in promoting the idea of a Jewish restoration to the Holy Land as a fulfillment of biblical prophecy.Dispensationalists emphasize the literal interpretation of biblical prophecy, including the belief in a future literal return of Jesus Christ to establish a physical kingdom on earth. They also distinguish between God's plan for Israel and the Church, seeing them as distinct entities with different purposes.Dispensationalists believe that there will be a future period, typically known as the "Great Tribulation," during which many Jewish people will come to faith in Jesus as the Messiah. They anticipate a significant ingathering of Jewish people to the Christian faith.