
Welcome to the Palestinian Holocaust Museum. These are just some of the over 200 Palestinian children killed by Israel in little more than a week.
Name of martyr: Dena Ba’losha
Age: 4 years old
Date of Death: Mon., 29/12/2008
Place of Death: Inside her home, Jabaliya refugee camp, northern Gaza.
Weapon Type: Air-to-ground missile.
Cause of Death: Killed in her home, as well as her other young 4 sisters, by rubble falling through the roof
Details of the last hours: Dena was inside her house with her other 4 young sisters: 8-year Jawaher, 12-year Samer, 14-year Ekram, and 17-year Tahreer Anwar Ba’losha, when their house was hit by an air strike in Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza, while three other young children were killed when a bomb struck their house in Rafah.

Name of martyress: Iman Hijo
Age: 4 Months Old
Date of murder: May 07, 2001
Place of murder: At her grandmother’s house in Khan Yunis Refugee Camp
Weapon used: Israeli Tank
Details of the last hours: Suzanne Hijo, Iman’s mother, hastened on to the street with her three children, Dina (6 years), Mahmoud (18 months), and Iman. She was trying to escape a sudden Israeli attack on the grandmother’s house. A tank shell ripped through the wall next to the front gate. Small fragments of shrapnel sliced into Iman’s body, killing her almost instantly. Her mother, brother, and sister were severely wounded. “There was blood everywhere here,” said Rocha Hijo, Iman’s 15-year-old aunt, scuffing her foot on the floor. The shell’s fragments went through Iman’s back and dispersed parts of her body in the street and on the walls of the house.
Belongings: Suzanne Hijo said, “Until now, her toys are still all in place... Her lollipop, her bed, her clothes - all are in the same place.”

Name: Lama, Haya Talal Hamdan
Age: 4, and 11 years old
Date of Death: Tue, 30/12/2008
Place of Death: Biet Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip
Weapon Type: Air-to-ground missile
Details of the last hours: an Israeli drone plane fired a missile at a donkey cart the girls were riding in the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Lahiya, killing them immediately.

Name of martyr: Na’el Zohair Abu-`Oun
Age: 13 years old
Date of murder: March 1, 2008
Place of murder: Eastern Jabalyah camp, northern Gaza Strip
Weapon used: Air-to-ground missiles from an Israeli reconnaissance plane
Details of the last hours: The situation in Gaza went from bad to worse as the Israeli military operations continued to target the area. Na’el’s school had to close its doors to protect the lives of its students.
Curious, 13-year-old Na’el and six of his schoolmates went out of school and walked to the nearest place where clashes between Palestinian freedom fighters and Israeli forces were under way. As the children were attentively watching, an Israeli reconnaissance plane fired a missile toward them. Na’el and two of his friends were killed on the spot. The other four children were seriously injured.
Hobbies during lifetime: Drawing and swimming
Dreams martyr once had: Na’el dreamed of being a lawyer like his father. He was eager to finish school and become a law student before he died.
This should have been a newslink.
Here’s the link:
http://www.kabobfest.com/2009/01/palestinian-holocaust-museum.html
Thank you for doing what you do - checking the originality of materials here that pose as articles.
These attempts are dishonest, (especially that submitted materials are total rip-offs), trying to make us readers believe that contributors are as prolific as they appear to be.
You might want to trash next time the rip-offs that you confirm.
This is an outright lie. Please, cite me one article I have written that is plagiarized.
I can’t believe you would so blatantly lie, you have not called me out on anything because there is nothing to be called out on. This is the first article you have every said is not my work, and I have cited a link to the original source, which is not Kabobfest but IslamOnline.
Please, provide the proof.
Your comment is nothing but a smear. I cannot believe the audacity of your lie. It’s one thing to say I have plagiarized, a few articles, but then to say I have plagiarized most!
You don’t like that I am pro-Palestinians are you’re trying to undermine me.
Provide the ”plagiarized articles” and your comments calling me out on them, otherwise: go fuck yourself!
I visited Kabobfest and noticed their post. I then clicked to the link they provided to IslamOnline.
I was going to copy a few pictures and stories from IslamOnline, but I had trouble copying their photos.
So instead I relied on those on Kabobfest, which are easy to copy and post. Thus I just happened to use IslamOnline information through Kabobfest rather than IslamOnline directly.
It would have been plagiarism if I did not provide a link to IslamOnline, but I did.
In hindsight, since I happened to use the same ones that Kabobfest, I should have provided a link to them as well as a second source. But my failure to do so does not constitute plagiarism, but, rather, at worst, it’s sloppiness.
But just because I choose to quote the same information that someone else did from a primary source, does not mean I have to cite the secondary source. Journalists re-quote all the time, the provide the primary not the secondary source as citation.
Second, this is not an opinion post. It’’s just information. I did not give my opinion in this post. I provided an introduction, that’s all.
Finally, I read my comments. I can’t believe your lies. Please, please, post these comments you say you have posted and post the accompanying articles.
I have already asked you twice to do this if you have proof, and you have the temerity to then ask me if you should do so. Go ahead, cite your proof. The only reason you have not is that there is nothing to prove. So there!
I visited Kabobfest and noticed their post. I then clicked to the link they provided to IslamOnline.
I was going to copy a few pictures and stories from IslamOnline, but I had trouble copying their photos.
So instead I relied on those on Kabobfest, which are easy to copy and post. Thus I just happened to use IslamOnline information through Kabobfest rather than IslamOnline directly.
It would have been plagiarism if I did not provide a link to IslamOnline, but I did.
In hindsight, since I happened to use the same ones that Kabobfest, I should have provided a link to them as well as a second source. But my failure to do so does not constitute plagiarism, but, rather, at worst, it’s sloppiness.
But just because I choose to quote the same information that someone else did from a primary source, does not mean I have to cite the secondary source. Journalists re-quote all the time, the provide the primary not the secondary source as citation.
Second, this is not an opinion post. It’’s just information. I did not give my opinion in this post. I provided an introduction, that’s all.
Finally, I read my comments. I can’t believe your lies. Please, please, post these comments you say you have posted and post the accompanying articles.
I have already asked you twice to do this if you have proof, and you have the temerity to then ask me if you should do so. Go ahead, cite your proof. The only reason you have not is that there is nothing to prove. So there!
What gives?
We know very well what Grace and Incognito are.you do your job and let them ........
INGREDIENTS
1 1/2 lbs yukon gold potatoes, peeled and quartered length-wise
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 Tbsp heavy cream
2 Tbsp butter
1 Tbsp milk
Salt and Pepper
A potato masher
METHOD
1 Put potatoes into a saucepan. Add 1/2 teaspoon salt. Add water until potatoes are covered. Bring to boil, reduce heat and simmer, covered, 15-20 minutes, or until done - a fork can easily be poked through them.
2 Warm cream and melt butter, together, either in microwave or in a pan on the stove. Drain water from potatoes. Put hot potatoes into a bowl. Add cream and melted butter. Use potato masher to mash potatoes until well mashed. Use a strong spoon to beat further, adding milk to achieve the consistency you desire. (Do not over-beat or your potatoes will get gluey.) Salt and pepper to taste.
Serves 4.
I think I should lengthen my name to GracePH. The style looks good.
But reading an article and then putting in one’s own words, it not plagiarism. That is what everyone is doing here, what do you think IB members are going on location and doing original reporting? If I just copied and pasted without providing quotation, that would be unethical.
But I didn’t, everything I write maybe be influenced by something I read, but its my own words, and my own editing.
There has never been even a single line, let alone a paragraph that was copied without citation.
The Huffington Post gets stories ideas from the NY Times, does that mean their plagiarizing?
And occasionally I do provide the article that I am getting information from, so that readers can read more if they want about the topic.
Staring now, I’ll do that with everything.
I am sorry I didn’t know you are a lady.My fault,I should have looked up your profile.
And to think I’ve already posted an article where I thought you were a man.
once again sorry for the goof up...and so I didn’t mean what you thought.
Local Opinions (0)
Global Opinions (26)
THIS one is on Kabobfest... word for word, picture for picture.
You should be linking to the originals in newslinks.
This should have been a newslink.
Here’s the link:
http://www.kabobfest.com/2009/01/palestinian-holocaust-museum.html
Thank you for doing what you do - checking the originality of materials here that pose as articles.
These attempts are dishonest, (especially that submitted materials are total rip-offs), trying to make us readers believe that contributors are as prolific as they appear to be.
You might want to trash next time the rip-offs that you confirm.
But the pictures and words do not belong to them, they belong to IslamOnline, which I linked to for credit.
I just choose to highlight the ones Kabobfest did because it was easier that way.
Given the link and the manner of posting, I think it was obvious that I was citing a previously written article, for which I provided credit.
This is an outright lie. Please, cite me one article I have written that is plagiarized.
I can’t believe you would so blatantly lie, you have not called me out on anything because there is nothing to be called out on. This is the first article you have every said is not my work, and I have cited a link to the original source, which is not Kabobfest but IslamOnline.
Please, provide the proof.
Your comment is nothing but a smear. I cannot believe the audacity of your lie. It’s one thing to say I have plagiarized, a few articles, but then to say I have plagiarized most!
You don’t like that I am pro-Palestinians are you’re trying to undermine me.
Provide the ”plagiarized articles” and your comments calling me out on them, otherwise: go fuck yourself!
We know very well what Grace and Incognito are.you do your job and let them ........
INGREDIENTS
1 1/2 lbs yukon gold potatoes, peeled and quartered length-wise
1/2 teaspoon salt
4 Tbsp heavy cream
2 Tbsp butter
1 Tbsp milk
Salt and Pepper
A potato masher
METHOD
1 Put potatoes into a saucepan. Add 1/2 teaspoon salt. Add water until potatoes are covered. Bring to boil, reduce heat and simmer, covered, 15-20 minutes, or until done - a fork can easily be poked through them.
2 Warm cream and melt butter, together, either in microwave or in a pan on the stove. Drain water from potatoes. Put hot potatoes into a bowl. Add cream and melted butter. Use potato masher to mash potatoes until well mashed. Use a strong spoon to beat further, adding milk to achieve the consistency you desire. (Do not over-beat or your potatoes will get gluey.) Salt and pepper to taste.
Serves 4.
I think I should lengthen my name to GracePH. The style looks good.
I visited Kabobfest and noticed their post. I then clicked to the link they provided to IslamOnline.
I was going to copy a few pictures and stories from IslamOnline, but I had trouble copying their photos.
So instead I relied on those on Kabobfest, which are easy to copy and post. Thus I just happened to use IslamOnline information through Kabobfest rather than IslamOnline directly.
It would have been plagiarism if I did not provide a link to IslamOnline, but I did.
In hindsight, since I happened to use the same ones that Kabobfest, I should have provided a link to them as well as a second source. But my failure to do so does not constitute plagiarism, but, rather, at worst, it’s sloppiness.
But just because I choose to quote the same information that someone else did from a primary source, does not mean I have to cite the secondary source. Journalists re-quote all the time, the provide the primary not the secondary source as citation.
Second, this is not an opinion post. It’’s just information. I did not give my opinion in this post. I provided an introduction, that’s all.
Finally, I read my comments. I can’t believe your lies. Please, please, post these comments you say you have posted and post the accompanying articles.
I have already asked you twice to do this if you have proof, and you have the temerity to then ask me if you should do so. Go ahead, cite your proof. The only reason you have not is that there is nothing to prove. So there!
I visited Kabobfest and noticed their post. I then clicked to the link they provided to IslamOnline.
I was going to copy a few pictures and stories from IslamOnline, but I had trouble copying their photos.
So instead I relied on those on Kabobfest, which are easy to copy and post. Thus I just happened to use IslamOnline information through Kabobfest rather than IslamOnline directly.
It would have been plagiarism if I did not provide a link to IslamOnline, but I did.
In hindsight, since I happened to use the same ones that Kabobfest, I should have provided a link to them as well as a second source. But my failure to do so does not constitute plagiarism, but, rather, at worst, it’s sloppiness.
But just because I choose to quote the same information that someone else did from a primary source, does not mean I have to cite the secondary source. Journalists re-quote all the time, the provide the primary not the secondary source as citation.
Second, this is not an opinion post. It’’s just information. I did not give my opinion in this post. I provided an introduction, that’s all.
Finally, I read my comments. I can’t believe your lies. Please, please, post these comments you say you have posted and post the accompanying articles.
I have already asked you twice to do this if you have proof, and you have the temerity to then ask me if you should do so. Go ahead, cite your proof. The only reason you have not is that there is nothing to prove. So there!
What gives?
But reading an article and then putting in one’s own words, it not plagiarism. That is what everyone is doing here, what do you think IB members are going on location and doing original reporting? If I just copied and pasted without providing quotation, that would be unethical.
But I didn’t, everything I write maybe be influenced by something I read, but its my own words, and my own editing.
There has never been even a single line, let alone a paragraph that was copied without citation.
The Huffington Post gets stories ideas from the NY Times, does that mean their plagiarizing?
And occasionally I do provide the article that I am getting information from, so that readers can read more if they want about the topic.
Staring now, I’ll do that with everything.
I am sorry I didn’t know you are a lady.My fault,I should have looked up your profile.
And to think I’ve already posted an article where I thought you were a man.
once again sorry for the goof up...and so I didn’t mean what you thought.
Home

Delicious
Digg
Facebook
Reddit
Stumble Upon
Technorati
Mixx
Sphinn
Twitter
SphereIt
Propeller
Gmarks
Newsvine
Yahoo! My Web
Live Journal
Blinklist
E-mail
RSS 







THIS one is on Kabobfest... word for word, picture for picture.
You should be linking to the originals in newslinks.
But the pictures and words do not belong to them, they belong to IslamOnline, which I linked to for credit.
I just choose to highlight the ones Kabobfest did because it was easier that way.
Given the link and the manner of posting, I think it was obvious that I was citing a previously written article, for which I provided credit.