Muhammad Hadid v. Israel:
After a period of calm in the Hadid family's attacks on the State of Israel, Muhammad Hadid returns to stirring the net.
At the center of the attack this time, a post that Hadid shared from an Islamic Instagram page called Islamify, which has over a million followers.
In the original post, which garnered more than 82,000 views, you can see a series of photos and a video of a mother crying over the grave of her evicted son, apparently seen by force by an Israeli policeman, with the agitating caption: "A Palestinian mother forcibly evicted from her son's grave "Build an amusement park instead. They don't even allow the dead to rest."
The post, which apparently relates to work taking place in the area of the Muslim cemetery in Yosef in East Jerusalem, with the aim of continuing the construction of a national park near the eastern wall near the Lions Gate in the cemetery near Al-Aqsa Mosque - Hadid shared on Instagram today (Wednesday). , Which is followed by 1.3 million surfers.
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A post shared by Mohamedhadid.
(@mohamedhadid)
"Is this normal anywhere else in the world?" Hadid wrote.
"How can they not so respect the dead, the families of the dead, the mother of the deceased. It breaks my heart. Let him rest in peace. Let everyone rest in peace. All people of all religions."
The post, of course, received thousands of anti-Israel comments that did not spare harsh words and harsh criticism.
"They do not respect the living with apartheid," raged a surfer, "so why should they respect the dead?".
"It's sickening," "ruthless," "inconceivable cruelty," others added.
"They only care about their feelings. No one else counts," wrote another surfer.
"To demolish a cemetery to build an amusement park. It is sickening. Israel is becoming more and more repulsive day by day," other surfers wrote.
"Allah watches from above and one day will avenge on behalf of all the victims," wrote an angry surfer.
Nature and Parks Authority: "The works are not carried out in the cemetery area"
The Nature and Parks Authority rejected the allegations and explained: "This is work carried out in an open public area, designated for a public park in the area of the national park according to valid plans. "The area, layout of nets and land, in preparation for gardening and construction of a fence on the border of the cemetery and open public space. The garden will be developed for the benefit of the entire public and first and foremost for the benefit of area residents and pilgrims."
The area where the works are carried out, Photo: Nature and Parks Authority
The Nature and Parks Authority emphasizes: "The work is not carried out in the cemetery area, there are a small number of graves buried illegally in the work area, despite a ban imposed by the court, with the aim of taking over the area and preventing the development of the public garden. "Even those that are illegal and will not be touched. We will finish the fencing work by the end of the week. Next week the gardening work will begin. A court allowed the works on the spot and all the appeals that were submitted were rejected."
Dan Lavie participated in the preparation of the article