Teaching children to hate Jews at a UNRWA summer camp in Gaza



Do you know what the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) is for? It's an agency used to provide aid in various ways to refugees, such as summer camps. The agency is largely funded by countries and unions, such as the United States, European Union and United Kingdom. But what exactly are they funding?

Undercover Mosque - The Return



A year-and-a-half after the critically acclaimed film Undercover Mosque was first screened, Dispatches goes undercover again to see whether extremist beliefs continue to be promoted in certain key British Muslim institutions. The film also investigates the role of the Saudi Arabian religious establishment in spreading a hard-line, fundamentalist Islamic ideology in the UK - the very ideology the Government claims to be tackling.

Click here to see the first part of this documentary.

Undercover Mosque



This documentary undertakes an extensive investigation into a number of British mosques to reveal how a message of hatred and segregation is being spread throughout the UK. Filming undercover at mosques run by key organisations, whose public faces are presented as moderate and mainstream, our reporter finds preachers condemning the idea of integration into British society, condemning British democracy as un-Islamic and praising the Taliban for killing British soldiers.

The investigation examines how such extreme messages are influenced by the religious establishment of Saudi Arabia and reveals how the influence of Wahabism extends to influential organisations that advise the British government on inter-community relations and prevention of terrorism.

Click here to see the second part of this documentary.

The Armenian Genocide



The Armenian Genocide is the complete story of the first Genocide of the 20th century, when over a million Armenians died at the hands of the Ottoman Turks during World War I – an event that is still denied by Turkey to this day. This film features interviews with the leading experts in the field, such as Pulitzer Prize-winning author Samantha Power and New York Times best-selling author Peter Balakian. The documentary includes never-before-seen historical footage of the events and key players including Rafael Lemkin telling the story of how he invented the word Genocide in the 1940s.

Freedom, Similarity and the Muslim Brotherhood



Is Islam hijacked by radical extremists who are actively working to destroy the values ​​that Western society is based? And should the world be worried? The film is a personal journey in the Muslim world, from key intellectuals who live with threats of the modern Islamism to the management of the worldwide movement Muslim brothers.

The writer Walid al-Kubaisi is the film's narrator and tour guide. From Yemen to Cairo, from Oslo to Paris, the audience share in his journey and a unique and revealing insight into the anti-democratic forces that have remarkable influence in the western world.

Extremely harsh treatment of "Palestinian" refugees in Lebanon...yet Jews are still to blame!

It is important to note that no Arabs were expelled from Israel during the 1948 war or any other war involving Israel. This is a complete misconception and misuse of terms. It was simply a war in which multiple Arab states attacked the Israeli state, and during wars people flee the areas which see heavy fighting in, regardless of which side is involved. In addition to this, the Arabs living in Israel at the time were demanded by their own leaders and the leaders of the Arab states to flee the land and not return. Israel had no intention of driving out the Arabs from the land and did no such thing. When the war was over, many of the Arabs returned to Israel and they were welcomed back by the Israeli government who initiated calls for the Arabs to return to Israel. Most of the Arabs rejected this request and so they took on the status of refugee on their own accord. The only parties to blame here are the Arab leaders and the leaders of the Arab states who attacked Israel and forced the Arabs to leave. Anything else is either a blatant lie or a complete fantasy.

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The video proves how badly the Arab states treat "Palestinian" Arab refugees and yet hardly anyone focuses on these serious issues which these people have to face everyday and also allow them to continue the fairy tale that Israel is to blame for their current situation. Even if Israel was to blame, it is still not right at all for the way the Lebanese government treats the "Palestinian" Arabs within their country and worse off, no one says a word about it. When Jews can't be blamed for suffering of Arabs, then no one is really that interested.

Richard Landes' Fisk: BBC Tim Sebastien's tough interview with al Zahar



Dr. Mahmoud Al Zahar is by training a surgeon, and a major political and ideological figure in Hamas. His dedication to eliminating Israel is well known. Here legendary "Hard-Talk" star Tim Sebastien gives him a hard time as he tries to blame Israel for everything while excusing his own side's behavior (BBC Doha Debates). A study in demopathy, partly confronted by hard questioning, supplemented by Richard Landes.

Moshe Dayan - A Warriors Journey

The video is in 4 parts. Press the play button or simply click on the desired part of the video to start playing. The videos will auto-play one after another.



The videos tell the story of how Israel emerged from the Palestine partition plan, then survived against a much larger Arab military, and the critical role of Moshe Dayan in these events.

Dayan is a person who embodied the spirit of Israel. Born a sabra in Israel’s first kibbutz, Dayan’s early years included playing with his Arab neighbors and developing a life-long deep appreciation for the Old Testament and its tales of ancient Jewish warriors.

When fourteen Dayan joined the Haganah, a militant underground Jewish group. In 1937 he enlisted in the British-created Jewish settlement police force, while also leading settler raids for the outlawed Haganah. He learned a lot about guerrilla warfare from a non-conventional British officer, Orde Wingate, before being arrested and given a ten-year prison sentence for his Haganah activities.

World War II got him out of prison and into the Australian 7th Division, where he received the Distinguished Service Order and also lost an eye and gained his distinctive black eye patch.

Dayan was a warrior. He was also a poet, a politician, an amateur archeologist, and, in his final years, a peacemaker. It was ironic that, as foreigner minister for his long-time adversary, Prime Minister Menachem Begin, he played an important role in achieving the historic Camp David Accords, under which much of the territory that Dayan had captured from Egypt was returned.

Dayan was an extraordinary individual. Even his friends might call him a ‘loose cannon.’ As Ariel Sharon noted about Dayan: “He would wake up with a hundred ideas. Of them ninety-five were dangerous; three more were bad; the remaining two, however, were brilliant.” Drawing inspiration from the story of David and Goliath, he continually devised special ways and tactics to win a war against a much larger Arab force. The same person who stated that he “didn’t know anything more exciting than war” in his later life pursued a new mission: to find lasting peace with the Arabs.