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#aysenurezgieygi — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #aysenurezgieygi, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, vefatının 1. yılında mezarı başında anıldı: Didim Asri Mezarlığında Eygi'nin mezarı başında anma programı düzenlendi.
    Mezar taşında Ayşenur'un fotoğrafıyla birlikte "Ayşenur'un anısı dünyanın vicdanlı insanlarının barış ve adalet mücadelesinde yaşayacaktır. Ruhu şad olsun" yazısı yer aldı.

    İlçe Müftüsü Refik Ali Demirel eşliğinde Kur'an-ı Kerim okundu, dua edildi.
    Eygi'nin babası… eshahaber.com.tr/haber/aysenur EshaHaber.com.tr #AyşenurEzgiEygi #Didim #Anma #Adalet #Barış

  2. Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi, vefatının 1. yılında mezarı başında anıldı: Didim Asri Mezarlığında Eygi'nin mezarı başında anma programı düzenlendi.
    Mezar taşında Ayşenur'un fotoğrafıyla birlikte "Ayşenur'un anısı dünyanın vicdanlı insanlarının barış ve adalet mücadelesinde yaşayacaktır. Ruhu şad olsun" yazısı yer aldı.

    İlçe Müftüsü Refik Ali Demirel eşliğinde Kur'an-ı Kerim okundu, dua edildi.
    Eygi'nin babası… eshahaber.com.tr/haber/aysenur EshaHaber.com.tr #AyşenurEzgiEygi #Didim #Anma #Adalet #Barış

  3. My colleague Hamza Zafer, who wrote the first version of this statement about #Aysenur, has shared his original wording—which was watered down by a #UW process prior to release. Here’s his stronger version of the statement, shared with his permission and endorsed by many of us, including me. #aysenurezgieygi #palestine #israel #seattle

  4. Nello stesso luogo dove hanno ucciso #AysenurEzgiEygi, i soldati israeliani hanno già ucciso 15 manifestanti.

    Il messaggio è chiaro: "non importa quanto pacifica, nessuna forma di protesta o resistenza sarà tollerata, che si tratti di palestinesi di attivisti internazionali che stanno con loro, chiunque può essere preso di mira."

    #WestBank #ZionistTerrorism
    #CeasefireNOW
    #GazaGenocide#Gaza #Israel #IsraeliOccupation #PACE #18settembre

    theintercept.com/2024/09/17/is

  5. A statement from University of Washington faculty on the murder of our student Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi in #Palestine. Ayşenur was one of the lead organizers of #UW’s encampment protests against the #Gaza #genocide. She’d spent most of her life in #Seattle.

    This comes from the Department of Middle Eastern Languages and Cultures, where she had just completed a minor. We are outraged and grieving. May this be the end of institutional silence. #aysenur #aysenurezgieygi #israel

    facebook.com/melcuw/posts/pfbi

  6. Letter to the Editor: Jews for Justice in Palestine responds to recent vigils and protest - Alex Kempler

    [🖼 (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor]

    (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor

    Tal Shutkin, a second-year in the Department of Geography’s doctoral program, and Alex Kempler, a sixth-year in the Department of Sociology’s doctoral program, are members of Jews for Justice in Palestine, an Ohio State student organization on behalf of whom this letter was written.

    We, Jews for Justice in Palestine, write this letter in response to the Sept. 4 Lantern article on the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus on the Oval. As Jewish, Palestinian and allied Ohio State students, we share in the broader Jewish community’s grief for the hostages who were killed two weeks ago. Like our peers mentioned on the Sept. 4 vigil, some of us share connections to Hersh Goldberg-Polin. At the same time, we have relatives in Gaza and the West Bank who are also weathering “the worst possible hell.”

    As The Lantern accurately reports, the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which is now spreading across the occupied territories, has murdered over 40,000 innocents. These 40,000 are people, too — children even — and like Hersh, each had their own dreams and “a whole life ahead” of them. 

    But this is not about counting the dead. Our Jewish tradition teaches that in every life, there exists an entire universe, and to end a life is to extinguish a world. We must be able to see a world in every life lost. It is people’s ability to put themselves in an Israeli’s shoes, but not in a Palestinian’s that makes so many deaths possible.

    While this harms Palestinians most acutely, in the end, it hurts us all. The devaluation some Jewish students have reported in their grief over the loss of Israeli lives is real. As Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel wrote in the aftermath of Oct. 7, “that devaluation [of Jewish grief] is itself a hallmark of the cycle of the diminishing value of human life.”

    Under the reality of occupation and apartheid, all humanity suffers.

    As the first-century sage Rabbi Hillel — yes, the same Hillel who the organizing student group is named for — teaches, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, what am I?” Jews have repeated this lesson about solidarity and community care for 2,000 years, yet it seems to be missing when needed most in the rhetoric of our most vocal institutions. We don’t need to close ourselves off because “non-Jews don’t understand.” This sort of self-isolation can only feed the dehumanization we see today in Gaza.

    Instead, we urge readers to practice seeing humanity in others. After all, for the world to recognize its full humanity, including the human right to self-determination, is all the Palestinian movement has been asking for.

    A week after the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus, Ohio State’s Students for Justice in Palestine, also known as SJP, held its own vigil on the Oval Wednesday. The community gathered in remembrance of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, Medo Halimy and Mohammad Zeubeidi, along with the countless martyrs throughout all of Palestine.

    Though the Ohio State Office of Student Life granted OSU Hillel permission to hold its Sept. 4 event on short notice, SJP’s event was met with a police surveillance tower erected on the Oval, reflecting the general hostility of university administrators toward Palestinian students. 

    Two days later on Friday, the community returned for a National Day of Action, marching to demand the university’s divestment from companies aiding in this genocidal campaign. While the horror continues, the hunger for Palestinian liberation and the end to the normalization of Palestinian blood grows.

  7. Letter to the Editor: Jews for Justice in Palestine responds to recent vigils and protest - Alex Kempler

    [🖼 (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor]

    (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor

    Tal Shutkin, a second-year in the Department of Geography’s doctoral program, and Alex Kempler, a sixth-year in the Department of Sociology’s doctoral program, are members of Jews for Justice in Palestine, an Ohio State student organization on behalf of whom this letter was written.

    We, Jews for Justice in Palestine, write this letter in response to the Sept. 4 Lantern article on the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus on the Oval. As Jewish, Palestinian and allied Ohio State students, we share in the broader Jewish community’s grief for the hostages who were killed two weeks ago. Like our peers mentioned on the Sept. 4 vigil, some of us share connections to Hersh Goldberg-Polin. At the same time, we have relatives in Gaza and the West Bank who are also weathering “the worst possible hell.”

    As The Lantern accurately reports, the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which is now spreading across the occupied territories, has murdered over 40,000 innocents. These 40,000 are people, too — children even — and like Hersh, each had their own dreams and “a whole life ahead” of them. 

    But this is not about counting the dead. Our Jewish tradition teaches that in every life, there exists an entire universe, and to end a life is to extinguish a world. We must be able to see a world in every life lost. It is people’s ability to put themselves in an Israeli’s shoes, but not in a Palestinian’s that makes so many deaths possible.

    While this harms Palestinians most acutely, in the end, it hurts us all. The devaluation some Jewish students have reported in their grief over the loss of Israeli lives is real. As Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel wrote in the aftermath of Oct. 7, “that devaluation [of Jewish grief] is itself a hallmark of the cycle of the diminishing value of human life.”

    Under the reality of occupation and apartheid, all humanity suffers.

    As the first-century sage Rabbi Hillel — yes, the same Hillel who the organizing student group is named for — teaches, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, what am I?” Jews have repeated this lesson about solidarity and community care for 2,000 years, yet it seems to be missing when needed most in the rhetoric of our most vocal institutions. We don’t need to close ourselves off because “non-Jews don’t understand.” This sort of self-isolation can only feed the dehumanization we see today in Gaza.

    Instead, we urge readers to practice seeing humanity in others. After all, for the world to recognize its full humanity, including the human right to self-determination, is all the Palestinian movement has been asking for.

    A week after the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus, Ohio State’s Students for Justice in Palestine, also known as SJP, held its own vigil on the Oval Wednesday. The community gathered in remembrance of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, Medo Halimy and Mohammad Zeubeidi, along with the countless martyrs throughout all of Palestine.

    Though the Ohio State Office of Student Life granted OSU Hillel permission to hold its Sept. 4 event on short notice, SJP’s event was met with a police surveillance tower erected on the Oval, reflecting the general hostility of university administrators toward Palestinian students. 

    Two days later on Friday, the community returned for a National Day of Action, marching to demand the university’s divestment from companies aiding in this genocidal campaign. While the horror continues, the hunger for Palestinian liberation and the end to the normalization of Palestinian blood grows.

  8. Letter to the Editor: Jews for Justice in Palestine responds to recent vigils and protest - Alex Kempler

    [🖼 (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor]

    (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor

    Tal Shutkin, a second-year in the Department of Geography’s doctoral program, and Alex Kempler, a sixth-year in the Department of Sociology’s doctoral program, are members of Jews for Justice in Palestine, an Ohio State student organization on behalf of whom this letter was written.

    We, Jews for Justice in Palestine, write this letter in response to the Sept. 4 Lantern article on the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus on the Oval. As Jewish, Palestinian and allied Ohio State students, we share in the broader Jewish community’s grief for the hostages who were killed two weeks ago. Like our peers mentioned on the Sept. 4 vigil, some of us share connections to Hersh Goldberg-Polin. At the same time, we have relatives in Gaza and the West Bank who are also weathering “the worst possible hell.”

    As The Lantern accurately reports, the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which is now spreading across the occupied territories, has murdered over 40,000 innocents. These 40,000 are people, too — children even — and like Hersh, each had their own dreams and “a whole life ahead” of them. 

    But this is not about counting the dead. Our Jewish tradition teaches that in every life, there exists an entire universe, and to end a life is to extinguish a world. We must be able to see a world in every life lost. It is people’s ability to put themselves in an Israeli’s shoes, but not in a Palestinian’s that makes so many deaths possible.

    While this harms Palestinians most acutely, in the end, it hurts us all. The devaluation some Jewish students have reported in their grief over the loss of Israeli lives is real. As Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel wrote in the aftermath of Oct. 7, “that devaluation [of Jewish grief] is itself a hallmark of the cycle of the diminishing value of human life.”

    Under the reality of occupation and apartheid, all humanity suffers.

    As the first-century sage Rabbi Hillel — yes, the same Hillel who the organizing student group is named for — teaches, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, what am I?” Jews have repeated this lesson about solidarity and community care for 2,000 years, yet it seems to be missing when needed most in the rhetoric of our most vocal institutions. We don’t need to close ourselves off because “non-Jews don’t understand.” This sort of self-isolation can only feed the dehumanization we see today in Gaza.

    Instead, we urge readers to practice seeing humanity in others. After all, for the world to recognize its full humanity, including the human right to self-determination, is all the Palestinian movement has been asking for.

    A week after the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus, Ohio State’s Students for Justice in Palestine, also known as SJP, held its own vigil on the Oval Wednesday. The community gathered in remembrance of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, Medo Halimy and Mohammad Zeubeidi, along with the countless martyrs throughout all of Palestine.

    Though the Ohio State Office of Student Life granted OSU Hillel permission to hold its Sept. 4 event on short notice, SJP’s event was met with a police surveillance tower erected on the Oval, reflecting the general hostility of university administrators toward Palestinian students. 

    Two days later on Friday, the community returned for a National Day of Action, marching to demand the university’s divestment from companies aiding in this genocidal campaign. While the horror continues, the hunger for Palestinian liberation and the end to the normalization of Palestinian blood grows.

  9. Letter to the Editor: Jews for Justice in Palestine responds to recent vigils and protest - Alex Kempler

    [🖼 (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor]

    (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor

    Tal Shutkin, a second-year in the Department of Geography’s doctoral program, and Alex Kempler, a sixth-year in the Department of Sociology’s doctoral program, are members of Jews for Justice in Palestine, an Ohio State student organization on behalf of whom this letter was written.

    We, Jews for Justice in Palestine, write this letter in response to the Sept. 4 Lantern article on the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus on the Oval. As Jewish, Palestinian and allied Ohio State students, we share in the broader Jewish community’s grief for the hostages who were killed two weeks ago. Like our peers mentioned on the Sept. 4 vigil, some of us share connections to Hersh Goldberg-Polin. At the same time, we have relatives in Gaza and the West Bank who are also weathering “the worst possible hell.”

    As The Lantern accurately reports, the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which is now spreading across the occupied territories, has murdered over 40,000 innocents. These 40,000 are people, too — children even — and like Hersh, each had their own dreams and “a whole life ahead” of them. 

    But this is not about counting the dead. Our Jewish tradition teaches that in every life, there exists an entire universe, and to end a life is to extinguish a world. We must be able to see a world in every life lost. It is people’s ability to put themselves in an Israeli’s shoes, but not in a Palestinian’s that makes so many deaths possible.

    While this harms Palestinians most acutely, in the end, it hurts us all. The devaluation some Jewish students have reported in their grief over the loss of Israeli lives is real. As Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel wrote in the aftermath of Oct. 7, “that devaluation [of Jewish grief] is itself a hallmark of the cycle of the diminishing value of human life.”

    Under the reality of occupation and apartheid, all humanity suffers.

    As the first-century sage Rabbi Hillel — yes, the same Hillel who the organizing student group is named for — teaches, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, what am I?” Jews have repeated this lesson about solidarity and community care for 2,000 years, yet it seems to be missing when needed most in the rhetoric of our most vocal institutions. We don’t need to close ourselves off because “non-Jews don’t understand.” This sort of self-isolation can only feed the dehumanization we see today in Gaza.

    Instead, we urge readers to practice seeing humanity in others. After all, for the world to recognize its full humanity, including the human right to self-determination, is all the Palestinian movement has been asking for.

    A week after the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus, Ohio State’s Students for Justice in Palestine, also known as SJP, held its own vigil on the Oval Wednesday. The community gathered in remembrance of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, Medo Halimy and Mohammad Zeubeidi, along with the countless martyrs throughout all of Palestine.

    Though the Ohio State Office of Student Life granted OSU Hillel permission to hold its Sept. 4 event on short notice, SJP’s event was met with a police surveillance tower erected on the Oval, reflecting the general hostility of university administrators toward Palestinian students. 

    Two days later on Friday, the community returned for a National Day of Action, marching to demand the university’s divestment from companies aiding in this genocidal campaign. While the horror continues, the hunger for Palestinian liberation and the end to the normalization of Palestinian blood grows.

  10. Letter to the Editor: Jews for Justice in Palestine responds to recent vigils and protest - Alex Kempler

    [🖼 (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor]

    (Left) Pranav Jani addresses the crowd during a Sept. 10 vigil, hosted by Students for Justice in Palestine. Credit: Reilly Ackermann | Asst. Campus Editor (Right) Attendees listen to speakers at the vigil hosted by OSU Hillel Sep. 3. Credit: Sandra Fu | Photo Editor

    Tal Shutkin, a second-year in the Department of Geography’s doctoral program, and Alex Kempler, a sixth-year in the Department of Sociology’s doctoral program, are members of Jews for Justice in Palestine, an Ohio State student organization on behalf of whom this letter was written.

    We, Jews for Justice in Palestine, write this letter in response to the Sept. 4 Lantern article on the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus on the Oval. As Jewish, Palestinian and allied Ohio State students, we share in the broader Jewish community’s grief for the hostages who were killed two weeks ago. Like our peers mentioned on the Sept. 4 vigil, some of us share connections to Hersh Goldberg-Polin. At the same time, we have relatives in Gaza and the West Bank who are also weathering “the worst possible hell.”

    As The Lantern accurately reports, the Israeli campaign in Gaza, which is now spreading across the occupied territories, has murdered over 40,000 innocents. These 40,000 are people, too — children even — and like Hersh, each had their own dreams and “a whole life ahead” of them. 

    But this is not about counting the dead. Our Jewish tradition teaches that in every life, there exists an entire universe, and to end a life is to extinguish a world. We must be able to see a world in every life lost. It is people’s ability to put themselves in an Israeli’s shoes, but not in a Palestinian’s that makes so many deaths possible.

    While this harms Palestinians most acutely, in the end, it hurts us all. The devaluation some Jewish students have reported in their grief over the loss of Israeli lives is real. As Jewish Currents editor-in-chief Arielle Angel wrote in the aftermath of Oct. 7, “that devaluation [of Jewish grief] is itself a hallmark of the cycle of the diminishing value of human life.”

    Under the reality of occupation and apartheid, all humanity suffers.

    As the first-century sage Rabbi Hillel — yes, the same Hillel who the organizing student group is named for — teaches, “If I am not for myself, who will be for me? But if I am only for myself, what am I?” Jews have repeated this lesson about solidarity and community care for 2,000 years, yet it seems to be missing when needed most in the rhetoric of our most vocal institutions. We don’t need to close ourselves off because “non-Jews don’t understand.” This sort of self-isolation can only feed the dehumanization we see today in Gaza.

    Instead, we urge readers to practice seeing humanity in others. After all, for the world to recognize its full humanity, including the human right to self-determination, is all the Palestinian movement has been asking for.

    A week after the vigil organized by OSU Hillel and JewishColumbus, Ohio State’s Students for Justice in Palestine, also known as SJP, held its own vigil on the Oval Wednesday. The community gathered in remembrance of Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, Medo Halimy and Mohammad Zeubeidi, along with the countless martyrs throughout all of Palestine.

    Though the Ohio State Office of Student Life granted OSU Hillel permission to hold its Sept. 4 event on short notice, SJP’s event was met with a police surveillance tower erected on the Oval, reflecting the general hostility of university administrators toward Palestinian students. 

    Two days later on Friday, the community returned for a National Day of Action, marching to demand the university’s divestment from companies aiding in this genocidal campaign. While the horror continues, the hunger for Palestinian liberation and the end to the normalization of Palestinian blood grows.

  11. youtube.com/watch?v=rDbsy_QUyG

    #DemocracyNow 16 September 2024 #news

    FYI: the man w tried to shoot trump at the golf course is a 58 year old trump supporter (?), just like the Pennsylvannia 20-something year old shooter was a trump supporter ( and he was also a #rightwing #accelerationist ).

    Meanwhile, #ButcherBiden has not even had the decency to contact the family of #AysenurEzgiEygi

    Fun world we live in.🙁

  12. "Why does the Israeli army get away with killing foreign activists?

    Investigations into Israeli soldiers’ attacks on civilians rarely lead to prosecutions.

    The killing of #AysenurEzgiEygi, a 26-year-old American -̶T̶u̶r̶k̶i̶s̶h̶ activist in the occupied #WestBank, has once again brought a troubling issue into the spotlight: Israeli forces #targetingcivilians."

    #Israel-#Palestine #Gaza #Genocide #IDF #Assassination
    aljazeera.com/program/inside-s @palestine @israel

  13. ⟦ L'IDF è tornato ad essere l'esercito più morale del mondo.
    Sono passati solo 4 giorni da quando i suoi soldati hanno ucciso l'attivista americana #AysenurEzgiEygi, prima che l'intensa indagine avviata dall'esercito si concludesse con la conclusione, purificante, che “la civile è stata colpita dal fuoco non mirato e non intenzionale di una forza dell'IDF che ha mirato a uno dei principali istigatori”.

    Fuoco non mirato e non intenzionale che aveva come obiettivo…

    Avete capito? Ne dubito. ⬇️2

  14. [cont’d] #US / Family of Aysenur, an American citizen who was killed on September 6th by an Israeli soldier while serving as an international observer, says that accepting the Israeli military's version of events without further investigation amounts to complicity in what they see as an agenda to take Palestinian land and downplay the killing of an American citizen.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

    Earlier Biden told reporters "Apparently it was an accident, ricocheted off the ground and just got hit by accident. I'm working that out now."

    ———

    FAMILY STATEMENT IN RESPONSE TO PRESIDENT BIDEN AND VP HARRIS WHITE
    HOUSE STATEMENTS

    September 11, 2024 President Biden has said, "If you harm an American, we will respond." On September 9th, the State Department claimed, "when it comes to the protection of our citizens and our
    personnel and if they are targeted, we of course will take appropriate action."

    In the midst of this terrible tragedy, our family has been crossing continents to gather and put our beloved Aysenur to rest. We will always remember Aysenur as the kindhearted, silly, and passionate soul whose face expressed all those qualities. We cannot speak of what happened to those expressions when her temple met a bullet fired by a trained
    Israeli soldier.

    Aysenur was an international observer who stood in witness of "violent extremist Israeli settlers [who] are uprooting Palestinians from their homes" - words President Biden himself used today. Despite this, President Biden is still calling her killing an accident based only on the Israeli military's story. This is not only insensitive and false, it is complicity in the Israeli military's agenda to take Palestinian land and whitewash the killing of an American.

    Let us be clear, an American citizen was killed by a foreign military in a targeted attack. The appropriate action is for President Biden and Vice President Harris to speak with the family directly, and order an independent, transparent investigation into the killing of Aysenur, a volunteer for peace.

    xcancel.com/prem_thakker/statu

    @palestine
    @israel
    #IsraelWarCrimes
    #IsraelOccupation
    #aysenurezgieygi
    #IDF

  15. "You'd have to be an Olympic stone thrower to reach the soldiers from there." The place where Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi was killed in Beita, September 8, 2024 (Photo: Oren Ziv)

    @palestine
    @israel
    #aysenurezgieygi

  16. [cont’d] View from the roof where the #IDF soldiers shot at Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi in Beita, on September 8, 2024 (Photo: Oren Ziv)

    @palestine
    @israel
    #aysenurezgieygi

  17. Biden just said to reporters of #aysenurezgieygi, the US citizen killed by Israeli forces: "Apparently it was an accident, ricocheted off the ground and just got hit by accident. I'm working that out now."

    This is a lie that not even the Israelis are claiming. This administration has been a catastrophe for Palestinians and Democrats who continue to be in denial about this aren’t doing themselves any favours in November. #Biden took a far right position on human rights. #Genocide #Gaza #Israel

  18. [cont’d] IDF casually acknowledges they shoot to kill Palestinian protesters for throwing stones…

    Israeli forces have admitted that they likely killed an American-Turkish activist, Aysenur Ezgi Eygi, in the occupied West Bank. The military says her death was unintentional, as she was hit indirectly by IDF fire meant for someone else during a protest against settlement expansion. The US Secretary of State has condemned the killing as "unprovoked and unjustified", while Israel has expressed regret and requested an autopsy.

    reuters.com/world/middle-east/

    @palestine
    @israel
    #IsraelOccupation #Apartheid
    #IsraelWarCrimes
    #aysenurezgieygi

  19. Più o meno alla stessa ora, non lontano da Qaryout, nel villaggio di #Beita, i soldati hanno ucciso una manifestante, un'attivista per i diritti umani con cittadinanza americana e turca.

    #AysenurEzgiEygi è stata colpito alla testa durante una manifestazione contro l'insediamento illegale #Evyatar, costruito sul territorio del villaggio e già costato la vita ad almeno 7 palestinesi.

    La Casa Bianca si è detta “profondamente turbata da questa tragica morte”.
    Ma questa non è stata una “morte tragica”.

    Jonathan Pollak, un giornalista di Haaretz, ha raccontato di aver visto i soldati su un tetto: “Ho visto i soldati sparare. Ho visto i soldati sparare”, aggiungendo che in quel momento non c'erano scontri in corso. ⬇️5

  20. Più o meno alla stessa ora, non lontano da Qaryout, nel villaggio di #Beita, i soldati hanno ucciso una manifestante, un'attivista per i diritti umani con cittadinanza americana e turca.

    #AysenurEzgiEygi è stata colpito alla testa durante una manifestazione contro l'insediamento illegale #Evyatar, costruito sul territorio del villaggio e già costato la vita ad almeno 7 palestinesi.

    La Casa Bianca si è detta “profondamente turbata da questa tragica morte”.
    Ma questa non è stata una “morte tragica”.

    Jonathan Pollak, un giornalista di Haaretz, ha raccontato di aver visto i soldati su un tetto: “Ho visto i soldati sparare. Ho visto i soldati sparare”, aggiungendo che in quel momento non c'erano scontri in corso. ⬇️5

  21. Più o meno alla stessa ora, non lontano da Qaryout, nel villaggio di #Beita, i soldati hanno ucciso una manifestante, un'attivista per i diritti umani con cittadinanza americana e turca.

    #AysenurEzgiEygi è stata colpito alla testa durante una manifestazione contro l'insediamento illegale #Evyatar, costruito sul territorio del villaggio e già costato la vita ad almeno 7 palestinesi.

    La Casa Bianca si è detta “profondamente turbata da questa tragica morte”.
    Ma questa non è stata una “morte tragica”.

    Jonathan Pollak, un giornalista di Haaretz, ha raccontato di aver visto i soldati su un tetto: “Ho visto i soldati sparare. Ho visto i soldati sparare”, aggiungendo che in quel momento non c'erano scontri in corso. ⬇️5

  22. Più o meno alla stessa ora, non lontano da Qaryout, nel villaggio di #Beita, i soldati hanno ucciso una manifestante, un'attivista per i diritti umani con cittadinanza americana e turca.

    #AysenurEzgiEygi è stata colpito alla testa durante una manifestazione contro l'insediamento illegale #Evyatar, costruito sul territorio del villaggio e già costato la vita ad almeno 7 palestinesi.

    La Casa Bianca si è detta “profondamente turbata da questa tragica morte”.
    Ma questa non è stata una “morte tragica”.

    Jonathan Pollak, un giornalista di Haaretz, ha raccontato di aver visto i soldati su un tetto: “Ho visto i soldati sparare. Ho visto i soldati sparare”, aggiungendo che in quel momento non c'erano scontri in corso. ⬇️5

  23. Più o meno alla stessa ora, non lontano da Qaryout, nel villaggio di #Beita, i soldati hanno ucciso una manifestante, un'attivista per i diritti umani con cittadinanza americana e turca.

    #AysenurEzgiEygi è stata colpito alla testa durante una manifestazione contro l'insediamento illegale #Evyatar, costruito sul territorio del villaggio e già costato la vita ad almeno 7 palestinesi.

    La Casa Bianca si è detta “profondamente turbata da questa tragica morte”.
    Ma questa non è stata una “morte tragica”.

    Jonathan Pollak, un giornalista di Haaretz, ha raccontato di aver visto i soldati su un tetto: “Ho visto i soldati sparare. Ho visto i soldati sparare”, aggiungendo che in quel momento non c'erano scontri in corso. ⬇️5

  24. The Seattle activist community has been shocked by the news of the murder of Ayşenur Ezgi Eygi at the hands of Israeli snipers in the West Bank. Ayşenur was a student at UW and was active at protests here in Seattle.

    She traveled to the village of Beita in the West Bank after graduation to work as a volunteer legal observer documenting the destruction and theft of Palestinian lands in the area.

    palsolidarity.org/2024/09/isra

    #Beita #WestBank #Seattle #UW #Turkey #AyşenurEzgiEygi #IDF #Israel

  25. Persino il ministro della Difesa, l'unico adulto responsabile del governo, non sta dando istruzioni all'esercito di trattare con severità i soldati disonesti e non sta presentando una posizione ordinata riguardo alla Cisgiordania.

    Una linea diretta collega l'uccisione di Bana Laboom e quella dell'attivista per i diritti umani #AysenurEzgiEygi, una giovane turco-americana che pare sia stata uccisa dai soldati mentre partecipava a una manifestazione a #Beita, vicino a #Nablus.

    Nel suo caso, sarà avviata un'indagine apparentemente seria.
    Era americana, non solo una ragazza palestinese che vive sotto occupazione. ⬇️6

  26. By now, it is clear that the dehumanisation of Palestinians not only lessens the value of Palestinian life, but also of the lives of other people who stand up in their defence.

    #aysenurezgieygi #Palestine #genocide

    m.youtube.com/watch?v=X6R9Nrcw

  27. Ieri il Ministero della Sanità palestinese ha riferito che #AysenurEzgiEygi, 26 anni, attivista per i diritti umani, cittadina #USA e turca, è stato uccisa da soldati dell'IDF mentre partecipava a una protesta contro gli insediamenti nel villaggio di #Beita, vicino a #Nablus

    In risposta all'incidente, l'IDF ha dichiarato di aver “risposto con il fuoco contro il principale istigatore dell'attività violenta che scagliava sassi contro le forze armate e che rappresentava una minaccia per loro”, e ha aggiunto che sta esaminando le affermazioni secondo cui un cittadino straniero sarebbe stato ucciso dagli spari.⟧🔚4

  28. The #NYT when an American is murdered by the #IDF:

    - She was born in Turkey: why is that relevant?
    - She “died”. How? After “being shot”. Oh okay, who shot her? What was the protest about?

    Seems like there might be a story there.

    That’s what the NYT is when #Israel is concerned. They gaslight readers as policy. #aysenurezgieygi

  29. Looking forward to the Biden administration doing a big nothing whatsoever about the Israeli army's killing of a US citizen

    #AysenurEzgiEygi

    bbc.com/news/articles/cdx6771g