

We sat in the shelter
Too scared to sleep
She rolled under my arms and sat there
She said she would be safe there
We heard the bombings
That crushing sound
It went pitch black
We could barely breathe anymore
She was looking into my eyes
She knew it was the end
I could only cry, trying to convince her that we will survive
She was smiling
She said:
It’s okay, we’re going to a better place
We can play there and look at the stars
No more sudden sounds
No more blood
No amputated arms or legs
I started to feel sleepy
She was sleepy as well, yet she was still smiling
I smiled back drying my tears
She kissed me and said: I can see stars!
I held her, and breathed my last breath…we’re in a better place now
Inspired by two children that were found “sleeping” holding hands…they didn’t survive
by lynnelle
From the page:
No more pain…
Just imagine!
Mariam Hamed, 80, who lost three members of her family in an Israeli warplane missile attack
Last month the Reverend John Hagee, a Pentecostal television evangelist from Texas, convened a meeting in Washington of 3,500 members of Christians Unified for Israel. The organisation is dedicated to building support for Israel, even in states where there are few Jewish voters.
A Lebanese girl who was wounded and burned by an Israeli attack rests in a Tyre hospital in south Lebanon
Mr Hagee called the Israeli attacks on Lebanon a “miracle of God” and suggested that a ceasefire would violate “God’s foreign policy statement” towards Jews. The evangelist is a leading figure in the so-called Christian-Zionist movement, rooted in a literal interpretation of the Book of Revelations, which predicts a final battle between good and evil in Israel, where two billion people will die before Christ’s return ushers in a 1,000-year period of grace.
“The end of the world as we know it is rapidly approaching . . . Rejoice and be exceeding glad — the best is yet to be,” Mr Hagee has written in a book that has sold 700,000 copies.
Brothers Nabil Alaa al-Din, left, Ramzi, center, and Ali, right
HAMIDA
i spoke once of my mom who was 10 years old in the second world war.
today, in the newspaper, i met
HAMIDA MESSELMANI
“it’s the first time i am a refugee”
hamida is from the village of ch’itiya in the south of lebanon, and she is now in the ch’aïb hospital in saida.
hamida is 122 years old. she is born in 1884.
she was thirty when first world war started.
i still have a lot… a lot lot…
god makes you stronger oh hamida. we we remain!