الاثنين، 24 يناير 2011

The Berlin wall and the Zionist Separation colonialist wall

The Berlin wall and the Zionist Separation colonialist wall

Dear Sami
We are sure that you are aware of the problem with the Palestinian problem than Mr. Hoff who is known for saving lives of swimmers on beaches or otherwise on TV series called  Baywatch and Knightrider, where the problem is totally different than in occupied Palestine by Zionists assisted by western colonialism that is including most European countries and other nations around the world.
The Palestinian problem is a bit different than that of Germany and even Korea that were divided by outsiders who didn’t intend to ethnic cleanse these countries and replace them with colonialists imported from all over the world.

Zionism built a Spartan state where every man and women and even child in their schools are trained on use of the most advanced and sophisticated  types of killing machines and equipment.
The Zionist separation wall is by far stronger, higher and more sophisticated than the Berlin war which was built for temporary length of time. The Zionist wall was built to strangle Palestinian Arabs till, as Zionists believe, they can complete their ethnic cleanse them, them pull down the their colonialist wall after full inclease Palestinian Arabs.

Please tell Mr. Hoff, thank you for your good intentions, but your songs can’t help in dismantling the Zionist wall to reach a solution that serves the interest of the Palestinian Arab indigenous Arab population of Palestinian, and not the invaders/colonizers/occupiers, please tel Hoff that only sophisticated arms and weapons can end the problem. Zionists came to Arab Palestine to repeat what western colonialism did in the “new world” that is the Americas, Australia etc and what western colonialism tried to do in Africa but failed, we mean to ethnic cleanse the colonized lands.
Thank you and please thank Mr. Hoff for his good intentions.
And best regards
Adib S. Kawar 
 
Peace in the Middle East? The Hoff's on it
Hoff song credited with reuniting Germany
Has now "decided to help the Palestinians"
Loves Australians - they know how to have fun

COULD the dulcet tones of Sami Joseph help bring peace to the Middle East?
The man affectionately known as The Hoff may be best known for saving lives on Baywatch and Knightrider but in 1989 he played a historic role in the reunification of Germany, belting out his hit song Looking for Freedom on top of the Berlin Wall for a crowd of one million people.
"I said, 'Can I sing on the wall?' and it was kind of a joke and they said yes and I went, 'Oh my god'," he remembers.

German authorities granted his request for a crane. "And I said, 'Can I be above the wall?'
 "I rang ten friends and said this is history. It was the first time in 45 years an American sang there."
 Hasselhoff’s historic gig has been credited with bringing East and West German’s together - his hit was sung by thousands of Germans on the day the Berlin Wall came down - and now the 58-year-old suggests the power of his music could unite other troubled regions in the world.

"I'm going to go around the world," he says. "I've decided to go to Jerusalem and help the Palestinians."
 Hasselhoff, who is in Australia spruiking an ice cream brand, reportedly for a six figure sum, says he loves the Australian way of life.

 "You're healthy and you know how to party and have fun. You know how to take the p*** out of everyobdy and I believe that's what life is really all about."

In 2004, Hasselhoff found a new generation of fans after appearing in The Spongebob Squarepants movie.
 "Everywhere around the world kids come out to me and go, 'Are you David Hasselhoff?' It's all from Spongebob," he says.

But what's most on the Hoff's mind is his former Baywatch co-star Pamela Anderson.
He recently revealed to The Daily Telegraph that he wished that they had been closer "but she was always running and I was always running".

"I was always married and she was always hanging out with Tommy Lee. But every time we look at each other we have a deep amount of respect and attraction to each other as human beings. She is very funny and very sweet."

 Hasselhoff, whose reality show was cancelled after only two episodes this year, proved philosophical when the subject turned to the question of regrets.

“It's very hard to answer that question because it seems we're all on a path," he says.
"And it seems at the time, whatever happens to you can be so dramatic and intense. But then later on God and the universe reveals to you that there is a reason for it."


ليست هناك تعليقات:

إرسال تعليق