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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: steve harris who wrote (583512)6/16/2004 6:48:14 PM
From: Bill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
unbelievable



To: steve harris who wrote (583512)6/16/2004 7:14:10 PM
From: Done, gone.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Women's eNews.org still features the September 2003 report, written by Sarah Smiles, who's identified as a "WeNews correspondent."


Please provide the link to this "September 2003 report, written by Sarah Smiles." I spent half an hour crawling through enews.org and wenews.org but haven't found it.

TIA.

If you can't provide the link, I'll have to conclude your post is absolute bullshit.



To: steve harris who wrote (583512)6/16/2004 7:16:44 PM
From: Ann Corrigan  Respond to of 769670
 
Which Dem VP candidate has pulled out & pledged to help reelect Pres Bush?

Never mind....they were talking about John McCain.



To: steve harris who wrote (583512)6/16/2004 7:16:58 PM
From: Wayners  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
You sure here money didn't also go to actually FUND Hezbollah. Now thats some serious jail time if that is found to be true.



To: steve harris who wrote (583512)6/16/2004 8:13:39 PM
From: Done, gone.  Respond to of 769670
 
How lies gain traction.

When everything else fails, try twisting the truth to suit your purpose.

Example - The Twisted Lie:

Heinz Kerry-Funded Web Site Praises Hezbollah

A Web site partially funded by Teresa Heinz Kerry offers a report
glorifying Hezbollah (Hizbullah) suicide bombers as "deified in paradise
and venerated on earth for fighting Israel" - and praises the terrorist
group's support network for women widowed by their husband's "martyrdom"
attacks.

Women's eNews.org still features the September 2003 report, written by
Sarah Smiles, who's identified as a "WeNews correspondent."

Smiles interviewed a number of Lebanese women who were widowed after
their husbands decided to join in the cause of killing Israelis and
Americans.

At the end of her screed, the Web site notes:

"Women's eNews is supported by our readers; reprints and licensing fees;
and the Fund for the City of New York, the Teresa and H. John Heinz III
fund of the Heinz Family Foundations, the John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation, the Barbara Lee Family Foundation, the Rockefeller Family
Fund, The Helena Rubinstein Foundation, the Sister Fund, the Starry
Night Fund."

First noted yesterday by OpinionJournal.com, the Heinz Kerry-funded
report reads like a recruiting brochure for suicide bombers. Here are
some highlights:

"Hizbullah has built up an impenetrable support network for the women.
Through the Hizbullah martyrs' wives association some 2500 families in
Lebanon receive a monthly salary, free health care and schooling for
their children – to the tune of $1,200 each a month.

"'We do everything in our power to make them feel they are not missing
anything,' says Mohsan Shaheen, a spokesperson for the association.
'Anything a martyr's wife wants, we will give it to her, basically,
because her husband sacrificed himself. The only thing we can't provide
for her is to bring him back.'

"On top of sending their children to the best schools and universities
abroad if they choose, the association runs vocational training classes
and seminars for the woman and offers a dating service to help them
remarry if they wish. ..."

Comments from Hezbollah suicide widows:

"A staunch, pious woman veiled completely in black, Naji shows little
regret about her ultimately fateful marriage.

"'When I married him, I knew he followed the party. I knew I had a
martyr at home,' she says. Leaning closer, she confesses her ambitions
for her sons, the youngest of whom was a nursling when Aboud died.

"'When my sons tell me: "I hope to become a martyr one day," I say: "I
hope so too. I hope God chooses you as a martyr.'"

"'Although a mother doesn't need to tell the son of a martyr to do it,'
she says, 'she may guide him towards it, but really, it's innate. He
automatically has a feeling that he must follow his father.' ...

"Pregnant when her husband Ahmed Fadlallah was killed in a Hizbullah
operation in 1999, Zoorgoof has struggled to come to terms with the
loss.

"'I tell my daughter: "your father is a hero." I take her to his grave.
But this feeling of loneliness and despair ...' she says, her voice
growing distant.

"Since Fadlallah's death, Zoorgoof has relied heavily on the Hizbullah
martyrs' wives association, which is helping her buy a house and pays
for her to go to university, where she is studying Arabic literature.

"'Hizbullah is like a family. It takes care of us, provides for us,' she
says."


newsmax.com

__________________________________

The Truth - the actual article twisted beyond belief in the above:

Hizbullah Widows Enjoy Honor, Comforts in Lebanon

Run Date: 09/14/03

By Sarah Smiles
WeNews correspondent

In southern Lebanon, a generous support network provides for the widows
of Hizbullah martyrs and ensures them a place of honor in the community.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (WOMENSENEWS)--Like many Shiite Muslim girls in southern
Lebanon, Rima Naji was married early, at the tender age of 13. By 15 she
had delivered her first child--a healthy boy--and by 19 her husband
Sheikh Fadi Abboud was dead.

"He was martyred on the 10th of February 1995. He was 21 years old," she
says. "Thank God he died according to the objectives of Hizbullah."

A member of Hizbullah or "Party of God," the Shiite Islamic resistance
group that controls southern Lebanon, Aboud died in a commando operation
against the Israeli army, which occupied the south from 1982 to 2000.
His death was not extraordinary. During the lengthy occupation, scores
of Lebanese were displaced, maimed and killed in a bloody guerilla war.
When the Israeli army withdrew in May 2000, grinding their tanks out
from bunkers across the south, Hizbullah--which is listed as a terrorist
organization by the Pentagon--emerged victorious.

No Regrets About Husband's Fate

A staunch, pious woman veiled completely in black, Naji shows little
regret about her ultimately fateful marriage.

"When I married him, I knew he followed the party. I knew I had a martyr
at home," she says. Leaning closer, she confesses her ambitions for her
sons, the youngest of whom was a nursling when Aboud died.

"When my sons tell me: 'I hope to become a martyr one day,' I say: 'I
hope so too. I hope God chooses you as a martyr.'

"Although a mother doesn't need to tell the son of a martyr to do it,"
she says, "she may guide him towards it, but really, it's innate. He
automatically has a feeling that he must follow his father."

After her husband died, Naji began studying to become a religious Sheik,
finding comfort and acceptance of her husband's death in Islam.

"Although it's sad that he died, it also brings me enormous pride," she
says of the honor her husband earned by dying as a martyr professed in
the Koran. "It's more respectful to die as a martyr than a normal
death."

Admired for Husbands' Heroism

Deified in paradise and venerated on earth for fighting Israel,
Hizbullah's martyrs are nothing short of heroes in southern Lebanon.
Their wives are in turn admired, because of their husband's sacrifice.

"I have no problems in the community. I only get respect," says Naji.

Hizbullah has built up an impenetrable support network for the women.
Through the Hizbullah martyrs' wives association some 2500 families in
Lebanon receive a monthly salary, free health care and schooling for
their children--to the tune of $1,200 each a month.

"We do everything in our power to make them feel they are not missing
anything," says Mohsan Shaheen, a spokesperson for the association.
"Anything a martyr's wife wants, we will give it to her, basically,
because her husband sacrificed himself. The only thing we can't provide
for her is to bring him back."

On top of sending their children to the best schools and universities
abroad if they choose, the association runs vocational training classes
and seminars for the woman and offers a dating service to help them
remarry if they wish.

Remarriage Is Recommended

Remarriage is "strongly recommended" by Hizbullah, says Shaheen. Men
often approached the association looking to marry a martyr's wife, he
says. "Her husband sacrificed himself and that's an honor."
Nevertheless, he admits that twice martyrs' wives had remarried, only to
be widowed once again.

For Naji, the financial and emotional support of the association has
been life-saving. Considering her lack of skills and education, she may
have been destitute without it. Somewhat indebted, she pledges her
loyalty to the party.

"I can now help Hizbullah by bringing up the next generation of
Hizbullah," she says.

Like Naji, many Hizbullah widows speak fearlessly about what they view
as the martyrdom of their husbands. Ibtisam Zoorgoof, 28, is an
exception. A fragile, intellectual woman with mournful eyes, Zoorgoof
buckles with grief as she describes her status as a widow.

"It will always hurt me to think that I was expecting a child when he
died. That my daughter didn't know her father," she says.

Pregnant when her husband Ahmed Fadlallah was killed in a Hizbullah
operation in 1999, Zoorgoof has struggled to come to terms with the
loss.

"I tell my daughter: 'your father is a hero.' I take her to his grave.
But this feeling of loneliness and despair . . ." she says, her voice
growing distant.

Since Fadlallah's death, Zoorgoof has relied heavily on the Hizbullah
martyrs' wives association, which is helping her buy a house and pays
for her to go to university, where she is studying Arabic literature.

"Hizbullah is like a family. It takes care of us, provides for us," she
says.

Alarmed by U.S. Calls to Dismantle Hizbullah

Completely dependent on Hizbullah, women such as Zoorgoof are directly
threatened by the United States' recent calls for Hizbullah to
dismantle. Visiting Beirut in May this year, U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell demanded Hizbullah disarm and that the Lebanese army be
deployed to the Israeli border.

Since 2000, Hizbullah, which is backed by Syria and Iran, has controlled
south Lebanon autonomously. This decision is ultimately condoned by
Syria, which has occupied Lebanon since the end of its civil war, and
views Hizbullah as a card to play in any future peace negotiations with
Israel.

Nizar Hamzeh, a politics professor at the American University of Beirut,
dismisses Powell's call for Hizbullah to withdraw from the border as
ludicrous. "Withdraw to where? This is nonsense. The people live there.
This is a civilian resistance," he says.

Hamzeh says Hizbullah is still a force to be reckoned with in Lebanon.
Three years after the Israeli withdrawal, it still commands enormous
respect and loyalty from many Lebanese. Its generous social-welfare
programs and infrastructure projects in southern Lebanon have only
boosted its popularity. It is also firmly engaged in Lebanese politics,
occupying seats in the Lebanese parliament.

Dismantling the party that has a constituency of 500,000 supporters
could only be done by force, says Hamzeh. "And this will mean a civil
war. It doesn't seem that Hizbullah will just pack its bags and leave."

Hizbullah Budget Larger Than Government's

Hamzeh also estimates the budget of the group at over $1 billion a year,
more than that of the Lebanese government. Fifty percent of this figure
comes from Iran, says Hamzeh, which as a Shiite theocracy holds a
spiritual veto over the party.

The remaining 50 percent is the fruit of Hizbullah's own business
ventures inside Lebanon and abroad and donations to the party, he says.

Even if Iran was pressured into cutting funding to Hizbullah, the group
is self-sustaining, says Hamzeh. Yet he thinks it unlikely that the
group will lose its funding, especially regarding the martyrs'
association.

"Even (Iran's President Mohammed) Khatami would not abandon support for
the martyrs' association," he says. "It has to do with morality.
Supporting those who fought for the party."

At present it appears the future of Hizbullah is ensured, not only
financially but by the willingness of many of its women to offer up
their offspring.

"God chose my husband to be a martyr and a Muslim, and that's a great
honor," says Naji, enamored with the promises of glory outlined in the
Koran. "I hope my children become martyrs and my father and brothers
too. Inshallah," she says. God willing.

Sarah Smiles is an Australian freelance journalist based in Beirut.


womensenews.org