When Iranian missiles began raining down on Israel, many residents scrambled for cover. Sirens wailed across the country as people rushed into bomb shelters.
But for some Palestinian citizens of Israel – two million people, or roughly 21 percent of the population – doors were slammed shut, not by the force of the blasts and not by enemies, but by neighbours and fellow citizens.
Mostly living in cities, towns, and villages within Israel’s internationally recognised borders, many Palestinian citizens of Israel found themselves excluded from life-saving infrastructure during the worst nights of the Iran-Israel conflict to date.
Palestinian citizens of Israel have long faced systemic discrimination – in housing, education, employment, and state services. Despite holding Israeli citizenship, they are often treated as second-class citizens, and their loyalty is routinely questioned in public discourse.
they are often treated as second-class citizens
Understatement of the century
I know photos can be taken out of context, but that sure is a lot of smiles for people supposedly in a war zone. If you didn’t know better, that line looks like a group of people waiting to board a cruise line.
Zionazi SSettlers cant even feel empathy for each other
lmao, this is like something out of a particularly heavy-handed religious parable. Looking forward to the imminent smiting
Nazis turning on each other during crisis? Who could’ve seen that coming
I could Nazi that coming.
(I am so sorry)
Wow, the settlers are Khamas now
The only progressive society in west asia/middle east tho.
If this were a Twilight Zone episode, it would end with the shelters collapsing