“We just want it to be calm,” say Lebanese, who live in the vicinity of a 76-year-old settler colony

As Israel and Lebanon prepare for possible war, life on the streets goes on.

In Beirut, shops are open, and traffic is as snarled as ever. In Tel Aviv, cafes hum with patrons and umbrellas sprout across crowded beaches.

We just want it to be calm,” he said. “We prefer to have a political arrangement and not war.”

12 May 1948 Members of Haganah, the Jewish military force, expel Palestinians from Haifa. Nakba  (AFP)

Seeking calm while thunderstorms prevail the neighbour might imply an egocentric wish that is rooted in individualism, which is a by-product of white supremacy societies.

This dear planet has witnessed predominantly individualists who have chosen to turn a blind eye to attrocoties perpetrated within reach, for the sake of their own peace, rather than just fighters standing for the collective good.

The pictures of martyred Hezbollah fighters adorn the streets of Beirut on Ashura 2024

Lebanese mothers’ beget heroes with ambitions exalted to the skies, who brave the horizon to liberate Al Aqsa.

Euro News report

Hezbollah media via Resistance News Network

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