AVI BINUR: MERCY GATE בָּרוּךְ הַשֵׁם

ANI FILIPINI: PILIPINO AKKO



Nicole Scherzinger: Feeling this artist right now




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Children: we miss our school
Fadia Salem: We left our homes, around Qaraqush. No one is there, now, everyone left. If there’d been international protection for us, we wouldn’t have left our homes; wouldn’t have to live in these tents, but is there any international protection?

Soham Yakoub: Every moment is suffering. We can’t sleep. It rained, yesterday. The sound was like stones, on the tent. My child said to me, this morning, he wants to go home. He told me, we’ll go back, today. I asked him, "How, did you dream this?" He stared at me, silently. I don’t know, maybe he dreamt he went back to our house.

Asrar Walid: Life is very bad here, when it rains. We’ve suffered a lot. There is no machine, for washing. We don’t have anything. We don’t have money. We ask for help, to leave Iraq. Everyone just sits, watching us, from a distance, without going to much trouble to find out how bad things are for us. Water leaks, into the tents. They won’t protect us, in winter.

Walang ligaya sa lupa na hindi dinilig ng luha.

Filipino Proverb: There is no earthly bliss not watered by tears.

Bnei Lot are of an ancient origin. In the migratory tradition of Ruth begun more than two millennia ago, a remnant of David and Solomon migrated into Maritime Southeast Asia which comprises what is now Brunei, East Timor, Indonesia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, The Philippines, and Singapore, as well as Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia, with a sizeable minority of Malays migrating back to their tribal allotments in Sephardic Judah, besides Terrestrial and Figurative Jordan.