Parts 1, 2 & 3: Sabras, Wars, Hope

With age it has become difficult, at times, to keep up with multiple pages anywhere – even the mail. But, these are the words of Marionetta.

The Trinity, Part One: Sabras

/Cherie Lynns Herstory – Ballyntynes History / Edit

The point of this map is to illustrate some of the national history for the ancestry of some of the Jews (and some Arabs) in Israel, the holy land, Palestine, whatever one wishes to call it, there are Jews from over 100 countries – including these noted Arab countries and more.

Maybe about 32% + were native born Sabra Jews before the great expulsions to Israel in 1947. Sabras — Jews of the Holy Land for many generations — are local Jews and so they are Palestinian Jews. One lady showed me an old expired passport from her childhood and it is Palestinian and she was certainly noted as a Jew.

These Arab countries and more expelled Jews at this beginning. I hope I have the right link for this map –

The Muslim countries who, in the 1947 expulsions, sent almost 2 million Jews to the Holy Land, did not care a jot for the Palestinians who were there — Muslim or Christian. They did not care that there was not enough anything, food, resources, infrastructure to take care of who lived there, much less an entirely new population.

The Sabras and the expellees have nowhere to go; they were at home in the holy land and they were are Palestinian Jews. Many Christians were there too and also unwanted by the fundamentalist Muslims. The Christian Arabs living there also trace their roots back many generations, almost back to the disciples of Christ.

Who are the much maligned imported Jews?

This was the situation when the UN and powers started steps for the creation of Israel in 1947, but the migration and expulsions continued up to recent decades. Russia sent almost a million in 1989.

1947

Morocco deported to Israel 42,000 Jews. Algeria deported over a quarter of a million Jews. Iran almost a half a million, 60,000 from Yemen. The Algerians did not care about the Palestinians’ needs or wishes, nor did the Moroccans or any of these countries.

Let’s read the map again.

So it is wrong to say the Israelis are nothing but a bunch of eastern Europeans who do not belong there.

And when you look at the y-DNA — which traces paternal lines through father after father — you can see that they all match: Syrians, Lebanese, Jordanians, Egyptians and Palestinians descended from the same g.g.g.g.grandfathers as the Jews. And countless Arabs have in their y-DNA matches, Jews of Eastern Europe and Jews of the Arab world.

This fight is brother to brother – cousin to cousin – like it or not and know it or not, believe it or not.

The Jews in Israel belong there as much as any any other people wanting a homeland. Just as much as this Arab Palestinian/Syrian/Lebanese y-DNA that I read. The men all share the same clear solid roots in the Fertile Crescent.

And if one were to say: Jews go back where you came from? How do you send Jews to Saudi or Iran? Iran won’t have them, but they will send money and bombs to kill them. And in doing so, Iran and the likes make it clear they do not care a jot whether the Palestinians ever have peace. They do not care that Lebanon does not have peace.

There were 460,000 Iranian Jews expelled to Israel at 1947.

And Iran sends money and bombs to kill them.

AI gives some basic memories of history and herstory

In 1947, the total population of Palestine was approximately 1.97 million, with the majority being Muslims (around 1.18 million), followed by Jews (approximately 630,000) and Christians (about 143,000). These figures are estimates based on data from the British Mandate and demographic research.  

  • Total Population: ~1.97 million
  • Muslims: ~1.18 million
  • Jews: ~630,000
  • Christians: ~143,000

In 1947 the Jews said yes to a two state solution; the Arab Muslims said never.

And one of the most vicious fights in Earth’s history, herstory began.

And to think it has gone from hope to torture and possible sodomy of prisoners. It has gone from cease fires to shooting and killing unarmed, surrendered, men on their knees with their arms raised.

The Trinity – for my Lebanese, Syrian even Palestinian Holy Land Step Father whose y-DNA matches…

The Trinity, Part Two: …yes, there is a war. But does it have to be fought…

/Cherie Lynns Herstory – Ballyntynes History / Edit

For Philip Louis Kadri (Adrey) ancestry Zahle, Lebanon and after. Left To right: My stepfather Philip, me, Bud, mother Shirley, uncle Johnny

Cameras and what they capture has changed the world.

I want to begin here where this essay started, before the horrors of these last weeks. I cannot get my tears slowed long enough to get something written before something else happens.

We met someone who was despondent over these tragedies between Israel and Palestine – just as I am, we are. I had wished to share with him … yes, – there certainly is a war – yes ...

… but, does it really have to be fought?

Everyone of my stories has more DNA info than I can ever get explained in the blogs…

Brother Fighting Brother

Does the y-DNA of Palestinian and Jewish groups match? Yes.

Is this war different from other war(s)?

Cameras

This camera recorded words that changed our lives. Words that described deeds we wished we had never heard, never known, wished were not true. Brother to brother; Sister to sister; human to human.

She told about being the lookout. He, sheepishly, said he’d never do anything like that. I just wished the recording signal red light on the camera had been noticed. It was bad enough that I heard the words, but the words were recorded on the camera and so many people heard them, and we so terribly suffered for the knowledge of the words she wanted me to know. Why did she want me to know? To out him? To say she was one of the guys? Because she was drunk and loose lipped?

Cameras

The cameras in Memphis recorded the beating of Tyree Nichols that led to his death. I hear the words from Memphis recordings like I hear her words describing watching for cars, looking to and fro. And in Memphis, officers command Tyree to ‘show them his hands’ which they are holding bound.

To think this is what happens while she and others watch for cars.

Israel and Palestine and Israel and Lebanon and Israel and Egypt and Israel and Iran and

Iran and the world.

I doubt it makes any sense or use to ask why. I do believe any country “fighting an enemy” helps governments to keep the populations under control.

These so-called religious of Iran, supposedly saving the religion from infideles, would be no more, no less than any of the fundamentalists religious bigoted haters of every and any religion in the world. We learn through Iran’s proxies the level of depravity the Iranian leaders have sunk to.

Cameras

October 7th: Brother Raping Sister, Killing Brother, Kidnapping brothers and sisters

“level of depravity” all caught on hundreds of cameras

The most concise interview was by Piers Morgan interviewing journalist Douglas Murray. It is below. And google the interviews week one and two after October 7th of Andersen Cooper speaking with Nick Robertson and see the footage and watch the whys? This link should take you to this interview. If not I am working to find a second source for the interview – hope always to always have the original source.

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2023/11/journalist-douglas-murray-schools-piers-morgan-true-horror/embed/#?secret=nzwwBVMlTE#?secret=Myr4Q8XDv0

Fast forward two years: Cameras

Captured – Brother Sodomizing Brother?

The man is dragged to the wall, hands bound, and he is surrounded by homo sapiens holding shields to block the camera’s view. Clearly knowing the camera is there, and shielding their actions from the lens’ view while the man is tortured. Was he sodomized? Dragged back to his spot on the floor, the man is limp from torture.

A solitary person stood up against this behaviour and… now her life is threatened.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cy0kpd97qqko

Surrendered – Brother Executing Brother – Cameras

And now the camera sees – the men being told to surrender and they do – on their knees with arms raised and shot like inhuman beings.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/nov/28/video-shows-israeli-forces-shooting-palestinians-dead-moments-after-surrender

War. Does it have to be fought?

For one split second in time – stop the war for a few.

The Trinity, Part Three: Religion, Spirituality, Worship, Faith, Belief, Divinity, Hope …

/Cherie Lynns Herstory – Ballyntynes History / Edit

I have embraced the life of devotion to the high power of existence since I was a child. I did it in the face of a battle between the two sides of my family being of different faiths, different churches. Different.

My mother was Roman Catholic and my father’s family, where we lived far from mother’s birth world, was evangelical Protestant, etc. In the backward worlds of my childhood, the taunts and jeers happened at church camp — “Your mother’s going to hell” — and this wasn’t to be taken lightly considering what we were taught about hell.

And I was distraught over it. Like when my kitten died, froze to death actually, being on the wrong side of the kitchen door. (Whose fault that was remains a mystery 70 years later but my money was on …) When my kitten died I was sobbing because the mean child up the street said animals didn’t go to heaven. Daddy Paw assured me the kitten was in heaven and yes, my mother would go there too.

A family court judge in Jefferson County did not weigh in on heaven or hell but did say that I would have every other weekend with my mother and I would go to church on Sunday with her and at the church of her choice.

1962 Cherie and Shirley – different differences

So I am dual. A dualist in many ways. Reared, predominantly, in a Fundamentalist Nazarene community, on my paternal grandmother’s side; they who had been staunch Methodists since our earliest 19th century records. Paw was a believer and gave me permission to follow my heart. I remain steadfast in the believe and practice of spiritual love of everyone through the word of G-d.

Hellfire and brimstone sermons are the ones I remember from the earliest days of wiggling around in the pews. Yes, yes G-d is love and Jesus is the way, the truth and the life. But to get there, one hears, “Sinner, sinner, sinner, repent.” And I did.

The evangelical works churches did not have “once saved, always saved.” You could and did lose your salvation for nothing but a nasty thought. If you don’t believe me, ask Jimmy Carter; he knew about thinking sin. This repeat sinning results in getting saved again and again, and by the time one is “of age” the number of times I was baptized is more than I wish to try to count.

Seeing from birth this fight between religious factions made me different from many around me. I was born in 1952; my visitation, church order, happened in 1962; and by 1963 my hometown had become a center of strife. Integration in Birmingham had begun and Black people were going to White places, schools, restaurants, churches and more.

Horribly, shamefully, criminally and morally bankrupt Whites went to Blacks’ places and blew up homes. And they blew up churches, killing little girls — little girls my age.

Oh yes, religion was touted. The White preachers, paced and ranted like barking dogs: “Those peoples are descendants of Ham.” The White pastors of the love of G-d wanted them de-boned.

But the priest at my mother’s and stepfather’s church lived the love of G-d. He, Father Raya, even stood and marched with the Blacks in Birmingham. He was one of only a small handful of Whites who walked in Birmingham with the Black community.

(I wish I and all the children of Birmingham – all sides — had had a program to help children.)

Fast forward through four continents, living in a half-dozen different countries, Gulf One, and more and 70 years later, I declare there are more ways to have a religion for every denomination than there are Carter’s little pills. Thousands of different Methodists and Baptists and Anglicans and Melkites and Romans and Shias and Sunnis and more and more

The ugliest belief systems are those of sects whose people say: “I know the right interpretation and my way is the only way.”

War – how many dead?

Damn – and all in the name of the same evolved Higher Power.

Don’t say a word to me about spirituality, faith, devotion. I remain steadfast. I remain a believer and worship — and I have not killed anyone, not even in the name of G-d.

War — while we adults fight over who is right, fight to settle scores and get justice, the next generation needs to be spared. Somehow.

Maybe there is no point. Whether Memphis or Gaza, whether black, white or brown, whether ancient history or herstory or just another news story passed over – while we adults fights wars

remember the children…

I believe in this program and wish to share its existence with you.

From their page:

“BRIDGING GAPS, TRANSFORMING LIVES.

The International Network for Aid, Relief, and Assistance — INARA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that provides essential medical and mental health support to children affected by human-induced and natural disasters. Founded in 2015, INARA operates in Lebanon, Palestine, Egypt, Afghanistan, Ukraine, Syria, and Türkiye, with plans to expand into Sudan and Yemen.

Our areas of intervention include comprehensive medical services, mental health and psychosocial support, education in emergencies, economic empowerment, WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) initiatives, and rapid emergency response. INARA emphasizes long-term care, ensuring that children receive continuous treatment and rehabilitation.

Conflict impacted children struggle to find someone to support them. At INARA, we step in to provide them with the care they need to heal, recover, and move on.

INARA fills programmatic gaps and takes on cases when no other institution can.

We currently sponsor children of all nationalities in our areas of operations who need medical attention and psychological help. We have a team of well-trained caseworkers and mental health professionals ready to step in when needed.”

end https://inara.org/get-involved/

I credit Father Joe for much of my feelings and insight

Countless memories of Father Raya including mine.

“Archbishop Joseph Raya – Apostle of Peace and Love

posted on: Nov 13, 2014

Joseph Raya was born in Zahle, Lebanon, on August 15th, 1916, the sixth of seven children in a family of devout Christian Arabs. As a result of his formal education, he quickly attained fluency in Arabic, French, and Greek. Educated in Zahle, Paris, and Jerusalem, he was exposed to a variety of formative experiences and cosmopolitan environments. Ordained a priest on July 20th, 1941, he was assigned to Jerusalem, Zahle, and later Cairo.

In 1944, he became the Director of the Diocesan school in Zahle, a position he held until 1946. He was subsequently transferred to Cairo, Egypt to serve as Supervisor of Studies and Professor of French Literature at the Patriarchal College. Raya believed women should have the right to receive an education[1] and generally defended the dignity of women. Raya advised an Arab woman to slap the face of any man who made inappropriate sexual advances toward her, no matter the man’s rank. When the deserved but insulting slap was delivered to King Farouk, Father Raya was maligned and given twenty four hours to leave Egypt. Had Father Raya failed to heed the warning of King Farouk, he would have faced certain death at the hands of King Farouk’s men.[2]

Settling in the United States of America, Father Joseph Raya mostly served as a priest in Birmingham, Alabama. His sixteen years in Birmingham were characterized by a number of ambitious, but successful undertakings: he promoted vernacular (English) in Byzantine Church services, he engaged in deep interpretive study and activity whereby he reframed many traditional Orthodox theological constructs. For example, he redesigned theological constructs that would negate violence, especially towards Jews. He recognized and responded to various racial, religious, and ethnic inequalities, and became a close personal friend of Martin Luther King Sr. and Martin Luther King Jr. Finally, he supported and embraced their philosophies of non-violent resistance.

In the fall of 1968, Father Joseph M. Raya was consecrated as Archbishop and appointed to the See of Akko, Haifa, Nazareth, and all of Galilee. During this very challenging and complex time in his life, Archbishop Raya attempted to embrace Israeli’s Arab Christians, Moslems, Druze, and Jews as his brothers and sisters. Archbishop Raya sought to find peaceful and loving ways to enhance the dignity, equality, and freedom of all people through a series of bold peace and justice initiatives.

Most notable was Raya’s fight for the return of Ikrit and Kfar-Berem, two Christian Arab villages located within his diocese in northern Israel. On October 31, 1948, the Israeli army entered these two Palestinian villages near the Lebanese border. Approximately one week later, on November 8, 1948, the military requested the entire populace vacate for security purposes with the assurance they could return in less than fifteen days. Years passed but the displaced villagers were not allowed to return to their homes and lands, livelihoods and businesses. With their lives in disarray, the villagers presented their case to the Supreme Court of Israel. On July 31, 1951, after much debate, the Supreme Court of Justice ruled that it was the inalienable right of the Palestinians to return their villages. Unwilling to recognize the court ruling, the Israeli military decided to continue occupancy of the area and ultimately ordered the destruction of the villages. For twenty-four years, the Palestinians lobbied for the implementation of the Court’s decision and the opportunity to return to their shattered homes and lands.

Various individuals and groups shared their concerns with Archbishop Raya, and asked that he investigate and address their causes. Using non-violent means, Raya:” READ MORE….

From arabamerica.com https://www.arabamerica.com/

“…RAYA, ARCHBISHOP JOSEPH M. (1916-2005) Archbishop Joseph M. Raya, former Greek Catholic Metropolitan of Akko, Haifa, Nazareth and all Galilee, died 10 June in hospital in Barry’s Bay, Ontario. Raya, who served in Galilee from 1968 to 1974, was known for his commitment to seeking reconciliation between Jew, Christian and Muslim, for his English translation of the Byzantine Liturgy and for his teaching of Byzantine theology. He has been nominated for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize. Ordained in Jerusalem in 1941, Raya served in Lebanon, Egypt and New Jersey before coming to Birmingham as pastor of St. George Melkite Church 1952-1968. He served as a research aide at Vatican II. He was a friend of Martin Luther King Sr. and Jr. and worked for interracial justice. In Galilee he became a key…”

https://obits.al.com/us/obituaries/birmingham/name/joseph-raya-obituary?id=9117822

Read the entire article https://melkite.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/Winter-22.pdf

Father Joe

“Archbishop Joseph

Father Joseph M. Raya served as pastor of St. George Melkite Catholic Church in Birmingham, Alabama, from 1952 to 1968. He quickly became known as a priest who lived the Gospel with courage and conviction. He insisted on celebrating the Divine Liturgy in the language of the people so that faith could be accessible to all, to the point of producing many of the initial English translations of the service texts and scripture readings used by Eastern Catholics and Orthodox alike. He became deeply involved in the Civil Rights Movement. Marching alongside Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Father Raya endured threats, beatings, and even Ku Klux Klan intimidation for his defense of human dignity and equality. When African-Americans could no longer safely attend St. George due to violence, he responded by founding St. Moses the Abyssinian — the first Byzantine Catholic mission in the United States dedicated to African-Americans.

What made Father Raya’s ministry so remarkable was not only his boldness but his love. He met hatred with forgiveness and refused to let fear or violence keep him from his mission. Even when beaten and threatened, he answered with words of compassion, inspiring those around him to see Christ in every person. His witness left a lasting imprint on Birmingham and on the life of the Church, showing what it means to put Catholic social teaching into practice, no matter the cost.

In 1968, Father Raya was named Archbishop of Akko, Haifa, Nazareth, and All Galilee. There, too, he carried his passion for justice and peace, becoming a voice for reconciliation between Jews, Christians, and Muslims, and for the dignity of both Arabs and Jews. He led peaceful demonstrations, fasted before the Knesset, and worked tirelessly for those who had been displaced. His efforts earned him worldwide recognition, including a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2005. Whether in Alabama or the Middle East, Archbishop Raya’s ministry was marked by the same truth: every human person is made in the image of God and deserves to be treated with love and dignity.”

https://www.saintgeorgeonline.org/clergy

I don’t claim to know anything. My heart needs to voice.

Thank you

Leave a comment