comparemela.com

And places, restaurants i could. That was in 1965. After the civil rights act. And he helped bring a lot of that gave People Knowledge of what was going on when he made the stand and refused to be inducked into the military and made people realize, likewelt, what is this religion, the nation of islam. And we accepted quakers as not wanting to step forward for military, and like, well, he made people realize we still do have religious intolerance and racial discrimination. He woke a lot of people up. He said, in hindsight, that was a teaching moment. Many one of the greatest office his lives. Michael buffer, the family is beginning to enter. Cant thank you enough for being here. Thank you, thank you for have leg and lets sit back and. Muhammad ali. Thats our plan, thank you very much. My friends, brian and arthur, are here. Arthur aidala has a grandfather who in the hall of fame. My grandfather is in the boxing hall of fame and his claim to fame was he judged the muhammad alijoe frazier fight, in scare Square Madison square garden, which was alis most important fight and ironically he lost it but that was after he almost went to prison for five years. People dont realize mull muhammad ali almost wasnt muhammad ali and the person who gets credit is Justice Brennan on the supreme court. The reason he was going to prison is he was seen as one who was dodging service. Absolutely. He said, as so Many Americans did, i have a religious objection. And they didnt believe because it was muslim, they did not believe that he was genuine in his beliefs. And the case he lost at the trial level, lost the first appellate level, and in the first vote on the supreme court, behind closed doors, he lost again and was supposed to go to jail for five years but Justice Brennan within door to door with his colleagues colleagues and wo change the tide, and muhammad ali won the case and never went to jail and its hoyt were we return it. People said he was trying to dodge fighting. He was already getting a uso assignment. So much easier for him to have just gone into the service. Lets listen. Brian killmeade is here at well. Above all i guess a huge fan and also sort of student of this. Doing sports radio, had a chance to immediate him four or five times. In the early 90s. And with Howard Bingham and company, had a chance to interview his photographer, watches best friends with jim brown who i did a show with so got a chance to see what it was like and here what it was like to be an outstanding athlete in a place and some states where you couldnt use the same water fountain, the same shower. Had to sit in a certain spot of the bus and had to understand the responsibilities athletes felt to make america better. While not saying i want to go to another country. No. Im going to make it better. Show me equality in society. And they felt as though hey had to take the bull by the horns as athletes back then, and we really they were it was more than sports. That is one of the many reasons we celebrate this today. Thats one of the many reasons that for two hours hell forego commercial breaks because much of alis life was a teaching moment for us and people around the world, about tolerance and goodness and understanding, and realizing that who it is you worship does not define who you are. Brian, he wanted people to understand that everybody is not exactly the same, and that you are not exactly like me, does not mean either of us is inherently bad. Absolutely not. And i thought jim brown said it great on meet the press on sunday when he said, most of all, mull muhammad ali was proud to be an american and what would want the heavyweight champion to be treated as a second class citizen. So he rankled a lot of feathers it be came around to see what he did. Its interesting that were trying to learn these same lessons again, that now we have these divisions along the exact same lines and after all of these years of learning to these years of learning to understand, now its. Zni again. Yeah. Thankfully, i think we made huge strides in the country. Were trying to perfect it. I also thing theres a time when things can be addressed generally and you see muhammad ali had as as many white friends, augusts friends and black friends as anybody. He did not see color. Her saw injustice and tried to fight it. The sad thing as his motor skills receded we didnt get to see the best of him. If youre. Pressed with Charles Barkley or george gorman, nothing compared to what muhammad ali would have been in the last 30 years had parkinsons syndrome not robbed him of that. It was interesting, arthur, watched him over the past few years around children, and it was an astounding thing to see. Speaking of george forman, he happens to be on the line with us. Nice to talk to you. Thank you for having me. I understand you were in a ring once 0 and heard a whisper from him, george, is that all you got . That was about all i had. I gave him for everything i had and i thought for certain he bee knocked out in one or two rounds. That was only the beginning of muhammad ali. You had just beaten and knocked out one guy who had just beaten ali pretty well. So you had to have had heady thoughts going into this. I thought this would be the easiest paycheck for me in boxing. I knocked out joe frazier, ken norton, all the guys who defeated him. But when i got in the ring with him i found out there was more presence than i was prepared for that night. The man was better than a boxer. He brought a crowd with him and they when you got in the ring with him, he was as tough a human being as ive ever faced in my life. I heard the whisper came in the sixth round. First time, as he fell on me i thought i hit him good. He fell on me. That all you got, george in show me something, and i remember thinking, oh, my, what is going on here . The fight was on. Kept hitting him, but thats when he started fighting elm realized that muhammad didnt want to lose because he figured if he fell, other people would fall with him. He fought for more than just the world title and a purse, which for me, all i was boxing for was fame and fortune. He had more on his mind. Its my understanding he said to you, you are he strongest man he ever fought. I may have been the strongest man he ever fought but the sure did whip me good. I should have read you see people, you study films and study on your opponents. I should have read about david and goliath at that point because he must have brought in some kind of slingshot in the ring with him. He got the giant that night. What were things like after that night, george . I was devastated. I lost a fight. Everything i had because i was heavyweight champ on the world. Lost my identity but as the years progressed i hated him a little bit. Did. Because i wanted my title back. One night, one day he called me in houston and he was champion then, and begged me to come back and beat keny norton but they were forcing him to fight ken norton. He said, please, george, you can bet home. Cant beat him but you can. We became the best of friends from that point on. We talked, we hugged, we visit. Our children are friends. That brought us close right then. Him needing a favor from me. Over the years what do you think his largest contributions were . Not just to america but to everyone. If anybody tried to identify him, even the civil rights and all of that, that would be an injustice. I would go to switzerland, id be all over africa, japan, china, and id hear this little chant, ali, ali, ali. They loved this map. He was a giant all over the world. For more reasons than i could ever count. But for some reason he meant so much to a lot of people. His identity is yet to be explained or expressed. All i can say is he made the word the greatest. Now you look at muhammad ali and you see the greatest. Thats the definition of the greatest, is muhammad ali. George, he went from showman to statesman of sorts. He seemed to be living a life of teaching moments. What did he want people too understand he felt like they didnt . Didnt have to say a lot because once he got on the scene, you looked at him and you felt better. Muhammad ali made you look better, feel better. During a period where he suffered with the parkinsons. People who would get sick, would retreat, especially celebrities who didnt look like they did when they were young. They would hide. Muhammad ali came out to the world and said, look at me. Lighting that olympic torch. He had a tremble but for some reason he made that look beautiful. Everything he did was beautiful. Youre an honorary pallbearer today and i wonder what you teach your kid about his legacy . My kids, i was watching when we were a king before it came out, movie about muhammad ali and myself, and my kid would just watching and looking, and they were smiling and just enjoying muhammad ali. I wanted to tell them, dont you understand, he beat . I dont have to i have dont have to tell them anything. Anyone that sees muhammad ali is going to love him. Including all my children. Every time i see you selling a grill during the commercial breaks i think, what an enormous contribution you and he made to our society and a real honor to talk to you today, sir. Thank you. Thank you. Now please be seated, ladies and gentlemen. In accordance with muslim tradition, and consistent with the wishes of muhammad ali, may god have mercy on him. We begin this program with the brief recitation from the koran. The scripture of me muslims by a young imam of the midtown mosque in memphis, tennessee, where he spearheading a neighborhood renewal effort and one of the most blighted neighborhoods in memphis, and that effort is centered around the mosque, one of the few africanamerican graduates of university. He will share with us a few verses from the koran. Ladies and gentlemen, hamza abdul malik. [applause] [speaking in foreign language] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] [chanting] now with the recitation excuse me with the translation of those verses we would like to bring to the stage a Second Generation daughter of syrian immigrants. She is an excellent student and in her spare time, in recent years, she raises money to provide medical supplies, surgical instruments, instruments and other forms of medical assistance, for Syrian Refugees fleeing from the horror of the current conflict in that land, and we pray that almighting god brings it to a cessation soon. Ladies and gentlemen. [applause] in the name of god, the most gracious, the most merciful, truly those who say our lord is god, and our upright, the angels will disease dissend upon them say have near the fear nor sadness but rather rejoice any paradise you have been promised. We are your allies any lower life and the year after. Where you well have your hearts desire, and youll have whatever you ask for. Honestly from the one most forgiving, most merciful. Who is more beautiful in speech than the one who invites to god and does righteous work, saying, truly, i am submitted to god. For good and evil are not equal. Repel ugliness with beauty and behold the one between you and whom there was enmitt is transformed into a warm friend. But no one arrives at the station without great patience and immense fortune. Through prostration, chapter 41 verses 30 to 35. Thank you. [applause] i forgot to mention that she is a louisvillean, a proud resident of this city. [applause] how, god, miss this day of ours, you are our protector. What an excellent protecter, an excellent helper. Honorable president bill william j. Clinton, distinguished guests, viewing audience, on behalf of the ali family, and the city of louisville, kentucky, the home of the peoples champ. [applause] ali, ali, ali, ali. [chanting] ali, ali. Were dealing with time here, folks. Louisville, kentucky, admirably led by mayor greg fisher, i would like to welcome you. Give it up for the mayor. [applause] i would like to welcome you to this Memorial Service for the peoples champ, muhammad ali. And this time, we would like to introduce our first speaker. Dr. Reverend kevin w. Caldly. [applause] were it not for time, since cosby rhymes with ali, we would say, cosby, cosby, but time doesnt permit. Reverend cosby is Senior Pastor of st. Stevens church in louisville, kentucky do to his dynamic bible teachings his congregation has grown over the long years of his ministry. Reverend cosby combines passion, wit, and intellect as the foundation of the Inspirational Ministry that is transformed the lives of thousands of individuals. Reverend cosby. [applause] thank you. I looked into the dictionary for the word, fidelity. And it had two words. Lonnie ali. [applause] in 1967, nine months prior to his assassination and martyrdom, dr. Martin luther king, jr. Was interviewed by merv griffin on the merv griffin show. Merv griffin asked dr. King a relevant question. He said, dr. King, what has been the greatest affect and impact that the civil rights struggle has had on the negro . Dr. King paused and said, besides the dismantling of barriers that prohibited the negro from free access, the greatest and most profound effect that the civil rights struggle had was that it infused in the negro something that the anything negro needed all along. And that was a sense of somebodiness. You will never be able to appreciate what dr. King meant when he said, negro needed a sense of somebodiness until you understand the 350 years of nobodiness. That was infused into the psyche of people of color. Every sacred document in our history, every hallowed institution, conspired to convince the african in america that when god made the african, that god was guilty of creative mall fees malfeasance. All of the documents from the constitution said to the negro, that youre nobody. The constitution said that we were threefifths of a person. Decisions by the supreme court, like the dred scott decision, said to the negro, to the african, you had no rights that whites were bind to respect. And even Francis Scott key, in his writing of the star spangled banner we sang, versus one, but in versus verse three he celebrates slavery by saying, no refuge can save the enslaved from the sorrow of night or the death of the grave. Every institution from religion to entertainment, from amos and andy to jane and tarzan, infused in the psyche of the negro, that he was inferior. But something happened to the depression generation and the world war ii generation of africanamericans. Jackie robinson picked up his bat and hit a ball and the brooklyn dodgers win the pennant. Joe louis dismantles the pride of aryan supremacy by knocking out max. Jesse lewis runs at am la am beulaher am laker to speed ad wins four goad medals. Rosa parks sits on a bus in 1955 and a young seminary student from Boston University stands up and takes the complex ideas and dips nit chocolate so big mama can understand it. And then from louisville, d. [cheering] emerged the civil verytongued poet who took the ethos of somebodiness to unheard of heights before james brown said, im grabbing and im proud. Muhammad ali said im black and im pretty. [laughter] black and pretty was an oxymoron. Blacks did not say pretty. The first black millionaire in this country was not oprah but madam c. J. Walker blocker walker who made products in order to help black people escape theyre africanity, but muhammad ali said im proud. Im pretty. Im glad of who i am. And when he said that, that infused in africans a sense of somebodiness. To extrapolate mull mull muhammad ali from the times in which he lives is called historic presentism. To talk about George Washington and not talk about the American Revolution to talk about Abraham Lincoln and not talk about the civil war. To talk about Franklin Roosevelt and not talk about the depression and world war ii. Our brother, muhammad ali, was a product of a difficult time. And he dared to love black people. At a time when black people had a problem loving themselves. [applause] he dared. He dared to affirm the beauty of blackness. He dared to affirm the power and the capacity of africanamericans. He dared to love americas most unloved race. And he loved us all, and we loved him because he we knew he loved us. He loved us all. Whether you lived in the suburbs or lived in the slums, whether you lived on the avenue or whether you lived in an alley. Whether you came from the penthouse or whether you lived in the projects, whether you came from morehouse or whether you had no house, whether you were high yellow or boot black, muhammad ali loved you. Our city is known for two things. Its known for muhammad ali, it is known for the kentucky derby. We hope you will come back and visit our city. The first saturday in may, we hope you will place a bet on one of the horses, but if you do, please know the rules. What will happen is the horses start in the starting gate and then the signal will be given think will run in the mud for two minutes. And the winner will then be led to the Winners Circle where a right of roses will be placed around the horses neck. We want you to make a bet but please know the rules. You cannot bet for the horse once its in the Winners Circle. You have to bet for the horse while its still in the mud. [applause] and there are lot of people, a lot of people who will bet and have bet on muhammad ali when he was in the Winners Circle. But the masses bet on him while he was still in the mud. [applause] Kareem Abduljabbar stood with him when he was in the mud, jim brown stood with him when he was in the mud. Bill russell stood with him when he was in the mud. Howard cosell stood with him when he was in the mud. Please dont mishear me. I am not saying that muhammad ali is the property of black people. He is the property of all people. [applause] but while he is the property of all people, let us never forget that he is the product of black people in their struggle to be free. [applause] i went looking for jesus on a poor westend street, looking that i would find him as he walked around with men and women with stumbling feet. People who had their heads bowed low because they were broke and had nowhere to go. But then i went looking for jesus, way in the sky. Thinking he would wear a robe that would dazzle my eye. When suddenly, jesus came walking by with stumbling feet because he had been hanging with the poor on a westend street. [applause] the muhammad ali of my childhood had a shuffle but as he grew older he walked with shuffling feet. And i will submit to you he walked with shuffling feet not because of parkinsons disease but he walked with shuffling feet because he hanged out with the folk in West Louisville who had shuffling feet. Peace and god bless you. [applause] yes, yes, yes. Yes, yes, yes. Dont give a teenager a telephone and dont give a preacher a microphone. [laughter] wed like to bring senator orren hatch to the stage, now in this seventh term as utahs senator, one of utahs senators, he is the most senior republican in the senate, author of some of the most farreaching legislation in recent decades. Senator hatch is a seasoned and distinguished public servant. Were deeply honored by his presence today. [applause] reverend, that was really good. Its hard for this poor old senator to have to follow that is all i can say. Well, the head of the first fight was sonny liston, and muhammad ali stood before a crowded pack of reporters and told the world unapologetically who he was. Im the greatest. Thats what he said. But this simple proclamation all took the history and ali took the history and wrote his own title in the textbooks. He was not muhammad ali, the prize fighter. Or even the world champion. He was mew ham mall all all muhammad all the greatest. His daughters dismissed this as bragging but ali wasnt talking trash. He was speaking truth. And he was in the world of boxing, he truly was the greatest. [applause] with the quickness of a street fighter, and the simple grace of a ballerina, ali moved with the killings like agility and punched with herculean strength but to assume that alis greatness stems seoul solely from his athletic solely from his athletic prowess is was to see half the man. Ali was great not only as an extraordinary fighter. He was a committed civil rights leader, an international diplomat, a forceful advocate of religious freedom, and effective emissary of islam. He was something. He was caring as a father, a husband, a brother, and a friend. And indeed, it is as a personal friend that it witness alis greatness for myself itch first met muhammad ali 28 years ago. Almost to the day, to this day. I was in my Senate Office and an assistant said you have a visitor, and i was really surprised that it was none other than the champion himself. The friendship we developed was puzzling to many people, especially to those who saw only our differences. I might say that where others saw a difference, ali and i saw kinship. We were both dedicated to our families. And deeply devoted to our faiths. He took islam, and i to the church of jesus christ of latterday saints. We were both products of humble backgrounds and Hard Scrabble youth. Ali grew up poor here in louisville and i grew up poor in pittsburgh. True, we were different in some ways but our differences fortified our friendship. They did not define it. I saw greatness in alis ability to look beyond the horizon and our differences. To find common ground. This shared sensibility was the foundation of a rich and meaningful relationship i will forever treasure. One of my fondseest memories of our friendship when ali joined news the salt lake going to listen to the salt lake mormon tabernacle choir. I have to say, it was the same mormon tabernacle choir ali loved music, and he enjoyed the choirs performance, but he seemed most excited to share his own religious beliefs with those who came to hear the christian hymns. Ali attracted big crowds that day, and as he always did, and he gave everyone autographed pamphlets explaining his muslim beliefs. Hundreds of mormons lined up to grab the pamphlets, and of course i took one for myself. I respected his deeply held convictions just as he respected mine. In our relationship it was anchored by our different faiths. Ali was open to goodness. In all of its diverse amendments and varieties. Die veers realities and varieties. Took ali to primary Childrens Hospital in salt lake city. We visited with downtrodden children that perhaps had never smiled a day in their lifetime. Until ali showed up. Ali held those kids and looked into their eyes. They would grin from ear to ear. These are kids that never smiled. They were so pained. The nurses were astounded. Never before had they seen someone who had connected so immediately and profoundly with these sick children. Ali had a special way with kids as we all know. He may have been a tough and tenacious man in the ring, but he was a compassionate and tender around those that he loved. Through all of his ferocity as a fighter, ali was also a peacemaker, particular radio host in utah berated me constantly on the air waves. Week after week. One day the host asked if i were arrange for ali to meet utahs former middleweight champion, james fulmer, for a joint interview. Ali agreed. Knowing that the appearance could help me build some good wilburt he also was very interested in meeting gene as well. It was an unforgettable experience. Here were two champions, facetoface, reminiscing about some of the best fights the world has ever seen, and i have to say, in the process, ali claimed that radio host well, he charmed the radio host so much on my behalf, gently transforming an unrepentant an to go is in into a respectful starring partner. So dedicated was ali to our friendship, that he joined me on the campaign trail during several election cycles. He came to utah year after year to raise funds for a charity benefiting needy women, women in jeopardy, and families in our state. Ali didnt look at life through the binary lens of republican and democrat. So common today. He saw worthy causes and shared humanity. And always willingness to put principles ahead of partisanship, he showed us all the path to greatness. And ill never forget that greatness. Nor will i ever forget him. [applause] there there were many faces to alis greatness. His abilities as a boxer, his charisma as a public figure, his benevolence as a father and as a friend. All of these made ali great. But there was Something Else that made him the greatest. Ali was the greatest because, as a debilitated and unbroken champion for later years he put is to a greatness beyond ourselves, greatness beyond even ali. He pointed us to the greatness of god. [applause] god raised up ali to be the greatest fighter in the world of alltime. Yet he allowed ali to wrestle with parkinsons disease, an inescapable reminder were all mortal, and that we are all dependent on gods grace. Ali believed this himself. He once told me, god gave me this condition to remind me always that i am human, and that only he is the greatest. [applause][ ] ali was an unsurpassed symbol of our universal dependence on the divine. He was the greatest because he reminded us all who truly is the greatest. God, our creator. Im eternally grateful for my special bond with this special man, and for my friendship with his beloved wife, lonfully who is loved dearly. One of the great women in this world. [applause] she was dedicated to the very end and i pray that ali rested peacefully and ali will rest peacefully the presence of the greatest of all, even our gods. I can bear testimony that i believe in god. I believe that were here on earth for a reason. I believe that this earth life is a time for us to do what is right for god and for our fellow men and women. I dont know that ive ever met anybody who did it any better than my friend, muhammad ali. [applause] god bless you. God bless the family. [applause] the utah senator orrin happen. Our coverage continues in just a minute. Stay with us. How about you . I taste whaaaaaaaaaow. Wha wha na na na na na na da ba da ba da ba daw its good. Experience the thrill of the lexus is f sport. Because the ultimate expression of power, is control. This is the pursuit of perfection. R, a professor of islamic studies. The Funeral Service for muhammad ali, live from louisville, kentucky. Of the Muslim Community as he is sitting in the library and burrowing through books. A true public intellectual. He is the initial and principal islamic advisedder to the ali family. He has been instrumental in assuring that the last days of muhammads life, his burial, his bathing, his shrouding, and his burial today, his funeral and burial today, all were in accordance with the strictures of muslim law. So now id like to bring to you the person i affectionately call, brother, doctor, imam, timothy jionati. [applause] in the name of god who is the loving nurturer of the creation, and the ever compassionate and ever merciful, id like to share a prayer today. This is a prayer adapted from a there divisional prayer of the prophet muhammad. My gods peace and blessings be upon him. But before i do so i would just like to say to the family, to lonnie, to everyone here, that serving muhammad ali has been one of the greatest privileges of my life. 9 pw oh, god, you who are the light of the heavens and the earth, grant our brother muhammad a light in his heart. A light in his earthly body, now restored to the earth. A light in his grave. A light before him as he journeys on to you. A light in all that he has left behind in this world. A light to his right, and the lights to his left. Oh, god, increase him inlight. Grant him light. A light in his deeds in this world and a light in the hereafter. A light in the hearts of those whom he loved. And a light in the eyes of those who loved him. A light in those whom he knocked down. And a light in those whom he lifted up. A light in his words which echo in our hearts. A light in the lives of all those whom he touched. A light in his children and a light in their mothers. A light in his grandchildren. And a light in his devoted wife, lonnie. Oh, lord, increase your servants in light. And give him light. And embrace him in light. And fill us all with light. Foreign foreign you who are the light odd earth, you who are the most merciful of all those who show mercy. [applause] next well hear a few words from rabbi michael lerner. Ran lerner is the editor of a magazine, as the magazines name suggests, rabbi lerner has dedicated his life to working, to heal and repair the world. Rabbi lerner is never afraid of ruffling a few feathers so we asked him to be nice it to nice today. Rabbi lerner. [applause] well see about the feathers. [chanting] master of compassion, god of compassion, send your blessings to muhammad ali and send your blessings to all who mourn for him, and send your blessings for all the millions and millions of people who mourn for him all over this planet. I come here speaking as representative of American Jews, and to say that American Jews played an Important Role of solidarity with the africanamerican struggles in this country, and that we today stand in solidarity with islamic communities in this country and all around the world. [applause] we will not tolerate politicians or anyone else putting down a muslim and blaming muslims for a few people. [cheers and applause] we know what its like too be demeaned. We know what its like to have some a few people who act against the highest visions of our tradition, to then be identified as the value of the buyer tradition. And one of the reasons that we in the magazine, magazine of liberal and progressive is and enter faith magazine, have called upon the United States to stand up to the parts of the Israeli Government that are suppressing palestinians, is that we as jews understand that our commitment is to recognize that god has created everyone in gods image, and that everyone is equally precious. And that means that Palestinian People as well as all other people on the planet. [applause] the people of louisville have a special relationship to muhammad ali, and i had a personal relationship in the 60s when both of us were indict by the federal government and before our various stands against the war in vietnam. I want to say that although he was cheered on as the heavyweight champion of the world, you know the truth is that in all the honor to him, that heavyweight champions of the world come and go, and sports heroes come and go. There was something about muhammad ali that was different. At the key moment when he had that recognition, he used it a short pause. Well be back. But with added touches you cant get everywhere else, like claim free rewards. Or safe driving bonus checks. Even a claim satisfaction guaranteeeeeeeeeee in means Protection Plus unique extras only from an expert allstate agent. Its good to be in, good hands. In new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. All across the state, the economy is growing, with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. Like in buffalo, where the largest solar gigafactory in the western hemisphere will soon energize the world. And in syracuse, where imagination is in production. Let us help grow your companys tomorrow today at business. Ny. Gov kennetthis afternoon closinfor auditions . Whats on that piece of paper . Oh, miss maroney, your forehead should not be doing anything. I just had botox. I know exactly whats happening ah whoa this is a bad streaming experience. The girlie show is a real fun lady show. vo dont let bad streaming ruin a good show. Dont look at me vo only verizon has the largest, most reliable 4g lte network. Can your network say that . Switch now, buy two samsung phones and get a free tv, plus up to 650 back. Only on americas best network. This is Fox News Channel continuing coverage of the Memorial Service for muhammad ali. Faith leaders from different faiths have come to microphone in some cases eulogize and others give wisdom and thought and now a rabbi has come to stain stage to remind us theres injustice in the world. Lets listen. A way to get security is for israel, is to stop the occupation of the west bank and help create a palestinian state. Tell the next president of the United States that

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.