William Gourlay

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William Gourlay

William Gourlay

@GourlayWill

PhD; teaching @Monash_Arts, sometime researcher @MESF_Deakin; watching Kurds, Turkey & environs; Francophile, dog lover, Tigers fan, tree planter. Views my own.

Katılım Haziran 2012
1.3K Takip Edilen1.4K Takipçiler
William Gourlay retweetledi
Omar
Omar@omar_dddg·
Doctor friend from a hospital ER in Beirut describing some of the scenese: a toddler with a missing leg fainted from crying, mothers from all religions are wailing in corridors, an older woman with a crushed femur, not enough doctors to treat dying patients. It’s a bloodbath.
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Bakhti Nishanov
Bakhti Nishanov@b_nishanov·
A few weeks ago, on a sunny Sunday in Kyiv, my colleagues and I went to a masjid (it was the Eid weekend), chatted with the imam. Then went to Babyn Yar for a solemn tour guided by a rabbi. Later that day, we met with a Christian pastor to talk shop. That’s what Ukraine is.
Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦@IAPonomarenko

Just a thought: Ukraine’s President is Jewish. Our Defense Minister is a Muslim, a Crimean Tatar. The Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces is an ethnic Russian. Our top drone ace — recently awarded the title Hero of Ukraine — is an ethnic Hungarian. Over 70,000 women serve in the military now. Almost all of the most renowned combat medics are women. The revolution that changed this country forever began with a Facebook post by an ethnic Afghan Pashtun, a prominent Ukrainian journalist. And in our parliament, we have a Black MP — an Afro-Ukrainian and universally admired Olympic champion. All of this — in a country that is still, for the most part, Slavic. On the streets of Kyiv today, you’ll see halal restaurants for Muslim tourists standing peacefully next to Jewish eateries. Nearby are a museum and a monument to Sholem Aleichem, and a plaque bearing the face of Golda Meir, who once lived here. Among our main landmarks: 19th-century synagogues. Just a short walk away — a large mosque and Muslim cultural center. And above all, of course — the ancient Christian churches and monasteries that are the oldest and most significant in the East Slavic world. I still can’t get over the fact that Ukraine’s chief Muslim mufti (an ethnic Tatar from Donetsk) stepped down to serve as a frontline paramedic in the army. That our chief rabbi works tirelessly every day to help Ukraine across the globe — and that his adopted son died fighting for Ukraine, weapon in hand. For many years now, a giant glowing menorah has stood each Hanukkah in the heart of Kyiv’s main square. And on Independence Day, every religious denomination gathers in Saint Sophia Cathedral to offer prayers for Ukraine, each in their own rite. Just as they all come together for remembrance at Babyn Yar and the Holodomor monument. The more you look at the world, the more often you realize how much healthier Ukrainian society has become when it comes to coexistence between nationalities and faiths. We weren’t always like this. We are becoming this now — as the country is being radically transformed by revolution and by the defense against imperial Russia. We are shedding the weight of so many remnants of the past — really fast. Just recently in May, Ukraine held its WWII commemorations — with poppies and the slogan “Never again!” What a stark contrast to the satanic frenzy of Russia’s “Victory Day,” with its death cult, its “We can do it again!” bravado, and its glorification of dying for the Tsar. Against the backdrop of war, Ukraine is living through a real national and cultural renaissance. We are rediscovering the Ukrainian language, Ukrainian books, music, cinema — as something precious. And for how many decades were we taught to look down on everything Ukrainian — as “third-rate,” “peasant,” “inferior”?... I walk the streets of Kyiv on Christmas (December 25th, not January 7th as demanded by Moscow priests) and see bands of children in traditional embroidered clothes carrying colorful Bethlehem stars and singing carols. “Ukrainian Christmas” is returning to these lands as a vibrant cultural tradition. On Easter, crowds gather near Saint Sophia Cathedral for picnics and spring dances. In the old city above Podil, I often hear youth pounding out Cossack songs on drums. I always see many people at our nation’s sacred places — the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, the cathedrals of Lviv, the Motherland Monument, the old castles. We haven’t suddenly become devout believers. We’ve simply come to take pride, like never before, in being Ukrainian — in treasuring our traditions, our culture, our history, and our way of life, in our own country. New traditions keep being born in wartime, against all odds. Today, we honor war veterans by inviting them to make the symbolic first kick at football matches — and then we give them a standing ovation from the stands, for their service. I could go on like this for hours. What I’m trying to say is — I love what Ukraine is becoming. This hope — breaking through unspeakable pain and hardship — feels like a light piercing the tunnel. Ukraine now, and Ukraine 12 years ago, are two completely different countries. The road ahead is brutally hard, but if only — if only our Ukraine can survive this war for its very existence.

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William Gourlay
William Gourlay@GourlayWill·
Despite everything, there is still good happening in the world, folks. Here is an inspiring example of some of those making the world a better place.
New Lines Magazine@newlinesmag

“The oryx, the wildlife in our country, has great value. For those who have never seen wildlife, it is vital we show them it and talk to them about it.”  @annaliesej goes to Chad to see how scimitar-horned oryxes are beginning to thrive after decades of drought and poaching. newlinesmag.com/reportage/how-…

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William Gourlay retweetledi
Joseph O'Neill
Joseph O'Neill@JosephONeillx·
Quite simply, this must be stopped.
Oil PAC Tracker@TrackOilPACs

BREAKING: @Google’s new deal to power their data centers with fracked gas in Texas would emit 4.5 million tons of CO2 per year, more than that of the entire city of San Francisco. Google previously pledged to be carbon neutral by 2030. This is a code red for our planet. 🚨

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Duhok Buzz
Duhok Buzz@Duhok_Buzz·
Rare photos from the Kurdish mass exodus on April 4, 1991, as civilians fled the Kurdistan Region northward across the border to escape the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein. 📸 Kurdish journalist Nail Kadirhan
Duhok Buzz tweet mediaDuhok Buzz tweet mediaDuhok Buzz tweet mediaDuhok Buzz tweet media
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Philip Proudfoot
Philip Proudfoot@PhilipProudfoot·
A country that has nuclear weapons is threatening to use its nuclear weapons on the country it won’t allow to have nuclear weapons because if they had nuclear weapons they would ‘use them.’
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Recep Somuncu
Recep Somuncu@Recepsamuncu1·
2012. Yeni biten Seyrantepe Ali Samiyen Spor Kompleksi'nin yanında mandalar serinliyor. 14 yıl önce, şu anda "Vadi İstanbul AVM" olan bu alan gerçekten bir vadiydi ve mandalar serinliyordu.
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rust belt roadtrip
rust belt roadtrip@gmoult·
americans don’t want war with iran, we want a masonry exchange program
rust belt roadtrip tweet mediarust belt roadtrip tweet mediarust belt roadtrip tweet mediarust belt roadtrip tweet media
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Ami Dar
Ami Dar@AmiDar·
A magnificent view from Artemis II. Our dumb wars look even dumber from there. Can we please let life win?
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Art Gallery
Art Gallery@X_ArtGallery·
Holding Hands Persepolis (Iran), c. 500 BC
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Iryna Voichuk
Iryna Voichuk@IrynaVoichuk·
Hell on earth. Kharkiv right now.
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Ali Hashem علي هاشم
American-Israeli attack on the Pasteur Institute in Tehran, a century-old health research center and a member of the international Pasteur network. Since 1920, this institute has been one of the pioneers and major hubs of vaccine production in the region.
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Sohail Jannessari
Sohail Jannessari@SoJannessari·
Wife, who's a biologist, says the biggest goal of everyone in Iran who studied medical sciences, biology, and related sciences was to work, research, and study at the Pasteur Institute. A biologist friend says they feel paralyzed. And similar stories.
Ali Hashem علي هاشم@Alihashem

American-Israeli attack on the Pasteur Institute in Tehran, a century-old health research center and a member of the international Pasteur network. Since 1920, this institute has been one of the pioneers and major hubs of vaccine production in the region.

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Anonymous
Anonymous@YourAnonNews·
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Dalai Lama
Dalai Lama@DalaiLama·
MESSAGE I wholeheartedly endorse the powerful appeal for peace made by the Holy Father, Pope Leo, during his Palm Sunday Mass. His call for the laying down of arms and the renunciation of violence resonated profoundly with me, as it speaks to the very essence of what all major religions teach. Indeed, whether we look to Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism or any of the world's great spiritual traditions, the message is fundamentally the same: love, compassion, tolerance, and self-discipline. Violence finds no true home in any of these teachings. History has shown us time and again that violence only begets more violence and is never a lasting foundation for peace. An enduring resolution to conflict, including the ones we see in the Middle East or between Russia and Ukraine, must be rooted in dialogue, diplomacy and mutual respect — approached with the understanding that, at the deepest level, we are all brothers and sisters. I urge for and pray that the violence and conflicts may soon come to an end. DALAI LAMA 31 March 2026
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