The man they killed was literally born on a concentration camp for Palestinians.
“Yahya Ibrahim Hassan al-Sinwar was born on 29 October 1962,
[26] in the
Khan Yunis refugee camp,
when the Gaza Strip was under Egyptian rule, where he spent his early years.”
A concentration camp ran by Egyptians?
In 1988, Sinwar planned the abduction and killing of two Israeli soldiers and the murder of four Palestinians whom he suspected of cooperating with Israel. He was arrested on February that year; during questioning he admitted to strangling one of the victims with his bare hands, suffocating another with a
kaffiyeh,
[7] inadvertently killing a third during a
violent interrogation, and accidentally shooting the fourth during an attempted abduction, and showed investigators an orchard where the four bodies were buried.
[36] He was sentenced to four life sentences in 1989.
[4][9] Sinwar regarded extracting confessions from collaborators as a righteous obligation. He told interrogators that one of them had even said, "he realized he deserved to die."
[7][36] Sinwar persisted in targeting informants while in prison. Israeli authorities suspected him of ordering the beheadings of two suspected informants. Hamas operatives reportedly disposed of the victims' severed body parts by throwing them out of cell doors and telling guards to "take the dog's head."
Ma'ariv reported that during his time in prison, Sinwar enrolled in fifteen courses through the
Open University of Israelover a span of seven years, beginning in 1995. Most were in history, covering topics such as the history of the Jews in the
Second Temple and
Rabbinic periods, the First Temple period,
The Holocaust, and
Zionism, along with a political science course on governance and Israeli democracy.
[37]
In 2004, Sinwar, displaying symptoms like standing for prayer then falling and drifting in and out of consciousness, complained of neck pain. A prison dentist, Yuval Bitton, suspected a brain issue, possibly a stroke or abscess, urging urgent hospitalization.
At Soroka Medical Center, Israeli surgeons removed a brain tumor that would have been fatal. Bitton emphasized that without surgery, the tumor would have burst. He recounts that a few days later, he visited Sinwar in the hospital with a prison officer. Sinwar asked the Muslim officer guarding him to thank the dentist and to explain to him the significance of his life-saving surgery in Islam and how he felt indebted to him for saving his life. Sinwar rarely interacted with Israeli prison authorities, but he began regular meetings with a dentist. Their discussions, unlike the dentist's usual chats with inmates, focused solely on Hamas ideology.
Sinwar, who knew the Qu'ran by heart, articulated Hamas' beliefs, emphasizing its religious stance on the land. He dismissed the possibility of a two-state solution, asserting the land belonged to Muslims.[7]
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Did this make you happy David Duke?