ADVERTISEMENT
get_a(300,250,"frame1");
[/align][/align]He looks like Mickey Mouse and sounds like Mickey Mouse, but what he's saying is hardly the fairytale stuff of Disney.
A Mickey Mouse look-alike named Farfur is teaching Palestinian children the ABCs of terror on Hamas' official television station, Al-Aqsa TV.
On the weekly program "Tomorrow's Pioneers," Farfur and a young girl name Saraa' tell children to pray five times each day and drink their milk, while urging the children to "resist" the "oppressive invading Zionist occupation."
"Instead of being entertained, they"re being indoctrinated," Itamar Marcus, the director of Palestinian Media Watch, told FOX News.
Marcus says that "resist" is a Palestinian euphemism for terror. Click here for FOXNews.com's Middle East center.
"Their message is of hatred toward Jews, hatred toward Israel, hatred to America as well," Marcus said. "They make fun of Condoleezza Rice, they make fun of Bush."
Excerpts from episodes that aired last month show the squeaky voiced mouse egging on children with nationalistic fervor.
"We, tomorrow"s pioneers, will restore to this nation its glory, and we will liberate Al-Aqsa, with Allah"s will, and we will liberate Iraq, with Allah"s will, and we will liberate the Muslim countries, invaded by murderers," Farfur says in one episode that aired in April.
The message seems to be working. Poems and songs submitted by young viewers contain violent imagery. "Rafah sings "Oh, oh,"" one caller says as Farfur mimes carrying a rifle. "Its answer is an AK-47." Click here to watch the video.
& we have those in this country who say we're the problem, & have nothing to fear from the radical islamists...
RE: Hamas Uses Mickey Mouse Look-Alike to Teach Terror to Kids on TV
Jews are stillapes and Christians are stillpigs in Saudi schools. What is happening in Palestinian schools pales in comparison to Saudi schools. Saudi schools exist for one reason and one reason only, religious indoctrination.
"When asked about offensive language in textbooks, he said: "This is taken out." But, according to Miss Shea, this is not true. "Teaching methods that ask kindergarten children to give examples of 'false religions', like Judaism and Christianity, add up to an ideology that runs throughout," she said. "It is not hate speech here and there. It adds up to an argument, an ideology of us versus them.""