News | International
11 Feb 2025 19:57
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > International

    Israeli police seize books during raid on East Jerusalem bookshop run by Palestinian family

    The lawyer for two Palestinian men arrested over books they were selling in their family store says they are being pursued for political reasons.


    Israeli police have seized books, including a children's colouring-in book, from a Palestinian-run shop, arresting two members of the family who have run the store for more than four decades.

    Mahmoud and Ahmed Muna appeared in the Jerusalem Trial Court on Monday, accused of breaching public peace, following raids on their family bookshop on Sunday afternoon.

    The Educational Bookshop has been a literary haven in the Israeli-annexed East Jerusalem since 1984, selling tomes about Palestinian and Middle Eastern culture and current affairs.

    Israeli police with search warrants arrived at two of the shops on Sunday afternoon, scouring the shelves and seizing hundreds of books with Palestinian authors, titles and imagery.

    "They think that there is dangerous items in the bookshops," Mahmoud's brother and Ahmed's uncle, Murad Muna, told the ABC.

    "They started searching for 1 hour, just throwing books on the floor … they didn't understand what the books are talking about, so they used Google translate to understand.

    "Almost all of the books are English books, which are written by Israeli and Palestinian and European authors.

    "They are talking about the conflict. They have both sides of the issue."

    Many of the books were returned, but about eight were kept by police as part of their evidence to be taken to court.

    Among them was a colouring-in book, From the River to the Sea, by a South African illustrator — the title referring to a Palestinian resistance phrase.

    "Why are you worried about it? Why do you feel triggered?" Mahmoud's wife Mai asked outside court.

    Ms Muna was inside court as her husband and nephew were brought in after spending a night in police custody in Jerusalem's Russian Compound district.

    "Mahmoud looks a little bit tired, Ahmed as well, but I know they are strong enough," she said.

    Nasser Oday, who was representing the two men in court, argued they were being wrongly detained.

    "We will call for their immediate release because this is a political and not a legal detention," he told reporters.

    "[Police] claim that the charge is disturbing public peace … they claim that they are selling political books that are not in line with the Israeli politics.

    "We claim that this is a violation of the right of the citizens to express their opinion, who are protected by the intranational law and the Israeli law as well."

    Police said there were numerous books in the shop "containing inciteful material with nationalist Palestinian themes" and directly mentioned the colouring-in book.

    "The Israel Police will continue its efforts to thwart incitement and support for terrorism, as well as apprehend those involved in offenses that threaten the security of Israel's citizens," it said in a statement.

    Police prosecutors asked the court to hold the men for another 8 days.

    The judge only agreed to continue their detention for another 24 hours, and said they might be released on Tuesday, local time, on strict conditions — including five days' house arrest and a 15-day ban on entering the bookshops.

    Protesters warn of creeping authoritarianism in Israel

    In court, the men's defence lawyer said their arrest immediately reminded him of two moments in history.

    "The first was in 1258, when the Mongols invaded Baghdad in Iraq," Mr Oday told the court.

    "They invaded the libraries — they confiscated the books, burned them and threw a great many of them into the Tigris River in hope, according to the writers and the historians, to control the knowledge and the minds.

    "The second incident was — and I am not comparing, it's important for me to emphasise, your honour — but in 1933 in Germany, in the persecution of the Jewish community, they arrested writers, authors, artists out of a fear that this art would be a criticism of all the atrocities that the Nazi regime perpetrated against the Jews and others."

    Supporters of the men gathered outside the court house with banners and megaphones, chanting slogans that Israel was a "fascist state" and holding placards saying "cowards confiscate books".

    Among them was Pulitzer Prize-winning author Nathan Thrall, who had launched his book A Day in the Life of Abed Salama at the Educational Bookshop.

    He said he was outraged by the raids, but not surprised.

    "It's part of what is a widely documented increase in authoritarianism here," he told the ABC.

    "But it's really important to emphasise that when we talk about authoritarianism here, that we're not implicitly describing [Israel] as a democracy that's sliding into authoritarianism.

    "Any state that for decades has ruled over millions of people, depriving them of basic rights on the basis of their inborn characteristics, does not fit any definition of democracy that I know of."

    Bookshop opens its doors despite raids

    The Muna family were determined to reopen the bookshop on Monday, even with Mahmoud and Ahmed still in police custody.

    "Our business is not only a money business — I mean, it's an idea, we have a case to struggle for," Murad said.

    "We know even that we pay the price, we should continue because we are on the right side."


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

     Other International News
     11 Feb: An asteroid has a 2.2 per cent chance of hitting Earth. How would we respond to an actual threat?
     11 Feb: What does DEI mean, and why does Donald Trump want to ban diversity programs?
     11 Feb: Miss Pacific Islands pageant judge not allowed to leave Solomon Islands after alleged voting controversy
     11 Feb: Hamas suspends hostage releases as 'warning' over alleged ceasefire breaches
     11 Feb: Donald Trump says there will be 'no exemptions' to tariffs on steel and aluminium imports
     11 Feb: Experts on how to bring passion and purpose back to your personal life
     11 Feb: Metropolitan Police response criticised at Sam Kerr's racially aggravated harassment trial in London
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks winger Caleb Clarke's intent on impacting rugby in his own way - after withdrawing from the Super Rugby Fantasy competition More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    The Trade Minister's laying bare the cost of Donald Trump's tariffs for New Zealand More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Dave Coulier is "doing okay" amid his cancer battle 19:42

    Entertainment:
    Khloe Kardashian isn't sure her children in her family will get along when they are teenagers 19:12

    Environment:
    Warnings of severe thunderstorms hitting parts of Waikato around Morrinsville, Waitoa, and Ngarua 18:57

    Entertainment:
    Ashley Tisdale wants to share "less and less" on social media 18:42

    Rugby League:
    Not the news Warriors fans wanted to hear on Dallin Watene-Zelezniak 18:37

    International:
    An asteroid has a 2.2 per cent chance of hitting Earth. How would we respond to an actual threat? 18:17

    Entertainment:
    Sarah Michelle Gellar likes to think "every day is Valentine's Day" now that she has been married for so long 18:12

    Business:
    The Trade Minister's laying bare the cost of Donald Trump's tariffs for New Zealand 18:07

    Politics:
    Kainga Ora's changing up how it helps tenants keep on top of rent 17:57

    Education:
    New Zealand's secondary school scholarship results are out 17:57


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd