In an earlier post ("
Israel Turns to Social Media in Fight against Hamas")
I described how the Israeli Consulate in New York is using Twitter in
the battle for public opinion regarding the conflict that
partisans on
both sides seem to be calling the "War on Gaza."
It turns out there's some social media savvy on the Palestinian side as well.
GazaTalk.com
(warning: if you click around on the site you'll see gruesome photos)
launched January 1. I discovered it at about 5 a.m. January 5 (today),
via a link in the
tweetstream of Beshr Kayali. I have no idea who he is beyond the fact that
his Twitter page says he's in Damascus, and because I need to wrap this up quickly before a busy workday, I'm not going to research it.
The
GazaTalk.com homepage features the death toll scorecard badge above,
along with links to articles, blog posts, pro-Palestinian "Gaza
Tweeters" and more.
(Disclosure: I've made clear where
my own sympathies lie in this conflict. For this post, I'm setting aside my political views to focus on social media.)
If
you click on the image below, I think you'll see a much-larger version
of it. (Works on my machine, anyway, but I'm still a newbie blogger and
I don't know if it will work for you. Give it a shot, then come back
here to continue the text.)
By using
Tweet Grid
-- one of the many independent sites that have sprung up to leverage
Twitter's tweetstream -- I've collected the most recent tweets from
both Kayali and from
Benny Daon. I don't know anything about him either, but he gives his location as Tel Aviv.
The
large screenshot (if you can see it) shows Daon and Kayali parsing the
nuances of the conflict in 140-character tweets. Here's a text version
of one exchange:
Beshrkayali: RT @ysalahi: Gaza's 9/11: 500 dead so far out of 1.5 million in #Gaza. that's approximately 100,000 americans out of 300 million.
Translation:
Kayali is re-tweeting ("RT") a tweet from someone else ("@ysalahi")
which compares the Gaza death toll with the 9/11 death toll, based on
the respective populations of Gaza and the U.S. (If anyone cares about
what I think about this argument on a substantive level, please inquire
in the comments -- I'm staying neutral in the body of the post.)
Daon fires back with a different take:
daonb: @Beshrkayali of the 500 dead in #gaza most are jihadists who got their wish and many others were human shields. In 9/11 just civilians
One
last observation, then I've gotta wrap this up. Daon and Kayali both
press their cases in highly partisan language. Maybe it's wishful
thinking, but I think I detect a hint of grudging respect and even
camaraderie in this exchange:
daonb: @Beshrkayali watching bbc news now for smart analysis on #gaza. hoping we can have peace after this bloodbath, but very much doubt it
Beshrkayali: @daonb Yeah me too... It appears that Israel won't stop until ALL Palestinians are dead... That's what Olmert said... #gaza
The two sides in the Gaza War may not be negotiating, but at least they're tweeting.
(Cross-posted from All That Is Necessary)