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#Kilani
milomeri · 2 years
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Koilani Village
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shezizi · 2 years
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netcarat · 2 years
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The Top 8 Famous Jewelers for Rappers In Demand
Here are 8 hip hop jewelers who are famous and in demand. Know the story behind how and what made them so famous and why rappers like their jewelry.
Click here to read the blog
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roxannenebula · 23 days
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*Ko'shyro Kilani (he/him)* Evocation Wizard* Seldarine Drow* Urchin*
An au of one of my oldest oc's - Koshiro, I genuinely am very into this version of him and how well he and Astarion mesh because of their past. So suffice to say he's likely going for Astarion ~
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astrumocs · 5 months
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for Kilani -🔶, 🐉, 🧡, 🥪
🔶 LARGE ORANGE DIAMOND — does your oc know cpr? do they have any other medical expertise?
I think she knows CPR because it seems like a good general skill to have and emergencies come up, but beyond that, I don't think she's ever had the desire or reason to seek any medical expertise.
🐉 DRAGON — what is your oc's favorite mythical creature?
I think it's too easy to say some kind of dragon because her lusus is part dragon, but honestly, the fierce regality of them is something she admires and enjoys a lot. Finds their depth and variety of being good and/or evil compelling..
🧡 ORANGE HEART — does your oc tend to prioritize family or friends?
Most trolls typically don't have a familial bond outside of their lusus, so I think it's unlikely to be that. Her lusus also doesn't really rely on her or anything, so there's not much of a need to really prioritize it over her friends.
Not to mention she cares very deeply for her friends and doesn't consider you a friend period unless she thinks very well of you overall.
🥪 SANDWICH — what does your oc's typical lunch look like? do they usually eat lunch?
I'd say the lunch is something light and classy.. picturing a quick but nice meal from a bistro or brunch bar. I imagine Lani eating chicken salads with couscous, little sandwiches with nicely seasoned fries dressed in truffle oil, etc. That kinda thing. Prefers not to eat things that are too messy/greasy, but is absolutely not against doing it for really good food or for a casual sit down with a friend.
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raeliyah · 2 years
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Hey @maribunart  Merry Calibration!!  how could I _not_ choose your adorable hearthcat-loving cinnamon roll of a Dragonblooded??? I love Kilani and I am so happy for the chance to draw her!! Tried to give her a quiet moment enjoying a delicious beverage with two hearth-cat buddies to keep her company.  I hope you like it <3 This is watercolor & colored pencil on hotpress watercolor paper, about 8x10 finished area, and if you want the original I’m happy to mail it to the address of your choice!  so sorry for making you and @shiftingpath sweat with my sliding-up-to-the-deadline near lateness! 😬 
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astral-ardors · 1 year
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u know i’m gonna send a list question here too: biggest to least size queen
SIGHS... Parlus is the biggest-size queen on here... blasphemous slut supreme... i needn't say more,
Least? hmmmm, probably Kilani.. it's just not something she's all that hung up on or cares about? She can and will make it work no matter the size of her partner, so she doesn't consider it much to begin w/,
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eretzyisrael · 2 years
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The Lion’s Den terror group is vowing revenge after one of its senior commanders was killed in an explosion in Shechem (Nablus) on Saturday night.
The circumstances of the blast were not clear. Some Palestinian reports say 33-year-old Tamer Kilani was killed by his own explosive while others said he was killed by a booby trapped motorcycle.
Israeli officials have not commented on the incident. A video circulating on social media purporting to show a motorcycle left by a “collaborator” blowing up as Kilani walked past has not been independently verified.
Hebrew media reports said Kilani was personally involved in a number of shooting and grenade attacks against Israelis in Samaria while masterminding others.
Kilani also dispatched a Palestinian with a Carlo submachine gun and two bombs to Tel Aviv in September to carry out a mass-casualty attack. What could have been a massacre was foiled when officers from the elite Yasam anti-terrorism unit in Jaffa spotted the terrorist acting suspiciously.
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1991diamondaries · 2 years
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lescroniques · 3 months
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Sense sentir les bombes o senyals d'alerta: Els reptes d'una persona sorda a Gaza
yotambien.mx Tots els dies, Bassem Al-Habal surt de l’habitació on viu amb la seva família per buscar aigua i menjar. La seva vida, després de vuit mesos de conflicto armat a Gaza, ha canviat tant que ara considera llar un petit espai adaptat dins d’una escola convertida en refugi. Notícies ONU, l’agència d’informació de Nacions Unides, va conversar amb Al-Habal, un home sord que va començar a…
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ghost-waves · 7 months
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Photo by Luisa Kilani on Unsplash
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kilanihair · 1 year
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Secure and Comfortable: The Benefits of Wearing Glueless Wigs
When it comes to transforming your hairstyle effortlessly, wigs have become a popular choice. Among the various wig options available, glueless wigs have gained significant attention. These innovative hairpieces offer a multitude of benefits, providing wearers with both security and comfort. Let's explore why glueless wigs have become a game-changer in the world of hair fashion.
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Versatility and convenience
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fairuzfan · 9 months
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AMAZING article about what it means to participate in anti-Zionism work both online and in person.
If your anti-zionism does not in any way acknowledge that it is a way of thought and practice led by and for Palestinians, then you need to reevaluate your "anti-zionism" label.
Some passages that felt especially relevant to tumblr:
If we accept, as those with even the most rudimentary understanding of history do, that zionism is an ongoing process of settler-colonialism, then the undoing of zionism requires anti-zionism, which should be understood as a process of decolonisation. Anti-zionism as a decolonial ideology then becomes rightly situated as an indigenous liberation movement. The resulting implication is two-fold. First, decolonial organising requires that we extract ourselves from the limitations of existing structures of power and knowledge and imagine a new, just world. Second, this understanding clarifies that the caretakers of anti-zionist thought are indigenous communities resisting colonial erasure, and it is from this analysis that the strategies, modes, and goals of decolonial praxis should flow. In simpler terms: Palestinians committed to decolonisation, not Western-based NGOs, are the primary authors of anti-zionist thought. We write this as a Palestinian and a Palestinian-American who live and work in Palestine, and have seen the impact of so-called ‘Western values’ and how the centring of the ‘human rights’ paradigm disrupts real decolonial efforts in Palestine and abroad. This is carried out in favour of maintaining the status quo and gaining proximity to power, using our slogans emptied of Palestinian historical analysis.
Anti-zionist organising is not a new notion, but until now the use of the term in organising circles has been mired with misunderstandings, vague definitions, or minimised outright. Some have incorrectly described anti-zionism as amounting to activities or thought limited to critiques of the present Israeli government – this is a dangerous misrepresentation. Understanding anti-zionism as decolonisation requires the articulation of a political movement with material, articulated goals: the restitution of ancestral territories and upholding the inviolable principle of indigenous repatriation and through the right of return, coupled with the deconstruction of zionist structures and the reconstitution of governing frameworks that are conceived, directed, and implemented by Palestinians.  Anti-zionism illuminates the necessity to return power to the indigenous community and the need for frameworks of justice and accountability for the settler communities that have waged a bloody, unrelenting hundred-year war on the people of Palestine. It means that anti-zionism is much more than a slogan. 
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While our collective imaginations have not fully articulated what a liberated and decolonised Palestine looks like, the rough contours have been laid out repeatedly. Ask any Palestinian refugee displaced from Haifa, the lands of Sheikh Muwannis, or Deir Yassin – they will tell that a decolonised Palestine is, at a minimum, the right of Palestinians’ return to an autonomous political unit from the river to the sea. When self-proclaimed ‘anti-zionists’ use rhetoric like ‘Israel-Palestine’ – or worse, ‘Palestine-Israel’ – we wonder: where do you think ‘Israel’ exists? On which land does it lay, if not Palestine? This is nothing more than an attempt to legitimise a colonial state; the name you are looking for is Palestine – no hyphen required. At a minimum, anti-zionist formations should cut out language that forces upon Palestinians and non-Palestinian allies the violence of colonial theft. 
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The common choice to centre the Oslo Accords, international humanitarian law, and the human rights paradigm over socio-historical Palestinian realities not only limits our analysis and political interventions; it restricts our imagination of what kind of future Palestinians deserve, sidelining questions of decolonization to convince us that it is the new, bad settlers in the West Bank who are the source of violence. Legitimate settlers, who reside within the bounds of Palestinian geographies stolen in 1948 like Tel Aviv and West Jerusalem, are different within this narrative. Like Breaking the Silence, they can be enlightened by learning the error of colonial violence carried out in service of the bad settlers. They can supposedly even be our solidarity partners – all without having to sacrifice a crumb of colonial privilege or denounce pre-1967 zionist violence in any of its cruel manifestations. As a result of this course of thought, solidarity organisations often showcase particular Israelis – those who renounce state violence in service of the bad settlers and their ongoing colonisation of the West Bank – in roles as professionals and peacemakers, positioning them on an equal intellectual, moral, or class footing with Palestinians. There is no recognition of the inherent imbalance of power between these Israelis and the Palestinians they purport to be in solidarity with – stripping away their settler status. The settler is taken out of the historical-political context which afforded them privileged status on stolen land, and is given the power to delineate the Palestinian experience. This is part of the historical occlusion of the zionist narrative, overlooking the context of settler-colonialism to read the settler as an individual, and omitting their class status as a settler. 
It is essential to note that Palestinians have never rejected Jewish indigeneity in Palestine. However, the liberation movement has differentiated between zionist settlers and Jewish natives. Palestinians have established a clear and rational framework for this distinction, like in the Thawabet, the National Charter of Palestine from 1968. Article 6 states, ‘The Jews who had normally resided in Palestine until the beginning of the Zionist invasion will be considered Palestinians.’ When individuals misread ‘decolonisation’ as ‘the mass killing or expulsion of Jews,’ it is often a reflection of their own entanglement in colonialism or a result of zionist propaganda. Perpetuating this rhetoric is a deliberate misinterpretation of Palestinian thought, which has maintained this position over a century of indigenous organising.  Even after 100 years of enduring ethnic cleansing, whole communities bombed and entire family lines erased, Palestinians have never, as a collective, called for the mass killing of Jews or Israelis. Anti-zionism cannot shy away from employing the historical-political definitions of ‘settler’ and ‘indigenous’ in their discourse to confront ahistorical readings of Palestinian decolonial thought and zionist propaganda. 
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In the context of the United States, the most threatening zionist institutions are the entrenched political parties which function to maintain the status quo of the American empire, not Hillel groups on university campuses or even Christian zionist churches. While the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) engage in forms of violence that suppress Palestinian liberation and must not be minimised, it is crucial to recognise that the most consequential institutions in the context of settler-colonialism are not exclusively Jewish in their orientation or representation: the Republican and Democratic Party in the United States do arguably more to manufacture public consent for the slaughtering of Palestinians than the ADL and AIPAC combined. Even the Progressive Caucus and the majority of ‘The Squad’ are guilty of this.
Leila Shomali and Lara Kilani
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itsloriel · 5 months
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Photo by Luisa Kilani on Unsplash
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opencommunion · 9 months
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Excellent overview of what anti-zionism means from an indigenous Palestinian perspective, and how to assess whether a solidarity organization is aligned with that perspective
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astrumocs · 9 months
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💫 forrr kilani...
💫 Kilani - Kilani and Laelin met when they both got booked for the same fashion shoot sweeps ago and they were immediately seeing pitch and giving each other such a time about it.
This also happened again a couple months later, but Kilani arranged it that way on purpose as a bold pitch-flirting move. It paid off too, as you can imagine,
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