Carrie Devorah, a photojournalist in Washington DC, and the sister of Chezi Goldberg who was murdered in the Jan. 29th Jerusalem bus bombing, went to The Hague to document the events.
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| Jews light memorial candles outside The Hague, in memory of the 927 terror victims.
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| Zaka, the emergency team who gathers bits of bodies after a terror attack, shipped a bombed Egged bus to be displayed outside The Hague. |
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| The bombed Egged bus arrives at the Amsterdam airport. |
| Israeli Knesset Members, Wasil Taha (left) and Ahmad Tibi, flew to The Hague to join in the protest against Israeli policy.
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| Pro-Palestinian protesters call for Western leaders to be put behind bars.
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| The mother of Israeli terror victim Gila Kessler pleads for protection against mass murderers. |
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| 927 dead. 927 reasons for the anti-terror fence. |
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| Arabs decry the need for a fence. |
| With The Hague looming in the background, an advocate of the anti-terror fence stands against the demonstrators.
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| U.S. Congressman Robert Wexler (D-Florida, pictured here with faces of Israeli victims in the background) and Cong. Steve Chabot (R-Ohio) flew to The Hague in support of Israel. Says Wexler: "[The] International Court of Justice is being hijacked by nations and groups for political purposes, rather than for the good of both Israelis and Palestinians."
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| Arab boy crouches under massive Palestinian flag. |
| Arab protester against the fence.
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| The father of an Israeli terror victim articulates how the fence is reversible, but death is not.
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The photographer of this series, Carrie Devorah (center, wearing cap), joins a vigil outside The Hague with relatives of terror victims. She is holding a photo of her brother Chezi Goldberg, murdered in the Jan. 29, 2004 Jerusalem bus bombing.
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