Danh ngôn của Ayman Odeh (Sứ mệnh: 5)

The struggle for equality is really a struggle for democracy, and that's why it's a struggle for all the population.
I agree with myself on 80 percent of things, but when I look at myself in the mirror in the morning, I still have inner debates about the right thing to do.
Just as Jews in the U.S. joined Martin Luther King, I'm sure hundreds of thousands of Jews will join the struggle for civil equality in Israel.
I can argue like a Marxist about whether there was a global Jewish nation 200 years ago or whether it was just a religion. But this really doesn't matter.
If Jews don't come to Nazareth, Arabs don't go to Afula. There is fear on both sides.
I believe that the U.S. is the strongest country in the whole world and the country that supports Israel the most. I believe that it has the strength to push Israel towards peace.
Eventually, I moved from a place of anger toward the Jews of Israel toward a place of embrace.