2. Dennis Kucinich: Gaza,
reforming the mon[ISO-8859-1] etary system and a plea for your support
3. From the Gaza border
4. Call for a Ceasefire in Gaza
5. Tues 6 Jan at 5pm Protest at Israeli and Egyptian Embassies
6. Irish anti war
7. Israel, The Sociopathic State
8. Our Gaza Cease-Fire ad appeared in today's New York Times
9. photos that someone sent to me... "Jews say: Not In Our Name" 2009 01
12
10. What Congress should do on Gaza
11. Bolivia cuts ties with Israel
12. The Free Gaza Movement
13. Raza Educators Stand in Solidarity with Gaza
14. "Jesuit priest corresponds with Hamas"
15. Israeli refuseniks
16. genocide
18. HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS
19. Bringing Bush and Cheney to justice and Obama and Gaza
20. The Sand Creek logic
21. Zionist state of "Israel"
22. War of Deceit, Lies and Propaganda
23. Political Correctness in the Middle East
24. Courage to Refuse Update - First Gaza Refusenik Goes to Prison
25. Urgent plea for help- regarding the family of a friend of
mine
26. compare and contrast:It can't be more specific
27. bloodied still breathing
28. why gasoline prices have doubled
29. Israeli intentions In quotes
30. over 700 detained
31. Please Sign Our Call Jews Say: Not in Our Name
32. Gaza: Israel's Great Humanitarian Debacle
33. How can we talk about Genocide, Oppression,
Violence...?
34. On zionism
35. an article from CommonDreams.org: A 'Police State' Celebrates
36. Voices for Creative NonviolenceWhy I Am in Gaza
37. Eyeless in Gaza
38. Democracy Now! --Palestinian and American Indian perspectives on
their dehumanization
39. Dialogue - moyers and foxman
40. Stop the War website and email attacked
41. Voices for Creative NonviolenceStrongest Weapon of All
42. Hugo Chavez Speaks the Truth
About Gaza
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 04:02:25 -0800 (PST)
From: "Samer, Care2 Action Alerts" <actionalerts@care2.com>
1. Gaza: Stop the Violence
care2 petitionsite actionAlert
On Monday, Masouda al-Samouni lost her 10-month-old son to an Israeli
missile attack. She had been preparing food for the baby when the missile
struck. "He died hungry," she said.
Israel launched its "all-out war" on Hamas in the Gaza Strip in response
to Hamas' repeated rocket fire on Israeli towns. But with 1.5 million
people, the Gaza Strip is one of the most densely crowded areas in the
world, and Israeli artillery, tank and missile fire can easily cause
civilian casualties and deaths.
Ask President Bush to use the United States' special relationship with
Israel to urge for a ceasefire. >>
At least a quarter to one-third of deaths in the recent attacks have been
civilians. Unlike other conflicts where there's a chance to flee the war
zone, Gaza itself has become the war zone, and there's nowhere else for
the population to go.
Israel has the right to defend itself against Hamas rocket attacks, but
this war is a disproportionate response, placing thousands of civilians
at risk of injury and death.
So far, Israel has resisted international calls for a ceasefire. Urge
President Bush to push the Israeli government for a ceasefire. Please act
today! >>
Take action link: http://www.care2.com/go/z/e/Aex.T/YaiK/JVYC
[samer.jpg] Thanks for taking action!
Samer
ThePetitionSite
P.S. For a quick update on ceasefire efforts, check out Care2's Human
Rights Cause Channel.
Stop the Violence in Gaza
Approximately 550 Palestinians have been killed so far, at least a
quarter of them civilians.
Take Action!
Care2.com, Inc.
275 Shoreline Drive, Suite 300
Redwood City, CA 94065
http://www.care2.com
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 10:45:52 -0500 (EST)
From: Dennis Kucinich <reply@kucinichforcongress.com>
2. Dennis Kucinich: Gaza,
reforming the mon[ISO-8859-1] etary system and a plea for your support
Dennis Kucinich - www.Kucinich.us
Gaza, reforming the monetary system and a plea for your support
As Congress begins, I have been leading the way towards addressing the
humanitarian plight of the people of Gaza whose desperate conditions must
be addressed if there is to be any chance for peace in the Middle East.
I have also begun a campaign to work on the reform of our monetary system
in order to bring about equity, prosperity and environmental
sustainability.
I had to spend the resources you provided in order to retain my seat in
Congress. I need your generous help again to fund our ongoing political
operations including media outreach, web communications, office
administration and issues campaigning.
I know these are hard times but your contribution is essential to
strengthening our efforts. Please contribute as generously as you can.
Your support assures a true independent voice in Congress.
With hope and in peace,
Dennis J Kucinich
Dennis
Paid for by the Re-Elect Congressman Kucinich Committee
PO Box 110475 | Cleveland | OH | 44111 | 216-252-9000
reply@kucinichforcongress.com.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 12:42:12 -0500 (EST)
From: Barbara Lubin <meca@mecaforpeace.org>
3. From the Gaza border
* * * * * * * * * * * LATEST NEWS * * * * * * * * * * *
As we were preparing this update, Barbara called
to tell us that she and Dr. El-Farra purchased
a mobile intensive care unit to take into Gaza.
I arrived Cairo late Thursday night and, together with MECA's Director of
Gaza Projects, Dr. Mona El-Farra, and a good friend and MECA supporter,
Sharon Wallace, I have been working hard on our emergency shipment to
Gaza.
Thanks to your generous support, we were able to purchase
state-of-the-art wheelchairs, powdered milk, and baby cereal, as well as
soccer balls, crayons, pens and paper for the hundreds of thousands of
traumatized children. Dr. El-Farra has been calling her colleagues at the
Red Crescent Society and the Union of Health Work Committees to make sure
we are only sending items that children and families in Gaza need during
this ongoing massacre.
Once the ambulance is ready, we will load up the trucks and head to the
Rafah Crossing point into Gaza. The Arab Doctor's Union has volunteered
to cover our transportation fees so that we can use every cent of your
donations to buy emergency supplies.
Meanwhile the World Health Organization (WHO) is sending MECA's four tons
of medications for children and infants by air to Tel Aviv and then into
Gaza. We purchased this shipment at a reduced cost, thanks to the help
of Medical Teams International.
I am so thankful to all of MECA's supporters and partners who are making
this shipment possible. In the face of so much death and destruction,
your support for children in Gaza means so much.
But what the children need more than anything is an end to the Israeli
airstrikes, tank shellings, and ground invasion. Please continue to send
letters, write op-eds, attend demonstrations, and build campaigns for
boycott, divestment and sanctions against Israel. It is up to all of us
to make Gaza a safe place for children.
Sincerely,
Barbara Lubin
Cairo, Egypt
Click here to make a contribution for more aid.
What You Can Do!
Protest Israel's Attacks on Gaza in your area
See protests around the world
Contact Congress, State Dept. White House to demand immediate
implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1860:
Send a letter
Contact Obama Transition Team
Website
Call 202-540-3000, press 2
Demand Fair Media Coverage
Make a contribution
More Gaza News & Action
MECA blog
MECA website
Thank the 5 representatives who voted against the House Resolution
supporting Israel's attacks: Maxine Waters, Gwen Moore, Dennis Kucinich,
Nick Rahall, Ron Paul
202-224-3121
UPCOMING EVENTS
Jan. 24, Oakland, 7pm
Poetry for Gaza
Islamic Cultural Center
1433 Madison Street, Oakland
Feb. 11, Berkeley, 7pm
Nadje Al-Ali: What Kind of Liberation? Women and the Occupation of Iraq
More info
During this crisis MECA is sending out information to the media almost
daily. If you would like to get these updates, click on this link:
JOIN OR UPDATE EMAIL LIST
Gaza is Sinking in a River of Blood
gaz funeral May 08 A Message from a Gazan to the World
By Mohammed Fares Al Majdalawi
Jabalya Refugee Camp, Gaza, January 11,2009
There is a horror in every minute and it is clear especially in the lives
of children. For example, there were five sisters in one family killed
from the Israeli occupation while they stayed in their home. But there
are 800,000 other children in Gaza, all afraid, all waiting for someone
or something to help them. They are caught in a prisonthat is becoming a
concentration camp. Everyday we sleep and open our eyes to the Israeli
crimes of killing children and women and destroying civilians' homes. My
words are unable to convey my feelings about this life in Gaza.
Go to article on Electronic Intifada
MECA IN THE NEWS
MECA Director Barbara Lubin on Bay Area ABC TV News
"My cousin is still under the rubble," by Dr. Mona El-Farra
Founder of US Aid Organization Brings Four Tons of Medicine to Gaza
As Israel Breaks Ceasefire, US Nonprofit Sends $1.6 Million of Medicine
and Medical Supplies for Children in Gaza
Louisville-area woman seeks to bring aid to Gaza
MAKE A SECURE ONLINE DONATION NOW!
gaza children bleeding Please make a contribution of whatever amount you
can afford to MECA.
If you haven't given recently, please give now. Even if you have given
already, please consider an additional gift.
Any amount you can afford will help MECA send more aid to Gaza!
DONATE NOW!
meca@mecaforpeace.org.
Middle East Children's Alliance | 1101 8th Street | Suite 100 | Berkeley
| CA | 94710
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 14:10:57 -0500 (EST)
From: "Kevin Martin, Peace Action" <Peaceact@mail.democracyinaction.org>
4. Call for a Ceasefire in Gaza
While the violence in Gaza continues unabated, and may well be escalated
soon, the U.S. Congress voted late last week on resolutions giving
unqualified support to Israel's actions. The Senate's vote last Thursday
was not even recorded; it was passed by a voice vote. In the House, the
roll call (on a resolution that was even more one-sided than the one in
the Senate) last Friday was 390 yes, 5 no and 22 "present" (usually taken
to mean the Representative wanted to register opposition to the measure
without voting "no"). Look at the vote.
How is it possible? Almost every representative in our government
refused to publicly acknowledge the humanitarian crisis boiling over in
Gaza. Our elected officials are out of step with our country.
Another piece of legislation has been proposed; one which acknowledges
the plight of the women, children, and men in Gaza. Please take action
today and encourage your representatives to support Dennis J. Kucinich's
resolution expressing the sense of the House of Representatives
concerning the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. READ IT HERE.
Tell Your Representative to support this measure by co-sponsoring it.
In short, he asks the House of Representatives to call "on the Government
of Israel and representatives of Hamas to implement an immediate and
unconditional ceasefire and to allow unrestricted humanitarian access in
Gaza." This is in line with calls from our allies in Europe and the
principles set out by the Geneva conventions.
[freegazaboats.jpg] There is no excuse for remaining silent while so many
of the innocent are dying. Please write your Representatives and ask
them to support the Kucinich resolution for the Gazan cease-fire. You
can take other actions as well; you'll find a list of them, here. Peace
Action is also promoting our coalition partner the U.S. Campaign to End
the Israeli Occupation. They have a list of ongoing protests, here.
Mazin Qumsiyeh, a Peace Action Education Fund board member, is currently
in Palestine. Here is a link to his words from the ground.
Sincerely,
Kevin M. Martin
Executive Director
Peace Action
www.Peace-Action.org
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: <info@irishantiwar.org>
Sent: Sunday, January 04, 2009 8:54 PM
5. Tues 6 Jan at 5pm Protest at Israeli and Egyptian Embassies
>
> Israel troops have now entered the Gaza strip. The terror unleashed by
> bombings is now being continued in the streets in people's houses.
>
> This is a repeat of Lebannon 2006. Israel's claim that it is a
"necessary operation" in retaliation to the launching of rockets is absurd
Israel has killed one hundred times more people. Equally unbelievable is
the Israeli claim, even while they massacre innocent civilians, that they
are "facilitating" humanitarian aid.
>
> This is about the approach of the Israeli elections, the interlude of
the US presidency and an age-old political aim to destroy Palestine. The
invasion of Gaza makes mobilizing opposition in Ireland all the more
urgent.
>
> Israel's actions are allowed continue because those leaders in the
> Arab world are terrified of the radicalizing effect of the war on Gaza.
> Egypt's Mubarak, despite two million of his people demonstrating
against the attacks on Gaza, refuses to allow the people from Gaza to flee
to safety across the Rafah crossing into Egypt.
>
> This cynical move further endangers Palestinians. It is an attempt to
> stem a growing radicalization within Egypt.
>
> Demonstrations against Israeli terror have taken place across the world.
> Once again we see the determination of the international
anti-war movement to stop needless deaths at the hands of those determined
to keep Palestinians stateless and vulnerable. Gaza is the latest phase in
the "war on terror" and we cannot let Israel and its western backers away
with it.
>
> Opposition to this slaughter needs to move beyond verbal condemnation.
> We call for an immediate cessation of all military attacks on Gaza, the
> severing of diplomatic relations with Israel, and with demonstrations,
local protests, boycotting of Israeli goods, keeping up the pressure on
our government to isolate Israel and its terrorization of the people of
Gaza.
>
> PROTEST at Israeli Embassy to Egyptian Embassy Assemble at the
> Israeli Embassy, opposite the former Jurys in Ballsbridge at 5 pm on
Tuesday 6th Jan afterwards to march the Egyptian Embassy.
>
> STOP The slaughter in GAZA Free Palestine - Boycott Israel
This list is primarily set up to distribute the 'Green Letters' edited by
Jenny James which give a running account of the activities and experiences
of the Atlantis Community in Colombia since 1995
Archived messages may be seen at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Green-Letters/messages See also
http://afan.org.uk/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 06:53:17 -0500
From: Jenny James <atlantiscol@hotmail.com>
6. Irish anti war
Please support these protests
In protest at the bloody slaughter by Israel of over 420 people in Gaza
and the injuring of over 2,000, the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign
(ISPC) calls on people in Ireland to turn out for the National
Demonstration in Dublin, or the countrywide demonstrations to show their
solidarity with the people of Gaza.
The IPSC demands that the Irish government use all means it its power to
bring the slaughter to an end and to ensure the delivery immediately of
humanitarian supplies which Israel has been preventing. It also calls on
the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr Micheál Martin TD, to demand that the
EU suspend its Association Agreement with Israel - which grants it special
trading privileges - as long as its slaughter of Palestinians and its
blockading of Gaza continue. In addition we are calling on civil society
to get active in the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign
against Israel
Free Gaza: Stop the Slaughter! End the Siege!
Saturday 3rd January, Dublin
The demonstration will begin at the Central Bank Plaza at 1.00pm. A
march will proceed to the Dail and the EU offices and finish up with a
rally at the Spire in O'Connell St. where there will be a live link-up
with Gaza.
Speakers include:
Patricia McKeown, President ICTU
Robert Ballagh, Award Winning Artist
Patrick Comerford, Anglican Minister, Chair of CND Ireland
Mary Lou McDonald MEP, Sinn Fein
Philip O'Connor, IPSC
Speakers from the Palestinian Rights Institute in Ireland and the General
Delegation of Palestine in Ireland
Mairead Corrigan Maguire, Nobel Peace Laureate
Joe Higgins, Socialist Party
Read statements from Cardinal Brady, Archbishop Harper and Rev. Aian
Ferguson, heads of the three major Churches, and from Michael D Higgins,
TD (Labour) will be read.
Demonstrations are also being held around the country at the following
locations:
Galway - 12.30pm Shop Street
Limerick - 1pm, Assemble outside Penny's
Cork - 1pm, Daunt Square
Derry - 3pm, Guildhall Square
Sligo - 3pm, O'Connell St
For full details of all protests, please see http://www.ipsc.ie
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 10:23:43 -0800 (PST)
From: patricia blair <cris6369@yahoo.com>
7. Israel, The Sociopathic State
If you have any doubts of the rampant horror & terrorism that
is war taking place in Gaza, please let this video footage
speak for itself- however, be forewarned that war, like
truths, can be extremely ugly. Otherwise, please scroll
below for several electronic appeals to engage your
conscience. Regardless of the complexity or historical
perspectives of this matter, war and violence has failed to
resolve anything in this conflict- this is beyond
side-taking. Certainly, taking out a 1,200 eyes for 24 is
hardly justice and will surely lead to more blindness. Pete
VIDEO: THE CARNAGE IN GAZA (you won't see on US/Israeli media)
http://muslimtv.magnify.net/video/ISRAEL-CARNAGE-CIVILIANS-CHILDR
[excerpt]
http://www.bestcyrano.org/THOMASPAINE/?p=1508
Israel ^Ö The Sociopathic State
By Mary Sojourner
1/4/09
>>Israel^Òs current assault on Gaza, its most heinous in years,
shows no mercy to the Palestinians. The blockade has already brought Gaza
to its knees, and now they are bombing the pitiful land almost to
oblivion. Children and women are being killed, along with so-called
^Ólegitimate targets.^Ô I would maintain that every ^Ótarget^Ô is a human
being, particularly when the battle is so unequal, so unfair.
The sociopath is unable to feel remorse. Emotionally shallow, he abuses
others without hesitation. He cannot make friends, much less keep them. He
is secretive, paranoid, and authoritarian. Is Israel paranoid? Does it
suffer from the delusion that all its Arab neighbors are waiting to
destroy it? Of course it does. It threatens attack for no reason ^Ö e.g.
Iran ^Ö and has attacked without provocation in the past ^Ö e.g. Iraq and
Lebanon. And even now, with the intolerable treatment it is giving Gaza,
have there been any threats from other countries? Of course not. It sits
in its sea of nuclear weapons and dares anyone to attack, while it
destroys Gaza with impunity.
The sociopath lies pathologically and will make promises that he never
keeps, yet he continually expects to be believed and will react with
outrage if someone refuses to accept his promises as real. At the same
time he demands that those around him make and keep promises even knowing
that his will not be kept. How many times has Israel broken promises not
to increase settlements in the West Bank? Building is going on there even
as Gaza is being destroyed.<<
@@@
Reports - Israel Using Illegal Chemical Weapon in Gaza
ADC Calls for Investigations Into Reported Israeli use of White
Phosphorus on Gaza
Washington, DC | January 5, 2009 | www.adc.org | The American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) today called on the United States
Government; including members of Congress, and the international
community; including the United Nations and the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC), to investigate Israel's reported use of White
Phosphorus in its ongoing attack on Gaza. According to the United Nations
Israel's overwhelming attacks on Gaza, now in their tenth day, have thus
far killed 540 people, 30% of whom are civilians, and injured over 2,750
people; including over 1,000 children. Among those killed today was a
family of seven from Shati refugee camp, who were killed by Israeli navy
shelling. Three siblings from one family, as well as a girl and her
grandfather, also died in the Zeitoun neighborhood of Gaza during Israeli
artillery shelling. Emergency medical services have also come under
Israeli attack with the al-Awda hospital in Jabaliya being hit by two
Israeli shells today. The attacks have also destroyed 12 Mosques. Since
the Israeli attacks began, rocket fire from militants in Gaza has thus far
killed 5 Israelis including one soldier.
Credible media reports have indicated that the Israeli military is using
White Phosphorus artillery shells in its bombing of Gaza. ADC National
Executive Director Kareem Shora said, "White Phosphorus is categorized as
a chemical weapon by most governments and its use in civilian areas is
banned by the 1980 Geneva Convention. It is a violation of international
humanitarian law and the laws of war to use White Phosphorus ammunition,
an incendiary weapon, in civilian areas."
The UN has listed Gaza, with a population of 1.5-Million people, as the
most densely populated area in the world with a population density that is
higher than that of Manhattan in New York City. White Phosphorus causes
painful burn injuries to exposed human flesh.
The Israeli military used White Phosphorus ammunition during the 2006 war
on Lebanon as documented by ADC in its extensive 233-page report
Eyewitness Lebanon: an International Law Inquiry. White phosphorus is an
indiscriminate killer that ignites once it is exposed to oxygen, producing
such heat that it bursts into a yellow flame and produces a dense white
smoke.
@@@
While the violence in Gaza continues unabated, and may well be escalated
soon, the U.S. Congress voted late last week on resolutions giving
unqualified support to Israel's actions. The Senate's vote last Thursday
was not even recorded; it was passed by a voice vote. In the House, the
roll call (on a resolution that was even more one-sided than the one in
the Senate) last Friday was 390 yes, 5 no and 22 "present" (usually taken
to mean the Representative wanted to register opposition to the measure
without voting "no"). Look at the vote.
How is it possible? Almost every representative in our government refused
to publicly acknowledge the humanitarian crisis boiling over in Gaza.
Our elected officials are out of step with our country.
Another piece of legislation has been proposed; one which acknowledges the
plight of the women, children, and men in Gaza. Please take action today
and encourage your representatives to support Dennis J. Kucinich's
resolution expressing the sense of the House of Representatives concerning
the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. READ IT HERE.
Tell Your Representative to support this measure by co-sponsoring it.
In short, he asks the House of Representatives to call "on the Government
of Israel and representatives of Hamas to implement an immediate and
unconditional ceasefire and to allow unrestricted humanitarian access in
Gaza." This is in line with calls from our allies in Europe and the
principles set out by the Geneva conventions.
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/161/images/gaza/freegazaboats.jpg
There is no excuse for remaining silent while so many of the innocent are
dying. Please write your Representatives and ask them to support the
Kucinich resolution for the Gazan cease-fire. You can take other actions
as well; you'll find a list of them, here. Peace Action is also promoting
our coalition partner the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.
They have a list of ongoing protests, here.
Mazin Qumsiyeh, a Peace Action Education Fund board member, is currently
in Palestine. Here is a link to his words from the ground.
Sincerely,
http://hq.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizations/Peaceact/images/k%27s-sig.gif
Kevin M. Martin
Executive Director
Peace Action
@@@
Subject: petition on Gaza ceasefire
Dear friends,
Thanks for signing the Gaza ceasefire petition -- over 150,000 of us have
joined to raise our voices in just 72 hours. Our petition is being heard
by the UN, the EU, the USA and the Arab League. Now, importantly as news
emerges that a temporary ceasefire has been rejected, we are asking you to
send this urgent email on to your friends and family. Around the world,
people are wondering what they can do to help ^Ö signing the Avaaz
ceasefire petition is a powerful way to contribute to a peaceful outcome
in Gaza.
The conflict continues to dangerously escalate -- endangering hopes of a
swift end to the humanitarian crisis that's already seen over 370 killed
and thousands injured.. The answer lies with the whole international
community actively intervening to mediate peace between Israel and all
Palestinian parties. Now we must raise our voices even louder to get the
needed action. Over the coming days, we will increasingly use the numbers
signing the petition to advocate for a ceasefire, and you can help
increase those numbers: POR FAVOR FIRMEN EN ESTE ENLACE
http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=164047753&v=2623
<http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=164047753&v=2623>
Thanks for all you do and have a peaceful 2009!
The Avaaz Team
---------------
Dear friends,
The Gaza crisis has exploded -- put your name to our emergency petition
demanding a ceasefire. We'll deliver it immediately to the UN Security
Council, the Arab League, the US and other world leaders!
Take Action Now
<http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=164047753&v=2623> As
we watch the Gaza bloodshed with horror, appalled at how the crisis is
spiraling further out of control, one thing is clear -- this violence will
only lead to further civilian suffering and an escalation of the conflict.
There must be another way. Over 280 are dead so far in the Gaza Strip and
hundreds more injured -- rockets are striking Ashdod deep inside Israel
for the very first time, and the sides are mobilising for invasion. A
global outcry has begun, but it'll take more than words -- the immediate
violence won't end, nor will wider peace be secured, without firm action
from the international community.
Today, we're launching an emergency campaign which will be delivered to
the UN Security Council and key world powers, urging them to act to ensure
an immediate ceasefire and address the growing humanitarian crisis -- only
with robust international oversight and action can civilians on all sides
be protected and real steps be taken toward a wider peace. Follow this
link now to sign the emergency petition and send it to everyone you know:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=164047753&v=2623
<http://www.avaaz.org/en/gaza_time_for_peace/?cl=164047753&v=2623>
After Gaza's bloodiest day in recent memory and eight or more years of
ineffective US and global diplomacy, we need to get world leaders to do
more than issue statements if they're to ensure a lasting ceasefire.1
Through the UN Security Council and other international bodies, the world
can provide the help and pressure needed to stop the violence and change
the situation on the ground in Gaza -- preventing the rockets and
incursions, re-opening crossing-points under international oversight so
that instead of weapon-smuggling, the 1.5 million ordinary people of Gaza
can get the fuel, food and medicines they so desperately need.
All sides to the conflict will continue to act as they have in the past if
they believe that the world will stand by and allow them to do so. We
mobilised for a ceasefire in 2006's Israel-Lebanon war and succeeded, but
this time the international community must not delay -- let's raise a
truly worldwide outcry. 2009 is a year that things can be different. As we
face this crisis, and the possibilities of a new year, it's time for us
everywhere to work together to stop this violence.
With hope and determination,
Brett, Ricken, Alice, Ben, Pascal, Paul, Graziela, Paula, Luis,
Iain and the whole Avaaz team
-----
1 Further actions could include: a formal resolution from the Security
Council rather than issuing a press statement as was done on 28 December
2008; explicit private and public international pressure on the parties to
end the hostilities including developing clear terms for the resumption of
negotiations; proper international oversight of the Rafah border; and in
time, a detailed Security Council resolution setting out the terms in
international law for a permanent peace between Israel and Palestine. For
background, see this Jerusalem Post article, "No international pressure to
end op":
http://www..jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1230456497503&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull<http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1230456497503&pagename=JPost/JPArticle/ShowFull> )
Here are four simple things you can do today, each of which takes five
minutes or less:
1. Vote at Change.org
Thanks to your tremendous effort, the ideas to "Appoint Secretary of Peace
in Department of Peace and Nonviolence" and "Bridging the Empathy Gap -
Yes We Can," BOTH made it to the final round of voting at Change.org!
Voting began anew yesterday so we must ALL vote again, and enroll our
friends and family in doing the same.
1. Go to change.org/ideas
2. Type "Department of Peace" into the search bar on the right side of
the page and hit return.
3. Click on the blue "Vote" button to the left of the idea.
4. You'll be prompted to sign in.
1. If you voted in round one, put in your login information.
2. If you didn't vote in round one, create an account. An email
confirmation will be sent to you. Click on the link in the email to verify
the account, then click on "Ideas" in the upper right menu items. Repeat
steps 2 and 3 to make your vote count.
5. Make sure the "Vote" button turns from blue to red/brown and says
"voted" at the bottom of the button.
6. If you also support the Nonviolent Communications (NVC) initiative,
repeat steps 2 and 3, searching for "empathy" to bring up the idea.
You can find more information on our action page.
Voting ends at 5:00 pm ET on January 15 and only the top 10 out of the 90
remaining ideas will be sent to the President. So please vote today and
forward this email to your entire network.
Read the powerful and insightful article about the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict by Co-founder of The Peace Alliance Marianne Williamson:
"Towards a Miracle in the Middle East"
-----
Join us for
Peace Within Reach: People and Politics Partnering for our Common Security
The Department of Peace Campaign National Conference Washington, D.C.
March 20-23, 2009
Learn, share, empower and serve the cause of peace as we make our voices
heard on Capitol Hill.
Register Now!
------
Please Donate
2. Vote at Change.gov
No, that's not a typo. Change.gov is the official site of the incoming
Administration's transition team. They are "Open for Questions" from
citizens about what matters most to us.
By voting up questions related to the Department of Peace we will ensure
the incoming Administration sees the people's commitment to reducing and
preventing violence.
As the site explains, as of yesterday, "93,638 people have submitted
67,302 questions and cast 4,170,091 votes...but we want to know what you
think."
You can vote up as many questions as you like. Simply:
1. Go to change.gov/openforquestions.
2. Sign in or follow the instructions to register.
3. Type "Department of Peace" into the search bar and hit return. This
will display many similar questions
4. Click the checkbox to the right of the question(s) you'd like to "vote
up" to cast your vote.
-----
3. Send Presidential Postcards for Peace
There's still time to write and collect postcards to send to the new
President on Inauguration Day. Simply pick up a postcard from your state
or community, write a personal note to (soon-to-be) President Obama asking
him to support a Department of Peace and Nonviolence and make violence
reduction and prevention a national priority.
Collect postcards from everyone you know and mail them en masse on January
20, 2009 to:
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenuew NW
Washington, DC 20500
For more information and tips on writing your postcard, visit our action
page.
4. Vote at Ondayone.org
Again, the idea "Create a Cabinet-level Department of Peace" made it
through the first round of voting on ondayone.org, an initiative sponsored
by Ted Turner's Better World Campaign. Help the idea continue to garner
public awareness, validity, and the attention of influential organizations
by voting it up.
Simply visit the site and click on the "vote" box under the idea name--you
should see it in the top row, far right column of the "Final 9 for 09."
Voting ends January 12!
This New Year offers us fresh opportunities to bring forth ancient
understandings of the true meaning of "peace." As our Founders stated in
the Declaration of Independence, government is created for the purpose of
securing our "unalienable Rights" and "among these are Life, Liberty and
the pursuit of Happiness."
None of these can be fulfilled in a world of violence, making peace the
most fundamental right of all.
Let us work together to ensure our right to peace, and thus, as our
Constitution reminds us, "establish Justice, insure domestic
Tranquility...and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our
Posterity."
Thank you for your commitment, your citizenship and your action.
In gratitude,
Wendy Greene
Managing Director
The Peace Alliance
1730 Rhode Island Avenue NW, Suite 712 | Washington, DC 20036 | Tel
202-296-1187
www.ThePeaceAlliance.org
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 21:08:52 -0500 (EST)
From: Dave Belden <davebelden.tikkun@gmail.com>
8. Our Gaza Cease-Fire ad appeared in today's New York Times
Tikkun to heal, repair and transform the world [michael_lerner_75.jpg] A
note from Rabbi Michael Lerner Join or Donate Now!
In case you missed it...
Thanks to the more than 2800 people who signed it and over 1,200 who
contributed, our ad calling for a cease-fire (and an international
conference to pressure both side to create the conditions for a lasting
peace) appeared in the NY Times today, page 17.
Please talk it up, send it to friends, blog about it: this ball has only
just started rolling. People feel helpless about Gaza. This is something
they can do. More signatures will mean more impact, and we are now raising
money to place it in the Washington Post or other media. You can sign on
here if you haven't already:
http://www.spiritualprogressives.org/article.php/gaza (or cut and paste
that into your browser if the link doesn't work). If you would like to
make a donation, it helps us if you can do it online.
Here's the text:
Cease Fire Now in Gaza!
President-elect Obama:
It's Time to End the Violence in the Middle East-Once and for All
Convene an International Middle East Peace Conference to facilitate a
lasting and just settlement for all parties. The world's attention is
focused on the Middle East for a fleeting moment. Let's seize this
opportunity to insist on an end to this struggle in all its dimensions.
A Call for Lasting Peace
President-elect Obama: When you become president, please call for an
immediate CEASE-FIRE in GAZA and for an International Peace Conference to
implement a fair and lasting solution to all aspects of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The solution must also address the conflict
between Israel and other states in the region. The international
community must stop the violence and terror against Israeli civilians and
against Palestinian civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. The
international community must also stop the hidden but persistent violence
of the Occupation itself.
Such a solution would be based on the following conditions:
a. The creation of an economically and politically viable Palestinian
state (roughly on the pre-1967 borders, with minor border modifications
mutually agreed upon between Israel and Palestine).
b. The withdrawal of Israel from the Golan Heights, and simultaneously
the full and unequivocal recognition by Palestinians and the State of
Palestine and all surrounding Arab states of Israel's right to exist.
Meanwhile Israel must offer full and equal rights to all of its
non-Jewish citizens. Preferential treatment for Jews should exist only
with regard to immigration, and that must be phased out when
anti-Semitism in the world has disappeared. The same preferential
treatment for Palestinians should exist in the Palestinian state as long
as they face discrimination, reduced rights, or threats to their safety
in other parts of the world.
c. The creation of an international consortium to provide generous
reparations for Palestinians who have lost homes or property from 1947 to
the present, and generous reparations for Jewish refugees from Arab
states from 1947 to 1967.
d. The deployment of a long-term international peacekeeping force to
separate Hezbollah and Israel in southern Lebanon and northern Israel, to
ensure demilitarization of the Golan Heights, to protect Israel and
Palestine from each other, to police the borders and the corridor that
will need to be established linking Gaza with the West Bank, and to
protect both Israel and Palestine from other forces in the region that
might seek to control or destroy either state. In addition, treaty
agreements must be made with the United States and other Western states
to protect both Israel and Palestine from any assault by other countries
(e.g. Iran, Pakistan, China, or Russia).
e. The quick imposition of robust sanctions against any party that
refuses to sign or that violates these agreements.
It would be in the interests of Israel, the Palestinians, the Arab
states, the Jewish people, the United States, and the world if this
solution could be imposed on the parties now. It breaks our hearts to see
the suffering of the Israeli people, the Palestinian people, the Lebanese
people, and others in the region when we know how unnecessary it is. The
basic issues can be resolved. No matter how maximalist the fantasies are
on each side about eliminating their perceived enemies, and how enticing
they seem when people feel powerless in any other way to stop the
violence and oppression, the truth is that the majority of the people on
all sides of the struggle would embrace peace if they thought it could be
established in ways that provided for genuine security from military
assault and terrorism for everyone, real justice for Palestinians, and
acknowledgment of the wrongs that have been done to each side as a first
step in healing the humiliations and huge psychic wounds suffered by
Arabs and Jews throughout their histories.
A New Spirit of Openheartedness and Reconciliation
We know that no political solution can work without a change in
consciousness that minimally includes an openheartedness and willingness
to recognize the humanity of the other, as well as repentance and
atonement for the long history of insensitivity and cruelty each side has
shown toward the other side.
All sides must take immediate steps to stop the discourse of violence.
Members of each side must stop the demeaning of the other in their media,
their religious institutions, and their school textbooks and educational
systems. They should implement this by creating a joint authority with
each other and with moral leaders in the international community. The
joint authority must be able to supervise and, if necessary, replace
those in positions of power in Jewish, Islamic, and Arab societies who
continue to use the public institutions of the society to spread hatred
or nurture anger at the other.
Once the other parts of a lasting peace have been set in place, we call
upon the parties to this struggle to launch a Truth and Reconciliation
Commission, following the model used in South Africa.
We Affirm the Sacredness of All Human Beings
President Obama, your presidency might well be the last chance we in the
advanced industrial societies have to avert international catastrophe
(either environmental or nuclear). To do so, our way of dealing with the
world must model something else besides brute military might, economic
self-interest, and indifference to the well-being of others. If not now,
when?
It is time to overcome national chauvinism and arrogance. Instead we must
build ethical and spiritual solidarity among the people of the world. Our
well-being depends on the well-being of everyone else on the planet. So
we need to build and strengthen those international institutions that can
foster this sense of solidarity, which is the necessary foundation for
global peace, social and economic justice, and ecological repair of the
planet.
A Domestic and Global Marshall Plan-Starting with Israel/Palestine
The self-described "realistic" version of global politics asserts that we
live in a world in which our safety can only be achieved through
domination because others are always seeking to dominate us first. Of
course, when we act on this assumption, it becomes self-fulfilling.
We propose, instead, a strategy of generosity-to act on the assumption
that people have an enormous capacity for goodness and generosity
(without negating the truth that certain conditions promote fear, anger,
and hatred, which sometimes are expressed in horribly destructive ways).
For the United States and other G-8 countries, we call for a domestic and
global Marshall Plan: for each of the next twenty years, the United
States and other G-8 countries should dedicate between 1 percent and 2
percent of their Gross Domestic Product to eliminating hunger,
homelessness, poverty, inadequate health care, and inadequate education
both at home and around the world, to be paid for by a tax on
international financial transactions and a reduction in the military
budgets of these countries. We've developed the details of a domestic and
global Marshall Plan at www.spiritualprogressives.org.
If done in a way that emphasizes caring and solidarity, and not just the
money, this strategy of generosity can help heal the angers and feelings
of humiliation and abandonment that have been part of the psychological
legacy that has made it easier for haters to recruit people into acts of
terror or into extremist and fundamentalist consciousness. Just as a
domestic Marshall Plan will help build a new sense of solidarity and hope
in our country, so a global plan beginning in the Middle East (a plan
that you, President Obama, introduce as part of the International Peace
Conference) would reduce tensions there, not only by reducing physical
suffering, but also by showing the people of the area, as well as people
around the world, that selfishness is finally being challenged by a
spirit of love and caring.
Israel's security would be greatly enhanced if the money spent on
enforcing an occupation and protecting West Bank settlements went instead
toward building a prosperous Palestinian economy. The "cynical realists"
claim that others are entrenched in their hatefulness, and that war is
the only way to confront them. This kind of thinking has led to 5,000
years of people fighting wars in order to "end all wars"-and it has not
worked. It's time now to try a new strategy of generosity, both economic
generosity and generosity of spirit. As stated above, there will first
have to be a transitional period in which real military protections are
available to people on all sides of the struggle. But by beginning now to
simultaneously commit our economic resources and change the way that we
talk about those whom we previously designated as "enemies," we can begin
the long process of thawing out angers that have existed for many
generations. Precisely at this moment, when our global economic meltdown
requires a fundamental rethinking of how we've organized our global
economy, we can now shift the funds from military spending and other
wasteful production toward building a sustainable global reality. You,
President Obama, could be the leader who teaches Americans this new way
to understand America's self-interest.
Nothing can redeem the deaths and suffering that all sides have faced in
this struggle for the past 120 years. But this very moment could also be
the time in which the human race realizes the futility of violence and
comes together not only to impose a lasting solution for the Middle East,
but also to recognize that our own well-being depends on the well-being
of everyone else on the planet. The International Middle East Peace
Conference should be structured to achieve this end. In short, it should
have an explicit psychological and spiritual dimension and a visionary
agenda.
Unrealistic? Not at all. What has proved unrealistic time and
again-whether we are talking about U.S. policy in Vietnam and Iraq, or
Israeli and Arab policies in the Middle East-is the fantasy that one more
war will put an end to wars. The path to peace must be a path of peace.
Signed by:
Rabbi Michael Lerner, Sister Joan Chittister, and Professor Cornel West,
Co-chairs of the Network of Spiritual Progressives (NSP):
info@spiritualprogressives.org
Zygmunt Bauman
Rabbi Haim Dov Beliak
Lawrence Bragman
Anne Brown
Fritjof Capra
Clayborne Carson
Nicandro Castaneda
Deepak Chopra
Howard Cort
Peter Coyote
Jonathan Demme
Ariel Dorfman
Richard Falk
Peter Gabel
Danny Goldberg
Rabbi Julie Greenberg
Mary Grey
Ashawna Hailey
Hazel Henderson
Robert Inchausti
Rabbi David Ingber
Rabbi Abie Ingber
Mary Ellen Irving
Rev. Jeff Johnson
Mark C. Johnson
Nancy Kass
Barbara King
Rabbi Sharon Kleinbaum
Jack Kornfield
Rev. Peter Laarman
Annie Lamott
Rabbi Mordechai Liebling
Jaime Longhi
Michael Maccoby
Everett Mendelson
Michael Nagler
Murray Polner
Rabbi Peretz Wolf-Prusan
Matthew Rothschild
Denis Rutovitz
Saskia Sassen
Richard Schwartz
Jeffrey Shapiro
Rabbi David Shneyer
Mark L. Taylor
Yi-Fu Tuan
Jon Basil Utley
Genevieve Vaughan
Rabbi Brian Walt
Alyn Ware
Rabbi Arthur Waskow
And more than 2,800 other religious, cultural, and community leaders, the
full list of whom you can find by going to
www.spiritualprogressives.org/article.php/gaza. You can add your name to
this list at www.tikkun.org and donate so we can publish a shortened
version of this message in other media.
* Yes, add my name to the list of signatories of the ad * To help get
this message published in other media and to capture the attention of our
policy shapers, I will donate: $__________
I have enclosed a check (or am sending you my credit card info plus email
and home phone) made out to TIKKUN for:
* $5,000 *$1,000 *$500 *$300 *$100 *$75 *$25 *Other $ __________________
You can also sign this ad and donate money online at www.tikkun.org.
Name ______________________________________ Organization/Affiliation
____________________________
Address ____________________________________ City/State/Zip
____________________________________
Email ______________________________________ Phone
__________________________________________
*MC *Visa *Amex Credit Card No._______________________________Exp. date
______________
Security Code (required)_________ (Last 3 digits on reverse of MasterCard
or Visa; last 4 digits on front right side of American Express)
Please make checks payable to TIKKUN
and return this form to:
Tikkun
Attn: Gaza
2342 Shattuck Ave, Suite 1200
Berkeley, CA 94704
Get Involved.
Tikkun Community's Network of Spiritual Progressives (NSP) is an
interfaith organization that seeks a New Bottom Line so that
corporations, legislation, educational systems, legal and government
policies, and our personal behavior get judged "efficient" or "rational"
not only because they maximize money or power, but also to the extent
that they maximize love, generosity, kindness, and ethical and ecological
sensitivity, as well as enhance our capacities to respond with awe,
wonder, and radical amazement at the mystery and grandeur of the
universe. Please join at www.spiritualprogressives.org, become active
with us, and donate to help us hire staff to expand our work throughout
the United States. Our peace work flows from this goal.
We also urge you to support other organizations doing important work for
peace in the Middle East. They include: J Street (www.jstreet.org), Brit
Tzedek v'Shalom (www.btvshalom.org), Rabbis for Human Rights
(www.rhr-na.org), Jewish Voice for Peace (www.jewishvoiceforpeace.org),
Americans for Peace Now (www.peacenow.org), Gush Shalom
(http://gush-shalom.org), the American Friends Service Committee
(www.afsc.org), and the Shalom Center (www.shalomctr.org).
More info: RabbiLerner@Tikkun.org.
web: www.tikkun.org
email: info@spiritualprogressives.org
Copyright (C) 2008 Network of Spiritual Progressives(R).
2342 Shattuck Avenue, #1200
Berkeley, CA 94704
510-644-1200 Fax 510-644-1255 [TrackImage?key=870526235]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: ronald june [mailto:]
Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 10:01 AM
9. photos that someone sent to me... "Jews say: Not In Our Name" 2009 01
12
It seems as though more and more Jewish people in the U. S. and Canada are
coming out against the Israeli offensive in the Gaza. If it grows large
enough here, it might get B. O. and his Plenty to work at affecting a real
peace in the Middle East, but that remains to be seen.
Here are photos taken tonight, 1/12, in front of Israeli
Consulate. There were 400 - 500 people there (our estimate).
[ Part 2, Image/JPEG 163KB. ]
[ Part 3, Image/JPEG 101KB. ]
[ Part 4, Image/JPEG 186KB. ]
[ Part 5, Image/JPEG 105KB. ]
[ Part 6, Image/JPEG 150KB. ]
[ Part 7, Image/JPEG 114KB. ]
[ Part 8, Image/JPEG 109KB. ]
[ Part 9, Image/JPEG 106KB. ]
[ Part 10, Image/JPEG 116KB. ]
[ Part 11, Image/JPEG 151KB. ]
[ Part 12, Image/JPEG 140KB. ]
[ Part 13, Image/JPEG 167KB. ]
[ Part 14, Image/JPEG 106KB. ]
[ Part 15, Image/JPEG 119KB. ]
[ Part 16, Image/JPEG 162KB. ]
[ Part 17, Image/JPEG 118KB. ]
[ Part 18, Image/JPEG 131KB. ]
[ Part 19, Image/JPEG 114KB. ]
[ Part 20, Image/JPEG 142KB. ]
[ Part 21, Image/JPEG 109KB. ]
[ Part 22, Image/JPEG 107KB. ]
[ Part 23, Image/JPEG 113KB. ]
[ Part 24, Image/JPEG 106KB. ]
[ Part 25, Image/JPEG 144KB. ]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 10:15:02 -0800
From: Amnesty International USA <alerts@takeaction.amnestyusa.org>
10. What Congress should do on Gaza
Amnesty International USA: TAKE ACTION NOW!
With innocent civilians, women and children dying every day, Congress must
act. Tell Congress to help get more humanitarian aid into Gaza and to
suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel.
20 days into the Gaza crisis and the humanitarian crisis there gets worse
every day.
Over 1000 Palestinians have been killed; 398 women and children are dead,
another 4500 injured, 750,000 lack access to water and one million are
without electricity. Thirteen Israelis, including three civilians have
been killed1.
Each day that passes guarantees more innocent civilians will suffer. Tell
Congress to act swiftly to help more humanitarian aid and workers enter
Gaza and to suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel.
Almost 30,000 of you sent letters to Secretary Rice. Your letters
together in concert with separate parallel actions from other Amnesty
sections around the world helped bring about a positive vote at the UN
late last week2-6. The UN passed a binding resolution 14-0 on January 8th
calling for an immediate cease-fire7.
But despite mounting evidence of war crimes, both Israel and Palestinian
armed groups continue to defy the resolution.
Itâ^À^Ùs critical that Congress acts. Congress can take two actions that
will make a significant impact on the ground:
Please forward this email. Congress must act.
David Silverman/Getty Images
Take Action Now!
ACT NOW and then PLEASE FORWARD this email.
1. Urge Israel to allow for increased humanitarian supplies into Gaza and
press Egypt to allow more wounded Palestinians to seek medical treatment
in Egypt.
The Israeli three hour truce to allow for humanitarian supplies to enter
Gaza is not sufficient. A spokesman for the UN relief agency UNWRA said
â^À^ÜWhen you are trying to feed 750,000 people a day in Gaza as we are,
you need a permanent ceasefire. You canâ^À^Ùt do that in a three-hour
window.â^À^Ý8
Although Egypt has opened the Rafah crossing allowing limited medical help
in and injured Palestinians out, the number allowed to seek medical care
outside of Gaza needs to increase dramatically. There are currently 4500
wounded Palestinians.
2. Suspend all transfers of weapons to Israel until there is no longer a
substantial risk that they will be used for serious violations of human
rights or international humanitarian law -- such as in attacks that
disproportionately kill civilians -- while pressing all sides to stop
unlawful attacks.
AI is calling for a comprehensive arms embargo on Israel, Hamas and
Palestinian armed groups. The US Arms Export Act of 1976 was passed to
help guarantee that US-made weapons would only be used for legitimate
self-defense and not for violations of internationally recognized human
rights. The act requires the State Department to report to Congress when
there is a â^À^Øâ^À^Ùsubstantial violationâ^À^Ý of the law9.
These demands comply with widely recognized international human rights
law. Tell Congress to act now, and then please forward this email. Time
has run out for the civilians of Gaza and Israel.
For daily updates and detailed information on the crisis, visit our blog
at blog.amnestyusa.org and our online Q&A with Amnesty International
researcher Donatella Rovera stationed in southern Israel.
Thank you for your continued support.
Sincerely,
Curt Goering
Deputy Executive Director
[1] http://www.ochaopt.org/?module=displaysection§ion_id=11
[2] http://www.amnesty.org.uk/actions_details.asp?ActionID=551
[3] http://www.amnesty.org.au/centre/action/20079
[4] http://amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/pages/crisis-in-gaza
[5]http://www.amnesty.fr/index.php/amnesty/s_informer/actualites/gaza_et_israel_pro
teger_les_civils
[6] http://www.amnesty.ca/urgentappeal/2009/gaza/email/
[7] http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=29495&Cr=gaza&Cr1
[8] http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7815929.stm
[9]
http://blog.amnestyusa.org/us/us-must-monitor-use-of-us-weapons-in-gaza/
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> From: eltonyg@earthlink.net
11. Bolivia cuts ties with Israel
> Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2009 19:22:10 -0800
>
> Companero,
>
> La voce del Indio es fuerte!! The President of Bolivia, with Venezuela
are setting a pace in the diplomatic arena for the rest of the Americas,
and to further isolate the USA and their surrogate, the number one arms
dealer which its new president will preside over the fate of the
oppressed....despierta america!
> All my relations, adelante!
> Tony Gonzales
> AIM-WEST
> eltonyg@earthlink.net
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Rabab Ibrahim Abdulhadi-AMED
> Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 12:23 PM
>
> Hi Tony and all sisters and brothers:
>
> All I can say is wow to our sisters and brothers in Bolivia!
Palestinians were chanting yesterday for Hugo Chavez; the whole Arab and
Muslim world is chanting for the international support from our sisters
and brothers in Latin America and indigenous communities.
>
> I'm on my way to Palestine but I'll see you when I return.
>
> In solidarity,
>
> Rabab
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Rabab Ibrahim Abdulhadi, PhD
> Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies
> Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas Initiative
> College of Ethnic Studies
> San Francisco State University
> 1600 Holloway Ave, EP 425
> San Francisco, CA 94132
> Phone: (415) 405-2668
> Fax: (415) 405-2573
> Email: amed@sfsu.edu
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: StoptheWall
> Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 9:08 AM
>
> Dear all,
>
> please, see below. That's the kind of principled reaction we should hope
> all govrnments would take up. Thanks to Evo Morales for this courageous
> decision.
>
> maren
---->
>
> Palestinian grassroots Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign - outreach
> global@stopthewall.org
> www.stopthewall.org
> tel.: +972-22971505
>
> Bolivia cuts Israel ties over Gaza
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/americas/2009/01/200911415461671162.html
> Hundreds of civilians have died in Gaza
> since the Israeli offensive began [Reuters]
>
> Evo Morales, the president of Bolivia, says he is breaking off ties with
> Israel in protest against its war in Gaza, which has left more than
> 1,000 Palestinians dead.
>
> Morales said on Wednesday that he would seek to get top Israeli
> officials, including Ehud Olmert, the Israeli prime minister, charged
with "genocide" in the International Criminal Court.
>
> The Bolivian president also dismissed the United Nations and its
> "Insecurity Council" for its "lukewarm" response to the crisis and said
the general assembly should hold an emergency session to condemn the
invasion.
>
> "Considering these grave attacks against ... humanity, Bolivia will
> stop having diplomatic relations with Israel," Morales told diplomats
in the Bolivian capital, La Paz.
>
> He also said that Shimon Peres, the Israeli president, should be
> stripped of his Nobel Peace Prize for failing to stop the invasion.
>
> Palestinian 'holocaust'
>
> Morales's move follows the decision by his ally Hugo Chavez, the
> Venezuelan president, to expel Israel's ambassador in the country
because of the offensive, calling it a "holocaust".
>
> Morales expelled the US ambassador from Bolivia in September after
> accusing him of encouraging violent protests against his government.
>
> Chavez did the same not long afterwards in "solidarity" with Morales.
>
> More than 1,000 Palestinians have now died in Israel's offensive in
> Gaza, around 40 per cent of whom were civilians, aid agencies and
> Palestinian medics say.
>
> Thirteen Israelis have also died, four from rocket fire from Gaza.
________________________________________________________________________________
From: James Curtis <jcurt@sonic.net>
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2009 20:37:34 -0800
12. The Free Gaza Movement
www.freegaza.org
Wednesday, 14 January 2009 00:06 Written by FREE GAZA MOVEMENT
For Immediate Release
In Gaza Hippocrates is dead
Monday, 12 January 2009 20:58 Last Updated on Monday, 12 January 2009
21:04 Written by Vittorio Arrigoni
Read more...
Day 17 of the Israeli War On Gaza
Monday, 12 January 2009 20:22 Written by Sameh A. Habeeb
Informative Report on Gaza War: Death toll 920, wounded 4200
Read more...
Regev: "I can assure you that Israel will respect international law"
Monday, 12 January 2009 19:49 Last Updated on Monday, 12 January 2009
20:15 Written by Anis Hamadeh
----
At 8:30 a.m. Pacific Standard Time, official Israeli Prime Minister
Spokesperson Mark Regev discussed the current voyage of Free Gaza boat
"Spirit of Humanity" with Free Gaza co-founder Paul Larudee. Larudee was
seeking assurance that Israel would not harm the boat or prevent it from
entering Gaza with medical supplies and personnel, as well journalists and
human rights workers. The boat is currently at sea, heading for Gaza.
Israel is threatening to use "all available means" to stop the boat. On
Dec. 30, an Israel gunboat rammed and almost sank a previous boat. Here is
a rough, reconstructed transcript of the conversation:
Read more...
Monday, 12 January 2009 16:17 Written by Free Gaza Movement
Take Action! CALL the Israeli Government and let them know that the mercy
ship SPIRIT OF HUMANITY is coming to Gaza. DEMAND that Israel immediately
STOP slaughtering civilians in Gaza and STOP using violence to prevent
human rights and humanitarian assistance to the Palestinian people.
Read more...
Monday, 12 January 2009 15:43 Written by Free Gaza Movement
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (Cyprus, 11 January 2009) - The Free Gaza Movement
ship, "SPIRIT OF HUMANITY," left Larnaca Port at 3:00 pm, Monday, 12
January, on an emergency mission to besieged Gaza. It is expected to
arrive in Gaza at approximately 11am (UST) Tuesday morning. Aboard the
ship are 36 passengers and crew, representing 17 different nations. They
are doctors, journalists, human rights workers, and five European
parliamentarians representing Belgium, Greece, Italy, and Spain (see below
for a complete passenger list). The mercy ship also carries desperately
needed medical supplies meant for hospitals in the Gaza Strip.
Read more...
More Articles...
* The Ceasefire
* Day 16 of the Israeli War On Gaza
* I won't leave my country
* FREE GAZA TO ISRAEL: "WE ARE COMING IN ON TUESDAY"
* Day 15 of the Israeli War On Gaza
* FREE GAZA IN THE MEDIA
* Day 14 of the Israeli War On Gaza
* Free Gaza Fundraiser in LA on Sunday
* Al Nakba 2009
* Day 13 of the Israeli War On Gaza
* How Israel brought Gaza to the brink of humanitarian catastrophe
* A Call from Within - signed by Israeli citizens
* Motion today in the Scottish Parliament
* Riding on fire and a third intifada
* Rafah Exodus
* A TRIBUNAL FOR ISRAELI WAR CRIMES
* Day 12 of the Israeli War On Gaza
* Press Advisory - GAZA EYEWITNESSES AVAILABLE for interviews
* Nous y retournons et prévenons Israel
* Inside Gaza
Copyright © 2008 The Free Gaza Movement,
____________________________________________________________
Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2009 23:51:02 -0800 (PST)
From: Jose Lara <josexlara@yahoo.com>
13. Raza Educators Stand in Solidarity with Gaza
Association of Raza Educators - Los Angeles
January 14th, 2009
As educators, we are horrified at Israel's war on Gaza in which, as of
today, the UN reports 1,000 Gazans have been killed, including at least
300 children, as well as 4,800 wounded of whom one-third are children.
As Raza Educators that stand for critical consciousness, we are bound by
our profession to expose the misconceptions/lies that the corporate media
and the Euro-centric/pro-Israeli educational system give.
We will continue to raise the consciousness of our communities to
understand the connections between the Israeli attacks on the Palestinians
in 1948 and the U.S. attack on Mexico people in 1848 which are almost
synonymous in nature. Zionism is the modern day Manifest Destiny; both are
clear expressions of racism. We express our total and complete solidarity
with the Palestinian people and their struggle for liberation.
We call on all educators, and to all Raza, to stand is solidarity with
Gaza!
* We CONDEMN the ongoing genocidal massacres by Israel across Gaza;
* We CONDEMN Israel's bombing of the UN School in Jabaliya resulting in
at least 45 deaths.
* We CONDEMN Israel's refusal to allow medical workers access to the
wounded and dying;
* We CONDEMN Israel's targeting of medical workers and clinics;
* We CONDEMN Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa for his shameful
support of Israel and we insist that he does not speak or represent
the interests of the majority of our community.
* We RECOGNIZE that 56% of the 1.5 million Gazans are children;
* We RECOGNIZE that 80% of Gazans were living below the poverty line;
living on $2 per day.
* We RECOGNIZE that Gazans have been living under a crippling blockade by
Israel for 18 months.
* We RECOGNIZE the similarities between the genocidal campaigns of
settler colonies against Indigenous populations and Israel's treatment of
the Palestinian people.
* We RECOGNIZE the similarities between the conditions in Gaza and the
Warsaw Ghetto of WWII.
* We RECOGNIZE the similarities between the fascist bombing of Guernica
and Israel's current offensive on Gaza.
* We RECOGNIZE that Israel is a settler colony with the world's 5th most
powerful military;
* We RECOGNIZE the Palestinians' right to exist, to self-determination
and to self-defense.
* We CALL ON the international community to demand an immediate halt to
Israel's genocidal campaign on Gaza,
* We JOIN WITH APPO teachers from Oaxaca, Mexico who are declaring: Alto
al genocidio en contra del pueblo palestino! Palestina no esta sola!
* We JOIN WITH Zapatista Subcomandante Marcos who stated, ^ÓThe
Palestinian people will also resist and survive and continue struggling
and will continue to have sympathy from below for their cause.^Ô
* WE JOIN WITH Union del Barrio who stated, ^ÓWe know the impact that
walls of apartheid have on people; we also know the deaths that these
walls create. And while they may be two different walls that divide our
peoples, our struggle is one.^Ô
AQUI , ALLA, LA LUCHA SEGUIRA!
[ Part 2, Application/PDF 203KB. ]
Network mailing list
Network@lists.edliberation.org
http://lists.edliberation.org/listinfo.cgi/network-edliberation.org
------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 08:45:05 -0500
From: Sonia Rosen <soniar@dolphin.upenn.edu>
Thank you, Jose, for sending us this. I am half Muslim Arab and half
Ashkanazi Jew, and my heart is warmed that you and the Association of Raza
Educators are willing to fight for real justice in this world by standing
against this genocide. There are so many educators out there who purport
to be for "liberation", yet when it comes to the genocide of Palestinians
by the Israeli government they run into a terrible blind spot and cannot
see their own racism against Arabs (just look at the discourse that
justifies the occupation of Palestine - it is purely and simply racist).
As liberatory educators, it is important that we remain consistent with
our students - that is, when we say that we stand for justice and
equality, this must mean justice and equality for all people.
I have to admit that I am very sad to see a posting on this list from
someone who actually supports this ongoing oppression and violence against
Palestinians (are Palestinians less human than the Jews who suffered in
the Holocaust?), and it makes me think that maybe this list is not quite
as "liberatory" as it claims... I hope others on the list will prove me
wrong. I encourage everyone to sign the Teachers Against the Occupation
petition that is being sent to President (-Elect) Obama:
http://www.teachersagainstoccupation.org/home/
I also want to remind everyone on the list of the currently accepted
international definition of genocide (from the 1948 Convention on the
Prevention of Genocide). I have used this in my classes in the past in
discussing the genocide of Native Americans and Africans by European
colonists in the Americas, the genocide of Jews by the Nazis in Europe,
the genocide of Tutsis by Hutus in Rwanda, and the genocide of
Palestinians by the Israelis in the Middle East, among others:
Excerpt from the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide
(From http://www.preventgenocide.org/genocide/officialtext.htm)
"Article II: In the present Convention, genocide means any of the
following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.
Article III: The following acts shall be punishable:
(a) Genocide;
(b) Conspiracy to commit genocide;
(c) Direct and public incitement to commit genocide;
(d) Attempt to commit genocide;
(e) Complicity in genocide. "
For more justice-oriented news and information on the horrific bombing of
Gaza by the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), I would recommend the following
articles/videos, most of which can also be used in the average middle
school, high school, or college classroom (there are many more where that
came from, so let me know if you're interested in more detailed news and
analysis and I'd be happy to send it to you):
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21588.htm
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123154826952369919.html
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/09/gaza-palestinians-israel-evacuees-zeitoun
http://www.alternet.org/audits/118080/what_you%27d_know_about_israel_if_you_watched_al_jazeera_tv_/?page=1
http://www.nytimes.com/glogin?URI=http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/08/opinion/08khalidi.html&OQ=_rQ3D2&OP=628694f4Q2F!Q5C39!LgZiQ22ggxC!CppB!pS!p(!gh6u6gu!p(wa_s6L6Maxfs
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090112/gordon?rel=hp_currently
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mc9DN2Oi0-w&feature=channel_page
http://annies-letters.blogspot.com/2009/01/palestinians-will-never-forget-by-susan.html
And here are some excellent English language news sources that you can go
to in general if you are looking for better info on this situation:
http://www.alternet.org/
http://english.aljazeera.net/
http://www.zmag.org/znet
http://www.cbc.ca/news/
http://www.thenation.com/
And, finally, here's a way to support Gazans both financially and with a
public show of solidarity. The proceeds from these t-shirts, which read
"Gaza on my mind" and "Our hearts are with you Gaza", are being used to
fund the supply of food and/or medicine for Gazans (who have been starving
and without adequate medical care, electricity, and fuel at the hands of
the Israeli blockade for the past 2 1/2 years and are now in even more
dire straights with the bombing):
http://247463.spreadshirt.com/-/-/Shop/
In peace and solidarity with you who stand for justice for all, Sonia
Rosen
-------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 10:25:34 -0500
From: Brian Van Slyke <brian@freeschooling.org>
Hi, I also wanted to say thank you for sending this out.
As a Jew, a teacher, and a student I am deeply concerned and involved with
this issue. At the college I'm currently attending, we are working on
divestment from the illegal Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands - and
BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) was called for by many members of
Palestinian civil society and academic institutions. If folks don't know,
this year is the 30 year anniversary of the first college/university in
the United States to divest from apartheid South Africa. Divestment was
one of the major tools used by activists in the United States to help
bring down apartheid in South Africa, and it can also be used to help end
the occupation and killings of Palestinians. I want to encourage folks who
are a part of a college/university to look into starting
divestment/helping divestment efforts at their institution. Here is the
BDS website: http://bdsmovement.net/ . If you want any more information on
divestment efforts, feel free to send me a message. Additionally, the
group I am a part of are close to finishing a media package/strategy guide
on starting and running a divestment effort at colleges/universities - so
I can also supply you with that if you're interested.
Free Palestine,
Brian
P.S. Here is a (rough-cut) podcast that we've just finished putting
together describing BDS, the importance of BDS for Palestinians, and the
current state of divestment at our institution:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a6fTtZ1IphE
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From: Max Obuszewski <mobuszewski@verizon.net>
Date: Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 7:24 AM
14. "Jesuit priest corresponds with Hamas"
National Catholic Reporter
January 14, 2008
"Jesuit priest corresponds with Hamas"
By Claire Schaeffer-Duffy, Worcester CW ThereseCW@aol.com
http://ncronline3.org/drupal/?q=node/3082
Fr. Raymond Helmick is a copious correspondent. For the past three years,
the Jesuit priest has written nearly 20 letters to Khalid Mishal, founder
and political leader of the Palestinian movement Hamas, urging him to
abandon militancy, unify with Fatah, Hamas' political rival, and organize
the Palestinians in a disciplined campaign of nonviolent resistance to the
Israeli occupation.
"Your military weapons are too puny to stand against Israeli weapons, but
that mobilized power of a people denying, without violence, any
cooperation with its occupiers is something Israel could not withstand,"
wrote Helmick in a Feb 2006 letter sent weeks after Hamas won the
Palestinian parliamentary elections.
The missives to Mishal are the latest chapter in Helmick's extraordinary
engagement with the major power brokers in the Israeli/Palestinian
conflict, an engagement conducted primarily through letters and, on rare
occasions, meetings. Over the past two and a half decades, the priest has
written to Palestinian political leaders and state officials from a series
of U.S. and Israeli administrations, including the late president Yasir
Arafat, U.S. presidents Clinton and both Bushes, secretaries of state
Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice, and Israeli prime ministers Yitzhak
Rabin and Ariel Sharon.
The letters and reports, which fill three volumes, provide one of the
texts for a course on the Middle East that Helmick, a theology professor,
teaches at Boston College.
"Conflict resolution is a process of interpretation," Helmick said. "I'm
always very anxious to analyze, interpret, and see what options people
have and to talk to them about it. ^Å Once there is an alternative to
violence, violence is no longer a legitimate course. Arafat understood
that. The Israelis understand that. Hamas understands that. Of course,
they have to believe that other options are real, and that can take a lot
of exploration."
The 77-year-old priest has a long history of unofficially monitoring and
mediating conflicts. He worked with warring factions in Northern Ireland,
Lebanon and Yugoslavia. In Washington, he helped establish the U.S.
Institute of Peace and later served as senior associate for the Program in
Preventive Diplomacy at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies. Both assignments gained him access to American foreign policy
makers. With the Rev. Jesse Jackson, he helped facilitate the release of
three American prisoners held in Belgrade during the 1999 conflict in
Kosovo.
But it is the Israeli/Palestinian conflict that has consumed much of
Helmick's attention. He became involved with the conflict through his
Jewish friend Richard Hauser, a sociologist, and Hauser's wife, Hephzibah
Menuhin, concert pianist and sister of famed violinist Yehudi Menuhin. The
priest and couple founded London's Center for Human Rights and
Responsibilities, which in 1973 hosted a Palestinian delegation sent by
Arafat to make contact with European Jews.
Helmick later met with the Palestinian leader several times in 1986, two
years before the U.S. government officially recognized the PLO, and for
the next two decades continued corresponding with him, weighing in on the
options for peace amid negotiations over the Oslo and Camp David Accords.
In his book Negotiating Outside the Law: Why Camp David Failed, Helmick
argues that the 2000 peace talks suffered from a structural flaw -- the
neglect of international law. "Disparity of power most basically defines
this conflict. Unless the conflict is approached according to law the only
alternative is a procedure based on power relationships and therefore
determined by political and military superiority. That makes any agreement
formed, nothing other than a Diktat," he said. "The law would not protect
the occupation, but it would protect Israeli rights as well as
Palestinians," he added.
Within a week of Hamas' electoral win in 2006, Helmick sent Rev. Jackson
his assessment of the election and proposed meeting with Mishal, who lives
in exile in Damascus, Syria. Jackson and Helmick had previously attempted
to engage with Hamas while on a 2002 interfaith delegation to Israel and
the Palestinian territories. The delegates were scheduled to go to Gaza
for a session with Hamas spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, but aborted
their trip after Hamas detonated a bomb at Hebrew University, Jerusalem,
in retaliation for an Israeli F-16 attack launched days earlier. In an
impassioned letter to the Muslim cleric, Helmick lamented that the bomb,
an "act of vengeance for vengeance," had made it impossible for them to
meet.
"What do you want of the Israelis?" the Catholic priest asked. "Do you
want them to remain in this hateful quest for vengeance or do you want to
elicit from them compassion and justice? We are all responsible for our
enemies, for their souls, and must seek to bring them to righteousness and
repentance. That will only happen if you act with a higher morality than
theirs in emulation of the compassion and righteousness of God."
Despite the F-16 attack and subsequent bombing, Palestinians were
contemplating a unilateral cease-fire with Israel during the summer of
2002. Hamas' reluctance to sign a cease-fire document stemmed from their
disagreement with the document's reference to the Israeli/Palestinian
border, Helmick said.
"I advocated to them that they just leave the border out of the document
and declare their cease-fire on the basis of compassion of Islam. That is
eventually what they did, and, in fact, over the next four years, Hamas
showed itself responsible in its restraint," the priest said. In 2004, the
Israelis assassinated Yassin.
Jackson and Helmick finally did meet Mishal in 2006. Israel's war on
Hezbollah had just concluded and the Lebanon crisis overshadowed much of
the trip. Helmick reported that the Americans were warmly received in
Damascus. The session with the Hamas leader and four members of his
political bureau went until 3 a.m. "[Mishal] assured us that his party's
intentions in no way intended the destruction of Israel. They set as their
goal the establishment of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders,"
wrote the priest in his summary of the session.
But according to Helmick, when urged to explicitly recognize the
legitimacy of Israel, one of several Israeli preconditions for negotiating
with Hamas, Mishal said the time for that had not come.
Helmick attributes Hamas' refusal to several factors including concern for
a disparity in the Oslo Accords and uncertainty over Israel's borders. At
Oslo, the PLO recognized the legitimacy of the Israeli state while Israel
recognized the PLO as the sole representative of the Palestinian people.
"The recognition was not symmetrical," Helmick said. "The Israelis did not
recognize the entitlement of the Palestinian people to a viable state."
Amid the numerous proposals explored in Helmick's correspondence, common
themes emerge. To the Palestinians, he consistently argues for disciplined
nonviolent resistance to the occupation as the only viable option. To the
Americans and Israelis, he pleads for adhering to the rule of law.
Responses to the letters have varied. There have been perfunctory
acknowledgements and a few specific replies. A 2002 epistle to Ariel
Sharon, in which the priest pointedly asked if the prime minister was
pursuing a policy of "transfer" toward the Palestinians, elicited a
pleasant note from Sharon's secretary, Marit Danon, who thanked the
American cleric for his "in-depth analysis."
More often than not, the dialogue has been one-way. The silence does not
bother Helmick, who said he knows political leaders cannot articulate
policy in letters to private individuals. For Mishal, who has survived one
assassination attempt by the Israelis, merely acknowledging correspondence
could be hazardous.
Helmick believes the need to engage with Hamas is more necessary than
ever. "Israel's recent incursion into Gaza is just one more effort to
knock Hamas out of the picture and get it done before Bush leaves office.
But Hamas is gaining in political strength. Their popularity is growing in
Gaza and the West Bank."
So the priest continues to write. In the past two months, he has sent a
dozen communiqués to all the major players, including letters to
president-elect Barack Obama and Mishal.
Claire Schaeffer-Duffy lives in Worcester, Mass. and writes frequently for
NCR.
Donations can be sent to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th
St., Baltimore, MD 21218. Ph: 410-366-1637; Email: mobuszewski [at]
verizon.net
"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has
always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and
nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and
everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 12:05:09 -0600
From: Donna L. Vukelich-Selva <dlvukelich@wisc.edu>
15. Israeli refuseniks
thanks very much, Sonia, for your comments
another reason, of course, that it is so important for people in the US to
hold the Israeli government accountable is that US military aid to Israel
has been, and continues to be, absolutely crucial to their continued
policies
here's a link to a very moving video on youtube that underscores the fact
that there is a great deal of debate in Israel around the entire issue of
occupation
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1cMs0nai4JQ [or type in Israeli soldiers
refuse to serve in Gaza], it is interviews of refuseniks at a recent
demonstration against the attacks on Gaza
Donna
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 10:21:25 -0800 (PST)
From: lucha <unchainthemind@yahoo.com>
16. genocide
http://revcom.us/a/153/parallels-en.html
Undeniable Parallels: Gaza and the Warsaw Ghetto
by Alan Goodman
Before I stood outside the Holocaust Museum in New York City with a
banner reading ^ÓAfter the Holocaust, the worst thing that has happened to
Jewish people is the state of Israel,^Ô I toured the museum. After viewing
the exhibit on the Warsaw ghetto, the comparison between what is going on
in Gaza now and Warsaw ghetto under the Nazis became more striking to me.
The German ruling class promoted vicious anti-Semitism, and carried out
the mass murder of Jews as part of a whole agenda for reviving and carving
out a greater sphere of domination for German imperialism through World
War 2. In Warsaw, Poland, by 1940, over 400,000 Jews^×nearly 40% of the
population^×were literally walled into a space that took up less than 5%
of Warsaw. The Jews in the Warsaw ghetto were systematically starved^×they
received only about a quarter of the amount of food of the Polish
population in Warsaw, and less than a tenth of food rations provided for
Germans. They had to smuggle in food and fuel, and smuggle out products
from their illegal workshops to survive. Under siege, they organized
cultural activities, schools, and social services, most of which were
linked to organizations banned by the Nazis. By late 1942, hundreds of
thousands of Jews had died of starvation in the Warsaw ghetto, or been
sent off to Nazi death camps. When Jews rebelled in the famous Warsaw
Ghetto Uprising, they were brutally slaughtered, and accused of starting
the violence. And, as a matter of fact, they did ^Óstart it^Ô in terms of
the uprising itself, but who would deny that their uprising was just?
The parallels to Palestine, and Gaza in particular, are simply undeniable.
The establishment and massive economic, political, and military backing of
Israel is in service of the strategic interests of U.S. empire in the
Middle East, and the ethnic cleansing of Palestine is a product of that.
One result: two thirds of the 1.5 million people packed into the tiny,
impoverished territory of Gaza were driven from their homes in other parts
of Israeli-occupied Palestine through Zionist terror (for documentation of
Zionist ethnic cleansing and terror, see ^ÓThe Nakba: Ethnic Cleansing and
the Birth of Israel,^Ô Revolution #130, May 25, 2008, and other resources
at revcom.us).
Within Gaza, conditions were horrific even before Israel^Òs current
invasion. When Israel ended occupation and direct military rule over Gaza
in 2005, it kept complete control of the land, sea and air borders. Israel
sent armored bulldozers to destroy Gaza^Òs fruit orchards, blockaded the
fishing port, cut off supplies to factories and other businesses, and
forbade most Gaza residents the right to work elsewhere or even leave. As
a result, approximately a million of Gaza^Òs people are dependent on UN
food distribution, and food and supplies smuggled in through tunnels from
Egypt. And the situation has gotten much worse since Hamas seized control
of Gaza in June 2007. Even before the current massacre, Israel was
strangling the people of Gaza. Israeli blockades have cut off food,
medicine, and fuel. A partially leaked but still-secret report by the
International Red Cross reported that a ^Ódramatic fall in living
standards has triggered a shift in diet that will damage the long-term
health of those living in Gaza and has led to alarming deficiencies in
iron, vitamin A and vitamin D.^Ô (^ÓChronic malnutrition in Gaza blamed on
Israel,^Ô Independent, November 15, 2008)
And, like the Nazis, Israel (and its U.S. sponsor) claim that any
resistance to what they are doing to the people of Gaza then justifies
even more brutality and death.
Never again can it be the case that the Holocaust (or ludicrous claims of
^Óself-defense^Ô on the part of Israel) is invoked to justify the truly
Nazi-like policies and actions which the rulers of Israel, and its
founders, have carried out over the past sixty years and more, and which
they are now carrying to new depths of brutality and depravity with the
slaughter in Gaza.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: msukkar@
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 09:58:02 -0600
18. HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS
THE GRANDCHILDREN OF HOLOCAUST SURVIVORS FROM WORLD WAR II ARE DOING TO
THE PALESTINIANS EXACTLY WHAT WAS DONE TO THEIR FAMILIES BY NAZI
GERMANY…
BUILDING WALLS & FENCES TO KEEP PEOPLE IN PRISONS
CHECK POINTS NOT TO ALLOW PEOPLE BASIC FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT
ARRESTS & HARASSMENTS
DESTROYING HOMES & LIVELIHOODS
GIFTS (WITH LOVE) FROM THE CHILDREN OF PEACE-LOVING & CIVILIZED COUNTRIES
THE CLASSIC PROPAGANDA MACHINE - YOU WILL FIND THE PICTURE IN BLACK &
WHITE IN ALL AMERICAN AND SOME OTHER WESTERN COUNTRIES HISTORY BOOKS,
ENCYCLOPAEDIAS, LIBRARIES, MUSEUMS… THAT DEPICTS A YOUNG JEWISH BOY
WITH HIS HANDS UP WHILE NAZI TROOPS POINT THEIR GUNS AT HIM AND HIS FAMILY
IN ORDER TO EXPEL THEM FROM THEIR HOMES… (IT’S SUPPOSED TO MAKE
YOU SYMPATHIZE WITH THE VICTIMS & TO SUPPORT THEIR CAUSE FOR JUSTICE & A
HOMELAND)
THE ISRAELIS PRACTICE THE SAME TACTICS
[ Part 2.2, Image/JPEG 53KB. ]
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Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 08:08:20 +0900
From: Trevor Osborne <Trevor@world-harmony.com>
19. Bringing Bush and Cheney to justice and Obama and Gaza
It will be interesting to see if this ever takes place.
Trevor
----
January 16, 2009
[] Bringing Bush and Cheney to justice
Pepe Escobar: Where is the special prosecutor? view
[ Part 2, Image/JPEG 31KB. ]
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 23:24:35 +0000 (GMT)
From: nisiocam@optonline.net
20. The Sand Creek logic
http://www.pslweb.org/
News and Analysis
The Sand Creek logic of the Gaza Massacre
Friday, January 9, 2009
By: Travis Wilkerson
Colonial oppressors stick to tried-and-true practices
What is presently happening in Gaza will enter history as one of the worst
atrocities committed by the state of Israel against the people of
Palestine. It will rank alongside nightmares such as the massacres in
Jenin and in Sabra and Shatila. The devastation has been unleashed with
the full material and political support of the US government.
Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle, 1864 Sand Creek massacre survivor
Cheyenne Chief Black Kettle, a survivor of the Sand Creek massacre
Israel is the largest recipient of U.S. aid in the world. It receives more
than $15 million every day from the United States. The F-16 fighter jets
and apache helicopters that have rained down thousands of tons of bombs
and missiles on Gaza are provided to the Israeli government by the
Pentagon. It is inconceivable that the Israeli aggression in Gaza could
have taken place without the explicit consent and military support of the
U.S. government.
Using numbers alone, the offensive against Gaza is an abject massacre. At
the time of this writing, 10 Israelis have died, including three
civilians. The Palestinian numbers are constantly rising, but at this
moment at least 660 Palestinians have been killed, hundreds of them
civilians. Many thousands more have been seriously injured and Gaza is on
the verge of a humanitarian crisis on a scale unfamiliar even to many
Palestinians.
It is interesting to put Gaza in the context of an earlier atrocity.
In November 1864, the worst single massacre of American Indians in western
settlement took place in the frozen plains of territorial Colorado
southeast of Denver. A regiment of Colorado volunteer cavalry led by
Colonel John Chivington attacked without warning a village of Cheyenne and
Arapaho Indians, who were peacefully camped along the Sand Creek.
The Indians were there both with government treaty and explicit
territorial permission. They flew not only a white flag of surrender, but
also an American flag over the village. In fact, most of the Indian men of
fighting age were off hunting, because they rightly assumed their
encampment was safe. Instead, Chivington and his men massacred the entire
village.
They killed indiscriminately, butchering equally men, women and children.
The soldiers raped several women and decapitated babies before their
mothers. They also mutilated the bodies of the victims. Several men
fashioned mutilated vaginas into necklaces they wore during their victory
parade through the muddy streets of Denver.
Chivington has gone down in infamy. But one thing should be clear: He was
doing exactly what the white settlers and their territorial government
wanted him to do.
Remember, this was Colorado territory before statehood. The whole of the
future state had been given by treaty to the Indians of the region: the
Cheyenne and Arapaho in the East and the Utes in the West. The land was
theirs, even by the white man's law, plain and simple.
And then white surveyors identified things of value in Colorado. First and
foremost, gold was discovered, triggering the initial burst of settlement.
Failed miners often turned to agriculture on the fertile plains of
Colorado. Later, other resources were discovered and coveted, especially
coal.
So how do you take land that isn't yours? You settle that land. You simply
take the land you want. And then your army defends the settlers. Of
course, that breeds anger and discontent from the population that lives
there, with absolute right.
Chivington gives the following defense of butchering the village: First,
the Indians were hostile to the settlers, especially in the preceding
months. Second, among Indians, it is impossible to distinguish enemy from
non-combatant, because the combatants hide among the non-combatants.
Third, Indians had killed some white settlers and taken their property.
Fourth, Indians didn't respect the "chastity" of women.
Here's how the Rocky Mountain News, the official paper of white
settlement, justifies the massacre: "The confessed murderers of the
Hungate family^×a man and wife and their two little babes, whose scalped
and mutilated remains were seen by all our citizens^×were ^Ñfriendly
Indians,^Ò we suppose, in the eyes of these ^Ñhigh officials.^Ò They fell
in the Sand Creek battle."
The accusation^×which, incidentally, was false^×was that the Indians
camped along Sand Creek had killed four settlers. And so Chivington and
his men had permission to murder somewhere on the order of 200 Native
Americans in retaliation. One settler^Òs life is worth 50 Indian lives,
goes the racist logic.
Meanwhile, half a world away and in another century, the Israeli military
employs far more sophisticated means as it rains horror upon the dense,
squalid reservation known as Gaza.
Israel^Òs defense for all this? Rocket fire from Gaza into southern
Israel. Rocket fire, which, in the years prior to the bombing campaign and
invasion, had killed exactly four settlers. Sound familiar?
Israel has undertaken a nearly incomprehensible atrocity against a people
already living under inhuman conditions in alleged "self-defense." Using
U.S. weapons, Israel has now murdered at least 660 Palestinians. One
Israeli life is now worth at least 165 Palestinian lives. How else but
through the prism of naked racism can Israeli life be calculated to be
hundreds of times more valuable than Palestinian life?
This is the Sand Creek logic of the Gaza Massacre. Except that the numbers
have gotten even worse.
Chivington was removed from command, but never punished. This should come
as no surprise. In fact, his best friend was the governor and he was doing
precisely what the settlers wanted. He was terrorizing the indigenous
population to make white settlement easier.
History has been a bit harsher to Chivington, who no longer has a single
prominent defender. He is regarded as something between a fool and a
monster. There is no longer a single monument in his name, save an
abandoned town near the site of the massacre.
Meanwhile, the attack on Gaza has eclipsed even Sand Creek with the scope
of its barbarity. On Jan. 6, word came that Israel had murdered dozens of
Palestinians cowering in a school in a U.N. refugee camp. Think about that
one more time: Israel is now openly bombing targets such as schools,
ambulances and health workers, and claiming even that amounts to
self-defense.
Palestinians have replaced Indians and the Israeli state has replaced
white settlements, but the underlying principles remain the same. The
perpetrators wish their violence to be horrific and public. They wish it
to be terrifying. If we can^Òt subjugate you, we will simply exterminate
you. And let this genocide be a warning to others.
What form of justice is adequate in the face of a crime such as this? What
form of recompense for the attempted destruction of an entire people?
Like those who once defended Sand Creek, defenders of the Gaza massacre
should be exposed to all for what they are: racist apologists of
whole-scale barbarism, aiding and abetting an indefensible, criminal
explosion of violence. These defenders include the entire political
leadership of the U.S. government. History will not judge them merely as
fools.
End the Gaza massacre! Long live Palestine!
Network mailing list
Network@lists.edliberation.org
http://lists.edliberation.org/listinfo.cgi/network-edliberation.org
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 23:27:36 +0000 (GMT)
From: nisiocam@optonline.net
21. Zionist state of "Israel"
DEMONSTRATION AGAINST THE VIOLENCE IN GAZA
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Time: 4pm
Park Across from United Nations
New York City, NY
Orthodox Rabbis representing Torah-True Jews and Rabbinical authorities
will be demonstrating their outrage at the Zionist state of "Israel" and
its atrocities against the inhabitants of Gaza. What has caused a people
to fall to such levels of depravity? Come and hear our message! Zionism
and the state of "Israel" is expressly forbidden according to the Torah.
We are forbidden to make any attempts to leave the Godly decreed exile; We
are forbidden to oppress any people and we are required to be loyal
citizens in every country in which we reside, we are required to emulate
God ^× we are to be kind and compassionate.
Judaism is a religion of thousands of years. Zionism is a relatively new
movement of over little over a hundred years, created by non-religious
Jews who aspired to transform the religion into nationalism and have
rebelled continually against the Almighty's commandments. This has
culminated in the terrible atrocities being perpetrated against the people
of Gaza today. Jews true to the Almighty and His Torah cry out. Hear our
voices at the protest that will take place Sunday January 4, 2009 at 4pm
at the park across from the United Nations in New York City, NY. There
will be made available at the demonstration FOR THE FIRST TIME the English
compilation of "Historic Documents" which shows the Jewish opposition to
Zionism and the Zionist leaders heretical statements and comments. Also,
for the first time, the English book, "The Rabbis Speak Out", which is a
compilation of the Rabbinical Authorities' most vociferous universal
opposition to Zionism. Read the statement delivered in London, Durban,
S.A., and Rockefeller Center, New York City.
http://www.nkusa.org/activities/Speeches/20081227.cfm May we be worthy of
the speedy and peaceful dismantlement of this rebellion against God and
the cessation of the Zionist attacks on Gaza.
______________________________________________________________________________
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 23:34:31 +0000 (GMT)
From: nisiocam@optonline.net
22. War of Deceit, Lies and Propaganda
Israel's War of Deceit, Lies and Propaganda
By Uri Avnery
January 12 "Gulf Times" -- - -Nearly 70 years ago, in the course of the
Second World War, a heinous crime was committed in the city of Leningrad.
For more than a thousand days, a gang of extremists called "the Red Army"
held the millions of the town's inhabitants hostage and provoked
retaliation from the German Wehrmacht from inside the population centres.
The Germans had no alternative but to bomb and shell the population and
to impose a total blockade, which caused the death of hundreds of
thousands.
Some time before that, a similar crime was committed in England. The
Churchill gang hid among the population of London, misusing the millions
of citizens as a human shield. The Germans were compelled to send their
Luftwaffe and reluctantly reduce the city to ruins. They called it the
Blitz.
This is the description that would now appear in the history books - if
the Germans had won the war.
Absurd? No more than the daily descriptions in Israeli media, which are
being repeated ad nauseam: the Hamas "terrorists" use the inhabitants of
Gaza as "hostages" and exploit the women and children as "human shields",
they leave Israel no alternative but to carry out massive bombardments,
in which, to Israel's deep sorrow, thousands of women, children and
unarmed men are killed and injured.
In this war, as in any modern war, propaganda plays a major role. Almost
all the Western media initially repeated the official Israeli propaganda
line. They almost entirely ignored the Palestinian side of the story, not
to mention the daily demonstrations of the Israeli peace camp. The
rationale of the Israeli government ("The state must defend its citizens
against the Qassam rockets") has been accepted as the whole truth. The
view from the other side, that the Qassams are a retaliation for the
siege that starves the one and a half million inhabitants of the Gaza
Strip, was not mentioned at all.
Only when the horrible scenes from Gaza started to appear on Western TV
screens, did world public opinion gradually begin to change.
War - every war - is the realm of lies. Whether called propaganda or
psychological warfare, everybody accepts that it is right to lie for
one's country. Anyone who speaks the truth runs the risk of being branded
a traitor. The trouble is that propaganda is most convincing for the
propagandist himself. And after you convince yourself that a lie is the
truth and falsification reality, you can no longer make rational
decisions.
Falsification
An example of this process surrounds the most shocking atrocity of this
war so far: the shelling of the UN Fakhura school in Jabaliya refugee
camp.
Immediately after the incident became known throughout the world, the
army "revealed" that Hamas fighters had been firing mortars from near the
school entrance. As proof they released an aerial photo which indeed
showed the school and the mortar. But within a short time the official
army liar had to admit that the photo was more than a year old. In brief:
a falsification.
Later the official liar claimed that "our soldiers were shot at from
inside the school". Barely a day passed before the army had to admit to
UN personnel that that was a lie, too. Nobody had shot from inside the
school, no Hamas fighters were inside the school, which was full of
terrified refugees.
But the admission made hardly any difference anymore. By that time, the
Israeli public was completely convinced that "they shot from inside the
school", and TV announcers stated this as a simple fact.
So it went with the other atrocities. Every baby metamorphosed, in the
act of dying, into a Hamas "terrorist". Every bombed mosque instantly
became a Hamas base, every apartment building an arms cache, every school
a terror command post, every civilian government building a "symbol of
Hamas rule". Thus the Israeli army retained its purity as the "most moral
army in the world".
The truth is that the atrocities are a direct result of the war plan.
This reflects the personality of Ehud Barak - a man whose way of thinking
and actions are clear evidence of what is called "moral insanity", a
sociopathic disorder.
The real aim (apart from gaining seats in the coming elections) is to
terminate the rule of Hamas in the Gaza Strip. In the imagination of the
planners, Hamas is an invader which has gained control of a foreign
country. The reality is, of course, entirely different.
A top priority for the planners was the need to minimise casualties among
the soldiers, knowing that the mood of a large part of the pro-war public
would change if reports of such casualties came in. That is what happened
in Lebanon Wars I and II.
This consideration played an especially important role because the entire
war is a part of the election campaign. The planners thought that they
could stop the world from seeing these images by forcibly preventing
press coverage. But in a modern war, such a sterile manufactured view
cannot completely exclude all others - the cameras are inside the strip,
in the middle of the hell, and cannot be controlled. Al Jazeera
broadcasts the pictures around the clock and reaches every home.
Hundreds of millions of Arabs from Mauritania to Iraq, more than a
billion Muslims from Nigeria to Indonesia see the pictures and are
horrified. This has a strong impact on the war. Many of the viewers see
the rulers of Egypt, Jordan and the Palestinian National Authority as
collaborators with Israel in carrying out these atrocities against their
Palestinian brothers.
If the war ends with Hamas still standing, bloodied but unvanquished, in
face of the mighty Israeli military machine, it will look like a
fantastic victory, a victory of mind over matter.
What will be seared into the consciousness of the world will be the image
of Israel as a blood-stained monster, ready at any moment to commit war
crimes and not prepared to abide by any moral restraints. This will have
severe consequences for our long-term future, our standing in the world,
our chance of achieving peace and quiet.
In the end, this war is a crime against Israelis too, a crime against the
State of Israel.
Uri Avnery is an Israeli writer and peace activist with Gush Shalom. He is
a contributor to Counter Punch's book 'The Politics of Anti-Semitism'.
____________________________________________________________________________
Date: Fri, 16 Jan 2009 20:21:09 -0700
From: Rebecca Cummings <beckyspi@mac.com>
23. Political Correctness in the Middle East
Rule #1: In the Middle East, it is always the Palestinians that attack
first, and it's always Israel who defends itself. This is called
"retaliation."
Rule #2: The Palestinians are not allowed to kill Israelis. This is
called "terrorism."
Rule #3: Israel has the right to kill Palestinian civilians; this is
called "self-defense," or "collateral damage".
Rule #4: When Israel kills too many Palestinian civilians, the Western
world calls for restraint. This is called the "reaction of the
international community."
Rule #5: Palestinians do not have the right to capture Israeli military,
not even 1 or 2.
Rule #6: Israel has the right to capture as many Palestinians as they
want (around 10,000 to date being held without trial). There is no limit;
there is no need for proof of guilt or trial. All that is needed is the
magic word: "terrorism".
Rule #7: When you say "Hamas", always be sure to add "supported by
Hezbollah, Syria and Iran".
Rule #8: When you say "Israel", never say "supported by the US, the UK,
European countries and even some Arab regimes", for people (God forbid)
might believe this is not an equal conflict.
Rule #9: When it comes to Israel, don't mention the words "occupied
territories," "UN resolutions," or "Geneva conventions." This could
distress the audience of Fox, CNN, etc.
Rule #10: Israelis speak better English than Arabs. This is why we let
them speak out as much as possible, so that they can explain rules 1
through 9. This is called "neutral journalism."
Rule #11: If you don't agree with these rules or if you favor the
Palestinian side over the Israeli side, you must be a very dangerous
anti-Semite. You may even have to make a public apology if you
express your honest opinion.
I thought the above was astute.
Rebecca Cummings
beckyspi@mac.com
Martin Luther King Jr: "There comes a time when one must take a position
that is neither safe, nor politic, nor popular; but one must take it
because it is right."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Arik Diamant - Courage to Refuse <arik@seruv.org.il>
Date: Thu, Jan 15, 2009 at 3:23 PM
24. Courage to Refuse Update - First Gaza Refusenik Goes to Prison
Dear Supporters,
The first Gaza refusenik was sent to prison for a term of 14 days. Courage
to refuse members are in contact with his family and are helping in any
way we can. To date there are about ten refuseniks, but the IDF is making
special efforts to silence this story and prevent it from reaching other
soldiers. We assume this is the reason why most refuseniks have not yet
been trialed (some are waiting for over a week now). Our demonstration
last Thursday went very well, hundreds showed up and protested against the
war. A video of the demonstration can be viewed here (Hebrew, English
subtitles) This, along with other efforts of the Israeli Peace Camp,
contributed to the public discourse by introducing new voices- this time
critical, about the war. We plan on continuing our demonstrations and plan
to hold a public debate on the subject of refusal next Sunday. I wish to
thank all those of you who proposed to donate to Courage to Refuse. Your
help is much needed. An online donation System is now in place, allowing
donations via credit card. The donation is processed by The Refuser
Solidarity Network, an American NGO that agreed to receive donations on
our behalf. To donate, please go to:
https://secure.groundspring.org/dn/index.php?aid=712 and select Courage to
Refuse Projects in the RSN project field (This detail is very important).
American citizens- your donation is IRS-recognized 501(c)3.
With some hope and a lot of hard work- the cease fire may not be that
far. Thank you all for your support.
Arik Diamant
Courage to Refuse
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 17:08:32 -0800
From: Annie Elfing <annie.rowan@gmail.com>
25. Urgent plea for help- regarding the family of a friend of
mine
hey, i don't know anyone but i thought you might. love,
annie
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Bevis, Leah <leahb@middlebury.edu>
Date: Sat, Jan 17, 2009 at 6:52 AM
read these emails from bottom to top. i know amro - was friendly with him,
and he lived in my friend's suite here before he graduated and moved to
DC. hes a really awesome guy. and now both of his brothers are dead,
maybe his father. and the second death could have been avoided if only the
idf had let in help.
we've all been crazy with worry for the last 24 hours, all the community
of people who knew amro, and who are from the region. everyone trying to
contact someone who could help get aid to the ambulance.
i have two other much closer friends here, whos family also live in gaza
strip. thankfully none of their close family have died yet.
love leah
____________________
From: Safi, Zohra
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2009 8:39 AM
I apologize for flooding your inboxes. I just received some updates from
my friend Adriana that Amer's second brother also died from severe
injuries and the father has been taken out of the area. No news on the
father's condition. Regards, Zohra
___________________
From: Safi, Zohra
Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2009 8:20 AM
Please please forward this message to anyone who would be able to help in
any way. Amer was my colleague and also we took "Germany and Islam" class
together. He graduated last semester. Peace, Zohra
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Adriana Qubaia <aqubaia@gmail.com<mailto:aqubaia@gmail.com>>
Date: 2009/1/16
Friends and colleagues, please forward widely. Amer is a good friend of
mine, I've know him for 5 years. Thank you for your help.
-------------------
Hello,
I am writing to make a request for a good friend from Gaza (Amer Shurrab,
UWCAD '01--03, Middlebury College '08.5). He just found out his father and
two brothers were attacked while returning home from their farm during the
3-hr ceasefire. One brother (Kassab Shurrab) died, but the father
(Mohammed Shurrab -64) and the remaining brother (Ibrahim-17) are now
wounded and stranded in an Israeli Defense Force (IDF) controlled area.
It's been 16 hours and emergency services are unable to reach them. The
ambulances cannot travel there without permission from the IDF, and local
aid groups claim that soldiers are blocking their access.
We have spoken with the local Red Cross in Khan Yunis and they have been
trying to get the IDF's permission to get to the family, but have not been
allowed. What we are asking, is if you could help by using any of your
contacts (in the area and/or region, with NGOs, HR groups,media, etc), to
bring attention and pressure in order to get permission for the ambulances
to save two lives. We are very desperate and trying as many avenues as
possible to help aid reach them. If you know even a foot soldier who might
be able to push the ball by calling a local commander we would really
appreciate any help.
His father and brother are located at:
In front of Supermarket Abu Zidan El-Najar
El Fukhari (neighbourhood)
Khan Yunis (town)
Gaza
We truly appreciate any help at this time, thank you for your time.
Salam,
Adriana Qubaia +1.781.350.8080
(aqubaia@gmail.com<mailto:aqubaia@gmail.com>)
Amer Shurrab: +1.802.377.7962
(ashurrab@gmail.com<mailto:ashurrab@gmail.com>)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 17:11:50 -0800 (PST)
From: patricia blair <cris6369@yahoo.com>
26. compare and contrast:It can't be more specific
PRAY, WEEP,Go TO THE STREET AND DEMONSTATE OR DO ANYTHING
THAT YOU BELIEVE MAY GET THE PALESTINIAN PEOPLE OUT OF
THIS NAKBA.
Peace & Aloha,
Ramsis
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Date: Sun, 18 Jan 2009 00:30:57 -0800 (PST)
From: patricia blair <cris6369@yahoo.com>
27. bloodied still breathing
Archbishop Desmond Tutu states, " IF YOU ARE NEUTRAL IN
SITUATIONS OF INJUSTICE, YOU HAVE CHOSEN THE SIDE OF THE
OPPRESSOR". I am not neutral. I will be walking in the MLK
Parade Monday for Justice for the Palestinians. Please join
me for the sake of peace. Pat
More grueling realities from Gaza- 21 days. Yes, protests and
marches don't seem to be enough.
Aloha,
Hector
//////////// ///////// //
Counterpunch 1-16-09
Weekend Edition
January 16-18, 2009
A Report From Gaza
Terribly Bloodied, Still Breathing
By CAOIMHE BUTTERLY
Gaza
The morgues of Gaza's hospitals are over-flowing. The bodies in their
blood-soaked white shrouds cover the entire floor space of the Shifa
hospital morgue. Some are intact, most horribly deformed, limbs twisted
into unnatural positions, chest cavities exposed, heads blown off, skulls
crushed in. Family members wait outside to identify and claim a brother,
husband, father, mother, wife, child. Many of those who wait their turn
have lost numerous family members and loved ones. Blood is everywhere.
Hospital orderlies hose down the floors of operating rooms, bloodied
bandages lie discarded in corners, and the injured continue to pour in:
bodies lacerated by shrapnel, burns, bullet wounds. Medical workers,
exhausted and under siege, work day and night and each life saved is seen
as a victory over the predominance of death. The streets of Gaza are
eerily silent- the pulsing life and rhythm of markets, children, fishermen
walking down to the sea at dawn brutally stilled and replaced by an
atmosphere of uncertainty, isolation and fear. The ever-present sounds of
surveillance drones, F16s, tanks and Apaches are listened to acutely as
residents try to guess where the next deadly strike will be- which house,
school, clinic, mosque, governmental building or community centre will be
hit next and how to move before it does. That there are no safe places- no
refuge for vulnerable human bodies- is felt acutely. It is a devastating
awareness for parents- that there is no way to keep their children safe.
As we continue to accompany the ambulances, joining Palestinian paramedics
as they risk their lives, daily, to respond to calls from those with no
other life-line, our existence becomes temporarily narrowed down and
focused on the few precious minutes that make the difference between life
and death. With each new call received as we ride in ambulances that
careen down broken, silent roads, sirens and lights blaring, there exists
a battle of life over death. We have learned the language of the war that
the Israelis are waging on the collective captive population of Gaza- to
distinguish between the sounds of the weaponry used, the timing between
the first missile strikes and the inevitable second- targeting those that
rush to tend to and evacuate the wounded, to recognize the signs of the
different chemical weapons being used in this onslaught, to overcome the
initial vulnerability of recognizing our own mortality. Though many of the
calls received are to pick up bodies, not the wounded, the necessity of
affording the dead a dignified burial drives the paramedics to face the
deliberate targeting of their colleagues and comrades- thirteen killed
while evacuating the wounded, fourteen ambulances destroyed- and to
continue to search for the shattered bodies of the dead to bring home to
their families. Last night, while sitting with paramedics in Jabaliya
refugee camp, drinking tea and listening to their stories, we received a
call to respond to the aftermath of a missile strike. When we arrived at
the outskirts of the camp where the attack had taken place the area was
filled with clouds of dust, torn electricity lines, slabs of concrete and
open water pipes gushing water into the street. Amongst the carnage of
severed limbs and blood we pulled out the body of a young man, his chest
and face lacerated by shrapnel wounds, but alive- conscious and moaning.
As the ambulance sped him through the cold night we applied pressure to
his wounds, the warmth of his blood seeping through the bandages reminder
of the life still in him. He opened his eyes in answer to my questions and
closed them again as Muhammud, a volunteer paramedic, murmured "ayeesh,
nufuss"- live, breathe- over and over to him. He lost consciousness as we
arrived at the hospital, received into the arms of friends who carried him
into the emergency room. He, Majid, lived and is recovering. A few minutes
later there was another missile strike, this time on a residential house.
As we arrived a crowd had rushed to the ruins of the four story home in an
attempt to drag survivors out from under the rubble. The family the house
belonged to had evacuated the area the day before and the only person in
it at the time of the strike was 17 year old Muhammud who had gone back to
collect clothes for his family. He was dragged out from under the rubble
still breathing- his legs twisted in unnatural directions and with a head
wound, but alive. There was no choice but to move him, with the imminence
of a possible second strike, and he lay in the ambulance moaning with pain
and calling for his mother. We thought he would live, he was conscious
though in intense pain and with the rest of the night consumed with call
after call to pick up the wounded and the dead, I forgot to check on him.
This morning we were called to pick up a body from Shifa hospital to take
back to Jabaliya. We carried a body wrapped in a blood-soaked white shroud
into the ambulance, and it wasn't until we were on the road that we
realized that it was Muhammud's body. His brother rode with us, opening
the shroud to tenderly kiss Muhammud's forehead. This morning we received
news that Al-Quds hospital in Gaza City was under siege. We tried
unsuccessfully for hours to gain access to the hospital, trying to
organize co-ordination to get the ambulances past Israeli tanks and
snipers to evacuate the wounded and dead. Hours of unsuccessful attempts
later we received a call from the Shujahiya neighborhood, describing a
house where there were both dead and wounded patients to pick up. The area
was deserted, many families having fled as Israeli tanks and snipers took
up position amongst their homes, other silent in the dark, cold confines
of their homes, crawling from room to room to avoid sniper fire through
their windows. As we drove slowly around the area, we heard women's cries
for help. We approached their house on foot, followed by the ambulances
and as we came to the threshold of their home, they rushed towards us with
their children, shaking and crying with shock. At the door of the house
the ambulance lights exposed the bodies of four men, lacerated by shrapnel
wounds- the skull and brains of one exposed, others whose limbs had been
severed off. The four were the husbands and brothers of the women, who had
ventured out to search for bread and food for their families. Their bodies
were still warm as we struggled to carry them on stretchers over the
uneven ground, their blood staining the earth and our clothes. As we
prepared to leave the area our torches illuminated the slumped figure of
another man, his abdomen and chest shredded by shrapnel. With no space in
the other ambulances, and the imminent possibility of sniper fire, we were
forced to take his body in the back of the ambulance carrying the women
and children. One of the little girls stared at me before coming into my
arms and telling me her name- Fidaa', which means to sacrifice. She stared
at the body bag, asking when he would wake up. Once back at the hospital
we received word that the Israeli army had shelled Al Quds hospital, that
the ensuing fire risked spreading and that there had been a 20-minute
time-frame negotiated to evacuate patients, doctors and residents in the
surrounding houses. By the time we got up there in a convoy of ambulances,
hundreds of people had gathered. With the shelling of the UNRWA compound
and the hospital there was a deep awareness that nowhere in Gaza is safe,
or sacred. We helped evacuate those assembled to near-by hospitals and
schools that have been opened to receive the displaced. The scenes were
deeply saddening- families, desperate and carrying their children,
blankets and bags of their possessions venturing out in the cold night to
try to find a corner of a school or hospital to shelter in. The paramedic
we were with referred to the displacement of the over 46,000 Gazan
Palestinians now on the move as a continuation of the ongoing Nakba of
dispossession and exile seen through generation after generation enduring
massacre after massacre. Today's death toll was over 75, one of the
bloodiest days since the start of this carnage. Over 1,110 Palestinians
have been killed in the past 21 days. 367 of those have been children. The
humanitarian infrastructure of Gaza is on its knees- already devastated by
years of comprehensive siege. There has been a deliberate, systematic
destruction of all places of refuge. There are no safe places here, for
anyone. And yet, in the face of so much desecration, this community has
remained intact. The social solidarity and support between people is
inspiring, and the steadfastness of Gaza continues to humble and inspire
all those who witness it. Their level of sacrifice demands our collective
response- and recognition that demonstrations are not enough. Gaza,
Palestine and its people continue to live, breathe, resist and remain
intact and this refusal to be broken is a call and challenge to us all.
Caoimhe Butterly is an Irish human rights activist working in Jabaliya and
Gaza City as a volunteer with ambulance services and as co-coordinator for
the Free Gaza Movement, She can be contacted at sahara78@hotmail.co.uk
________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Sun, 18 Jan 2009 08:19:31 -0800
From: Rebecca Cummings <beckyspi@mac.com>
28. why gasoline prices have doubled
At Least Nixon Resigned
If you wonder why your gasoline prices have doubled or tripled in the last
few years and have been told that it is because there is a shortage of US
refining capacity? Take a look at these facts from Salon.com ^ÓAccording
to documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, between 2004
and 2007 the U.S. Defense Department gave $818 million worth of fuel to
the Israeli military. The total amount was 479 million gallons, the
equivalent of about 66 gallons per Israeli citizen. In 2008, an additional
$280 million in fuel was given to the Israeli military, again at U.S.
taxpayers' expense. The U.S. has even paid the cost of shipping the fuel
from U.S. refineries to ports in Israel.^Ô
Gaza invasion: Powered by the U.S.
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2009/01/16/gaza_invasion/
Read the FAQ for this list at http://lists.riseup.net/www/info/organize-news
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 18 Jan 2009 17:44:58 -0800 (PST)
From: patricia blair <cris6369@yahoo.com>
29. Israeli intentions In quotes
Early 1970's:
"We have no solution... You [Palestinians] shall continue to
live like dogs, and whoever wishes may leave, and we will see
where this process leads."
^Ö Moshe Dayan (1915-1981) served as Chief of Staff of the
IDF, defense minister, and leader of the Labor party in
Israel. He said these words in a talk with members of his
Labor cabinet. Noam Chomsky cites as source of this quote:
Yossi Beilin, Mehiro shel Ihud (Revivim, 1985), 42; an
important review of cabinet records under the Labor Party.
Books that cite these words (excluding Chomsky's)
May 3, 1983:
"When we have settled the land, all the Arabs will be able to
do about it will be to scurry around like drugged roaches in
a bottle."
^Ö Rafael Eitan (1929-2004) served as Chief of Staff of the
IDF, and later as Knesset member and government minister.
Sources
October 8, 2004: "The significance of the [Gaza Strip disengagement] plan
is the freezing of the peace process," Dov Weisglass told Haaretz
newspaper, adding the US had given its backing. ... "It supplies the
amount of formaldehyde that is necessary so there will not be a political
process with the Palestinians ... When you freeze [the peace] process, you
prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and you prevent a
discussion on the [Palestinian] refugees, the borders and Jerusalem. ...
Effectively, this whole package called the Palestinian state, with all
that it entails, has been removed indefinitely from our agenda. ... And
all this with authority and permission. All with a [US] presidential
blessing and the ratification of both houses of Congress." ^Ö Dov
Weisglass, then adviser to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. Source
February 2006: "The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet but not to
make them die of hunger." ^Ö Dov Weisglass, adviser to now-Prime-Minister
Ehud Olmert, talking about Israel's blockade on the Gaza Strip. Source 1,
2
February 29, 2008: "The more Qassam fire intensifies and the rockets reach
a longer range, they will bring upon themselves a bigger 'shoah'
[Holocaust] because we will use all our might to defend ourselves." ^Ö
Matan Vilnai, Israel's deputy defense minister. Source
Jan 12, 2009: "Gaza is a laboratory of catastrophization." ^Ö Adi Ophir,
professor of philosophy and critical theory at Tel Aviv University. Link
Finally a 'longish' quote by Yitzhak Laor, Israeli poet and novelist. From
an op/ed page in the London Review of Books, Jan 2009:
We've been here before. It's a ritual. Every two or three years, our
military mounts another bloody expedition. The enemy is always smaller,
weaker; our military is always larger, technologically more sophisticated,
prepared for full-scale war against a full-scale army. But Iran is too
scary, and even the relatively small Hizbullah gave us a hard time. That
leaves the Palestinians.
Israel is engaged in a long war of annihilation against Palestinian
society. The objective is to destroy the Palestinian nation and drive it
back into pre-modern groupings based on the tribe, the clan and the
enclave. This is the last phase of the Zionist colonial mission,
culminating in inaccessible townships, camps, villages, districts, all of
them to be walled or fenced off, and patrolled by a powerful army which,
in the absence of a proper military objective, is really an over-equipped
police force, with F16s, Apaches, tanks, artillery, commando units and
hi-tech surveillance at its disposal.
The extent of the cruelty, the lack of shame and the refusal of
self-restraint are striking, both in anthropological terms and
historically. The worldwide Jewish support for this vandal offensive makes
one wonder if this isn't the moment Zionism is taking over the Jewish
people.
But the real issue is that since 1991, and even more since the Oslo
agreements in 1993, Israel has played on the idea that it really is
trading land for peace, while the truth is very different. Israel has not
given up the territories, but cantonised and blockaded them. The new
strategy is to confine the Palestinians: they do not belong in our space,
they are to remain out of sight, packed into their townships and camps, or
swelling our prisons. This project now has the support of most of the
Israeli press and academics.
We are the masters. We work and travel. They can make their living by
policing their own people. We drive on the highways. They must live across
the hills. The hills are ours. So are the fences. We control the roads,
and the checkpoints and the borders. We control their electricity, their
water, their milk, their oil, their wheat and their gasoline. If they
protest peacefully we fire tear gas at them. If they throw stones, we fire
bullets. If they launch a rocket, we destroy a house and its inhabitants.
If they launch a missile, we destroy families, neighbourhoods, streets,
towns.
Israel doesn't want a Palestinian state alongside it. It is willing to
prove this with hundreds of dead and thousands of disabled, in a single
'operation'. The message is always the same: leave or remain in
subjugation, under our military dictatorship. We are a democracy. We have
decided democratically that you will live like dogs.
On 27 December just before the bombs started falling on Gaza, the Zionist
parties, from Meretz to Yisrael Betenu, were unanimously in favour of the
attack. As usual ^Ö it's the ritual again ^Ö differences emerged only over
the dispatch of blankets and medication to Gaza. Our most fervent pro-war
columnist, Ari Shavit, has suggested that Israel should go on with the
assault and build a hospital for the victims. The enemy is wounded,
bleeding, dying, desperate for help. Nobody is coming unless Obama moves
^Ö yes, we are all waiting for Godot. Maybe this time he shows up.
^Ö Yitzhak Laor lives in Tel Aviv. He is the editor of Mita'am.
- - - anees
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sun, 18 Jan 2009 18:25:53 +0000 (GMT)
From: nisiocam@optonline.net
30. over 700 detained
How to Sell 'Ethical Warfare'
By Neve Gordon
Guardian (UK)
January 16, 2009
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jan/16/gaza-middleeast1
Claim moral superiority, intimidate enemies
and crush dissent - Israel's media management
is not just impressive, it's terrifying.
One of my students was arrested yesterday and spent the night in a prison
cell. R's offence was protesting the Israeli assault on Gaza. He joins
over 700 other Israelis who have been detained since the beginning of
Israel's ruthless war on Gaza: an estimated 230 of whom are still behind
bars. Within the Israeli context, this strategy of quelling protest and
stifling resistance is unprecedented, and it is quite disturbing that the
international media has failed to comment on it.
Simultaneously, the Israeli media has been towing the government line to
such a degree that no criticism of the war has been voiced on any of the
three local television stations. Indeed, the situation has become so
absurd that reporters and anchors are currently less critical of the war
than the military spokespeople. In the absence of any critical analysis,
it is not so surprising that 78% of Israelis, or about 98% of all Jewish
Israelis, support the war.
But eliding critical voices is not the only way that public support has
been secured. Support has also been manufactured through ostensibly
logical argumentation. One of the ways the media, military and government
have been convincing Israelis to rally behind the assault is by claiming
that Israel is carrying out a moral military campaign against Hamas. The
logic, as Eyal Weizman has cogently observed in his groundbreaking book
Hollow Land, is one of restraint.
The Israeli media continuously emphasises Israel's restraint by
underscoring the gap between what the military forces could do to the
Palestinians and what they actually do. Here are a few examples of the
refrains Israelis hear daily while listening to the news:
- Israel could bomb houses from the air without warning, but it has
military personnel contact - by phone no less - the residents 10 minutes
in advance of an attack to alert them that their house is about to be
destroyed. The military, so the subtext goes, could demolish houses
without such forewarnings, but it does not do so because it values human
life.
- Israel deploys teaser bombs - ones that do not actually ruin houses - a
few minutes before it fires lethal missiles; again, to show that it could
kill more Palestinians but chooses not to do so.
- Israel knows that Hamas leaders are hiding in al- Shifa hospital. The
intimation is that it does not raze the medical centre to the ground even
though it has the capacity to do so.
- Due to the humanitarian crisis the Israeli military stops its attacks
for a few hours each day and allows humanitarian convoys to enter the Gaza
Strip. Again, the unspoken claim is that it could have barred these
convoys from entering.
The message Israel conveys through these refrains has two different
meanings depending on the target audience.
To the Palestinians, the message is one that carries a clear threat:
Israel's restraint could end and there is always the possibility of
further escalation. Regardless of how lethal Israel's military attacks are
now, the idea is to intimidate the Palestinian population by underscoring
that the violence can always become more deadly and brutal. This
guarantees that violence, both when it is and when it is not deployed,
remains an ever-looming threat.
The message to the Israelis is a moral one. The subtext is that the
Israeli military could indiscriminately unleash its vast arsenal of
violence, but chooses not to, because its forces, unlike Hamas, respect
human life.
This latter claim appears to have considerable resonance among Israelis,
and, yet, it is based on a moral fallacy. The fact that one could be more
brutal but chooses to use restraint does not in any way entail that one is
moral. The fact that the Israeli military could have razed the entire Gaza
Strip, but instead destroyed only 15% of the buildings does not make its
actions moral. The fact that the Israeli military could have killed
thousands of Palestinian children during this campaign, and, due to
restraint, killed "only" 300, does not make Operation Cast Lead ethical.
Ultimately, the moral claims the Israeli government uses to support its
actions during this war are empty. They actually reveal Israel's
unwillingness to confront the original source of the current violence,
which is not Hamas, but rather the occupation of the Gaza Strip, West Bank
and East Jerusalem. My student, R, and the other Israeli protesters seem
to have understood this truism; in order to stop them from voicing it,
Israel has stomped on their civil liberties by arresting them.
____________
Neve Gordon teaches in the Department of Politics and Government,
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel, and is the author of Israel's
Occupation, University of California Press, 2008. His website is
israeloccupation.com
________________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 08:15:37 -0500
From: Donna Nevel <denevel@gmail.com>
31. Please Sign Our Call Jews Say: Not in Our Name
JEWS SAY: NOT IN OUR NAME
On January 12th, 2009, hundreds of Jews stood together in NYC in front of
the Israeli Consulate to protest the Israeli massacre in Gaza. Please add
your name (and/or organization) if you would like to join our call by
sending an email to: jewssayno@gmail.com
Statement and signatories are attached.
[ Part 2, Application/PDF 48KB. ]
_______________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 13:29:35 -0500
From: John Wilmerding <wilmerding@earthlink.net>
32. Gaza: Israel's Great Humanitarian Debacle
I found this Guardian article helpful ... I hope you do too. -- JW
Gaza: Israel's Great Humanitarian Debacle
Posted in the discussion forum on MEPEACE.ORG by John Wilmerding on January 10, 2009
[PHOTO: A wounded Palestinian policeman gestures while lying on the ground
outside Hamas police headquarters following an Israeli air strike in Gaza
City. Photograph: Mohammed Abed/AFP/Getty Images]
The writer of this article, Avi Shlaim, is a professor of international
relations at the University of Oxford in England, and the author of 'The
Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World' and of 'Lion of Jordan: King
Hussein's Life in War and Peace'. He served in the Israeli army, and has
never questioned the Israeli state's legitimacy. But its merciless assault
on Gaza has led him to devastating conclusions.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jan/07/gaza-israel-palestine
How Israel Brought Gaza to the Brink of Humanitarian Catastrophe by Avi
Shlaim © 2009 Guardian News and Media Limited 2009
Wednesday, January 7, 2009 -- The only way to make sense of Israel's
senseless war in Gaza is through understanding the historical context.
Establishing the state of Israel in May 1948 involved a monumental
injustice to the Palestinians. British officials bitterly resented
American partisanship on behalf of the infant state. On 2 June 1948, Sir
John Troutbeck wrote to the foreign secretary, Ernest Bevin, that the
Americans were responsible for the creation of a gangster state headed by
"an utterly unscrupulous set of leaders". I used to think that this
judgment was too harsh, but Israel's vicious assault on the people of
Gaza, and the Bush administration's complicity in this assault, have
reopened the question.
I write as someone who served loyally in the Israeli army in the
mid-1960s, and who has never questioned the legitimacy of the state of
Israel within its pre-1967 borders. What I utterly reject is the Zionist
colonial project beyond the Green Line. The Israeli occupation of the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip in the aftermath of the June 1967 war had very
little to do with security and everything to do with territorial
expansionism. The aim was to establish Greater Israel through permanent
political, economic and military control over the Palestinian territories.
And the result has been one of the most prolonged and brutal military
occupations of modern times.
Four decades of Israeli control did incalculable damage to the economy of
the Gaza Strip. With a large population of 1948 refugees crammed into a
tiny strip of land, with no infrastructure or natural resources, Gaza's
prospects were never bright.
Gaza, however, is not simply a case of economic under-development but a
uniquely cruel case of deliberate de-development. To use the Biblical
phrase, Israel turned the people of Gaza into the hewers of wood and the
drawers of water, into a source of cheap labor and a captive market for
Israeli goods. The development of local industry was actively impeded so
as to make it impossible for the Palestinians to end their subordination
to Israel, and to establish the economic underpinnings essential for real
political independence.
Gaza is a classic case of colonial exploitation in the post-colonial era.
Jewish settlements in occupied territories are immoral, illegal and an
insurmountable obstacle to peace. They are at once the instrument of
exploitation and the symbol of the hated occupation. In Gaza, the Jewish
settlers numbered only 8,000 in 2005 compared with 1.4 million local
residents. Yet the settlers controlled 25% of the territory, 40% of the
arable land, and the lion's share of the scarce water resources. Cheek by
jowl with these foreign intruders, the majority of the local population
lived in abject poverty and unimaginable misery. Eighty per cent of them
still subsist on less than $2 a day. The living conditions in the strip
remain an affront to civilized values, a powerful precipitant to
resistance, and a fertile breeding ground for political extremism.
In August 2005, a Likud government headed by Ariel Sharon staged a
unilateral Israeli pullout from Gaza, withdrawing all 8,000 settlers and
destroying the houses and farms they had left behind. Hamas, the Islamic
resistance movement, conducted an effective campaign to drive the Israelis
out of Gaza. The withdrawal was a humiliation for the Israeli Defense
Forces.
To the world, Sharon presented the withdrawal from Gaza as a contribution
to peace based on a two-state solution. But in the year after, another
12,000 Israelis settled on the West Bank, further reducing the scope for
an independent Palestinian state. Land-grabbing and peace-making are
simply incompatible. Israel had a choice and it chose land over peace.
The real purpose behind the move was to redraw unilaterally the borders of
Greater Israel by incorporating the main settlement blocs on the West Bank
to the state of Israel. Withdrawal from Gaza was thus not a prelude to a
peace deal with the Palestinian Authority, but a prelude to further
Zionist expansion on the West Bank. It was a unilateral Israeli move
undertaken in what was seen -- mistakenly, in my view -- as an Israeli
national interest. Anchored in a fundamental rejection of the Palestinian
national identity, the withdrawal from Gaza was part of a long-term effort
to deny the Palestinian people any independent political existence on
their land.
Israel's settlers were withdrawn, but Israeli soldiers continued to
control all access to the Gaza Strip by land, sea and air. Gaza was
converted overnight into an open-air prison. From this point on, the
Israeli air force enjoyed unrestricted freedom to drop bombs, to make
sonic booms by flying low and breaking the sound barrier, and to terrorize
the hapless inhabitants of this prison.
Israel likes to portray itself as an island of democracy in a sea of
authoritarianism. Yet Israel has never in its entire history done anything
to promote democracy on the Arab side, and has done a great deal to
undermine it. Israel has a long history of secret collaboration with
reactionary Arab regimes to suppress Palestinian nationalism. Despite all
the handicaps, the Palestinian people succeeded in building the only
genuine democracy in the Arab world, with the possible exception of
Lebanon. In January 2006, free and fair elections for the Legislative
Council of the Palestinian Authority brought to power a Hamas-led
government. Israel, however, refused to recognize the democratically
elected government, claiming that Hamas is purely and simply a terrorist
organization.
America and the EU shamelessly joined Israel in ostracizing and demonizing
the Hamas government, and in trying to bring it down by withholding tax
revenues and foreign aid. A surreal situation thus developed, with a
significant part of the international community imposing economic
sanctions not against the occupier but against the occupied, not against
the oppressor but against the oppressed.
As so often in the tragic history of Palestine, the victims were blamed
for their own misfortunes. Israel's propaganda machine persistently
purveyed the notion that the Palestinians are terrorists, that they reject
coexistence with the Jewish state, that their nationalism is little more
than antisemitism, that Hamas is just a bunch of religious fanatics, and
that Islam is incompatible with democracy. But the simple truth is that
the Palestinian people are a normal people with normal aspirations. They
are no better, but they are no worse, than any other national group. What
they aspire to, above all, is a piece of land to call their own on which
to live in freedom and dignity.
Like other radical movements, Hamas began to moderate its political
program following its rise to power. From the ideological rejectionism of
its charter, it began to move towards pragmatic accommodation of a
two-state solution. In March 2007, Hamas and Fatah formed a national unity
government that was ready to negotiate a long-term ceasefire with Israel.
Israel, however, refused to negotiate with a government that included
Hamas.
It continued to play the old game of divide and rule between rival
Palestinian factions. In the late 1980s, Israel had supported the nascent
Hamas in order to weaken Fatah, the secular nationalist movement led by
Yasser Arafat. Now Israel began to encourage the corrupt and pliant Fatah
leaders to overthrow their religious political rivals and recapture power.
Aggressive American neoconservatives participated in the sinister plot to
instigate a Palestinian civil war. Their meddling was a major factor in
the collapse of the national unity government, and in driving Hamas to
seize power in Gaza in June 2007 to pre-empt a Fatah coup.
The war unleashed by Israel on Gaza on 27 December was the culmination of
a series of clashes and confrontations with the Hamas government. In a
broader sense, however, it is a war between Israel and the Palestinian
people, because the people had elected the party to power. The declared
aim of the war is to weaken Hamas, and to intensify the pressure until its
leaders agree to a new ceasefire on Israel's terms. The undeclared aim is
to ensure that the Palestinians in Gaza are seen by the world simply as a
humanitarian problem, and thus to derail their struggle for independence
and statehood.
The timing of the war was determined by political expediency. A general
election is scheduled for 10 February and, in the lead-up to the election,
all the main contenders are looking for an opportunity to prove their
toughness. The army top brass had been champing at the bit to deliver a
crushing blow to Hamas in order to remove the stain left on their
reputation by the failure of the war against Hezbollah in Lebanon in July
2006. Israel's cynical leaders could also count on apathy and impotence of
the pro-western Arab regimes, and on blind support from President Bush in
the twilight of his term in the White House. Bush readily obliged by
putting all the blame for the crisis on Hamas, vetoing proposals at the UN
Security Council for an immediate ceasefire, and issuing Israel with a
free pass to mount a ground invasion of Gaza.
As always, mighty Israel claims to be the victim of Palestinian
aggression, but the sheer asymmetry of power between the two sides leaves
little room for doubt as to who is the real victim. This is indeed a
conflict between David and Goliath, but the Biblical image has been
inverted -- a small and defenseless Palestinian David faces a heavily
armed, merciless and overbearing Israeli Goliath. The resort to brute
military force is accompanied, as always, by the shrill rhetoric of
victimhood and a farrago of self-pity overlaid with self-righteousness. In
Hebrew, this is known as the syndrome of bokhim ve-yorim, "crying and
shooting".
To be sure, Hamas is not an entirely innocent party in this conflict.
Denied the fruit of its electoral victory and confronted with an
unscrupulous adversary, it has resorted to the weapon of the weak --
terror. Militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad kept launching Qassam
rocket attacks against Israeli settlements near the border with Gaza,
until Egypt brokered a six-month ceasefire last June. The damage caused by
these primitive rockets is minimal, but the psychological impact is
immense, prompting the public to demand protection from its government.
Under the circumstances, Israel had the right to act in self-defense but
its response to the pinpricks of rocket attacks was totally
disproportionate. The figures speak for themselves. In the three years
after the withdrawal from Gaza, 11 Israelis were killed by rocket fire. On
the other hand, in 2005-7 alone, the IDF killed 1,290 Palestinians in
Gaza, including 222 children.
Whatever the numbers, killing civilians is wrong. This rule applies to
Israel as much as it does to Hamas, but Israel's entire record is one of
unbridled and unremitting brutality towards the inhabitants of Gaza.
Israel also maintained the blockade of Gaza after the ceasefire came into
force which, in the view of the Hamas leaders, amounted to a violation of
the agreement. During the ceasefire, Israel prevented any exports from
leaving the strip in clear violation of a 2005 accord, leading to a sharp
drop in employment opportunities. Officially, 49.1% of the population is
unemployed. At the same time, Israel restricted drastically the number of
trucks carrying food, fuel, cooking-gas canisters, spare parts for water
and sanitation plants, and medical supplies to Gaza. It is difficult to
see how starving and freezing the civilians of Gaza could protect the
people on the Israeli side of the border. But even if it did, it would
still be immoral, a form of collective punishment t
hat i s strictly forbidden by international humanitarian law.
The brutality of Israel's soldiers is fully matched by the mendacity of
its spokesmen. Eight months before launching the current war on Gaza,
Israel established a National Information Directorate. The core messages
of this directorate to the media are that Hamas broke the ceasefire
agreements; that Israel's objective is the defense of its population; and
that Israel's forces are taking the utmost care not to hurt innocent
civilians. Israel's spin doctors have been remarkably successful in
getting this message across. But, in essence, their propaganda is a pack
of lies.
A wide gap separates the reality of Israel's actions from the rhetoric of
its spokesmen. It was not Hamas, but the IDF that broke the ceasefire. It
did so by a raid into Gaza on 4 November that killed six Hamas men.
Israel's objective is not just the defense of its population, but the
eventual overthrow of the Hamas government in Gaza by turning the people
against their rulers. And far from taking care to spare civilians, Israel
is guilty of indiscriminate bombing, and of a three-year-old blockade that
has brought the inhabitants of Gaza, now 1.5 million, to the brink of a
humanitarian catastrophe.
The Biblical injunction of an eye for an eye is savage enough. But
Israel's insane offensive against Gaza seems to follow the logic of an eye
for an eyelash. After eight days of bombing, with a death toll of more
than 400 Palestinians and four Israelis, the gung-ho cabinet ordered a
land invasion of Gaza the consequences of which are incalculable.
No amount of military escalation can buy Israel immunity from rocket
attacks from the military wing of Hamas. Despite all the death and
destruction that Israel has inflicted on them, they kept up their
resistance and they kept firing their rockets. This is a movement that
glorifies victimhood and martyrdom. There is simply no military solution
to the conflict between the two communities.
The problem with Israel's concept of security is that it denies even the
most elementary security to the other community. The only way for Israel
to achieve security is not through shooting, but through talks with Hamas,
which has repeatedly declared its readiness to negotiate a long-term
ceasefire with the Jewish state within its pre-1967 borders for 20, 30, or
even 50 years. Israel has rejected this offer for the same reason it
spurned the Arab League peace plan of 2002, which is still on the table:
it involves concessions and compromises.
This brief review of Israel's record over the past four decades makes it
difficult to resist the conclusion that it has become a rogue state with
"an utterly unscrupulous set of leaders". A rogue state habitually
violates international law, possesses weapons of mass destruction, and
practices terrorism -- the use of violence against civilians for political
purposes. Israel fulfills all of these three criteria; the cap fits and it
must wear it.
Israel's real aim is not peaceful coexistence with its Palestinian
neighbours but military domination. It keeps compounding the mistakes of
the past with new and more disastrous ones. Politicians, like everyone
else, are of course free to repeat the lies and mistakes of the past. But
it is not mandatory to do so.
=========================================
COLLEGIUM IUSTITIÆ ÆQUITATEM RESTITUENTI
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://woolman.ning.com Email to: JWC@igc.org
John Woolman College (of Active Peace) [JWC]
c/o John Wilmerding <wilmerding@earthlink.net>
217 High Street, Brattleboro, VT, USA 05301-6073
_____________________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 14:03:37 -0500
From: Sharon Smith <starsmith13@gmail.com>
33. How can we talk about Genocide, Oppression,
Violence...?
The following interview with Chomsky, puts the Israel-Palestine
situation into succinct perspective for me. He points to striking
parallels between colonial genocide and theft in the Americas and what
is happening now in Palestine. For me, the issue is one of how to
dismantle the cultural construct which enables this cannibalistic
psychosis to continue masquerading as normalcy.
If this means anything to you, I recommend that you read, Columbus and
Other Cannibals: The Wetiko Disease of Exploitation, Imperialism and
Terrorism, by Jack D. Forbes. This book examines, "aggression, violence,
imperialism, rape , and so on," from a Native American perspective and ,
" from a perspective as free as possible from assumptions created by the
very disease being studied." It did a lot for me, in terms of helping me
to articulate what I have been feeling. I highly recommend it.
Sharon Smith
Chomsky: Undermining Gaza
Sameer Dossani | January 16, 2009
Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco
Foreign Policy In Focus
www.fpif.org
Noam Chomsky is a noted linguist, author, and foreign policy expert.
Sameer Dossani interviewed him about the conflict between Israel and Gaza.
DOSSANI: The Israeli government and many Israeli and U.S. officials claim
that the current assault on Gaza is to put an end to the flow of Qassam
rockets from Gaza into Israel. But many observers claim that if that were
really the case, Israel would have made much more of an effort to renew
the ceasefire agreement that expired in December, which had all but
stopped the rocket fire. In your opinion, what are the real motivations
behind the current Israeli action?
CHOMSKY: There's a theme that goes way back to the origins of Zionism. And
it's a very rational theme: "Let's delay negotiations and diplomacy as
long as possible, and meanwhile we'll 'build facts on the ground.'" So
Israel will create the basis for what some eventual agreement will ratify,
but the more they create, the more they construct, the better the
agreement will be for their purposes. Those purposes are essentially to
take over everything of value in the former Palestine and to undermine
what's left of the indigenous population.
I think one of the reasons for popular support for this in the United
States is that it resonates very well with American history. How did the
United States get established? The themes are similar.
There are many examples of this theme being played out throughout
Israel's history, and the current situation is another case. They have a
very clear program. Rational hawks like Ariel Sharon realized that it's
crazy to keep 8,000 settlers using one-third of the land and much of the
scarce supplies in Gaza, protected by a large part of the Israeli army
while the rest of the society around them is just rotting. So it's best
to take them out and send them to the West Bank. That's the place that
they really care about and want.
What was called a "disengagement" in September 2005 was actually a
transfer. They were perfectly frank and open about it. In fact, they
extended settlement building programs in the West Bank at the very same
time that they were withdrawing a few thousand people from Gaza. So Gaza
should be turned into a cage, a prison basically, with Israel attacking
it at will, and meanwhile in the West Bank we'll take what we want. There
was nothing secret about it.
Ehud Olmert was in the United States in May 2006 a couple of months after
the withdrawal. He simplyannounced to a joint session of Congress and to
rousing applause, that the historic right of Jews to the entire land of
Israel is beyond question. He announced what he called his convergence
program, which is just a version of the traditional program; it goes back
to the Allon plan of 1967. Israel would essentially annex valuable land
and resources near the green line (the 1967 border). That land is now
behind the wall that Israel built in the West Bank, which is an
annexation wall. That means the arable land, the main water resources,
the pleasant suburbs around Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, and the hills and so
on. They'll take over the Jordan valley, which is about a third of the
West Bank, where they've been settling since the late 60s. Then they'll
drive a couple of super highways through the whole territory ^× there's
one to the east of Jerusalem to the town of Ma'aleh Adumim which was
built mostly in the 1990s, during the Oslo years. It was built
essentially to bisect the West Bank and are two others up north that
includes Ariel and Kedumim and other towns which pretty much bisect
what's left. They'll set up check points and all sorts of means of
harassment in the other areas and the population that's left will be
essentially cantonized and unable to live a decent life and if they want
to leave, great. Or else they will be picturesque figures for tourists ^×
you know somebody leading a goat up a hill in the distance ^× and
meanwhile Israelis, including settlers, will drive around on "Israeli
only" super highways. Palestinians can make do with some little road
somewhere where you're falling into a ditch if it's raining. That's the
goal. And it's explicit. You can't accuse them of deception because it's
explicit. And it's cheered here.
DOSSANI: In terms of U.S. support, last week the UN Security Council
adopted a resolution calling for a cease fire. Is this a change,
particularly in light of the fact that the U.S. did not veto the
resolution, but rather abstained, allowing it to be passed?
CHOMSKY: Right after the 1967 war, the Security Council had strong
resolutions condemning Israel's move to expand and take over Jerusalem.
Israel just ignored them. Because the U.S. pats them on the head and says
"go ahead and violate them." There's a whole series of resolutions from
then up until today, condemning the settlements, which as Israel knew and
as everyone agreed were in violation of the Geneva conventions. The
United States either vetoes the resolutions or sometimes votes for them,
but with a wink saying, "go ahead anyway, and we'll pay for it and give
you the military support for it." It's a consistent pattern. During the
Oslo years, for example, settlement construction increased steadily, in
violation of what the Oslo agreement was theoretically supposed to lead
to. In fact the peak year of settlement was Clinton's last year, 2000.
And it continued again afterward. It's open and explicit.
To get back to the question of motivation, they have sufficient military
control over the West Bank to terrorize the population into passivity.
Now that control is enhanced by the collaborationist forces that the
U.S., Jordan, and Egypt have trained in order to subdue the population.
In fact if you take a look at the press the last couple of weeks, if
there's a demonstration in the West Bank in support of Gaza, the Fatah
security forces crush it. That's what they're there for. Fatah by now is
more or less functioning as Israel's police force in the West Bank. But
the West Bank is only part of the occupied Palestinian territories. The
other part is Gaza, and no one doubts that they form a unit. And there
still is resistance in Gaza, those rockets. So yes, they want to stamp
that out too, then there will be no resistance at all and they can
continue to do what they want to do without interference, meanwhile
delaying diplomacy as much as possible and "building the facts" the way
they want to. Again this goes back to the origins of Zionism. It varies
of course depending on circumstances, but the fundamental policy is the
same and perfectly understandable. If you want to take over a country
where the population doesn't want you, I mean, how else can you do it?
How was this country conquered?
DOSSANI: What you describe is a tragedy.
CHOMSKY: It's a tragedy which is made right here. The press won't talk
about it and even scholarship, for the most part, won't talk about it but
the fact of the matter is that there has been a political settlement on
the table, on the agenda for 30 years. Namely a two-state settlement on
the international borders with maybe some mutual modification of the
border. That's been there officially since 1976 when there was a Security
Council resolution proposed by the major Arab states and supported by the
(Palestinan Liberation Organization) PLO, pretty much in those terms. The
United States vetoed it so it's therefore out of history and it's
continued almost without change since then.
There was in fact one significant modification. In the last month of
Clinton's term, January 2001 there were negotiations, which the U.S.
authorized, but didn't participate in, between Israel and the
Palestinians and they came very close to agreement.
DOSSANI: The Taba negotiations?
Yes, the Taba negotiations. The two sides came very close to agreement.
They were called off by Israel. But that was the one week in over 30
years when the United States and Israel abandoned their rejectionist
position. It's a real tribute to the media and other commentators that
they can keep this quiet. The U.S. and Israel are alone in this. The
international consensus includes virtually everyone. It includes the Arab
League which has gone beyond that position and called for the
normalization of relations, it includes Hamas. Every time you see Hamas
in the newspapers, it says "Iranian-backed Hamas which wants to destroy
Israel." Try to find a phrase that says "democratically elected Hamas
which is calling for a two-state settlement" and has been for years.
Well, yeah, that's a good propaganda system. Even in the U.S. press
they've occasionally allowed op-eds by Hamas leaders, Ismail Haniya and
others saying, yes we want a two-state settlement on the international
border like everyone else.
DOSSANI: When did Hamas adopt that position?
CHOMSKY That's their official position taken by Haniya, the elected
leader, and Khalid Mesh'al, their political leader who's in exile in
Syria, he's written the same thing. And it's over and over again. There's
no question about it but the West doesn't want to hear it. So therefore
it's Hamas which is committed to the destruction of Israel.
In a sense they are, but if you went to a Native American reservation in
the United States, I'm sure many would like to see the destruction of the
United States. If you went to Mexico and took a poll, I'm sure they don't
recognize the right of the United States to exist sitting on half of
Mexico, land conquered in war. And that's true all over the world. But
they're willing to accept a political settlement. Israel isn't willing to
accept it and the United States isn't willing to accept it. And they're
the lone hold-outs. Since it's the United States that pretty much runs
the world, it's blocked.
Here it's always presented as though the United States must become more
engaged; it's an honest broker; Bush's problem was that he neglected the
issue. That's not the problem. The problem is that the United States has
been very much engaged, and engaged in blocking a political settlement
and giving the material and ideological and diplomatic support for the
expansion programs, which are just criminal programs. The world court
unanimously, including the American justice, agreed that any transfer of
population into the Occupied Territories is a violation of a fundamental
international law, the Geneva Conventions. And Israel agrees. In fact
even their courts agree, they just sort of sneak around it in various
devious ways. So there's no question about this. It's just sort of
accepted in the United States that we're an outlaw state. Law doesn't
apply to us. That's why it's never discussed.
Sameer Dossani, a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, is the director
of 50 Years is Enough and blogs at shirinandsameer.blogspot.com.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2009 01:00:11 +0000 (GMT)
From: nisiocam@optonline.net
34. On zionism
From colonial project to repression of Palestinians Zionism: a legacy of
racism
By Saul Kanowitz
The heroic uprising of the Palestinian people has focused world attention
on Israel^Òs occupation and repression of Palestine. That conflict is
often portrayed as a struggle between Jews and Arabs. This is in line with
the political ideology of Zionism, which is the basis for Israel^Òs
existence as a ^ÓJewish state.^Ô
In fact, Zionism is a racist ideology. Over the long term, it is harmful
to the interests of the vast majority of Jewish working people, although
it is Palestinians and other Arab people who suffer its most direct
consequences.
During the late 1800s, pogroms^×violent attacks on the Jewish
community^×were used by the Russian czarist regime to scapegoat Jews for
the suffering of the Russian peasants and workers during economic crises.
Against this backdrop, two main views emerged within the Jew- ish
communities of how to fight this racist repression. On the one hand,
Jewish workers and intellectuals played a major role in the socialist,
communist and other progressive movements of the day, fighting for
equality within the countries where they lived. These activists, who
represented the majority of workers at that time, viewed themselves as
part of the societies in which they and their ancestors had lived for
generations.
In contrast to the integrationist view of the majority of Jewish society,
the propertied class was pessimistic, promoting the view that
anti-Semitism could not be overcome. Zionism was the solution offered by
the Jewish bourgeoisie. Theodor Herzl, the father of modern Zionism, wrote
in his 1896 book, The Jewish State, that the solution for Jews was to
build a state of their own.
The colonial model
The early proponents of Zionism saw the creation of an all-Jewish state
based on a European model. The idea was to colonize a non-European country
as part of the great colonial plan to divide the planet. For example,
Herzl wrote to British imperialist colonizer of Africa, Cecil Rhodes,
promoting the interest of the Zionist idea:
^ÓYou are being invited to help make history. This cannot frighten you. It
is not your [Rhodes] accustomed line; it does not involve Africa but a
piece of Asia Minor, not Englishmen, but Jews C9 How then do I happen to
turn to you since this an out-of-the-way matter for you? How indeed?
Because it is something colonial.^Ô1
In the early 1900s, the Zionist perspective was still a tiny minority
within the Jewish working class. The majority of Jewish workers were
fighting in the countries where they lived alongside other oppressed
peoples and anti-imperialist forces against capitalist exploitation, the
war, and anti-Semitism.
But Zionism gained the backing of the British government. The 1917
Balfour Declaration declared, ^ÓHis Majes- ty^Òs government views with
favor the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish
peopleC9^Ô At that time, hundreds of thousands of Palestin- ians lived in
Palestine. While the Zionist slogan advocated ^Óa land without a people
for a people without a land,^Ô the Pal- estinians were viewed as
invisible and were given no say in this colonial process.
Vladimir Jabotinsky was a leader of what was called Revisionist Zionism,
ad- vo- - cating the development of a strong mil- itary force as the main
component for carrying out the colonization of Palestine. (This
contrasted with the majority view of Labor Zionism that immigration and
settlements were the main vehicle to statehood.2) Jabotinsky wrote openly
about his view of the Zionist project: ^ÓExcept for those that are blind,
[the Zionists] realized long ago that it is utterly impossible to obtain
the voluntary consent of the Palestinian Arabs for converting
^ÑPalestine^Ò from an Arab country into a country with a Jewish
majority.^Ô
Jabotinsky described what was necessary for the conversion. ^ÓZionist
colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native
population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the
protection of a power that is independent of the native
population^×behind an iron wall, which the native population cannot
breach.^Ô3
Although Revisionist Zionism was not the dominant perspective in
Jabotinsky^Òs time, the ^Óiron wall^Ô became a de facto policy of Zionism
from the colonial settlers in the 1920s to Israel today.4
The Zionist settler population in Palestine increased from about 10
percent in the early 1920s to nearly 30 percent by the end of the 1930s.
Discussion of ^Ótransfer^Ô of the native Palestinians in- ten- sified.
Joseph Weitz, head of the Jewish Agency^Òs Colonization Department,
typified the racist attitude of the Zionists: ^ÓBetween ourselves, it
must be clear that there is no room for both peoples together in this
country. We shall not achieve our goal if the Arabs are in this small
country. There is no other way than to transfer the Arabs from here to
the neighboring countries^×all of them. Not one village, not one tribe
should be left.^Ô5 Weitz was responsible for the actual organization of
settlements in Palestine.
U.S. shuts out Holocaust victims
During the 1930s, Europe saw the rise of fascism and the outbreak of
World War II. Hitler unleashed a genocidal campaign against Jews. At the
same time, the U.S. government imposed a ^Óclosed door^Ô immigration
policy on Jewish people. During the 1930s at the time of the Great
Depression, there were too many unemployed workers. Jewish immigrants
were turned away unless they had money, or a good job prospect, or a
^Ócertificate of good conduct^Ô from the Nazi government.6 As
anti-Semitic as this policy was, it dovetailed with the Zionist
movement^Òs primary goal: migration to Palestine at all costs, even at
the expense of Jewish people.
During the war, the Zionist leaders were well aware of the Nazi genocide
campaign being carried out against Jews. However, they did little to aid
the fight. In fact, they saw support for the struggle against the Nazis
as a threat to the project in Palestine. In 1943^×the year of the Warsaw
ghetto uprising in Nazi-occupied Poland^×Itzhak Greenbaum, head of the
Zionist Jewish Rescue Committee declared, ^ÓIf I am asked could you give
from UJA (United Jewish Appeal) money to rescue Jews? I say, ^ÑNo and
again no.^Ò In my opinion, we have to resist that wave which puts Zionist
activities in the second line.^Ô7
At the end of World War II over 80 percent of displaced Jewish survivors
and refugees from the war wanted to migrate to the U.S.8 However, the
U.S. government and the Zionists organized so that Palestine was the only
viable op- tion for displaced Jews. In the U.S., a campaign was waged
that branded any opposition to immigration to Palestine as anti-Semitic.
Newspapers ran editorials, labor unions passed resolutions supporting
Jewish immigration to Palestine, and millions of dollars were raised for
the Zionist project. The Zionists offered money and resources to
displaced Jewish people on the condition they agreed to migrate to
Palestine.9
The U.S. and Zionist leaders channeled worldwide sympathy for the plight
of Jewish people into support for the creation of an Israeli state. Under
intense U.S. pressure, the United Nations passed a resolution on Nov. 29,
1947, allocating 56 percent of historic Palestine to Israel, with 44
percent to go to the creation of a Palestinian state. Palestinians
comprised 70 percent of the population at the time.
Israel: born in terror
In the war that followed, Israel^×with superior economic and military
resources and support from Europe and the U.S.^×ended up conquering 78
percent of Palestine. Nearly 90 percent of the Arab population was
forcibly ^Ótransferred.^Ô
A campaign of terrorism accompanied the military campaign against the
Palestinians. For example, on April 9, 1948 the Zionist terrorist group
Irgun (headed by future Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin) killed 254
men, women and children in Deir Yassin.
On May 15, 1948, the Zionist state of Israel was born. Some 750,000
Palestinians be- came refugees. Thousands had been killed. For the
Palestinian people, this day is called Al-Nakba^×the catastrophe.
From the beginning, Israel was economically isolated from the surrounding
Arab countries, its most logical geographic trading partners. Combined
with the need for an enormous military budget to prevent the Palestinians
who had been displaced from returning to their land, Israel required vast
amounts of outside economic and military aid to sur- vive. In 1950, its
im- ports exceeded its ex- ports by a ratio of 10 to 1.
In order to get the aid it needed, Israel offered its services in the
interests of Western imperialism. The Sept. 30, 1951, issue of the
Hebrew-language daily Ha^Òaretz of- fered the following commentary:
^ÓStrengthening Israel helps the Western powers to maintain equilibrium
and stability in the Middle East. Israel is to become the watchdog. There
is no fear that Israel will undertake any aggressive policy to- wards the
Arab states when this would explicitly contradict the wishes of the U.S.
and Britain. But if for any reason the Western powers should sometimes
prefer to close their eyes, Israel could be relied upon to punish one or
several neighboring states whose discourtesy towards the West went beyond
the bounds of the permissible.^Ô
Enforcing U.S. interests
In the Middle East, the centerpiece of U.S. interests has been control of
the region^Òs vast oil reserves. During the more than 50 years since its
formation, Israel has played the role of a military outpost guarding
against the Arab people^Òs struggle for self-determination and control of
the region^Òs natural resources. Any Arab state that has tried to exert
its independence from imperialism, on whatever basis^×bourgeois
nationalist or Pan-Arab socialist^×has had to consider what Israel will
do in response to any actions they may take. Israel has staged military
campaigns against Lebanon in 1978 and 1982 (even partnering with the Leb-
anese Phalange Party, a fascist organization that traced its roots back
to the Nazi Party). In 1981 it bombed an Iraqi nu- cle- ar plant to end
Iraq^Òs nuclear energy program.
In addition to Israel^Òs direct role enforcing U.S. interests in the
Middle East, the Zionist state has repeatedly acted as a U.S. surrogate
around the world. In the 1980s, when it was politically untenable for the
U.S. to do business with the apartheid regime of South Africa, Israel
obediently scabbed for world imperialism and traded with the outlaw
regime. During the same period, the Israeli army helped train and arm the
Guatemalan army when it was carrying out gen- o- cide against the
indigenous people of that country at a time when the U.S. Congress had
cut off direct aid to Guatemala.
This is the reason that the U.S. gives over $3 billion a year in aid to
Israel. It has nothing to do with any ^ÓJewish lob- by^Ô in Washington.
It is payment for ser- vices rendered as part of the U.S. imperialist
system. In fact, some of Israel^Òs staunchest supporters, like Truman and
Nixon, were virulent anti-Semites.10,11
When Israel was first created, Zionist leaders demagogically made appeals
to Jewish workers by portraying Israel as a socialist utopia. Today, that
appeal is daily shown to be a lie. Labor and Likud Israeli governments
have continued Zionism^Òs original plan of creating a purely Jewish state
by trying to rid historic Palestine of Palestinians, whether by
overwhelming military force or through conditions of slow strangulation
intended to force the Palestinian people to leave.
Zionism vs. internationalism
Israel was founded on the basis of being a colonial project. By
implication it had to be a garrison military state that would be in
perpetual conflict with the native population. This was the objective
reality facing Jews who went to Palestine either by choice or by
circumstance.
As long as this is the foundation of Israel, then mandatory military
service for all Jewish adults, at least one-fifth of the GDP spent on
^Ódefense,^Ô and the perception of ^Óliving under siege^Ô will be the way
of life for the average Israeli. This is not the kind of existence for
which those fighting anti-Semitism from the pogroms to the Nazi
resistance died.
By speaking in the name of Jewish people, Israel does an injustice to the
progressive and radical history of Jewish people. Israel claims all
actions taken against the Zionist state, whether they are political,
economic or military, are anti-Semitic. For the Jewish people inside and
outside of Israel who want to live peacefully, free of anti-Semitism, the
actions of Israel will only lead to further hatred and acts of
resistance.
Before Zionism established itself in Palestine, the different cultures,
religions and peoples of the region lived together in harmony. It was
only the intervention of colonial powers, from the Ottoman Empire to the
European colonialists to U.S. imperialism, that brought about division
and rivalry.
The Zionist conception of a Jewish-only state created on the backs of
another oppressed people is a false solution to anti-Semitism. A real
solution to anti-Semitism must be based on international solidarity. For
all progressive people, Jew- ish and non-Jewish, who want to honestly
fight anti-Semitism and all forms of racism, it will take the struggle
against all colonial occupation and domination^×including Zionism. The
formation of a democratic and secular Palestine respecting the rights of
all people regardless of religion, ethnicity or race would be a first
step in that direction.
Notes
1. Source: translated from the German by Sylvie D^ÒAvigdor, this edition
published in 1946 by the American Zionist Emergency Council, Essential
Texts of Zionism.
2. The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World, Avi Shlaim, 2000, p. 12.
3. Ibid.
4. The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World, Avi Shlaim, 2000, p. 16.
5. Weitz, Davar, Joseph, Sept. 29, 1967, cited in Uri Davis and Norton
Mevinsky, eds., Documents from Israel, 1967-1973, p. 21.
6. Our Roots Are Still Alive: The Story of the Palestinian People,
Peoples Press, 1977, p. 54.
7. Hecht, Ben, Perfidy, New York 1961, p. 50, cited in Our Roots, p.57.
8. New York Times, May 5, 1948.
9. Rose, John, Israel:The Hijack State, www.marxists.de.
10. Press Release: ADL Shocked by Discovery of Anti-Semitic Passages in
President Truman^Òs Diary, www.adl.org.
11. Nixon^Òs Anti-Semitic Views Revealed in Tapes, October 1999,
www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Articles may be reprinted with credit to
Socialism and Liberation magazine.
_____________________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 20:03:24 -0500
From: dlvukelich@wisc.edu
35. an article from CommonDreams.org: A 'Police State' Celebrates
CommonDreams.org
A 'Police State' Celebrates
by Nora Barrows-Friedman
JERUSALEM - The Israeli government is stepping up efforts to suppress
dissent and crush resistance in the streets. Police have been videotaping
the demonstrations and subsequently arresting protesters in large numbers.
According to Israeli police reports, at least 763 Israeli citizens, the
majority of them Palestinian and 244 under 18 years old, have been
arrested, imprisoned or detained for participating in such demonstrations.
Most have been held and then released, but at least 30 of those arrested
over the past three weeks are still being held in prison.
Click here to read more on our site
CommonDreams.org is an Internet-based progressive news and grassroots
activism organization, founded in 1997. We are a nonprofit, progressive,
independent and nonpartisan organization.
____________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 18:09:36 -0700
From: Rebecca Cummings <beckyspi@mac.com>
36. Voices for Creative NonviolenceWhy I Am in Gaza
Rebecca Cummings
beckyspi@mac.com
Every society honors its live conformists and its dead troublemakers.
--Mignon McLaughlin
Begin forwarded message:
From: Voices for Creative Nonviolence <vcnvlist@vcnv.org>
Date: January 19, 2009 3:36:48 PM MST
Why I Am in Gaza
by Audrey Stewart.
Lots of people have asked me why I chose to leave my children and travel
to Gaza in the middle of a war. If you knew three year old Omar it might
be easier to understand.
Omar is the youngest child in the family of Abu Yusif, one of our host
families during our time in Gaza. Yesterday Omar's family was able to
return to their real home for the first time since the bombing started.
Omar proudly packed up a plastic bag of clothes to bring back to the
family's temporary housing. He repacked it three times to get it just
right. Then he brought it to me to tie the bag.
Omar's father, Abu Yusif, spent the day working on the house, repairing
shattered windows and a section of one wall.
Gaza is full of families with children like Omar. For example, we visited
Shifaa hospital in Gaza City today. A four year old child, Azad, lay in
one bed, worry in his eyes. His father explained that the family was in
the kitchen when a bomb from an F-16 landed near the house. Azad was hit
in seven places in his legs and back by shrapnel. Azad's mother is in
another wing of the hospital with a broken leg and shrapnel injuries.
The ambulance that came to bring the family to the hospital was delayed
four hours by the bombing.
Outside the hospital two Red Crescent ambulances are parked. One of the
ambulances is badly dented on the top and both have all their windows
blown out. A white sheet holds the front door of one closed.
In our visits with the community in Gaza, we ask each person that we meet
what message they would like to send back to the US. Over and over we
hear the same message, "Please tell the world that we are people with
dreams for ourselves and our children - we are just like you."
Watching Omar packing his bag of clothes, I thought of my own three year
old son, Dominic. He and Omar like to play many of the same games. When
I hand Omar a pen and paper, he draws big circles and looks at me for
encouragement and approval just as Dominic often does. I wonder what
dreams these three year old boys will have as they grow up - one in New
Orleans, one in Gaza.
Why did I choose to leave my children and travel to Gaza? I've asked
myself a hundred times if I should be here. Ultimately I am here because
I believe that three year old Omar has the same right to a life and dreams
as three year old Dominic. And as a mother, it is my responsibility to
love and speak up not just for my children, but for another mother's child
also. ----------
Audrey Stewart is a human rights worker in New Orleans and the mother of
two small sons. She has been in Gaza with Kathy Kelly for several days.
Kathy Kelly is with Voices for Creative Nonviolence ^Ö www.vcnv.org
---
Voices for Creative Nonviolence
1249 W Argyle Street #2, Chicago, IL 60640
Phone: (773) 878-3815
E-mail: info@vcnv.org
web: www.vcnv.org
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 10:07:33 -0800
From: Stephen Vincent <steph484@PACBELL.NET>
37. Eyeless in Gaza
Can you imagine a land devastated, one without any remaining
architecture? Can you imagine such a land composed and spoken entirely of
sentences in a language so orderly, so lyric and so radiant that its refugees
- though starving and otherwise defenseless - wander about (dancing, walking,
loitering) without grief or resentment? ^ÓThere are certain things
impossible to take away,^Ô these citizens will insist. ^ÓThe
construction of poetry, its edification is not only our bread and water. It
is our architecture.^Ô
To the contrary, many among us, no matter the poetry, no matter
the sentences, the songs - as though again ^ÑEyeless in Gaza^Ò
- come to nothing in wordless, appalled silence.
As Israel destroys itself in horrific anger.
from "Homeless Blankets - A Winter Series" on the blog,
photographs et al, at:
http://stephenvincent.net/blog/wp-admin/post.php?action=edit&post=704
===============================================================================
Date: Sat, 17 Jan 2009 07:53:25 -0600
From: David-Baptiste Chirot <davidbchirot@HOTMAIL.COM>
38. Democracy Now! --Palestinian and American Indian perspectives on
their dehumanization
watch/listen go to:
http://www.democrac ynow.org/ 2009/1/16/ bloody_israeli_ assault_on_ gaza_enters
-----
Many books, articles, writings by myself , have noted similarities in the
actions, rhetoric and over all goals
which have been used against the American Indians and the Palestinians.
If one is familiar with even a bit of the dehumanizing
terms, names, lies, and justifications for things beyond unjust used
regarding one of these peoples, then one will readily recognize it when
turning to the other.
-----
Today/night on Democracy Now! Three guests address what it is like on the
silenced side of the Wall, the side of dehumanized existence.
President Clinton was known for his "friends of Bill," and perhaps
President Obama has already added a new wrinkle, with the "former friends
of Barack."
Khalid Rashidi is one of these "former friends" who was left out in the
old while undergoing massive attacks fro Gov Palin, Sen McClain and the
Fox Bellowers of Rightwing Righteousness. In the interview with Amy
Goodman he speaks eloquently of the current events in Gaza and the role of
the US there, via massive (many illegal under American Law) shipments of
weapons, gigantic infusions of cash (8,000,000$ a day) and the full
support of the US's politicians and media, despite a rising tide of
protest among the American Jewish Community along with a great many other
organizations.
Dr. Rashidi also points out the difficulty in the USA of presenting
information regarding Gaza and Palestinian questions historically in the
US media. As an example he points to the day's NY Times article on the
bombing of UN headquarters in Gaza, which was packed with al the recently
arrived deliveries of food and fuel for people who have been steadily
starving over the course of the last two years, until almost complete
starvation levels are being reached in the last months. Dr Rashidi points
out the Times article takes up ten paragraphs given the justifications for
this bombing, with the newspaper basically working as a conduit through
which the IDF funnels its versions of events, despite their complete
contradiction to the reports from International aid workers at the scene.
In a sense this media control creates another Wall behind which the
Palestinians are hidden and cut of from the world, while Americans receive
only a propagandistic and dehumanized view of Palestinians and their
slaughter. If one goes through the history of reporting on American
Indians, even to this day, the dehumanization is strongly present. The
consequences of the dehumanization of persons are only all too well known,
all over the world.
Dr Suleiman Baraka is interviewed also, a Palestinian Astrophysicist at
Virginia Tech who tells of learning over the phone his mother and son have
been critically injured when a one ton bomb was dropped on their house.
This is one of the most moving interviews I have ever seen on War, all
wars, and its effects on an entire extended family as it steadily loses
its members.
With the pardon of Marc Rich back in the news due to the questioning of
the nominee for Attorney general Mr. Eric Holder, Amy Goodwin interviews
the writer Louise Erdrich for a perspective from one American Indian^Òs
view (though is shared by all) of Clinton's pardoning a mega scumbag and
fugitive from justice like Rich, while denying any clemency to Leonard
Peltier, imprisoned now 35 years due to a rigged trial, for shooting FBI
agents during an encounter with the AIM (American Indian Movement--for a
number of years classified as a "terrorist" organization by the US Govt.)
Also two reports on a Palestinian Doctor who papers frequently on Israeli
TV, learning of the deaths of his children form an Israeli bombing
January 16, 2009
Bloody Israeli Assault on Gaza Enters Fourth Week, Palestinian Death Toll
Tops 1,100
Guest: Rashid Khalidi, Edward Said Professor of Arab Studies at Columbia
University. His forthcoming book is Sowing Crisis: The Cold War and
American Hegemony in the Middle East. He joins us in the firehouse studio.
It's Day 21 of Israel's assault on Gaza. Israeli warplanes attacked forty
targets across Gaza overnight, as Israeli troops backed by tanks have
pushed deep into the heart of Gaza City. Since Israel started its
bombardment of Gaza, over 1,100 Palestinians have been killed and more
than 5,200 wounded. At least 700 civilians are among the dead, including
more than 350 children. We speak with Columbia University Professor Rashid
Khalidi. [includes rush transcript]
to listen/watch go to:
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/1/16/palestinian_father_in_ us_recounts_ how
January 16, 2009
Palestinian Astrophysicist in US Recounts How His 11-Year-Old Son Died
When Israeli Warplanes Bombed His Family's House
As the Palestinian death toll in Israel's assault on Gaza climbs above
1,100, we take a look behind the statistics. Suleiman Baraka is a
Palestinian astrophysicist working at Virgnia Tech with NASA. His
eleven-year- old son Ibrahim was killed in an Israeli air strike on his
house. His wife and three other children are now homeless in Gaza, along
with seventeen members of his family. In his first broadcast interview in
the US, Suleiman Baraka tells his story. We also speak with Suleiman's
brother, Sayed, who arrived at the house seconds after it was bombed.
[includes rush transcript]
http://www.monstersandcritics.com/news/middleeast/features/article_1453957.php/Tragic_Palestinian_war_drama_unfolds_on_Israeli_tv__News_Feature__
Click link to read full story
Tragic Palestinian war drama unfolds on Israeli tv (News Feature) Middle
East Features
By Shabtai Gold
Jan 16, 2009, 18:55 GMT
Tel Aviv - A Palestinian doctor from Gaza who was a regular guest on
Israeli television Friday called a reporter who had interviewed him many
times, screaming frantically that his house had just been bombed by the
military.
'My girls, oh god, they've killed my girls,' cried Ezz al-Din Abu al-Aish,
the doctor, as the Israeli reporter held his mobile phone to the
microphone during a live broadcast.
Abu al-Aish's home in Beit Lahiya, in the northern Gaza Strip, had just
been hit by a shell, fired by Israeli soldiers.
The doctor works as a gynecologist at both hospitals in Gaza as well as
the Tel Hashomer medical center in Israel and speaks fluent Hebrew, making
him an ideal guest for the television.
'I hope anyone who can hear us, the military, the red cross, can get
there,' the emotional reporter, Shlomi Eldar said, announcing the exact
location of the doctor's home, hoping help would arrive quickly.
Eldar then went off-camera to call his numerous contacts in Israel and
try and get the family assistance.
Medical teams have reported extreme limitations on their movement during
the ongoing Israeli military campaign.
Three girls of the doctor's eight children died in the attack, two others
were injured as was he, and they were taken to hospitals in Israel.
The doctor had become a mainstay on Channel 10, giving daily updates to
Eldar and other reporters on the unfolding Israeli offensive in the Gaza
Strip, and adding his own moderate political message. Clock link to read
rest of the story
Palestinian doctor who gave war dispatches to Israeli TV reports 3
daughters' deaths:
The Palestinian doctor provided Israeli TV viewers with regular updates on
Gaza fighting's human toll. But Friday's report was different - with sobs he
told how his three daughters and a niece were killed by an Israeli shell.
http://tinyurl.com/9qrje9Sponsored Link:
________________________________________________________________________________________
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 18:52:52 -0500
From: Ty dePass <maceito@comcast.net>
39. Dialogue
gente - whether one considers oneself a Freirean, a Marxist, or a Budhist,
it's difficult to discuss ideas w/o some sense that there are groundrules,
binding on all parties, which must never be broken.
as a long time anti-racist activist, i've encountered the tactic employed
Mr. Foxman against Bill Moyers many times: if one can't rebut the
message, rebuke the messenger. feigned indignation, distortion,
name-calling, appeals to a bandwagon mentality, nit-picking, and
cardstacking are the common stock-in-trade of the
intellectually-challenged w/an agenda. before there can be dialog, there
must be respect, otherwise, debate devolves to a zero-sum game of scoring
points to humiliate rather than enlighten. - tdp
AlterNet
Bill Moyers Volleys Back at Foxman's `Reprehensible' Smear Tactics on Gaza
By Lefty Coaster, Daily Kos
Posted on January 18, 2009, Printed on January 19, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.dailykos.com//120779/
Following a kerfuffle over a "genetically coded" remark Moyers made on
last week's Journal while addressing Israel's Attack on Gaza, on this
week's Journal Bill Moyers explained his remark and gave his assesment of
the Israeli attack on Gaza:
Bill Moyers Journal
Some of you were offended by my comment that "god-soaked violence" has
become "genetically coded." Those words were obviously not sufficiently
precise, I was not talking about a specific people but of the violence in
the DNA of the human race, as the Bible itself so strongly attests.
So here's the lens through which I see things. >From my days in President
Johnson's White House onward, I have defended Israel's right to defend
itself, and still do. But killing innocent people is wrong, whether in
Vietnam, Israel, Iraq or Gaza. Sometimes a candid critic is a country's
best friend.
As the former Israeli soldier turned journalist, Jeffrey Goldberg, wrote
in the New York Times this week, Hamas cannot be bombed, nor cajoled, into
moderation. "Tanks cannot defeat deeply held beliefs," he wrote. No.
Waging war on an entire population guarantees one thing: the radicals get
what they want, and the innocents, on both sides, suffer.
Moyers also mentioned his response to a letter from Abe Foxman Director of
the Anti-Defamation League that charged Moyers with being an anti-Semite.
Here is that exchange:
Exchange Between Bill Moyers and Abraham Foxman of the Anti-Defamation
League
Following Bill Moyers' reflections on the events in Gaza on the JOURNAL
last week, Anti-Defamation League National Director Abraham Foxman sent
him this letter:
Mr. Moyers,
In less than a thousand words, you managed to fit into your January 9
commentary: (1) moral equivalency between Hamas, a radical Islamic
terrorist group whose anti-Semitic charter cites the Protocols of the
Elders of Zion, and Israel, the only democracy in the Middle East and
perhaps America's greatest ally in the world; (2) historical revisionism,
asserting that Canaanites were Arabs; (3) anti-Semitism, declaring that
Jews are "genetically coded" for violence; (4) ignorance of the terrorist
threat against Israel, claiming that checkpoints, the security fence, and
the Gaza operation are tactics of humiliation rather than
counter-terrorism; and (5) promotion of an individual, the Norwegian
doctor in Gaza, who has publicly expressed support for the September 11
attacks.
I have seen and read serious critiques of Israel's military campaign in
Gaza, and I have disagreed with many of them. Your commentary, however, is
different, consisting mostly of intellectually and morally faulty claims
that do a great disservice to the PBS audience. It invites not
disagreement, but rebuke.
On one point you are correct - "America has officially chosen sides." And
rightly so. Fortunately for our nation, very few of our citizens engage in
the same moral equivalency, racism, historical revisionism, and
indifference to terrorism as you. If the reverse held, it would not be a
country that any decent person would want to live in.
Sincerely,
Abraham H. Foxman
National Director
Anti-Defamation League
In response, Bill Moyers sent Mr. Foxman the following message:
Dear Mr. Foxman:
You made several errors in your letter to me of January 13 and I am
writing to correct them.
First, to call someone a racist for lamenting the slaughter of civilians
by the Israeli military offensive in Gaza is a slur unworthy of the
tragedy unfolding there. Your resort to such a tactic is reprehensible.
Earlier this week it was widely reported that the International Red Cross
"was so outraged it broke its usual silence over an attack in which the
Israeli army herded a Palestinian family into a building and then shelled
it, killing 30 people and leaving the surviving children clinging to the
bodies of their dead mothers. The army prevented rescuers from reaching
the survivors for four days."
When American troops committed a similar atrocity in Vietnam, it was
called My Lai and Lt. Calley went to prison for it. As the publisher of a
large newspaper at the time, I instructed our editorial staff to cover the
atrocity fully because Americans should know what our military was doing
in our name and with our funding. To say "my country right or wrong" is
like saying "my mother drunk or sober." Patriots owe their country more
than that, whether their government and their taxes are supporting
atrocities in Vietnam, Iraq, or, in this case, Gaza.
Contrary to your claim, I made no reference whatsoever to "moral
equivalency" between Hamas and Israel. That is an old canard often
resorted to by propagandists trying to divert attention from facts on the
ground, and, it, too, is unworthy of the slaughter in Gaza. Contrary to
imputing "moral equivalency" between Hamas and Israel, I said that "Hamas
would like to see every Jew in Israel dead." I said that "a radical stream
of Islam now seeks to eliminate Israel from the face of the earth." And I
described the new spate of anti-Semitism across the continent of Europe. I
am curious as to why you ignored remarks which clearly counter the notion
of "moral equivalency."
And although I specifically referred to "the rockets from Hamas" falling
on Israel and said that "every nation has the right to defend itself, and
Israel is no exception," you nonetheless accuse me of "ignorance of the
terrorist threat against Israel." Once again, you are quite selective in
your reading of my essay.
Your claim that "the checkpoints, the security fence and the Gaza
operation" [I used the more accurate "onslaught"] are not humiliating of
the Palestinians is lamentable. I did not claim that these were, as you
write, "tactics of humiliation rather [emphasis mine] than
counter-terrorism," but perhaps it is overly simplistic to think they are
one and not the other, when they are both. Also lamentable is your
description of my "promotion" of the Norwegian doctor in Gaza when in fact
I was simply quoting what he told CBS News: "It's like Dante's Inferno.
They are bombing one and a half million people in a cage." The whole world
has been able to see for itself what he was talking about, and as one
major news organization after another has been reporting, is reeling from
the sight.
And, to your claim that I was "declaring Jews are `genetically coded' for
violence," you are mistaken. My comment - obviously not sufficiently
precise - was not directed at a specific people but to the fact that the
human race has violence in its DNA, as the biblical stories so strongly
affirm. I also had in mind the relationship between all the descendents of
Abraham who love the same biblical land and come to such grief over it.
From my days in President Johnson's White House forward, I have defended
Israel's right to defend itself, and still do. But sometimes an honest
critic is a government's best friend, and I am appalled by Israel's
devastation of innocent civilians in this battle, all the more so because,
as I said in my column, it is exactly what Hamas wanted to happen. To be
so indifferent to that suffering is, sadly, to be as blind in Gaza as
Samson.
Sincerely,
Bill Moyers
Foxman tried to mischaracterize Moyers' "genetically coded" remark
claiming it was directed at Jews. Foxman also falsely accused Moyers of
being ignorant of this conflict's Israeli victims. Foxman's attempt to
manufacture propaganda at Moyers expense and intimidate the media
backfired in Bill Moyers' case.
Attempts like this to intimidate opinion leaders like Bill Moyers are
toxic to our Democracy.
(C) 2009 Daily Kos All rights reserved.
View this story online at:
http://www.alternet.org/bloggers/http://www.dailykos.com//120779/
Ty dePass, Boston
it ain't what we don't know that hurts us...it's what we do know, that
ain't so...
____________________________________________________________________________________
> From: "Stop the War Coalition" <office@stopwar.org.uk>
> Sent: Sunday, January 11, 2009 5:16 AM
40. Stop the War website and email attacked
>
>> Stop the War Coalition
>> Temporary email address
>> stopwaruk@gmail.com
>>
>> STOP THE WAR WEBSITE AND EMAIL ATTACKED
>>
>> Stop the war has suffered a serious attack on its internet
>> site, which has been hacked, we assume by supporters of
>> Israel's attacks on Gaza. Our website is down and our usual
>> email address not functioning.
>>
>> We have set up a temporary email address for you to contact
>> Stop the War: stopwaruk@gmail.com
>>
>> We expect to restore normal service soon.
>>
>> Many thanks to everyone who attended yesterday's magnificent
>> demonstrations in London and Edinburgh. The London
>> demonstration was by far the largest ever in support of
>> Palestine. We will send more details in our next newsletter.
>>
>> Israel has announced a sharp escalation of its attacks on
>> Gaza. Stop the War, together with the other organisations
>> who helped organise Saturday's demonstration, will be
>> announcing soon the next stage of our campaign calling for
>> an immediate stop to the carnage.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 18:24:07 -0700
From: Rebecca Cummings <beckyspi@mac.com>
41. Voices for Creative NonviolenceStrongest Weapon of All
Rebecca Cummings
beckyspi@mac.com
Be here now. Be someplace else later. Is that so complicated?
Begin forwarded message:
From: Voices for Creative Nonviolence <vcnvlist@vcnv.org>
Date: January 19, 2009 3:41:32 PM MST
The Strongest Weapon of All
By Kathy Kelly
Co-Coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence
January 19, 2009
Dr. Atallah Tarazi, a General Surgeon at Gaza City's Shifaa Hospital,
invited us to meet him in his home, in Gaza City, just a few blocks away
from the Shifaa Hospital.
Early this morning, he and his family returned to their home after having
fled five days earlier when the bombing attacks on Gaza City had become so
fierce that they feared for their lives. "Believe me, when I would drive
from the hospital to the place where my family was staying, I prayed all
the way," said Dr. Tarazi, "because the Israelis would shoot anyone on the
roads at night."
Dr. Tarzi has been practicing medicine as a General Surgeon all of his
adult life. Now, at age 61, he says he has never seen such terrible and
ugly wounds as he saw during the past three weeks when he and a surgical
team tried to help numerous patients with broken limbs, shrapnel wounds,
and severe burns. Neurosurgeons, vascular surgeons, orthopedic and
general surgeons worked together on patients, as a team, trying to save
them, but there were many whose lives they couldn't save. He described
patients with shrapnel wounds in their eyes, faces, chests, and abdomens,
patients whose legs were amputated above the lower limbs. Most, he said,
were civilians.
"These are strange ways of destroying the human body," said Dr. Tarazi.
"Please, come tomorrow to the Burn Unit, and you will see patients
suffering from the use of white phosphorous."
Dr. Tarazi said that he began to understand the extent of the trauma and
danger by listening to the stories of wounded and injured patients.
"Some were sitting in their houses when a tank bomb hit them. They didn't
know what happened to them," said Dr. Attalah. "Survivors would reach the
hospital after many of their relatives had been killed."
Patients from Beit Lahia told him that in one home, an extended family of
25 people had been attacked while inside their home. When relatives came
to help them, Israeli snipers shot eight of them. Many of the wounded were
left to die. Ambulances and Red Cross relief workers weren't allowed to
enter the area.
At one point, Israel announced a lull in the fighting, but then bombed the
Palestine Square, near the municipal offices. Four people came to the
hospital, severely injured. "We couldn't save them," said Dr. Tarazi.
"Seven others were injured, and they survived."
"In Gaza City, all of the important buildings necessary for maintaining a
city have been bombed," said Dr. Tarazi. "From ministries to civilian
police stations, all have been destroyed.
Some were Hamas buildings, but not all."
We had just walked through the area where the buildings housing ministries
of justice, education, and culture were completely destroyed. Driving
into Gaza City we saw mosques, factories, houses and schools reduced to
rubble. We asked Dr. Tarazi to tell us why, in his opinion, the Israelis
had attacked Gaza so fiercely.
He believes that the attacks are essentially irrational but that a main
cause for the timing and the magnitude of these attacks is that certain
Israeli candidates for upcoming elections want to assure the Israeli
public that they are willing to use military force to insure security for
Israelis. "Palestinians all the time pay the taxes in blood," said Dr.
Tarazi.
"One of the worst aspects of this war," says Dr. Tarazi, "is the lack of
respect for the UN. Three United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA)
schools were bombed. In Jabaliyah, more than 45 people were killed at a
UN school; F16s bombed UNRWA supplies and stores."
"In Shifaa Hospital, we saw plumes of smoke for day and night. All Gaza,
every day, was covered with smoke and chemicals. We don't know how it
affects the health."
"Yes, 'rocklets' did go out," says Dr. Tarazi, referring to Hamas rockets
fired into Israeli towns, "and we felt sympathy for any Israelis hurt by
the rocklets. But, if someone hurts you with a pin, you don't cut off his
head. You ask WHY the person tried to prick you with a pin. Consider that
people here are trapped in a prison and there is a shortage of everything.
No one can repair anything. People wanted borders opened so that goods
could come and go.
After six months of closed borders, people are frustrated. Now, one side
declares a cease fire, they say nothing about opening the borders, nothing
about withdrawal, and yet they want NATO to help tighten the siege."
"I hope President Obama will be much better than George Bush concerning
these things," said Dr. Tarazi. "Human beings that have such a strong
army should be civilized and not behave like a terrorist group. Fanatics
can be expected to use terror, but a democratic state shouldn't use
fallacious statements as an excuse for massive killing. A state which does
this should be brought before an International Court of Justice."
"And yet," he said, "we must experiment with ways of love. We are trying,
with Jewish people^Åby feelings and actions. We need to succeed. We need
to live together. We are trying to be in good relations with all the
partners, all the views."
"The strongest weapon all over the world is love," says Dr. Tarazi, adding
that he has always believed this and has said this to his colleagues,
whether Muslim, Christian or Jewish, throughout his career. He recalled
declaring this same belief at the Eretz border crossing, shortly after the
Israelis launched "Operation Cast Lead." He had been among the 200
Christians who were chosen (800 had applied) to cross the border and
celebrate the Orthodox Christmas holiday with family members in the West
Bank. When the attacks began, he ended his holiday and hurried to the
border, knowing he must return to his work and his family. At the border
crossing, he greeted soldiers, "Merry Christmas." Soldiers answered, "Do
you have weapons?" "Yes," Dr. Tarazi replied, "I have the strongest
weapon of all, the weapon of love." ----------
Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative
Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org) She and Audrey Stewart are writing from Gaza.
---
Voices for Creative Nonviolence
1249 W Argyle Street #2, Chicago, IL 60640
Phone: (773) 878-3815
E-mail: info@vcnv.org
web: www.vcnv.org
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 19 Jan 2009 22:06:43 -0500
From: Sharon Smith <starsmith13@gmail.com>
42. Hugo Chavez Speaks the Truth
About Gaza
"If people insist on living as if there's no tomorrow, there really won't
be one.
- Kurt Vonnegut
________________________________________________________________________________
Gabrielle Welford, Ph.D. (support "Noho Hewa: The Wrongful Occupation of
Hawai'i" by going to www.nohohewa.com and clicking on "donate")
blog:
www.greenwom.blogspot.com
books:
_Too Many Deaths: Decolonizing Western Academic Research on Indigenous
Cultures_
http://www.theguildofwriters.com/books/shop.php?action=full&id=317
_Dora_
http://www.theguildofwriters.com/books/shop.php?action=full&id=378
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