Wednesday 16 November 2011

Palestinian Freedom Riders

I'm really impressed and inspired by this action and the brilliant historical links they're drawing on with the civil rights movement in the US. Just like then, most people don't really consider the apartheid which is going on until it's made so obvious - despite the fact that prominent people of genuine integrity like Desmond Tutu and former US President Jimmy Carter and so many others have described it as such. Here's a great little one minute youtube clip as a taster.


Rather than me write lots about it, check out this blog which has lots of stuff on it and the links on the right hand side of my page like the Jewish Voice for Peace and the Palestine Monitor for more coverage.


Some more great coverage here too and some words about it which I've borrowed from the occupiedpalestine wordpress blog:


Palestinian Freedom Riders to Challenge Segregation By Riding Settler Buses to Jerusalem: November 15, 2011
Palestinian activists will reenact the US Civil Rights Movement’s Freedom Rides to the American South by boarding segregated Israeli public transportation in the West Bank to travel to occupied East Jerusalem.
Palestinian activists will attempt to board segregated Israeli public transportation headed from inside the West Bank to occupied East Jerusalem in an act of civil disobedience inspired by the Freedom Riders of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement in the 60′s.
Fifty years after the U.S. Freedom Riders staged mixed-race bus rides through the roads of the segregated American South, Palestinian Freedom Riders will be asserting their right for liberty and dignity by disrupting the military regime of the Occupation through peaceful civil disobedience.
The Freedom Riders seek to highlight Israel’s attempts to illegally sever occupied East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank, and the apartheid system that Israel has imposed on Palestinians in the occupied territories.
Several Israeli companies, among them Egged and Veolia, operate dozens of lines that run through the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, many of them subsidized by the state. They run between different Israeli settlements, connecting them to each other and cities inside Israel. Some lines connecting Jerusalem to other cities inside Israel, such as Eilat and Beit She’an, are also routed to pass through the West Bank.
Israelis suffer almost no limitations on their freedom of movement in the occupied Palestinian territory, and are even allowed to settle in it, contrary to international law. Palestinians, in contrast, are not allowed to enter Israel without procuring a special permit from Israeli authorities. Even Palestinian movement inside the Occupied Territories is heavily restricted, with access to occupied East Jerusalem and some 8% of the West Bank in the border area also forbidden without a similar permit.
While it is not officially forbidden for Palestinians to use Israeli public transportation in the West Bank, these lines are effectively segregated, since many of them pass through Jewish-only settlements, to which Palestinian entry is prohibited by a military decree.

Briefly out of Hibernation

This blog is supposed to be in hibernation (and my current travels and adventures are over here on this other blog), but this action going on right now needs all the publicity and support we can muster. Please check out the info below from Avaaz (an excellent internet-based movement), watch the video and please sign the petition or do whatever else you can.


Here's the direct link, and here's some background....

From: Avaaz.org <avaaz@avaaz.org>
--------

Dear friends,

In the next few hours, history could be made in Palestine. A small number of brave Palestinians will brave attack and arrest to commit a forbidden act -- they will board a public bus.

Lacking their own state, Palestinians are forbidden to use buses and roads reserved for non-Arabs - part of a host of race-based rules that US President Jimmy Carter has called "apartheid". 50 years ago, blacks in the US challenged these rules by simply and non-violently refusing to follow them. In a few hours, Palestinians will take the same approach, and their actions will be live webcasted by Avaaz teams at the link below.

As diplomats stall in the fight for a Palestinian state, the Palestinian people are taking the fight into their own hands, one public service at a time. And they're doing it with the simple, elegant and unstoppable moral force of non-violence in the tradition of Gandhi and Martin Luther King. The Palestinian spring begins right now - click below to watch it LIVE, register support, and give these brave activists the global solidarity and attention they urgently need to win:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/palestine_freedom_riders/?tta

Non-violence is the game-changing force in this long standing conflict. Boarding buses is a symbolic act, but so was Gandhi's salt march, and Rosa Park's own 'freedom ride' on a segregated bus in the US. Just as non-violent protest was able to topple dictators in Egypt and Tunisia, so can it finally free the Palestinian people from 40 years of crippling military oppression by a foreign power.

There are many dangers. Israel has been arming the extremist settler population, a tactic which is likely, if not intended, to provoke awful violence that will draw the news cameras away from the brave acts of non-violence. Even the Palestinian authorities are pushing back on the action which they fear will start a democratic protest movement that they cannot control. But these few brave Palestinians have had enough, and if we stand with them now, we can help them ignite a flame that will burn its way all the way to a free and peaceful Palestinian state:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/palestine_freedom_riders/?tta

We have no idea what will happen in the next 24 hours. Maybe the authorities will crush this brave action. Maybe it will spark into a massive conflagration. Maybe it will sow the first seed of an unstoppable movement with tremendous integrity. But we can watch it live, and lend our voices to the effort. And maybe one day, we can tell our grandchildren that we were there when Palestinians boarded the buses that would ultimately take them to freedom.

With hope and determination,

Ricken, Alice, Emma, Alice, Raluca, Pascal, Diego and the rest of the Avaaz team

Sources:

I Woke Up This Morning with My Mind Set on Freedom
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/clarence-b-jones/i-woke-up-this-morning-wi_b_1087407.html

Freedom Riders: 1961 and the struggle for racial justice
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/19/books/review/19foner.html

Palestinian Freedom Rides echo the Civil Rights Movement
http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/topics/news/3888-freedom-rides

'Freedom Rides' to Resume in Palestine
http://www.palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=17242

Monday 31 October 2011

Sojourner moves to South Asia

Thanks to all my readers to date but as I mentioned might happen, this blog is hibernating, perhaps even demised. Having left Palestine and the middle east ages ago now, as much as I'd like to continue to promote the cause of peace and justice for Palestine, I don't have anything firsthand to report. Do feel free to read over some of my posts and follow the links to the sites such as Electronic Intifada if you're keen on following the issues.


However, to the delight of perhaps three of you, I am now blogging about further travels in India, Nepal and Afghanistan over here at my wanderingsojourner.tumblr.com blog. More of a personal travel blog, so without the overt politics of this blog . . . either way, drop in for a read or to check out my photos from amazing places like the Himalayas.



Monday 19 September 2011

Radio interviews

A couple of friends host a local indymedia radio show every week and had a focus on Palestine tonight. I was interviewed, but more interesting was their first guest, Miko Peled. He is an Israeli peace activist but one with a special story; the son of a General in the Israeli army during the '67 war, and the grandson of one of the signatories to Israel's declaration of independence.


Check out his own blog in the link above or google or youtube him to get an idea of what a powerful and significant perspective he has.He is currently in Australia so for any of you in Perth he's speaking on the 29th of September - check out the details here, or here for other places in Australia.


And to hear his interview (or mine) on Perth's indymedia show (on RTR FM) here's that link. Just click on the 19th September show; Miko's interview starts about 10 or 11 minutes in and goes for about 20 minutes. Mine starts close to the 40 minute mark and goes for about 15. Too many umm's, and a few things I could have explained better, but another good chance to raise some awareness after last week's talk. Feel free to leave me a comment if you have a listen...


And just one more reminder about the petition I mentioned last week; do check it out - this is a crucial time as the bid for Palestinian statehood goes to the United Nations. And for a surprisingly un-baised overview of the statehood bid, (and a number of fascinating comments from various significant individuals in Israel), check out this article from the Weekend Australian (17/18 Sept).

Wednesday 14 September 2011

How do you explain the Palestine conflict in 3 minutes?


With an amazing little video put together by Avaaz
Check it out if you've got 3 minutes to spare - it obviously simplifies things but it also gives an amazing insight into some of the issues in a very short space of time. 
I used it at my talk tonight - thanks to those who came and especially those who asked questions and added to the discussion . . . and thanks to Kelli, the pvi gang and CIA (no,not that one) for being such great hosts as well as awesome artists. 

More info from the talk soon.
And if you're in Perth do come along to the rally in Murray St this Saturday, 1pm!

Sunday 11 September 2011

Public talk in Perth this Wednesday

Flyer for the evening - click to enlarge
For those of you in Perth, I'm going to give a talk about my time in Palestine on Wednesday night;
6 - 7.30pm at CIA, 480 Newcastle St, West Perth.
It's directly opposite the City Motors caryard - look for the old brick school building - entry is around the back and up the stairs.


My thanks to the artists at the CIA studios and especially to the very groovy and mischievous pvi collective for hosting me - boo yah.


Entry is by donation to cover the evening, with any remaining funds to go to he amazing Combatants for Peace who I've blogged about a couple of times before - here and there.


I'd love to see you there if you can make it.


...and for those of you from Perth who can't make it, do check out the Friends of Palestine WA website and think about getting along to the next event in Perth - a rally in the city to support the international BDS (boycott, divestment and sacntions) campaign against apartheid Israel - Murray St Mall, 1pm Saturday 17th September.


Meantime - for anyone - here's an online petition that'll I'd really encourage you to consider signing - which also has an awesome two minute video giving an overview of the Palestinian situation. Do check it out!

Tuesday 9 August 2011

Finally . . .

Finally, some news - apologies to my four regular readers that i haven't posted anything for so long. I am indeed back in Australia as some of you may know, and have been for a few weeks.


I returned for family reasons (my Mum's 70th!) over in Victoria, and finally made it to my home town in the West a couple of days ago.


I have been meaning to write more about Palestine and my travels from Australia, but many factors have meant I haven't been too successful. Re-adjusting to this comfortable but warped country, family times and celebrations, hanging out with new and old friends in Melbourne, some excellent activism, and just generally moving around have all meant I've found it hard to write. But, now back in Perth for a time, I am planning on posting a few more stories about Palestine and my travels, after which I'm fairly sure this blog will go into hibernation.


(I may  - or may not - start a different blog at some point, so if you are even somewhat interested in any future writing, please send me an email: khristo at gmail dot com )


Meantime, as mentioned, since I've been back I've been involved in two excellent activist events; one involving solidarity with Palestine, and the other part of a campaign against the war in Afghanistan.


Looking to track down some Melbourne friends on my arrival back in Australia, I discovered they were taking part in a week of protests against Australia's involvement in Afghanistan and was invited to join in. I managed to do so for three days, and was so glad I did. A really great, solid group of people, and a mostly awesome week of actions. So much more I could say, but there's a whole website... See this link for lots of info, photos and reports of the Swan Island Peace Convergence. For some footage check this out, and for brilliant photos by the wonderful Jon Osborne, check out this link.

400 candles and a small group of protestors meditate for peace, while a couple of others scale the bridge leading to one of Australia's more secret military training facilities - Swan Island, Victoria.
While there, I heard that a few nights before that protest began, 19 people had been arrested in a heavy-handed police response to a pro-Palestine/boycott Israel protest in Melbourne. A couple of weeks later I was able to attend the follow-up protest, targeting an Israeli company - Max Bremmer - who proudly talk of their support for the Israeli army and their actions. 


One of two Max Bremmer stores targeted that night as part of the BDS campaign; at least 300 people and a considerable - though this time peaceful - police presence
It was great to be back in Australia but still showing support and solidarity for Palestine. More from me soon . . .


Solidarity for Palestine from across the oceans!





Thursday 14 July 2011

This week's photo

(click to enlarge)

Boys in Al Aroub refugee camp
(where some families have been since 1948)

Monday 4 July 2011

Al Arakib Elders

This week's photo of the week... despite their appearance, these men were very happy to be photographed.
They were two of the men I had the privilege of meeting at the Al Arakib village, albeit under difficult circumstances for them - see my post from March. Dignified, resilient, sad but determined.


(Click on the photo to enlarge)


Saturday 2 July 2011

Desmond Tutu - speaking out against the occupation for over 20 years





Today I was reading of Archbishop Desmond Tutu’s involvement in the issue of the occupation and apartheid in Palestine. Interestingly, he became involved while still suffering under apartheid in South Africa. He was in the USA to thank Jews for their support of the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, and spoke at a synagogue in New York in January 1989. Following is a little of what he said – powerful stuff if you imagine a Jewish audience in the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue, looking forward to being thanked for helping.

 . . . and that is the question of the Palestinians . . . I have to say that I find it very, very difficult to understand Israel’s policy in this regard . . . My position is made more difficult because of two factors. I am a Christian, and many of the Palestinians are Christians – in fact, many are Anglicans – and their anguish tears my heart apart. Second, it is because I am a black South African, and if you changed the names, the description of what is happening in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank could be a description of what is happening in South Africa. It is uncanny and it is deeply, deeply distressing. Israel cannot do that: it is out of line with her biblical and historical traditions. Israel, or shall we say the Jews, having suffered so much, cannot allow their government to cause other people to suffer so much. Jews, having been dispossessed for so long, cannot allow their government to dispossess others. Jews, having been victims of gross injustice, cannot allow their government to make others victims of injustice. It is such a horrific contradiction . . .

His speech caused much debate, but he has continued to speak out against Israel, and given his history, his detailed discussions about the apartheid practices of Israel carry significant weight.

I'm grateful that such prominent figures are so willing to continue to speak out, even into their old age - and despite constant criticism that they could so easily avoid.


Tutu is an amazing figure; here's a link to his Wikipedia biography, and this one is to the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation.

Thursday 30 June 2011

Photo of the week

I've thought about setting up a flickr account or similar to show readers some of my photos - and I still may - but meantime I'll just put one or two up here now and then . . . 
This first one has appeared before - with this story - so have a read for more context if you like, but it's one of my favourites, not as a brilliant photo in itself, but because it captures some of what my last two posts have been about; people from different cultures coming together for peace.


(click on the photo to enlarge)
A Jewish grandfather, a Muslim grandmother and her grandson rest at the site of a protest, watched by various onlookers including a young soldier on the other side of the barbed wire.


Sunday 26 June 2011

A victory against the Wall! (and a note re my last post)

For avid readers you'll already know the good news but for those who haven't been following the other blogs I recommend (down the right side on my page) here's a really great story from The Palestine Monitor website... 


I hope you click on the link for the full story, but in short, after years of non-violent protest the village of Bil'in has had at least a partial victory against the illegal 'separation wall' going through their village. The Israelis have begun to take some of it down, restoring hundreds of acres of land back to Bil-in and it's citizens. It's only a start, but an excellent result for the determination and persistence of these villagers.


Do check it out for more, including photos - and don't forget the other sites I've highlighted for more on Palestine, including the already mentioned Palestine Monitor, The Electronic Intifada, and the Jewish Voice for Peace.


And speaking of the last one, a quick note regarding my last post.
Israelis and Palestinians, Jews and Muslims of all ages,
working side by side for justice and peace


As I described, I have been moved from despair to hope a number of times by the many awesome people and organisations I've come across in Palestine and Israel working against the occupation and for peace. Encouragingly, many of these individuals and groups are Israelis and/or Jewish (or groups founded by Israelis), and I chose to highlight three such groups in my last post (as well as a joint Jewish/Palestinian group). 





I did this because of my genuine delight to find Israelis so willing to hold their country to account for their terrible occupation of Palestine and so determined to work for peace. I also wanted to highlight them because so often the portrayal of Israel in Australia (and no doubt in much of the rest of the world) leaves out these dissenting voices. Perhaps this is not surprising given the official and political positions presented by Israel, but it's important to know that there is a very strong opposition within Israeli society to the occupation, despite them rarely appearing in the mainstream media. (With at least one result being that to support Palestine is to 'obviously' be opposed to Israel, and then to perhaps even be portrayed as anti-Semetic.) 


I also found it useful to highlight these groups to demonstrate - at least indirectly - that I am not blindly supporting Palestine, nor anti-Israeli (despite some criticisms of me by people who will remain nameless).


I totally condemn violence by all parties, and strongly support any and all those wanting and working for peace - especially those in Palestine who are feeling the effects of over forty years of occupation. I condemn the violence of Palestinians who take up arms against Israel, and I condemn the settlers, soldiers and other Israelis who daily use violence to brutally suppress the Palestinian people.


I have met inspirational Palestinians, but also Israelis, and stand with them in solidarity against the state of Israel's occupation and inhumanity towards the Palestinian people.


As all of the Israeli peace activists and groups demonstrate, anti-occupation is not anti-Israel and is not synonymous with some apparent goal of the destruction of Israel. To make that clear; I do not desire the loss of the state of Israel. 


What I do desire is a peaceful and just settlement between Israel and Palestine which results in two peoples living side by side with justice and equality. Many people I met on both sides of this conflict inspire me to believe this could actually happen.






Update: Here's a link to the BBC report re the Bil'in story.

Friday 24 June 2011

Inspiring stories and awesome people


While much of what I’ve experienced during my time in Palestine and Israel has made me angry, sad, frustrated or a jumble of those and other troubling emotions, I’ve also come across many amazing people and brilliant organizations who give me great hope.


Nakba Day 2011 in Ramallah
(pic by the groovy Goeran S.)
Many of these people are remarkable, resilient Palestinians who I’ve met who despite all that they have lived through – and are currently still experiencing – remain committed to a peaceful future. But I’ve also met awesome individuals from Israel (and other places) doing what they can to expose and change the injustice of Israel towards Palestine and it's people.


This is just a sample of people who have inspired me, surprised me or who I just wanted to include for their work for Palestine.


This incredible group is comprised of former Israeli soldiers and former Palestinian fighters, who are now committed to non-violence and more amazingly to working with people who used to literally try to kill them. Their motto is: ‘only by joining forces, will we be able to end the cycle of violence’.
I first wrote about them in March after a group of us had the privilege of meeting Wael and Tamar and hearing first-hand from them about the group and their stories (see also my photo here). More of the incredible personal stories can be found here. Check out this story from an Israeli perspective, and this for a Palestinian just as two beautiful examples of changed lives.


I mentioned ICHAD in my last post, after having met with one of their staff on a really insightful tour of parts of Jerusalem a couple of months ago - check out their staff page for a brief bio on Jeff Halper and a couple of his great colleagues. These folk are another great example of Israelis and Palestinians working together, and especially of Israelis standing against their own government’s policies, and working in solidarity with Palestinians.


While this group works across a broad range of issues they are particularly concerned with the occupation and have a specific department working on this - check out the stories at this link.

It's been really inspiring to find a group of Jewish religious leaders so willing to confront their own people with injustice - here’s a quote from their website:
. . . the injustice to Palestinians in the area under Israeli rule is blatant and as rabbis we feel it our religious duty to counter the powerful lobbies of fundamentalists, both Jewish and Christian, in our work with the Israeli authorities. Our understanding of Torah is that it legislates justice and equality before the law, and that the land was promised to the Jewish people on condition that those are the values by which it would be ruled.’


This is a courageous group of former soldiers speaking out about their experiences in the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) and the truth about what happens to the Palestinians under occupation. Often decried as traitors, they have an amazing amount of testimonials from the very people tasked with Israel's occupation activities.

From their website:

Founded in March 2004 by a group of soldiers who served in Hebron, Breaking the Silence has since acquired a special standing in the eyes of the Israeli public and in the media, as it is unique in giving voice to the experience of soldiers. To date, the organization has collected more than 700 testimonies from soldiers who represent all strata of Israeli society and cover nearly all units that operate in the Territories. All the testimonies we publish are meticulously researched, and all facts are cross-checked with additional eye-witnesses and/or the archives of other human rights organizations also active in the field. Every soldier who gives a testimony to Breaking the Silence knows the aims of the organization and the interview. Most soldiers choose to remain anonymous, due to various pressures from official military persons and society at large. Our first priority is to the soldiers who choose to testify to the public about their service.





The face of the future - a young Israeli activist standing in solidarity
with an even younger Palestinian
Often this conflict is described as intractable; hopeless; never-ending, and so on. And I can admit to sometimes feeling this despair myself. But I was also incredibly surprised at how hopeful many of these people and groups made me as I was meeting them or witnessing them in action; if people literally surrounded daily by the conflict can be so committed to peace, how can I doubt?

I hope this gives you hope too – and perhaps inspires you to take some small action to help end the occupation.

(Feel free to post a comment or email me if you need any hints for action. Of course, you could start by writing a letter).

Sunday 19 June 2011

The Palestinian Authority’s Historic Mistake - and Opportunity (Guest post by Jeff Halper of ICAHD)


While I have occasionally posted links on my blog, usually the writing is mine. Today though I got an email from an amazing guy in Jerusalem with an article he’s written that I really wanted to pass on. Jeff Halper is the Co-founder and Director of the brilliant organisation ‘Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions’ which has worked tirelessly for the rights of Palestinians – more info about him and ICAHD below. For now, Jeff’s article.


By Jeff Halper           

No one knows the precise plans of the Palestinian Authority vis-a-vis September: will Mahmoud Abbas declare a Palestinian state within recognized borders and ask that it be admitted as a full member of the UN – or not? Perhaps Abbas himself does not know. Now political leaders often make decisions alone or in consultation with a small group of advisors. As in so many matters political, however, the Palestinian leadership finds itself in a unique situation. Its main allies are not governments, and certainly not the American government, whose support for some inexplicable reason has constituted the Palestinians’ default position for the past forty years. Rather, the Palestinians’ most loyal and powerful ally is civil society. And yet, this most solid base of support remains unappreciated, unutilized and ignored.
 
Three circles of popular support radiate out into the wider world, able to mobilize millions of people to the Palestinian cause. First, of course, is the Palestinian people itself. Displaced, scattered, oppressed, occupied, struggling for its national rights and very cultural identity, this “little grain of sand,” as it has been called, continues generation after generation to jam not only the vaunted Israeli military machine but that of its main supporter, the United States, who for decades has used Israel as its forward position in the Middle East.

To oppressed people everywhere, the Palestinians have become an inspiration, almost their surrogate. Their ability to remain steadfast (sumud) is proof that injustice, even when supported by the most advanced weaponry of the most powerful super-powers, can be resisted. But Israel, helped by time and geography, has succeeded in fragmenting the Palestinians. The refugees in the camps are almost completely excluded from political processes, but it is the exclusion of the Diaspora that is especially problematic. Highly educated for the most part, fluent in all the European languages, they could play a major role in promoting the Palestinian cause abroad. Indeed, a few individuals have carved out influential positions despite being excluded, even resisted, by the West Bank leadership. Instead, the Palestinian Authority has fielded, with a couple notable exceptions, a most inept and inarticulate corps of diplomats. Rather than using their greatest asset, their own people abroad as well as the legions of articulate spokespeople at home, including younger people, the Palestinian Authority has tied its own hands diplomatically just when Israel is mounting a major international offensive against it. Just recall one astounding fact: during the entire year that saw the Obama Administration taking office and the invasion of Gaza, there was no official Palestinian representative in Washington!

The second circle of civil society support for the Palestinian cause is, of course, the Arab and wider Muslim worlds. While each uprising of the “Arab Spring” has its own reasons and dynamics, the Palestinian struggle provided the inspiration. The Arab peoples came to realize that the same forces oppressing the Palestinians – militarism designed to thwart democracy and ensure neo-colonial control over their lands and resources – are at the source of their own oppression as well.

Indeed, the Palestinians possess one source of tremendous clout: they are the bone in the throat of the global powers that prevent them from completing their imperialist plans. The Palestinian struggle is not simply a local one between Palestinians and Israelis; it has become global on the order of the anti-apartheid struggle in South Africa. It cannot be by-passed. Even though there are larger and bloodier conflicts in the Middle East, until the Palestinians signal the rest of the Muslim world that they have arrived at a political settlement with Israel and the time has come to normalize relations, the conflict is not over. A solution cannot be imposed, and the Palestinians are the gatekeepers. Nothing can happen without them, and until the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is indeed resolved, the US and Europe will be unable to pursue their interests unencumbered in an empowered Middle East.

The third circle of civil society just waiting to be mobilized are the millions of ordinary people the world over whose have devoted enormous energy and resources towards the realization of Palestinian national rights. The Palestinian struggle has indeed assumed the proportions of that against apartheid. It is one of the two or three leading issues in the world. Churches, trade unions, university students, political and human rights organizations, prominent intellectuals, performers and even key politicians have all mobilized in support of the BDS movement (boycotts, divestment and sanctions against Israel). They are evident in the repeated attempts to break the siege of Gaza by sending international flotillas.

But they, like Palestinian civil society and that of the Arab and Muslim worlds, wait to be mobilized by the Palestinian leadership. According to newspaper accounts – unfortunately, the Authority leadership has never conducted an open discussion of the crucial September initiative and has never shared its deliberations – the two main objections to seeking membership in the UN are fear of upsetting the American administration and failure to obtain the required number of votes. The first is ridiculous. Does anyone still believe the Palestinians will gain anything by pursuing American-led “negotiations”?

The second objection, that not receiving the required votes for admission to the UN constitutes a “failure,” exposes a key flaw in the strategic thinking of the Palestinian leadership. If Abbas approaches the UN in a docile and half-hearted way, appearing more to be pushed by an Israeli refusal to negotiate than by his people’s own just cause and urgent need for independence, the Palestinian struggle will certainly suffer. Many other countries that would otherwise support the Palestinian initiative will indeed waiver, giving in to US and Israeli pressure because it seems the Palestinian themselves are not serious about it. But if he goes into the UN as the head of a national unity government with the support of the world’s peoples, Mandela-like, he could decisively change the course of events forever.

To pull off his September initiative, Abbas must reject the go-it-alone approach that the Palestinian leadership has followed fruitlessly for so long. He must recognize that civil society the world over – and in the Muslim world and Europe in particular – is the Palestinians’ most important ally. The issue is not whether the initiative “succeeds;” it is clear that the US will cast a veto. The true struggle is to pull out all the stops to show the world just how strong the Palestinian movement is. If mobilized, the collective power of the grassroots who have for years labored on the Palestinian issue will generate a momentum that will be hard to stop.

Time is of the essence. Mobilization must begin immediately. The elected representatives of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Territory, joined for the first time by Palestinians of the refugee camps, inside Israel and the Diaspora, should issue a joint “Call for Support.” Immediately following the Palestinian Call, grassroots activists would issue a Civil Society Call to support the Palestinian initiative, which would be signed by tens of thousands of people from all over the world and delivered to the UN in September. If a campaign for public support begins now, if the political leadership works intensively and closely with its own civil society to garner wide-spread support, more than 100,000 people can be gathered at the UN in New York in September in a mass rally for Palestinian independence. (And believe me, Israel will mobilize its own supporters!)

Inside the UN, Abbas would present Palestine’s compelling case for independence and UN membership, as he did in his New York Times piece of May 16th. He would also reframe the conflict. It is not specious security issues that lay at the roots of the conflict, but Israel’s refusal to respect Palestinian national rights and to end the Occupation. As he also did in the New York Timesarticle, Abbas must also make it clear that recognition of a Palestinian state within the 1967 borders in no way compromises the right of refugees to return to their homes, a key point of future negotiations with Israel. He should also state up-front that the establishment of a Palestinian state does not end the Palestinian quest, through peaceful means, of an inclusive single-state solution.

If international mobilization is pursued vigorously and Abbas exudes a genuine determination to see a Palestinian state established and recognized, more than 130 countries, including many of the leading European ones, will vote to accept Palestine into the UN. Even if this does not overrule the US veto in the Security Council, it is far more than a merely symbolic achievement and certainly cannot be considered a failure. Such a massive expression of support would demonstrate the inevitability of Palestinian statehood. It would signal the beginning rather than the end of an international campaign for Palestinian rights, one now joined by governments as well as civil society.

We, the people who have pursued Palestinian rights over the decades, Palestinians and non-Palestinian alike, are an integral part of the struggle. We have earned the right, all of us, to have our voices heard in September. Indeed, I would argue that if September comes and goes without any breakthrough due to the acquiescence and weakness of the Authority leadership, civil society support might well dissipate. The people can bring the struggle to a certain point; we cannot negotiate or pursue initiatives at the UN. If the leadership fails us then we truly have nowhere to go. All those Palestinians who have suffered, resisted and died over the past decades cannot be let down at this historic moment by a vacillating political leadership. We call on you to mobilize us. Together we shall succeed, and sooner rather than later.

Co-founder and Director of Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions

Jeff Halper is the co-founder and director of ICAHD, the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions.  He was born in 1946 in Minnesota and emigrated to Israel in 1973.  Since then he has been a tireless advocate for justice and civil rights for all Israelis and Palestinians.  He spent ten years as a community worker in Jerusalem aiding low-income Mizrahi families. He co-founded ICAHD with Meir Marglit in 1997 to help resist Israel’s strategy of house demolitions in the occupied territories.  He is the author of three books, Between Redemption and Revival: The Jewish Yishuv in Jerusalem in the Nineteenth Century, An Israeli in Palestine: Resisting Possession, Redeeming Israel, and Obstacles to Peace: A reframing of the Palestinian – Israeli Conflict.


ICAHD Home page: http://www.icahd.org/


About ICAHD
ICAHD is a non-violent, direct-action organization established in 1997 to resist Israeli demolition of Palestinian houses in the Occupied Territories — 24,000 as of this writing and counting. As we gained knowledge of the brutalities of the Occupation, we expanded our resistance activities to other areas – land expropriation, settlement expansion, by-pass road construction, policies of “closure” and “separation,” the wholesale uprooting of fruit and olive trees, the Separation Barrier/Wall, the siege of Gaza and more…


Saturday 18 June 2011

Occupation 101 - revisited

An average sight on a street corner in Al Khalil (Hebron)
[original photo by my buddy JW 
- March 2011]






This is actually a post about the Occupation itself but a quick reminder about an earlier post as well. Some time ago I mentioned a film called 'Occupation 101' which I highly recommend.


It's on youtube and in my earlier post I gave the link to the first eight minutes in the hope that this taster would have you keen to see more. The downside to that is that you need to keep loading each segment of the whole feature film. For those that would like to see the first segment only here's that link again, but since my first post I've discovered a link to the whole film viewable in one go. As I've indicated, I can't recommend this highly enough as an overview of the situation in Palestine - I'd really love you to watch it.






And now a little about the occupation itself.
I can't even begin to convey in words what it's like to be in an occupied country, and as a visitor I can't actually do justice to the sense of occupation for Palestinians. But I'd ask you to at least try and imagine what it would be like if your country had been at war, and not only lost, but was then occupied.


Imagine that you were constantly surrounded by heavily armed soldiers, jeeps, armoured cars, military equipment and more. Road blocks and curfews. Closure of farms, business areas and your ability to get to work hindered or completely stopped. Add to this the constant threat of violence, shootings or even bombings, or the arbitrary demolition of your home.


Please stop and try and imagine this just for a minute.


Then understand that this has been going on in Palestine for forty-four years.
How would that be for me or you in our countries?


(I know some of my readers are actually in Palestine or other countries affected by conflict and war, but most are in comfortable western countries like mine in Australia).


On top of this, bear in mind that Israel refuses to acknowledge the occupation.
In feats of verbal gymnastics and avoidance of responsibility, they talk of an 'administered territory', 'disputed territories' and various other euphemisms to avoid the reality. Yet not even their key ally, the U.S. accepts this; in fact no other country accepts the Israeli position. The 'road map initiative' of the Quartet (USA, Russia, Europe and the UN) talks very specifically about occupation, and Israel must be willing to acknowledge this as part of moving towards peace. 


More importantly, Israel needs to realise that peace will only prevail when Palestine is no longer occupied; when Palestinians experience real freedom; when two people can live side by side as equals instead of the oppressors and the oppressed.


An ID check in your own street having already been checked 200 metres earlier. A normal day for this part of town...