Thursday, January 22, 2009

Forum Friday in Arlington

Spread the word
LET GAZA LIVE!
AN EDUCATIONAL FORUM ON THE CURRENT CRISIS
sponsored by Arlington/Lexington United for Justice with Peace
Friday, January 23, 7:30 PM
Cavalry Methodist Church300 Massachusetts Ave.E. Arlington.

While a brutal war has been waged on the defenseless people of Gaza , and rockets launched into Israel, the media distorts what is really going on and more importantly, why. This forum will address the political, military, economic, and ideological reasons behind the latest crisis, the situation on the ground, as well as ways that Americans can help to support the victims and to resolve the crisis. A question and answer session will be included, to encourage audience participation and input.

Speakers:
Elaine Hagopian, Noted authority on the history of conflict in the Middle East. Salma Abu Ayyash, Palestinian activist and educator Howard Lenow, American Jews for a Just Peace Suggested donation $5.00. For more information, call 781-316-2018. Dr. Elaine Hagopian is Professor Emerita of Sociology, Simmons College, Boston. For over fifty years, she has studied the core issues in the Middle East. She has taught at the American University in Beirut and the American University in Cairo. She has received two Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Grants to do research in the M.E. She has worked with UNESCO as a team member doing a feasibility study for an open university for Palestinians, and with UNICEF in the Arabian Gulf evaluating a project in the field on community development and women. She is the editor and author of three books related to Arab and Arab-American issues, and has published some tens of articles on conflicts in the M.E.

Salma Abu Ayyash is a Palestinian born in Jordan. She is co-founder of the Palestinian arts and culture organization Tawassul and is a local Palestinian rights activist. She is an Electrical Engineer by training (MS, Ph.D. ABD). Recently, Salma taught high school math and science and does freelance Arabic-English translations.

Howard Lenow has been a union and civil rights lawyer for almost thirty years. He also has worked closely with dedicated activists seeking a just peace for Palestine through American Jews For A Just Peace and Visions of Peace With Justice in Israel/Palestine, the U.S. Campaign to End the Occupation, the Boston Committee for Palestinian Rights, the Israeli Coalition Against Home Demolition, the Palestinian Medical Relief Society and other peace groups both in the U.S., Palestine and Israel. Over the last five years, through the Health and Human Rights Project, Howard has been a co-leader of five human rights delegations to Israel Palestine and returned from his most recent trip this past November.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Forum Wednesday featuring NOAM CHOMSKY

The Emergency Gaza Coalition presents:
STOP THE MASSACRE OF GAZA!
The truth about the war on Gaza, the US government's role, and why we must fight back!
featuring:
NOAM CHOMSKY
ASSAF KFOURY, Professor, Boston University
AHMED SHAWKI, Editor, International Socialist Review

with discussion period for all to input their ideas, ask questions, debate and discuss the issues!

**WITH ACTIVIST BAZAAR OF PRO-PALESTINE GROUPS AND VENDORS!**

Before and after the event, come to learn, meet activists, pick up new literature and information and get plugged into the movement!
6:30PM Bazaar opens, 7PM Teach-in with panelists begins@
Palestine Cultural Center for Peace41 Quint Avenue, Allston, MA 02134

for more information or to endorse/co-sponsor this event, or to be represented at activist bazaar, please email:emergencygazacoalition@gmail. comor call: 617-970-2701
____________ ________
Are you outraged at Israel's genocidal war path through Gaza? You and hundreds of millions around the world! Who wouldn't be at the senseless destruction, loss of innocent life, the targeting of schools and mosques, the use of horrific chemical weapons such as white phosphorus, the targeting of aid convoys, youth, power plants that keep water clean and the little food that's around refrigerated, destruction of communications infrastructure, the razing of not only homes but whole neighborhoods and cities... It's an immeasurable catastrophe.
In order for our movement to be effective and to grow wide and strong, we must come together to learn and exchange ideas. This conflict raises questions of local, national, and international significance:
* What is Israel doing? What actually happening on the ground? Why is this war happening, and why now? What are Israel's real goals behind the rhetoric?
* What is the US's relationship with Israel? Why does the US give Israel such massive and unflinching support materially and diplomatically, despite international opposition?
* Can we do anything about it? What does the grassroots movement against this war look like here and abroad, where is it going? Does what we do in our own neighborhoods and schools really matter?

Let's educate ourselves to build this movement and really make a difference!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

PROTEST FRIDAY!!

Let Gaza live!
Stop the Israeli war!
Stop US support for the massacre in Gaza!

PROTEST this Friday 1/16 4:30 pm

We will start at (Israeli Consulate 20 Park Plaza) 4:30 P.M and make our way to the State House while paying a visit to many important stops along the way. This will be a highly organized protest and we plan on rallying on the streets hopefully if the permit situation goes well. We will have mega-phones and amplifiers to show Boston that "when you are shopping/driving/doing whatever you are doing, BOMBS ARE DROPPING ON INNOCENT PEOPLE!"

Spread word! Invite your friends, allies, classmates, coworkers, neighbors, EVERYONE!!!!!!

As Israel ruthlessly tears into Gaza, slaying any and all in its genocidal path--including aid convoy and children--international pressure mounts to shut these atrocities down and let the people of Gaza live, which is already having a major effect on how the war is covered in the media, and--most importantly--on people's sense of need and confidence to fight back. We've had a series of excellent mobilizations in Boston including rowdy protests, vigils and a large funeral march, dozens out to Saturday's national protest at the White House and more. We must come together to continue to build the movement with even bigger & stronger actions and events geared toward drawing into the movement the thousands in our area who are outraged at Israel's shear brutality and the US's support for it.

Called by the Emergency Gaza Coalition
For more info, email bostonstandswithgaza@gmail.com

Monday, January 12, 2009

Zionist rally in Copley and counter-protest

Thanks David, for sending this
Last Thursday all the Zionist groups in Boston (AIPAC, CJP, Hillel Centers of New England, etc) held a pro-"Israel" rally indoors in the temple next to the Chestnut Hill Mall in support of the Zionist genocidal aggression in the Gaza Strip. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick was there. Newon Mayor David Cohen was there. Steve Grossman, former president of AIPAC and former chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was there. And hundreds - the zionists claim over a thousand - supporters of "Israel" were there.
See http://www.wickedlocal.com/newton/homepage/x512380610/Chestnut-Hill-temple-fills-with-Israel-supportersand http://www.boston.com/yourtown/newton/articles/2009/01/09/israeli_palestinian_supporters_rally_try_to_make_case_in_newton/?rss_id=Boston+Globe+--+Today's+paper+A+to+Z

The Zionists are going to rally again - this time venturing outdoors - this Wednesday Jan 14 in Copley Square at 5:30. They may have politicians speaking. On Friday 8 out of 10 US congressmen from Massachusetts voted 'yes' for the house resolution supporting "Israel's" genocide against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip.
Pro-Palestinian Anti-Genocide people, please show up in Copley Square, Boston, at 5 to start demonstrating against Zionism. We can shout down the Zionist rally.

Stop the Siege of the Gaza Strip!Stop the Zionist War of Aggression and Genocidal Massacres Against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip!End 61-Years of Zionist Racist Genocidal Colonial Rule in All of Palestine!From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Be Free!Support the Palestinian Resistance, including Hamas! The Palestinian people are rightly defending themselves in their own country!The Zionists broke the ceasefire! The Zionists are the aggressor today as in 1948!Stop All US funding & support to "Israel"!"Israel" and "USA" are the real terrorists!

Organizing meeting Tuesday!

-- PLEASE PUBLICIZE WIDELY --
BOSTON ORGANIZING MEETING FOR ACTIONS ON GAZA
TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 7 PM
PALESTINIAN CULTURAL CENTER, 41 QUINT ST., ALLSTON
The killing and the blockade go on. Come to the organizing meeting to get involved in the following activities:
1. Public Protest - local vigils, city-wide actions
2. Lobbying - Emails, phone calls, visits to Congressional offices, oppose Israel support resolutions, promote cease-fire
3. Education - Forums, educational materials, speaking to groups
4. Media - op eds, letters to editors, radio, TV shows, pressure media to cover Palestinian side
5. Fundraising - Raise money for humanitarian relief through benefits, individual contributions, fundraising appeals
6. Outreach - Get support from diverse constituencies, religious institutions, students, unions, community organizations
7. Boycott, divestment, sanctions
Proposed agenda:
Brief updates on recent protests - 10 min.
Suggestions for organizing under each category listed above - 30 min.
Break into working committees according to interest - 40 min.
Report back from working committees - 30 min.
Next steps - 10 min.
Agenda proposed by Marilyn Levin

Interfaith vigil and declaration of peace

Thank you to Jenna Miller, who sent this.

Dear Friends,

There has been a growing cry for a community gathering about the Gaza crisis that calls for an end to the violence while expressing our anguish for both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples.

Boston-area Muslim, Christian, and Jewish leaders have jointly written a statement calling for a ceasefire in Gaza and expressing our desire to demonstrate that during these most difficult of times we are prepared to stretch our hands out to each other. The statement with initial signatures is attached.

Join us for a silent INTERFAITH VIGIL to make the declaration public and stand shoulder to shoulder with members of Boston ’s Muslim, Jewish, and Christian communities. Signs (drawn from the statement) will be provided. No other signs please.

INTERFAITH VIGIL
Tuesday, January 13
5:30-6:30pm
Park Street Station, downtown Boston

To sign the petition go to: http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/interfaithdeclarationforpeace/
This effort is being organized by a wide range of activists from each faith group. Boston Workmen’s Circle has offered to serve as the contact for logistics. For up to date information go to www.circleboston.org; for questions email info@circleboston.org.

AN INTERFAITH DECLARATION FOR PEACE

We, members and leaders of the Muslim, Jewish, and Christian communities in Greater Boston - all having deep and symbolic ties to the land and peoples of the Middle East - are anguished by the events unfolding in Israel and Gaza. Recognizing the legitimate needs of all peoples, including all those living in the Middle East , for dignity, peace, safety and security –- regardless of religion, race, or national origin -- we issue this joint statement with the hope and belief that our interfaith voices will be heard clearly, above the din of war.

As guiding principles,

We acknowledge the long, complex, and painful history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
We acknowledge the wide range of deeply-held beliefs, and intensely-felt narratives on all sides
We acknowledge that all sides are capable of assigning blame to others, and asserting justification for their cause
We observe that violence by any side begets more violence, hatred, and retaliation
We deplore any invocation of religion as a justification for violence against others, or the deprivation of the rights of others
We decry any use of inflammatory rhetoric that demonizes the other and is intended, or is likely, to promote hatred and disrespect
We believe the conflict can be resolved only through a political and diplomatic solution and not a military one.

In the face of many competing narratives, we recognize that the overriding common need of the peoples of the region is the prompt implementation of a just and lasting peace. Toward that end, and particularly in response to the current hostilities,

We call upon the United States and the international community immediately to intercede to help reestablish a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, toward the goal of a permanent cessation of hostilities
We call upon Hamas immediately to end all rocket attacks on Israel , and upon Israel immediately to end its military campaign in Gaza
We call for an immediate end to all strikes on civilian centers and citizens, both Israeli and Palestinian
We call for lifting of the blockade on Gaza as to all non-military goods, for an immediate and significant increase in humanitarian aid to address the needs of the people of Gaza , and for all parties involved to join in taking responsibility to address those human needs
We call on all parties involved in the conflict to work sincerely and vigorously toward a just and lasting peace that addresses and promotes the national aspirations of both the Israeli and Palestinian peoples
We call on President-elect Obama to make clear that as President he will urgently assert US leadership to achieve a comprehensive diplomatic resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian and Arab-Israeli conflicts

Through this joint statement we affirm our commitment to engage with one another, even, and especially, during times of great stress. We also affirm our common humanity and our common belief – as Jews, Muslims and Christians - that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict must cease, that there is no military or violent solution, that all human life is valued, and that all parties must cooperate to make the peace – a just and lasting peace desperately needed and deserved by all the peoples of the region.

Signed:

Salwa Abd-Allah, Executive Council, Muslim American Society of Boston (MAS Boston ), Islamic Society of Boston Cultural Center (ISBCC)

Tariq Ali, President, Harvard Islamic Society

Hossam AlJabri, President, MAS Boston-ISBCC; Trustee, Interreligious Center for Public Life (ICPL)

Rev. Dr. Jim Antal, President, United Church of Christ Mass. Conference

Abdul Cader Asmal, Past President, Islamic Council of New England and Islamic Center of Boston ; Trustee ICPL

Rabbi Al Axelrad, Hillel Director Emeritus, Brandeis University
Diane Balser, Executive Director, Brit Tzedek v’Shalom
Dorothy C. Buck, Ph.D., Director, Badaliya

Rev. Nick Carter, Ph.D., President, Andover Newton Theological School

Dris Djermoun, President, Islamic Center of Boston (Wayland)

Diana L. Eck, Professor, Harvard University

Imam Talal Eid, Islamic Institute of Boston ; Chaplain Brandeis University

Ashraf Elkerm, Board Chairman, Islamic Center of Greater Worcester

Rev. Dr. Terasa G. Cooley, Unitarian Universalist Mass. Bay District Executive

Mercedes S. Evans, Esq., Committee on Contemporary Spiritual & Public Concerns (CSPC Committee) (Civil Rights)

Imam Abdullah Faruuq, Imam, Mosque for the Praising of Allah (Roxbury)

Michael Felsen, President, Boston Workmen's Circle
Lisa Gallatin, Executive Director, Boston Workmen's Circle

Zekeriyya Gemici, President, MIT Muslim Students Association

Rabbi David Gordis

Rabbi Arthur Green, Rector, Rabbinical School, Hebrew College , Newton
Rev. Raymond G. Helmick, S.J., Instructor, Conflict Resolution, Boston College

Arnold Hiatt

Rev. Jack Johnson, Executive Director, MCC

M. Bilal Kaleem, Executive Director, MAS Boston-ISBCC

Anwar Kazmi, Executive Council, MAS Boston-ISBCC

Alexander Kern, Executive Director, Cooperative Metropolitan Ministries

Nabeel Khudairi, Past President, Islamic Council of New England

Idit Klein, Executive Director, Keshet

Margie Klein, Co-Director, Moishe/Kavod House

Mary Lahaj, Muslim Chaplain, Simmons College

Geoffrey Lewis

Imam Taalib Mahdee, Imam, Masjid Al-Quran, ( Dorchester )

Rev. Bert Marshall, Church World Service, New England Director

Jerome D. Maryon, Esq., President, CSPC Committee

Michael J. Moran, Pax Christi Massachusetts

Sister Jane Morrissey, SSJ, Pax Christi Massachusetts

Merrie Najimy, President, American Arab Anti-discrimination Committee, MA

Imam Khalid Nasr, Imam, ICNE-Quincy

Imam Basyouni Nehela, Imam, Islamic Society of Boston

Rashid Noor, President, Islamic Center of New England

Rabbi Sara Paasche-Orlow
Rabbi Barbara Penzner, Temple Hillel B'nai Torah
Rev. Rodney L. Petersen, Ph.D., Executive Director, Boston Theological Institute

Dr Asif Rizvi, President-Elect, Islamic Council of New England

Rabbi Victor Reinstein, Nehar Shalom
Rev. Anne Robertson, Executive Director, Massachusetts Bible Society

Qasim Salimi, President, Boston University Muslim Students Association

Robert M. Sarly, Trustee, ICPL

Rev. Mikel E. Satcher, Ph.D., Pastor, Trinity Baptist Church

Professor Adam Seligman, Boston University

Rabbi Sanford Seltzer, Chair, ICPL

Enid Shapiro, Trustee, ICPL
Rt. Rev. M. Thomas Shaw, SSJE, Episcopal Bishop, Diocese of Massachusetts

Alan Solomont

Rabbi Toba Spitzer, Congregation Dorshei Tzedek
Rev. John K. Stendahl, Pastor, Lutheran Church of the Newtons

Sidney Topol
Rabbi Andrew Vogel, Temple Sinai

Peter D. Weaver, Bishop, United Methodist Church , Boston Area

(Organizational affiliations for identification purposes only)

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Tuesday organizing meeting for Gaza!

BOSTON ORGANIZING MEETING FOR ACTIONS ON GAZA

TUESDAY, JANUARY 13, 7 PM

PALESTINIAN CULTURAL CENTER, 41 QUINT ST., ALLSTON

The killing and the blockade go on. Come to the organizing meeting to get involved in the following activities:

1. Public Protest - local vigils, city-wide actions

2. Lobbying - Emails, phone calls, visits to Congressional offices, oppose Israel support resolutions, promote cease-fire

3. Education - Forums, educational materials, speaking to groups

4. Media - op eds, letters to editors, radio, TV shows, pressure media to cover Palestinian side

5. Fundraising - Raise money for humanitarian relief through benefits, individual contributions, fundraising appeals

6. Outreach - Get support from diverse constituencies, religious institutions, students, unions, community organizations

7. Boycott, divestment, sanctions

crisismiddleeast@yahoo.com gazaonmymindboston@gmail.com boston-stands-with-gaza@googlegroups.com

Protesters arrested at Gaza conflict demonstration


In case you missed it!



By Globe Staff


Boston Police arrested several people today when protesters opposed to Israel's military incursion into the Gaza Strip rushed the lobby at the Park Plaza Building, which houses the Israeli Consulate.
Overwhelmed lobby personnel scuffled briefly with the demonstrators, who then lay down on the floor. Police were called and some of the protesters were arrested.
Judith Glaubman, a spokeswoman for the protesters, said four people were arrested.
"The people who did civil disobedience are in solidarity with the people of Gaza, who are being held in captivity," she said. "There needs to be an immediate cease-fire and an end to the siege."
Nadav Tamir, consul general from Israel to New England, defended Israel's actions, saying, "I think most Americans understand that what we're doing is self-defense and we're doing what any government would do, which is protect our citizens."
Police said they found about 20 protesters on the scene when they were called at 8:13 a.m. and some arrests were made. Neither the exact number of arrests nor any other details were immediately available, a police spokeswoman said.
Israel's military campaign, which has killed hundreds of Palestinians, follows years of terrorist rocket fire from Gaza on Israeli civilians. Wire services reported this morning that Israel; Hamas, which rules the Gaza Strip; and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas have begun talks with Egypt to try to reach a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip.
Members of Boston's Jewish community were expected to rally tonight in support of Israel at Congregation Mishkan Tefila, a Chestnut Hill temple.

Funeral Procession in Boston Joins National Protests Against Israel's Incursion in Gaza

Originally published on Boston Indymedia: http://boston.indymedia.org/feature/display/206629
January 10, 2009
by Sofia Jarrin

Boston, Mass.--Around 400 people with home-made coffins marched in downtown Boston in a silent funeral procession to join protests around the world against Israel's military aggression in Gaza. Thousands marched in major cities in Europe, Arab countries, and the United States to express their outrage for the killings of so far 821 Palestinians, including 235 children, and close to 3700 wounded (50% of them women and children). Thirteen Israelis have died in the offensive, ten of them soldiers.

“Palestinian people must be some of the most extraordinary human beings in the world to continue to survive and raise families and talk about peace under the conditions they are living in,” said Catherine Hoffman from the Cambridge-Bethlehem People-to-People Project. “People who see Israel as the victim here, can see the power, absolute power that Israel wields in Palestine, not just now in terms of the killing, but everyday in terms of the occupation.”

Dressed all in black, a diverse community of Palestinians, Arab-Americans, Jews, Christians, and people from different heritage backgrounds, gathered in Boston in solidarity with the Palestinian cause. They marched from Copley Square to Downtown Crossing and back, waving Palestinian flags and carrying small bundles to represent dead children. They called for an immediate cessation of Israel's attacks on Gaza, a humanitarian international response to the crisis, and an end to Israel's stranglehold of the occupied territories.

“What's going on in Gaza right now is nothing new. We've had massacres all through our history since 1948. Hundreds of massacres, large scale, low scale. Continuously targeting Palestinians,” said Salma Abu Ayyash, a US resident born to Palestinian parents who fled the occupied territories in the late 1960s. “What is happening in Gaza is basically a manifestation of a greater plan to partition Palestine and make it impossible for Palestinians to have any kind of self-determination, any kind of real political representation and rights as human beings.”

Hillary Rantisi, a Palestinian from Ramallah who arrived to the United States seven years ago with her husband, a Ph.D. student, said that life in the West Bank is marked by a daily struggle under Israel's military and political power. She said her childhood memories are marked with Israeli soldiers patrolling the streets on her way to school. She herself was caught in the crossfire and has many friends who have been imprisoned.

The 600-plus checkpoints and the network of fences and walls controlled by the Israeli army make daily life impossible in the West Bank, said Hillary. “Imagine if you lived in Somerville and went to university in Boston or Cambridge, and there was a checkpoint in between. You wouldn't be able to go to your school. Or if you worked in a different town. So your life is basically very much under the control of all these restrictions,” she said.

“They need to acknowledge that we have rights too,” said Salma, “that the only way to move forward is if Israel recognizes our right to exist. Is not the other way around. We are the ones who are being obliterated here.”

Meanwhile, Israel has dropped leaflets in Gaza warning the 1.5 million residents of an escalation to the offensive, ignoring a UN Security Council call for an immediate ceasefire. The Hamas resistance continues to throw rockets into Israel in response. Concerns for the safety of the civilian population in Gaza has become critical as Human Rights Watch confirmed today the use by Israel forces of white phosphorus in the Gaza City/Jabaliya area.

“White phosphorous can burn down houses and cause horrific burns when it touches the skin,” said Marc Garlasco, senior military analyst at Human Rights Watch. “Israel should not use it in Gaza’s densely populated areas.” Its use, according to the organization, would violate the requirement under international humanitarian law to take all feasible precautions to avoid civilian injury and loss of life.

At the same time, fears have arisen that its war tactics has resorted to target journalists within the strip. The International Federation of Journalists issued today a condemnation of the Israeli government for bombing the Al-Johara Tower, an eight-story building that housed over 20 news organizations. At least one journalist was reported injured. Four other Palestinian journalists were killed in separate attacks. Nevertheless, news of the human loss and devastation in Gaza have been broadly broadcasted around the world, despite Israel's blockade of media entry into the strip.

Similarly, the daily worldwide protests seem to be on the rise. Israel Indymedia reported protests in at least six different cities in Israel today and yesterday, with several arrests. In Washington D.C. as many as 15 thousand people rallied today for Gaza, according to DC Indymedia. In Boston, daily vigils and protests have spread into several different towns, including Boston, Cambridge, Watertown, Roxbury, Dorchester, Brookline, Worcester, and Northhampton; in a spree of solidarity that has not been seen since the early protests against the Iraq war.

“It is in the US where it's particularly amazing, I think, because for the most part this is where our most fierce opposition lies and it's where it's most significant to have a change in policy. We've always known there has been a global movement of solidarity with the Palestinian people, and to see that penetrate into US mainstream I think is absolutely inspiring at this stage,” said Omar Baddar, executive director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee of Massachusetts and steering committee member US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.

“We stand together, whether we are Jews, Muslim or Christians, saying that we have one humanity. That we are equal as human beings, regardless of our religion, regardless of our backgrounds. And we today demand that we [Palestinians] are recognized as having equal humanity,” said Hillary.

RELATED: Watch video of the funeral procession, by Michael Borkson:http://openmediaboston.org/node/498

Accusations of Anti-Semitism

This is a piece sent to me by Pat Westwater-Jong, a journalist and peace activist who has been to Palestine and lives in Boston. The piece refers to a rally that has already happened--it took me a while to post this. Thanks, Pat!

I have found that for many/most people, especially the American press and politicians and many of my Jewish friends and family - opposing the Israeli government's treatment of the Palestinians, especially now in Gaza - is code for "opposing the state of Israel", and for being anti-Semitic. I think that any signs people carry and speakers at the rally, that/who aren't clear that they oppose the Israeli government's treatment of Palestinians, and not the Israeli people and not Jews in general - is counterproductive. Those accusations merely increase many people's fear and mis-belief that to oppose the Israeli government in any way is anti-Semitic -which entrenches their inability to listen to what is happening and come to understand that what the Isreali government is going is not for safety of Israel and not within their value system. I know there are people who are anti-Semitic, and some of them will be drawn to this protest and i do not identify with them any more than i identify and support anyone who is racist or prejudiced against any group. I hope that the speakers will address this because i think this is the key reason why so many people, "liberals" in particular, align themselves with the oppressors here and cannot hear what is truly happening in Israel, and therefore cannot oppose it. Until these people realize that it is OK to criticize Israeli government policies and that can actually be a way to stand up for moral Jewish behavior, they will continue to associate criticizing Israel with being anti-Semitic, and Israel is likely to continue their illegal and immortal treatment of the Palestinian people.

If we can get enough Americans to understand that they can oppose those Israeli policies which are illegal and immoral, just as they have opposed Bush administration policies that are illegal and immoral, and still been patriot Americans - then many of them will be open to being informed about what's really happening - and then we can change public opinion and then we can withdraw that support from Israel which enables them to treat the Palestinians as they have been treated. Without US support, it seems they cannot continue and certainly my friends in Israel believe that Israel will not continue to oppress and abuse Palestinians without US support. The bombs are being dropped onto the people in Gaza, from American planes.
I want very much to be part of an effort that informs and encourages human rights for all - not one that espouses hatred for Israel and Jews. The only way out of this is to stand up against hatred and abuse of everyone - and stop abuse of anyone - regardless of what group/religion/race/political party, etc, they are a part of.

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Get on the bus to DC!

"Let Gaza Live!" Protest
BOSTON-DC BUS

MEET AT BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY //
COPLEY STATION- 700 BOYLSTON ST, BOSTON MA
11PM, FRIDAY JAN 9PLEASE CALL/

EMAIL TO CONFIRM! SPREAD WORD! "ATTEND" AT FACEBOOK PAGE, INVITE FRIENDS!http://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=home#/event.php?eid=43692745919
Phone:
617-970-2701
Email:
resistingempire@gmail.comThe time to act is now! Local marches have taken place all over the country. Now is the time to bring the outrage of the people right to the steps of the White House. $20-$50 --- sliding scale --- Please give generously according to your ability! we would rather neither turn people away due to low funds, nor put a huge burden on those who are fronting the $thousands for the bus. Thank you & solidarity!

The biggest possible demonstration at the seat of power will capture the largest attention in the media, put direct pressure on the government, and bring forces together who will be pivotal local, nationally and internationally in building in this new phase of the anti-war movement.We are sending a message to both Bush and the incoming Obama administration: This war of aggression must end immediately! People all over the world will be marching in their country's capital cities on Saturday, January 10. The people of this country will come together in Washington, D.C., to say NO to the government that speaks in their name and uses their tax dollars to fund Israel to the tune of over $15 million per day.Tens of thousands have marched across the country.

Sponsored by Act Now to Stop War and Racism (International A.N.S.W.E.R.), The Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR), American Muslim Task Force (AMT), American Muslims for Palestine (AMP), American Muslim Alliance (AMA), Muslimah Writers Alliance (MWA), Voters for Peace (VFP) and many others have become sponsoring organizations of the January 10 Let Gaza Live National March on Washington, along with the ANSWER Coalition, Muslim American Society Freedom (MASF), Free Palestine Alliance (FPA), National Council of Arab Americans (NCA), Al-Awda - International Palestine Right to Return Coalition, and hundreds of others

Sunday, January 4, 2009

Video of 1/3 march in Boston

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qeDx79oW44c

Organizing meeting Tuesday!

The war continues, so our struggle continues!
Come to an organizing meeting:
Tuesday, Jan 6, 7pm at the Palestine Cultural Center,41 Quint Ave., AllstonBetween Brighton Ave. and Glenville Ave.

Solidarity action in Providence

PROVIDENCE, RI

Show your solidarity with the uprisings in Athens, and the people of Gaza.

We are planning a funeral procession in solidarity with all victims of warand state violence on Saturday, January 10th, through the streets of Providence. We will speak at various sites of state violence throughout the city. Anyone interested in planning or speaking please come to aplanning meeting Monday January 5th at 6pm. Email whatqueer@gmail.com forinfo, even if you can't make it on the 5th.

Called for by What Queer?! a radical queer collective in Providence.Please forward widely.

Friday, January 2, 2009

Rallying in support of Gaza

http://socialistworker.org/2009/01/02/rallying-in-support-of-gaza
WAR AND ANTIWAR
Elizabeth Schulte rounds up reports of demonstrations of solidarity with the Palestinian population of Gaza.
January 2, 2009

AS THE news spread that the Israeli government had begun raining bombs on the people of Gaza December 27, tens of thousands of people around the world surged into the streets in the hours and days that followed to speak out in support of the Palestinian victims of this onslaught.

Throughout the Middle East, people protested Israel's latest atrocity. In Ramallah, hundreds marched to the headquarters of the Palestinian Authority in the largest demonstration held there in several years. As Mel Frykberg of InterPress Service reported:

Elegantly turned out middle-aged women from Ramallah's Christian minority marched side by side with tough young men from the surrounding refugee camps. Grandmothers, journalists, factional leaders, and mothers with toddlers walked, linking arms with a scattering of international sympathizers based in the cosmopolitan central West Bank city.

Some protesters then marched to the nearby Israeli military checkpoint of Beit El, where Israeli police fired tear gas and rubber bullets to disperse them.

In Beirut, Lebanon, on the third day of Israel's assault, tens of thousands protested in pouring rain at a demonstration called by the Islamist resistance organization Hezbollah. Demonstrators carried Palestinian, Lebanese and yellow Hezbollah flags and banners.

Protesters in many cities marched to Egyptian consulates and embassies to condemn Egypt's government for closing its border with Gaza, which has helped fuel the humanitarian crisis there.

In Egypt, hundreds of thousands have taken part in protests around the country. Thousands more gathered in Damascus, Syria; Khartoum, Sudan; Amman, Jordan; and in Baghdad in occupied Iraq.

''The Israelis kill our people in Gaza and the West Bank,'' Yassin Abu Taha, a protester in Jordan's Baqaa camp for Palestinian refugees, told the Associated Press. "The Americans kill our people in Iraq. We're refugees, kicked out of our home in Tulkarem in 1967 and we're still displaced."
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IN THE U.S., where mainstream political leaders voiced unanimous support for Israel's war of terror against Palestinians, solidarity actions nevertheless came together in a matter of hours.

Some 2,000 marchers turned out to line eight blocks of downtown Dearborn, Mich., where there is a large Arab-American population.

In Orange County, Calif.--a generally conservative area south of Los Angeles--as many as 1,000 protesters gathered in Anaheim the day after the attacks. The rally, initiated by a coalition of groups including Al-Awda, brought out large numbers from the local Arab and Muslim community. Spontaneous marches took place, lasting from early afternoon until well past nightfall, with people young and old leading chants and marching with their friends and families.

Nayef, a young Palestinian American came to the protest with his family. "I'm here because we need a protest to let the world know we must end the occupation," he said. "It's unfair and just not right to kill innocent civilians for no reason." His 11-year-old cousin, Anas, said: "I wish that the people of Gaza could have enough food and for Gaza to be free...that's why I am here."

In San Francisco, hundreds of protesters took over the downtown intersection of Montgomery and Market December 29 and occupied it for two hours, without arrests, before continuing their march to Union Square.
The same day, some 500 people protested in Chicago's freezing temperature at Water Tower Place. Several organizations co-sponsored the event, including leftist, antiwar, Muslim, Palestinian, Arab and Jewish peace groups. The crowd was mostly Arab and Arab American, but with strong support from other groups, including student organizations from at least five universities.

On December 30, thousands of protesters in several cities--including San Francisco, Washington, D.C., New York, Los Angeles and Chicago--took part in a national day of action called by a number of groups, including the ANSWER Coalition, the Muslim American Society, the National Council of Arab Americans, the Free Palestine Alliance, Al-Awda-International Palestine Coalition for the Right of Return and others.
In San Francisco, 2,000 people gathered to protest at the Israeli consulate--the crowd was so large that demonstrators took over the streets and began marching through downtown San Francisco. Despite the interruption to their evening commute, many motorists could be heard honking their support of Palestine.
Large numbers of people of Middle Eastern descent, who have at times been ignored by the antiwar movement, attended. Iraq Veterans Against the War member Carl Davison said, "What is happening in Iraq is the same as what is happening in Palestine. This is the U.S. raining down imperialism against people who are almost defenseless, and it is unacceptable."

In Washington, D.C., 3,000 protested at the State Department. In Los Angeles, 1,000 rallied for three hours at the Israeli consulate. At the same time, a protest called by Los Angeles Jews for Peace took place at the Federal Building in west Los Angeles, drawing 300 people.

Hundreds turned out at the Israeli consulate in New York City, separated by police barricades from pro-Israel protesters. "I'm shocked at what Israel is doing--indiscriminately killing children, women...punishing an entire population for the acts of a few," protester Dalia Mahmoud told WABC.

In Boston, 200 people rallied against the massacre in Gaza, chanting "Stop the blood, stop the hate, Israel is a racist state!" The demonstrators also confronted Israel supporters who had gathered across the street to defend Israel's terrorism. The rally continued at Copley Square, where there was a speak-out. Plans were made for further actions.

In San Diego, 500 gathered at the Federal Building on December 30. The protesters were there "to demonstrate against the massacre of our people in Gaza and the rest of occupied Palestine," said Youssef Abudayyeh of the Free Palestine Alliance.

"People are outraged. We need to attract the larger American public about the massacre that is taking place in our names with our tax dollars...We call on people to do whatever they can to demonstrate our outrage."
Khalid Mansour, who has visited family members in Gaza and the West Bank, said, "Gaza is the biggest open prison. What they are doing is pushing us in this little open prison, and they are bombing us...It's just too much to see what is going on."

Some 500 people gathered the same day at the federal building in Portland, Ore., with protesters carrying signs and banners proclaiming "Stop the holocaust against the Palestinians," "Killing Children Is Not Self-defense" and "Free Palestine: One state solution."

As at other rallies, Palestinians, Muslims and Arab Americans turned out in large numbers. Activist Rima Ghandour said, "It was inspiring to so see so many young people from the Arab community participating and finding their voice." After the protest, a call was made to march on pro-Israel Sen. Ron Wyden's (D-Ore) office to demand a hearing. Failure to get one would bring a rain of old shoes on the senator and his office, the organizers promised.

Three hundred people turned out in the freezing cold in Toledo, Ohio, chanting "From Iraq to Palestine, Occupation is a Crime!"

Forty came out in Albany, N.Y. to the state capitol to hear speakers from several organizations, including one who brought solidarity greetings from Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer, who is still recovering from his ordeal in Israeli captivity. A Palestinian refugee, who survived the Israeli invasion of southern Lebanon in 1982, spoke of his experiences.

In Seattle, 200 people turned out on December 30 at the Federal Building. Student antiwar activists used the opportunity to publicize a rally and march of local progressive forces on January 20--Inauguration Day--to show Obama what kind of change we want to see.

As one of the demonstrators, Adnan, said, "I'll definitely be out for that. I was horrified that Obama would support Israel's massacre in Gaza. We're going to have to hold his feet to the fire by organizing and protesting."

In Atlanta, 300 protested on December 30. Two days before, an emergency protest of 100 was organized on 24 hours' notice by pro-Palestine student activists at Emory University and the University of Georgia. At the conclusion of the two-hour protest on December 30, an impromptu march began through the streets of midtown Atlanta. Plans are being circulated for another protest January 3 in front of the CNN building.
In Ithaca, N.Y. 30 people protested December 30 in solidarity with the people of Palestine--as well as two local community activists, Clare Grady and Ellen Grady, who were arrested the day before protesting in front of the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C.

Fifty people protested in Burlington, Vt. In Baltimore, a crowd of 50 people gathered at the War Memorial Plaza near City Hall.
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THE IMMEDIATE flood of support for the Palestinian people--from longtime activists and organizations as people new to activism--reflected a new confidence to speak out. Activists are looking for ways to build more solidarity between different struggles, and antiwar activists in particular are linking the U.S. war on Iraq with Israel's war on the Palestinians.

Similarly, in many places, opponents of the Israeli war recognized that they must take anti-Arab and anti-Muslim head-on. At the University of California at Berkeley, for instance, antiwar and pro-Palestinian groups are taking a stand against anti-Arab hate crimes on their campus.
Activists are also making sure to bring their message to President-elect Barack Obama. In Washington, D.C., activists quickly organized a 200-strong demonstration near Obama's transition office. A favorite chant was "Hope for Gaza."

In Hawaii, where Obama and his family were on vacation in the fancy Oahu suburb of Kailu, a handful of protesters gathered nearby with placards that read "No U.S. support for Israel" and "Gazans need food and medicine, not war."

Obama has so far declined to make a statement on Israel's assault, while his staff reiterates the line that "there can only be one president at a time." But senior advisor David Axelrod appeared on CBS's Face the Nation the day after the attacks to affirm Obama's support for Israel's right to attack the Palestinians.

"The president-elect was in Sderot last July, in southern Israel, a town that's taken the brunt of the Hamas attacks," he said. "And he said then that, when bombs are raining down on your citizens, there is an urge to respond and act and try and put an end to that. So, you know, that's what he said then, and I think that's what he believes."

As Green Party presidential candidate and former Democratic member of Congress Cynthia McKinney told CNN, "As we are about to celebrate Martin Luther King's birthday, let's remember what he said. He said that the U.S. was the greatest purveyor of violence on the planet, and we experienced a little of that because the weapons that are being used by Israel are weapons being supplied by the U.S. government."

McKinney was on board the SS Dignity alongside members of the Free Gaza Movement who were attempting to bring desperately needed supplies to Gaza via the Mediterranean Sea, when the small boat was rammed three times by an Israeli naval gunboat. The Israeli government claimed it was an accident.

Protests against Israel's war will continue. In Chicago, for example, a Friday protest has been called by the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago, which will bring together the city's mosques and Muslim organizations.

Activists are committed to standing with protesters around the world to oppose Israel's assault on Gaza, here in the country that supports and funds Israel's war crimes.

Jeff Bale, Patrick Dyer, Rick Greenblatt, Josh Karpoff, Tim Koch, Katie Miller, Rachael Moshman, Alex Read, Mer Reese, Gillian Russom, Nevin Sabet, Michael Schwartz and Kathryn Weber contributed to this article.

WHAT YOU CAN DO: Protests against Israel's assault on Gaza have already taken place in cities around the country, with more planned for the coming days. Contact local organizers for details where you live.For updates on the current situation, plus commentary and analysis on the background to the war, read theElectronic Intifada Web site. Electronic Intifada Executive Director Ali Abunimah's "Gaza massacres must spur us to action" is a good starting point for further reading.You can also find updated coverage on conditions in Gaza and the efforts of activists to stand up to the Israeli war at the Free Gaza Web site.Between the Lines: Readings on Israel, the Palestinians and the U.S. "War on Terror," by Tikva Honig-Parnass and Toufic Haddad, documents the apartheid-like conditions that Palestinians live under today.For background on Israel's war and the Palestinian struggle for freedom, readThe Struggle for Palestine, a collection of essays edited by Lance Selfa on the history of the occupation and Palestinian resistance.