Catholics urge that Palestinian voices be heard in peace process

Palestinian family in refugee camp. (photo: Dominika Zarzycka / Shutterstock)

By Courtney Grogan | Catholic News Agency | Sep 10, 2018

I am reminded of the teachings of the great popes of our time who have pleaded that the voice of the Palestinian people be heard. Without hearing that voice, the dream of justice and peace for Israel, for Palestine and for the Middle East will remain impossible. Closing the Embassy is an attempt to silence that voice.
— Father David Neuhaus, a Jerusalem-based priest

The U.S. State Department announced Monday it will close the Palestinian Liberation Organization office in Washington because it says Palestine has failed to take “steps to advance the start of direct and meaningful negotiations with Israel.”

The Palestinian Liberation Organization, or PLO, is recognized by the United Nations as “the representative of the Palestinian people” and has diplomatic relationship with over 100 states, including the Holy See. . . .

In 1948, Pope Pius XII wrote in an encyclical on Palestine, “Even before the armed conflict began . . . We manifested our lifelong solicitude for peace in Palestine, and, condemning any recourse to violence, We declared that peace could only be realized in truth and justice.”

Continue reading “Catholics urge that Palestinian voices be heard in peace process”

Trump’s endgame in Palestine

Palestinians in Bethlehem are seen in front of the separation wall on Nakba Day, May 14, 2013. (photo: Ryan Rodrick Beiler / Activestills.org)
Washington defunding the Palestinian refugee agency is not merely an attack on UNRWA, as serious as that may be. It is an attempt to destroy the Palestinian national movement.

By Mitchell Plitnick | +972 Magazine | Sep 9, 2018

Trump has steered his policy on Israel-Palestine down a clear path. He is motivated by the right-wing belief, undoubtedly held by Jared Kushner, Jason Greenblatt, and his ambassador to Israel, David Friedman — Trump’s “Mideast peace team” — that contrary to conventional wisdom, the Palestinians can be pounded into submission.

Late last month, the State Department announced it would end all funding of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), the UN agency that provides many essential services for Palestinian refugees in the West Bank, Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon, and Syria. The reaction to this decision has been mostly negative.

Some have objected to the Trump administration’s decision because it runs counter to U.S. interests. Some have objected because it jeopardizes Israel’s security. Others talk about the staggering humanitarian consequences for the millions of refugees UNRWA serves.

These are all important concerns. But none of them hits the mark of what the Trump administration — apparently at the urging of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, without any consultation with anyone else in the Israeli government or defense establishment — is doing. This is not merely an attack on UNRWA, as serious as that may be. This is an attempt to destroy the Palestinian national movement.

Continue reading “Trump’s endgame in Palestine”

Israeli settlers and IDF soldiers conducting “joint assaults” on Palestinian villages

Israeli soldiers stand next to cars set on fire by Jewish settlers in the Palestinian city of O’urif in Occupied Palestine, Jul 13, 2018. The graffiti on the wall behind the soldiers reads, “Watch out!” (photo: Majdi Mohammed | AP)
The rise in recent attacks involving cooperation between settlers and IDF soldiers seems to be a prelude to Israel’s efforts to formally annex the entire West Bank.

By Whitney Webb | MPN News | Sep 10, 2018

Settler violence — especially when directly supported by the Israeli military — erects “invisible walls” that pave the way for the annexation of Palestinian land. Indeed, such attacks often force Palestinians to abandon or neglect properties . . . . This abandoned land is then taken over by Israel, whence it then becomes “state land” that is then often given to the very settlements responsible for the initial attacks.

Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem has provided evidence showing Israeli soldiers joining settlers in a series of attacks targeting the Palestinian village of ‘Urif, near Nablus in the occupied West Bank. The village, home to around 3,600 Palestinians, has been a target of extremist settlers for years given its close proximity to the illegal settlement of Yitzhar, notorious even among the Israeli security establishment for its repeated attacks on Palestinians and arson of nearby Palestinian property. Such attacks have historically taken place on farmland bordering the village, as well as near the village’s water tower.

Yet, while the Israeli government has long dismissed Yitzhar attacks on Palestinians as the work of a handful of settler youth “activists,” B’Tselem has now revealed that many of these attacks are conducted along with the active participation of Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers, resulting in IDF-settler “joint assaults” on Palestinian civilians that rob Palestinians of “not only their land but also their livelihood.”

B’Tselem detailed several different attacks that have taken place in recent months, in which settlers have exacted damage on Palestinian property, many with direct assistance from IDF soldiers. The first two that involved IDF-settler cooperation took place in March and early June.

Continue reading “Israeli settlers and IDF soldiers conducting “joint assaults” on Palestinian villages”

Peace Works 2018: Middle Eastern Film Festival (Saturday)

Please join our brothers and sisters from the Rachel Corrie Foundation for this exciting event.
Date: Saturday, Sep 15, 2018
Showtimes: 2:00 pm The Prophet
5:00 pm Persepolis
7:00 pm Meet & Greet
8:00 pm Naila and the Uprising
Location: Capitol Theatre
205 5th Ave SE
Olympia, WA  98501
Information: Event information here →
Tickets: Buy tickets here →
Event Details

The purpose of the project is to enliven and enrich the South Sound community with Middle Eastern films and allied arts, and to raise funds for the upcoming Shuruq IV: Olympia Arab Festival taking place at The Olympia Center on October 6, 2018.

The film festival will feature the following:

  • 2:00 pm: The Prophet, an animated children’s film based on the writings of Lebanese-American writer, poet, and visual artist Khalil Gibran. Exiled artist and poet Mustafa embarks on a journey home with his housekeeper and her daughter; together the trio must evade the authorities who fear that the truth in Mustafa’s words will incite rebellion.
  • 5:00 pm: Persepolis, an adult animated biographical comedy-drama film, based on Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical graphic novel of the same name, about a precocious and outspoken Iranian girl growing up during the Islamic Revolution.
  • 7:00 pm: Meet & Greet in the theater mezzanine with guests Paula and Jordan Somers and Aisha Jumaan. Paula and Jordan are the mother and brother of Luke Somers whose photography from Yemen is showcased in the theater this month. Luke was killed in Yemen in December 2014.
  • 8:00 pm: Naila and the Uprising, a documentary, chronicles the remarkable journey of Naila Ayesh whose story weaves through the most vibrant, nonviolent mobilization in Palestinian history — the First Intifada in the late 1980s.
  • Photography exhibit, “A Day in the Life of Yemen,” showcasing the work of Luke Somers, a British-born American freelance photographic journalist and resident of Yemen, who was held hostage and killed by al-Qaeda in 2014.
  • Children’s activities, film Q&A sessions, and opportunities to get involved with RCF.

“Peace Works, a cornerstone project for RCF, is always an opportunity for us to creatively engage with community members on issues of injustice and struggle, and this year is no different. We are all too aware of the polarization and oppression occurring in communities around the country, including our own, and we hope that through film and allied arts, we can amplify the voices that are all too often silenced,” stated Whitney Faulkner, RCF Executive Director.

More information here →

Education Department reopens Rutgers case against BDS

Kenneth L. Marcus, the Education Department official who reopened the case against Rutgers, is a longtime opponent of Palestinian rights causes. (photo: Susan Walsh / AP)
When Mr. Marcus was nominated, human rights organizations protested his confirmation, concerned that he would use his position to further his pro-Israel cause.

By Erica Green | The New York Times | Sep 11, 2018

Mr. Marcus has sought to use the complaint process to chill a particular political point of view, rather than address unlawful discrimination.
— Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights statement

The new head of civil rights at the Education Department has reopened a seven-year-old case brought by a Zionist group against Rutgers University, saying the Obama administration, in closing the case, ignored evidence that suggested the school allowed a hostile environment for Jewish students.

The move by Kenneth L. Marcus, the assistant secretary of education for civil rights and a longtime opponent of Palestinian rights causes, signaled a significant policy shift on civil rights enforcement — and injected federal authority in the contentious fights over Israel that have divided campuses across the country. It also put the weight of the federal government behind a definition of anti-Semitism that targets opponents of Zionism, and it explicitly defines Judaism as not only a religion but also an ethnic origin.

And it comes after the Trump administration moved the American Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, moved to cut off aid to the Palestinian Authority and announced the closing of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s office in Washington.

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Film: The Occupation of the American Mind

Please join our brothers and sisters at Woodinville Meaningful Movies for this compelling story of the Israeli public relations war on the US.

 

Date: Friday, Sep 14, 2018
Time: 7:00 – 8:30 pm
Location: Northshore United Church of Christ
18900 168th Ave NE
Woodinville, WA 98072
Information: Event information here →
Event Details

Israel’s occupation of Palestinian territory and blockade of the Gaza strip have triggered a backlash against Israeli policies virtually everywhere in the world — except the United States. The Occupation of the American Mind takes a look at this critical exception, zeroing in on pro-Israel public relations efforts within the US.

Narrated by Roger Waters and featuring leading observers of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, the film explores how the Israeli government, the US government, and the pro-Israel lobby have joined forces, often with very different motives, to shape American media coverage of the conflict in Israel’s favor.

The Occupation of the American Mind analyzes Israel’s decades-long battle for the hearts, minds, and tax dollars of the American people — a battle that has intensified over the past few years in the face of international condemnation of Israel’s current right-wing policies.

More information here →

“You should be ashamed of yourself” — Trump aide Stephen Miller condemned by childhood rabbi

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 Stephen Miller’s rabbi’s denunciation follows close on the heels of a similar repudiation by his uncle, David Glosser. (photograph: Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
Neil Comess-Daniels denounces Miller as a purveyor of “violence, malice and brutality” for zero-tolerance immigration policies.

By Andrew Gumble | The Guardian | Sep 10, 2018

Honestly, Mr. Miller, you’ve set back the Jewish contribution to making the world spiritually whole through your arbitrary division of these desperate people. The actions that you now encourage President Trump to take make it obvious to me that you didn’t get my, or our, Jewish message . . . You should be ashamed of yourself.
— Rabbi Neil Comess-Daniels

The childhood rabbi to Stephen Miller, special adviser to Donald Trump and a key architect of his “zero-tolerance” immigration policies, criticized his former charge on Monday as a purveyor of “negativity, violence, malice and brutality” who had learned nothing from his Jewish spiritual education.

Rabbi Neil Comess-Daniels of Beth Shir Shalom, a progressive reform synagogue in the beachside city of Santa Monica where Miller grew up, devoted his sermon marking the Jewish New Year to a striking denunciation of Miller and the now-abandoned policy he championed of separating immigrant families at the border.

Continue reading ““You should be ashamed of yourself” — Trump aide Stephen Miller condemned by childhood rabbi”

US to close PLO office in Washington

National security adviser John Bolton plans to announce the PLO office’s closure in a speech to the Federalist Society, a conservative group, on Monday, Sep 10. (photo: Fabrice Coffrini / AFP / Getty Images)
National security adviser John Bolton also plans to threaten sanctions against International Criminal Court.

By Michael Gordon | The Wall Street Journal | Sep 10, 2018

All of this is making sure the U.S. will never ever play the role of the peacemaker.
— Husam Zomlot, the Palestinian representative to Washington

The Trump administration is expected to announce Monday that it will close the Palestine Liberation Organization’s office in Washington, administration officials said Sunday night, widening a U.S. campaign of pressure amid stalled Middle East peace efforts.

“The United States will always stand with our friend and ally, Israel,” national security adviser John Bolton planned to say in a speech he is scheduled to deliver Monday, according a draft of his prepared remarks reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

“The Trump administration will not keep the office open when the Palestinians refuse to take steps to start direct and meaningful negotiations with Israel,” he is planning to add.

Senior Palestinian officials strongly condemned the Trump administration decision and described it as a “reckless escalation.”

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US aid cuts to East Jerusalem hospitals will have dire effects

Jumana Daoud carries her 7-month-old daughter Maryam at Makassed Hospital in East Jerusalem on Feb 20, 2017. (photo: Ahmad Gharabli / AFP)
Trump’s $25 million cut covers 40% of costs in six East Jerusalem hospitals that treat West Bank and Gaza patients.

By Staff | The Times of Israel | Sep 9, 2018

This decision could cause the collapse of these two respected hospitals [Augusta Victoria Hospital and St. John Eye Hospital] serving the Palestinian community.
— Dave Harden, former head of USAID in the West Bank and Gaza

The director of an East Jerusalem hospital said Sunday that a US decision to cut funding to hospitals serving the Palestinians will have a “severe effect.”

Bassem Abu Libdeh, of the Makassed hospital, said that the US currently covers 40 percent of costs in six East Jerusalem hospitals that provide care for Palestinians from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.

The Trump administration announced on Saturday it was cutting $25 million funding from the East Jerusalem Hospital Network, saying it would redirect the money toward “high-priority projects elsewhere.”

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Jerusalem mayor: I want to expel UNRWA

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Nassim Ammour, 11, scores a goal as he plays with friends next to the Israeli barrier in the Shuafat refugee camp in east Jerusalem, May 4, 2018. (photo: Ammar Awad / Reuters)
The organization now serves more than five million Palestinian refugees.

By Tovah Lazaroff | The Jerusalem Post | Sep 3, 2018

No matter how often attempts are made to minimize or delegitimize the individual and collective experiences of Palestine refugees, the undeniable fact remains that they have rights under international law and represent a community of 5.4 million men, women and children who cannot simply be wished away.
— UNRWA Commissioner-General Pierre Krähenbühl

Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat threatened to expel UNRWA from Jerusalem, in the first public statement by an Israeli official that called on the government to use its power to shut down the agency that services Palestinian refugees.

“UNRWA is a foreign and unnecessary organization that has failed miserably,” Barkat said in a speech he delivered Monday morning in Jerusalem at a conference sponsored by Channel 2. “I intend to expel it from Jerusalem.”

Barkat explained that he had already instructed his municipal staff to come up with a plan to replace the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which he plans to present to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

He spoke just three days after the US State Department announced that it intends to permanently halt its annual contributions to UNRWA, which last year amounted to $360 million out of the organization’s one billion dollar budget. Netanyahu publicly stated his support for that decision. Continue reading “Jerusalem mayor: I want to expel UNRWA”