Facebook COO ignores Palestinian complaints of censorship, pledges $2.5 mill to Israel advocacy group

Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer, Facebook. (photo: wiki commons)
The Israeli government & the ADL, which advocates for Israel, help Facebook executives decide which content to censor and perhaps it’s no coincidence that Palestinians’ Facebook pages are increasingly being removed.

By Alison Weir | If Americans Knew | Oct 30, 2019

While some American organizations that work on the Palestinian issue have largely been able to function on Facebook with relatively small difficulties (including the one I work for), the story for Palestinians living in the occupied Territories has been markedly different.

While Facebook is in the midst of a controversy in which Palestinian journalists are complaining that the company has a different standard for Palestinians than for Israelis, Facebook’s Chief Operating Officer, Sheryl Sandberg, publicly pledged $2.5 million to an organization that advocates for Israel.

This action was in line with Sandberg’s life history of connection to Israel. And it coincided with Facebook’s pattern of a double standard for Palestinians vs. Israelis.

While some American organizations that work on the Palestinian issue have largely been able to function on Facebook with relatively small difficulties (including the one I work for), the story for Palestinians living in the occupied Territories has been markedly different.

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Film: Imprisoning a Generation

Please join our brothers and sisters of the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon Task Force for Palestinian Human Rights in the screening of this documentary film in Portland OR with director and film producer Zelda Edmunds.
       
  Date: Sunday, Nov 10, 2019  
  Time: 6:15 – 9:00 pm
Film will begin at 7:00 pm
 
  Location: Grace Memorial Episcopal Church, 1535 NE 17th Ave, Portland, OR
Park in lot on 16th & NE Weidler
 
  Information: Event information here →  
  Tickets: Free  
Event Details

Join in this film screening and discussion with Zelda Edmunds, the director and producer of this documentary film which follows the stories of four young Palestinians detained and imprisoned under the Israeli military and political system.

More information here →

Reform movement spurns iconic Israeli charity to protest West Bank land buys

A photograph taken last year from the Palestinian West Bank village Turmus Ayya shows the Jewish settlement Shilo.
A photograph of the Palestinian West Bank village Turmus Ayya shows the Jewish settlement Shilo. (photo: Jaafar Ashtiyeh/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images)

Issues of transparency and settlement land purchases by the Israel Jewish National Fund raise issues for the Union of Reformed Judaism, the largest Jewish movement in North America.

By Aiden Pink  | Intercept  | Oct 31, 2019

‘Anybody who is closely watching the activities of KKL in Israel knows they’re deeply enmeshed in’ expanding the settlement enterprise…
— Rabbi Jill Jacobs, executive director of T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights

The largest Jewish denomination in the United States is turning down a donation from an iconic Israeli charity, alleging that the charity tricked the movement by buying and then hiding land purchases in the West Bank.

Keren Kayemet LeYisrael-Jewish National Fund is probably best known in the United States for its famous blue tzedakah box and for planting trees in the Holy Land. The quasi-governmental organization is also a major owner and purchaser of land throughout Israel, and the Union of Reform Judaism has long supported it.

Yet on Tuesday, URJ president Rick Jacobs published a series of tweets accusing the charity of “deceiving the board of directors and most senior leaders in the organization.”

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Israel’s new moves to ‘legalize’ the occupation

 

A Palestinian stands on his property overlooking the Israeli settlement Har Homa, West Bank, February 18, 2011. (Photo: UPI/Debbie Hill)
A Palestinian stands on his property overlooking the Israeli settlement Har Homa, West Bank, February 18, 2011. (photo: UPI / Debbie Hill)

Efforts to privatize settlements could be the next legal expansion in further delaying/denying Palestinian rights.

By Jonathan Cook | Mondoweiss | Oct 28, 2019

Their latest proposal has been described as engineering a ‘revolution’ in the occupation regime. It would let the settlers buy as private property the plots of occupied land their illegal homes currently stand on.

The United Nations’ independent expert on human rights in the Palestinian territories issued a damning verdict last week on what he termed “the longest belligerent occupation in the modern world”.

Michael Lynk, a Canadian law professor, told the UN’s human rights council that only urgent international action could prevent Israel’s 52-year occupation of the West Bank transforming into de facto annexation.

He warned of a recent surge in violence against Palestinians from settlers, assisted by the Israeli army, and a record number of demolitions this year of Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem – evidence of the ways Israel is further pressuring Palestinians to leave their lands.

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Can we talk about Zionism?

Dr. Alice Rothstein (photo:  http://www.alicerothchild.com)

A look into the birth and growth of Zionism in history and context in order to understand its aspirations and contradictions.

By Dr. Alice Rothchild | Brookline Chronicle |  Oct 29, 2019

‘Political Zionism is a recent phenomenon. This is very different from my zayde’s messianic Zionism which was more a belief that the Messiah would come someday and everything would get better, but don’t hold your breath. This was often followed by a fatalistic shrug and more davening.’

Today I’m going to be discussing the recently published book, Reclaiming Judaism from Zionism: Stories of Personal Transformation. The book is a collection of curated essays by rabbis, students, academics, and activists, and includes my chapter titled: Choosing a different path. I am going to start with some definitions that I have gleaned from my own personal research and also from the excellent introduction written by Professor Carolyn Karcher who is the editor of this book.

I would define Judaism as a religion, centered on tikkun olam, on pursuing justice and loving the stranger. It is a body of sacred texts, rituals, and ethical precepts. This is very different from the definition of a Jewish macher (see Yiddish – big shot) in Boston who once said in answer to the question: “Can you be a Jew and not be a Zionist?” “You don’t understand, Israel is the religion.” Clearly I take issue with that.

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Democratic Candidates Pressed On Cutting Israel Aid

The Associated Press
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks at the J Street National Conference on Monday in Washington. (photo: The Associated Press)

Presidential candidates Bernie Sanders and Pete Buttigieg make the strongest statements linking human rights concerns to military aid to Israel.

By Jodi Rudoren  | The Forward |  Oct 28, 2019

‘If you want military aid, you’re going to have to fundamentally change your relationship’ to Gaza…adding that some aid money ‘should go right now into humanitarian aid in Gaza.’
— Senator Bernie Sanders

Democratic presidential candidates diverged on Monday over the question of whether to condition United States military aid on Israeli policy toward the Palestinians, which activists at the annual J Street conference here in Washington seem to be trying to make something of a wedge issue in the crowded primary field.

In separate appearances before the conclave, Sen. Bernie Sanders and Mayor Pete Buttigieg said the $3.8 billion a year should indeed come with some strings attached, while Secretary Julian Castro said using the aid as a pressure tactic “wouldn’t be my first move” and Sen. Michael Bennet said he would want to carefully weigh the impact on domestic politics both here and in Israel.

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The Episcopal Church will sell stock in companies profiting from the Occupation

 

A Banksy grafitti in Bethlehem. (photo: anon.)

The Executive Council voted to adopt the recommended Global Human Rights Screen with ‘criteria for the Israel//Palestine conflict.’

By Episcopal Peace Fellowship Palestine Israel Network | Oct 22, 2019

Adoption of the Global Screen & Criteria puts in place an Episcopal Church Human Rights No Buy List, administered by CCSR, to apply to corporations that resist effective engagement on human rights.

Meeting in Montgomery, Alabama on 18-21 October the Council voted to receive the June 2019 Report of its Committee on Corporate Social Responsibility (CCSR) on resolution B016 and adopt the recommended Global Human Rights Screen (GHRS) with “criteria for the Israel//Palestine conflict.” The GHRS is modeled on the ELCA’s human rights screen and is consistent with policy adopted by General Convention or Executive Council over the last six decades. PIN lauds the clear criteria established by the GHRS for deciding if a corporation supports or benefits from denial of human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT). These are,

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Israel Lobby Criminalizes Children’s Books

Highland Park police standing guard outside children’s book reading at Highland Park Library, October 20, 2019. (photo: Facebook)

A children’s book expressing pride in being Palestinian is being used to create fear.

By Richard Silverstein  |  Tikun Olam | Oct 22, 2019

A prominent local rabbi declared the book a travesty and threatened to evict a Manhattan bookstore selling it from the synagogue’s annual book fair.

A few years ago, Iranian author and Rutgers faculty member, Goldbarg Bashi, published a children’s alphabet book, P is for Palestine (now out of print). It is an abecedary for children, teaching them words associated with the Palestinian struggle for justice and national rights. Somehow the book has become a cause celebre for the pro-Israel community in the New York metropolitan area. A prominent local rabbi declared the book a travesty and threatened to evict a Manhattan bookstore selling it from the synagogue’s annual book fair. The bookstore caved to pressure and released a statement saying it opposed the book’s content, but continued selling it, hiding it behind the counter as if it was a banned substance.

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Uninhabitable: Gaza faces the moment of truth

march-return
The Great March of Return.  (photo:  thegazapost.com)

Israel has ignored warnings by the United Nations that Gaza is about to become uninhabitable, acting as if Palestinians there can be caged, starved and abused indefinitely.

By Jonathan Cook | Americans for Middle East Understanding | Sept/Oct 2019

‘Without urgent, vigorous action, plagues and infections will break out that could cost a great many lives, both in Israel and in Gaza, and no fence or Iron Dome [Israel’s missile interception system] can thwart them.’
— Gideon Bromberg, the Israeli director of EcoPeace Middle East

The only way Israelis can be made to sit up and take note of the disaster unfolding next door in Gaza, it seems, is when they fear the fallout may spill out of the tiny coastal enclave and engulf them too. Environmental experts from two Israeli universities issued a report in June warning that the imminent collapse of Gaza’s water, sewage and electricity infrastructure would soon rebound on Israel.

Gideon Bromberg, the Israeli director of EcoPeace Middle East, which commissioned the report, told journalists: “Without urgent, vigorous action, plagues and infections will break out that could cost a great many lives, both in Israel and in Gaza, and no fence or Iron Dome [Israel’s missile interception system] can thwart them.” Israel’s liberal Haaretz newspaper paraphrased another of Bromberg’s comments: “If something isn’t done, the upshot could be political horror in the form of hundreds of thousands of Gazans fleeing for their lives toward Israel – for fear of catching disease.”

Continue reading “Uninhabitable: Gaza faces the moment of truth”

US ambassador says evacuating West Bank settlements ‘would be a recipe for disaster’

Ambassador David Friedman addresses the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations. February 19, 2018. (photo: Conference twitter feed.)

A bit of truth amidst a history of occupation.

By Yumna Patel |  Mondoweiss  | Oct 17, 2019

‘Having seen the experience of the evacuation of Gaza, I don’t believe that there is a realistic plan that can be implemented that will require anyone, Jew or Arab, to be forced to leave their home.’
— David Friedman, US Ambassador to Israel

The US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman told Israeli news website Arutz Sheva on Thursday that he believed the US Embassy move from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem “promoted peace” and that “uprooting” Jews or Arabs in the event of a US peace plan in the region would be “inhumane.”

In an extensive interview with the news site, which covered topics from the 1967 war to Iran, Friedman was asked about President Donald Trump’s elusive peace plan, and the future status of Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.

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