**Please click here for video from www.panet.co.il.
Thousands of people converged Thursday on the land of Safuria to mark the anniversary of the Nakba and to demonstrate for the right of return of the refugees. The crowd included mainly Palestinian citizens of Israel, and some Jewish citizens. Chants included "Long live Palestine," "Gaza is Palestinian and Golan is Syrian," and "We are all one people" invoking the West Bank, Gaza and Arab countries along with the people of the Galilee, and "The White House is the biggest terrorist." Some people released hundreds of black balloons into the sky to fly over the 60th Birthday of Israel celebrations and barbecues to remind them of those who were forced out 60 years ago.
Safuria was a town that was cleared of its residents and destroyed in 1948. It was larger than Nazareth at the time of its destruction. Many of the descendants of the former residents of Safuria now live in nearby Nazareth, while others fled to refugee camps in the West Bank and surrounding countries. The Jewish community that now lives on the land of Safuria is called Tsippuri. Each year for the last ten years, these Nakba commemoration demonstrations in the Galilee have been at the site of a different destroyed village.
When I left the demo, I saw riot police waiting across the street. However they seemed relaxed and simply there to make sure no confrontations took place with the Jewish people celebrating in the field on the other side. Then, the next morning, I saw this image of Member of Knesset Wasel Taha:
I learned that after a couple hours of the demonstration, the police moved in, some on horseback, and attacked people with tear gas and sound bombs, brilliantly setting the fields on fire. My coworker was there with her small girls still at the time the police and army came into the crowd. My older daughter was so afraid. She never wants to go again, though I told her no, the police are just trying to make us afraid. There were people with blood, and smoke and bombs and gas. We are not used to this and we didn't expect anything like it. There had been no problem- the police and the army came in and made the problem.
Six youth were arrested, and more were injured at the close of what was an otherwise peaceful demonstration attended by whole families with small children:
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Nakba Demonstration in Safuria Attacked
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KABOBegories: activism, Emily, images, israel, Nakba, palestine, Palestinian citizens of Israel, refugees
Wednesday, May 07, 2008
60 Years Later, Nakba Front Page News
Israel is today celebrating it's 60th anniversary. I was surprised and pleased to see this article on the front page of the International Herald Tribune yesterday: After 60 Years, Arabs in Israel Are Outsiders, complete with pictures and video.
Then I read the first paragraph. The author feels the needs to qualify from the start the Palestinian discontent inside of Israel:
As Israel toasts its 60th anniversary in the coming weeks, rejoicing in Jewish national rebirth and democratic values, the Arabs who make up 20 percent of its citizens will not be celebrating. Better off and better integrated than ever in their history, freer than a vast majority of other Arabs, Israel’s 1.3 million Arab citizens are still far less well off than Israeli Jews and feel increasingly unwanted.
Why? The first thing the author points out is to the effect of, 'You should thank your lucky stars that you're living here in a westernized civilized society, and not with those backwards barbarians we're surrounded by.' And does he really believe that they are freer than other Arabs? If he's talking about ability to get a visa to the US, ok. If he's talking about freedom from harassment by intelligence and police, freedom from state oppression, freedom from discrimination, the right to hold property without anyone taking it from you arbitrarily, or freedom of the press, he's got some research to do.
The article also curiously ignores the Bedouin, who have the worst living situation and rights abuses inside of Israel's self-chosen borders not including Jerusalem. The article ignores the situation of Jerusalem residents, who have lived under Israeli governance since 1967 yet who do not have Israeli citizenship and hence have a different, lesser set of rights. While I understand the purpose of focusing on Palestinian citizens of Israel, which does not include the Golan or Jerusalem, I find that simply mentioning their plight in the consideration of Israel's treatment of the native population within what it considers its borders demonstrates the nature of the colonial settlement and ethnic cleansing that has been ongoing for 60 years. It gives some context to the 'freedoms' the author cites, that these apparently civilized barbarians should be thankful that they've been enlightened with.
Despite my criticisms, however, the Nakba on the front page is a positive step.
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KABOBegories: Emily, human rights, israel, Nakba, palestine, Palestinian citizens of Israel
Tuesday, May 06, 2008
Electricity, Police and Oslo
Guess what! Fayyad's village has electricity 24 hours a day now! His family gave me a birthday party a year and a half ago in darkness. While the lack of electric lighting creates a romantic atmosphere for candle-blowing, and kerosene lamps may seem like a creative throwback, it gets old very quickly. Try washing dishes by kerosene lantern. Try studying. Try washing the clothes of your whole family by hand- it makes your fingers bleed. Using the bathroom in the pitch-blackness, I accidentally once discovered that my longjohns made light when you rub two parts together!! "Lack of electricity makes everyone a discoverer," said my host.
If you look out from the upper story windows, or go for a walk, you get a distinct and revealing view of the differential between the villages and the settlements, the West Bank and Israel. The settlement lights are ordered in rows, are bright yellow and light up the night, and have clear perimeters. The village lights, if they have lights, are dim, whiter, and scattered. The Apartheid Wall actually is visible in the darkness: there is bright light on one side from the bordering villages (also Palestinian Arab), and darkness on the other. You can actually see it follow a line.
Even when they had electricity for a few hours a day in the village, they paid several times more for it than I do to enjoy 24 hours of service inside Israel. Now, the solution that has brought back the convenience we take for granted, and the absorbing lure of the TV as well as the global gateway of internet, is an agreement with Israel to bring the Israeli lines to the village. In this arrangement, the electricity-controlling station, for lack of the correct word, is a little hut near the wall where the Israelis hold the key to one half of the hut, which is divided by a wall down the middle, and the Palestinians hold the key to the other half. Talk about a tiny analogy.
Apart from the romantically dim candle-blowing ceremony, on that visit I had the pleasure of witnessing Oslo-era maintenance of public order. One afternoon, it was announced from the mosque that something had happened in the next village over involving an argument between residents, and the accidental shooting of a woman. From the roof, we watched private car after private car carrying anyone who had anything to do with anything in the next village over there, in case there was anything they could do to help. Fifteen minutes after that, unmarked Palestinian police cars went by, on their way to do their duty. Then a full half hour AFTER that, and perhaps nearly an hour after everyone with any relation whatsoever had certainly made it to the scene of the event, the marked Palestinian police cars went by.
The police need to take permission from the Israelis before they can go to another village, traveling through Areas B and C (shared and Israeli control). Note that in this case, the police were going from Palestinian area to Palestinian area, through Palestinian areas. But they still needed to wait for radioed permission to move in their official capacity.
I can only imagine the scene when they actually got there. What do you do as a citizen in a situation like that? Wait for the police? They may never come and tensions may rise out of any control before that. So you can see that, in the absence of an effective police response outside of the major cities, justice has resorted to traditional ways of resolving conflicts like this- meaning exile of the perpetrator until the family of the victim agrees to blood money or retribution. This isn't something people should have to do! These aren't people in a midieval village we're talking about, this is 2008 in a place surrounded by people living in modernity (or post-modernity perhaps, except that it has many aspects of colonialism still- whats correct oh humanities gradschoolers?). They're just cut off by the Wall and in addition, and purposefully, from all of the aspects of life that the rest of the world takes for granted.
There seems to be a trend going on. 470 additional police were recently deployed in Jenin, approved first by Israel of course. A similar gaining of control over Nablus by police is ongoing from last year. You can see the police out in force in Ramallah regularly, usually stopping cars and checking the registration, searching for ones reported stolen from Israelis.
And yet, in the villages in all the areas surrounding the major cities, the Israeli army polices. In the village of Azzoun near Qalqilya, the army surrounded a high school after a few attendees were accused of stonethrowing. (Can you imagine? Try for just a second to imagine yourself sitting in ninth grade English, while a foreign ARMY surrounds the perimeter of your school. Imagine being a parent of those kids.)
What is the point of having a police force, if they aren't allowed to police? The Israeli army maintains all control over the West Bank, except for that little bit of Jenin, the little bit of Nablus that you can only enter from two places that the Israelis control anyway, that little bit of Ramallah... And then they seem to be used mainly as traffic directors, finders of stolen vehicles, and Abbas henchmen/arresters of Hamsawis. (also crushers of general public demonstrations) The Israeli army enters these towns and tears them up with their tanks regularly. With the Palestinian police deployments, the Israeli army seems able to simply save themselves the cost of regular day-to-day policing.
Unfortunately I am unable to find an uploaded version of the story I saw on Al Jazeera about the policemen in Gaza making themselves useful to the citizenry, using their cars to transport people around, as they're the only ones with any fuel. However I did find this:
And here's another consequence of blockade and no fuel: burning chicks...
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KABOBegories: Al-Jazeera, apartheid, Emily, Gaza, israel, palestine, video
Monday, May 05, 2008
Myanmar
10,000 people are dead today in Myanmar. 24 million people are living in disaster zones.
In addition to hundreds of thousands of people being made homeless, the security forces killed 36 people rioting when the roof blew off a prison.
Watch the BBC video images of the storm here.
If you're like me and had to look up Myanmar to find out that it is also called Burma, and that it is where Ang San Suu Kyi is from and lives under house arrest, now's your chance to learn about it. Kind of like learning about the Ninth Ward.
The Burmese government has refused emergency disaster aid from the US (which is stupid-- people are dying. kind of like how new york refusing money from the gulf was stupid.) I'm curious as to the reason they give for the refusal, and whether it's related more to the US's sanctions on Burma and interference in Burmese affairs, or whether it's because of the havoc we tend to cause in the world. I'm inclined to think it is most likely due to the previously existing strained relationship.
Eventually I hope that we are able to help, and I wish we actually had money to help with and that it wasn't all dumped into destroying Iraq. Check out this site: how fast can you spend 3 trillion dollars, which is the amount spent on the Iraq War. It takes a long time! 3 trillion dollars would be health care for us and disaster aid for New Orleans AND Burma, and much more.
**For more on Burma, see Quiqui's post and pictures!
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KABOBegories: Emily, human rights, military, war on terror
Thursday, May 01, 2008
Photojournal: the Galilee
The hummos not yet appropriated by the white man.
Good Friday in Shefa Amr.
Plaque in Haifa's German Colony: "In the middle of a sparsely populated and largely barren land..."
Jabal Al-Sheikh on a clear day from Haifa. This peak is visible from Lebanon, Syria, and the Galilee. It is impossible for anyone actually from these countries, to see it from all three.
"Martyrs of Racism" poster showing the faces of Palestinian citizens of Israel killed in October 2000 and the Shefa Amr Massacre, among other events.
Road sign for Jenin. The sign was good a few years ago but is now obsolete. All roads lead to the Wall.
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KABOBegories: Emily, israel, October 2000, palestine, Palestinian Christians, Palestinian citizens of Israel, photography, travelogue
LIVNI LA VIDA LOCA: Spitfire-side Chat
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, seen here raising a finger during her April visit to Qatar, may have used her visit to stick up for Shimon Peres' hurt feelings. (What kind of a weird flicking-off that is, and more significantly why the AFP posted this as their main closeup of Livni is beyond me.)
There are other possibilities though. Livni may also have been aiming the sentiment at Hamas, which is "controlling Gaza by weapons, training and money," apparently from Iran. (Of course not because they won the last election fair and square-- democracy anyone?) Or she was giving it to all the Gulf people who would rather excuse themselves to go barf than see formal ties, or worse, sit in a room with Israeli government officials.
The following is an internal discussion on the significance of the Qatari and Omani reception of Livni. As Chaim protested, "Why do you D-bags host these conversations on this listserv, take it to the blog!"MHMD: Hey what do you guys make of this? Well, there really isn't much to make of it, I'm not surprised-but is there anything left to say about the Qataris and Omanis meeting so openly with Livni?
Emily: I had an argument with a friend recently. He's from Bahrain and was thinking of coming to Jordan, and I suggested that we meet there. I also said oh maybe I'll bring my friend along from Shefa Amr! She's never been to Jordan!
At which point he seriously took the conversation off the record and was like "wait... she's... israeli?" He didn't want to hang out with her in Jordan (a Muslim Arab Palestinian citizen of Israel) because of her Israeli passport. He was like, there's a boycott. I have to stick to my principles.
I think I spent a half an hour typing like a madwoman about all of the violations against Palestinians in Israel even though they are "Israeli." And furthermore pulled up the call for boycott and sanctions and sent him the actual text of it- 'institutional boycott' etc etc.
Anyway I'd like to post about this and the context of Livni's visit. I thought Qatar was like the rest of the Gulf states in that people with Israeli passports can't travel there? Or is it the one exception or something?
MHMD: Well, Qatar's always been the most openly friendly Gulf state with Israel-if I recall correctly they were the first to allow an Israeli Trade Office to open there. As far as I know, the ban on Israeli passport holders in the gulf is one bigass myth-Israelis travel freely to the UAE and Qatar, and I'm sure they do to Bahrain and Oman too. The Omani FM said one of the purposes of his meeting with Livni was to discuss the reopening of the Israeli Trade Office in Muscat.
Furthermore, I recently saw a news report on MBC quoting several Israeli and US studies that reveal there are up to 220 Israeli companies active in Iraq now. The Arab boycott is just one big joke.
Chaim: Why do you D-bags host these conversations on this listserv, take it to the blog! And use my title: LIVNI LAVIDA LOCA... I just wanna see it in print cause I'm so proud of it :) Or do a round-table burn... KABOBfest hasn't done one of those in a great long while.
Emily: Maybe it can be on what constitutes a violation of the boycott: Qatar and the gulf countries giving Israeli businessmen free reign when there's a boycott going on, or me working for a Palestinian org that is actually an Israeli org inside of Israel, or just talking to Palestinian citizens of Israel (as many regular gulfi people seem to think- I have more examples)
Is my working in Israel a violation of the boycott of Israel for all people of conscience?
Does the boycott include the exclusion of Palestinian people with Israeli passports otherwise known as Arab ISRAELIS?
I'm pretty sure we all agree that Qatar talking to Livni is hypocrisy... or do we?
MHMD: Livni accuses MP Tibi of trying to sabotage two-state solution That should be useful too.
Nimr: I strongly disagree, actually. I hate it when US pundits blast Obama for saying he would meet with the leaders of Iran, Hammas, Venezuela, N. Korea or whoever (well, I actually think there should be "high level" conversations first. Meeting the pres. should be the carrot for substantive talks). I feel I would be the hypocrite to criticize Qatar for talking with Livni.
I see no harm with welcoming and meeting with Livni. It's not like they are going to let Israel bury nuclear waste there (see: Mauritania). For the record, I think the academic boycott is dumb and counterproductive too. Heck, I think the travel restrictions in general are silly as well. If any Americans are going to boycott Israel, you better be ready to get your ass boycotted 300x over by the rest of the world too.
Also, let's be clear. As Mohammed pointed out, the rules about travel prohibitions are not universally followed. UAE "unofficially" lets all kinds of people who visit Israel and/or are Israeli citizens come there for business (lots of diamond, tech and finance). That might be open for criticism. Alternately, Yemen allows their own Jewish citizens to visit Israel for family and/or religious reasons, they just do it super on the DL. I applaud that. Syria might not have suffered the loss of its Jewish population if they could have come and gone as they pleased.
Lastly, to put the visit in context, Qatar is very much trying to position themselves as players on the international stage. This kinda thing is probably more about them posturing as players than caring so much about Israel, Palestine or the peace process.
The boycotts and restrictions ultimately do much more to hurt "us", financially, culturally, symbolically and politically than them.
My 2 cents
Emily: So are you against boycott, academic institutional etc? What about monetary divestment campaigns? I really don't think any boycott, academic or institutional, would cause much actual harm to the boycotting organization itself unless it depends on funds from Zionist orgs or people.
That's a really good point about Syria and Yemen. It's stupid to not let people travel. It's just dumb.
I think that boycott is in fact a decent tool to get Israeli organizations and institutions to take notice of what is happening. I'm here and I don't see people really having to notice much in their everyday lives. Life goes on as usual while 10 minutes away people are under occupation. I think that for many educated people who want to be part of the global community (Tel Aviv University, for example), if they got responses when they tried to make a conference saying people won't participate because of the occupation, it would make them have to notice. I've heard Pappe stand on a podium, spread his arms, and say "please! boycott me!"
But the way it happens, it is carried out all wrong. people are not allowed to travel. That is stupid. Businessmen instead make a ton of valuable connections over everyone else's heads, and don't feel a thing even though there's a 'boycott'.
Fadi: I think isolation will work. I think boycott, whether academic, cultural, or economic, advances such isolation. Whether doing away with a certain type of boycott (such as academic) will harm the mission of isolating Israel, I don't know. Maybe the academic boycott is not necessary. Maybe it is. I think the reward (saving Palestinian - and Israeli - lives) is worth the risk. I think isolation will work. I understand the arguments against its practicality, or that it harms civilian infrastructure. I'm fairly certain that refusing to publish papers by Israeli academics, or cutting off grants or joint research (much of it on military and arms research) is not going to starve Israelis to death. I think isolation will work, this has been empirically established (for example, South
Africa). Those willing to argue against boycott of Israel, I think, must also argue against the boycott of Apartheid South Africa. If you're not willing to do that, then there's a double standard being applied.
Nimr: I would be interested to see any empirical data on isolation working as a strategy. Most of the data I have seen shows, 1) isolating other countries rarely works and 2) the connection between isolating S. Africa and the end of apartheid is anecdotal, and most probably part of a matrix of many other factors (which may or may not exist in Palestine).
Andrew Mack and Asif Khan have analyzed UN sanctions and their conclusion is that results have been mixed at best. They point out that sanctions work well as a tool of policy, but not as a policy. Look at the disaster of isolating Iraq under sanctions, Cuba, Hammas, Burma, Iran etc. Attempts to isolate them failed, and tended to strengthen the targeted elements, not weaken them. Also, it is almost impossible to isolate any country, this didn't even work with S. Africa (otherwise DeBeers would not be facing anti-trust issues in the USA). Israel and others kept strong relations with apartheid S. Africa.
This is further complicated by the particular governmental structure of Israel where small fanatical parties have disproportionate influence (domestically and in the USA). Attempts to isolate Israel will only strengthen their power and influence, as it will prove their narrative. (which would lead to more death and land appropriation)
I think the more apt analogy for Israel is the United States, not S. Africa. Like I said if we expect people to start boycotting Israel, culturally, politically, economically and/or academically, we must be prepared to suffer the same treatment in spades. As an American, I feel that the actions of my gov't do not represent my values. In spite of that lots of people die directly and indirectly from my gov't's actions. The same could be said of countless Israelis.
It gets complicated really quickly too. The US allowed black S. Africans to come to the US to attend college for instance. Should we not allow Arab-Palestinians? If we do, should we not allow progressive Israelis? If we do....
I think the divestment campaign makes sense, but only so long as this is on an org by org, individual by individual basis and not gov't policy. I am all for not collaborating with Israel on any research that has military focus and/or biased scholarship (i.e. propaganda), but a sweeping boycott is counterproductive. Some of the best most critical scholarship of Israeli policy comes from Israel.
Specific targeted sanctions (high tech, weapons, etc) are vital parts of foreign policy, but isolating countries/groups seems to have a fairly dismal track record.
Will: I saw this research a long time ago... I think they also argued that if it does not work at the stage of threats, it won't work. Also, democracies are much more responsive to the threats of isolation, theoretically. Hard empirical analysis would be hard to do because the sample size is probably pretty damn small.
We can assume sanctions against Israel would work if the whole world stood behind them. So we should ask, how realistic is this, on what basis, and would do the prospects of good relations with the Arab world mean?
I would not say Qatar is hypocritical, since they have not exactly been touting anything but a soft position, anyways. I do not think the Arab boycott has truly existed since Egypt got off board in the late 1970s. So asking if it is legitimate is hypothetical. If it existed, it would be, though.
In principle, I am against normalizing Israel until it has clearly defined borders, a clear demarcation of its polity, and lives up to its obligations under international law -- in the context of a just and viable solution with the Palestinians. Until then, recognizing Israel without its recognition of the Palestinians is one-sided and
legitimizing criminality.
I do not see how accomodationism could bring about peace. Eretz Yisrael is a non-negotiable ideological strain, first, and the settlements are internalized in the Israeli public's worldview. Accommodation means accepting these fundamentals, which strike at the heart of Palestinian rights.
Emily: What about the fact that Palestinian civil society has called for boycott/divestment/sanctions? I for one think that we should be listening to what they are saying, and doing our best to implement where we can, for the mere fact that they are the ones calling for it. This probably does not translate to the govenrnmental level, at least not at this juncture. However there are many areas where resolutions can be passed and where choices not to participate/invite/invest can be made and publicized.
That said, I am working in Israel. Does this violate what I'm saying above?
Fadi: That's right, I think sanctioning dictatorships (eg. Iraq, Cuba) or populations that were never in a position of prosperity to revert to (HAMAS) is clearly different from boycotting governments that are accountable to a people that are benefactors of a system that oppresses others. The Apartheid regime in South Africa, like that in Israel, does have a population that it is accountable to. I'm not sure why you would bring up Iraq or Cuba, I think we can agree that their dictators don't care about their constituents and are not accountable to their constituents - so there's a good chance isolation will not work there. Despite your opposition to boycotting Apartheid South Africa, you can't dismiss the isolation of South Africa that led whites there to realize that "ok, we can no longer benefit from Apartheid, let's choose a new path." If we can agree on isolating Israel as a means to liberate Palestinians, then we can discuss the
details (such as travel restrictions on Palestinian citizens of Israel).
But i do think that Qatar and other Arab states are hypocritical. If there are no official policies on boycott in a certain Arab state, I do think these dictators do frequently evoke the Palestinian cause, and express support for Palestinians, to their people. They do not support the Palestinian people, they exploit the Palestinian people. The regimes care about filling their pockets and insulating themselves (e.g.., by strengthening themselves politically in the global arena);
engaging in economic deals with Israel is not something done out of necessity - or at least a morally pure necessity (maybe they think they need to do it in order to retain their authoritarian rule). I would not see them as hypocrites if they normalized relations with Israel while not pretending to be strong supporters of the Palestinian struggle.
Maybe some disagree, but I wouldn't be surprised if the U.S. policy of sanctioning HAMAS and punishing the civilian population will lead to some shift in the next election, if there ever is one. That is, I wouldn't be surprised if that policy works. It's a disgusting policy, and it's a much different situation, and certainly isolating Israel will not lead to a humanitarian crisis such as that which exists in Gaza (and existed in Gaza before Hamas, before Fatah, before the PLO) or that which existed under Iraq's dictatorship during the sanctions.
CLICK HERE FOR:
Palestinian Campaign for the Academic & Cultural Boycott of Israel
Palestine BDS Campaign
Divestment Support Committee
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KABOBegories: apartheid, Chaim, divestment, Emily, Fadi, HAMAS, israel, Mohammad, Nimr, palestine, Palestinian citizens of Israel, south africa, syria, The Spitfire-side Chats, uae, Will
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Palestinian deaths, the Sean Bell verdict, and Desentization-The Spitfire-side Chats
As one Kabob-er noted, sometimes our internal conversations on the listserv are more interesting than our actual posts. The following is a conversation between Kabob-ers regarding the "Wiping out a family is how Israel says 'no'" post written by Mohammad:
Excen-Tarik: I started to write (about the story) and I was too tired to be as angry as I wanted to be.
Emily: The really sad thing that I thought when I first saw this email is that it becomes difficult to muster enough energy to be sufficiently sad and angry over tragedies like this. It becomes just one more.
Makes it even more important to blog about it I suppose.
Excen-Tarik: It really does. I was gonna write within the context of the Israeli army spokeswoman Avital Lieberman's callous denial of having anything to do with it... something along the lines of "sorry, but you have to realize that they died because of the terrorists, not because the tank shell hit them..." you know? hella ironic and cynical as fuck...
Mohammad: I think you should still go through with that. The other Israeli explanation i heard was that they targeted two militants, and that their missile set off the explosives carried by the militants; and it was those explosives that killed the family. Then of course you realize the only other person killed near the home was a 17 year old schoolboy, so the Israeli army says 'he might have been a militant.'
Excen-Tarik: I know right? Thats what I was talking about: the fact that they said it was "bags" full of explosives that killed them. Does it really make a difference when a TANK SHELL is fired at them? I mean, c'mon... bags of explosives and according to al-jazeera international 4 tank shells were fired- one of which landed 10 meters from the house they were in. The "militants" were reportedly over 100 meters away from the house- and NO ONE has witnessed these "bags" or anything like that- only the shells being fired on 2 younger palestinians. AND there was shrapnel from the shells all over the fucking kitchen they were eating in. You can't fit a qassam in a "bag" man- you know? Fuck.... im so pissed about it. For real.
I'm sure we're all hurting right now- sorry about my emotional shit...
Mohammad: What pisses me off the most (and its sad to say this because i've become almost desensitized to the idea of Palestinian families being wiped out) is how Israel can get away with shit like this with the weakest explanations. I mean, their excuses don't hold any water at all, and yet people take their word as fact when the most basic armchair investigation disproves everything they say. Why is it more believable to so many that Palestinians are responsible for their own deaths, even in the midst of israeli attacks?
Excen-Tarik: seriously, habibi. well said. its such a fucking shame.
Maytha: It kinda parallels how an unarmed black man can be shot 50 times by three cops (including one who reloaded his gun) the night before his wedding, and the cops who weren't forced to face a jury (only a judge), could be acquitted on ALL counts-blemish-free! And there is NO outrage on TV, in newspapers, on the radio, and some have sheik even had the never to say, "well we have to have compassion for the cops, and realize the kinda of stress they might be facing that contributed to this." The world has become so desensitized to the brutal and senseless slaughter of black people as it has to Palestinian families murdered in cold blood (and used pathetic excuses to cover it up).
I think we need to start making these kind of connections, like that of Sean Bell, to take the consciousness about and active support for Palestine a reality outside our circles. Because, when we post stories like these, who really becomes shocked? It's people already aware of the immoral conduct of the Zionist state and its mis-writting of history who read the stories that we post on Palestine.
QuiQui: Hear hear.
Mohammad: I completely agree with Maytha. I think this is an aspect of Zionut assholism that has been neglected by activists for decades-facing their untruths head on and disproving them. They've managed to discredit us-its sad we've let them become the trusted source for anything to do with Palestine.
And connecting it to stuff like Sean Bell's murder is important-back in my younger days, in the 60's and 70's, I remember how popular the Palestinian cause was because it was linked to social justice and independence movements worldwide.
QuiQui: Maybe it's just because I'm from L.A., but I swear I thought NYC would riot after I heard about the aquittal. But nothing. There's not enough outrage. Neither civil disobedience nor uncivil disobedience. Isn't the always looming threat of outrage precisely what is supposed to keep democracy in check? Hmmm.
"We might fight with each other
but I promise you this
we will burn this shit down -- get us pissed"
-- Tupac Shakur, To Live & Die in LA
Mohammad: Can't remember where I read about that-that they managed to avoid the rioting because the 'police had made inroads into the community' or some
bullshit like that.
Fadi: I think they might just support police killing black men out there... I think NYC might just be whack, i had an mp3 of Bruce Springstein singing his song "American Skin (41 shots)" about Amidou Diallo in NYC and you can hear the crowd is booing him for some odd reason, and then I remember reading how the head of the NYC chapter of the Fraternal Order of Police called Springstein a "Faggot" because he wrote this song that has such contentious (sarcasm) lyrics as "is it a gun, is it a knife, is it a wallet, this is your life, it ain't no secret, you can get killed just for livin in ur american skin" or something like that. What's up New York!
QuiQui: I wouldn't be surprised if it's those effing community organizations that, under the guises of cultural centers, are de facto front groups for the government. They're kept operating through funding from the State and municipal governments and exist to monitor and collect data on the marginalized communities they pretend to serve. As history has shown, you always gotta have a ripe set of collaborators to help do the bidding of the oppressor.
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KABOBegories: Emily, Excen-Tarik, Fadi, Maytha, Mohammad, palestine, QuiQui, racism, The Spitfire-side Chats
Monday, April 28, 2008
Clergy Brawl Reveals Architectural Flaw
The Orthodox Easter ends today after a week of tense negotiations between Armenian and Greek Orthodox. The fights which broke out on Palm Sunday a week and a day ago included pushing priests to the ground, kicking them, and beating one another with palm fronds.
I would just like to point out that this all could be avoided were the architecture inside of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre rearranged to coincide with the structural changes taking over the rest of the Holy Land. The Holy Sepulchre is currently in the shape of a large underground circle- to get from one place to the other, you have to walk through all areas in between. It could simply be rearranged (destroying all natural contiguity of the cave structure, but what the hell- the Apartheid Wall and settlement roads already destroys all natural contiguity of the land above ground.) Might I suggest that the natural cave be divided by a series of floor-to-ceiling concrete walls, and that separate entrances be constructed where the guards question your knowledge of either Armenian, Greek, Latin, Episcopalian, Unitarian, Methodist, Maronite, or other group tradition. You must pass this test, which also determines your identity, to gain entry to your respective position (Unitarian will have an excess of the rejects from other sections). Entrants will enter and leave without ever seeing each other. Separation is clearly the only way to solve this.
Tarboush Tip: Fayyad
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KABOBegories: apartheid, Emily, israel, jerusalem, palestine, Palestinian Christians
Saturday, April 19, 2008
HKJ Needs Better Publicity Staff

The above is a recreation of the framed image at the Sheikh Hussein/Jordan River Valley Crossing. Jordan has a silly rule that you are not allowed to take pictures of any police anything, even their little huts. So you'll have to do with my approximation.
It was a faded image of police in RIOT GEAR charging towards the viewer, with the words "JUSTICE FOR ALL: Constitution of the National Police."
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KABOBegories: Emily, images, Jordan, travelogue
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Gaza 3la Baly

Children, and 23-year-old Reuters cameraman Fadel Shana among the dead. The photo is graphic for BBC, no? And yet from the above photo it still isn't clear that those kids in the street are dying, next to the burning press car.
Go look at the Al-Jazeera images for more context of the scene. Click on the small icon at top left for Al-Jazeera photo gallery


Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Why Inviting Someone to a Conference is An Assy Thing to Do... In Palestine
**TO SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT:
1) My original picture was the girl and donkey.
2) That chicken poop picture is disgusting.
3) I put the donkey in the air image after finding said chicken poop picture this morning.
4) Retribution will be swift and merciless.
In the midst of our recent exciting conversation about an upcoming conference in Michigan, and all the cool things Kabobers can submit on the pretext of being academics and activists (but really just aiming to have a big party), our resident MHMD interjected, "What a bunch of nerds."
(Note: It must be stated that this was in fact a considerably insightful observation.)
I nearly responded by inviting MHMD, who is in Ramallah and who clearly cannot just up and arrive in Michigan, to submit his recent paper and then use the acceptance to get a visa to come with us.
I nearly made myself into a huge ass.
HAD I invited MHMD to the conference, he would then have had to explain that well actually, in order to get a visa he'd have to go to Jerusalem or to Amman. Going to Jerusalem is practically impossible; he'd have to get a permit that would take forever to get and probably not be issued anyway. Plus there's the fact that his ID is Gazawi, which means that instead of giving him a permit or even just denying him the permit, they could deport him to Gaza and completely destroy his school, life, etc etc. Alternatively, if he goes to Amman, upon reentry at the border, he'd be herded onto the van for people with Gaza id and sent straight to Gaza, no questions and no exceptions.
I'm glad I didn't make myself into an ass by inviting him to the conference. Only under the strange and inhumane nature of an apartheid regime can such a thing as inviting someone to a conference become an assinine thing to do.
**MHMD corrected me that he does indeed have another passport. What this means is that he can in fact travel overseas quite easily. However, Israel deems its own IDs to have precedence over any other passport anyone might carry- US, Canadian, British, anything. If they can find your Palestinian ID number, you fall under Palestinian travel restrictions. What THIS means, is that were MHMD to leave, he almost certainly could never come back. He would in fact be herded onto the van and sent to Gaza, or not allowed back in at all.
And if he were any number of other people, the above would apply, and there'd be no traveling for you, Joe.
So I need to stop accidentally inviting folks to conferences until Palestine is free, already!
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KABOBegories: academic freedom, apartheid, borders, Emily, israel, palestine
Please Plagiarize This Letter. Seriously.
(no really, it's better than the last one.) use whatever you want, just please write or fax something to:
Honorable Judge Gerald Lee
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
401 Courthouse Square, Alexandria, VA 22314
Fax: (703) 299-3339
RE: The Unjust Imprisonment of Dr. Sami Al-Arian
Your Honor,
I am writing to request that you restore some degree of integrity to the justice system of our country by releasing Dr. Sami Al-Arian in this month of April 2008. The plea agreement that was agreed to by both Dr. Al-Arian and the US Government in April of 2006 stipulated his release and expedited deportation on 11 April 2008. As you can see, this date has passed.
Dr. Al-Arian's case has made me lose a great deal of faith in the justice system of our country. It used to be the one branch of government that I was taught to believe was governed by principles. It turns out that this same justice system is willing to keep a man in prison for two and a half years after a jury of his peers failed to convict him of a single charge. It also kept him in prison, most of that time in cruel solitary confinement in a maximum security facility, before he was ever brought to trial. He was the lone pretrial detainee in that facility.
This is not the justice system that I grew up respecting. This is nothing more than a racially motivated abuse of justice for political ends.
Prosecutors in the Eastern District of Virginia have abused the grand jury process to keep Dr. Al-Arian detained more than a year beyond his original sentence. They continue to threaten further action with this latest court order seeking his testimony. This must not be permitted.
The plea agreement removed all standard language that would allow the government to pursue cooperation. Florida prosecutors have admitted, on the record, Dr. Al-Arian explicitly requested non-cooperation, and that they agreed to his request.
Dr. Al-Arian has been on a hunger strike since the 3rd of March. For the first 18 days, he abstained from both food and water. Since then, he has only taken water. He has lost 35 pounds and his life is in danger. His release is therefore requested not only on legal grounds, but humanitarian grounds as well.
The case of Dr. Sami Al-Arian has drawn international attention, and has dealt a severe blow to the United States of America’s domestic human rights record. Dr. Al-Arian is the most prominent political prisoner in the United States, and the only one currently on hunger strike. His release may restore some level of respect for our institutions in the world view, as well as at home. Only with the expedited release of Dr. Al-Arian can some measure of integrity be restored to our justice system.
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KABOBegories: activism, american politics, Emily, human rights, politics, sami al-arian, war of terror, war on terror
Monday, April 14, 2008
Puppy-Killing US Soldier=Your Neighbor
It puzzles me why the soldier-throwing-puppy-off-cliff video has drawn far more outrage across the internet than any single video of US soldiers in Iraq committing indiscriminate murder. Perhaps this video, of American troops essentially behaving like assholes, (or children someone made the very poor choice to hand guns and who are drunk on power, or frat boys who would be much better served by being given scissors to run around with) can put the puppy video into a tiny bit of perspective.
At least in part, the sentiment that causes us by and large to focus on the puppy-over-the-cliff, as opposed to indiscriminate disregard for human dignity, property and life, may be due to the fact that many of us know people who have gone to Iraq. Take the town of Killeen, Texas for instance. Stars line the walls of the high school for the hundreds of parents who are in Iraq, they've had to dig an entire new cemetary, and 200 widows have been created by the war since 2003.
We know these people, they're our neighbors. How can we reconcile these images with our own communities, and as such, our own identities? Is it really possible that the victimizers are in fact also victims?
I've written before that I have little faith in human nature, and that each and every one of us is capable of the worst nightmarishly horrible violations, if only given the power, and the ability to think of others as subhuman.
The towns, though, that continue burying their young people who come home in boxes, understandably prefer to believe that their sacrifice is for something worthwhile, something that in the national imagination is inarguably above our value as individuals:Everyone believed that US troops should remain in Iraq to protect America from terrorists, to honour the dead, such as Gary, and to complete the job... even one whose definition was becoming less certain.
"You want to know why small-town America is losing so many of its people in Iraq?" he asked, his voice quivering. "It's because small-town America still believes in this country, still believes in fighting for the freedom to worship whichever God you believe in. Our young men and women - like Gary - have been sacrificing their lives for this for 200 years. This is America."
If we are to remove the ideology from the equation, and gain a practical understanding of what is happening and what our government is sending people to die for, we must, in fact we NEED, to be listening very carefully to these people.
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KABOBegories: american politics, Emily, politics, video, war crimes, war of terror, war on terror
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Dr. Al-Arian Transfered to Custody of Immigration Authorities on Friday
Dr. Al-Arian's hunger strike continues; he has lost 34 pounds. Please contact the Attorney General:
Attorney General Michael Mukasey
Department of Justice
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
Fax Number: (202) 307-6777
AskDOJ@usdoj.gov
To the Attorney General:
I am writing to request that you restore some degree of integrity to the justice system of our country by releasing Dr. Sami Al-Arian on 11 April 2008, as agreed to by both Dr. Al-Arian and the US Government in April of 2006.
Dr. Al-Arian's case has made me lose a great deal of faith in the justice system of our country. It used to be the one branch of government that I was taught to believe was governed by principles. It turns out that this same justice system is willing to keep a man in prison for two and a half years after a jury of his peers failed to convict him of a single charge.
This is not the justice system that I grew up respecting.
I demand that:
1. Dr. Al-Arian was promised release and expedited deportation in 2006. This must be honored immediately.
2. The Department of Justice must cease abusing it's power through continual grand jury subpoenas and new criminal charges.
3. Given Dr. Al-Arian's hunger strike, there are serious concerns about his health. He must be released and allowed to return to his family for humanitarian reasons.
4. Dr. Al-Arian's imprisonment, and the US Government's abuses of power, have come to the attention of the entire world. His release may restore some level of respect for our institutions in the world view, as well as at home.
PLEASE ALSO CONTACT
1. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Immigration Field Office
Vincent Archibeque
Acting Field Office Director
2675 Prosperity Avenue
Fairfax, VA. 22031
Phone: 703-285-6200
2. Honorable Judge Gerald Lee
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
401 Courthouse Square, Alexandria, VA 22314
Fax: (703) 299-3339
UPDATE:
Tampa Bay Coalition for Justice and Peace
April 12, 2008
Dr. Al-Arian Placed in Punitive Detention
VIRGINIA-- At 1 a.m. on Saturday, Dr. Sami Al-Arian was moved by hostile prison guards from a regular holding cell at the Howard County Detention Center in Jessup, Maryland, to the "Special Housing Unit." The SHU is an extremely punitive and restrictive section of the prison where inmates are placed in solitary confinement 23 hours a day, usually in freezing temperatures.
Prisoners are normally moved there for violating prison rules. However, in the case of Dr. Al-Arian, he has always been placed there without reason or any explanation. In the SHU, prisoners are subjected to continuous, deafening alarm sounds and have little contact with the outside world. With no medical supervision, this is an extremely dangerous place for Dr. Al-Arian to be during his hunger strike, which is on its 41st day. Dr. Al-Arian was also held in solitary confinement for 37 months before and during his trial. This was a deliberate attempt by the government to break him down physically and psychologically and to prevent him from preparing for his trial.
Amnesty International has written several letters decrying the prison conditions of Dr. Al-Arian, calling his treatment "gratuitously punitive" and "inconsistent with international standards for humane treatment."
The Tampa Bay Coalition for Justice and Peace urges all conscientious individuals and organizations to contact the Howard County Detention Center and call for humane treatment of Dr. Al-Arian. We also call on media outlets to cover these abuses, which so far have received no attention.
TAKE ACTION
Call the Howard County Detention Center and ask that Dr. Al-Arian be removed from the Special Housing Unit, where he does not belong, and that the prison ensures he is given proper medical treatment during his hunger strike. The number is (410) 313-5200.
see the Free Sami Al-Arian website for more information.
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KABOBegories: activism, civil rights, Emily, human rights, war of terror, war on terror
