Silent Candlelight Vigil in Support of the People of Gaza ~ Wednesday, January 7th, 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM ~ At Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles ~ Sponsored by AFSC & LA Jews for Peace

Please Join

American Friends Service Committee & LA Jews for Peace

In a

Silent Candlelight Vigil

In Support of the People of Gaza

 

Wednesday, January 7th  

5:00 PM to 7:00 PM

At

Israeli Consulate  

6380 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles

Between Fairfax and La Cienega

 

READ SIGNS BEFORE YOU PARK – Side streets have restricted parking.    
Signs should emphasize the humanitarian crisis and calls for a cease-fire and ending siege.

Palestinian civilians are continuing to suffer as the Israeli military attacks Gaza from the air, sea and sky.  More than 500 Palestinians have been killed in the last 10 days and thousands have been injured, a great number of them children.  Al-Jazeera reported that a family of seven from the Shati refugee camp were killed today, along with three siblings from another family. Emergency medical services have also come under attack, with Al-Awda hospital in Jabaliya being hit by two Israeli shells.

 

Sponsored by American Friends Service Committee: www.mepeacela.org

 Co-sponsored by LA Jews for Peace: www.lajewsforpeace.org

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Below is AFSC Open Letter to President Bush and President-Elect Obama

 

Dear President Bush and President-Elect Obama,

 

As an organization with 60 years of experience working in the Gaza Strip and committed to a peaceful future between Palestinians and Israelis, we are saddened and distressed at the spiraling violence in Gaza over the past five days. As a Quaker organization that cares deeply about the life, dignity, and security of all people, we ask you to take immediate action to end this spiral of violence.

 

We urge you to take all steps necessary to end the Israeli attacks against Gaza, which have as of this writing taken more than 500 lives, injured thousands, and destroyed many homes and properties. The military strike is in addition to a two year-old siege imposed by the Israeli government, and supported by the U.S. government, that has severely restricted the importation of food, medicine, fuel and other essential goods necessary to maintain the well-being of more than 1.4 million people in the Gaza Strip.

The disproportionate Israeli siege and military assault continue a policy of collective punishment. The time has long-passed to end this policy.

 

At the same time, we recognize that Hamas’s decision to launch rocket attacks into Israel has threatened the safety of Israeli civilians and incurred tragic consequences for the people of Gaza. So the cycle of violence deepens. Even today, Hamas threatens to increase the number of rockets fired into Israel in retaliation for the Israeli siege and air strikes. Israel justifies the siege and the attacks because of the rocket attacks. It’s an untenable situation that need not continue.

 

Violence must be replaced with negotiations. Both the air strikes and the embargo should end immediately. Israel should engage in diplomacy with the Palestinians, including Hamas as elected leaders of the Palestinian legislature. And every effort should be made through the good offices of the Arab states to urge Hamas to re-establish the cease fire and put forth a good-faith effort to end the current violence.

 

Given its tremendous regional influence, the United States can move the parties toward a peaceful resolution. The U.S. supports Israel militarily, financially, and politically.  You have the power to end weapon sales to Israel ; weapons that are often used against civilians. We urge that you also stop supporting the embargo on Gaza. The U.S. government has supported an Israeli militarist strategy that has not, and will not, lead to a lasting peace. Only a solution based in fairness, respect, and security for both Palestinians and Israelis will offer the peace that all so desperately seek and deserve. Only creative dialogue and negotiation, not military force, can lay the path to that solution. We urge you to use your power and influence well so that U.S. policy can move further along the path to peace.  We hope that this New Year is a more peaceful one, in the Middle East, the U.S. , and throughout the world.

 

Sincerely,

Mary Ellen McNish

General Secretary,

American Friends Service Committee

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Join LA Jews for Peace

In a Demonstration to Protest

Israel’s Attacks & Continued Siege of Gaza

Sunday, January 11th - 12:00 PM to 2:30 PM

The Federal Building in Westwood

11000 Wilshire Blvd.

Corner of Wilshire & Veteran

www.lajewsforpeace.org

 

LA Jews will have signs and banners; bring your own; but no flags please

since our message is internationalism and humanism, not nationalism.

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This is a link to a Gush Shalom description of an Anti-war demonstration in Tel Aviv Saturday evening attended by 10,000 Israelis.  
    
http://zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/events/1231029668

 

ACTION ALERT

Go to the Americans for Peace Now website to send a letter to your Senators and Representative demanding that they urge the Bush Administration to push for a cease-fire. You might want to remove the first paragraph, and the first word of the second paragraph, of the proposed letter - http://capwiz.com/peacenow/issues/alert/?alertid=12374481&type=CO

 

As you know, the situation is Gaza has been intolerable, but with full support of the U.S. government has gotten much worse.  Israel has attacked the Gaza Strip continually since Sat., Dec. 27 with a massive air and naval attack that killed almost 500 people including at least 60 women and children.  This attack was carried out using American supplied F-16s, Apache helicopters, and guided missiles.  Now besides a blockade causing shortages of food, medicine, fuel, electric power, and commercial goods, there has been a massacre.  The UN Secretary General, the Swiss government, and other groups have called the situation a humanitarian crisis and a violation of the 4th Geneva Convention.  It is surely a violation of Jewish and international law. The massacre and blockade are not only cruel and inhumane, but also counter-productive in that they fuel violence against Israel and works to undermine efforts to achieve peace through negotiations throughout the region.  LA Jews for Peace urges everyone to speak out against the attacks and blockade, including our own government’s support of it.  We call for an immediate cease fire and a resumption of shipments of food and medical supplies to the people of Gaza, a hold of U.S. aid to Israel until the blockade is ended, and admittance of journalists to Gaza to report on the desperate conditions.

 

 

Olive Tree Circus Multimedia Event ~ Thursday, January 8th, 7:30 PM ~ At the Iman Cultural Center - 3376 Motor Ave., Los Angeles ~ Free Dinner to the first 50 RSVP’s

Olive Tree Circus Multimedia Event

Thursday, January 8th, 7:30 PM  

Iman Cultural Center - 3376 Motor Avenue, Los Angeles 90034

Vivien Sansour will be speaking about Gaza.

Free to the Public – Donations Welcome

Free Dinner to the first 50 RSVP’s

Reservations Call: 310-657-5511


Unión del Barrio on the Criminal Military Incursion of Gaza

Unión del Barrio on the Criminal Military Incursion of Gaza

www.uniondelbarrio.org

 

Sent by Celina Benitez:  prettycelina1@aol.com

 

January 4, 2009

Unión del Barrio, a Mexican and Latin American organization based in Southern California which has struggled for over 25 years for the self-determination of the Mexican people within the boundaries of the United States, stands today with the Palestinian people and strongly condemns the criminal military incursion by the Israeli occupying forces into Gaza.

We have seen with horror, the effects of Israeli occupation against the people of Palestine and in particular the people of Gaza who have had to endure the illegal blockade that for nearly three years the Israeli government has perpetrated against the people of Gaza, depriving nearly 1.5 million people of basic resources and thus creating one the worst humanitarian crisis in the world turning Gaza into a virtual open air prison.

The criminal bombardment of Gaza and the illegal invasion by the Israeli occupying forces must stop: The world over demands it.

From this corner of the world, also besieged by walls of apartheid, such as the one now being built along the US-Mexico border, the Mexican people who live in the United States stand with t he people of Palestine and with their righteous struggle for self-determination as well as their right to return to the lands that were illegally taken by t he State of Israel.

Although thousands of miles separate us, we support the Palest inian community because we know what persecution is, as the Department of Homeland Security has created a state of siege in our communities. It is this very U.S. government, which with one hand finances the illegal Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands, and with the other wages a criminal war against our people on our own lands. From Gaza to the U.S.-Mexico border we are unveiling the mask of “national security”: for what it really is; State sponsored terrorism. We know the impact that walls of apartheid have on people; we also know the deaths that these walls create. And while they may be two different walls that divide our peoples, our struggle is one.

Unión del Barrio stands with Palestine and its struggle. The courageous resistance of the Palestinian people in the face of State terrorism gives hope to the millions of displaced and conquered people all over the world. We are confident that through unwavering solidarity and the continued resistance of the brave Palestinian people, justice will be had. We know that the walls that divide us will come tumbling down and our peoples will be free. From the river to the sea Palestine will be free!

Self-determination for all freedom loving people!
¡Viva la lucha Palestina!

Central Committee
Unión del Barrio

0A ————

04 Enero del 2009

Unión del Barrio, organización Mexicana y Latinoamericana basada en el Sur de California, ah luchado por mas de 25 aC3os por la auto-determinación de los pueblos Mexicanos dentro de las fronteras políticas de los EE.UU.  Hoy en día compartimos el repudio del pueblo Palestino y condenamos la incursión militar criminal de las fuerzas Israelitas en Gaza.

Hemos visto con horror los efectos de la ocupación Israelí contra el pueblo Palestino, y en particular los ciudadanos de Gaza que han resistido el bloqueo ilegal que por casi tres años el gobierno Israelí ah perpetuado contra la gente de Gaza, privando a casi 1.5 millones de gente de recursos básicos y creando una de las peores crisis humanitarias en el mundo, convirtiendo Gaza en una prisión al aire libre.

El bombardeo y invasión criminal de Gaza por las fuerzas ocupantes deben llegar a un fin inmediatamente: El mundo entero lo demanda.

Desde esta esquina del mundo, también rodeados de muros que dividen como el que ahora se construye a lo largo de la frontera EE.UU.-México, el pueblo Mexicano que vive dentro de los EE.UU. estamos con la gente de Palestina y su lucha justa por la auto-determinación al igual que su derecho a regresar a las tierras que se le robaron ilegalmente por el Estado de Israel. 

A pesar que miles de=2 0millas nos separan, rendimos nuestro apoyo a la comunidad Palestina porque sabemos lo que es la persecución, así como el Departamento de Seguridad a la patria ah creado un estado de terror en nuestras comunidades.  Es este mismo gobierno Estadounidense, el que tiene una mano en el financiamiento de la ocupación ilegal Israelita de tierras Palestinas, y con la otra mano lanza una guerra criminal contra nuestra gente en nuestras propias tierras.  Desde Gaza a la frontera EE.UU.-México levantamos la mascara de “seguridad nacional”: por lo que verdaderamente es; terrorismo de Estado.  Sabemos el impacto de los muros en la humanidad; también sabemos sobre las muertes que son resultados directos de estos muros.  Aunque son dos muros diferentes que dividen nuestra gente, nuestra lucha es una sola. 

Unión del Barrio se une con la gente de Palestina y su lucha.  La resistencia heroica del pueblo Palestino contra el terrorismo de Estado nos da esperanza a los millones de desplazados y gente conquistada de todo el mundo.  Estamos seguros que tras la solidaridad y la resistencia continua del pueblo valiente de Palestina, la justicia es inminente.  Sabemos que un día los muros que nos dividen van a caer, y que nuestra gente llegaran a saber lo que es la liberación.  ¡Desde el rió hasta el mar Palestina vencerá!

¡Liberación para todos los oprimidos!
¡Viva la lucha Palestina!

Comité Central
Unión20del Barrio

HAMAS SPEAKS - An Excellant Editorial in Today’s LA Times by Mousa Abu Marzook, Deputy of the Political Bureau of Hamas - Thanks to the LA Times for Printing this.

Hamas Speaks

A Hamas Official Insists that a ‘Legacy of Suffering’ Under Israel is what Fuels Palestinian Resistance.

By Mousa Abu Marzook - Deputy of the Political Bureau of Hamas
January 6, 2009

While Americans may believe that the current violence in Gaza began Dec. 27, in fact Palestinians have been dying from bombardments for many weeks. On Nov. 4, when the Israeli-Palestinian truce was still in effect but global attention was turned to the U.S. elections, Israel launched a “preemptive” airstrike on Gaza, alleging intelligence about an imminent operation to capture Israeli soldiers; more assaults took place throughout the month.

The truce thus shattered, any incentive by Palestinian leaders to enforce the moratorium on rocket fire was gone. Any extension of the agreement or improvement of its implementation at that point would have required Israel to engage Hamas, to agree to additional trust-building measures and negotiation with our movement — a political impossibility for Israel, with its own elections only weeks away.

Not that the truce had been easy on Palestinians. In the six-month period preceding this week’s bombardment, one Israeli was killed, while dozens of Palestinians lost their lives to Israeli military and police actions, and numerous others died for want of medical care.

The war on Gaza should not be mistaken for an Israeli triumph. Rather, Israel’s failure to make the truce work, and its inevitable resort to bloodshed, demonstrate again that it cannot permit a future built on Palestinian political self-determination. The truce failed because Israel will not open Gaza’s borders, because Israel would rather be a jailer than a neighbor, and because its intransigent leadership forestalls Palestinian destiny and will not make peace with history.

This week’s war is not an attack on the Izzidin al-Qassam units — our movement’s military wing — but is simply aggression targeting the people, infrastructure and economic life of Gaza, designed to sow terror and loose anarchy; it aims to establish new “facts on the ground” — that is, heaps of rubble with bodies trapped beneath — in advance of the coming American administration.

Israel claims loudly that it had no other choice this week but to rain death on refugees in camps, killing dozens of women and children, while Defense Minister Ehud Barak (the once and would-be prime minister) — his eye fixed on February elections — employs mass murder as his party’s latest vote-getting appeal, an electoral strategy fit to shame the most hardened Chicago political operative.

But, of course, options remained available. Israel might have relented months ago, for the sake of the truce, in its criminal determination to starve Gaza, cutting off much of its fuel and choking all commerce to a trickle, blocking relief organizations from delivering food and medicine, and consigning Gaza’s citizens to famine rations. Only the most cynical observer would call this grinding attrition “good faith” adherence to the truce. Blockades, after all, are explicitly acts of war.

Palestinians everywhere mark the closing of the Bush era with relief; nevertheless, skepticism runs high that any justice for our people might come from a new president who remained ominously silent in the presence of the latest Israeli onslaught, and who has aligned himself so thoroughly with Israel’s interests, so long in advance of taking power. Barack Obama’s helicopter ride two years ago above the Holy Land was not unusual in the annals of American parliamentarians junketed on “fact finding” trips by Israel’s lobbyists; yet his fond remarks on what he saw — “houses and streets like ones you might find” in any American suburb — were notable for their silence as to any troubling sights. Did he miss the security roads and checkpoints that riddle the West Bank, or the construction of the wall, or the illegal settlements? Perhaps his helicopter flew too high.

But now, amid Israel’s latest attack on our people, as the death toll rises in the hundreds, with thousands wounded — all victims of American taxpayers’ largesse — Palestinians wonder how Obama will react to the escalating crisis. They demand of the next White House a new paradigm of respect and accountability, because when Palestinians see an F-16 with the Star of David painted on its tail, they see America.

Palestinians are understandably guarded about the coming administration, noting its appointments with trepidation. The soon-to-be secretary of State is unforgettable for urging years ago U.S. recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s “undivided” capital, while the administration’s chief of staff bears the stain of his father’s service in the banned terrorist Irgun paramilitary, a Zionist group responsible for numerous atrocities.

Renewed calls today for our movement to “recognize the right of Israel to exist,” in the face of murderous onslaught, ring as hollow as Israel’s continuing claims to be acting in “self-defense” as her jets bomb civilians. Without debating here the Zionist state’s fictive, existential “right,” which of the many Israels, precisely, would the West have us recognize? Is it the Israel that militarily occupies land belonging to three of its neighbors, ignoring international law and scores of U.N. resolutions over decades? Is it the Israel that illegally settles its citizens on other people’s land, seizes water sources and uproots olive trees? Is it the Israel that in 60 years has never acknowledged the forced expulsion of Palestinians from their farms and villages as the foundational act of its statehood and denies refugees their right to return?

Through bitter experience, when we hear demands for “recognition” of Israel as a precondition to dialogue, what we hear is a call for acquiescence in its crimes against us, validating the injustices that have been wrought in its name.

Our spirit to fight on is the legacy of collective suffering: With tens of thousands dead or wounded by decades of the “peace process,” you cannot find a family in Palestine — Muslim or Christian, Hamas, Fatah, PFLP or Islamic Jihad — without a son or daughter killed, injured, jailed or tortured, or which does not count itself or its kin among the millions of refugees living in U.N. camps.

Hamas is not a handful of leaders. Israel may kill all of the current leadership in this round of violence, including me, and its organic, social infrastructure will not go away. We are, simply put, a homegrown national liberation resistance movement, with millions of people who support our struggle for freedom and justice.

President-elect Obama spoke courageously in his campaign for a policy of open dialogue, absent preconditions, with those deemed inimical to U.S. interests, and we were listening. One former U.S. president — a true peacemaker — has dared to visit with us and hear our side of this struggle, while offering us no shortage of criticism. It has been a refreshing exchange. Now is the time for the next U.S. president to do the same.

No American leader has ever visited a Palestinian refugee camp anywhere, much less in Gaza — a startling fact, considering the central role America has played in our people’s narrative. None has dared to look our refugees in their faces and experience their suffering directly.

In observance of the storied tradition of Arab hospitality to guests, and anticipating that day when an American president fulfills his promise of change, we extend the invitation now, and we will put the kettle on.

Mousa Abu Marzook is the deputy of the political bureau of Hamas, the Islamic Resistance Movement.

You can read over 100 comments about this article at the link below:

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oew-marzook6-2009jan06-gb,0,2544550.graffitiboard?slice=1&limit=10