Raza in Solidarity with Palestine - Saturday, January 17th, 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM - At Centro Cultural Francisco Villa - 2100 Maple Ave. LA - END the OCCUPATION NOW!

Union del Barrio Invites the Southern California Community…

 

END the OCCUPATION NOW!
1848 (
Mexico) and 1948 (Palestine)
Two People’s; ONE STRUGGLE!

Teach-in and Video Presentation

From Venezuela to Los Angeles, Raza shows its solidarity with the people & struggle of Palestine!

Saturday, January 17th - 6:00 to 8:00 PM

Centro Cultural Francisco Villa
2100 Maple Ave. Los Angeles 90011
(Corner of Maple Ave and 21st Street)

 

Come learn about the Palestinian people’s struggle for liberation and how it’s historically similar to the plight of the Raza/Indigenous people’s of the Americas.

Speakers:
Christian Ramirez, American Friends Service Committee: Will speak about his experience from his 2008 visit to
Palestine (will include a video segment)

Daniel Montes, Union Del Barrio: Will speak on UdB’s analysis and historical similarities between the liberation struggles of Palestinians and Mexicans

Palestinian speakers: TBA…still confirming who will be the speakers…

Documentaries, food and drinks will be available for a small donation!

 

For more information: udbla@aol.com
323-602-3480

 

Ron Gochez - mexicanoatucla@aol.com
Social Justice Educator/Community Organizer

 

 

Today: National Call-In Day for Gaza Ceasefire - Friday, January 16th - Call President-Elect Obama’s Transition Team at 202-540-3000 ~ Call your Representative at 202-224-3121 - Call Your Senator

National Call-In Day for Gaza!

   Today - Friday, January 16th, 2009

                                               

We designate Friday, January 16th as National Call-In Day for Gaza. Calling is quick, easy, and effective, and will take about 5-10 minutes. We need to keep the phones ringing non-stop for the duration of the day so that our message CAN NO LONGER BE IGNORED.

 

Contact in order of importance:

 

1) Call President-Elect Obama’s Transition Team at: 202-540-3000.

Ask that President-Elect Obama and his team call for:

1) An immediate cease-fire.

2) An end to the blockade and siege of Gaza.

3) An immediate withdrawal from Gaza.

 

Be firm and polite and stress the fact that over a thousand people have died and thousands have been injured in Gaza, mainly civilians. This follows months of suffering under a severe blockade that has resulted in shortages of food, fuel and basic medical supplies. When calling, mention (UN Security Council Resolution 1860 that was adopted last week which calls for an immediate ceasefire and unimpeded humanitarian access.

 

2) Call your Representative at: 202-224-3121. Ask how they voted on House Resolution 34 which passed overwhelmingly in the House last Friday, with 390 Representatives voting yes, 5 no, and 22 present. The resolution "recognizes Israel’s right to defend itself" and "reaffirms the United States‘ strong support for Israel."

 

If your Representative voted "no" or "present" on H. Res. 34, thank them and ask that they cosponsor Rep. Kucinich’s upcoming resolution. (See: http://endtheoccupation.org/downloads/KUCINI_001_xml.pdf)

 

If your representative voted "yes" on H.Res. 34 state your disagreement with their vote and ask them to co-sponsor the Kucinich resolution.

 

3) Call your Senators at: 202-224-3121 and assert your disagreement with their unanimous vote on Senate Resolution 10 and ask that they introduce a resolution in the Senate that is similar to Rep. Kucinich’s resolution in the House.  

 

Please forward this to all your lists and personally contact 10 friends and urge them to make these calls to save lives in Gaza.

 

Change happens with numbers. That is how Obama became president and that is how we can bring a lasting peace and justice to the Palestinians. As people living in America, we control the discourse and the funding that has resulted in the present massacre in Gaza. Considering the fundamental role that we play in this political situation, our participation is the least we can do.

 

"The death of children is the death of innocence, and the death of innocence is the downfall of humanity."

 – Emine Erdogan, wife of Turkey’s Prime Minister, 1/10/09

New Venue: PEACE SUNDAY ~ January 18th - Doors Open at 2:00 PM ~ Program 3:00 to 5:00 PM ~ At Modern Om - 13452 Washington Blvd., Marina Del Rey

Please Notice this is a Change of Venue

 

The Unity & Diversity World Council Presents

 

 PEACE SUNDAY ~ January 18th

 Doors Open at 2:00 PM ~ Program 3:00 to 5:00 PM

At

Modern Om

13452 Washington Blvd., Marina Del Rey 90292

 East of Lincoln Blvd. across from Cosco on the south side of Washington

Park at Cosco

 

 $10 Suggested Donation

Contact Leland Stewart: 310-391-5735 – Email: udcworld1@yahoo.com

 

 

A Talk by Sonali Kolhatkar ~ “Why the U.S. Should Exit Afghanistan” ~ Friday, January 16th, 7:30 PM - At the Harry Bridges Institute in San Pedro - San Pedro Neighbors for Peace & Justice

Why the U.S. Should Exit Afghanistan 

A Talk by Sonali Kolhatkar

Host & Producer of KPFK’s Uprising 

Friday, January 16th, 7:30 PM

At the

Harry Bridges Institute

350 W. 5th Street, Suite 209, San Pedro 90732
Information: 310 548 3333 - jaclin1@pacbell.net

San Pedro Neighbors for Peace & Justice

NEWSLETTER

issue 40

January 14, 2009

300th Friday Night

"Vigil to End the War"

 

Hi Everybody: This Friday Evening at  SPNPJ’s 300th Friday Night "Vigil to End the War" we are collecting new and serviceable used shoes that will be donated to US Vets-Villages at Cabrillo, located in the former US Naval Housing Quarters in Long Beach that houses 500 formerly homeless Vets and provides services to their families. Join us with your shoes or a donation at 1st and Gaffey from 5:00-7:00 PM.  Instead of throwing shoes at Bush we are putting them to good use.

Jack Finley

——————————————————–

  

San Pedro Neighbors for Peace & Justice presents:

 

Why the U.S. Should Exit Afghanistan
With

Sonali Kolhatkar

Host and Producer of
“Uprising Radio” on KPFK

 

Friday, January 16th, 7:30 PM
 Harry Bridges Institute
350 W. 5th Street, Suite 209
San Pedro 90732
Information: 310 548 3333


Details: There is handicap parking and an elevator to the second floor.
 The event is free. Donations are appreciated

 


What happened to the “good war”. How will President-Elect Barrack Obama’s help or hurt the search for peace. What is President- Elect Obama’s Afgahnistan policy?

Please join us for this discussion and short film. We are proud to announce that Sonali Kolhatkar host and producer of  KPFK’s Uprising Radio will be the presenter for the evening. “Uprising Radio” airs daily on KPFK from 8 to 9:00 AM weekdays.

Our speaker, Sonali Kolhatkar is a member of the Afghan Women’s Mission and a supporter of RAWA, the Revolutionary Alliance of Woment of Afghanistan.

 

What is RAWA?
It was founded in
Kabul in 1977 by Meena Keshwar Kamal, a student activist who was assassinated on February 4, 1987 for her political activities. RAWA supports non-violent strategies. The organization aims to involve women of Afghanistan in both political and social activities aimed at acquiring human rights for women and continuing the struggle against the government of Afghanistan based on democratic and secular, not fundamentalist principles, in which women can participate fully. RAWA also strives for multilateral disarmament.
Much of RAWA’s efforts in the 1990s involved holding seminars and press conferences and other fund-raising activities in
Pakistan. RAWA also created secret schools, orphanages, nursing courses, and handicraft centers for women and girls in Pakistan and Afghanistan. RAWA also secretly filmed women being beaten in the street in Afghanistan by the religious police, and being executed. RAWA activities were forbidden by both Taliban and Northern Alliance.
RAWA was highly critical of the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, emphasizing casualties among the civilian population. They continue to charge that the current government led by President Hamid Karzai has no support in most areas of Afghanistan, and that fundamentalists are enforcing anti-woman laws as they were under the Taliban.

Recently RAWA started its mission inside Afghanistan and organize some of its events in Kabul. They marked the International Women’s Day in Kabul on March 8, 2006, March 9, 2007 and March 8, 2008.
On
September 27, 2006, a RAWA member for the first time (perhaps in the whole history of RAWA) appeared in a round table of a local Afghan TV channel called TOLO TV. She had a debate with a representative of a hard line fundamentalist group. She named the top leaders of the Islamic groups and termed them "war criminal and responsible for the ongoing tragedy in Afghanistan". Tolo TV censored the audio of any sections where names were called.

"Each of us needs a little RAWA"  Arundhati Roy

 

 

Peace, Education and Action in Our Neighborhoods

310 548 3333

Amy Goodman Interviews Professor Avi Shlaim, who Served in the Israeli Army in the Mid-1960s - This is very much worth watching, especially to anyone who supports Israel.

Democracy Now Hosted by Amy Goodman: January 14th, 2009

 

Amy Goodman Interviews Professor Avi Shlaim, who served in the Israeli Army in the Mid-1960s. He is known as one of the leading authorities in the world on the Israel-Palestine conflict and Arab-Israel conflict.

 

You can read the interview or watch it at the link below.

 

http://www.democracynow.org/2009/1/14/leading_israeli_scholar_avi_shlaim_israel

 

Israel Committing “State Terror” in Gaza Attack, Preventing Peace

 

By Avi Shlaim

Democracy Now: Jan 14, 2009

 

The assault on Gaza is entering its nineteenth day, with no end in sight. Israel continues its intense bombardment of the territory as Israeli troops edge closer to the heart of Gaza City. Nearly 1,000 Palestinians have been killed, more than 4,400 injured, many of them women and children. Thirteen Israelis have died over the same period, ten of them soldiers. We speak with Oxford professor Avi Shlaim. He served in the Israeli army in the mid-1960s and is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on the Israeli-Arab conflict. [includes rush transcript]

 

Guest:

 

Avi Shlaim, a professor of international relations at Oxford University who served in the Israeli army in the mid-1960s. He is the

author of numerous books, most notably The Iron Wall: Israel & the Arab World. His latest book is Lion of Jordan: King Hussein’s Life in War & Peace. Avi Shlaim is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on the Arab-Israeli conflict.

 

AMY GOODMAN: The Israeli assault on Gaza is entering its nineteenth day, with no end in sight. Israeli warplanes are continuing their bombardment, launching over sixty air strikes overnight. Meanwhile, Israeli troops have edged closer to the heart of the densely populated Gaza City and are engaged in street fighting with militants.

 

Since Israel’s offensive began on December 27th, nearly 1,000 Palestinians have been killed. More than 4,400 have been injured, and an estimated 90,000 have fled their homes. Thirteen Israelis have died over the same period, ten of them soldiers, including four by so- called “friendly” fire.

 

As the war continues, humanitarian concerns are mounting. The chief UN aid official for Gaza, John Ging, has appealed to the international community to protect Gaza’s civilians, calling it a “test of our humanity”.

 

Meanwhile, a UN watch group has accused Israel of showing a “manifest disrespect” for the protection of children in Gaza. According to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, more than 40 percent of those killed in Gaza are women and children.

 

On Tuesday, the head of the International Committee of the Red Cross visited Gaza and said what he saw was shocking. ICRC president Jakob Kellenberger said, “It is unacceptable to see so many wounded people. Their lives must be spared and the security of those who care for them guaranteed.”

 

Despite a UN Security Council ceasefire resolution last week, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said the military operation will continue.

 

Our next guest is widely regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities on the Arab-Israel conflict. Avi Shlaim served in the

Israeli army in the mid-1960s. He is now a professor of international relations at Oxford University. In an article in The Guardian

newspaper of London, he says he has never questioned the legitimacy of the state of Israel within its pre-1967 borders. But he says its merciless assault on Gaza has led him to devastating conclusions. Professor Avi Shlaim is the author of a number of books, most notably The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World. His latest book is Lion of Jordan: King Hussein’s Life in War and Peace. Avi Shlaim joins us today from Oxford University in Britain.

 

We welcome you to Democracy Now!

 

AVI SHLAIM: Thank you. I’m happy to be on your program in these very sad times.

 

AMY GOODMAN: As you look at what’s happening in Gaza from your vantage point, well, many miles away in Britain, can you talk about the kind of trajectory your evaluation has taken, where you started in your thoughts about Israel and where you are now?

 

AVI SHLAIM: As you mentioned, I did national service in the Israeli army in the mid-1960s. And in those days, Israel was a small state surrounded by enemies, and the nation was united in face of the surrounding Arab states. We all felt total commitment to the state of Israel & to the defense of the state of Israel. The Israeli army is called the Israel Defense Forces, and it was true to its name.

 

But 1967, the war of June 1967, was a major turning point in the history of Israel and the history of the region. In the course of the

war, Israel captured the Golan Heights from Syria, the West Bank from Jordan and Sinai from Egypt. After the war, Israel started building civilian territories in the occupied territories in violation of international law. So Israel became a colonial power and an imperial power.

 

And I, for my part, have never questioned the legitimacy of the Zionist movement. I saw it as the national liberation movement of the Jewish people. Nor did I ever question the legitimacy of the state of Israel within its pre-1967 borders. What I reject, what I reject totally, absolutely and uncompromisingly, is the Zionist colonial project beyond the 1967 borders. So we have to distinguish very clearly between Israel proper, within its pre-1967 borders, and Greater Israel, which began to emerge in the aftermath of the June ’67 war and has completely derailed the Zionist project.

 

AMY GOODMAN: And then, specifically talk about Gaza, how it has developed and where it is today, right now under assault by the Israeli military.

 

AVI SHLAIM: In a long-term historical perspective, I would begin with the creation of the state of Israel in 1948. I wrote a book, which you mentioned in your introduction, called The Iron Wall: Israel and the Arab World. It is a history of the Arab-Israeli conflict since 1948. It’s a very long book, but I can summarize it for you in one sentence, that throughout its sixty years, Israel has been remarkably reluctant to engage in meaningful negotiations with its Arab opponents to resolve the dispute between them and only too ready to resort to military force in order to impose its will upon them. And the current vicious Israeli onslaught on the people of Gaza is the climax of this longstanding Israeli policy of shunning diplomacy and relying on brute military force.

 

[break]

 

AMY GOODMAN: Our guest right now is Oxford University Professor Avi Shlaim. He teaches international relations at Oxford University. He’s speaking to us from Oxford right now, leading authority in the world on the Arab-Israeli conflict.

 

We’ve had a number of debates here on Democracy Now!, Professor Shlaim, over the past weeks about what’s happening in Gaza and those who support the Israeli military continually say that in 2005, three years ago, Israel pulled out of Gaza entirely. You have a different picture of what happened under Ariel Sharon in August of 2005. Explain how you see the withdrawal of Israeli military at that time.

 

AVI SHLAIM: President Bush described Ariel Sharon as a man of peace. I’ve done a great deal of archival research on the Arab-Israeli conflict, and I can honestly tell you that I have never come across a single scintilla of evidence to support the view of Ariel Sharon as a man of peace. He was a man of war, a champion of violent solutions, a man who rejected totally any Palestinian right to self-determination. He was a proponent of Greater Israel, and it is in this context that I see his decision to withdraw unilaterally from Gaza in August of 2005.

 

The withdrawal was officially called the unilateral Israeli disengagement from Gaza. I would like to underline the word

“unilateral.” Ariel Sharon was the unilateralist par excellence. The reason he decided to withdraw from Gaza was not out of any concern for the welfare of the people of Gaza or any sympathy for the Palestinians or their national aspirations, but because of the pressure exerted by Hamas, by the Islamic resistance, to the Israeli occupation of Gaza. In the end, Israel couldn’t sustain the political, diplomatic and psychological costs of maintaining its occupation in Gaza.

 

And let me add in parentheses that Gaza was a classic example of exploitation, of colonial exploitation in the postcolonial era. Gaza is a tiny strip of land with about one-and-a-half million Arabs, most of them—half of them refugees. It’s the most crowded piece of land on God’s earth. There were 8,000 Israeli settlers in Gaza, yet the 8,000 settlers controlled 25 percent of the territory, 40 percent of the arable land, and the largest share of the desperately scarce water resources.

 

Ariel Sharon decided to withdraw from Gaza unilaterally, not as a contribution, as he claimed, to a two-state solution. The withdrawal from Gaza took place in the context of unilateral Israeli action in what was seen as Israeli national interest. There were no negotiations with the Palestinian Authority on an overall settlement. The withdrawal from Gaza was not a prelude to further withdrawals from the other occupied territories, but a prelude to further expansion, further consolidation of Israel’s control over the West Bank. In the year after the withdrawal from Gaza, 12,000 new settlers went to live on the West Bank. So I see the withdrawal from Gaza in the summer of 2005 as part of a unilateral Israeli attempt to redraw the borders of Greater Israel and to shun any negotiations and compromise with the Palestinian Authority.

 

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim, Israel says the reason it has attacked Gaza is because of the rocket fire, the rockets that Hamas is firing into southern Israel.

 

AVI SHLAIM: This is Israeli propaganda, and it is a pack of lies. The important thing to remember is that there was a ceasefire brokered by Egypt in July of last year, and that ceasefire succeeded. So, if Israel wanted to protect its citizens—and it had every right to protect its citizens—the way to go about it was not by launching this vicious military offensive, but by observing the ceasefire.

 

Now, let me give you some figures, which I think are the most crucial figures in understanding this conflict. Before the ceasefire came into effect in July of 2008, the monthly number of rockets fired—Kassam rockets, homemade Kassam rockets, fired from the Gaza Strip on Israeli settlements and towns in southern Israel was 179. In the first four months of the ceasefire, the number dropped dramatically to three rockets a month, almost zero. I would like to repeat these figures for the benefit of your listeners. Pre-ceasefire, 179 rockets were fired on Israel; post-ceasefire, three rockets a month. This is point number one, and it’s crucial.

 

And my figures are beyond dispute, because they come from the website of the Israeli Foreign Ministry. But after initiating this war, this particular table, neat table, which showed the success of the ceasefire, was withdrawn and replaced with another table of

statistics, which is much more obscure and confusing. Israel—the Foreign Ministry withdrew these figures, because it didn’t suit the new story.

 

The new story said that Hamas broke the ceasefire. This is a lie. Hamas observed the ceasefire as best as it could and enforced it very effectively. The ceasefire was a stunning success for the first four months. It was broken not by Hamas, but by the IDF. It was broken by the IDF on the 4th of November, when it launched a raid into Gaza and killed six Hamas men.

 

And there is one other point that I would like to make about the ceasefire. Ever since the election of Hamas in January—I’m sorry, ever since Hamas captured power in Gaza in the summer of 2007, Israel had imposed a blockade of the Strip. Israel stopped food, fuel and medical supplies from reaching the Gaza Strip. One of the terms of the ceasefire was that Israel would lift the blockade of Gaza, yet Israel failed to lift the blockade, and that is one issue that is also overlooked or ignored by official Israeli spokesmen. So Israel was doubly guilty of sabotaging the ceasefire, A, by launching a military attack, and B, by maintaining its very cruel siege of the people of Gaza.

 

AMY GOODMAN: Israel calls Hamas “terrorist.” What is your definition of “terror”?

 

AVI SHLAIM: My definition of “terror” is the use of violence against civilians for political purposes. And by this definition, Hamas is a terrorist organization. But by the same token, Israel is practicing state terror, because it is using violence on a massive scale against Palestinian civilians for political purposes. I don’t hold a brief for Hamas. Hamas is not a paragon of virtue. Its leaders are not angels. They harm civilians indiscriminately. Killing civilians is wrong, period. That applies to Hamas, and it applies equally to the state of Israel.

 

But there are two points I would like to make about Hamas, and that is— the first point is that it was elected in a fair and free election in January 2006. It was an impeccable election, monitored by a number of international observers, including President Jimmy Carter. So it is not just a terrorist organization. It is a democratically elected government of the Palestinian people and the representative of the Palestinian people in Gaza, as well as the West Bank.

 

And the second point that I would like to make is that since coming to power, Hamas has moderated its political program. Its charter is extreme. Its charter denies the legitimacy of a Jewish state. The charter calls for an Islamic state over the whole of historic Palestine. The charter has not been revived, but since coming to power, the leadership of Hamas has been much more pragmatic and stated that it is willing to negotiate a long-term ceasefire with the state of Israel for twenty, thirty, forty, maybe even fifty years.

 

Thirdly, Hamas joined with Fatah, the rival group, the mainstream group, on the West Bank in a national unity government in the summer of 2007. That national unity government lasted only three months. Israel, with American support, helped to sabotage and to bring down that national unity government. Israel refused to deal with a Palestinian government which included Hamas within it. And shamefully, both the United States and the European Union joined in Israel in this refusal to recognize a Hamas-dominated government, and Israel withdrew tax revenues, and European Union withdrew foreign aid, in a shameful attempt to bring down a democratically elected government.

 

So, I do not defend Hamas, but I think that it hasn’t received a fair hearing from the international community, and Israel has done

everything to sabotage it all along.

 

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Shlaim, you say it’s done everything to sabotage it, except at the beginning, when you say it supported Hamas to weaken Fatah, which it now supports.

 

AVI SHLAIM: Indeed. Israel has always played the game of divide and rule. This is a very good tactic in times of war, to divide your

enemies and pick them off one by one. No one can complain about that. But divide and rule isn’t a good tactic in times of peace. If your aim is to achieve peace with the Arabs, then you should want unity among the Palestinians and unity in the Arab world. But Israel continued to play this game of divide and rule.

 

Hamas emerged in the course of the First Intifada in the late 1980s. It is the Islamic resistance movement. The mainstream movement, Fatah, was led by Yasser Arafat. And Israel gave tacit encouragement and support to the Islamic resistance in the hope of weakening the secular nationalists led by Yasser Arafat. It was a dangerous game to play, because the end result of this game was that Hamas emerged as the strongest Palestinian political party.

 

And Israel helped Hamas inadvertently in another way, because Fatah signed the Oslo Accord with Israel in 1993. It expected the Oslo Accord to lead to a two-state solution. And yet, Israel, after the election of Benjamin Netanyahu in 1996, reneged on the Israeli side of the deal. So, the Oslo Accord, the Oslo peace process wasn’t doomed to failure from the start. It failed because Israel, under the leadership of the Likud, reneged on its side of the deal. So that left the Palestinians with nothing but misery and poverty and frustration and ever-growing Israeli settlements on the land. And it was this context that led to the success of Hamas at the last elections. So Israel has a lot to explain in the rise to power of the Hamas movement.

 

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim, we only have a minute, but I want to ask you where you see the solution at this point. Barack Obama will be president on Tuesday in just a few days. Hillary Clinton will be Secretary of State.

 

AVI SHLAIM: The solution—this is a political conflict, and there is no military conflict to—there is no military solution to this conflict. The only solution lies in negotiations between Israel and Hamas about all the issues involved. President-elect Obama is a very impressive man and a very intelligent man and a very fair-minded man. He hasn’t demonstrated any courage in the course of this crisis. He hasn’t taken any position. He hasn’t called for an immediate ceasefire. So the first step is an immediate ceasefire, and the next step would be negotiations between all the sides about restoring the ceasefire and then moving on to stage two, which is a political settlement to this tragic hundred-year-old conflict.

 

AMY GOODMAN: And Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State, who said in her confirmation hearing yesterday she wouldn’t negotiate with Hamas?

 

AVI SHLAIM: Yes, but there are other signs from the Obama campaign that they would be willing to consider low-level, indirect contacts with Hamas. And one has to be grateful for small mercies, so small, minor, low-level contacts with Hamas could lead to a proper dialog in due course. So I remain optimistic that sanity and rationality would take over in American foreign policy after the dreadful last eight years.

 

AMY GOODMAN: Professor Avi Shlaim, thank you very much for being with us. Professor Avi Shlaim, professor of international relations at Oxford University, served in the Israeli military—among his books, Lion of Jordan: King Hussein’s Life in War and Peace—known as one of the leading authorities in the world on the Israel-Palestine conflict

and Arab-Israel conflict. Among his other books, The Iron Wall.

 

 

http://www.democracynow.org/2009/1/14/leading_israeli_scholar_avi_shlaim_israel

Vigil to Mourn 1000 Deaths in Gaza ~ Today, Wednesday, January 14th, 5:00 PM ~ At the Westwood Federal Building ~ Join OOA & Palisadians for Peace

Today

Join Office of the Americas and Palisadians for Peace…

 

 

Vigil to Mourn

1000 Deaths in Gaza 

 

Wednesday, January 14th, 5:00 PM

 

Westwood Federal Building

 (Wilshire & Veteran)

 

 

   Bring Candles and Signs

  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

See story in the Guardian, London, with related links:

 

Palestinian Death Toll in Gaza Reaches 1000

BREAKING NEWS — Jews Shut Down Israeli Consulate in Los Angeles

For Immediate Release: January 14, 2009

 

JEWS SHUT DOWN ISRAELI CONSULATE!

10 JEWS CHAIN TOGETHER TO BLOCK DRIVEWAY AND ENTRANCE!  

 

 

Who

Jewish people of conscience in Los Angeles, including a nurse, a school counselor, a retired school teacher, a retired union representative, and a community organizer.

 

What

Civil Disobedience to shut down the Israeli consulate, with people risking arrest by chaining themselves to the building, strong visuals condemning Israeli attack on Gaza

 

Where

Consulate General of Israel, 6380 Wilshire Blvd # 1700, Los Angeles, CA 90048

 

When

January 14th, 2009 at 8:30 AM  

 

Concerned Jewish residents of Los Angeles will shut down the Israeli consulate for the first time ever in a historic protest against the policies of Israel. An ad-hoc, multi-generational group including members of the recently founded International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, will send a message to the Israeli government and its US supporters: "Not In Our Name! We will not be silent! Jews demand an end to20the Israeli siege on Gaza and an end to Israeli apartheid." The demonstration will kick off a wave of demonstrations across the United States uniting Palestinians, Jewish people, and other Americans outraged by the siege.

 

"We are shocked and outraged at Israeli’s latest act of violent aggression against the Palestinian people. Killing over 950 people, including 250 women and children, bombing schools and mosques and then calling it self-defense—that is the worst kind of hypocrisy. It also amounts to war crimes," said Hannah Howard, a local member of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network. "We are shutting down the Israeli consulate today because as Jewish people we cannot allow business as usual while violence is being done in our name. This is a direct betrayal of our Jewish tradition of social justice."

 

Action participants will also speak out against the US government’s unconditional support for Israel’s siege and its ongoing war against the Palestinian people. "While US-funded F16’s rain down bombs on the people of Gaza, our elected officials locally and nationally offer unqualified support." said Marsha Steinberg, a retired union representative. "Our government must stop sending billions of dollars in military and economic aid to the Israeli war machine while defending Israel in the international community," Steinberg said. In the coming week, concerned Americans from all backgrounds w ill call on the new Presidential administration to make a 180 degree change in policy.

 

"While the end of the siege on Gaza is our most immediate priority, this is only the latest chapter in Palestinians’ 60 plus year experience of occupation and ethnic cleansing. Peace and justice in the region will only come when Palestinians have freedom and control their own destiny," said Lisa Adler, a community organizer in Los Angeles and another member of the International Jewish Solidarity Network. "Even before the siege began, Israel’s inhumane months-long blockade of Gaza created a major humanitarian crisis. We must end the siege. And we are building a nonviolent international movement of boycott, divestment and sanctions that brings an end to Israel’s policies of occupation and apartheid and advances the Palestinian struggle for justice," said Adler.

 

For more information on the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, visit: www.ijsn.net

– ## –

 

Profiles of the Demonstrators

 

Marsha Steinberg is a retired union representative and long time activist for social justice.

 

Gabriel Strachota is a 22-year old Jewish native of Massachusetts. His mother grew up in apartheid South Africa and he has many aunts, uncles, and cousins living in Israel.

 

Robin Ellis is a 34-year old queer woman originally from New York and a Registered Nurse working in Los Angeles‘ public health system.

 

Lisa Adler is a 29-year old New York native from a Latin American Jewish family.  She spent several weeks in occupied Palestine in 2002 working in solidarity with Palestinians resisting the occupation non-violently.

 

Eric Romann is a 31-year old community organizer originally from New Jersey.  Eric’s grandparents moved to Palestine to escape Nazism in the 1930’s and lost many family members in the Nazi Holocaust.  His father spent the first 15 years of his life in Israel and Eric has many family members living there.

 

Samantha Tess Sunshine is a queer white Jew who lives in Los Angeles.  She is a trained sex educator who has worked in the field of sexual health for almost a decade, and is currently a lead facilitator for the Leadership Development in Interethnic Relations Program at the Asian Pacific American Legal Center.

Stop the Israeli Massacre of Gaza ~ Protest this Friday, January 16th, 6:00 PM ~ The Wilshire Theatre Beverly Hills - 8440 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills

Stop the U.S.-Backed Israeli Massacre in Gaza!

 

Protest! 

 

 

Friday, January 16th, 6:00 PM

 

The Wilshire Theatre Beverly Hills  

 

8440 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills 90211

 

Bring signs, banners & large photos of the Palestinian people who are being killed in Gaza by the hundreds

 

Initiated by Libros Revolucion and Readers of Revolution newspaper, 213.488.1303

 

Why  

To oppose the pro-Israel rally that will be held under the guise of a special citywide religious service, complete with a presentation on Israel’s recent Gaza action, Q&A with the Israeli consul general and a 4-point action agenda of how to support Israel.  (Their event will run from 8 to 9:30 p.m.)

 

We need to take a stand!  The horror of Israel’s invasion of Gaza mounts daily. The 1.5 million people of Gaza - fenced in on all sides - are being subjected to a brutal military assault from land and air. Civilian casualties are in the thousands. Food, medicine, and fuel are blockaded. Israel has declared this to be a "war to the bitter end." The United States has backed Israel both with new, sophisticated military weaponry and with full diplomatic support.

 

As Israel carries out this massacre, the Nazi holocaust is again being invoked to suppress, silence, and declare "beyond the pale," any exposure and criticism of Israel.

This is ludicrous and obscene: The mass murder of six million Jews was a horrific crime carried out by the German imperialist ruling class. And—in fact—the rulers of the "Western democracies" made conscious decisions to ignore, cover-up, and do nothing about it at the time—including the policy of the United States to turn away ships with Jews trying to escape the Nazis.

Israel was not established as a "response to the Holocaust" but as an instrument of the imperialist powers—especially the U.S.—to further their economic and political domination of the nations and peoples of the Middle East. There is no logic or justice to invoking the holocaust to justify the systematic ethnic cleansing of Palestine, or the apartheid-like imprisonment of the Palestinian people in their own land—especially when Palestinians had NOTHING TO DO with the mass murder carried out by the Nazi regime.

Today Israel is maintained by massive military and financial aid by the United States, and acts not only in its own interests, but most fundamentally as an enforcer of the U.S. empire. The result has been death, destruction, torture, and terror in the Middle East, and beyond—from South Africa to Guatemala.

In this light, the statement by Bob Avakian, the Chairman of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA is something that needs to be confronted by everyone, and poses a critical moral challenge: "After the Holocaust, the worst thing that has happened to Jewish people is the state of Israel."

We, living in this country, have a great and urgent responsibility to act against what must be recognized as a War Crime by Israel with the full support of the United States. Too many who watch the assault on Gaza with horror and outrage, have remained silent. Too few have acted. This must, and can, change.

 

Whether the world sees political protest and resistance, and mass outpourings of opposition and outrage in different forms in this country…or whether it sees continued support for and passive complicity with these attacks coming from the people here…all this will matter greatly, not only here in the US, but to people all over the world.

 

Read "Undeniable Parallels:  Gaza and the Warsaw Ghetto" by Alan Goodman here.

 

 

Screening of “OCCUPATION 101″ ~ Friday, January 16th, 7:00 PM ~ KIWA Cultural Education Center in LA ~ Film on the Current & Historical Root Causes of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine

Join BAYAN-USA and the International Action Center

In a Film Screening and Discussion of

OCCUPATION 101

A Thought-Provoking & Powerful Documentary Film on the Current & Historical Root Causes of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine

Friday, January 16th, 7:00 PM
KIWA Cultural Education Center
3471 West 8th Street at Hobart, Los Angeles

For more information: 310-677-6407
VIDEO OCCUPATION 101

A thought-provoking and powerful documentary film on the current and historical root causes of the Israeli occupation of Palestine. Unlike any other film ever produced on the conflict — ‘Occupation 101′ presents a comprehensive analysis of the facts and hidden truths surrounding the never ending controversy and dispels many of its long-perceived myths and misconceptions.
 

The film also details life under Israeli military rule, the role of the United States in the conflict, and the major obstacles that stand in the way of a lasting and viable peace. The roots of the conflict are explained through first-hand on-the-ground experiences from leading Middle East scholars, peace activists, journalists, religious leaders and humanitarian workers whose voices have too often been suppressed in American media outlets.

The film covers a wide range of topics — which include — the first wave of Jewish immigration from Europe in the 1880’s, the 1920 tensions, the 1948 war, the 1967 war, the first Intifada of 1987, the Oslo Peace Process, Settlement expansion, the role of the United States Government, the second Intifada of 2000, the separation barrier and the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, as well as many heart wrenching testimonials from victims of this tragedy.

Also: Update on the tidal wave of resistance to the U.S.-backed Israeli siege of Gaza
& Special report on the Bail Out the People Movement Labor/Community Conference


Friday, January 16, 7:00 pm
KIWA Cultural Education Center
3471 West 8th St at Hobart, L.A.

For more information: 310-677-6407 - maggiev999@gmail.com
Sponsored by International Action Center & BAYAN-USA