topic : Palestine
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December 2008
by Amy Goodman
As President-elect Barack Obama focuses on the meltdown of the U.S. economy, another fire is burning: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
You may not have heard much lately about the disaster in the Gaza Strip. That silence is intentional: The Israeli government has barred international journalists from entering the occupied territory. Last week, executives from the Associated Press, New York Times, Reuters, CNN, BBC and other news organizations sent a letter of protest to Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert criticizing his government's decision to bar journalists from entering Gaza.
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May 2008
by Daisy Ouye and D K Ouye
Long-time peace activist Riad Hamad , who chaired an organization called Palestinian Children’s Welfare Fund (PCWF) that has raised millions of dollars for Palestinian children, was found dead just before 2 p.m. on April 16. His family reported him as a missing person when he didn’t return from a trip to a local pharmacy two days prior, telling police he was suicidal.
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March 2008
by Chris Allert
Jen Marlowe is the author of Darfur Diaries: Stories of Survival (Nation Books), which is included in the Best American Non-Required Reading Collection 2007. (http://www.darfurdiaries.org ) She is directing and editing Rebuilding Hope, a film about South Sudan, ( http://www.rebuildinghopesudan.org ) and writing a book and a play about Palestine and Israel. Her previous film was Darfur Diaries: Message from Home. She serves on the board of directors of The Friends of the Jenin Freedom Theatre ( http://www.friendsofthejeninfreedomtheatre.org ) and is a founding member of the . . .
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March 2008
Jen Marlowe and Sima, holding Flat Stanley. (Photo by Jen Marlowe)
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March 2008
by Therese Saliba
For the last twenty years, Michel Shehadeh was accused by the US government of being a terrorist. In 1987, he was arrested in an early morning raid by armed federal agents in Los Angeles along with 6 other Palestinian men and a Kenyan woman. They were jailed for 23 days in a maximum security cell, then released while the government tried to deport them. Through numerous court rulings and appeals, their case made it to the Supreme Court . On October 30, 2007, after what Shehadeh describes as “20 grueling years,” the federal government dropped all charges against the LA-8.
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March 2008
Michel Shehadeh and Joan Mandell in Olympia (Photo by Therese Saliba)
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February 2008
by Chris Allert
[The Olympia-Rafah Mural Project is an official recognition, by the people of Olympia, Washington, of the sister city relationship that exists with the city of Rafah, Palestine. Through the act of creating a collaborative public mural, we will express our desire for Palestinian self-determination, which is rooted in honoring the common struggles for global justice faced by marginalized people everywhere. By upholding rights for all, we seek to break down barriers to understanding, increase visibility for Palestinian people, encourage imagination, embrace the hope and courage of . . .
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February 2008
A mural by Susan Greene, local artists from Rafah and Khan Younis. The quote on the ribbon reads “I think it’s important that human rights and resistance to oppression be included in the way we define ourselves as a community.” (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
The mural of Edward Said at San Francisco State University. It was painted by Fayeq Oweis and Susan Greene. For more about this mural, visit http://www.oweis.com/said.html (photo by Darlene Bouchard)
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February 2008
Susan Greene Painted this mural of oranges in Beit Hanoun with a group of children. (Photo by Susan Greene)
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February 2008
Character by Naji al-Ali. For more about Handala, visit http://www.handala.org/
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February 2008
Dr Kareem Nasrallah standing where his house once was pointing to where Rachel Corrie was murdered in Rafah. (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
John Halaka, Dr. Kareem Nasrallah, and Susan Greene standing at site of Rachel Corrie's murder (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
Artists in Rafah working on mural that is now outside the Rachel Corrie Center. (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
Completed mural being applied to outside of Rachel Corrie Center in Rafah. (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
Completed mural on Rachel Corrie Center in Rafah. (Photo by Rachel Corrie Center in Rafah)
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February 2008
Susan Greene entertaining a crowd of curious children in Rafah. (Photo by John Halaka)
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February 2008
By Marco Rosaire Rossi
Throughout the conflict in the Middle East, the United States and Israel have engaged the Palestinians in a cycle of meaningless negotiations and harsh repression. In late 1988, when it became impossible for the US to ignore the Palestinian Liberation Organization’s peace plan, the US agreed to organize negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. Shortly after the negotiations, Israel increased pressure on the occupied territories. At the time, Israel Defense Minister Yizhak Rabin proudly proclaimed that “the inhabitants of the territories are subject to harsh . . .
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August 2007
by Molly Gibbs
Local Peace activists express concern for Palestinians under Israeli Occupation
June was a horrific month for people enduring the Israeli Occupation in Gaza and the West Bank. The right-wing Likud Party and the Israeli government has taken advantage of the split between Hamas and Fatah, as civil war erupts with Fatah in control of the West Bank, and Hamas in Gaza. Many fear the vengeful attacks on Gaza's citizens may destroy their society, and any possibility of peaceful coexistence for and among Palestinians.
Olympians for Peace in the Middle East -- June, 1967 Teach-in
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August 2007
July 9, 2007, Seattle -- Today the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit heard Corrie et al. v. Caterpillar, a case charging Caterpillar, Inc. with aiding and abetting war crimes and other serious human rights violations on the grounds that the company provided bulldozers to Israel knowing they would be used unlawfully to demolish homes and endanger civilians in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (opt). The case was brought by the parents of Rachel Corrie and four Palestinian families whose family members were killed or injured when Caterpillar bulldozers demolished their homes. Corrie, a . . .
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June 2007
by Jeff Berryhill
As the US forcefully imposes a military occupation of Iraq, now in its fourth year, it is important to recognize an equally illegal and immoral occupation that has lasted forty years with the explicit approval and support of the US. I am speaking of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip that began at the conclusion of the June 1967 war, mounted in an equally aggressive manner and possessing many characteristics which are comparable to the US role in Iraq. Israel has managed this occupation with notorious impunity, ignoring rights of Palestinian . . .
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May 2007
by Phan Nguyen
On Tuesday, April 17, the Olympia City Council opened a public hearing on the proposal by the Olympia-Rafah Sister City Project (ORSCP) to formalize a sister city relationship with the Palestinian city of Rafah. The public communications period had begun with a racist diatribe against a supposed Asian threat, in reference to the recent Virginia Tech shootings. It followed with several racist diatribes against a supposed Palestinian/Arab/Muslim threat, and it ended with the City Council pandering to this supposed threat and denying formal sister city status with Rafah.
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May 2007
City Hall was packed on April 17 during the public hearing on the Rafah sister city proposal. (Photo by Muhammed Ayub)
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May 2007
A Palestinian girl decorates the memorial site where Rachel Corrie was killed in 2003. The area was later flattened by the Israeli military.
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May 2007
Fida Qishta, a member of the Rafah sister city delegation to Olympia, teaching Arabic to children at LP Brown Elementary. (Photo by Ron Eggleton)
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May 2007
The Nasrallah family in Olympia, visiting from Rafah. (Photo by Ron Eggleton)
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May 2007
Craig and Cindy Corrie with Iman Nasrallah in Rafah. The Corrie's daughter Rachel died defending the Nasrallah home in March 2003.
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May 2007
[The following email was sent by Khaled Nasrallah from Rafah, Palestine. It was the Nasrallah family's home that Rachel Corrie was protecting when she was killed by an Israeli military bulldozer. The home was destroyed months later, with no rationale provided by the Israeli military.
Khaled Nasrallah visited Olympia in 2005. He and other Palestinians viewed the April 17 Olympia City Council meeting on the Internet.]
Dear all Olympia Rafah Sister City,
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May 2007
Serena Becker and Rochelle Gause, Olympia-Rafah sister city delegates sharing a birthday celebration with the Nasrallah family in Rafah.
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May 2007
by Sami Awad
On April 16, a tragic event took place in Virginia Tech in the US that shocked not only the people of the United States but people all across the globe. A violent massacre took place there that resulted in thirty-two killed, individuals who presented different cultures, religions, and nationalities. In a sign of solidarity the people of Palestine in general and those from the couthern villages surrounding the Holy city of Bethlehem dedicated their weekly nonviolent activity against the building of Apartheid wall to the families of the victims of the Virginia Tech massacre.
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May 2007
On April 20, the Holy Land Trust and the Popular Committee Against the Wall dedicated their weekly nonviolent resistance to the victims of the Virginia Tech massacre. Thirty-two olive trees were planted on the land of the village Joret Asham'a, which will soon be expropriated by Israel's Wall. The Palestinians were joined by Israeli and international activists, as Israeli soldiers surrounded and videotaped them.
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May 2007
On April 20, the Holy Land Trust and the Popular Committee Against the Wall dedicated their weekly nonviolent resistance to the victims of the Virginia Tech massacre. Thirty-two olive trees were planted on the land of the village Joret Asham'a, which will soon be expropriated by Israel's Wall. The Palestinians were joined by Israeli and international activists, as Israeli soldiers surrounded and videotaped them.
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April 2007
by Steve Niva
A year after Rachel Corrie was crushed to death while defending a Palestinian home from demolition by an Israeli army bulldozer in the Gaza Strip, I visited the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel's army and illegal Israeli settlements to see the massive Israeli wall that will enclose Palestinians within small enclaves of land.
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April 2007
Dear City Councilmen and Women,
It has come to my attention that the Olympia-Rafah Sister City Project is attempting to effect an official sister-city relationship with the cities of Olympia, Washington and Rafah, Gaza. By now you are no doubt aware of the many reasons they wish to pursue this, including to pay tribute to Rachel Corrie whose untimely death in Gaza on March 16th, 2003 should have been met with outrage across the United States. Instead it was met with silence or, in some cases, the vicious attempt to distort what happened to her and why. Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by a D9 . . .
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January 2007
[In our December issue, Works In Progress published an article by Norman Finkelstein in which he challenged Human Rights Watch for the statement addressed in this press release from HRW.]
Human Rights Watch press release, December 16, 2006
We regret that our press release, "OPT: Civilians Must Not Be Used to Shield Homes Against Military Attacks," gave many readers the impression that we were criticizing civilians for engaging in nonviolent resistance. This was not our intention. It is not the policy of the organization to criticize non-violent resistance or any other form of peaceful protest, . . .
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December 2006
by Ali Abunimah
As I watched the images last week of destruction from the Gaza Strip, where an Israeli shelling attack had killed an entire family, as a Palestinian I could understand the feelings of one survivor who said, "I cannot see a day when we will live in peace with them." But I also know there is no other choice.
When Israel was established, its founders said it would be an exemplary, moral state. For many Jews, it seemed like a miraculous redemption after so much suffering and loss in the Nazi Holocaust.
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December 2006
by Norman G. Finkelstein
Even by the grim standards of Gaza, the past five months have been cruel ones.
Some four hundred Palestinians, mostly unarmed civilians, have been killed during Israeli attacks. (Four Israeli soldiers and two civilians have been killed.) Israel has sealed off Gaza from the outside world while the international community has imposed brutal sanctions, ravaging Gaza's already impoverished economy.
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December 2006
by Stephen Zunes
The election of a Democratic majority in the House and Senate is unlikely to result in any serious challenge to the Bush administration's support for Israeli attacks against the civilian populations of its Arab neighbors and the Israeli government's ongoing violations of international humanitarian law.
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November 2006
by Jonathan Cook
A mistake too often made by those examining Israel's behavior in the Occupied Territories -- or when analyzing its treatment of Arabs in general, or interpreting its view of Iran -- is to assume that Israel is acting in good faith. Even its most trenchant critics can fall into this trap.
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October 2006
by Marco Rosaire Rossi
In the "official" report, the account reported by the major media outlets in the United States and other Western nations, the timeline for the conflicts between Israel and Hizbullah begins with the capture of two Israeli soldiers on June 25. This perspective is widespread; even mainstream human rights organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch perpetuate the idea by referring to Israel actions against Lebanon as retaliatory. However, the idea that the June 25 kidnapping started the conflict between Israel and Hizbullah is false. Israel did not . . .
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September 2006
by Todd Chretien
On August 12, 2006, some 25,000 people in San Francisco, Washington, DC, Los Angeles and other cities took part in protests against the Israeli/American war in the Middle East. Probably around fifty per cent of the marchers were Arab or Muslim. These protests showed the Arab world, and specifically our brothers and sisters in Lebanon and Gaza, that there is opposition to the US government's policies. That's a good start. But you have to ask the question: Why after a month of war did so few people come out to protest? Where were the "anti-war" Democratic leaders? Where were the . . .
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August 2006
by Jonathan Cook
This week I had the pleasure to appear on American radio, on the Laura Ingraham show, pitted against David Horowitz, a "Semite supremacist" who most recently made his name under the banner of Campus Watch, leading McCarthyite witch-hunts against American professors who have the impertinence to suggest that maybe, just maybe, Arabs have minds and feelings like the rest of us.
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August 2006
by Fairness and Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR)
On July 16, CBS Face the Nation host (and CBS Evening News anchor) Bob Schieffer dedicated the entire Sunday morning news show to the Middle East conflict. In his closing editorial, he adapted a well-known fable in an attempt to explain the causes of the current conflict -- or rather, the lack of causes:
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August 2006
On July 18 and 19, the US Senate unanimously and the House near-unanimously passed AIPAC-backed resolutions in complete support of Israeli aggression in the Middle East. Meanwhile, concerned voters have composed a letter calling for more responsible leadership from local elected representatives in the escalating crisis.
To add your name to the letter, email ammurano@gmail.com and include your name, address and congressional district as soon as possible.
To the Honorable Senators Murray and Cantwell and Representatives Baird and Smith:
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August 2006
About a hundred concerned people demonstrated at Percival Landing on July 19 to call for an immediate Middle East cease-fire and for the US to end its decades-long support for the Israeli Occupation. (photo by Sandy Mayes)
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July 2006
Press Release, PCHR, 28 June 2006
PCHR strongly condemns IOF retaliatory measures targeting Palestinian civilians in the Gaza Strip, including the destruction of properties that are not classified as a legitimate military targets. The Centre calls upon the international community, particularly the High Contracting Parties of the Fourth Geneva Convention, to force IOF to respect the convention, which prohibits reprisals against protected persons, as stipulated in article 33. In addition, the convention prohibits the destruction of private properties belonging to individuals, groups, . . .
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July 2006
Palestinians inspecting a bridge destroyed by Israeli army warplanes on a main road in the northern Gaza Strip, June 28, 2006. (MaanImages/Wesam Saleh)
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June 2006
by Annamarie Murano
Many of us know the personal tragedy of Rachel Corrie's death under the blade of a Caterpillar D-9 militarized bulldozer while protecting a Palestinian family home in Rafah, Gaza Strip. We also know the international tragedy of human rights abuses perpetrated by the Israeli military through the destruction of Palestinian homes and livelihoods, civilian infrastructure and the building of the racially discriminatory West Bank Barrier resulting in Israeli settlement expansion and confiscation of Palestinian land. We worked to educate our regional Caterpillar distributor, NC . . .
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May 2006
by Lailia El-Haddad
[In the two-and-a-half weeks preceding the Tel Aviv suicide bombing of April 17 that killed nine Israeli civilians, the Israeli military killed 26 Palestinians -- at least five of them children -- and injured 161 more. At the time of this article, Israel had been continuously pounding Palestinians in the Gaza Strip with hundreds of artillery shells per day. Israel has also severely limited the flow of goods to and from the Gaza Strip, in a move designed to freeze the Gazan economy and, as senior Israeli advisor Dov Weissglas joked, put the Palestinians on a diet.
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May 2006
by Norman Solomon
Weeks after a British magazine published a long article by two American professors titled "The Israel Lobby," the outrage continued to howl through mainstream U.S. media.
A Los Angeles Times op-ed article by Council on Foreign Relations senior fellow Max Boot helped to set a common tone. He condemned a working paper by professors John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt that was excerpted last month in the London Review of Books.
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February 2006
by Annamarie Murano
Caterpillar Inc. is responsible for violations of human rights in the Occupied Territories and must be held accountable. Caterpillar knows this is happening and continues to violate international law. The Olympia CAT Campaign is calling on the company to investigate its role in human rights abuses and cease its support of the Israeli military through the supply of Caterpillar equipment, including the CAT D9 militarized bulldozer, which was used in the killing of Rachel Corrie.
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January 2006
by Rochelle Gause
Looking out over the Rafah skyline at dark from the roof of my apartment building, most families are sleeping. The flicker of a few late night TVs can be seen through an occasional window. The street lights shine down on the sidewalks, highlighting mounds of sand and scattered trash. Laundry and the tattered edges of Palestinian flags blow gently in the wind. Things are peaceful, mostly quiet with the sporadic calls of roosters and donkeys.
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December 2005
by Serena Becker and Rochelle Gause
Ten hours difference, some 6,800 miles away from Olympia, we are staying in the home of a Palestinian family in Rafah and it feels like an extension of our own families. We are part of a group of four, hopefully five soon, who have traveled to the Occupied Palestinian Territories as a delegation of the Olympia Rafah Sister City Project. After Rachel Corrie was killed, our hearts and minds were drawn to this place. We have come in the hopes of connecting with the community and creating lasting ties through tangible projects and cross-cultural exchanges. . . .
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December 2005
A bullet-riddled building from Block L, Rafah Refugee Camp
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December 2005
Serena Becker and Rochelle Gause - Serena pointing to their location in Rafah on a map drawn onto a wall.
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December 2005
Olympians Serena Becker and Rochelle Gause (third and second from right) with the Nasrallah family and their neighbors. The Nasrallahs' first home was demolished by the Israeli military after Rachel Corrie was killed defending it.
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November 2005
by Cindy and Craig Corrie
October 10, 2005 - When our daughter Rachel Corrie was killed by an Israeli bulldozer in the Gaza strip on March 16, 2003, an immediate impulse was to get her words out to the world. She had been working in Rafah with a nonviolent resistance organization, the International Solidarity Movement, trying to stop the demolition of Palestinian homes and wells. Her emails home had had a powerful impact on our family, making us think about the situation in the Middle East in ways we had never done before. Without a direct connection to Israel and Palestine, we had not . . .
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September 2005
International Solidarity Movement
Palestine
August 19, 2005
With the deluge of coverage about Israel's "disengagement" from Gaza, it's easy to be lulled into the idea that the "road map" to peace in the region is moving ahead and that the occupation is nearing some sort of conclusion. It's important to keep in mind the information offered in this fact sheet.
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August 2005
by Gideon Levy
The media is to blame: For months, it portrayed the story of the "great sacrifice" the evacuated settlers must make. For years, it ignored the injustices they inflicted on their neighbors and thus helped portray the settlers in a false light. The result: broad public sympathy for their bitter fate and shock over their brutal behavior, as if blocking roads or even the lynching of a Palestinian teenager is something new or unusual. But in the territories, the settlers have been violently blocking roads for years, and harsh brutality toward Palestinians is also nothing . . .
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August 2005
The Israeli settlement Pisgat Zeev seen from the Palestinian village Hizma
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August 2005
by Uri Davis, Ilan Pappe, and Tamar Yaron
We feel that it is urgent and necessary to raise the alarm regarding what may come during and after evacuation of Jewish settlers from the Gaza Strip occupied by Israel in 1967, in the event that the evacuation is implemented.
We held back on getting this statement published and circulated, seeking additional feedback from our peers. The publication in Ha'aretz (22 June 2005) quoting statements by General (Reserves) Eival Giladi, the head of the Coordination and Strategy team of the Prime Minister's Office, motivated us not to delay publication and . . .
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June 2005
by Alexander Cockburn
Whatever sour emotions I entertained while reading accounts of the funeral of Marla Ruzicka had nothing really to do with the death on April 16 of a brave young woman in Baghdad. On many accounts, and I have had a detailed conversation with a close friend of Marla's whose judgment I respect, she was an idealistic person whose prime political flaw seems to have been the very forgivable one of naivety.
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June 2005
by Jennifer Zahn Spieler
[Reprinted with permission from The Sitting Duck.]
Most people know how Rachel Corrie was killed: she was crushed by an Israeli bulldozer. But why she was in front of "that bulldozer" is often overlooked.
Television commentator Ken Schram, in a 216-word rant against the Corries' decision to sue Caterpillar Inc (manufacturer of the bulldozer), has said Rachel was killed " . . . as she defiantly stood in front of a home that the Israeli military was in the process of demolishing." Schram's phrasing suggests the place was vacant.
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May 2005
by Serena Becker
On April 13, demonstrations were held in over 30 cities worldwide for the International Day of Action Against Caterpillar. These actions brought attention to Caterpillar's complicity in systematic human rights abuses in the occupied Palestinian territories and demanding an end to their continued violations of international law.
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May 2005
Over 100 people gathered outside NC Machinery in Tukwilla , Washington to pressure the Harnish Group to use their influence to stop Caterpillar from contributing to human rights abuses in the Occupied Territories. (Photo by Robert Torre)
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April 2005
by Rochelle Gause
Since 1967 the Caterpillar Corporation has been providing equipment to the Israeli military for use in its illegal occupation of the Palestinian people. Since the second intifada began in 2000, the Israeli military has created a human rights crisis in the Occupied Territories. Three specific incidents have recently highlighted the role Caterpillar is playing in these human rights abuses: the 2002 destruction of the Jenin refugee Camp, the 2003 killing of Rachel Corrie, as she nonviolently defended a Palestinian home, and last May's "Operation Rainbow" in Rafah where . . .
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April 2005
Craig and Cindy Corrie in Rafah with the Nasrallah family after their daughter Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli military Caterpillar bulldozer. Rachel was attempting to defend the Narallah home against demolition by the US-built weapon.
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March 2005
by Rochelle Gause
"We stand in the path of the bulldozers and are physically pushed with the shovels backwards. The bulldozers then proceeded on their course, demolishing one side of the houses with the protesters inside. The drivers sometimes drop a sound grenade out of the cab of the bulldozer, and continue to demolish the houses, at which point the activists are able to escape, amid gunfire from the tanks. We can only imagine what it is like for Palestinians living here, most of them once-or-twice refugees already, for whom this is not a nightmare, but a continuous reality from which . . .
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March 2005
"This has to stop. I think it's a good idea for us all to drop everything and devote our lives to making this stop. I don't think it's an extremist thing to do anymore." --Rachel Corrie
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March 2005
This photo was taken in Gaza by Tom Hurndall shortly before he was shot in the head by an Israeli sniper. He was shot as he attempted to escort children away from the sniper's bullets. After nine months in a coma, Tom died on January 13, 2004.
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March 2005
A Palestinian couple on the rubble of their home, destroyed by the Israeli government.
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March 2005
A Palestinian woman confronts an Israel home demolition bulldozer.
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August 2003
by Jenni Minner
Although the Bush administration's Roadmap for Peace is mentioned in the mainstream media, the realities of Palestinian life are often distorted or unreported. Many Americans hear nothing about the Separation Fence (a.k.a. the Apartheid Wall) that Israel constructs, separating many Palestinians from their land, water, schools and services, thus putting Palestine under even tighter Israeli control. It is rare that Americans are able to hear critical analyses of the situation or perspectives that connect the situation to overall American foreign policy.
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August 2003
by Steve Niva
Having just spent nearly a month traveling in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories has led me to conclude that talk about "progress" and "momentum" regarding President Bush's peace initiative known as the roadmap is largely a deception. This view is shared not only by Palestinians but also by the majority of activists in the Israeli peace camp with whom I met during my stay.
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July 2003
by Cindy Corrie
What a joyful day! I know Rachel is dancing somewhere in the heavens as she peers down upon all of us and celebrates with all of you who are graduating today. She will cheer loudly and lovingly when her colleagues cross this stage to collect their diplomas, and she will offer an especially triumphant salute to her dear, dear friend and ours Colin Reese. I know, too, that Rachel is out there somewhere impishly smiling at usher poppy and her mama coming to pick up her diploma for her because she is busy elsewhere.
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July 2003
Education [is] . . . the practice of freedom, the means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world. -- Paulo Freire
If the Israeli military should break with their racist tendency not to injure white people, please pin the reason squarely on the fact that I am in the midst of a genocide which I am also indirectly supporting, and for which my government is largely responsible.
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June 2003
by Tom Wright
"The relationship between Israel and Gazacould be characterized as de-development. De-development is the deliberate, systematic deconstruction of an indigenous economy by a dominant power(It) isdesigned to ensure that there will be no economic base, even one that is malformed, to support an independent indigenous existence."
-Sara Roy, The Gaza Strip, 1995
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