Annual Harvard Graduation Demo Puts Spotlight on Gaza

Palestine Solidarity Activists Stand Out for Gaza

On May 24, a line of 60 or so activists holding banners and signs protesting the Gaza massacre greeted newly-minted Harvard graduates and their families as they left Harvard Yard.  

They walked past names of most of the Gazans killed in creative, unarmed demonstrations mounted to demand their dignity, freedom from the cage confining Gaza, and a recognition of the rights of refugees.  

A flyer headlined ‘Slaughter in Gaza Demands our Response!’  spelled out the results of Israel’s lethal impunity:

• At least 118 killed, most targeted by Israeli snipers from hundreds
of yards away. 15 children, one a baby, and 2 journalists were killed.
• 12,600+ injured, many with wounds requiring amputations.
Dozens of journalists and some 700 children are among the wounded.
• 1 Israeli soldier reported to be ‘lightly wounded’; 0 Israelis killed.

What was the reaction?  There was more anger expressed towards us than in previous years, revealing the extent to which Israel’s relentless demonization of Palestinians has been internalized by some Americans.

But there was also a show of support from many graduates.  Most heartwarming was the outpouring of joy from a young Palestinian woman in cap and gown, whose family thanked us for our presence by distributing ice cream to the entire group. 

Nancy Murray, Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

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A Letter to our Senators about Gaza--Action Needed!

The Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine delivered the letter below, signed by several Massachusetts groups, to the offices of Senators Markey and Warren, both of whom had signed onto the May 11th letter to Secretary of State Pompeo initiated by Bernie Sanders.  

If you don't live in Massachusetts, feel free to use information from this letter in outreach to your representatives.

If you do live in MA, please call Senator Warren (617 565 3170) and Senator Markey (617 565 8519).  Thank them for speaking out about the killing of unarmed demonstrators in Gaza and urge them to push for an end to the 11 year closure of the Gaza Strip.  Tell them that this is essential if a looming humanitarian catastrophe is to be averted. 

 

May 17, 2018
Senator Edward Markey
975 JFK Federal Building
15 New Sudbury Street
Boston, MA 02203

Dear Senator Markey, 

The undersigned Massachusetts organizations want to express our gratitude to you for signing onto the May 11, 2018 letter to Secretary of State Pompeo urging the administration to do what it can to alleviate the ongoing humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, including restoring its funding cuts to UNRWA, and working to ease restrictions associated with Israel’s 11-year-long siege.   

As the letter points out, unless immediate action is taken to address the dire water situation, electricity shortage and collapsing economy, the Gaza Strip may soon be ‘unlivable’ as UN reports have long warned.

The May 11th letter also calls on the US “to put its weight behind proposals to build Gaza’s economy through bold initiatives such as the proposed Gaza Seaport” which is “supported by a range of Israeli security and cabinet officials.”  

We take issue with this provision.  Although such an initiative might bring a measure of economic relief, enabling Israel to reconfigure the cage in which it has confined Gazans is not what is needed from the US. 

Instead, our country should be putting its weight behind the international consensus – long thwarted by the US through its UN vetoes - that both the 11-year-long closure of the Gaza Strip and Israel’s 50-year-long military occupation must be brought to an end and the rights of Palestinians under international law must be asserted and fully protected.  

Currently, Israel is operating with total impunity against unarmed protestors demonstrating for freedom from their open-air prison, and for a recognition of their human rights, including the rights of refugees who make up 70 percent of Gaza’s population.  

The statistics are shocking.  Without a single Israeli being killed or even injured, more than 100 Palestinians have been killed, including many children and two journalists wearing vests clearly marked ‘PRESS.’  Hundreds of journalists, hundreds of women and more than 700 children are among the 12,000 who have been wounded, many shot – according to Amnesty International – with US manufactured Remington M24s.  Amnesty reports that Israeli snipers are also using locally-made Tavor rifles with a military combat load of 5.56mm ammunition designed to fragment and pulverize bone and flesh, causing large exit wounds and often requiring amputations.  

The fact that Israeli snipers are regarding nonviolent protesters as dehumanized ‘targets’ that can be killed at will or permanently disabled with the squeeze of a trigger finger should be met with outrage by the US Congress, which in 2016 approved giving Israel $38 billion in military aid over a 10-year period.  

A range of US and international human rights groups have denounced the Gazan killings as crimes against humanity.  Shortly after the US on March 31 blocked a Security Council resolution calling for an investigation into the killings, Human Rights Watch termed them “unlawful” and urged the International Criminal Court to open a formal investigation into serious international crimes in Palestine.  (On May 8, Israel revoked the work permit of Omer Shakir, the director of Human Rights Watch, and gave him 14 days to leave the country). 

The Israeli human rights group B’Tselem has also strongly condemned “the manifestly illegal rules of engagement implemented during the demonstrations, of ordering soldiers to use lethal gunfire against unarmed demonstrators who pose no mortal danger.”  

We support the call by Amnesty International for an arms embargo on Israel.  
But we understand that the provision of the Foreign Assistance known as the ‘Leahy Law’ (section 620M)  – which limits the cut off of military aid for human rights violations to individuals and military units – can not as currently framed be made the vehicle for moving towards a nation-wide arms embargo.  

However, it can be deployed to demand accountability for how Israeli military units have been using lethal repression against unarmed Palestinian protest activity.  This would require an independent investigation into the Gaza killings.   

We ask you to continue to show sorely needed leadership on this issue by working with Senator Leahy, and your other colleagues who signed the May 11th letter, to invoke the Leahy provision in order to demonstrate that Israel is not beyond the reach of US domestic and international law.  

On its website the Israeli human rights group B’Tselem makes a compelling case for why it is particularly important to hold Israel to account in a world where human rights abuses are rife: 

 “Israel is unique in insisting that its unlawful actions are in keeping with international law.  This challenges the very foundations of international law -- unlike the conduct of states that make no attempt to lend a semblance of legality to their actions.  If the international community does not come to its senses and force Israel to abide by the rules that are binding to every state in the world, it will pull the rug out from under the global effort to protect human rights in the post-World War II era.”  

By taking a stand to hold Israel accountable you will not just be upholding the rule of law.  You will also be giving voice to increasing numbers of your constituents.  

As you may be aware, public opinion on the question of Israel/Palestine is changing both generationally and within the political parties.  A January 2018 Pew Research Center poll found that 70% of Republicans say they sympathize more with Israel than Palestinians, compared with only 27% of Democrats. 

We hope that through your leadership, growing numbers of your colleagues will be encouraged and emboldened to reflect this shifting public opinion. 
 
Sincerely,

1for3.org
Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine
Boston Coalition for Palestinian Rights
Massachusetts Peace Action
Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East
United for Justice with Peace

Delivered by:
Dr. Nancy Murray

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Woman hols signs with names of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces at Boston event "Remembering and Resisting: 70 Years of Ongoing Ethnic Cleansing in Palestine." 

Woman hols signs with names of Palestinians killed by Israeli forces at Boston event "Remembering and Resisting: 70 Years of Ongoing Ethnic Cleansing in Palestine." 

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UN to Launch War Crimes Investigation

"They are, in essence, caged in a toxic slum from birth to death; deprived of dignity; dehumanized by the Israeli authorities to such a point it appears officials do not even consider that these men and women have a right, as well as every reason, to protest." UN Human Rights Council chief speaking about Gazans.

Gaza: UN to launch war crimes investigation into Israeli forces' shooting of protesters

Palestinian protesters flee from tear gas during the demonstrations on Monday (AFP/Getty)

Palestinian protesters flee from tear gas during the demonstrations on Monday (AFP/Getty)

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The "Ongoing Nakba"

Boston Responds to the ‘Ongoing Nakba’ and Gaza Slaughter

On May 15, in the wake of the killing on a single day of 61 unarmed protesters in the Gaza Strip, more than 300 Boston-area residents refused to be deterred by reports of a violent storm sweeping across Massachusetts, and gathered in the Boston Common to express their solidarity for the Palestinian People.

 ‘Remembering and Resisting: 70 Years of Ongoing Ethnic Cleansing in Palestine,’ featured exhibits making the connection between the 1948  ‘Nakba’ (Catastrophe) during which 800,000 Palestinians were driven from their homes to make way for the State of Israel, and the ongoing process of dispossession that has undergirded Israel’s colonial expansion during the last 70 years.  

As the wind whipped up and the rain began to fall, the rally shifted to a nearby church that had at the last minute opened its doors to us as a gesture of solidarity.  

There were moving speeches delivered by Palestinians of all ages, a young member of the United American Indians of New England, solidarity activists and a spoken word poet.  They highlighted the ‘ongoing Nakba’ that was so painfully visible in the events taking place in the Gaza Strip.  The names were read of many of the 110 Gazans whose lives have been extinguished by Israeli soldiers as they participated in the nonviolent protests that were launched on Land Day, March 30, to demand freedom from the prison in which they have been confined by Israel and their right as refugees to return to their homes.

The youngest victim was an 8-month old baby, Leila Anwar Al-Ghandoor, who died on May 14 from dense tear gas being sprayed from drones on the crowd many hundreds of yards away from the first of the fences caging Gaza.

The spirit of Gaza’s Great March of Return was conveyed in a personal message to Boston from one of its founders, Abu Artema:

“The March of Return represents a new birth of life in the face of the many attempts to kill the Palestinians and their cause. The march of return is a proof of the will of people and their determination and belief in their rights. It proves that people are stronger than the arsenal of weapons owned by the occupiers. It also sends a strong message to the world that Zionism, which relied on the factor of time to legitimize the reality of occupation and end the Palestinian presence, has failed… 

Gaza has been under a deadly siege for 12 years… meant to push people to the brink of death and despair. But the march of return proved that the forces of life in the Palestinians overcame the forces of death... The Palestinians in Gaza challenged the occupation, even as the occupation bet on killing the will of life among them when hundreds of thousands marched to break the siege and to announce to the world that we will not die silently and to say, enough with this life of oppression and humiliation.  

We are talking to the free people in this world. The battles of freedom are indivisible and the Palestinians who are marching these days are fighting for the principles of freedom, justice, and dignity. This requires all of us, the ones who honor justice, freedom, and dignity, to stand with the Palestinians in this moral struggle. We take pride in your standing with us and we appreciate your commitment to the human conscience. In order to reach the inevitable historical moment of freedom, return, and self-determination, we have to work together. The Palestinian cause is a just cause.”

Standing with Palestinians “in this moral struggle” are the organizers of this Nakba event: the Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine, the Boston Palestinian Community, Grassroots International, JVP-Boston, Massachusetts Peace Action, Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East, and United for Justice with Peace, joined by 38 endorsing organizations.

Nancy Murray, for the Alliance for Water Justice in Palestine

You can listen to event speeches here.

photo credits: Hubert Murray

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