Gaza Freedom March http://palestine.ctsastl.org St. Louis Delegates: Ongoing Analysis and Further Action posterous.com Tue, 26 Apr 2011 06:02:56 -0700 Untitled http://palestine.ctsastl.org/50869309 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/50869309 http://zojuzopi.t35.com/

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Tue, 12 Jan 2010 05:41:40 -0800 Shining a Light on the Occupation http://palestine.ctsastl.org/shining-a-light-on-the-occupation http://palestine.ctsastl.org/shining-a-light-on-the-occupation A review of Kathleen and Bill Christison, Palestine in Pieces: Graphic
Perspectives on the Israeli Occupation (Verso, 2009).
by Mark Chmiel

When several of us went to work with the International Solidarity
Movement in 2003, my friend Pat Geier observed that her going raised
the anxiety level of her friends in Louisville. Because she was
headed into a possibly dangerous conflict zone, her friends began to
pay more serious attention to what was going on there. That said, I
can strongly recommend Kathleen and Bill Christison’s recent book
Palestine in Pieces to anyone who has made a first trip to Palestine
as well as to those people who’ve had their anxiety and awareness
raised by such travelers.

For example, I think of Matt Miller and Nima Sheth who spent a week on
the West Bank in 2008 and a day in Gaza in 2009; Kelly McBride who
visited the West Bank for three days in 2009; and J’Ann Allen and
Sandra Tamari, who just returned from Cairo where they and 1400 other
internationals had gathered to march to Gaza. I’m guessing that each
of them knows at least a score of people who were made more aware of
the injustices the Palestinians face daily.

Years ago, the Christisons were analysts with the Central Intelligence
Agency. Their journey into solidarity with the Palestinians’ struggle
for freedom has been a long, gradual, and humble one. Having made
seven visits to the West Bank and Gaza since 2003, the Christisons
bring to this book familiarity on the ground, critical analysis, and
passion commensurate with the oppression inflicted on the
Palestinians. It’s instructive and intriguing to read how a couple
once ensconced in the foreign policy establishment came to such
clarity about this asymmetrical conflict.

The title of the book bluntly calls attention to the results of the
Israel’s occupation. To see the realities created on the
Palestinians’ land by Israel’s settlers and army is to come close to
despair about the possibilities of a meaningful two-state settlement.
The reason is the occupation has so fractured the Palestinians’
economic, social, cultural, and religious lives that they are living
separated from their compatriots and, often, their own means of
employment, access to health care centers, and ability to cultivate
their agricultural fields.

Several chapters introduce the reader to the interlocking modalities
of the occupation’s domination of the Palestinians: carving up their
land by establishing Jewish-only settlements (or colonies) and
erecting the illegal Separation Wall; proliferating checkpoints and
roadblocks that impede Palestinians’ freedom of movement; demolishing
people’s homes; and subjecting cities, towns, and villages to the
severe measures of curfew, closure, and siege.

Three representative passages:

Security is not an adequate or an appropriate excuse for wanton
killing, for expropriating massive tracts of Palestinian land, for
imprisoning millions behind walls and razor wire, for bulldozing
thousands of homes belonging to innocent people never charged with or
even suspected of terrorism. What exactly is the reason for spilling
sewage from Israeli settlements onto the land of neighboring
Palestinian villages? What indeed is the security excuse for planting
settlements on Palestinian land in the West Bank in the first place?
What is the reason for dropping 1,000-pound bombs or lobbing artillery
shells onto homes and apartment blocs in the middle of the night when
it is a certainty that the vast majority of the casualties will be
civilian?

The hypocrisy of the demand for sympathy for Israel’s position, when
Israel is the human rights violator and the brutal oppressor, is
stunning. (p. 20)

***

At the root of the vast matrix of roads and checkpoints that cripple
the Palestinian economy and Palestinian lives is the network of
Israeli settlements throughout the West Bank. Without the settlements,
there would be no segregated roads, no checkpoints and, most likely,
no Separation Wall. The checkpoints protect the roads; the roads
protect the settlements; the settlements are a colonial implantation,
relentlessly expanding, intended to grab land and keep it for Israel.
Like the “critically inferior” Palestinian road system that must pass
underneath Israeli roads, all Palestinian interests, all Palestinian
security and viability are subordinate to this essential Israeli
objective of Jewish expansion across all of Palestine. (p. 86)

***

There are hardly words to describe the human suffering and degradation
deliberately imposed on Palestinians by Israel’s occupation. The
Israeli threat to Palestinian lives and livelihood, individually and
collectively—indeed to Palestinian national existence—through theft of
land and the siege of towns and villages, through walls and roads and
blockades that strangle, through the crippling of economic
opportunity, through deliberate large-scale killing, together resemble
a hunting expedition to cage and ultimately eliminate animals from a
natural habitat. Israeli leaders, Israeli settlers, Israeli soldiers
treat Palestinians not as a collective of human beiges, but as trapped
animals whose fate is of little or no concern. (p.137)

One of the dedicatees of the authors’ book is Rachel Corrie, the U.S.
college student who was killed by an IDF soldier in his bulldozer, as
she attempted to prevent a Palestinian family’s home from being
destroyed. In 2003 she had come to Gaza to work with the
International Solidarity Movement. In an email to her family, she
confessed, “I'm having a hard time right now. Just feel sick to my
stomach from being doted on very sweetly, by people who are facing
doom. I know that from the United States it all sounds like
hyperbole. A lot of the time the kindness of the people here, coupled
with the willful destruction of their lives, makes it seem unreal to
me. I can't believe that something like this can happen in the world
without a bigger outcry. It hurts me, again, like it has hurt me in
the past, to witness how awful we can allow the world to be.” Like
Corrie, the Christisons have experienced such kindness, incredulity,
and indignation, and these formative contacts with the Palestinian
reality have given birth to this book.


Palestine in Pieces is a penetrating work of demystification and
conscientization. May something inside this book—a story, a photo, a
fact—hurt something inside the reader as she feels arise in her the
conviction: This must not be.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Wed, 06 Jan 2010 11:54:00 -0800 Yvonne Ridley Interviews Hedy Epstein in Cairo http://palestine.ctsastl.org/yvonne-ridley-interviews-hedy-epstein-in-cair http://palestine.ctsastl.org/yvonne-ridley-interviews-hedy-epstein-in-cair

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Mon, 04 Jan 2010 12:29:00 -0800 Dana Elborno writes of her experience of the GFM as a Palestinian-American http://palestine.ctsastl.org/dana-elborno-writes-of-her-experience-of-the http://palestine.ctsastl.org/dana-elborno-writes-of-her-experience-of-the

100104-cario-gaza

"Hedy Epstein, a Holocaust survivor on hunger strike to protest the Egyptian government's refusal to let us travel to Gaza, chose not to board the bus and gave a beautiful, emotional and painful speech explaining her decision...

"Accepting these buses [to Gaza on December 30] and boarding them was
in effect changing our political goal to a weak humanitarian goal. The
Gaza Freedom March was supposed to stand as a testament of a global
voice yelling, 'Enough is enough, break the siege.' These buses turned
us into a small delegation of people carrying humanitarian aid into a
land under siege. That is simply not who we are. Or even worse, these
buses had turned us into a disconnected group of people with
individual reasons for going to Gaza. Again, this is not at all who we
were. Of course I am not saying that I was not ambivalent about
wanting to go as an individual; all I have ever wanted to do is go to
Gaza and walk into the pictures of our home that hang on walls and sit
on mantles in our house in Chicago. But as a part of a political
group, neither my sister nor I could board that bus with a clear
conscience.

"It was one of the hardest decisions I have ever made, but in the end
I was sure: it was either all of us go or none of us. If only 100
went, the news story would have changed from 1,400 protest against the
siege in Gaza to Egypt allows 100 activists into Gaza. I did not want
to be used as a pawn by the Egyptian government to save their face in
the Arab world, nor did I want to weaken the political message of the
Gaza Freedom March."

The full story:
http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article10986.shtml

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sun, 03 Jan 2010 10:36:44 -0800 Egypt Opens Rafah Crossing into Gaza for 4 Days; More on GFM Activity in Cairo http://palestine.ctsastl.org/egypt-opens-rafah-crossing-into-gaza-for-4-da http://palestine.ctsastl.org/egypt-opens-rafah-crossing-into-gaza-for-4-da "Egyptian authorities have temporarily opened the Rafah border
crossing with the Gaza Strip, allowing those with permits to cross.
Authorities said that by early afternoon on Sunday around 133 people
had crossed from Gaza into Egypt - mostly students with visas for
foreign countries, and patients in need urgent of medical care."

Complete story:
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2010/01/20101310631832820.html

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sat, 02 Jan 2010 08:51:12 -0800 Philip Weiss: An Account of Wed planning and Thur action in Tahrir Square http://palestine.ctsastl.org/philip-weiss-an-account-of-wed-planning-and-t http://palestine.ctsastl.org/philip-weiss-an-account-of-wed-planning-and-t "The plan for [Thursday] was largely set. Mick had talked it over with
the “magnificent” French, the 300 or so marchers who were still
barricaded/imprisoned on the sidewalk outside their embassy but had
hopes of getting out. We would drift into Tahrir Square, the central
downtown Cairo intersection, at 9:30 the next morning, Dec. 31, the
day that we were supposed to be marching in Gaza alongside the
Palestinian civil society group that had invited us. We would pretend
to be just what the Egyptians wanted us to be—tourists– till 10
o’clock, and then the women leading the protest would give a sign,
unfurl a banner outside the Museum of Antiquities, and we were to
cloud together like bees, and start to march. The Egyptian security
forces would surely stop us, but we would take as much of the square
as we could and try to hold the space."

Full story:
http://mondoweiss.net/2010/01/the-reluctant-radical.html

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sat, 02 Jan 2010 07:22:47 -0800 [video] Guardian covers Tahrir Square protest Dec 31 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-guardian-covers-tahrir-square-protest-d http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-guardian-covers-tahrir-square-protest-d Egyptian police halt Gaza protest in Cairo

Large numbers of Egyptian riot police blocked the demonstration near
the Egyptian Museum in the city centre and contained the protesters by
the side of the road.
Around 1,400 activists from 43 countries arrived in Egypt last week to
commemorate the first anniversary of Israel's 2008 attack on Gaza


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2009/dec/31/gaza-freedom-march-egypt

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sat, 02 Jan 2010 05:49:19 -0800 [photos] St. Louis Delegation at French Embassy on Thursday, December 31 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/photos-st-louis-delegation-at-french-embassy http://palestine.ctsastl.org/photos-st-louis-delegation-at-french-embassy

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sat, 02 Jan 2010 04:53:00 -0800 [audio] KPFA Flashpoints for Dec 28, 29, and 30 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/audio-kpfa-flashpoints-for-dec-28-29-and-30 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/audio-kpfa-flashpoints-for-dec-28-29-and-30

Dennis Bernstein of KPFA's Flashpoints program covered the Gaza
Freedom March on three consecutive programs:

Flashpoints - December 28, 2009 at 5:00pm

Click to listen (or download)
Flashpoints - December 29, 2009 at 5:00pm

Click to listen (or download)
Flashpoints - December 30, 2009 at 5:00pm

Click to listen (or download)

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Sat, 02 Jan 2010 04:31:00 -0800 [video] Ehab addresses GFM at bus departure point Wed morning, Dec 30 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-ehab-addresses-gfm-at-bus-departure-poi http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-ehab-addresses-gfm-at-bus-departure-poi

Sandra Tamari of the St. Louis delegation recorded Ehab of the GFM
steering committee addressing the GFM delegates who gathered at
the bus departure point on Wednesday morning, December 30.


Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Fri, 01 Jan 2010 19:58:11 -0800 Hedy Epstein Signs the Cairo Declaration on January 1, 2010 http://palestine.ctsastl.org/hedy-epstein-signs-the-cairo-declaration-on-j http://palestine.ctsastl.org/hedy-epstein-signs-the-cairo-declaration-on-j
Gfm_0101_004

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Fri, 01 Jan 2010 13:07:25 -0800 Sandra Tamari Comments on Help Received on Thursday in Tahrir Square http://palestine.ctsastl.org/sandra-tamari-comments-on-help-received-on-th http://palestine.ctsastl.org/sandra-tamari-comments-on-help-received-on-th I am traveling with Hedy Epstein and J'Ann Allen. We are St. Louis,
Missouri activists in Cairo for the Gaza Freedom March.

We participated in the action taking over the street at Tahrir Square
on December 31. When the police quickly barricaded us in, we felt a
great fear of being crushed. Others sensed this too and mobilized to
protect Hedy from danger. French delegate Clare Didier, who out of
respect for Hedy had visited us in the hotel the previous night,
mobilized several people to create a buffer zone around Hedy to shield
her from falling or being crushed. Anthony Lowenstein from Australia
was positioned behind us and was critical in keeping the space behind
us. Many of us, including Hedy, fell when the crowds pushed from
behind. Immediately, many individuals worked to get Hedy up to her
feet. I had fallen too but was still holding on to Hedy's arm when we
got up and we started to be led toward the sidewalk. I saw a woman
just to my right being beaten by a police officer. I was so angry
that I punched the officer in the arm (and I admit this with
embarrassment since I'm a Quaker). The officer smiled at me and I
believe he was going to come after me. But suddenly one of the senior
police officers recognized Hedy and started yelling "Hasab! Hasab!"
which means VIP. Immediately the atmosphere changed and the police
created a buffer zone around Hedy and helped Hedy, J'Ann and me onto
the sidewalk. Many internationals saved Hedy from harm and Hedy saved
me from a potential beating.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Fri, 01 Jan 2010 12:27:00 -0800 The Cairo Declaration http://palestine.ctsastl.org/the-cairo-declaration http://palestine.ctsastl.org/the-cairo-declaration

Hedy Epstein of St. Louis, as well as 127 others, including J’Ann
Schoonmaker Allen and Sandra Tamari of the St. Louis delegation, have
signed the following declaration issued by those gathered in Cairo for
the Gaza Freedom March.

Here's an account from the Indypendent of the signing of the declaration
and subsequent protest outside Israel's embassy in Cairo:
http://www.indypendent.org/2010/01/01/2689/

cairodeclaration.pdf Download this file

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Fri, 01 Jan 2010 04:11:00 -0800 Further Background on Political Developments in Cairo among GFM http://palestine.ctsastl.org/further-background-on-political-developments http://palestine.ctsastl.org/further-background-on-political-developments

A post on Jewbonics provides more details about Wednesday's
developments among the GFM dlegates as the Egyptian deal was rejected:

"Two days ago, Egypt attempted to placate the marchers by offering the
organizers permission for a token 100 marchers to enter Gaza.
Initially, a segment of the steering committee accepted the offer.

"But after many of the core delegations refused to submit to tokenism,
including the French EuroPalestine group, which has spent nearly a
week sleeping in tents in front of their embassy, and the South
African contingent, with leadership strengthened in the crucible of
the anti-apartheid struggle, a fuller, more representative segment of
the steering committee rejected the offer in deliberations that lasted
until dawn, and attempted to prevent the buses from leaving.

"Two young Palestinian-American sisters, Dana and Lara Elbrno, their
father from Gaza, were among those who refused to go. They said they
could not accept the offer and were unwilling to accept the terms the
Egyptian government had imposed: the buses allowed into Gaza under the
auspices of Code Pink and not the Gaza Freedom March, their purpose
framed explicitly as a humanitarian convoy and not a political symbol
- ultimately, they said, the conversion of a political statement
against the siege into charity.

"Others, selected among the 100, refused the offer too. Palestinian
author Ali Abunimah and Filipino politician and writer Walden Bello of
the Akbayan Party disembarked when they heard that the Gaza Freedom
March's core partners in Palestinian civil society, including Haidar
Eid, a literature professor at Al-Aqsa University and Omar Barghouthi,
the founder of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions campaign, also
spurned the offer, claiming it was divisive, and so, 'we deeply feel,
terrible for the solidarity movement.'"

Here's the full story:
http://www.maxajl.com/?p=2792

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 18:55:00 -0800 PRI's The World Reports on GFM in Tahrir Square http://palestine.ctsastl.org/hedy-epstein-interviewed-on-pris-the-world http://palestine.ctsastl.org/hedy-epstein-interviewed-on-pris-the-world

Report includes comments by Hedy Epstein about the purpose of the purpose of the GFM: "to break the siege of Gaza which has been going on for way too long."

Pri's The World: December 31, 2009 by Happy New Year! Listen on Posterous

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis Happy New Year! - Pri's The World: December 31, 2009
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 14:46:42 -0800 GFM at Midnight in Tahrir Square http://palestine.ctsastl.org/gfm-at-midnight-in-tahrir-square http://palestine.ctsastl.org/gfm-at-midnight-in-tahrir-square Thanks to Ali Abunimah:
http://aliabunimah.posterous.com/

Gaza Freedom Marchers in Tahrir Square in Cairo
...accompanied at a distance by the riot police

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 12:28:34 -0800 [video] Thursday Morning in Tahrir Square as GFM Delegates Gather http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-thursday-morning-in-tahrir-square-as-gf http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-thursday-morning-in-tahrir-square-as-gf Thanks to Sam Husseini for his coverage:

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 10:50:00 -0800 [photos] St. Louis Delegation in Cairo http://palestine.ctsastl.org/photos-st-louis-delegation-in-cairo-on-thursd http://palestine.ctsastl.org/photos-st-louis-delegation-in-cairo-on-thursd

J'Ann Allen provides photos from the St. Louis delegation.

Members of the French delegation visit with Hedy Epstein and the St. Louis delegation on Wednesday.

Scenes from Tahrir Square on Thursday.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 09:55:00 -0800 [video] Hedy Epstein Speaks to GFM Delegates Wednesday Morning http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-hedy-epstein-speak-to-gfm-delegates-wed http://palestine.ctsastl.org/video-hedy-epstein-speak-to-gfm-delegates-wed

Video from Wednesday:
Hedy Epstein addresses GFM delegates at the bus meeting point on
Wednesday morning explaining her decision to remain in Cairo.

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis
Thu, 31 Dec 2009 09:39:00 -0800 J'Ann Allen Halts Cairo Traffic with Ball of Yarn http://palestine.ctsastl.org/jann-allen-halts-cairo-traffic-with-ball-of-y http://palestine.ctsastl.org/jann-allen-halts-cairo-traffic-with-ball-of-y

The Gaza Freedom Marchers attempted to block traffic in Cairo's Tahrir
Square this morning but were pushed onto the sidewalk by riot police
after a few minutes and then corralled for the next several hours.
St. Louisan J'Ann Allen, however, was able to accomplish what the 500
were unable to do earlier in the day -- with a simple ball of yarn.
As Sandra Tamari, Hedy Epstein, and J'Ann got into a taxi to head back
to their hotel, a ball of yarn fell out of J'Ann's bag and onto the
street as the cab door closed. When someone flagged the driver, he
stopped abruptly in the middle of heavy Cairo traffic to get out and
retrieve the yarn, drawing laughter from police and stalled motorists.
Potential for future actions?

Permalink | Leave a comment  »

]]>
http://files.posterous.com/user_profile_pics/320969/CTSA-Logo-48.png http://posterous.com/users/37lu2SgzvAMV Center for Theology and Social Analysis CTSA Center for Theology and Social Analysis