Saturday, 5 June 2010

Helen Thomas: ‘get the hell out of Palestine’

Pulse

On the White House lawn just over a week ago, veteran Press Corps reporter Helen Thomas was asked by a rabbi* whether she had any words about Israel.  She replies: “Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine.” For this off-the-cuff comment, the disingenuous response from the site RabbiLive.com and the Weekly Standard is to call her the predictable epithets.

Keep in mind that Thomas was asked and responded about Israel, not Jews in general.

Contrary to the video clip (below) — which wields the Holocaust card but conveniently neglects to mention the Palestinians — Thomas already knows a number of indigenous Arab Jews had co-existed in Palestine with Christian and Muslim Arabs. 

She was clearly referring to the Jews from outside the Middle East, from Russia, Poland and Germany. There is nothing controversial about objecting to an israeli law that would see any of these Jews automatically granted citizenship where it directly displaces and violates the rights of those actually indigenous to the region, the Palestinians. That is what is controversial.



Thomas has nothing to apologize for. At most, her choice of words may have been unqualifiedly quick and injudicious. But ‘despicable’, ‘beyond disturbing’ and Judeophobic? The attempts to discredit her are laughable and she’ll probably win even more fans with her courage.

*Rabbi David F. Nesenoff interviewed Helen Thomas on the White House Lawn on American Jewish Heritage Celebration Day at the White House.
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Autopsy shows Gaza activists were hit 30 times: report

Autopsy shows Gaza activists were hit 30 times: report

Fri Jun 4, 2010 7:00pm EDT


Thu, Jun 3 2010




LONDON (Reuters) - Nine Turkish activists killed in an Israeli raid on a Gaza-bound aid ship were shot a total of 30 times and five died of gunshot wounds to the head, Britain's Guardian newspaper reported on Friday.

Autopsy results showed the men were hit mostly with 9mm bullets, many fired at close range, the Guardian said, quoting Yalcin Buyuk, vice-chairman of the Turkish council of forensic medicine which carried out the autopsies on Friday.

Israeli commandos stormed a flotilla of aid ships planning to break the Israeli sea blockade of Gaza on Monday. The deaths, which all took place on one ship, the Mavi Marmara, drew widespread condemnation.

Israel said the marines who rappelled onto the Mavi Marmara fired in self-defense after activists attacked them with clubs and knives as well as two pistols snatched from the commandos.

The autopsy results showed that a 60-year-old man, Ibrahim Bilgen, was shot four times in the temple, chest, hip and back, the Guardian said.

A 19-year-old, named as Fulkan Dogan, who also has U.S. citizenship, was shot five times from less than 45 cm (18 inches) away, in the face, the back of the head, twice in the leg and once in the back, it said.

Two other men were shot four times. Five of those killed were shot either in the back of the head or in the back, the Guardian quoted Buyuk as saying.

In addition to those killed, 48 others suffered gunshot wounds and six activists were still missing, he added.

Israel said the multiple gunshot wounds did not mean the shots were fired other than in self defense.

"The only situation when a soldier shot was when it was a clearly a life-threatening situation," the Guardian quoted a spokesman for the Israeli embassy in London as saying.

"Pulling the trigger quickly can result in a few bullets being in the same body, but does not change the fact they were in a life-threatening situation," the spokesman said.

The newspaper quoted Haluk Ince, chairman of the council of forensic medicine in Istanbul, as saying that in only one case was there a single bullet wound, to the forehead from a distant shot, while every other body showed multiple wounds.

He said all but one of the bullets retrieved from the bodies came from 9mm rounds. Of the other round, Ince said: "It was the first time we have seen this kind of material used in firearms. It was just a container including many types of pellets usually used in shotguns. It penetrated the head region in the temple and we found it intact in the brain."

No-one at Turkey's forensic laboratory could immediately be reached for comment.

Turkey, Israel's only Muslim ally, stepped up its rhetoric over the killings on Friday, accusing the Jewish state of betraying its own biblical law.

(Reporting by Adrian Croft)

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Radwan suggests five steps in response to the flotilla massacre


[ 04/06/2010 - 04:21 PM ]

GAZA, (PIC)-- Dr. Ismail Radwan, a leader of the Hamas movement, said that Hamas demands five steps in response to the Israeli massacre which was committed on Monday on board the ships of the Freedom Flotilla.

During a rally organized by Hamas on Friday, Radwan said the steps are: the withdrawal of the Arab peace initiative, the expulsion of Israeli ambassadors from all Arab and Islamic countries, lifting the Arab cover for the Fatah-Israeli negotiations, breaking the siege on the Gaza Strip and opening the Rafah crossing once and for all.

He greeted the Turkish government and people and said: "We stand today in honor of those who fell and those who were wounded on the Freedom Flotilla, and those heroes who came to break the siege of Gaza [..] We send special greetings to the Turkish Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan who represents a towering example of how leaders should be. All greetings to you from Gaza and from these persevering masses."

Radwan called on the international community to expose Israeli crimes, the latest of which was the flotilla massacre which he described as an act of piracy in international waters and state terror against activists who carry a humanitarian message.

Commenting on Ban Ki-moon's statement that the siege failed to break Hamas and that it should be lifted immediately, Radwan said: "To all the hypocrites we say that Hamas is a movement that is very difficult to break. It will not bow or break as long as the whole population is behind it with its strong will and steadfastness."

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The Mavi Marmara Martyrs for Justice


Pulse

Paul Woodward has a great post (below) on the nine murdered men aboard the Mavi Marmara, building upon Diane Mason’s efforts. These nine confirmed dead collectively leave behind 29 now fatherless children, as well as devastated families. Meanwhile, autopsies reveal that that these murdered Turkish citizens were shot repeatedly and at close range, five of them to the head.

As the Rachel Corrie sails out towards Gaza with Denis Halliday, Nobel Laureate Mairead Maguire and many others, also check out the statement from the Irish government.  Significantly, there’s emerging evidence that IDF radio communication was fabricated. More glaring discrepancies in the official IDF claims are emerging.

Remembering the dead and the Rachel Corrie’s mission


Paul Woodward writes:

Humanitarian aid workers, a firefighter, a politician, a taekwondo champion, a photojournalist, a student who hoped to become a doctornine Turkish men, mostly fathers who leave behind children and wives.

Even while their deaths are at the center of an international crisis that is rocking the state of Israel, these individual lives lost have scarcely gained attention — firstly because the Israeli government resisted revealing any information about who died and in what circumstances, and then, while maintaining a stranglehold on the facts, Israel’s propaganda machine has worked furiously to portray the victims as villains.

The world has largely viewed Israel’s efforts to conceal its brutality with a mixture of skepticism, contempt and outrage. Yet in one regard the hasbara has worked: it has effectively sold the idea that the organizers and participants in the Freedom Flotilla were intent on picking a fight. This was an act of provocation and where opinions differ is on whether the provocation was justified or not.
The first thing you need to know about the Gaza flotilla disaster is that the intention of the activists on board the ships was to break the Israeli blockade. Delivering the embargoed goods was incidental.
In other words, the activists were like the civil rights demonstrators who sat down at segregated lunch counters throughout the South and refused to leave until they were served. Their goal was not really to get breakfast. It was to end segregation.
Yes and no.

The Freedom Flotilla is part of a movement that aims to end the siege of Gaza, but delivering humanitarian aid is not incidental.

Israeli officials and the Israeli public who see themselves as victims of a campaign designed to make Israel look bad, fail to recognize that what cements Muslim solidarity and what has turned Gaza into a global issue, is not a global conspiracy against Israel or against Jews; it is a heartfelt response to human suffering.

The Freedom Flotilla carried thousands of tons of aid, not to poke Israel in the eye, but to help those in need. The many thousands of people who engaged in fundraising, made donations, gathered together supplies and readied the ships — a grass roots effort spread mostly across Europe and the Middle East — believed, naively or not, that the fruits of their efforts would be of real and practical assistance to the population in Gaza.

But, the cynics will ask, how could a few hundred people in a small flotilla of boats hope to successfully defy Israel’s military might? Firstly, simply on the basis that other vessels had completed the same mission. But more importantly, because courageous acts are invariably undertaken in defiance of the odds. The heroic imagination is enticed by what seems impossible.

The Freedom Flotilla as David, is not challenging the Goliath of Israel in order to give the mighty Jewish state some bad headlines. This is about defeating an agent of oppression. It is not about destroying Israel, but about challenging and overcoming the injustices which Israel sustains.

As the MV Rachel Corrie now approaches Gaza, Israel’s Foreign Ministry Director-General Yossi Gal says: “We have no desire for a confrontation. We have no desire to board the ship. If the ship decides to sail the port of Ashdod, then we will ensure its safe arrival and will not board it.”
A conciliatory gesture should receive a similar response, should it not?

Don’t be fooled. Israel and the United States are now working hand in glove to try and “moderate” the oppression of the population in Gaza. While the world calls for the siege to be ended, the Obama administration is calling for it to be “new approach.” Benjamin Netanyahu is reported to be “softening” his position.

This is about moving pressure from the heel to the toe, but it still means the Palestinians remain under an Israeli foot. It’s about taking Gaza out of the spotlight in the hope that global outrage can be replaced by global indifference.

For the Rachel Corrie to sail into the Israeli port of Ashdod under its own steam would be to capitulate to the power that claims it withdrew from Gaza even while it persists in maintaining absolute control over its population, its borders, its airspace and its economy.

The Rachel Corrie must reach Gaza, but if it is thwarted, more ships will come. Israel cannot win.
(Note of thanks to Lawrence of Cyberia for compiling information on those who died in the Flotilla Massacre and creating a page where new information is being added.)

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ZIONIST PIRATES BOARDING RACHEL CORRIE NOW (not yet confirmed by Media)

Update:
An IDF militarty speaker said the Rachel Corrie ship ignored IDF orders and still heading to Gaza, the IDF is geting ready to board

http://witnessgaza.com/




Free Gaza Movement videos



 

I4P

35 miles from Gaza at 3:36 AM Irishtime, been following things for hours now forgot to post it here, apologies. Over the lsat hour two large gunboats arrived, followed by smaller boats, people are having troble contacting the passengers now. Mairead Magurie was doing an interview when the ships apporached the Rachel Corrie. Communications on Rachel Corrie are now jammed I am told now that they are being boarded UPDATE they are currently being boarded right now.

UPDATE, Israel has taken control of the boat

ISRAEL A TERRORIST ROGUE STATE

Posted by I4P Writers Group at 3:36 AM

ZIONIST PIRATES BOARDING RACHEL CORRIE NOW


2010-06-05T03:36:00+01:00

I4P Writers Group

freedom flotillaMV rachel corrie
Links to this post

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Shame behind the silence of America over Israeli crimes

Aletho News

By Paul J. Balles | 5 June 2010
The Gulf Daily News (2 June 2010) headlined a front-page article “The silence of America”. Questions were submitted to the American embassy, the White House, US State Department and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

The article concluded: THE RESPONSE WAS SILENCE. The questions posed in that article deserve a response, but not the twists provided by Israeli apologists or Zionist controlled Washington.
Why, after all the years of total blind US support for Israel, would anyone expect anything different? Here are the questions and my answers:

1. What will it take before the US even condemns Israel’s behaviour?

Answer: A provable catastrophe committed by Israel resulting in the deaths of thousands of Americans. Israel’s behaviour has no judge other than Israel. Their behaviour will remain unchecked until a significant number of Americans suffer from the reality and become enraged.

2. How many people must die at the hands of Israelis before the US will take action against their behaviour? Ten people? 1,000? 10,000?

Answer: Consider how many Palestinian (6,348 between 2000 and 2009) and Lebanese (1,401 in two unprovoked raids) civilians have died unnoticed by America. Remember the provocation by Israel and the execution by America in Iraq; add another 1,366,350 innocents. To the Israelis, what’s another 10 murders in a humanitarian flotilla to Gaza?

3. Why is the US so against an independent inquiry into the flotilla incident?

Answer: The facts of such an inquiry, like the Goldstone inquiry into the carnage of Operation Cast Lead, would be ignored and the truth of its conclusions denied. Israel says “no independent inquiry”. America follows.

4. Any armed attack on any vessel in international waters would be deemed an act of piracy or war by most countries. Is the US definition of piracy and war different from the rest of the world?
Answer: If the pirates are Somalis, no. Pirates are pirates. If the pirates are Israelis, yes. Pirates become transformed into defence forces.
5. How would the US expect the crew or passengers of a civilian US ship to react if it was boarded by a foreign force in international waters? Would it expect them to defend themselves?

Answer: Bow, submit and genuflect if the foreign force is Israeli naval pirates. The victims of the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty – an American military ship – were silenced even though the combined air and sea attack killed 34 (naval officers, seamen, two Marines and a civilian), wounded 171 and severely damaged the ship. At the time, the ship was in international waters.

6. The US says it does not consider itself to be at war with Islam, but how can it possibly hope for trust from the Muslim world and elsewhere when it tacitly backs such acts?

Answer: If the American position was honest, we would say, “We’re not at war with Islam; we’re only at war with Muslims.” When is the Muslim world going to waken to the American double talk that’s convenient only for Israel and America?
7. Does the US condemn the detention of four Bahraini civilians and others onboard the flotilla in international waters?

Answer: Fortunately, the Bahraini humanitarians have been released and returned home. The US has not and never will condemn Israel for being what ex-Israeli Gilad Atzmon described as “an inhuman murderous collective fuelled by a psychosis and driven by paranoia”.

The US response? President Obama expressed “deep regret at the loss of life”. Ultimately, Obama will follow Netanyahu’s attempt to justify the actions of the Israeli soldiers, saying they were “defending themselves” after being attacked. The same old political scam.

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Funeral Ceremony at Beyazıt Mosque

Pulse

Under a stifling hot sun, thousands of people gathered on Friday at Istanbul’s Beyazıt Mosque for Turkish humanitarian aid activist Cevdet Kılıçlar’s funeral ceremony. Kılıçlar was one among 9 victims of Israel’s deadly attack on board the Mavi Marmara on Monday. Belén Fernández and I were among the crowd, which was both sombre and charged. Read Fernández’s account here and find more photographs below.


Photo: Jasmin Ramsey


Photo: Jasmin Ramsey

Photo: Jasmin Ramsey

Photo: Jasmin Ramsey

Photo: Jasmin Ramsey

Photo: Jasmin Ramsey

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Israel navy tails Gaza aid ship

band annie’s Weblog

By bandannie

Israeli war ships are “shadowing” a Malaysian-funded Irish aid ship headed towards Gaza, activists on board have said.

The MV Rachel Corrie’s radar was reportedly jammed as the ship sailed closer to restricted waters off the Gaza Strip early on Saturday, a spokeswoman for the campaign group supporting the ship said.
Activists aboard Rachel Corrie are attempting to break the siege of Gaza imposed by Israel, five days after Israeli troops violently intercepted a flotilla of aid ships carrying humanitarian aid for the territory, killing nine activists.

Mairead Maguire, who is aboard the aid ship told Al Jazeera just before radio contact was lost, that navy vessels were following Rachel Corrie and its radar systems have been jammed. She, however, added the situation on board was calm.

“We are not afraid and we are all advocating non-violence… and we will just sit here and go if they insist on commandeering our boat and forcing us into Ashdod,” she said.

Greta Berlin of the Free Gaza movement that sent the ship, said the vessel was 56km from Gaza’s shores at 5am Israeli time [02:00 GMT].

Deterimined activists

“There were two warships in the back of them … and a smaller boat was approaching,” Berlin said from the movement’s headquarters in Cyprus, citing a passenger on board.
IN DEPTH
The Malaysian-funded ship is carrying 11 activists, including Mairead Corrigan, a Nobel Peace laureate, Denis Halliday, an Irish former senior official at the United Nations, and eight crew members.
The activists say they are determined to continue sailing to Gaza with their cargo of medical and construction supplies.

But Israel says it will not allow the ship into Gaza, and has urged it to sail to the Israeli port of Ashdod.
Those on the ship have said they will offer no resistance if Israeli forces decide to board the vessel.
The Rachel Corrie is funded by Perdana Global Peace Organisation, a Malaysian non-governmental organisation headed by Mahathir Mohamad, the country’s former prime minister.
read on

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Derry Friends of Palestine



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Turks curtail nationalism, decide they are Palestinian


Pulse


Palestinian flag outside funeral ceremony for Turkish activist contradicts Netanyahu's claim that "this was not a love boat" (Photo: Jasmin Ramsey)

This afternoon at Istanbul’s Beyazıt Mosque, the funeral ceremony was held for Turkish humanitarian aid activist Cevdet Kılıçlar, one of 9 victims of the Israeli attack on Monday on the Mavi Marmara en route to Gaza.

The full fatality list, which was inexplicably withheld until yesterday, includes 7 other Turkish citizens and a 19-year-old high school student named Furkan Doğan with a United States passport, although the U.S. State Department’s noncommittal pledge to “look into the circumstances of the death of an American citizen” suggests that the administration might prefer to relinquish territorial responsibility for him.
In fact, it appears that international territorial boundaries are becoming increasingly tailored to the whims of Israel, which is now under the impression that it is entitled not only to the land of Palestine but also Lebanese airspace and the Mediterranean Sea, with additional claims suggested by the attendance last year at the Organization of American States by Deputy Foreign Minister of Israel Danny Ayalon.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has however identified greater territorial ambitions in the region, and recently warned the world of Iran’s intentions to “establish a Mediterranean port a few kilometers from Tel Aviv and from Jerusalem.” The inauguration of the Iranian port of Gaza would apparently thus have occurred had the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) permitted the Mavi Marmara to proceed undeterred, and Netanyahu announced that it was Israel’s right “[u]nder international law and under common sense and common decency” to inspect vessels potentially containing Iranian weaponry. More enlightened commentators have meanwhile invoked the issue of Iran this week merely to suggest that most nations don’t benefit from the Israeli model of legality, sensibility, and decency, especially when it comes to the murder of traditional U.S. allies and passport holders.
Signs of allied realignment at the funeral ceremony for Kılıçlar this afternoon, attended by thousands despite the heat, included ubiquitous green and black headbands reading “HEPİMİZ FİLİSTİNLİYİZ”—“We are all Palestinians.” A man selling bananas in a wooden cart outside the Beyazıt Mosque endeavored to persuade me that the martyr Kılıçlar had in fact hailed from Palestine and that his own bananas were not affiliated with the U.S. despite their Dole labels, while a customer admitted to having sympathized with Israel when its fast food restaurants were on the receiving end of suicide bombs but had eventually amended his sympathies after calculating the ratio of Israeli civilian deaths to Palestinian.

As for yesterday’s Turkish news headlines such as “What the world couldn’t do, this country did,” it turned out that this was not a reference to the only country that could get away with boarding humanitarian aid ships and slaughtering people but rather to the fact that Nicaragua had broken off diplomatic relations with Israel in the aftermath of the attack. The article did not specify whether Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega had yet donned a headband reading “We are all Turks,” or how his show of solidarity had been received by Central American citizens who group Arab and Jewish immigrants into the pejorative Ottoman-era category turcos. Israel might meanwhile enhance its post-massacre propaganda campaign by appealing to outdated views of Turks among certain European sectors and nicknaming the Mavi Marmara “Attila the Hun.”

The fact that contemporary Turkish protest headbands read “We are all Palestinians” rather than “You are all Turks” and that the ubiquitous Turkish flag has been joined by the Palestinian one—sometimes superimposed on the same piece of cloth—additionally suggests a tempering of sorts of the intense nationalism for which Turkey is known and often resented. How long Turks will continue to claim Palestinian nationality remains to be seen, although current slogans are presumably more sustainable than past ones such as “We are all Armenians,” coined on the occasion of the 2007 assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

According to a funeral observer standing against a railing at the perimeter of the Beyazıt Mosque today, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan must proceed in accordance with new national affiliations and break off all relations and agreements with the state of Israel “in order to deny it the water necessary for life.” A somewhat contradictory foreign policy approach was however advocated by a nearby group of girls holding a banner that read: “If every Muslim dumps a bucket of water, Israel will be flooded”—a result that has not yet been achieved by Israeli usurpation of Muslim water supplies.

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Global boycotts of Israel intensify after bloody Flotilla attack

Adri Nieuwhof, The Electronic Intifada, 4 June 2010

Protesters take to the streets in Philadelphia, US.

Israel's bloody attack on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla on 31 May killing at least nine and injuring dozens of activists carrying humanitarian aid to the blockaded Gaza Strip, has already intensified global actions for boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it respects international law and human rights, including endorsement by major trade unions in several countries.

The Gaza Freedom Flotilla was on an honorable, peaceful mission in solidarity with the Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip, challenging the Israeli-imposed blockade that has deprived them of basic necessities and the ability to travel outside their densely populated enclave for four years.

In response to the attack, civil society movements around the world organized protests in dozens of cities. In the Arab world, 285 civil society organizations united around a statement condemning the crime committed against the relief convoy, demanding an end to the blockade and the turning over of Israeli war criminals to international justice. In Palestine, the Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC) declared 5 June 2010 an emergency Global BDS Day of Action, the 43rd anniversary of the Israeli occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

The BNC called for increased pressure on governments to start implementing trade sanctions and arms embargoes, and asking trade unions to refuse to handle Israeli goods. The Swedish Port Workers Union decided to blockade all Israeli ships and cargo to and from Israel effective from midnight 15 June to 24 June. The union's chairman Bjorn Borg told media that it is unclear how many vessels would be affected, but that the most frequent cargos coming from Israel were fruit, while those going to Israel were often industrial products from Sweden.

The South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (SATAWU) also responded immediately. The union appealed for "an escalation of the boycott of Israeli goods and call[ed] upon our fellow trade unionists not to handle them." And, citing the lead of Swedish dockworkers, called on its own members "not to allow any Israeli ship to dock or unload in any South African port."

Also in South Africa, the South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU) decided, by a unanimous vote of its Central Executive Committee on 4 June, to "immediately work towards" making every municipality in South Africa "an Apartheid Israel free zone" by ensuring "that there are no commercial, academic, cultural, sporting or other linkages whatsoever with the Israeli regime." ("SAMWU Declares, Every Municipality an Apartheid Israel Free Zone!," 4 June 2010). UNITE the largest union in the United Kingdom voted unanimously at its conference in Manchester "to vigorously promote a policy of divestment from Israeli companies" and promote boycott of Israeli goods and services "similar to the boycott of South African goods during the era of apartheid" ("Unite votes to boycott Israel," The Jewish Chronicle, 4 June 2010).

The UN Special Rapporteur for the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Richard Falk, also expressed his support for BDS against Israel for its "murderous behavior."

Roar Flathen, chairman of the largest Norwegian trade union federation (LO) responded to Israel's Flotilla massacre by calling on the Norwegian State Pension Fund, the third largest in the world, to divest from all Israeli companies, and demanded the recall of the Norwegian ambassador to Israel. Norwegian pension funds had previously announced divestment from certain Israeli arms companies.

Following the attacks opinion polls in Norway show a major increase in support for BDS. The number respondents planning to boycott Israeli products had increased from 9.5 to 43 percent. Norwegian minister of education and leader of the Socialist Left Party, Kristin Halvorsen, called for an international boycott of arms trade with Israel following Norway's existing policy.

There is also an intensification of the sporting boycott as Swedish young footballers refused to play in Israel, following a similar decision of the Turkish youth football team who were in Israel at the time of the Flotilla attack but canceled their planned match and returned home.

The Swedish Football Association (SFA) formally requested that European soccer's governing body UEFA cancel Sweden's under-21 match, because they felt morally compelled to do so. However, UEFA did not give in to the request, because there are no UN sanctions in place. SFA chairman, Lars-Ake Lagrell, told Swedish radio that he is not worried about reactions or demonstrations against Israeli players in the return match fixed at Old Ullevi Stadium in Gothenburg on 3 September 2010. But if precedent is a guide their could be large protests: thousands of Swedes protested the Davis Cup tennis match against Israel in Malmo in March 2009.

The civil society response has been accompanied by an unusually strong reaction from governments as well, which may indicate that public pressure is starting to force a change of policy. Denmark, France, Greece, Norway, Spain, Sweden, Egypt, and South Africa among others summoned Israeli ambassadors to express their condemnation of the attack. Due to "unforeseen circumstances," Israel's ambassador to Ireland postponed a planned appearance before the parliamentary foreign affairs committee which wanted not only answers about the Israeli actions, but also to question him about Israel's intentions concerning the Irish-owned ship the Rachel Corrie which is still en route to Gaza with humanitarian aid and several prominent peace activists aboard, including Irish Nobel Peace Prize winner Mairead Maguire.

Meanwhile, Greece suspended joint military exercises with Israel and postponed a visit by Israel's air force chief. Turkey withdrew its ambassador from Tel Aviv, and its deputy minister, Bulent Arinc, canceled three joint military drills. On 3 June, the energy minister announced that Turkey had suspended all energy and water projects with Israel.

Nicaragua responded to the attack with the suspension of diplomatic relations with Israel. The country reiterated its support for the Palestinian people and urged an end to the blockade on the Gaza Strip. South African president Jacob Zuma said in radio interview that if any other country had undertaken action like the attack on the aid flotilla it would be regarded as a pariah. On 3 June, South Africa recalled its ambassador from Israel to demonstrate its strongest condemnation of the attack.

All these actions indicate growing support for the sentiment expressed by Scottish writer Iain Banks who emphasized the need for academic and cultural boycott of Israel. Writing in The Guardian the renowned science fiction author argued that the best way for international artists, writers and academics to "convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation" is "simply by having nothing more to do with this outlaw state."

Adri Nieuwhof is a consultant and human rights advocate based in Switzerland.

Photo credit: Ahd Child.


From Pulse

Boycotting the Outlaw State

The Klaxons and Gorillaz Sound System have cancelled their shows in Israel this week. They deserve our congratulations and support. Meanwhile bestselling novelist Iain Banks has written an excellent letter to the Guardian.
Following the murderous attack on the Gaza-bound convoy, is it not time to revisit the idea of a full cultural and educational boycott of Israel (Report, 2 June)? The sports boycott of apartheid South Africa hit the Afrikaners where, arguably, they felt it most and helped them understand precisely how despicable their regime’s policies were held to be by the rest of the world.
Writers and artists refusing to visit Israel, and the cutting off of as many other cultural and educational links with Israel as possible, might help Israelis understand how morally isolated they really are. It would be a form of collective punishment (albeit a mild one), and so in a way an act of hypocrisy for those of us who have criticised Israel for its treatment of the Palestinian people in general and those in Gaza in particular, but appeals to reason, international law, UN resolutions and simple human decency mean – it is now obvious – nothing to Israel, and for those of us not prepared to turn to violence, what else can we do? For the little it’s worth, I’ve told my agent to turn down any further book translation deals with Israeli publishers. I would urge all writers, artists and others in the creative arts, as well as those academics engaging in joint educational projects with Israeli institutions, to consider doing everything they can to convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation, preferably by simply having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.
Iain Banks
North Queensferry, Fife

You will have no protection

Alice Walker, The Electronic Intifada, 4 June 2010



You will have no protection

-- Medgar Evers to Civil Rights Activists in Mississippi, shortly before he was assassinated, 12 June, 1963

My heart is breaking; but I do not mind.

For one thing, as soon as I wrote those words I was able to weep. Which I had not been able to do since learning of the attack by armed Israeli commandos on defenseless peace activists carrying aid to Gaza who tried to fend them off using chairs and sticks. I am thankful to know what it means to be good; I know that the people of the Freedom Flotilla are/were in some cases, some of the best people on earth. They have not stood silently by and watched the destruction of others, brutally, sustained, without offering themselves, weaponless except for their bodies, to the situation. I am thankful to have a long history of knowing people like this from my earliest years, beginning in my student days of marches and demonstrations: for peace, for non-separation among peoples, for justice for Women, for People of Color, for Cubans, for Animals, for Indians, and for Her, the planet.

I am weeping for the truth of Medgar's statement; so brave and so true. I weep for him gunned down in his carport, not far from where I would eventually live in Mississippi, with a box of t-shirts in his arms that said: "Jim Crow Must Go." Though trained in the United States Military under racist treatment one cringes to imagine, he remained a peaceful soldier in the army of liberation to the end. I weep and will always weep, even through the widest smiles, for the beautiful young wife, Myrlie Evers, he left behind, herself still strong and focused on the truth of struggle; and for their children, who lost their father to a fate they could not possibly, at the time, understand. I don't think any of us could imagine during that particular phase of the struggle for justice, that we risked losing not just our lives, which we were prepared to give, but also our children, who we were not.

Nothing protected Medgar, nor will anything protect any of us; nothing but our love for ourselves and for others whom we recognize unfailingly as also ourselves. Nothing can protect us but our lives. How we have lived them; what battles, with love and compassion our only shield, we have engaged. And yet, the moment of realizing we are truly alone, that in the ultimate crisis of our existence our government is not there for us, is one of shock. Especially if we have had the illusion of a system behind us to which we truly belong. Thankfully I have never had opportunity to have this illusion. And so, every peaceful witnessing, every non-violent confrontation has been a pure offering. I do not regret this at all.

When I was in Cairo last December to support CODEPINK's efforts to carry aid into Gaza I was unfortunately ill with the flu and could not offer very much. I lay in bed in the hotel room and listened to other activists report on what was happening around the city as Egypt refused entry to Gaza to the 1,400 people who had come for the accompanying Freedom march. I heard many distressing things, but only one made me feel, not exactly envy, but something close; it was that the French activists had shown up, en masse, in front of their embassy and that their ambassador had come out to talk to them and to try to make them comfortable as they set up camp outside the building. This small gesture of compassion for his country's activists in a strange land touched me profoundly, as I was touched decades ago when someone in John Kennedy's White House (maybe the cook) sent out cups of hot coffee to our line of freezing student and teacher demonstrators as we tried, with our signs and slogans and songs, to protect a vulnerable neighbor, Cuba.

Where have the Israelis put our friends? I thought about this all night. Those whom they assassinated on the ship and those they injured? Is "my" government capable of insisting on respect for their dead bodies? Can it demand that those who are injured but alive be treated with care? Not only with care, but the tenderness and honor they deserve? If it cannot do this, such a simple, decent thing, of what use is it to the protection and healing of the planet? I heard a spokesman for the United States opine at the United Nations (not an exact quote) that the Freedom Flotilla activists should have gone through other, more proper, channels, not been confrontational with their attempt to bring aid to the distressed. This is almost exactly what college administrators advised half a century ago when students were trying to bring down apartheid in the South and getting bullets, nooses, bombings and burnings for our efforts. I felt embarrassed (to the degree one can permit embarrassment by another) to be even vaguely represented by this man: a useless voice from the far past. One had hoped.

The Israeli spin on the massacre: that the commandos were under attack by the peace activists and that the whole thing was like "a lynching" of the armed attackers, reminds me of a Redd Foxx joke. I loved Redd Foxx, for all his vulgarity. A wife caught her husband in bed with another woman, flagrant, in the act, skin to skin. The husband said, probably through pants of aroused sexual exertion: All right, go ahead and believe your lying eyes! It would be fun, were it not tragic, to compare the various ways the Israeli government and our media will attempt to blame the victims of this unconscionable attack for their own imprisonment, wounds and deaths.

So what to do? Rosa Parks sat down in the front of the bus. Martin Luther King followed her act of courage with many of his own, and using his ringing, compassionate voice he aroused the people of Montgomery, Alabama to commit to a sustained boycott of the bus company; a company that refused to allow people of color to sit in the front of the bus, even if it was empty. It is time for us, en masse, to show up in front of our conscience, and sit down in the front of the only bus we have: our very lives.

What would that look like, be like, today, in this situation between Palestine and Israel? This "impasse" that has dragged on for decades. This "conflict" that would have ended in a week if humanity as a whole had acted in defense of justice everywhere on the globe. Which maybe we are learning! It would look like the granddaughter of Rosa Parks, the grandson of Martin Luther King. It would look like spending our money only where we can spend our lives in peace and happiness; freely sharing whatever we have with our friends.

It would be to support boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel to End the Occupation of Gaza and the West Bank and by this effort begin to soothe the pain and attend the sorrows of a people wrongly treated for generations. This action would also remind Israel that we have seen it lose its way and have called to it, often with love, and we have not been heard. In fact, we have reached out to it only to encounter slander, insult and, too frequently, bodily harm.

Disengage, avoid, and withhold support from whatever abuses, degrades and humiliates humanity.

This we can do. We the people; who ultimately hold all the power. We the people, who must never forget to believe we can win.

We the people.

It has always been about us; as we watch governments come and go. It always will be.

Alice Walker is a poet, novelist, feminist and activist whose award-winning works have sold over ten million copies.

Image: Israeli soldiers stand guard as the Israeli navy raids one of the ships in the Freedom Flotilla. (Uriel Sinai/Getty Images)

‘Passion of Christ’ – The ADL version

Rehmat's World

June 5, 2010

Currently, the Bavarian village of Oberammergau (pop. 5000) is holding its 41st repeat of five-hours Oberammergau Passion Play from May 15-October 3, 2010. Its first session was conducted in 1634 CE. The legend goes that when half of village population was wiped out by a deadly plague in 1633 CE, the village elders vowed that if the village was spared they would re-enact the Crucification of Christ according to the New Testament narration – every ten years – and they have kept their promise ever since.

All the actors taking part in the play are local, who re-enact the life and horrible death of Christ at the hands of Romans and Jews and then his resurrection and disappearance. This year, the organizers are expecting more than half-million visitors around the world to come to Oberammergau and watch the play.
Jewish lobby groups in Germany, France and the US have for years called the play-script being ‘anti-Semitic’. Most of the biblical story surrounding Jesus life, death and resurrection has been water-downed for the approval the ZOG in Bonn. This year play was previewed by Rabbi Eric Greenberg, Amy-Jill Levine and Professor Leona B. Carpenter, a New Testament expert. Their observations were that though many revisions (acceptable) have been made to the original biblical narration of Jesus’ birth, life, death and resurrection (as shown in Mel Gibson’s movie – watch an interview below) – the play continue to depicts damaging setreotypes of Judaism and presents Jewish leadership as “deceitful, legalistic, vindictive and xenophobic”.

Harmony Grant Daws, an expert on the New Testament and associated with National Prayer Nework, in her response to ADL, titled ADL Rewrites New Testament, wrote: “For Abraham Foxman (national director Anti-Defamation League), the Gospel itself is anti-Semitic and dangerous, as is Christian evangelism to Jews. His book, Never Again? The Threat of the New Anti-Semitism, alleges that “with every annual reading or reenactment of the story of the death of Jesus in Christian churches, millions of Christians imbibed the notion that the Jews had been guilty of the worst crime in history. Into our own time, the deicide libel has been used to justify hatred of Jews and violence against them, including from Christian pulpits.” Violence from Christian pulpits even includes the commission to witness to Jews, according to Foxman, which is seen as attempted genocide of their souls!

Jewish leaders, captained by Foxman, have been radically successful in their assault. In Oberammergau, the gospel has been stripped. Its testimony is unspeakable in public. A 375-year-old religious tradition—vowed by a city, to thank God for deliverance—has been knifed of its content. (What happened to the sovereignty of old culture? What happened to the sanctity of traditions?) Nothing could more clearly state unbelieving Jewry’s intent to make the New Testament itself unspeakable, unacceptable…illegal.

And still, it is not enough. This year the ADL led a 16-page report from interfaith experts, denouncing the play. They want it decimated completely. The report, “supported by the American Jewish Committee, B’nai B’rith International and the National Council of Synagogues,” calls for “a totally new script using contemporary biblical studies and historical research in order to eliminate continuing damaging negative stereotypes of Jews and Judaism.”

This is about the Bible, plain and simple. The original passion play was lifted from the pages of the Christian Scriptures. The text was taken to the stage. Germans simply dramatized the Pharisees’ vengeful, unrelenting persecution from the book of John; Judas’ ugly, searing betrayal which Matthew witnessed; the Jewish masses’ homicidal contempt, retold by Mark; the agony of Christ, gut-wrenchingly recorded by Luke. History proves what happened. After Jesus’ return to the Father, Christians were persecuted relentlessly. The Jewish Talmud, to this day, records Christ as an evil bastard, now in hell, writhing in boiling semen. (Gittin 56b-57a)

What happened is really not debatable. But it is unacceptable to speak. Anti-Christian Jews can be blamed for nothing. Their leaders must be portrayed as always wise, balanced, good and moderate. As a people, they were never xenophobic or legalistic. And they had nothing, nothing, to do with Jesus’ death. The nails went through His hands and feet as if by magic. There was no murder.

Isn’t it interesting? Jewish leaders allow others no such exoneration.

In Germany, there is no such convenient bleaching of history. A radically different situation prevails. There, no one can be free from their ancestral guilt. No reparations can be enough. It is actually illegal to deny German blood guilt, their culture of hate, their cries through complicity of “Gas them! Gas them!” Under Germany’s Holocaust denial laws, only Jews may revise German history (as in Oberammergau). A person who even questions the Holocaust can go to prison. It is illegal to deny the intentional, mechanized murder of six million Jews. It is illegal even to question the methods used by the Nazis. In Germany, the streets themselves are painted with the memories. Black tulips are grown in memorial sites. Every year on Holocaust Memorial Day the whole of Europe grieves for its guilt and vows it will never be repeated.
If Jerusalem were Germany, there would be monuments on every corner. In the concrete graven words would say, “This is where Jewish crowds jeered Christ up the street…This is where Jews cried, “Crucify Him.” Plaques and columns would stand between black tulips to announce, “This is where Steven was stoned because he was a Christ-follower…Let us never forget…Never again…Never again.”

History, we know, is written by the conquerors. There can be no remaining doubt about Jewish power in the western world today. Jewish leaders are the scripters of history and Christians are silent and cowed, submitting our sacred Gospels and traditions to Jewish scissors as if they mean nothing………”
Earlier in 1903 – Cyrus I. Scofield revised the King James version of Bible by inserting pro-Zionist notes in the margins, between verses and chapters and on the bottom of the pages. It was published by Jewish publishinghouse, the Oxford Press under the name Scofield Reference Bible, which gave Zionist Jews and Zionist Christians ‘the divine’ right to expel 700,000 Muslim and Christian Palestinians in order to make space for the unwanted Jews in Europe.

Categories: Contemporary religions

River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian

"...No mercy... without some sort of highly public apology ..."

Via Friday-Lunch-Club


".... “They should think twice, hundreds of times, millions of times, before making such statements that certain people and certain circles are saying against Turkey,” Tan said, apparently referring to U.S. lawmakers and pro-Israel activists who have issued statements in recent days criticizing the flotilla activists for provoking the violence....

Israel must issue a formal apology, provide compensation to the victims’ families, as well as accept an independent, international investigation of the incident, Nam said. Two previous Turkish demands – that Israel immediately return all of the some 600 activists from 30 nations detained on the aid flotilla and return the bodies of those killed –have already been met. Turkey is also asking Israel to loosen its blockade on humanitarian aid going into Gaza. The Obama administration has made clear that this is something it also is urging Israel to consider.


Tan reiterated Turkey's disappointment in Washington’s muted public response to the flotilla violence to date, and its failure to publicly condemn Israeli actions....

Tan conceded that Israel may realize that it made it a mistake in how it conducted the raid, but showed no mercy for helping Israel find a way to back itself out of the corner without some sort of highly public apology, and agreement for an independent investigation of the flotilla violence....
And Tan offered several examples of strategic stakes and once intimate diplomatic ties for Israel to lose. ....... [and] much of a previously scheduled meeting Davutoglu held with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Tuesday that was supposed to focus on Iran ended up focused on the flotilla incident..... also seemed to indicate that Turkey’s vote at the UN Security Council on an Iran sanctions resolution was still up for grabs, indicating that while Turkey has made clear it opposes economic sanctions on Iran as a general principal, it has not said publicly which way it will vote on the key resolution.


For years in Washington, there was heavy overlap in pro-Israel and pro-Turkey circles, from lobby groups to strong U.S. defense sales to both countries as Turkey and Israel developed extensive military to military ties, and Israelis traveled widely in Turkey. ........

"The sad truth is that we treat Turkey like an ally, while the rest of the world treats Israel like a problem the U.S. has to solve," Rep. Anthony Weiner (D-N.Y.)wrote in a New York Daily News oped Thursday. "The week's events and Turkey's growing hostility toward Israel upend this misguided world-view. In fact, the same 'past tense' we use to describe a once-promising relationship between Israel and Turkey may soon need to be applied to our own relationship with the Turkish nation - if it continues to replace rationality with provocation and a belief in solutions with a culture that celebrates destructive martyrdom."
http://s3.amazonaws.com/lightstalkers/images/36468/us_attack_to_afghanistan2_large.jpg

Posted by G, Z, or B at 2:24 PM

MV RACHEL CORRIE UPDATE

I4P

Latest news is there was just a live interview with the ship and they are now only 80 miles from Gaza. If people recall the Zionist murderers attacked the Turkish ship 90 miles out.

Here's the interview:



And in other news the Irish free state government said this today:

04/06/2010
Statement by Minister Micheál Martin on the Rachel Corrie

The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Mr. Micheál Martin, T.D. has issued the following statement:

“The Government has made clear that it believes that the Rachel Corrie should be allowed to proceed to Gaza and to unload its humanitarian cargo. Those on board the Rachel Corrie have indicated that they are ready to accept inspection of their cargo at sea, prior to docking in Gaza. However, the Israeli government has stated that it is not willing to allow any breach of their naval blockade of Gaza.

As the Rachel Corrie continues to approach Gaza, the Government’s primary concern is the safety of Irish citizens and others on board. We are also conscious of the urgent need to address the humanitarian concerns of the people of Gaza, the desirability of reducing international tensions following the violent storming of humanitarian supply vessels by Israeli commandos earlier this week, and the obligation of States to respect the right to peaceful protest.

Acting on these considerations, I sought through various contacts to secure an agreement which would ensure the safety of those on board the Rachel Corrie, allow them to make their protest, and provide for the delivery to Gaza of the Rachel Corrie’s full cargo.

On Friday morning, an understanding was reached with the Israeli government whereby the Rachel Corrie would have approached the Israeli exclusion zone before accepting diversion to the Israeli port of Ashdod. At Ashdod, the cargo would have been unloaded and inspected under the supervision of UN and officials from the Irish Aid Division of my Department. The entire cargo, including what is understood to be 550 tonnes of cement, would then have been transported to Gaza. Two persons from the Rachel Corrie would have been permitted to accompany the cargo to the Israeli border crossing into Gaza at Erez.

In my view, such an arrangement would have offered a useful precedent for future humanitarian shipments, pending the complete lifting of the blockade.

This proposal was put to those on board the Rachel Corrie who, on Friday afternoon, after careful consideration and having thanked the Government for its efforts, declined to accept it. I fully respect their right to do so and to continue their protest action by seeking to sail to Gaza.
If, as is their stated intention, the Israeli government intercepts the Rachel Corrie, the Government demands that it demonstrate every restraint. Those on board the Rachel Corrie have made clear their peaceful intentions and have stated that they will offer no resistance to Israeli forces. Based on these assurances, there can be no justification for the use of force against any person on board the Rachel Corrie.

The Government also urges the Israeli Government to ensure the transfer to Gaza of the entire cargo of the Rachel Corrie, including cement which is urgently needed for the reconstruction of Gaza. The Government continues to call on Israel to lift its blockade of Gaza. Pending that, Israel should immediately facilitate the import into Gaza of all goods, other than weapons.”

ENDS

04 June 2010
Posted by I4P Writers Group at 9:31 PM


River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian