Take Action: Stand with the Anti-War Committee

image2

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands with the Anti-War Committee and encourages all supporters and friends of Palestinian political prisoners and the Palestinian struggle for liberation to support this call to action. Activists with the Anti-War Committee are being criminalized and attacked by University of Minnesota officials – and were arrested – following a protest against Israeli professor and author of the Israeli military’s “code of ethics” Moshe Halbertal on 3 November in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in the United States.

Rather than rejecting a war crimes apologist and architect of the systematic oppression of the Palestinian people, the University of Minnesota Law School paid Halbertal a $5,000 speaking fee, treating him as an honored guest, while meeting human rights activists, concerned students, and Palestinian and solidarity organizers with police force and arrest. Among the three activists arrested was a National Lawyers Guild observer filming the police aggression against protesters.

We salute the strength, commitment and integrity of the protest organizers, including longtime justice advocates, students of color, and Palestinian and Arab students and community members. As the Anti-War Committee writes, “Actions like the protest at the UMN Law School are critical to advancing this work. We call on people of conscience to seize every opportunity to challenge the normalization of the Israeli occupation, including directly confronting Zionist voices on our campuses, in our communities and in the government! It’s time we stop giving racist, Zionist, war apologists a free pass to speak on any public platform. Their words are hate speech and distortions, while their politics promote apartheid, occupation, and the denial of Palestinian liberation, including the fundamental right of return.”

We also note here that this is far from the first time the Anti-War Committee is targeted for repression; it has been targeted for FBI spying, government infiltration, and its offices were raided as part of the “Anti-War 23” raids and grand jury that have been attempting for over five years to target Palestine solidarity, anti-imperialist and anti-war organizers in the United States.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands with the Anti-War Committee and their commitment to full Palestinian liberation in a framework of anti-imperialist struggle for justice around the world. The AWC has always supported the struggle of Palestinians at all levels – including the struggle of Palestinian political prisoners. We demand that all criminal or disciplinary charges be dropped against all arrestees and that the University of Minnesota Law School stand with students and community activists defending human rights and justice, reject and take action to put an end to police use of force against students of color and community members, and end its hosting and honoraria of architects of the U.S. and Zionist war machine.

Please take action and stand with the Anti-War Committee by contacting Dean of the University Law School, David Wippman (612-625-4841, dwippman@umn.edu). Urge him to put an end to the policy of hosting  Zionist pro-war speakers; call on him to drop the charges against the three arrested, and end the public call for disciplining students who attended the protest; and challenge him on his praise of the police conduct, which included the shameful use of physical force, particularly against students of color.

You can also support the Anti-War Committee by writing to Minnesota media about the event: “We have published our responses to the Washington Post and Star Tribune respectively on our own website, here and here. Please amplify our efforts by submitting your own letters to the editor at the Star Tribune and the Minnesota Daily.”

Stand with the Anti-War Committee

One week ago, on Tuesday, November 3rd, the Anti-War Committee led a protest against a war crimes apologist, Moshe Halbertal, who was the featured speaker at the U of M Law School for a talk entitled “Protecting Civilians: Moral Challenges of Asymmetric Warfare.”

In response to our protest, the UMN Law School launched a campaign of public condemnation.  Their professors have used their prestigious positions at the University to denounce us in the media. Coverage in Fight Back News, the UpTake, Palestine in America, and even the Minnesota Daily, gave voice to our perspective; on the other hand, Haaretz, the Washington Post, and the Star Tribune all published one-sided reports that criticized the protest, failing to explain what motivated us.

Palestinian voices are routinely silenced, especially on university campuses across the country, by an epidemic of repression. Palestine Legal and the Center for Constitutional Rights have documented some 300 cases of repression of Palestinian rights advocates in 2014-2015; 85% were on college campuses. The response to our protest exemplifies this reality.  The Law School chose to answer our protest with police force. Students of color, especially those perceived as Arab or Muslim, were targeted with particular force by police, even when they were not disruptive. Now we have public calls by tenured faculty to discipline any students involved – students at the U and members of Students for Justice in Palestine on campus face disciplinary action and possible expulsion. For what? For challenging a representative of the Israeli occupation on their campus.

Please stand with us and with student members of our activist community by contacting the Dean of the University Law School, David Wippman (612-625-4841, dwippman@umn.edu).

Urge him to put an end to the policy of hosting  Zionist pro-war speakers; call on him to drop the charges against the three arrested, and end the public call for disciplining students who attended the protest; and challenge him on his praise of the police conduct, which included the shameful use of physical force, particularly against students of color.

Also, we need your help challenging one-sided media that has only given space to official Law School voices, and so far, failed to publish our rebuttals. Civil disobedience is an important tactic for breaking into mainstream media with anti-war and pro-Palestinian perspectives.

We have published our responses to the Washington Post and Star Tribune respectively on our own website, here and here. Please amplify our efforts by submitting your own letters to the editor at the Star Tribune and the Minnesota Daily.

Below is the Anti-War Committee’s statement regarding the protest and our actions.  Please use it not only to defend us, but also to help bring Palestinian voices into the center of community discussions about their own liberation.

Sincerely,

The Anti-War Committee

AWCbanner

Anti-War Committee Statement on the November 3rd Protest Against War Crimes Apologist, Moshe Halbertal

This fall, the Anti-War Committee learned that the University of Minnesota Law School would host Moshe Halbertal, a co-author of the the Israeli Defense Forces Code of Ethics.  Halbertal has a long public record of standing behind many of Israel’s atrocities, and is a professional war crimes apologist.

The University of Minnesota is wrong to spend $5000 in public funds for any speaker who gives cover to war crimes. In particular, there is an international movement to boycott Israel. That movement calls on academic institutions to NOT sponsor or participate in projects that whitewash Israel’s human rights abuses. We could not ignore the University’s decision to provide a platform that legitimizes apartheid and occupation.

Students for Justice in Palestine-UMN, Students for a Democratic Society-UMN, Women Against Military Madness, and Jewish Voices for Peace joined us to speak out against the use of “ethics” to justify Israel’s ongoing violations of human rights and international law.

Moshe Halbertal has put his views on the public record, clearly acting as a spokesperson for Israeli occupation, and an apologist for the crimes of its military.  Halbertal distorts the language of international law to justify the apartheid wall and the military occupation of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and to trivialize the horrific conduct of the Israeli military in repeated massacres of Palestinians living in Gaza.

Halbertal praised the Netanyahu government for “showing restraint” in Gaza. This is unbelievable, given the real facts of the 2014 war on Gaza. The Israeli military used on Gaza the equivalent explosive force of the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, and the effects were devastating.

UN reports document the losses in Gaza during summer 2014 (also here, here and here): Israel killed some 2,250 Palestinians, including at least 551 children. 140 families in Gaza were partially or completely obliterated in Israeli attacks. Some 18,000 housing units were destroyed, leaving over 100,000 people homeless. IDF targeted civilian infrastructure, with flagrant disregard for international law prohibiting such acts. The sole power plant was bombed, the largest sewage plant was destroyed, and 7 UN schools being used as emergency shelters were bombed. 22 Gaza schools were blown apart and 118 more were severely damaged. 24 medical facilities were damaged. As we said directly to Halbertal: That’s not restraint, that’s criminal!

Halbertal has attempted to justify and explain away such atrocities with statements such as ‘war is messy,’ admitting mistakes were made, but only ‘sporadically,’ that the IDF maintained ‘a serious effort to minimize collateral harm and to target only combatants,’ and that so-called “standards of proportionality” were maintained. Halbertal dismisses the harsh truth — that Israel indiscriminately, callously, carelessly and indifferently killed civilians — as ‘nonsense.’

Aware of his record, we set out to challenge Halbertal, and his University hosts. As the introductions were just beginning, one protester stood and asked, “Why is the Law School spending $5000 for a war crimes apologist to defend Israel, while University students can’t afford tuition rates that have doubled in ten years? Why is the university flagrantly violating its commitment to human rights by refusing to honor the academic boycott of Israel, hosting a speaker that gives legal cover to apartheid?” She was pressed to leave by the U of M police, but the crowd joined in chants of “Free, free Palestine!” as she exited.

Over half of the audience was with us, many of them from the Arab and Muslim community. Community members rose from their seats, one after another, making it impossible for Halbertal’s talk to proceed. Some 20 people intervened in the event, challenging Halbertal on Israeli war crimes in Gaza last summer, and the current violations of international law and human rights in the West Bank. Most ended their remarks with chants, such as “These are massacres, not mistakes! These are war crimes! Free, free Palestine!” and “Occupation is a crime, free, free Palestine!” While many joined the chanting, some people were removed by police simply for wearing keffiyehs (Palestinian scarves) and pro-Palestine t-shirts. We were troubled to see police use disproportionate force in removing Palestinian and other Black and brown protesters. This is especially troubling in light of Law School praise for the actions of police, who they called in to shut down protesters.

Palestine supporters delayed Halbertal’s speech with interruptions for more than a half an hour.  After we were ejected from the lecture hall, we continued in the hallway for another 30 minutes, with chants that could not be ignored. Ultimately, we were forced to leave the Law School under threat of arrest. In fact, three people were arrested.

The first arrest was of a man acting as an informal legal observer, arrested for taking video of the police. A second arrest took place when one activist, who had been removed for disrupting the speech once, re-enterred the room chanting, “Free free Palestine!” The last arrest was of an activist who spent most of her time outside the lecture hall, covered in mock blood, holding a baby doll, visually representing Palestine’s civilian dead. Each of them acted on their conscience, with the full support of the Anti-War Committee and other protesters present.

Responding to our actions, Dale Carpenter wrote in the Washington Post, “There are legitimate criticisms of Israeli policies and innumerable legitimate ways those criticisms can be aired. But preventing others from hearing Israeli speakers who aren’t even defending Israeli policy cannot be one of them.” Halbertal is, in fact, a professional defender of of Israeli policies. Given that Israel has never let itself be bound by the legitimate constraints of international law, or UN resolutions calling for change, it’s disingenuous to hold Palestinians and their supporters to arbitrary standards of “legitimacy.”

Indeed, we are compelled to challenge Israel’s policies of apartheid and occupation, and its defenders, at every turn. Carpenter views this debate from the ivory tower, while we understand that this is a matter of life and death for Palestinians and their families.  Halbertal’s Code of Ethics for the IDF is not some academic discussion of ethics. Rather, it gives legal cover and practical guidance, for Israel to justify their killing of thousands of Palestinians during the war on Gaza, and the daily crimes of a 67-year military occupation.

In a commentary in the StarTribune, UMN Law School Professor Oren Gross claimed our protest was anti-Semitic, which is a misleading effort to silence criticism. Conflating Zionism and Judaism is inaccurate, offensive, and dangerous. Anti-Zionist Jews are among the most outspoken critics of Israel, including Noam Chomsky and Norm Finkelstein.  Zionism is a racist ideology, rooted in settler colonialism that seeks to ethnically cleanse Palestine, just as Minnesota historically sought to erase Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples, peoples which suffer from that on-going racism and colonialism to this day. Palestinian resistance is not fueled by anti-Semitism, but by opposition to an occupying military force. Since 1948, Israel has robbed Palestinians of their rights to self-determination, land, and the right of return. And since then, Palestinians have remained determined to win their own liberation. We stand with them.

Since 2000, the Anti-War Committee has been organizing in solidarity with the Palestinian liberation struggle, against U.S. military and diplomatic support for Israeli apartheid and occupation. We are committed to challenging U.S. aid to Israel and to shining a light on the atrocities fueled by U.S. tax dollars. Our work is part of the BDS movement, a global campaign of boycotts, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel until it complies with international law and Palestinian rights.

Actions like the protest at the UMN Law School are critical to advancing this work. We call on people of conscience to seize every opportunity to challenge the normalization of the Israeli occupation, including directly confronting Zionist voices on our campuses, in our communities and in the government!  It’s time we stop giving racist, Zionist, war apologists a free pass to speak on any public platform. Their words are hate speech and distortions, while their politics promote apartheid, occupation, and the denial of Palestinian liberation, including the fundamental right of return.

One day, from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!!!