Home Blog Page 21

Palestinian detainee Thaer Halahleh sponsors school uniforms for children in Gaza

Palestinian administrative detainee Thaer Halahleh, who has conducted long-term hunger strikes to win his freedom from past imprisonment without charge or trial, sponsored school uniforms for 27 children in the central governorate of Gaza, Palestine, as children and youth head back to school for the new academic year. The uniform sponsorship from prison comes only days after Halahleh, 44, was ordered to another three months of arbitrary detention without charge or trial.

A committee distributing school bags and uniforms to students said that Halahleh dedicated this charitable initiative to the memory of the martyr Ali Halahleh, and to the leading martyrs of the Palestinian resistance and the Al-Quds Brigades of the battles of the Unity of the Fields and the Revenge of the Free in 2022 and 2023, as well as to the assassinated leader Baha’ Abu al-Ata, who “always supported the prisoners and stood by their just cause.” 27 students from the central governorate received uniforms through Halahleh’s initiative, which benefited impoverished students, orphans and memorizers of the Qur’an.

Halahleh, married and a father, was seized from his home in the town of Kharas, northwest of al-Khalil, on 7 June 2022 by Israeli occupation forces, only a year after his release from his last detention, when he was jailed for 14 months without charge or trial. He was issued a six-month detention order, another six-month detention order, a three-month detention order and now another three-month detention orders. These detention orders are issued on the basis of a “secret file” that is denied to both the detainee and their lawyer. There are currently over 1200 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial out of 5,100 total Palestinian prisoners in Zionist jails, a massive increase in the number of administrative detainees.

Administrative detention orders are issued for up to six months at a time and are indefinitely renewable. It was first introduced to Palestine by the British colonial mandate and then adopted by the Zionist project, where it is routinely used to target influential Palestinians and community leaders. There are currently seven Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike against administrative detention and injustice behind bars, including Kayed Fasfous, Sultan Khallouf, Osama Daqrouq, Abdel-Rahman Baraqa, Islam Bani Shamsa, Hassan Jaradat and Maher al-Akhras. (Like Halahleh, Kayed Fasfous, Sultan Khallouf and Maher al-Akhras are all former long-term hunger strikers who won their freedom in the past through their challenges to administrative detention.)

Halahleh is a prominent leader in the Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine, and he has spent approximately 15 years in occupation prisons, 11 of those in administrative detention without charge or trial. He was one of the hunger strikers who launched his 77-day strike in 2012 shortly after the victory of Sheikh Khader Adnan in his first major hunger strike against administrative detention. During his strike, he released a moving letter to his daughter Lamar. Khader Adnan’s life was taken on 2 May 2023 after 86 days of hunger strike against his detention; he was deliberately denied medical treatment after setting an example of winning his freedom four times through long-term hunger strikes.

Four Palestinian prisoners suspend hunger strikes; nine continuing strikes against detention and injustice

Nine Palestinian prisoners are continuing their hunger strikes against arbitrary imprisonent without charge or trial and ongoing injustices inside the Israeli occupation prisons, after four prisoners suspended their hunger strikes after reaching an agreement to end their administrative detention.

Zuhdi Abido from al-Khalil, Mohammed Zakarneh and Anas Kamil of Qabatiya south of Jenin suspended their strikes on Sunday, 27 August after 18 days, with an agreement to end their administrative detention, as did Saif al-Din Diab al-Amarin from Beit Awwa, after 8 days of hunger strike. Saif al-Din Diab is a student at Palestine Polytechnic University in al-Khalil.

On the other hand, Kayed Fasfous and Sultan Khallouf are continuing their hunger strikes after 26 days, as is Osama Daqrouq, for the 21st day. Abdel-Rahman Baraqa is on hunger strie for the 19th day. All are held under administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. Administrative detention orders are issued for up to six months at a time and are indefinitely renewable; Palestinians are routinely jailed for years at a time under these arbitrary orders. In the past year, the number of administrative detainees has escalated dramatically; there are now approxiately 1,200 administrative detainees out of a total of around 5,100 Palestinian prisoners, the largest number in 20 years.

Both Fasfous and Khallouf have won their freedom from administrative detention in previous long-term hunger strikes of 131 and 67 days, respectively, as has Maher al-Akhras, who is on his sixth day of hunger strike. Seized from his home on 23 August, the prominent Palestinian leader immediately launched his hunger strike. He continued the strike as his detention was extended for seven days for further interrogation. Al-Akhras won his freedom in 2020 in a 103-day hunger strike that drew worldwide attention.

Fellow Palestinian prisoner Hassan Jaradat is also on an open-ended hunger strike for the seventh day after being seized from his home on 22 August in Silat al-Harthiya, west of Jenin. He launched his hunger strike immediately upon his arrest and has continued his strike to demand his freedom.

They are joined on hunger strike by Hatem and Hazem Qawasmeh, brothers in occupation prison who have been imprisoned for over 22 years. Hatem is sentenced to 25 years in occupation prisons and has been detained since 2002, while Hazem i serving a life sentence and has been detained since 2003. The two brothers have been separated for the past three years and are on strike to be reunited inside occupation prisons. Hatem has been on strike for 17 days, while Hazem has now been on strike for three days. Islam Bani Shamsa has been on open hunger strike for 16 days in rejection of his arbitrary transfer, an ongoing policy attacking many Palestinian prisoners.

Their hunger strikes continued as the battle against repression inside the prisons also continued. On Sunday 27 August, repressive units of the occupaiton prison administration stormed section 13 in Nafha prison and begain extensive searches, ransacking the prisoners’ rooms. This section houses prisoners who were recently transferred from Ashkleon prison to Nafha, according to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society, which noted that the prisoners were abused and their belongings vandalized and destroyed.

What Is Administrative Detention?

Administrative detention was first used in Palestine by the British colonial mandate and then adopted by the Zionist regime; it is now used routinely to target Palestinians, especially community leaders, activists, and influential people in their towns, camps and villages.

There are currently approximately 1200 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention, out of nearly 5,000 Palestinian political prisoners, the highest number in 20 years.

Administrative detention orders are issued by the military and approved by military courts on the basis of “secret evidence”, denied to both Palestinian detainees and their attorneys. Issued for up to six months at a time, they are indefinitely renewable, and Palestinians — including minor children — can spend years jailed without charge or trial under administrative detention. Hundreds of Palestinians have gone on hunger strike to win their liberation from this form of arbitrary detention, which is not only illegal under international law but a form of psychological torture and collective punishment targeting Palestinian families and communities, as detainees are unable to predict or plan for their release.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges all supporters of Palestine to take action to support these Palestinian hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end.

It is particularly important to stand with the strikers and not let their cases be silenced — earlier this year, on 2 May, Sheikh Khader Adnan’s life was taken after 86 days of hunger strike while being actively denied medical care. He had previously won his freedom four times through hunger strikes. These Palestinian prisoners are putting their bodies, health and lives on the line for liberation.

With over 1200 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

Imprisonment in death: Occupation detains the bodies of 398 Palestinian martyrs, including 11 prisoners

27 August is the Palestinian National Day to Reclaim the Bodies of the Detained Martyrs, when Palestinian, Arab and international voices come together to demand an end to the imprisonment of the bodies of the martyrs by the occupation.

Today, there are 256 Palestinian martyrs whose bodies are held in the “numbers cemeteries,” where Palestinians are buried with numbers and not their names, while another 142 are held in occupation morgues since 2015. They include 11 martyrs of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement — most recently, the body of Sheikh Khader Adnan, whose life was taken after 86 days of hunger strike and the occupation’s deliberate refusal to provide him with medical care — 14 children and five women.

In March of this year, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network co-launched the International Campaign to Liberate the Remains of Palestinian Martyrs, a project supported by over 150 Palestinian, Arab and international organizations.

As noted in the call for the week, “The occupation pursues a fascist policy in its treatment of the Palestinian and Arab martyrs. By refusing to give their families the opportunity to bury their loved ones, the occupation uses the remains of the martyrs as a mechanism for psychological torture of their families by detaining them for years and using them as a card for negotiation with the Palestinian resistance.

“The Palestinian people have made clear that this barbaric policy will never ‘deter’ Palestinian youth from taking part in the resistance. These martyrs remain prisoners of the occupation even after death, and their families and the Palestinian people as a whole have every right to liberate, honour and bury them in ceremonies worthy of the sacrifices they made for the cause of Palestine, for return and liberation.”

The Higher National Follow-Up Committee of the Palestinian Prisoners’ Movement issued a statement on the occasion:

The prisoners stand on this national day to raise their unified, resisting Palestinian voice to demand the recovery of the bodies of our righteous and glorious martyrs, which are kept in the so-called “graves of numbers” and the morgues of Zionist colonialism.

The prisoners are fully involved, despite their restrictions and confinement, with the national concersn and issues of our people. The issue of recovering the bodies of the martyrs is one of the most important and highest priorities amid the fierce attack of the Zionist occupation.

The occupation did not cease its practices, procedures and abusive, arbitrary policies against our struggling people, seeking to deny the Palestinian presence on our national and historic land. Instead, it seeks to liquidate all forms of life by persecuting and targeting Palestinian bodies, violating their human rights and the dignity and sanctity of the bodies of the martyrs’ bodies…

This fascist regime seeks to burn and torutre the collective, resisting Palestinian consciousness by detaining the body after killing the martyrs..depriving their relatives and people of their farewell rituals and honour on death.

Zionist colonialism expresses in these policies of death, killing and detention the same goals that it always pursues in its racist and fascist system, including the detention of the bodies of 256 martyrs in the so-called ‘numbers cemeteries’, stripping from them their names and their national and human identity.

Among these righteous martyrs is the prisoner martyr Anis Dawla, who was martyred in the Battle of Empty Stomachs during the Nafha prison strike in 1980.

In addition to the numbers cemeteries, this brutal colonizer has been imprisoning in its morgues the bodies of 142 martyrs since 2015, including 11 prisoner martyrs from the prisons of Zionist colonialism, 14 child martyrs and 5 female martyrs. This brutal regime is expressing its abhorrent intentions of detaining nearly 400 martyrs, exposing its exclusionary and fascist settler colonial project to open struggle in the fields of life and death together.

We affirm on this national day that our martyrs who are held in morgues and numbers cemeteries are our shining stars in the proud sky of Palestine. The time has come for them to truly appear in the sky of the homeland, to illuminate it with their lights of sacrifice and resistance, these lights emerging from the blood of our martyrs, those who enlightened us on the path of return and liberation of Palestine.

The imprisoned 11 martyrs of the prisoners’ movement (out of 237 martyrs whose lives were lost behind bars, many due to medical neglect and/or torture and abuse) are:

It is critical that we take action on an international level to popularize the campaign to liberate the bodies of the martyrs. We call on resistance organizations, Palestinian and Arab networks, solidarity groups supporting the prisoners’ struggle and boycott campaigns around the world to join us in the international campaign to recover and release the remains of Palestinian martyrs, and to expand the support and solidarity for Palestinian prisoners and martyrs everywhere around the world, for their liberation and the liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea.  

Click here to endorse and support the campaign. Read the call to action in EnglishFrenchArabicSpanishGermanSwedish

Hold an event: You can organize stands and demonstrations, prepare seminars, distribute leaflets and hang posters, and send your activities to samidoun@samidoun.net or to our FacebookTwitter or Instagram pages.

They can’t assassinate resistance: 22 years on the martyrdom of Abu Ali Mustafa

Portions of the statement and article below were previously published in our article, Abu Ali Mustafa: A life in struggle for the liberation of Palestine:

Today, 27 August 2023, we mark the 22nd anniversary of the assassination of Palestinian revolutionary and national leader Abu Ali Mustafa by Zionist occupation forces, using US-made and US-provided helicopter-fired missiles, in a bloody illustration of the alliance of Zionism and imperialism. The General Secretary of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Abu Ali Mustafa was targeted in his office in occupied Al-Bireh, Palestine. He has become a symbol of resistance, Palestinian unity and confrontation of the occupation, known by his famous words when entering Palestine: “We return to resist, not to compromise.”

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Abu Ali Mustafa, a popular, revolutionary leader of the Palestinian liberation movement, committed to the Palestinian resistance, the Palestinian people and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea, until his last moment. He continued his work even though he knew that he was targeted, because he was determined to never abandon the cause of the people, resisting and struggling in the Al-Aqsa Intifada and developing the struggle after the devastation of Oslo.

Pan-Arab struggler of the Palestinian working class

Abu Ali Mustafa was a son of the Palestinian popular classes, born in 1938 in Arraba, Jenin, Palestine. He left school in the third grade and worked as a boy in the factories of Haifa before and during the Nakba and the Zionist colonization of Palestine. At the age of 17, he joined the Arab Nationalist Movement, founded by Dr. George Habash (al-Hakim), Wadie Haddad, Abu Maher al-Yamani (himself a labour leader), Basil al-Kubaisi, Ahmad al-Khatib, Hani al-Hindi and their comrades, and played a leading role in the ANM of the 1950s and 1960s.

He was committed to the vision of pan-Arab liberation and resistance to Zionism and confronted the imperialist-aligned Jordanian regime, which banned political parties and acted to defend the interests of imperialism in the region at the expense of the Palestinian people and the Arab people as a whole. He was arrested and sentenced by a Jordanian military court for his organizing and spent 5 years behind Jordanian bars. Throughout his life, he was committed to the liberation of the prisoners from Zionist, imperialist and reactionary regime prisons, recognizing the use of imprisonment as a tool of colonial control aimed to target the liberation movement.

Developing the Palestinian revolution

Abu Ali was finally released from Jordanian prison in 1961 and became responsible for the northern district of the West Bank of Palestine, before he joined with his comrades in establishing the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine following al-Naksa in 1967. The PFLP reshaped the Arab Nationalist Movement along Marxist-Leninist lines, for the mobilization of Palestinian, Arab and international forces toward the defeat of Zionism, reactionary forces and imperialism.

In the context of this struggle, Abu Ali Mustafa played a key role from the earliest days in developing the PFLP and in developing the Palestinian liberation movement. He was always active behind the scenes and did not seek the spotlight; thus, he was well-placed to establish the underground organizations of the Front. In 1965, he attended the Egyptian military course to graduate officers at the Anshas school, skills he then dedicated to building the Palestinian military resistance. He led some of the earliest guerilla patrols to cross the Jordan river into the West Bank, working to coordinate resistance activities throughout occupied Palestine without being detected.

He struggled throughout years of exile in the resistance, from the battles in Jordan against the attacks of imperialist-backed monarchy, to the Palestinian camps of Lebanon. He became the military leader of the Front in Jordan until 1971 and commanded its forces, before leaving to Lebanon in July 1971. In 1972, he became the deputy general secretary of the PFLP, a position he served in for many years while continuing his work of building its organizations and military capacity.

Throughout his life, he was renowned for his caring, humbleness and sincerity, who loved his family, spoke with the people and integrated the experiences and ideas of the Palestinian popular classes to further deepen his leadership and action.

Returning to resist, not to compromise

He returned to the occupied West Bank of Palestine in 1999 — to his place of birth, Arraba, Jenin. He expressed clearly that his return to Palestine was accompanied by a very clear commitment to resistance and liberation, including and particularly the armed resistance. In 2000, at the sixth congress of the PFLP, Abu Ali Mustafa was elected General Secretary of the Front.  His presence as a principled national leader in occupied Palestine was not a concession to the Palestinian Authority and the Oslo framework but served as a challenge to the so-called “peace process” — and this is why he was targeted for assassination. Over 50,000 Palestinians marched in his funeral in central Ramallah.

As a response to the targeted assassination of Abu Ali Mustafa, the PFLP elected its general secretary Ahmad Sa’adat — today imprisoned in Zionist jails — and targeted the notoriously racist Zionist tourism minister Rehavam Ze’evi several weeks later on 17 October. Ze’evi was widely known for his demands for the complete ethnic cleansing of Palestine. This response sent a clear message from the Palestinian resistance – that the Israeli assassination policy would not be tolerated and that an assassination of Palestinian leaders would be met with an equal response.

Confronting, resisting and defeating the assassination policy

The assassination policy of the Zionist project has always been part of a comprehensive project of elimination targeting the leaders, organizers and revolutionary voices of the Palestinian pople and their liberation movement. Abu Ali Mustafa’s name is joined with that of Fathi Shiqaqi, Abdel-Aziz Rantisi, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin Abu Jihad, Kamal ‘Udwan, Mohammed Yousef al-Najjar, Kamal Nasser, Wadie Haddad, Ghassan Kanafani, Mohammed Boudia, Basil al-Araj, Samir Kuntar and many more. This assassination policy includes the attacks on the Palestinian prisoners’ movement, from Ibrahim al-Rai, killed under torture, to the systematic denial of medical care to Sheikh Khader Adnan, martyred after 86 days of hunger strike, to the current attempt to assassinate Walid Daqqah behind bars through the policy of “slow killing” through medical neglect.

Just this morning, Zionist prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu once again declared his desire to assassinate Palestinian leaders, after the recent widely distributed interview of Hamas leader Saleh al-Arouri. As in the response to the assassination of Abu Ali Mustafa, the battles of the Unity of the Fields and the Revenge of the Free made clear that the Palestinian resistance will not relent under the assassination policy. In fact, Arouri himself stated: “Does the occupation expect that after its assassination threats, we will announce our surrender? No, these threats do not frighten us. We in Hamas are martyred like our people, we are arrested as they are arrested, our homes are demolished and we are being chased and pursued. This is the normal situation under the occupation. We fight because we must.”

Abu Ali Mustafa was known throughout his life as an organizer and a builder of organizations. Thus, it is appropriate that many institutions have been named to honor him after his martyrdom, from schools and sports clubs to the armed wing of the Popular Front, reflecting his wide-ranging legacy in the Palestinian liberation struggle.

This legacy lives on in the Palestinian, Arab and international revolutionary organizations and movements, and the people, always his compass, who continue to struggle for the liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea, for the return of the refugees, for the defeat of Zionism, for the uprooting of imperialism from the region and the world. These strugglers lead and fight so heroically from behind bars, under siege and in exile, despite all the internal and external difficulties that are being imposed upon them, confronting the forces of imperialism, Zionism and Arab reaction, as Abu Ali Mustafa did throughout his life.

He said: “We are all targets as soon as we start mobilizing. We do our best to avoid their weapons but we live under the brutal Zionist occupation of our lands and their army is only a few meters away from us…We have a job to do, and nothing will stop us.”

The legacy of Abu Ali Mustafa must inspire us all to action: to support the prisoners in their struggle, to fight back against imperialism, and to organize to bring an end to the assassination policy. Most fundamentally, Abu Ali Mustafa, a truly revolutionary Palestinian national leader, firmly upheld the Palestinian and Arab resistance, making clear that the people say “No” to normalization and negotiations, their eyes fixed on return and liberation.

When we act and organize on the path of Abu Ali Mustafa and his fellow Palestinian leaders targeted for assassination and imprisonment, we make clear that the assassination policy will never succeed in defeating the Palestinian people and the Palestinian, Arab and international liberation movement. This anniversary is not merely a historical occasion, but a call to action – to act together with the Palestinian prisoners, to support the Palestinian people and their resistance, and to realize the vision of Abu Ali Mustafa and of the Palestinian people – for victory, and for the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

More resources:

We are republishing below Khaled Barakat’s 2017 article on Abu Ali Mustafa, “The Lessons of the Revolutionary Worker:”

Published in Al-Adab, September 2017 issue (Original in Arabic)

“We are a party with a glorious history and high respect among the people, but this does not justify the state of retreat or decline that is facing us. A party that does not renew itself, with more giving and more action, is one that will fade away…” (The martyr Abu Ali Mustafa, al-Hadaf, 31 July 2000)

What is the main historical contribution of the martyred leader Abu Ali Mustafa in the Palestinian and Arab resistance movement in general, and in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, as whose secretary-general he was assassinated by the Zionists on 27 August 2001, in particular?

What are the elements of the self-motivation that made an impoverished boy working in the Haifa factories, who did not complete the third grade, from the village of Arraba in the occupied district of Jenin, to become one of the most prominent Palestinian and Arab revolutionary leaders of our time?

And if his fellow leaders, such as “al-Hakim,” Dr. George Habash; the writer Ghassan Kanafani; the “Revolutionary Engineer” Dr. Wadie Haddad; and many others have left important imprints in the fields of political thought, revolutionary literature, journalism, media and guerrilla action, then what is the imprint of Abu Ali Mustafa on the Palestinian and Arab struggle in general and on his party’s march in particular that made him the exceptional leader who says little, but does much?

The answer is one word: organization.

Yes, the construction of the organization was the craft of his diligent and stubborn perseverence: building the pillars of the Arab Nationalist Movement and then the Popular Front. It is an arduous task for those who take it seriously, as did this great leader. Organization is a part of the struggle that some comrades “evade” even though they may not run away from death itself(!) because it requires the mixture of the determination and patience of dedicated workers and the wisdom of a special type.

This work – party building – is rarely highlighted. This is due to its close association with burning internal issues directly related to the life, security, relations and tasks of the party. Those with long experience in armed action and the building of revolutionary organizations realize the difficulty of the tasks associated with this aspect of party and struggle activity.

What is organization?

It is the daily workshop that the eye does not see, but without it, one does not see at all. Without this workshop, you will not see any real results in the streets and the field, and it will be difficult to measure the level of progress and regression or gain access to the criteria for proper evaluation and criticism.

Internal organizational work not only lays the “foundations” of party principles, but also establishes theoretical, intellectual, and moral principles. This painstaking work is akin to the circulation of blood in the body of the party, which ensures the integrity of its line and the democratic processes of its ranks. It strengthens its ability to continue the struggle and develop its immunity and ability to eliminate the manifestations of corruption, calcification and stagnation.

Abu Ali Mustafa treated the Popular Front as his “daily workshop” that does not rest and does not sleep. If the party is the embodiment of the will of its members and supporters, all of them must participate in its construction and give their opinions in absolute freedom, so no one rank will confiscate the rights of another rank, nor one comrade confiscate the rights of another comrade.

How can each body and institution guarantee its rights while doing its duty at the same time? How do you know its role and limits? And how to preempt conflicts before they occur? What is the relationship of the Popular Front organization in the occupied territory with the status of the party organization and its leadership outside Palestine? How is the daily relationship organized with the Prison Branch? And many other questions.

All this happens within this daily workshop, which is called organization. Abu Ali was firmly convinced that the members of his party were the cells of one body: skilled workers who built the house together, advanced by revolutionary cadres that serve as “work crews” for the home, engineers, technicians, maintenance workers, electricians, and so on…

Therefore, there is no real construction without real participation, harmony in vision, and without this set of theoretical and ethical values that draw members of the party together, one to the other. But the role of the leadership is to provide the solution and lay out the vision and adjusts it according to the collective principles of the work, away from personalization, hypocrisy, flattery and opportunism. This is a necessity in order for the members not to be lost.

In an internal letter after receiving the duties as the General Secretary of the Popular Front, written in September 2000, Abu Ali said the following:

“How do we understand internal conflicts in the party, especially in the framework of the leadership bodies? Is this new? Is it a negative phenomenon or a natural phenomenon? Have the new circumstances of the Palestinian national liberation movement come to deepen these contradictions, exacerbate them, or did it raise them to a new level? And what is the nature of these levels? These are some of the questions that may be raised in the mind of any comrade, and even need to be asked with other questions to understand the changing of attitudes and interpretations within a sound, correct framework at the theoretical and organizational levels.”

Therefore, Abu Ali Mustafa was not only fighting for the rights of his people to liberation and return, but he was equally as strongly building the revolutionary tools that could create the act of liberation and help people to extract their confiscated rights: from the women’s institutions to the youth organizations, to the institutions for students, workers and charity, and for military action. These tools are the vehicles of the revolutionary organization.

Early on, Abu Ali realized that the readiness for struggle for Arab unity and the liberation of Palestine was not a sufficient condition for active participation in change and confrontation. Therefore, if he wanted to advance in the ranks and fields of sacrifice and redemption, it was first necessary to “build himself with his hands.” This means that he must read books, newspapers and magazines, talk with his comrades, listen to what people say, and participate in various fields of work: from distributing pamphlets (Al-Thaer, Al-Rai), to collecting donations, reaching to preparation of armed struggle. Abu Ali Mustafa listened more than he spoke in order to gain more knowledge of the pulse of the people and their needs, guided by ancient wisdom: “Those who do not renew themselves, will inevitably dissipate.”

For further self-development, the martyr Abu Ali joined Anshas Military College in Egypt and subjected himself to internal development processes that included refining his mind, body and will. It was a stage that provided him with practical and direct knowledge of weapons, theoretical knowledge of people’s experiences and strategies for wars of popular liberation and guerrilla wars. And, most importantly, that he received his share of the vibrant culture of Greater Egypt in the time of the late President Jamal Abdel Nasser.

Thus, this professional revolutionary worker fought a series of battle experiences and gained new skills. But he also tasted powerlessness, like hundreds of fighters and revolutionaries in the 1950s; that is an inevitable tax that militants must pay if they walk on the path of unity and the liberation of Palestine. Abu Ali knew these experiences prior to the establishment of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in 1967, and before its real renewal (as a united party) in February 1969, and he was subjected to prosecution, imprisonment, injury, financial deprivation and the loss of his job. He was forced to clash with friendly forces, sometimes with comrades. He tested many other experiences and challenges, and he developed a leader’s personality, which combined firmness with goodness, intelligence and flexibility.

***

This young worker was not in great need of the books of Constantine Zureik and Michel Aflaq to convince himself that he was a colonized Arab citizen. He did not need Karl Marx and Lenin to know that the poor worker was forced to sell his labor power for bread, and it was not necessary for Mao Zedong to convince him that the peasant must carry weapons to liberate his land from colonialism, oppression and subordination. But his devotion to his people pushed him beyond the “school and university” learning of which he was deprived, so that he could turn to the deep, quiet reading. The phrase “Abu Ali worked on his condition and built himself” is a common phrase in the Popular Front, especially on the tongues of those who knew and lived with him.

This young peasant from Jenin discovered that what he and all the young Arabs needed was a revolutionary youth wing: a vigilant student group that studied in Beirut and announced the launch of an Arab project that promised Arab change and unity. It was the “Arab Nationalist Movement,” which embraced various groups, but its focus was on the masses of refugees who had been displaced from their homeland. This was the natural response to the Nakba of 1948. This movement was discovered by Abu Ali Mustafa in Amman in the early 1950s and he joined its ranks without hesitation, and became one of its cadres, costing him 5 years of torment in the cells of the Jordanian regime without any reason or crime committed.

Abu Ali addressed the big guerrilla missions: transferring equipment and weapons to the occupied territory, building cells, providing money to fighters, direct supervision of training camps, building a network of secret contacts and other heavy and dangerous daily tasks that led him to become the military commander of the PFLP forces in Jordan. These tasks gave him more experience in the field each day; the more the enemy camp would close doors in front of his comrades, he would open new doors, roads and fields with determination and cleverness, in their vast Arab homeland, in exile and in distant lands.

This secret and solid effort, which was founded by Abu Ali and his colleagues, transferred the movement of the Palestinian people and its cultural and political elite from the stage of preaching the revolution to the stage of actual implementation of it by fire, speech and popular organization, and by building bases for the establishment of the revolution around occupied Palestine, especially after the defeat of 1967. His focus was on the path of the long-term popular liberation war, through its revolutionary apparatus, represented by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP).

***

Abu Ali was not looking for fame. The Kuwaiti newspaper, Al-Rai Al-Aam, interviewed Palestinian leaders on the 16th anniversary of the launch of the Palestinian revolution. Among them was Abu Ali Mustafa: “… the man who does not like the spotlight and is known in the Palestinian circles for his silent, hard work, far from the noise and clamor.” (Al- Hadaf magazine, 17/1/1981, p. 16). However, his choice to stay away from the lights and noise in order to build the organization did not prevent him from reading and researching in order to develop his perception, culture and Arabic language skills. His presence in Iraq, when he was in charge of “the rear command in Baghdad,” allowed him to read more, to engage with Arab forces and figures and to balance politics and culture.

In that period he wrote an important economic and political study in 1975 on the “economic foundations of the coming settlement project” and presented it at a political symposium in Baghdad. In this symposium Abu Ali predicted the inevitability of the collapse of the Sadat regime, and that the Egypt of Sadat cannot be the Egypt of Nasser, but is on the road inevitably to a “peace deal” that will have serious implications for the whole region, because what determines the direction of systems and their relationship to the United States and Israel is, in his view, the nature of the political, economic and social system.

As for the Jordanian regime, he considered it a reactionary power and an agent of colonial powers. He believed that this regime had specific functions: protecting the Israeli occupation in order to preserve the power of the ruling class and the authority of the financial tycoons of Jordan, and that this regime will continue to work for a peace deal with Israel along the lines of the Sadat approach. Abu Ali said to his colleagues in a graduation ceremony of the Ghassan Kanafani Officers Course at the Military College of the Popular Front in Beirut in response to those who claimed that the Jordanian regime has changed and that the relationship between it and the Palestine Liberation Organization must be rearranged:

“On what do we agree with the Jordanian regime? Is the Jordanian regime a partner in determining the fate of our people? Is it permissible to have a single military base there? It is an actual partner in the second stage of Camp David.” (Al- Hadaf magazine, 5 April 1980).

Of course, Comrade Abu Ali did not expect in his worst nightmares that the leadership of the PLO would sign agreements with Israel and “precede” the Jordanian regime, albeit in a formal and public sense. But this step did not break the spirit of will in this stubborn revolutionary worker, and did not prevent him from being aware of its potential effects in the organization. So he wrote to us, his comrades at the Front, in an internal message:

“Comrades, as a people, a cause and a party, we are facing and living in the midst of a difficult and complex stage that dictates harsh challenges to us, and this stage has its political, intellectual, social, cultural and military problems which are constantly moving and changing. If we do not understand our diversity of views on the basis of preserving unity and cohesion, the leadership bodies will suffer from the vibrations and tensions that will affect them and their work,” he said.

***

The martyr Abu Ali Mustafa did not leave us a book to read. However, his experience in struggle is a living book that no one can confiscate. We must read it time and time again. In his experiences, you find most of his thoughts, observations and convictions, which he confirmed with blood and did not retreat for one moment. Indeed, reading this leader’s experience is a true introduction to the experience of the entire PFLP and its reality between yesterday and today, and helps us understand the very meaning of revolutionary leadership.

Freedom for Amin Abu Rashed! Palestinian political prisoner in the Netherlands.

On 24 August, Samidoun was present at the press conference launching the Free Amin Abu Rashed campaign in the Netherlands. Amin Abu Rashed is a Palestinian community leader and activist who has been detained by the Dutch authorities since 22 June for his humanitarian work in support of the Palestinian people’s struggle for liberation and return. In this article we introduce Amin and present an overview of his case.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands in full solidarity with Amin Abu Rashed and calls for his immediate release from Dutch prison and all charges to be dropped. We urge all Palestinian and progressive organizations to support Amin and join the campaign for his release. Please reach out to the Free Amin Abu Rashed campaign through https://www.facebook.com/Palestijnsegemeenschap.nl or the spokesperson via WhatsApp +31638496427.

Who is Amin?

Amin Abu Rashed is a prominent and respected Palestinian community leader and organizer, born in Beirut in 1967. He was active for the Palestinian cause and lost his right arm during the Lebanese civil war. In 1992 he moved to the Netherlands and received asylum. Amin has been living in the Netherlands ever since. He is married to Umm Ibrahim, with whom he has two daughters.

During the last thirty years, Amin became one of the most active people in the Palestinian movement in the Netherlands, through various community organizations and foundations, such as the Palestijnse Gemeenschap in Nederland (“Palestinian Community in the Netherlands”) and het Palestijnse Huis (“the Palestinian House”). These organizations organize and empower Palestinians in the Netherlands, organize political actions and demonstrations for the liberation of Palestine, and support their people in refugee camps in Palestine and the region through humanitarian aid. He also has a long history of working to support international solidarity with Palestine, especially through the Freedom Flotilla project of sailing boats to Gaza to break the siege.

He also serves as president of the Palestinians in Europe Conference, which most recently drew thousands of people to attend its May 2023 conference in Malmö, Sweden. The conference was attacked bitterly by Zionist forces, who attempted to coerce politicians, including those with a declared position in support of Palestine, to boycott the conference, or to prevent the conference from taking place. This came alongside attacks by the Palestinian Authority on the conference and the work to organize Palestinians in Europe. In a sharp rebuke to all of these propaganda efforts, the conference was a major success in mobilizing the Palestinian community around a message of clear commitment to the right to return on the road to the liberation of Palestine.

As Samidoun, we have and will always cherish our relationship with Amin Abu Rashed and the organizations he is a board member of. These organizations play an important role in the Palestinian movement, both in the Netherlands, in Palestine and in various other countries. It is exactly this work, community organizing, political actions and humanitarian aid, that the Dutch state is trying to undermine by arresting Amin.

The public prosecutor has branded Amin as a “sponsor of terrorism,” while he is organizing for the return and liberation of his people and their homeland. That is why this is not only an attack on Amin, but an attack on the Palestinian movement in the Netherlands and internationally. Furthermore, it is an attack on all progressive and revolutionary movements, especially those of diaspora communities, that are being threatened in their right to support movements that go against the interests of the Dutch state.

We should note that the public prosecutor used “newspaper articles about a Hamas fundraiser in Europe” as reason to start their investigation. As a result of this, Zionist media are claiming responsibility for their role in his arrest. Zionist media in the Netherlands, Israel and internationally, have been waging a slanderous, racist and ableist campaign against Amin for decades. They have attempted for over 20 years to criminalize him and his work for justice, freedom and humanitarian support for Palestine. It is particularly disturbing that the public prosecutor is citing “media” reports as a reason to arrest, detain and imprison Amin Abu Rashed, especially as these smear campaigns are routinely used by Zionist organizations to target all organizations and activists supporting Palestine that they perceive as presenting a significant challenge.

In the Netherlands, politicians from right-wing and Christian fundamentalist parties have brought this Zionist propaganda into parliament over the years. These attacks against Amin escalated dramatically in May earlier this year, around the European Palestinians Conference held in Malmö, Sweden, of which he is the chairperson, which drew thousands of participants in defiance of the smear campaign against it.

Amin Abu Rashed is currently being held in remand in Sittard prison, a three hour drive from his family home close to Rotterdam. It is important to note his medical situation. He is an older man, with high blood pressure, and is limited in his mobility as he has only his left arm. Two weeks ago, Amin had a serious wound on his foot, which only received the necessary medical attention the day before the press conference.

His lawyers have requested both for Amin to be transferred closer to his family home, and to be released from remand altogether. It is unclear by which pretext the Dutch state has been able to hold him in pretrial detention, which hinders his ability to participate actively in his own defense or speak about his case. He should be able to prepare for his legal defense in freedom, with free access to all information, his lawyers, his family, colleagues and friends.

As Samidoun Palestinian Political Prisoner Solidarity Network we demand the immediate release of Amin Abu Rashed and that all charges against him be dropped. Amin is a respected community leader and organizer, who actively supports his people in social, political and humanitarian ways. We call upon all Palestinian- and solidarity organizations to stand together in defense of Amin and the right to organize for Palestinian liberation.

Amin Abu Rashed’s first public court hearing will take place 4 October 2023 at the courtroom in Rotterdam. We call upon all Palestinians and supporters to join this hearing and show support for Amin and his family.

For updates, please also follow:

Solidarity in Toulouse with Maher al-Akhras and all Palestinian prisoners

On Friday, 25 August, the Collectif Palestine Vaincra — a member organization of the Samidoun Network based in Toulouse, France — organized a Palestine Stand at the Bagatelle metro station in Toulouse. This action is part of the mobilization to free the 5,100 Palestinian men, women and children unjustly detained by the Israeli occupation, including over 1,200 in administrative detention: imprisonment without charge or trial, indefinitely renewable.

Raising awareness in the neighbourhood about the Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian liberation struggle, organizers raised banners and posters calling for the release of all Palestinian prisoners, including Georges Abdallah, the Lebanese Arab struggler for Palestine imprisoned in France for 39 years. On 21 October, a mass demonstration in Lannemezan — outside the prison where he is held — will demand his release. The Masar Badil, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement, is mobilizing for all supporters of Palestine to attend the demonstration, which is organized annually by a wide coalition of groups in France.

Activists at the stand informed passers-by about the major wave of resistance taking place in the colonial jails, as the Zionist authorities increase their attacks on prisoners and engage in mass arrests targeting Palestinians in the West Bank, Jerusalem and occupied Palestine ’48. They displayed the portraits of the 11 hunger strikers acting to resist administrative detention and punitive measures, reaffirming that their struggle is ours, against colonialism and apartheid.

Among them is Palestinian leader Maher al-Akhras, who was arrested on 23 October by the occupation forces and launched an immediate hunger strike, just as he did when he was arrested in 2020. He is an important figure in the Palestinian prisoners’ movement who won his last release from administrative detention in 2020 with a 103-day hunger strike that received broad international support, including in the Bagatelle neighbourhood.

The stand also highlighted the case of Walid Daqqah, Palestinian intellectual and freedom fighter who is battling cancer in a prison of the Israeli occupation regime. His release has been repeatedly denied despite the grave danger to his life.

A number of passers-by took solidarity photos to show their support and emphasize that the hunger strikers are not alone and can rely on popular international solidarity.

Participants in the stand also distributed hundreds of flyers to call for a boycott of fruits and vegetables “made in apartheid,” grown on stolen Palestinian land, especially to indicate the importance of mobilizing in our local communities against the Zionist project and its accomplices.

Even the outdoor market and the Aldi store in the neighbourhood regularly sell citrus fruits or mangoes that come from Israeli agribusiness conglomerates that exploit Palestinian land, resources and labour. Refusing to buy these products is refusing to participate in supporting the economy of colonialism and exploitation. Many people were eager to learn about this campaign and stopped by the stand to collect free stickers and flyers, including about the campaign to boycott sports equipment manufacturer Puma and pharmaceutical company Teva.

The Collectif Palestine Vaincra regularly organizes actions and various initiatives to support the Palestinian people and their resistance in Toulouse. Do not hesitate to contact us if you wish to participate and to follow us on our various social networks (Facebook, Twitter, InstagramTikTok and Telegram).

25 August, Toulouse: Stand Palestine – Boycott Israel, Free all Palestinian Prisoners!

Friday, 25 August
9 am to 11 am
Bagatelle Metro
Toulouse, France

The Collectif Palestine Vaincra is organizing a Palestine Stand this Friday as part of the mobilization to demand the release of the 5,000 men, women and children detained by the Israeli occupation.

For several weeks, a wave of resistance has been growing in the prisons of the Israeli occupation as the colonial authorities increase their attacks on prisoners and massively arrest Palestinians in the West Bank, Jerusalem and in Palestine ’48. In particular, several prisoners are on hunger strike to denounce administrative detention — imprisonment without charge or trial — which currently affects 1,200 prisoners, as well as the isolation and transfer measures practiced against them. Today, international solidarity is an indispensable weapon to support all the Palestinian prisoners who embody the resistance of an entire people fighting for the liberation of Palestine from the river to the sea. In this context, we must work especially to build the campaign to boycott Israel and corporations complicit in occupation, colonization and apartheid!

24 August, the Netherlands: Free Amin Abu Rashed! Press Conference

Press Conference: Thursday, 24 August 2023

18:00 (6 pm)

Location tba – contact the Palestinian Community of the Netherlands (https://www.facebook.com/Palestijnsegemeenschap.nl) or the convenors on WhatsApp (+31638496427) for details.

Press conference on the arrest and detention of Palestinian activist Amin Abu Rashed by the Dutch government.

Speakers:

  • Amin’s lawyer
  • Amin Abu Rashed’s wife
  • Dutch activist Oscar, the spokesperson for Amin’s campaign

Through the following platforms and other platforms:

https://www.facebook.com/Palestijnsegemeenschap.nl

European Palestinian Information Center EPAL

https://www.facebook.com/TheEuropeanPalestinianMediaCenter

Maher al-Akhras, former long-term hunger striker, seized by occupation forces; launches immediate hunger strike

Occupation forces seized Palestinian leader Maher al-Akhras, a former prisoner and long-term hunger striker whose 103-day hunger strike won his freedom and galvanized Palestinian, Arab and international support, from his home in Silat al-Dhahr, south of Jenin, in the early morning hours of 23 August 2023. His family announced that he had immediately launched a hunger strike upon his arrest to demand his immediate release. The immediate launch of his hunger strike recalls that of Sultan Khallouf — currently on strike in occupation prisons — and of Sheikh Khader Adnan, the martyr of the prisoners’ movement whose life was taken on 2 May after 86 days of hunger strike.

The arrest of Maher al-Akhras came together with a widespread arrest campaign throughout the West Bank of occupied Palestine conducted by Israeli occupation forces. In the late night of 22 August and the early morning of 23 August, occupation forces seized at least 14 Palestinians, including former prisoner (and the son of imprisoned Hamas leader Nazih Abu Aoun) Islam Abu Aoun from Jaba, south of Jenin; Najm Mahmoud Fashafsha, Ezz Abdel-Salam Ghanem, both also from Jaba; Sadiq Abu al-Khair, a leader in the Islamic Jihad Movement, from Silat al-Harthiya near Jenin; Mahmoud Freihat, from Al-Yamoun, west of Jenin; Bilal Shayyeh, from Tal, west of Nablus; Ihsan al-Rimawi, from Beit Rima; Ameed Hijazi from Nablus, a student at An-Najah University recently detained by the Palestinian Authority; former prisoner Said Bakr Bilal from Nablus; Abed Arar, from Beit Ummar, north of al-Khalil; Sheikh Ammar Manna from Izbat al-Jarad, near Tulkarem; Amer Ashraf Abdel-Ghani and Ahmed Shafiq Abdel-Ghani, from Saida, near Tulkarem. Ahmed Shafiq Abdel-Ghani is the son of a martyr, Shafiq Abdel-Ghani, and a released prisoner, and Amer is his cousin.

Al-Akhras joins 10 fellow Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike. Eight are on hunger strike against administrative detention: Kayed Fasfous and Sultan Khallouf, for 21 days (both former long-term hunger strikers who won their freedom through battles of steadfastness during previous periods of administrative detention); Osama Daqrouq, for 18 days; Anas Kamil, Mohammed Zakarneh, Zuhdi Abido and Abdel-Rahman Baraqa, for 14 days; and Saif al-Din Diab, for 4 days. They are demanding an end to their imprisonment without charge or trial; they are among 1200 Palestinians jailed arbitrarily with no charge or trial, nearly one-fourth of the Palestinian prisoners in total, who are nearly 5,000. Maher al-Akhras was previously jailed under administrative detention in his lengthy strike in the year 2000.

Also on hunger strike for the past 10 says are Islam Bani Shamsa, in protest of his arbitrary transfer to Ramon prison; arbitrary transfer is frequently used by the Israeli occupation to disrupt Palestinian prisoners’ lives. Hatem al-Qawasmeh is on hunger strike for 10 days to demand his reunification with his fellow imprisoned brother, Hazem al-Qawasmeh.

Sheikh Khader Adnan at Ramallah protest to free Maher al-Akhras in 2020, organized by Samidoun Palestine and student activists.

Al-Akhras is married to Taghreed al-Akhras, and he is the father of six children. His last hunger strike drew widespread support and solidarity: Artists, activists, parliamentarians join rolling hunger strikes in solidarity with Maher al-Akhras: Samidoun EspañaAnti-Imperialist Front launches solidarity strike for Maher al-AkhrasIrish activists announce solidarity hunger strike for Maher al-Akhras. This came especially after images of his emaciated body in Kaplan hospital were shared around the world. The occupation has been actively attempting to prevent Palestinian hunger strikers from being transferred to civilian hospitals in order to prevent these images from reaching the broader public — a deadly policy, as seen in the case of Khader Adnan.

Since his release, he has become an even more prominent spokesperson representing the views of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Movement, who regularly speaks about and attends events in support of Palestinian prisoners.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network condemns the arrest of Maher al-Akhras and his fellow Palestinian prisoners, and we urge all supporters of Palestine to take action to support the hunger strikers and all Palestinian prisoners struggling for freedom, for their own lives and for the Palestinian people. These sons of the Palestinian popular masses are confronting the system of Israeli oppression on the front lines behind bars, with their bodies and their lives, to bring the system of administrative detention to an end. With over 1200 Palestinians jailed without charge or trial — over 20% of all Palestinian prisoners — the struggle to bring down administrative detention is more urgent than ever. Take these actions below to stand with the hunger strikers and the struggle for liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Download these signs for use in your campaigns:

TAKE ACTION: 

Protest at the Israeli Embassy or Consulate in Your Country!

Join the many protests taking place around the world — confront, isolate and besiege the Israeli embassy or consulate in your city or country of residence. Make it clear that the people are with Palestine! Send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Take to the streets: Organize a protest in solidarity with Palestine!

Take to the streets and join actions for justice! Organize your own if there is none in your area, and send us your events at samidoun@samidoun.net.

Boycott Israel!

The international, Arab and Palestinian campaign to boycott Israel can play an important role at this critical time. Local boycott groups can protest and label Israeli produce and groceries, while many complicit corporations – including HP, G4S, Puma, Teva and others, profit from their role in support Zionist colonialism throughout occupied Palestine. By participating in the boycott of Israel, you can directly help to throw a wrench in the economy of settler colonialism.

Demand Your Government Sanction Israel!

The racist, settler colonial state of Israel and its war crimes against the Palestinian people are enabled and backed extensively by the over $3.8 billion each year given to Israel by the United States — targeted directly to support the Israeli occupation military killing children, women, men and elders throughout occupied Palestine. From Canada to Australia to the European Union, Western governments and imperialist powers provide ongoing diplomatic, political and economic support to Israel as well as selling billions of dollars of weaponry to the settler-colonial state. Meanwhile, they also purchase billions of dollars in weaponry from the Israeli state. Governments in league with imperialist powers, such as in the Philippines, Brazil, India and elsewhere, also buy weapons and “security” services — all “battle-tested” on the Palestinian population. Call your representatives, MPs, political officials and demand your government sanction Israel now, cut off all aid, expel its ambassadors, and stop buying and selling weapons!

Video: Fadia Barghouthi in conversation with NYC organizers

On Wednesday, 16 August, Fadia Barghouthi, a Palestinian political organizer and educator in Ramallah, spoke with CUNY 4 Palestine and several organizations active in New York and New Jersey, including Within Our Lifetime, Palestinian Youth Movement and Samidoun.

Watch the full video of the event below:

Introduction (Erica and Corinna, CUNY for Palestine and Not In Our Name CUNY) – 00:009:24
First Speaker (Fadia Barghouti) –
9:2829:33
Second Speaker (Nerdeen Kiswani, Within Our Lifetime) –
31:3344:35
Third Speaker (Tamar, Palestinian Youth Movement NYC Chapter) – 45:0654:19
Fourth Speaker (Charlotte Kates, Samidoun) –
55:0801:03:02
Fifth Speaker (Johnathan Buchsbaum, CUNY for Palestine) –
1:03:5101:08:46