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Samidoun US coordinator on speaking tour with ISM activists from Palestine: Bring them to your town

Among the speakers who are part of the following tour are Joe Catron, the US Coordinator of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network; other speakers include Rana Nazzal, Palestinian organizer formerly detained by the Israeli occupation alongside Nariman Tamimi and Katie Miranda, artist and organizer. We encourage you to bring this tour to your community!

In 2002, the International Solidarity Movement grabbed world attention by bringing volunteers from around the world to defend Palestine through nonviolent resistance.  They stayed with resistance fighters in the Nativity Church in Bethlehem. They brought medical supplies to the besieged Palestinians in the ancient Nablus Casbah.  They documented and filmed the destruction and mass killing of Palestinians in the Jenin refugee camp.  In 2002 and 2003, thousands participated at their own expense.

One was Rachel Corrie, who was killed trying to prevent demolition of a home in Gaza. Another was Tom Hurndall, killed by a shot to the head. ISM has operated continuously since then, serving at the request of the Palestinian community through participation in Palestinian nonviolent resistance. In 2009, 2012 and 2014, ISM volunteers were with the Palestinian people in Gaza, reporting the Israeli invasion and helping in the hospitals, clinics and schools that were attacked even as they served the refugees.

But ISM is today unable to fill the demand from the Palestinian popular movement.  We need to recruit more volunteers, so we are bringing the ISM to North America to talk to interested groups.

In late February, one of our Palestinian coordinators and an experienced international volunteer will team up to speak on the west coast. In March, they will tour the east coast, then the rest of the US and Canada, ending in late April.

The presentation will include a screening of an abridged version of Radiance of Resistancea film produced by three ISM volunteers serving in Nabi Salih and featuring Ahed Tamimi and her cousin, Janna Ayyad.


The first of two Palestinian ISM coordinators to join the tour, Rana Nazzal has trained and provided orientation to ISM volunteers in Palestine. In 2013, she and Nariman Tamimi, the mother of Ahed were arrested in Nabi Saleh. We have chosen to withhold the identity of the second Palestinian ISM coordinator until later, so as not to prejudice that person’s ability to come. Both are heroes with compelling stories that they would like to share with you.

The ISM volunteer for the west coast portion of the tour will be Katie Miranda , who served as an ISM activist, coordinator and trainer in the West Bank. Katie Miranda is a jewelry and apparel designer, calligrapher, and contributing cartoonist to Mondoweiss and Middle East Eye. She is the founder of Palbox, a quarterly subscription box featuring products from Palestine and Arabic calligraphy.

On the east coast, Joe Catron will serve on the tour. As an ISM volunteer, Joe reported from Gaza during several major Israeli attacks, especially from al-Shifa Hospital, as the Israelis threatened to bombard it. He is now an independent reporter on Palestine and the Middle East, and an organizer of many public actions in New York, as well as a widely followed commentator on social media.


The total length of the presentation, including the film and the two speakers, is 50-60 minutes not including Q&A. In order to make the  tour affordable to student groups, we are asking only for $250 per event plus local meals, lodging and transportation. Homestays with local families in the community are an inexpensive and welcome way to meet the lodging and meal requirements.  The actual cost to ISM is around $1000 per event, including international and domestic airfares as well as speaker compensation for otherwise lost income.  A small group of donors has already pledged to match your donations in order to raise the estimated $25,000 to cover the rest of the costs.  Please be as generous as you can.

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS (SUBJECT TO CHANGE):

  • Feb 26-27 Oregon (awaiting confirmation but accepting other bookings)
  • Feb 28      Claremont Colleges, California
  • Mar 1-5     Attending conference and Al-Awda rally and march in DC
  • March 6    Emory University, Atlanta
  • March 7    Atlanta event
  • March 8    U of Georgia, Athens
  • Mar 9-10   Available for events in or near Atlanta/ Birmingham
  • Mar 11-12  Birmingham, Alabama
  • March 13  Available for event betw Birmingham & Louisiana
  • March 14  Louisiana State U, Baton Rouge
  • March 15  Available for event in or near New Orleans
  • Mar 16-18  Available for events in southeast US
  • March 19  Brooklyn, NY
  • Mar 20-24  Available for events in northeast US
  • March 25  Boston, MA
  • Mar 26-30 Available for events eastern Canada
  • Mar 31-Apr 1 Break
  • April 2-7   Available for events in the US midwest
  • April 8-10 Madison, WI
  • Apr 11-17 Available for events in US midwest
  • Apr 18-25 Available for events in western US/CA

TO RESERVE A DATE FOR YOUR EVENT:

Email solidarity@ism-norcal.org or call 510-236-4250.

TO HELP WITH YOUR DONATION:

Send your donation by check or on line to the Northern California ISM chapter by following the instructions here:

http://www.ism-norcal.org/donate/

Thank you for helping to defend Palestine.

3 March, Manchester: Boycott Barclays! Stand Against War, Occupation and Slavery

Saturday, 3 March
12:00 pm
Barclays Bank
320 Oxford Road, Manchester
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/170539450392479/

Protest against Britain’s biggest banking sponsor of the global arms trade. Barclays funnels loans and investments to companies like Boeing, BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin, fuelling Israel’s occupation of Palestine, the Saudi war on Yemen and proxy wars in Syria and Libya, where warlords have brought slavery to a country wrecked by Nato. Barclays has a history of supporting apartheid and is now involved in backing austerity and supporting corporate tax-dodging.

Free Ahed Tamimi and all Palestinian political prisoners!
Victory to the anti-ZIonist and anti-imperialist resistance!
Freedom for Palestine!
Freedom for Kurdistan!
Imperialist hands off the Middle East!

Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine!

1 March, Vancouver: UBC SPHR Presents Dr. Ramzy Baroud, A Palestinian Story

Thursday, 1 March
4:00 pm
UBC Liu Institute for Global Issues
6476 NW Marine Drive
Vancouver
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1387069721397530/

Join UBC Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights and the Social Justice Centre in a discussion with Gaza-born Palestinian Dr. Ramzy Baroud as he discusses the Palestine Chronicle, his forthcoming book: The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story, and the urgent need to situate Palestinian refugees back at the centre of Palestinian discourse. He will also cover contemporary issues facing the Palestinian movement and the current conditions of Gaza.

About the Speaker:
Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. His latest book is The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story (Pluto Press, London). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. His website iswww.ramzybaroud.net.

LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
This event is being hosted on the unceded lands of the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), Xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), and Səl̓ilwətaɁɬ (Tsleil-Waututh) nations.

1 March, Amsterdam: Benefit for Jalazone Playground

Thursday, 1 March
7:00 pm
Joe’s Garage
Pretoriusstraat 43, Amsterdam
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/318732721982433/


On the 1st of March Students for Justice in Palestine will kickstart a series of benefit dinners at Joe’s Garage to raise money for the building of a children’s playground in the Palestinian refugee camp of Jalazone.

Last summer SRP visited Jalazone camp during one of our annually organised trips to Palestine. The living circumstances of the Palestinians in this refugee camp left a lasting impression on the group. Motivated by what they had seen they asked the local women’s collective for advice. Out of this conversation, a fund-raising project for the building of a children’s playground was formed.

Come and join us for a delicious meal and bring along your friends, family and neighbors. It will be a night of good company and great food!

Dinner includes starter + main for €4!

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Op 1 maart zal Studenten voor Rechtvaardigheid in Palestina het startsein geven voor een serie benefiet dinners in Joe’s Garage met als doel het ophalen van geld voor de bouw van een speeltuin in de Palestijnse vluchtelingenkamp Jalazone.
Afgelopen zomer is SRP als onderdeel van ons jaarlijks georganiseerde reis naar Palestina in Jalazone geweest.
De leef omstandigheden van de palestijnen in deze vluchtelingen kamp heeft een blijvende indruk gemaakt op de groep.
Gemotiveerd door wat ze hadden gezien hebben zij de lokale vrouwenbeweging om advies gevraagd. Zo heeft het idee om geld op te halen voor de bouw van een speeltuin vorm gekregen.

Kom genieten van een heerlijke maaltijd en breng je vrienden, familie en buren mee. Een avond met fijn gezelschap en lekker eten!

Het diner is inclusief voorgerecht + hoofdgerecht voor € 4!

1 March, Naples: Freedom for Palestinian prisoners

Thursday, 1 March
6:30 pm
Mensa Occupata
Via Mezzocannone 14
Naples, Italy
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1973445442916755/

Screening of the documentary by Aljazeera “Hunger Strike”, for the first time translated and projected into Italian, on the conditions of detention of the Palestinians and their instruments of struggle.

Featuring presentations by the comrades of the anti-imperialist collective Coup Pour Coup 31 of Toulouse, advocates of the liberation campaign for Georges Abdallah, illegally detained in French prisons.

28 February, Vancouver: Dr. Ramzy Baroud and the Palestinian Narrative

Wednesday, 28 February
6:30 pm
Institute for the Humanities at SFU
515 W. Hastings St
Vancouver
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/187008218702347/

Location: room 1700, SFU Harbour Centre. Both the building and room are wheelchair accessible.

Note: there will be a book signing at the end of the event.

DR. RAMZY BAROUD AND THE PALESTINIAN NARRATIVE

Gaza-born Palestinian author discusses the Palestine Chronicle, his forthcoming book: The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story, and the urgent need to situate Palestinian refugees back at the center of the Palestinian discourse. His talk will also cover contemporary issues facing the Palestinian liberation movement.

ABOUT THE BOOK

This is a history of modern Palestine like no other: built from the testimony of people who have lived through it. Ramzy Baroud here gathers accounts from countless Palestinians from all walks of life, and from throughout the decades, to tell the story of the nation and its struggle for independence and security. Challenging both academic and popular takes on Palestinian history, Baroud unearths here the deep commonalities within the story of Palestine, ones that draw the people together despite political divisions, geographical barriers and walls, factionalism, occupation, and exile. Through these firsthand reports—by turns inspiring and terrifying, triumphant and troubled—we see Palestine in all its complexity and contradictions, ever vibrant in the memories of the people who have fought, physically and otherwise, for its future. A remarkable book, The Last Earth will be essential to understanding the struggles in the contemporary Middle East.

SPEAKER

Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. His latest book is The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story (Pluto Press, London). Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. His website iswww.ramzybaroud.net.

—–

Co-sponsored by SFU’s Institute for the Humanities, Canada Palestine Association, Centre for Comparative Muslim Studies – SFUSFU School for International Studies, and Independent Jewish Voices Canada.

This event will take place on the unceded Coast Salish territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples.

Event is FREE and open to the public. If you would like to donate to the Institute to help fund future events like this one, please visithttp://www.sfu.ca/humanities-institute/donate.html.

ASL requests must be submitted at least 3 weeks prior the event to insthum@sfu.ca.

27 February, Leuven: Political Prisoners in Palestine with Omar Barghouti

Tuesday, 27 February
PSI 02.51
KU Leuven
Tiensestraat 102
Leuven, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/149054785811450/

Ahed Tamini is 17 years old. The day after Donald Trump declared Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, her fifteen year old cousin was shot in the head with a rubber bullet. That very same day Israëli soldiers came to stand in her driveway. Ahed gave one of the soldiers a slap in the face, four days later she was arrested during the night. She risks being charged with a long prison sentence.

The story of Ahed is symbolic for the daily realities that Palestinian youth are forced to endure. There are 6200 political prisoners in Israëli prisons, including Palestinian members of parliament and 300 children.

Tuesday the 27th of February, Comac Leuven and Intal will invite Omar Barghouti (co-founder BDS) and Hanne Bosselaers (PVDA/PTB) to talk about the situation of political prisoners in Palestine. We will begin at 8pm in PSI 02.51 (Tiensestraat 102). Afterwards there will be a reception.

Action call: Palestinian-French lawyer Salah Hamouri threatened with renewed administrative detention

The support campaign for Palestinian-French lawyer Salah Hamouri, imprisoned by the Israeli occupation without charge or trial under administrative detention, has warned that he is threatened with continued detention. The Shin Bet has reportedly requested that far-right racist Israeli defense minister Avigdor Lieberman renew Hamouri’s detention for an additional six months.

Thousands of fellow French citizens, including 1600 elected officials, and dozens of city councils and municipalities have adopted resolutions demanding the immediate release of Hamouri, a Palestinian Jerusalemite who works as a field researcher for Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association. He passed the Palestinian bar examination to practice as a lawyer only three days before he was seized by occupation forces on 23 August 2017 and ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial. After extensive pressure and advocacy from the support campaign led by Salah’s wife, Elsa Lefort, French president Emmanuel Macron requested the release of Hamouri on 10 December at his meeting with Israeli occupation prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Hamouri is a former Palestinian political prisoner whose case was widely known throughout France as a symbol of injustice and false allegations until his release in 2011 in the Wafa al-Ahrar prisoner exchange, only a few months before his sentence was to end. He has spoken throughout France and internationally at events like the World Social Forum on Palestinian prisoners and the struggle for freedom. After this time, he studied law; during his studies, he was banned from the West Bank, preventing him from attending classes at his university. When he traveled back to Palestine from a visit to France with his French wife, Lefort was denied entry despite a valid visa while pregnant and slapped with a 10-year entry ban, forcing her to give birth to her son in France rather than with his father in Palestine.

The support campaign for Salah Hamouri has emphasized that the next days are critical as Lieberman is expected to issue the order on or before 28 February. They demanded that the French government take serious action to protect their citizen and demand Israel immediately release Hamouri.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates our total support for the immediate liberation of Salah Hamouri, a dedicated struggler for the freedom of Palestine and the Palestinian prisoners. The French government’s overwhelming inaction on the case of Salah Hamouri despite the mobilization of thousands of citizens and elected officials indicates their extreme disregard for the rights of Palestinians, including those who are French citizens. The French state’s prosecutions of BDS activists and imprisonment of Lebanese struggler for Palestine Georges Ibrahim Abdallah for over 33 years are echoed in the silence and complicity in the ongoing imprisonment of Salah Hamouri. The French government has a clear responsibility to make it clear that Salah Hamouri must be freed and that his ongoing imprisonment without charge or trial under administrative detention is absolutely unacceptable. Free Salah Hamouri! Free Palestine!

Take Action:

1. Sign the appeal to support Salah Hamouri at http://libertepoursalah.fr

2. Organize an action, event or activity to demand an end to Salah Hamouri’s detention and his immediate freedom. Raise his case at events and actions for Palestine.

3. Like and share the Facebook page for Salah Hamouri, which will be regularly updated with news and actions to demand Salah’s freedom: https://www.facebook.com/freesalahhamouri/

Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association reproduced an interview with Salah Hamouri conducted by L’Humanite from the Negev desert prison. We reprint the interview here for broad distribution; his words are an inspiration to all who struggle for Palestinian freedom.

How do you feel?

It has been a long time since I last felt like this, this is actually a really difficult question for me to answer. This is the fourth time I have been detained, with this time coming after five years and a half of freedom. In those past five years, I’ve built a life for myself, and started a family which have lived apart from me since 2016, and now they’re even further away than before. In those years I went back to school as well. I actually became a lawyer three days before I got arrested.

So I guess I’m good. There’s good solidarity between prisoners in here, and sometimes I recieve news from outside through the lawyers.

One of the most difficult thing I encounter here is seeing children, 14 and 15-year-old imprisoned. They are in this brown uniform, handcuffed and dragged by prison guards from one place to the other.

I was transported to al Ramleh recently. During the transportation, I couldn’t handle the scene of six prisoners in one small cage that no human being should be put in. In there, I saw one prisoner I knew and actually lived with for five years in the past. His name is Walid Daqqa. He looked different, and had more gray hair than the last time I saw him. He also had more wrinkles on his face. When he saw me he yelled, “French guy! What are you doing in here? Why did they detain you?” In those moments, the map of Palestine was drawn in my head, and I was thinking of how much Palestinians suffer. The continuous arrests are just one mechanism that the Israeli occupation uses to pressure us to leave our land. It’s also a mechanism used to break and destroy our social life. All the relationships we build inside the prisons are a tool to resist this occupation, which obviously aims to empty Palestine of its people, especially Jerusalem.   

What are your detention conditions and how are you treated?

I’m now in al-Naqab prison where there are 2400 prisoners. Many of them have been here for the past ten years, and there are 300 administrative detainees as well. We have a right to receive clothes and books but only four times a year, which isn’t enough. We don’t receive any Arabic newspapers and we have access to only one TV channel of news which is in Hebrew, the rest of the channels are for entertainment.

The Israeli Prison Service (IPS) are using soft torture against us; psychological torture to break our will and force us to leave Palestine. This kind of torture is much harder than any physical torture. We have enough food and we are allowed to leave our prison cells every day, but this isn’t what we want. We want all of this torture to end. They just want to break us, and convince us that there’s no use to resisting  them. This is why we’re not allowed to get enough books or to have access to Arabic news.

For you to get one visit a month for 45 minutes is also a tool of torture, especially when this visit is from behind  glass. We aren’t allowed to hug our families; many parents suffer as a result of our detainment. Primarily, they miss us. Also, this prison is really far away from Jerusalem, so it’s a struggle for families to get here. Never mind those prisoners who aren’t allowed to receive any visits what so ever.

How do you contact the French Consulate?

The French Consul and his deputy visited me when I was at al-Mascobiyya, and a representative from the Consulate comes to every court session I have. Additionally, the French Consul visited me here at al-Naqab with his visit application being denied a few days ago. I learnt later that a French group were denied a visit to me as well. In my previous arrests I used to get visits from the French Consul and French diplomats all the time. It’s shameful that the Israeli occupation is treating French diplomats like this, denying them a visit despite the fact that they have been quite mild. The diplomats haven’t asked for the occupation to allow me visits, or hasn’t demanded my release.

What is your opinion on the French Government and their silent position?

We saw how this silence was broken in my previous arrest as a result of the solidarity from French people. The reality behind this silence is Israeli lobbying and pressure on the French government, which prevents the French President from speaking on the issue. France has to be brave and break this silence, to defend me and defend itself from this kind of censorship. France should also defend all people who are oppressed, and live under occupation and imperialist power. I should be treated just as any other French citizen; France should strongly defend my rights. Israel is violating my basic rights by placing me under administrative detention. France should take one strong clear position and defend me, as it should with all French people in the world.

Do you thing the French solidarity campaign to support you is important?

This campaign is really important, it affects me and also other prisoners with me. We all send our gratitude to all those supporters. When I learnt that I would not be released and would be placed under administrative detention,  I knew and was assured that a solidarity campaign would start. I know that in 2011, I was released from the prison because of the strong solidarity campaign in France. Now, I’ve been detained here for the past 100 days and I receive news about the solidarity campaign from my lawyers, and it’s even bigger and stronger than the previous one.

Our struggle will take time, and you should not give up even it takes a long time; I assure you that will win.  Your solidarity is increasing one day after day, and your influence is extending not only in France but also in other European countries. Your solidarity is the only way to make people around the world see us and pay attention to our issue and suffering.

Is there a message you would like to send?

You are the hope for every single Palestinian prisoner in Israeli jails. It is important to show the world the crimes the Israeli occupation authority is committing against Palestinians, especially children. There are many children who experienced detention and this is a systematic Israeli policy that is undertaken with the aim of destroying Palestinian childhood.

You are our voice in Europe and around the world, know that prison will not be the place where the occupier buries our dreams and hopes! We are getting stronger every day and we are convinced that resistance is a right, and a duty for all of us. Only through resistance will we be able to gain our rights, freedom, and independence. Every action you undertake, it sends us sun light, which makes our dark prison cells warmer in this cold winter. 

 

Palestinian mother and daughter Rusaila and Sara Shamasneh to be released today

Rusaila Shamasneh

Palestinian mother and daughter Rusaila Shamasneh, 48, and Sara Shamasneh, 14, will be released on Sunday, 25 February from Israeli occupation prisons. The Shamasneh women are the mother and sister, respectively of Mohammed Shamasneh, 23, who was killed by Israeli occupation forces in 2016. They were seized from their home in Qatana in occupied Jerusalem by occupation forces who raided their home on 31 January.

During their detention, Rusaila Shamasneh conducted a hunger strike for 17 days against her forcible separation from her young daughter until she and Sara were sentenced to 40 days in prison on Monday, 20 February. Both Shamasneh and Sara were accused of “incitement” for their statements at the funeral of their son and brother over two years ago; Rusaila was also accused of firing a gun into the air. Mohammed participated in an armed resistance operation in which he seized a gun of an Israeli occupation soldier. Sara was only 12 years old at the time.

Nevertheless, over two years later, occupation forces invaded their home and seized mother and daughter. Rusaila Shamasneh’s hunger strike served as a strong mechanism of pressure on the Israeli occupation, continuing until their sentencing. Their lawyer then appealed for their early release, which is being implemented today.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes the resistance and steadfastness of Rusaila and Sara Shamasneh and their fellow Palestinian prisoners, and we demand the release of every Palestinian prisoner held behind Israeli bars – and the freedom of Palestine and its people.

Detained Palestinian Yassin al-Saradih beaten, shot dead by occupation forces

Detained Palestinian Yassin al-Saradih was shot dead by Israeli occupation forces in Jericho on 22 February 2018, only minutes after his arrest, in the latest example of Israeli extrajudicial killing and murder in the form of an “arrest raid.” Al-Saradih, 33, was seized in a pre-dawn invasion of Jericho in which he was harshly beaten by occupation forces before being seized.

“His death came about due to the unreasonable use of force. Despite this being evident, the occupation authority communicated to Palestinian officials that he died as a result of cramps and choking from gas used by the soldiers,” said Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association and the Palestinian Prisoners Club in a statement. Video footage depicted the occupation soldiers clearly kicking and striking Saradih after shooting him and dragging him away; nevertheless, occupation forces originally attempted to claim that they were the victims of an “attack” by Saradih, who Israeli media also labeled a “terrorist.” Later, they claimed that he accidentally died due to tear gas exposure after the released video failed to back up their claims that Saradih attempted to “steal a soldier’s gun.”

The occupation forces killed Saradih as he was among dozens of Palestinians protesting the occupation forces’ armed invasion of Jericho. Saradih’s murder is only the latest in a series of extrajudicial executions carried out by occupation forces.

Saradih’s family, in Haaretz, noted that he was a laborer who worked in construction and agriculture as well as playing soccer at the Alhalhel football center in Jericho.

The killing of Saradih echoes multiple previous killings of Palestinians by Israeli occupation forces during “arrest raids,” including Raed al-Salhi, Basil al-Araj, Ahmad Jarrar, Moataz Washaha and others, as well as multiple cases of extrajudicial executions by occupying forces against Palestinians, especially youth, shot down in the streets, including the case of Nadeem Nuwara, Mohammed Odeh, Mahmoud Badran and many others.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network denounces this latest Israeli crime against Palestinian prisoners and the Palestinian people. It reflects the institutionally violent nature of the entire system of colonial imprisonment, repression and occupation imposed upon the Palestinian people. The widespread international silence and acceptance of such Israeli crimes also underlines the role of the United States and other imperialist powers in protecting the Israeli occupation state from any form of accountability for over 70 years of crimes against the Palestinian people. This brutal killing must inspire all of us to escalate our advocacy and organizing for Palestinian liberation, challenging all of those forces that seek to keep the Palestinian people oppressed, suppressed and vulnerable to the type of crimes that took Yassin al-Saradih from his home, community, family and people.