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NYC protest demands freedom for imprisoned Palestinian women leaders Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin

Photo: Joe Catron

Protesters in New York City gathered outside of the Best Buy electronics store in Union Square to demand freedom for imprisoned Palestinian leaders Khalida Jarrar and Khitam Saafin. Jarrar, a prominent Palestinian national leader and leftist parliamentarian, and Saafin, the president of the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees, were both seized by Israeli occupation forces in pre-dawn raids on their homes on 2 July. Both are currently imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention.

Photo: Joe Catron

The protest, organized by Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, also included distribution of literature about the situation of Palestinian prisoners as well as engagement with Best Buy shoppers about the role of HP in occupied Palestine. Hewlett-Packard consumer products corporations produce printers, laptops, tablets, ink and other consumer computer electronics sold at Best Buy, while its enterprise and other spinoff companies provide IT support, services and technology to the most repressive mechanisms of the Israeli state, including the Israeli occupation armed forces and navy, the checkpoint and ID system that enforces apartheid and suppresses Palestinian life and the Israel Prison Service.

Photo: Joe Catron

There is a growing movement for global boycott of HP products until the corporation ends its apartheid profiteering and cuts off its contracts with apartheid Israel. A growing number of churches and labor unions internationally are becoming “HP-free zones” in protest of the electronics corporation’s involvement in human rights violations in Palestine.

Photo: Joe Catron

Participants in the demonstration carried Palestinian flags and signs highlighting the cases of Jarrar and Saafin. Jarrar was ordered to six months in administrative detention without charge or trial; she is one of 12 members of the Palestinian Legislative Council currently imprisoned, most held in administrative detention. Khitam Saafin was ordered to three months in administrative detention. The detention order against her expires on 1 October, but as administrative detention orders are indefinitely renewable, there remains a risk until the last possible minute. This demonstration came alongside other international events and actions highlighting Jarrar, Saafin and Palestinian women prisoners this week that also emphasize the international attention to Saafin’s case and demands for her immediate release.

Jarrar and Saafin, as prominent international leaders, have received support from international organizations and and political parties, including the Communist Party of Spain, the Landless Workers’ Movement of Brazil, the Hellenic Union of Progressive Lawyers, a number of European parliamentarians and the government of South Africa.

Photo: Joe Catron

There are over 450 Palestinians imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention orders, among over 6,200 Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails in total. These orders are issued for one to six month periods and are indefinitely renewable; Palestinians can spend years at a time jailed without charge or trial. Jarrar and Saafin are among 58 women prisoners in Israeli jails; both are held in HaSharon prison, where 10 minor girls are also imprisoned. They are two of five Palestinian women held under administrative detention, alongside Ihsan Dababseh, Sabah Faraoun and Afnan Abu Haniyeh.

Photo: Joe Catron

During the protest, a graduate student at New York University stopped at the protest and interviewed participants for a video and essay hosted at his blog. The NYU student, a Palestinian from Gaza, had studied English several years before in a class in Gaza’s University College of Arts and Sciences taught by Joe Catron, Samidoun’s U.S. coordinator and a participant in the protest.

Passers-by were enthusiastic about the protest and a large number of flyers were distributed about Palestinian prisoners and about HP complicity in Israeli apartheid. Many stopped to have further conversation about the issues raised and find out more about the HP boycott.

Following the protest, a number of participants attended an event at NYU on the Balfour Declaration from the Perspective of its Victims, featuring a lecture by Prof. Rashid Khalidi, which focused on the situation of Palestinians for the past 100 years and the role of the British and U.S. empires in imposing Zionist colonial domination on occupied Palestine.

Photo: Joe Catron

Samidoun activists are also working for international solidarity in multiple contexts. Christian Cobb of the Workers World Party, a weekly participant in Samidoun protests in New York City, will be traveling to Cuba for two weeks to participate in the “In the Footsteps of Che” international brigade. In addition to studying the history and legacy of Che Guevara and the Cuban revolution, including meeting with veterans of the revolution, participants will join direct hurricane relief volunteer actions to support the Cuban people’s rebuilding after the damage caused by Hurricane Irma.  Several other New Yorkers, including participants in Palestine actions and Samidoun protests, will also be joining the brigade.

Many Samidoun activists will be joining the upcoming screening of “Kafr Kassem” in New York on 1 October, organized by the Open Committees of Al-Awda NY, the Palestine Right to Return Coalition. The classic 1974 film by Borhane Alaouie has been subtitled into English and will see its U.S. premiere at the Anthology Film Festival. It highlights the story of the massacre at Kafr Kassem with innovative film techniques that center the lives and experiences of Palestinians.

Samidoun will also participate on 30 September in a reception to honor the Rev. Edward Pinkney of Benton Harbor, released in June 2017 after 30 months in prison on trumped-up political charges. The reception is being organized by the International Action Center, New Abolitionist Movement and Free Mumia Coalition.

Leuven protest greets new rector with cake, calls to stop LAW-TRAIN

Photo: Pour la Palestine, Facebook

Over 60 activists, including 10 professors wearing academic gowns, greeted the opening academic procession at the Catholic University of Leuven (KU Leuven) in Leuven, Belgium on Monday, 25 September. The action demanded the university cancel its participation in LAW-TRAIN,  the European-funded research program that partners with Israeli police to study interrogation techniques.

Photo: Pour la Palestine, Facebook

The annual event marks the launch of the academic year. This year, it was the first public event of the newly elected university Rector, Luc Sels.

Organized by the Leuvense Actiegroep Palestina (Leuven Palestine Action Group) with participation from a number of groups in Belgium, people carried “Stop LAW-TRAIN” posters along the sidewalks where the procession passes, and 10 professors wearing academic gowns participating in the procession also walked with “Stop LAW-TRAIN” posters. Several participants in the action presented Rector Sels with a cake marked with “3,000 thank yous,” urging him to cancel the university’s participation in the project and win the thanks of the over 3,000 Belgians who have signed a petition against the project.

Photo: Pour la Palestine, Facebook

Professor Lieven De Cauter delivered a printout of the 3,000 signatures to the university to Sels as well.  The university’s newly-appointed vice-rector for research, Reine Meylaerts, had previously been active in supporting the campaign against LAW-TRAIN and other cooperation with human rights violators at the university.

Hundreds of Belgian academics and cultural workers have signed on to an open letter against LAW-TRAIN organized by BACBI, the Belgian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel. During the procession at KULeuven at the start of the prior academic year, four activists blocked the street to demand the university stop legitimizing torture through its participation in LAW-TRAIN.

Photo: Pour la Palestine, Facebook

Activists across Belgium have emphasized the involvement of the Israeli police in the torture, repression and interrogation of Palestinians from Jerusalem and Palestine ’48, as well as their involvement in home demolitions and destruction of Bedouin Palestinian communities in the Naqab. The Israeli Ministry of Public Security, presided over by far-right minister Gilad Erdan, who also holds the state’s anti-BDS portfolio seeking to suppress the international campaign for boycott, divestment and sanctions, is also a partner in the project, along with Bar-Ilan University.

Photo: Pour la Palestine, Facebook

Portugal pulled out of the project after growing protests from Palestinian and Portuguese associations. There is a significant campaign in Belgium and a broad coalition urging both the state agencies and the university to end their participation in LAW-TRAIN, noting that it legitimizes and sanctions the Israeli police’s use of torture in interrogation and involvement in occupation, colonialism and repression. A delegation of high-profile Belgian lawyers and human rights experts traveled to Palestine where they studied the use of torture by the Israeli police.

 

 

 

180 civil society groups urge international chefs to withdraw from Tel Aviv Round Tables

Samidoun joins civil society groups from across the world to call on international chefs to cancel participation in Brand Israel culinary event.

Take Apartheid off the menu

To the attention of:

7132 Silver, Swiss Alps
Chef Sven WassmerAndreu Genestra, Mallorca
Chef Andreu Genestra Garcia

Xemei, Barcelona
Chefs Stefano & Max Colombo

L’Air du Temps, Éghezée
Chef Sang Hoon Degeimbre

Maido, Lima
Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura

El Sud 777, Mexico City
Chef Edgar Nuñez

Il Desco, Verona
Chefs Elia & Matteo Rizzo

Ricard Camarena Restaurant, Valencia
Chef Ricard CamarenaLittle Social, London
Chef Jason Atherton, Head-chef Cary Docherty

Aniar, Galway
Chef JP McMahon, restaurateur Drigin Gaffey

The Elephant, Torquay
Chef Simon Hulstone

Loch Bay, Stein, Isle of Skye
Chefs Michael and Laurence Smith

Kadeau, Copenhagen
Chef Nicolai Nørregaard

Pok Pok, New York
Chef Andy Ricker

We, the undersigned civil society groups, are writing to you regarding your planned participation in the Round Tables Tour culinary event taking place in Tel Aviv from October 29 to November 17, 2017. We urge you to reconsider your involvement in this initiative aimed at using haute cuisine to mask Israel’s denial of Palestinian basic rights.

While Round Tables claims to advocate “cultural, economic and political dialogue through gastronomy,” it instead uses the time-honored tradition of sharing culinary experiences as a means for whitewashing widespread violation of Palestinian fundamental rights, including the right to food.

Among the partners of the event is the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which has for years been leading the Brand Israel” project, aimed at using culture and the arts as a way of distracting from its poor human rights record in order to create a positive image. Partner Dan Hotels, which is also one of the hosts of the festival, has a settlement hotel built on stolen Palestinian land in occupied East Jerusalem.

Only 35 per cent of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation are food secure. Israeli military attacks destroy farms, greenhouses, water wells, crops and livestock and Israeli army snipers regularly fire upon Palestinian farmers in Gaza. Israel uses agriculture as a means for wholesale theft of Palestinian land in the occupied West Bank and used cynical calorie calculations to deliberately keep Palestinians in Gaza on a starvation diet. Palestinian citizens of Israel are being forced off their land through repeated house demolitions and denial of basic services, including water.

This past summer, more than one thousand Palestinian political prisoners being held in Israeli prisons sustained a 40-day hunger strike over inhumane conditions including torture, denial of medical care and routine solitary confinement.

And though you will have no problem traveling to Tel Aviv, roughly 7 million Palestinian refugees and internally displaced persons resulting from Israel’s ongoing ethnic cleansing are denied the right to return to their lands as guaranteed under International Law.

In 2005, over 170 Palestinian civil society organizations called for boycotts, divestment and sanctions (BDS) as a means for putting pressure on Israel until it ends its human rights violations, which have continued undeterred and in complete impunity for decades. As part of this call, international artists, performers, academics, and even chefs, are urged not to participate in events in Israel. The list of those heeding the call continues to grow.

By choosing to cook in the privileged bubble of Tel Aviv, surrounded by millions of Palestinians living under Israeli oppression, not only will you be knowingly disregarding this principled call from the oppressed, you will also help the Israeli government mask its oppression of Palestinians by giving the country a veneer of prestige with your presence.

Respecting the Palestinian BDS call is the best way to ensure that Palestinians, in the words of famed South African anti-apartheid campaigner Archbishop Desmond Tutu, are not reduced to “picking up crumbs of compassion thrown from the table of someone who considers himself [their] master,” but rather have “the full menu of rights.”

We urge you not to lend your culinary talents to mask Israel’s crimes. Please cancel your participation in the Round Tables event until everyone has a place at the table.

Signed:

Land Defense coalition (LDC), Palestine
Palestinian Farmers Union (PFU), Palestine
Palestinian Environmental NGOs Network/Friends of the Earth-Palestine, Palestine
Stop the Wall Campaign, Palestine
Alternative Information Center (AIC), Palestine/Israel
Boycott! Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from within, Israel
Frauen in Schwarz (Wien), Austria
Association belgo-palestinienne, Belgium
Käthe Kollwitz Peace run, Belgium
Palestina Solidariteit vzw, Belgium
Plate-forme Charleroi-Palestine, Belgium
Vlaams-Socialistische Beweging (V-SB), Belgium
Vrede vzw, Belgium
Grupo de acción por palestina, Chile
Grupo de Acción por Palestina, Chile
Juventud Árabe por Palestina de Valdivia, Chile
BDS Colombia, Colombia
Boykot Israel, Denmark
Comité de Solidaridad Permanente EcuadorXPalestina, Ecuador
Abna Philistine (Enfants de la Palestine), France
BDS France Campaign, France
Association France Palestine Solidarité 63, France
Collectif Judeo Arabe et Citoyen pour la Palestine, France
Collectif 69 de soutien au peuple palestinien, France
Coordination Bds37 (Tours), France
CSPRN, France
Comité solidarité Palestine région nazairienne, France
Mouvement contre le Racisme et pour l’Amitié entre les Peuples – Gironde (MRAP33), France
Collectif BDS Metz, France
Comité BDS France 34 – Montpellier, France
Bds France Marseille, France
AK Nahost Berlin, Germany
AKtion Gerechter Frieden Nahost, Germany
BDS Berlin, Germany
BDS Hamburg, Germany
Deutsch-palästinensische Gesellschaft , Germany
Jüdische Stimme für gerechten Frieden in Nahost, Germany
Justice for Palestine, Germany
Palästinakomitee Stuttgart, Germany
Gaza Action Ireland , Ireland
Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Ireland
ACS – Associazione di Cooperazione e Solidarietà, Italy
Associazione Casale Podere Rosa (Rome), Italy
Associazione Culturale Sogni di un Mondo Diverso, Italy
Associazione senza paura – Genova, Italy
Associazione Stelle Cadenti, artisti per la pace, Italy
Assopace Palestina, Italy
BDS Italia, Italy
BDS Sardegna, Italy
Comitato per non dimenticare Sabra e Chatila, Italy
Comitato Pistoiese per la Palestina, Italy
Comitato varesino per la Palestina, Italy
Confederazione Cobas, Italy
Coordinamento BDS Roma e Provincia, Italy
Coordinamento Nord Sud del Mondo, Italy
Donne in Nero / Women in Black, Italy
Forum Italiano dei Movimenti per l’Acqua, Italy
Forum Palestina, Italy
Friends of the Palestinian Red Crescent, Italy
Gruppo Ibriq per la cultura e la causa palestinese, Italy
Italian Communist Party, Italy
Italian Jews against Israeli Occupation, Italy
Lo Sguardo di Handala (Rome), Italy
Luisa Morgantini, former VP European Parliament, Italy
Rete Radiè Resch – Gruppo di Salerno, Italy
Rete Radié Resch di solidarietà internazionale, Italy
Rete Radié Resch Varese, Italy
Rete Romana di Solidarietà con il Popolo Palestinese, Italy
Salaam Ragazzi dell’Olivo Comitato di Trieste, Italy
Servizio Civile Internazionale, Italy
U.S. Citizens Against War – Florence, Italy
U.S. Citizens for Peace & Justice – Rome, Italy
ULAIA ArteSud onlus, Italy
Un ponte per…, Italy
Coordinadora de Solidaridad con Palestina, México
Movimiento BDS Mexico, México
Article 1 Collective, Netherlands
docP, Netherlands
Nederlands Palestina Komitee (NPK), Netherlands
AKULBI (Academic and Cultural Boicott of the State of Israel), Norway
Federación Palestina del Perú, Peru
Associação Abril, Portugal
Colectivo Mumia Abu Jamal, Portugal
Comité de Solidariedade com a Palestina, Portugal
Conselho Português para a Paz e Cooperação, Portugal
Grupo Acção Palestina, Portugal
MPPM – Movimento pelos Direitos do Povo Palestino e pela Paz no Médio Oriente, Portugal
Panteras Rosa – Frente de Combate à Lesbigaytransfobia, Portugal
SOS Racismo, Portugal
San Ghanny Choir, Scotland
Association of Palestinian Communities in Scotland, Scotland
Scottish Friends of Palestine, Scotland
Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Scotland
Strathclyde Students for Palestine, Scotland
BDS Slovenia, Slovenia
Gibanje za pravice Plestincev, Slovenia
Red Solidaria contra la Ocupación de Palestina (RESCOP), Spain

Network composed by 43 organisations: Asociación Al-Quds de Solidaridad con los Pueblos del Mundo Árabe (Málaga), Asociación Andaluza por la Solidaridad y la Paz – ASPA, Asociación de Amistad Palestina-Granada «Turab», Asociación Hispano Palestina Jerusalén (Madrid), Asociación Pro-Derechos Humanos de Andalucía, Asociación Unadikum, BDS Catalunya, BDS Madrid, BDS País Valencià, Castelló per Palestina, Comité de Solidaridad con la Causa Árabe Madrid, Asturias), Comité de Solidaridad con los Pueblos – Interpueblos (Cantabria), Comunidad Palestina en Canarias, Comunitat Palestina de Catalunya, Comunitat Palestina de València, Coordinadora de apoyo a Palestina (La Rioja), Ecologistas en Acción (Confederal), Fundación IEPALA, Fundación Mundubat, Asociación Palestina Biladi, Anticapitalistas, Komite Internazionalistak (Euskal Herria), MEWANDO (Euskadi), Movimiento Solidaridad Internacional Catalunya – ISM Cataluña / Valencia, Mujeres en Zona de Conflicto – M.Z.C., Mujeres por la Paz – Acción Solidaria con Palestina (Canarias), Paz Ahora, Paz con Dignidad, Plataforma de Solidaridad con Palestina (Sevilla), Plataforma Palestina Ibiza, Plataforma Solidaria con Palestina de Valladolid, Red de Jóvenes Palestinos, Red Judía Antisionista Internacional -IJAN, Sodepau, Sodepaz, Sodepaz Balamil, Taula per Palestina (Illes Balears), UJCE (Unión de Juventudes Comunistas de España), Grupo de Cooperación Sevilla Palestina, CERAI (Centro de Estudios Rurales y de Agricultura Internacional), BDS Alacant (dentro de BDS País Valencià), Palestina Toma la Calle, Coalició Prou Complicitat amb Israel

Coalició Prou Complicitat amb Israel (CPCI), Catalonia, Spain

Network composed by 14 organisations: Rumbo a Gaza, Junts-Associació Catalana de Jueus I Palestins, Comunitat Palestina de Catalunya, NOVACT, BDS Catalunya, Pau Sempre, SUDS, Servei Civil Internacional de Catalunya (SCI-Cat), Centre Euro Àrab de Catalunya, En Lluita, Unadikum, Pallasos en Rebeldía, Asociación Cultural Arte & Maña and International Solidarity Movement BDS Galicia

(ISM) Catalunya
Red Antisionista de Sevilla, Spain
Centro Cultural Palestino Biladi, Basque Country, Spain
Revolta Global-Esquerra Anticapitalista, Catalonia, Spain
Unadikum, Spain
Vent, associació cultural, Spain
BDS Switzerland, Switzerland
BDS Zürich, Switzerland
Bernese Vigil for a just peace in Israel / Palestine, Switzerland
Palestine Solidarity Campagn, Thailand
BDS Thailand, Thailand
Artists for Palestine UK, United Kingdom
Architects and Planners for Justice in Palestine (APJP), United Kingdom
Cambridge Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
Camden Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
Camden Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
Inminds, UK
Jews for Boycotting Israeli Goods, United Kingdom
Leeds Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
Lewisham Friends of Palestine, United Kingdom
London Palestine Action (LPA), United Kingdom
Merton PSC, United Kingdom
Northern Women for Palestine, United Kingdom
Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
Stop G4S, United Kingdom
York Palestine Solidarity Campaign, United Kingdom
UK-Palestine Mental Health Network, United Kingdom
Adalah-NY; the New York Campaign for the Boycott of Israel, United States
CODEPINK Women for Peace, United States
Harvest & Revel, United States
Jewish Voice for Peace, United States
Jewish Voice for Peace, Tacoma chapter, United States
Jewish Voice for Peace – Syracuse, United States
Kairos Puget Sound Coalition, United States
Labor for Palestine, United States
Northwest BDS Coalition, United States
Palestine Solidarity Collective, United States
US Campaign for Palestinian Rights, United States
US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, United States
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

5 October, Washington DC: “Ghost Hunting” Opening Film at DC Palestinian Film and Arts Festival

Thursday, October 5, 2017
7:30pm 10:00pm
E Street Cinema
555 11th Street NW
Washington, DC
Website: https://www.dcpfaf.org/program/ghost-hunting

Preceded by ‘Congratulations on the New Wall Paint’ by Wisam Jafari and followed by a discussion on political prisoners.

OPENING FILM // Ghost Hunting
by Raed Andoni | Feature | 93 min. | 2017

A riveting, terrifying recreation of past trauma, Ghost Hunting won the 2017 Glasshütte Original Documentary Award at the Berlin Film Festival. Director Raed Andoni assembles an eclectic group of Palestinian ex-prisoners in order to rebuild the Israeli investigation center in which they were all imprisoned. However, as they were always blindfolded, none of them really knows what the place actually looked like.The result is a shocking, visceral and deeply moving portrait of apartheid.

DISCUSSION // Nearly a million Palestinians have see the inside of an Israeli prison cell since the beginning of the occupation 50 years ago, but their criminalization by the Israeli state dates back to its founding, when refugees attempting to return to their homes were branded “infiltrators” and shot on sight. In a discussion following the film, we explore the toll of mass incarceration on the psyches of former prisoners and their families, the liberation struggle, and Palestinian society at large.

29-30 September, Athens: Resistance Festival

Friday and Saturday, 29-30 September
Political events begin at 6:00 pm
School of Fine Arts
(ASCR, Piraeus 256, Agios Ioannis Rentis)
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1712063249095692/
Website and full details: http://resistancefestival.gr

Once again, Samidoun is participating in the annual Resistance Festival in Athens. We will have a stand with information and materials on both nights of the festival and Mohammed Khatib, Europe Coordinator of Samidoun, will be participating in the festival as well.

There are multiple events of interest on Palestine during the festival, including a presentation on Friday, 29 September by Brazilian cartoonist Carlos Latuff and a talk on Saturday, 30 September by Palestinian lawyer Jehad Abu Raya

30 September, Madrid: “Existence is Resistance:” Solidarity with Palestine w/Leila Khaled

Saturday, 30 September
6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Part of the PCE Fiesta
Carpa 1 Manolo Gil
Auditorio Municipal Villa de Vallecas
C/Monte de Montjuich, 7. Vallecas (Madrid)

More information: http://www.fiesta.pce.es/2017/sessions/coloquio-existir-es-resistir-de-solidaridad-con-palestina/

Presented by: Manuel Pineda, chair of the Middle East commission of the Communist Party of Spain

Speakers: Leila Khaled, historical Palestinian figure, of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, leader in the movement for refugees’ right of return

Sira Rigo, federal committee of the PCE

Jorge Ramos Tolosa, BDS movement activist in the Spanish state and co-author of the book, Existence is Resistance.

Coloquio “Existir es resistir” de solidaridad con Palestina”
Presenta: Manuel Pineda. Responsable de la Comisión de Oriente Medio del PCE.

Intervienen: Layla Khaled, dirigente histórica del Frente Popular para la Liberación de Palestina (FPLP), líder del movimiento por el derecho al retorno de los refugiados; Sira Rego, Comité Federal del PCE y Jorge Ramos Tolosa, activista del movimiento BDS en el Estado español y coautor del libro “Existir es resistir”.

Samidoun statement of solidarity with Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi against racist “lawfare” attacks

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network expresses our strongest solidarity with Dr. Rabab Abdulhadi as she confronts racist attacks, including a federal lawsuit launched by right-wing Zionist organizations.

The “Lawfare Project” filed a lawsuit against Prof. Abdulhadi, director of the Arab and Muslim Ethnicities and Diasporas (AMED) program at San Francisco State University (SFSU) as well as several SFSU administrators, attempting to accuse them of creating a “hostile environment” for Jewish students on campus.

Far from reflecting reality, this lawsuit is only the latest in a slew of attacks launched by Zionist organizations in an attempt to silence Palestinian activism, narratives and scholarship and to criminalize Palestinian students, faculty and education itself within the U.S. academy. At SFSU and beyond, Prof. Abdulhadi and Palestinian and Arab students – for example, the members of the General Union of Palestinian Students (GUPS) at SFSU, of which Prof. Abdulhadi serves as faculty mentor – have been subject to a series of assaults.

Racist posters bearing crude likenesses and lists of names, labeling faculty and students as “supporters of terrorism,” have repeatedly been posted on campus at the behest of David Horowitz’s so-called “Freedom Center” in an attempt to intimidate and silence support for Palestine. Anti-Palestinian and anti-Arab racism have run rampant on campus with little check from university officials.

It should also be noted that this latest attack by the Lawfare Project comes following numerous attempts to stop SFSU’s partnership with An-Najah University in Palestine, to prevent Dr. Abdulhadi from doing her work and to silence student activism for Palestine and GUPS organizing on campus. From AMCHA to the Simon Wiesenthal Center to Campus Watch, Stand With US, Middle East Forum and a number of other Zionist organizations, her work and scholarship has been a major target of coordinated attacks.

It should be noted that the lawsuit is an attack not only on Palestinian scholarship but on the College of Ethnic Studies, defending itself for years from defunding. It is an attack on, as Prof. Abdulhadi herself wrote, “the spirit of ’68,” of the movements on and on campus: Black, Latinx, Asian, Palestinian, Arab and other social justice, anti-racist and anti-colonial movements struggling for self-determination, confronting imperialism and reclaiming their scholarship and narratives. The College was created out of the 1968 student strike, and the Lawfare Project attempts to depict Ethnic Studies itself as leading to a “disturbing and consistent pattern of anti-Jewish animus,” thus attacking all anti-colonial, anti-racist scholarship that emphasizes oppressed peoples.

Further, we also are clear that this lawfare attack is part and parcel of the criminalization of Palestinian organizing and resistance. Prof. Abdulhadi has come under attack for leading programs like the Prison, Labor and and Academic Delegation to Palestine, building connections between Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and U.S. political prisoners and liberation movements. She has been attacked repeatedly for meeting with major Palestinian political figures like Leila Khaled, a prime example of the use of “anti-terror” rhetoric and legislative threats to silence Palestinian academia and activism.

The campaign has attempted also to criminalize Palestinian student organizing both in the United States and in Palestine, attempting to demonize students at An-Najah University as unacceptable and illegitimate just as those same students face daily night raids and arrests by Israeli occupation forces. This rhetoric comes hand in hand with the attempts to shut down GUPS and other students mobilizing for Palestine on the SFSU campus by targeting them with false claims of anti-Semitism, when in fact they are deeply committed to anti-racist and liberatory struggle.

This groundless lawsuit by the Lawfare Project is yet another attempt to marginalize and suppress Palestinian narratives and realities. From the targeting and deportation of former prisoner and community leader Rasmea Odeh, to the imprisonment of the Holy Land Five, to the surveillance of mosques, community groups and student organizations by police and FBI, to the promotion of anti-BDS legislation, to “anti-terror” laws and “terror” labeling that mirror Israeli occupation lists and labels and seek to silence and suppress Palestinian and solidarity organizing, we stand against all of these attacks and support those on the front lines confronting repression.

We join with many other organizations, students and faculty across the United States and around the world, in support of Prof. Abdulhadi against this malicious lawsuit. We call upon SFSU and the CSU system to provide Prof. Abdulhadi with independent, high-quality legal representation of her choice at no cost to ensure that she receives a thorough and proper defense, and we demand that the university and CSU system publicly and clearly uphold Prof. Abdulhadi’s academic freedom rights, defend her academic integrity, and refuse to settle this lawsuit in any way that concedes to any of the allegations made.

We also express our full support to all of the students and faculty targeted in the ongoing racist posters and attacks on California university campuses and emphasize the importance of official university support and proper funding for the AMED program and the College of Ethnic Studies. Defending these programs and the right to not only protect but expand and enhance Palestinian scholarship is critical to confronting these racist attempts to silence and intimidate.

Take action to support Professor Rabab Abdulhadi!

Sign the petition:   https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeeArXzfd9MNbGqCIqNGnz3y_yFwYo34Gj1AZEdBiJsW_hizw/viewform

Donate to the defense campaign:  https://www.launchgood.com/project/professor_rabab_abdulhadis_legal_fund#/

Like and follow the Facebook page:  https://www.facebook.com/DefendProfAbdulhadi

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1 October, NYC: “Kafr Kassem” U.S. Film Premiere and International Revival

Sunday, 1 October
6:00 pm
Anthology Film Archives
32 Second Ave, NYC
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/279056699263598/

Get tickets now: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/film-revival-kafr-kassem-tickets-37760119534

Support the project: https://www.generosity.com/fundraising/film-revival-kafr-qassem


Kafr Kasem (1975) 1hr 46minutes
Director: Borhane Alaouié

On October 1, 2017 at 6pm, Anthology Film Archive in NYC will host the first US screening and revival of the internationally acclaimed film “Kafr Qassem” a 1974 Franco-Belgo-Syrian co-production by Film Maker, Borhane Alaouié.

On an October afternoon in 1956, Israeli military impose a curfew on Arab villages with little notice. Arriving home after working in the fields, the villagers of Kafr Kassem were left unaware of the curfew or their violation of the curfew. Later that night, Israeli forces surround the town.

This film reconstructs the events leading up to that oft-commemorated event while sharing the quotidian activities of the townspeople so stoically, the viewer is left on edge by the eeriness of the human attempt at normalcy under unusually challenging conditions.

The film premiered in 1974 at the Carthage Film Festival [1]where it won top Award for Best Film, Tanit D’Oro, and was honored and nominated for the Golden Prize at the Moscow Film Festival of 1975. Despite its regional accolades and reach, the film was only briefly run, screened in only a few locations outside Syria and Lebanon and remained dormant almost immediately after its release because of the political crises brewing in the region at the time, leaving the film largely forgotten until now when a group of volunteers found the film and began the translation and subtitling to be able to bring it to the English speaking world.

Using Pontecorvo’s 1966 “The Battle of Algiers” as a visual and political framework for its depiction of the massacre, the film skillfully refuses to force any conclusions upon its audience. The General who ordered the massacre is depicted with same seeming objectivity as Lieutenant-Colonel Mathieu in the “Battle of Algiers.”

The film is made in Pontecorvo’s hallmark style of newsreel and documentary, using fictional realism to tell the story of the Arab workers and their massacre in 1956. The film begins with the testimony of the General, while the workers are introduced through the narrative of the spy as he meets with military officials. The film continues its serpentine meandering as it leads us to the fateful doom of the characters.

Alaouié uses near scientific accuracy in his depiction of the events, relying on official transcripts and records to build the narrative. The audience is also treated to glimpses of the daily life of the townspeople, their history, their humanity and their ability to manage normalcy and humor in this surreal context.

Acclaimed French film critic, Serge Daney, called filmmaker-director Borhane Alaouié a “topographer-filmmaker” for his seeming laissez faire approach to provoking thought in his audience.

Alaouié began his career in 1968 and explained that this film was a break from the sort of activism in his circles at the time– despite the subject matter– stating that, “[f]riends asked me, ‘You do not think that with the money of this film it would be better to buy Kalashnikovs? ‘I said ‘Kalashnikovs we have, movies, no.’ So, I went on.”

The film stars prolific Syrian actors Salim Sabri, Abdallah Abbassi, Shafiq Manfaluti and Charlotte Rushdie.
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[1] Carthage Film Festival celebrates Arab and African cinema, is the oldest event of its kind still active in Africa and the first of its kind in the Arab world, launched in 1966.

Hundreds bid farewell to Rasmea Odeh as she is deported to Jordan

Rasmea Odeh at Chicago send-off. Photo: Rasmea Defense Committee

On 19 September, Palestinian former political prisoner and beloved community leader Rasmea Odeh was forced to leave the United States after years of attacks by the FBI and the Department of Justice. She was sent off with the love, solidarity and admiration of hundreds of people who were present with her at O’Hare airport in Chicago as well as in the thoughts and hearts of thousands more across the United States and around the world.

The collective send-off for Odeh was organized by the Rasmea Defense Campaign, led by the US Palestinian Community Network and the Committee to Stop FBI Repression. An earlier community farewell for Rasmea in Chicago, featuring Angela Davis, scholar, Black Liberation movement figure and former political prisoner, drew 1,200 people.

Speakers at the farewell included Hatem Abudayyeh of USPCN, Frank Chapman of the National Alliance against Racist and Political Repression, representatives of Anakbayan, JVP Chicago and a number of other organizations. “We will liberate Palestine because of the Rasmea Odehs of the world,” said Abudayyeh.

Odeh herself addressed the group. “They began to destroy my life but I want to tell you, I am strong, they will not destroy me,” she said. “Even if they deport me out of this country, I will continue our struggle.”  ICE blocked her supporters from entering the airport to walk with her to check-in and security after several hours of rallying outside the entrance to O’Hare’s international terminal.

Crowds of friends and family awaited Odeh in Amman, Jordan after a 12-hour flight from Chicago, embracing her and welcoming her.

Odeh, 70, fought strongly and bravely against an immigration case brought against her in October 2013. A survivor of severe sexual torture at the hands of Israeli occupation forces who arrested and imprisoned her in 1969, she served 10 years in Israeli prison before winning her freedom in a prisoner exchange with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine in 1979.

Her story was told before the United Nations and in London’s Sunday Times in 1979; she was well-known as a former political prisoner and torture survivor. After coming to the United States in 1994, she became a community leader in Chicago, founding the Arab Women’s Committee of the Arab American Action Network and organizing hundreds of Palestinian and Arab women throughout the city.

The attack on Odeh came as the culmination of an ongoing attack on the Palestinian community and Palestine solidarity movements in the United States, including a series of raids and grand jury subpoenas against anti-war and social justice activists in Chicago and Minnesota carried out after an FBI agent infiltrated organizations mobilizing against the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis in 2008.

After the case against the activists fell apart, the Department of Justice next moved on to Odeh, beloved Palestinian leader and torture survivor, re-victimizing her in court and attempting to portray her as a “terrorist” for resisting Israeli occupation and oppression of the Palestinian people. In 2017, she reached a plea agreement after the DoJ refiled the case in a “terror” framework after Odeh’s appellate victory allowing her to introduce evidence of her PTSD that was earlier excluded at trial.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network salutes Rasmea Odeh, lifelong struggler for Palestine, its people and its liberation, with deepest respect and honor. She has left a deep imprint on the Palestinian community, the Palestine solidarity movement and all movements fighting racism, imperialism, colonialism and oppression in the United States and internationally. From Lifta to Chicago to Amman, she remains a leader and a symbol of Palestinian steadfastness, resilience, resistance and commitment to true liberation and justice. She is on the front lines of the ongoing march towards return and liberation.

Samidoun: Solidarity with Detained Turkish Lawyers

Photo: 16 arrested lawyers, via ELDH

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network stands in solidarity with 14 detained lawyers in Turkey, all members of the Progressive Lawyers Association (CHD); the 14 lawyers are all involved in the defense of the hunger strikers, Nuriye Gülmen and Semih Özakça. We urge their immediate release and the release of all political prisoners in Turkey’s jails.

The trial of Gülmen and Özakça was scheduled to begin on 14 September; two days before, 16 lawyers were arrested by Turkish police, preventing them from appearing in the courtroom and stopping the hunger-striking activists from receiving a defense. On the 20th, they were brought before the court; 14 were charged and two of the group, Ezgi Gokten and Ahmet Mandaci, were released on probation.

The 14 detained progressive lawyers are Didem Ünsal, Aytaç Ünsal, Yagmur Ereren, Barkin Timtik, Ebru Timtik, Sükriye Erden, Engin Gökoglu, Süleyman Gökten, Ozgur Yilmaz, Aysegül Çagatay, Behiç Asçi, Aycan Çiçek, Zehra Özdemir, and Özgür Yilmaz.

Meanwhile, the phones and computers of the president of the Progressive Lawyers’ Association, Selçuk Kozagaçli, and his wife Betül Kozagaçli, both of whom work in the CHD, were confiscated; they were also informed that their legal activities were restricted. The CHD has been repeatedly subject to attacks by the Turkish state over many years, including the arrests of lawyers and human rights defenders and an October 2016 order to close the association.

Before representing the two imprisoned educators, some of the arrested lawyers, among Turkey’s most active human rights defenders, represented the family of Berkin Elvan, a 15-year-old Turkish boy killed in 2014 after he was hit on the head by a tear gas canister fired by police, as well as the families of miners killed in the Soma mine disaster in Turkey in 2014. 301 miners were killed in the massive underground fire, and the Turkish government blocked an investigation into this mass killing of workers. Hundreds of family members of the victims protested after Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan labeled the disaster, the worst mine tragedy in Turkish history, as an “ordinary thing,” despite warnings about the mine’s safety only eeks before.

The European Association of Lawyers for Democracy and Human Rights (ELDH) noted that “We are particularly concerned about the situation of attorneys Barkin Timtik, Engin Gökoglu und Özgür Yilmaz. We fear that they are (again) subjected to torture.” ELDH further notes that there are now 1,343 lawyers subject to prosecution in Turkey; 538 of them were arrested under political charges following the attempted coup in July 2016.

The 16 lawyers seized here were clearly detained in order to prevent Nuriye Gülmen and Semih Özakça, two educators fired by the state who were then arrested for protesting their firing, from receiving a defense in court. Their arrest came in order to prevent them from carrying out their professional duties as lawyers and their responsibilities as human rights defenders for political prisoners in Turkish jails.

Photo: Nuriye Gülmen and Semih Özakça, by Murat Bay/Sendika.Org

This is only the latest incident in an ongoing pattern of Turkish state repression in which the lawyers of political prisoners are arrested or accused in the same proceedings as their clients in order to prevent them from presenting a defense in court.

Both Gülmen, a university professor, and Özakça, a primary school teacher, began their hunger strike in Ankara in April demanding the return of their jobs after both were dismissed under the pretext of the post-coup-attempt state of emergency, in clear retaliation for their progressive political positions, despite their rejection of military coups. Only one week after the two joined rallies in Ankara in support of a mass hunger strike of Palestinian political prisoners, they were arrested on 23 May and accused of “terror” activities. Now, the lawyers face similar charges of “membership in a terrorist organization.”

They have received support from Palestinian community and solidarity organizations in Turkey as well as from Palestinian resistance icon Leila Khaled. Hassan Tahrawi of the Palestinian community in Ankara declared, “We declare our solidarity as Palestinians with Nuriye, Semih and Kemal Gün. The resistance here and in Palestine is a continuation of the historical solidarity between oppressed peoples.”

Neither Gülmen nor Özakça was brought to court for their first hearing on 14 September in Ankara; “health and security” were cited as the reasons for their absence; their trial was adjourned until 28 September, when it will convene in Sincan, near Ankara, where the two are imprisoned.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network reiterates its solidarity with Nuriye Gülmen and Semih Özakça, now on hunger strike for 196 days. They are consuming lemon, salt water and sugar solutions along with vitamin B1 but refusing solid foods. Their health has deteriorated and they are at risk of forced feeding and forced treatment. We join their demand for immediate release and the reinstatement of their jobs.

Samidoun declares our strongest solidarity with the 14 imprisoned lawyers and human rights defenders and demands their immediate release and the dropping of all charges against these lawyers as well as an end to the ongoing harassment and repression against the Progressive Lawyers Association (CHD) and other lawyers and human rights defenders in Turkey.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network demands the release of all of the Turkish and Kurdish political prisoners in Turkey’s jails. From Turkey to Palestine, justice, freedom and liberation for all political prisoners!