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February 13, Milwaukee: Solidarity with Rasmea Odeh

Part of the Week of Action to support Rasmea Odeh. More info: http://justice4rasmea.org. More event information here: http://samidoun.net/2015/02/february-9-21-events-across-united-states-support-rasmea-odeh-with-live-streams-concerts-and-more/

Solidarity with Rasmea Odeh

Friday, February 13
6:00pm – 9:00pm in CST
Marquette University
Lalumiere Hall Rm 288
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1381081942203225/

PSC is hosting another Palestine Solidarity Social!

6:30pm Rasmea talk followed by Potluck and social.

With so many in the Milwaukee area working on various Palestine related efforts, we hope to come together for a night of food and conversation. Let’s share ideas and strengthen our movement!

At 6:30pm Rasmea Odeh will make a skype appearance to update us on her legal battle. She is currently awaiting sentencing in March, and there will be upcoming actions to defend her from the politically motivated witch hunt.

Please bring either a dish to pass, or a donation for the Rasmea Defence Committee if you are able.

Abdallah Abu Rahma’s sentencing postponed to 23 February: Take action

Palestinian human rights defender Abdallah Abu Rahma, chair of the Bil’in Popular Committee Against the Wall, was to be sentenced by an Israeli military court on 8 February on charges of “disturbing a soldier” for participating in a protest in 2012 in support of Palestinian political prisoners. However, on 8 February, his sentencing was postponed until 23 February. Continue to take action and support this Palestinian human rights defender – Take Action: Sign this online petition demanding freedom for Abu Rahma.

Take action: Next hearing for imprisoned Palestinian student Lina Khattab 16 February

Lina Khattab, 18-year-old Palestinian first year media student at Bir Zeit University and folkloric dancer, will face her next military court hearing at Ofer prison on 16 February 2015. Khattab was arrested by the Israeli military on 13 December 2014 at a student demonstration in support of Palestinian political prisoners held in Ofer prison; she was charged with “throwing stones” and “participating in an unlawful demonstration,” frequent and arbitrary charges leveled at Palestinians who participate in or are near popular demonstrations against the Israeli occupation. Click here to take action – demand the immediate release of Lina Khattab!

Her court hearing on 25 January – her seventh appearance in military court since her arrest – was closed to observers and the public. Her hearing on 16 February will be open to observers, reported Palestinian activist Mariam Barghouthi, who reported previously on Lina’s experience and that of her family at a postponed hearing.

Lina is one of many Palestinian students targeted annually by Israeli military forces; Palestinian university campuses and students’ homes have been raided, while many student blocs involved in student union elections have been treated as “hostile organizations” by the Israeli military – meaning that students can be prosecuted and imprisoned for their involvement in Palestinian student unions and other student organizing activities.

Lina reported through her lawyer that she had been abused and beaten by Israeli soldiers during her detention, and one of the soldiers hit her, ripped her clothes and shouted obscene insults at her.

The Progressive Democratic Student Pole at Bir Zeit University has organized several marches and rallies calling for Lina’s freedom; on 5 February, the Union of Palestinian Women’s Committees held support and protest gatherings at Lina’s family home as well as the family home of Malaak al-Khatib, the 14-year-old Palestinian girl sentenced to 2 months imprisonment.

The Union saluted the families of Lina and Malaak, symbols of steadfastness and struggle, and called for international action to free Palestinian prisoners and the immediate release of Lina and Malaak. Click here to take action – demand the immediate release of Lina Khattab!

Take action – demand the release of Lina Khattab!

1. Take action to demand the immediate release of Lina Khattab. Sign the letter here and send it to Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Netanyahu.

2. Take action for Palestinian prisoners: protest at an Israeli consulate or embassy, or hold an educational event Palestinian prisoners. Demand the freedom of Lina Khattab and Palestinian political prisoners.

3. Join the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions. Isolate Israel for its mass political imprisonment of Palestinians. Boycott products like HP and SodaStream, and demand an end to security contracts with G4S, which provides the security system at HaSharon that imprisons Lina and other Palestinian women. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

24 Palestinians ordered imprisoned without charge or trial under administrative detention

On February 3, Israeli military courts issued administrative detention orders – orders for imprisonment without trial or charge – against 20 imprisoned Palestinians, including 14 from Hebron, reported the Palestinian Prisoners’ Society.

16 of these orders renewed existing administrative detention sentences, which are indefinitely renewable and based entirely on secret evidence not available to Palestinians or their lawyers, while 4 were new orders.

The 20 Palestinians being held without charge or trial, and the length of their sentences, are as follows:

1. Adam Taha Abu Sharar of Hebron – 4 months
2. Adham Mohammed Ajlouni of Hebron – 6 months
3. Harbiye Hisham Ajlouni of Hebron – 6 months
4. Mohammed Ibrahim Harizat of Hebron – 6 months
5. Mohammed Anwar Kahoush of Ramallah – 6 months
6. Khalil Mohammed Shawabkeh of Hebron – 6 months
7. Hijazi Ali Qawasmeh from Hebron – 6 months
8. Omar Ahmed Awad of Hebron – 3 months
9. Bassam Ahmad Zarir of Hebron – 4 months
10. Azzedine Shehda Abu Sneineh of Hebron – 6 months
11. Hashim Mahmoud Azzam of Bethlehem – 6 months
12. Ibrahim Abdullah Al-Arouj of Bethlehem – 4 months
13. Mohab Musa Junaidi of Hebron – 6 months
14. Fares Awad Qawasmeh of Hebron – 4 months
15. Khader Khaled Sarkaji of Nablus – 6 months
16. Falah Taher Nada from Ramallah – 2 Months
17. Nur al-Din Abdel-Fattah Qawasmeh of Hebron – 5 months
18. Hani Ziad Alhuarin of Hebron – 6 months
19. Mohammed Hussein Musalema of Hebron – 4 months
20. Mohammed Bassem Sanif of Ramallah – 4 months

Four more Palestinians had their administrative detention orders confirmed in Ofer military court on Thursday, 5 February:

21. Mohammed Abu Juma of Jericho – 4 months
22. Hamza Mosfour of Ramallah – 3 months
23. Yazed Abu al-Hajj of Ramallah – 3 months
24. Khaled Suleiman of Ramallah – 3 months

There are currently 500 Palestinians held in administrative detention, including 28 from Hebron. 17 of them are members of the Palestinian Legislative Council, including Hatem Kufaisheh of Hebron, whose administrative detention order was reduced from four months to two months on 5 February; this is the sixth renewal of his administrative detention.

Administrative detention orders can range from one to six month periods and are indefinitely renewable; Palestinians can spend years in administrative detention, never charged or tried.

The systematic use of arbitrary imprisonment by Israeli forces to punish Palestinians violates international humanitarian law under the Fourth Geneva Convention.

Take Action: Free Palestinian child prisoners Khaled al-Sheikh and Malaak al-Khatib

Imprisoned Palestinian boy, Khaled al-Sheikh, 14, from Beit Annan in Jerusalem area, has now been imprisoned for 40 days, accused of “throwing stones.” Along with 14-year-old girl Malaak al-Khatib, also accused of “throwing stones,” he is one of the youngest of the Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails.  Malaak was sentenced to two months in Israeli prison and a 6000 NIS ($1500 USD) fine, which her parents struggled to pay. Between 150 and 200 Palestinian child prisoners are currently held in Israeli prisons. Take action: demand the release of Khaled, Malaak and all Palestinian child prisoners.

Al-Sheikh’s father, Hussam, speaking with Ahrar Center, said that his son has health conditions, including anemia, and is not receiving treatment. He is a tenth grade student, arrested on 12 December 2014 next to the separation wall near their village, and currently imprisoned in Ofer prison. He has had three sessions in his trial for throwing stones; this is a common charge against any Palestinian participating in a demonstration, and particularly is frequently used against child prisoners. He will be brought before the military court again on 11 February. The al-Sheikh family has been denied permits to visit Khaled for unstated “security” reasons, and they have not been allowed to touch him, hug him or talk to him privately during the court hearings, where he was shackled hand and foot despite his youth. “The normal place for children is their school or playground and not prison,” he concluded.

malaakIn February 2015, the Israeli army also announced that it was suspending a “pilot program” in the West Bank for the issuing of written summonses instead of arresting children at night. “No statistics were kept” on the pilot program; however, Military Court Watch reports that in 67% of cases where written summonses were issued, this was still done through military home raids after midnight that continue to traumatize children and their families. MCW noted that “no genuine attempt has been made by the military authorities to effectively replace night arrests with summonses and that the pilot programme has not been implemented in good faith.” Defence for Children International Palestine has also reported extensively on the abuse of Palestinian children in Israeli prisons.

Take Action: Demand the release of Palestinian Children:

1. Sign this petition calling on European parliamentarians to take action: https://secure.avaaz.org/en/petition/Members_of_European_Parliament_Pressure_Israel_to_release_Palestinian_Child_Prisoners/?pv=1

2. Take action for Palestinian prisoners: protest at an Israeli consulate or embassy, or hold an educational event. Share this alert for Palestinian child prisoners.

3. Join the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions. Isolate Israel for its mass political imprisonment of Palestinians. Boycott products like HP and SodaStream, and demand an end to security contracts with G4S, which operates in Israeli prisons. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

Take Action: Human rights defender Abu Rahma faces sentencing February 8

UPDATE: Abu Rahma’s sentencing has been postponed until 23 February. Please continue to take the action below:

On Sunday, February 8, Palestinian human rights defender Abdallah Abu Rahma, coordinator of Bil’in’s Popular Committee Against the Wall, will face sentencing for “disturbing a soldier;” he was convicted by an Israeli military court on October 21, 2014 of this charge for participating in a mass demonstration in support of Palestinian political prisoners in 2012. “Demonstrating against the occupation cannot be a criminal offence. Finding Abdallah guilty only shows that the [Israeli] military court is a tool to perpetuate the occupation,” stated Gabi Lasky, Abu Rahma’s lawyer. Take Action: Sign this online petition demanding freedom for Abu Rahma.

Petition text below:

Abdallah Abu Rahma, 44, is due to be sentenced on February 8th for exercising his legitimate right to protest in a nonviolent manner against the human rights violations and abuses perpetrated by the State of Israel on the occupied Palestinian territories.

Frank La Rue (former Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression) following his visit to Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory in December 2011,highlighted that the Israeli Military Order 101 is used by the IDF to “restrict Palestinians’ rights to freedom of expression and assembly”.

As explained by La Rue, the order “criminalises political expression and activities, including organising and participating in protests; taking part in assemblies or vigils; holding, waving or displaying flags or other political symbols; and printing and distributing any material ‘’having a political significance’’. Any breach of the order is punishable by 10 years of imprisonment and/or fine. The Israeli Military Code applied in the West Bank is used against civilians as a way of repression against Human Rights Defenders. The Military Courts are just a tool of the Israeli occupation to smash the Palestinian popular Struggle. The right to peaceful assembly is recognised in Article 21 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Israel is a signatory, as well as in Articles 19 and 20 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The European Union Guidelines on Human Rights Defenders and the UN Declaration on the Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of Society to Promote and Protect Universally Recognised Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms , despite not legally being binding documents for the states, provide to the International community a moral obligation to offer support and protection to human rights defenders in the context of their work.

However, the UN guidelines contains a series of principles and rights that are based on human rights standards enshrined in other international instruments that are legally binding – such as the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, from which Israel is a signatory member. Moreover, the Declaration was adopted by consensus by the General Assembly and therefore represents a very strong commitment by States to its implementation.

For all the above mentioned reasons, appealing to the obligation to protect and promote human rights, the undersigned hereby request the acquittal of Abdallah Abu Rahma on all charges and urges the Israeli Government to fulfill his obligations, respecting International Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law, ensuring protection of Human Rights and its defenders.

Take Action: Sign this online petition demanding freedom for Abu Rahma.

Statements of support for Abdallah Abu Rahma:

https://www.consilium.europa.eu/uedocs/cms_data/docs/pressdata/EN/foraff/116232.pdf

 

Sami al-Arian, Palestinian prisoner in US jails, deported to Turkey

Sami al-Arian, Palestinian professor, activist and political prisoner in US jails who was never convicted on so-called “terrorism” charges and spent years in house arrest because he refused to testify and inform on Palestinians who were being investigated by a federal grand jury, was finally deported from the US to Turkey on 4 February. Al-Arian’s case, which stretched on for over 13 years, exemplified the US policy of targeting Palestinian activists for repression, imprisonment and silencing.

Al-Arian told The Intercept: “I came to the United States for freedom, but four decades later, I am leaving to gain my freedom.”

Al-Arian released a statement upon his exit from the country:

To my dear friends and supporters,

After 40 years, my time in the U.S. has come to an end. Like many immigrants of my generation, I came to the U.S. in 1975 to seek a higher education and greater opportunities. But I also wanted to live in a free society where freedom of speech, association and religion are not only tolerated but guaranteed and protected under the law. That’s why I decided to stay and raise my family here, after earning my doctorate in 1986. Simply put, to me, freedom of speech and thought represented the cornerstone of a dignified life.

Today, freedom of expression has become a defining feature in the struggle to realize our humanity and liberty. The forces of intolerance, hegemony, and exclusionary politics tend to favor the stifling of free speech and the suppression of dissent. But nothing is more dangerous than when such suppression is perpetrated and sanctioned by government. As one early American once observed, “When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.” Because government has enormous power and authority over its people, such control must be checked, and people, especially those advocating unpopular opinions, must have absolute protections from governmental overreach and abuse of power. A case in point of course is the issue of Palestinian self-determination. In the United States, as well as in many other western countries, those who support the Palestinian struggle for justice, and criticize Israel’s occupation and brutal policies, have often experienced an assault on their freedom of speech in academia, media, politics and society at large. After the tragic events of September 11th, such actions by the government intensified, in the name of security. Far too many people have been targeted and punished because of their unpopular opinions or beliefs.

During their opening statement in my trial in June 2005, my lawyers showed the jury two poster-sized photographs of items that government agents took during searches of my home many years earlier. In one photo, there were several stacks of books taken from my home library. The other photo showed a small gun I owned at the time. The attorney looked the jury in the eyes and said: “This is what this case is about. When the government raided my client’s house, this is what they seized,” he said, pointing to the books, “and this is what they left,” he added, pointing to the gun in the other picture. “This case is not about terrorism but about my client’s right to freedom of speech,” he continued. Indeed, much of the evidence the government presented to the jury during the six-month trial were speeches I delivered, lectures I presented, articles I wrote, magazines I edited, books I owned, conferences I convened, rallies I attended, interviews I gave, news I heard, and websites I never even accessed. But the most disturbing part of the trial was not that the government offered my speeches, opinions, books, writings, and dreams into evidence, but that an intimidated judicial system allowed them to be admitted into evidence. That’s why we applauded the jury’s verdict. Our jurors represented the best society had to offer. Despite all of the fear-mongering and scare tactics used by the authorities, the jury acted as free people, people of conscience, able to see through Big Brother’s tactics.  One hard lesson that must be learned from the trial is that political cases should have no place in a free and democratic society.

But despite the long and arduous ordeal and hardships suffered by my family, I leave with no bitterness or resentment in my heart whatsoever. In fact, I’m very grateful for the opportunities and experiences afforded to me and my family in this country, and for the friendships we’ve cultivated over the decades. These are lifelong connections that could never be affected by distance.

I would like to thank God for all the blessings in my life. My faith sustained me during my many months in solitary confinement and gave me comfort that justice would ultimately prevail.

Our deep thanks go to the friends and supporters across the U.S., from university professors to grassroots activists, individuals and organizations, who have stood alongside us in the struggle for justice.

My trial attorneys, Linda Moreno and the late Bill Moffitt, were the best advocates anyone could ask for, both inside and outside of the courtroom. Their spirit, intelligence, passion and principle were inspirational to so many.

I am also grateful to Jonathan Turley and his legal team, whose tireless efforts saw the case to its conclusion. Jonathan’s commitment to justice and brilliant legal representation resulted in the government finally dropping the case.

Our gratitude also goes to my immigration lawyers, Ira Kurzban and John Pratt, for the tremendous work they did in smoothing the way for this next phase of our lives.

Thanks also to my children for their patience, perseverance and support during the challenges of the last decade. I am so proud of them.

Finally, my wife Nahla h​as been a pillar of love, strength and resilience. She kept our family together during the most difficult times. There are no words to convey the extent of my gratitude.

We look forward to the journey ahead and take with us the countless happy memories we formed during our life in the United States.

Free Albert Woodfox! US Black political prisoner struggles against 42 years of isolation

Albert Woodfox, one of the “Angola Three,” three Black political prisoners in US jails, whose conviction has been overturned three times, is continuing to struggle today for his freedom. On February 3, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals denied a request for a rehearing to the state of Louisiana, affirming the overturn of his conviction for murder.

Woodfox and his comrade Herman Wallace, Black Panthers who built a chapter of the party inside the notorious prison, a former slave plantation rife with corruption, segregation and horrific racist abuse, were accused of killing a prison guard in 1973, despite the fact that no physical evidence lined them to the murder and potentially exculpatory DNA evidence was lost by the state, and the witnesses who testified against them later retracted their statement. He has been held for over 40 years in solitary confinement, including 23 hours a day confined in his cell, lack of access to exercise, work, or education; he has been denied review of his isolation and is 67 years old today.

Herman Wallace died in 2013, free for only three days after 41 years in solitary confinement after his own conviction was overturned, and the third member of the Angola Three, Robert King, was released in 2001. The campaign to free Albert Woodfox – and end long-term solitary confinement – is supported by Amnesty International and numerous human rights organizations.

angola3Coup Pour Coup 31, an anti-imperialist collective in Toulouse, France, is organizing a campaign to free Albert Woodfox, noting that “his life bears witness to the popular and political struggle for self-defense and liberation of the African American community, denouncing all of the realities of racial and economic oppression of African American people: from neighbourhoods to prisons, from the slave trade to the industrial slavery of prison labor, from cultural and mental alienation to institutional destruction. It is the political strength of the resistance and the legacy of revolutionary fighters that has sustained Albert Woodfox through 42 years of isolation, and must also encourage the international campaign of solidarity for his release and against the racist system of oppression of US prisons.”

Coup Pour Coup is fundraising and holding events to support the case: learn more here: http://www.couppourcoup31.com/2015/02/campaign-for-the-release-of-albert-woodfox.html

Write to Albert Woodfox and send your support to:

Albert Woodfox #72148
David Wade Correctional Center
670 Bell Hill Road
Homer, LA 71040

Forum connects struggles for justice from Brazil to Palestine

Samidoun participated in São Paulo, Brazil in a political forum on “State Terrorism and Incarceration from Occupied Palestine to Brazil” on January 29, organized by the Movimento Palestina Para Tod@s (MOP@T), a youth-led Palestine solidarity and support organization in Sao Paulo focused on building connections between movements for justice inside Brazil and internationally.

The forum, which included Charlotte Kates of Samidoun, Palestinian activist and writer Khaled Barakat of the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat, and representatives of the 2 October Network, which organizes for prison justice and abolition in Brazil, and the Organization of Friends and Family of Prisoners in Brazilian prisons. All of the speakers addressed the impacts of mass incarceration on oppressed communities, racist injustice systems, and the relationship between mass incarceration and repression of movements.

Brazil has the third largest prison population in the world, a high level of police brutality and repression directed both against political movements and against poor and racialized communities, and a racist prison and policing system that targets Black youth in particular for repression, confinement and imprisonment. The representatives of the Brazilian movement discussed the impact of this level of mass imprisonment upon the families and communities of incarcerated people, including strip searching and abuse of family visitors and ongoing police harassment.

Kates addressed the system of mass incarceration in Palestine and its similarities – and differences – with racist and colonial oppression and imprisonment in the United States, Canada and Europe, noting that 1 in 3 Black men can be expected to be imprisoned at one point in his life in the US, and that the imprisonment rate of Indigenous people in Canada is 10 times that of white Canadians.

Discussing the Black liberation movement and Indigenous struggles for sovereignty, she addressed the use of mass imprisonment as a weapon of state terror against communities. In Palestine, where the racist, settler colonial state of Israel has been imposed upon the indigenous people of Palestine, 1 out of every 4 Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza will be imprisoned in Israeli prisons, while 40% of Palestinian men have been imprisoned. “Imprisonment is part of the ongoing Nakba, the Zionist campaign to erase Palestinian existence and resistance, and it symbolizes the oppression of all Palestinians: the over six million refugees forced from their homes and lands and denied their right to return; Gaza under siege and under fire; Jerusalem under attack and demolition; Palestinians in the West Bank struggling to live as a Wall of apartheid cuts them from their land; and Palestinians in ’48 facing dozens of racist laws and police murder,” Kates said.

She discussed the use of administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial, against Palestinians, including 500 current administrative detainees out of 6,500 Palestinian political prisoners, repression inside the prisons, and the denial of family visits to Palestinian prisoners as a method of collective punishment against the entire Palestinian people, as nearly every Palestinian family has been touched by mass imprisonment.

Three cases of Palestinian political prisoners were discussed at length: that of the child prisoner, 14-year-old Malaak al-Khatib, a teen girl who is the youngest of nearly 200 Palestinian childrenin Israeli jails; imprisoned Palestinian student and folkloric dancer Lina Khattab; and political leader, Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat, who was imprisoned by Israel as well as in collaboration with the United States, Britain and the Palestinian Authority.

The discussion also addressed the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions and the demand to free Palestinian prisoners as part of the BDS campaign. In particular, the campaign against G4S, which is involved in human rights abuses in detention and imprisonment around the world – including in Brazil, where BDS campaigns are focusing on its involvement in private prisons, and in Palestine – is growing internationally.

Palestinian writer and activist Khaled Barakat, coordinator of the Campaign to Free Ahmad Sa’adat, provided a political analysis of the current situation of the Palestinian struggle for liberation and what is needed today in order to achieve justice in Palestine.

“Those who recognize and defend Israel’s ‘right to exist’ on stolen Palestinian land cannot be true friends or part of the real solidarity movement with the Palestinian people. We must keep the flame of the struggle burning in confrontation with Israel and its supporters inside and outside Palestine, under the leadership of the Palestinian people and their resistance, and with the support of the Arab nation, the people of the region, and the progressive forces and people of the world. This is the only truly realistic and revolutionary option to change the balance of power locally and internationally and change the equation in the region to the benefit of the Palestinian people and their just struggle for liberation,” said Barakat.

He addressed the Palestinian and Arab resistance as the only mechanism capable of defeating “the settler-colonial racist state in occupied Palestine,” noting that there are nearly 100 years of Palestinian armed struggle for liberation. “Since 1917, the Palestinian people have been confronting colonialism and occupation.” He dismissed the so-called “two state solution” as a “major betrayal of the Palestinian people and their right to return to their homes from which they were forced,” calling instead for “the establishment of the democratic state of Palestine on the entire land of Palestine,” from the river to the sea.

Barakat denounced the Brazilian government’s economic and military partnerships with the Israeli state while it expresses verbal support for Palestinian rights, urging the acceleration of the campaign for the full boycott of Israel at all levels, military, economic, cultural, academic and political.

15 February, NYC: Love Yourself, Love Your Freedom: Welcome for Sekou Odinga

Love Yourself, Love Your Freedom: Welcome Home Celebration for Sekou Odinga
Sunday, 15 February
12:00 noon – 6:00 pm
Malcolm X and Dr Betty Shabazz Memorial and Educational Center
3940 Broadway, New York
More info: https://www.facebook.com/events/419643974871096/

Existence is Resistance, The Sekou Odinga Defense Committee and The Campaign to Bring Mumia Home present this all day celebration and fundraiser for recently released political prisoner of 34 years, Sekou Odinga.

Sekou Odinga was a U.S. held political prisoner imprisoned 34 years for fighting for the freedom of Black people and the building of the Republic of New Afrika. He was released November 25, 2014 into the arms of family, comrades and friends.

Sponsors:

MXGM
Universal Zulu Nation
Harlem Copwatch
Brotherhood SisterSol
Rebel Diaz Arts Collective
NY Black Panthers
Party for Socialism and Liberation

These organizations will be in attendance with various tables including activities such as letter writing to political prisoners and information on knowing your rights.

We will be showing two amazing documentaries:

12:30 pm The Mike Brown Rebellion by Rebel Diaz

2:30 pm Afraid of Dark by Mya B

Key Note Address at 4 pm by Sekou Odinga

Special Guest DJ Lumumba aka Revolution

Hosted by Hakim Green

Live Performances by:

Divine RBG
Intikana
The Peace Poets
Lah Tere & Mommas HipHop Kitchen
DK Dyson
Mahina Movement

Flier Designed by; Intifada Street
Original Photographic Image Credit: Solwazi, Ancestral Beauty Photography

sekou