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29 November, Online: Freedom for the Holy Land Five: Community Town Hall

Tuesday, 29 November
7 pm Eastern time (4 pm Pacific, 1 am central Europe, 2 am Palestine) 
Register to join: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMvd-qpqTwpH9Ew6Y9juOa7FwMqlk4qjSU-/
Organized by Within Our Lifetime

Join the Community Town Hall to discuss the campaign to Free the Holy Land Five, with speakers:

  • Nerdeen Kiswani, lawyer and chair of Within Our Lifetime
  • Nida Abu Baker, daughter of Shukri Abu Baker of the Holy Land 5
  • Amith Gupta, Staff Attorney, Center for Civil Freedoms

Strategize to build the movement for their freedom!

 

29 November, Online Event: Symposium in solidarity with the Palestinian people

Tuesday, 29 November
3 pm to 5:30 pm Jerusalem time (5 am Pacific, 8 am Eastern, 2 pm central Europe) 
Online event via Zoom: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88364534342?pwd=RkJKUVk5a0VoZ2N1SkNkTkFEU0FzUT09

Organized by Act 4 Palestine. Charlotte Kates of Samidoun will join this event at 4:45 – 5:00 pm Jerusalem time.

 

Remembering Samah Idriss: “If we abandon Palestine, we abandon ourselves”

On the first anniversary of his passing on 25 November 2021, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network remembers Arab intellectual and struggler Samah Idriss, who dedicated his life to the liberation of Palestine and the Arab region. The editor-in-chief of Al-Adab magazine and co-founder of the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of “Israel” in Lebanon, he was a leading voice for the Arab boycott movement, a co-founder of the Masar Badil, the Palestinian Alternative Revolutionary Path Movement, and a writer, thinker and revolutionary who inspired many on the road to liberation.

Listen to Samah Idriss interviewed on Voice of Palestine, by Hanna and Marion Kawas, in 2014:

In this interview for the Collectif Palestine Vaincra, Samah discusses the mutually supportive relationship between boycott and all forms of resistance:

Less than a month before his passing, his final speech was delivered to the inaugural conference of the Masar Badil in Beirut, ending with the words — a call for Arab unity, action and rejection of normalization — that have come to represent his legacy: “If we abandon Palestine, we abandon ourselves.”

In the year since Samah’s passing, Samidoun fundraised to open and create the Samah Idriss hall at the chess club in Shatila camp where Samah would read weekly to Palestinian children, even at his busiest moments. This year, the Masar Badil and many organizations — including Samidoun — are involved in over 20 events in honour of his life in struggle, including events in Shatila camp, Beirut, Vancouver, Madrid, Berlin, Malmo and elsewhere.

Samah Idriss never hesitated to stand with the prisoners and their struggle for freedom, organizing actions and Arab campaigns, editing issues of Al-Adab dedicated to the liberation of the prisoners, not to mention meeting with and organizing with Samidoun delegations to Lebanon. He was an Arab struggler committed to Arabic language and Arab liberation with one approach, a true internationalist, and one who lived his life dedicated to the cause of Palestine.

He continues to present us with an inspiration and an example as we work to achieve those goals he shared, and we join in the salute of the Palestinian prisoners: “We mourn you as a writer, an intellectual, a comrade, and a fighter for the freedom for which you died. Sleep with clear eyes, and know that the road to freedom will never be cut off for free people.”

As we remember him today, we republish the letter from the Palestinian prisoners’ movement in honour of Samah Idriss on his passing:

The prisoners’ message in memory of Samah Idriss

It is an unusual morning, when the news of your departure comes to sink its teeth into the delicateness of love and emotion, the morning turns into sunset and your soul sets there, Samah. We remain in its shade as it flutters and fills the space on this exceptional morning. The news of the tragedy of your departure replaces for now our thoughts of liberation and freedom. Your absence keeps us transfixed in time, we look around us and remember you, and we still need your words and your committed, principled positions. We are still in the middle of the road to freedom, Samah.

Your news has traveled and reached us as the dew drops fade from the prison fences and bars. With it, our feelings crept in, and we felt the wound of losing you publicly. We want you to hear our last cry, you, who always spoke with our voice and our screams, or perhaps we want to bid you farewell with a whisper of screaming.

Our words will certainly reach you. We are in the prisons of the Zionist colonizer, and we wanted to meet you. You can see and, as you taught us, the journey is still long, and our lamp still needs a lot of oil, so why have you left now?!

Samah, we know that you have not left the mountain. You are as a mountain in your stances, and your steps are engraved in the path of this long journey. You are our beloved comrade, a companion on the hard path of struggle, a friend on the long road. Your body has left us, but your spirit will remain an inspiration to us. Your words and your positions are a beacon that we raise, debate and discuss as we walk. We will keep walking, comrade, until we get there.

From behind bars, behind walls, behind fences, in the clutches of the Zionists, we salute your family, your loved ones, your comrades and your companions. We mourn you with pride and admiration, and the highest commitment to the struggle. We mourn you as a writer, an intellectual, a comrade, and a fighter for the freedom for which you died. Sleep with clear eyes, and know that the road to freedom will never be cut off for free people.

Your comrades in the occupation prisons

26 November 2021

 

26 November, Vancouver: Stand up for Palestine, Boycott Israeli Wines!

Saturday, 26 Vancouver
2 pm
BC Liquor Store, 768 Bute St at Alberni
Downtown Vancouver
https://www.facebook.com/events/839365647191853/

Join us to mark the annual International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People with a picket to “Tell the BC NDP Govt to Pull Israeli Apartheid Wines”.

Major international and Israeli human right groups, including Amnesty International, have determined that Israel is committing the crime of apartheid. Yet the BC government insists to carry Israeli wines in publicly owned BC liquor stores, even though most are linked to the illegal Israeli settlement enterprise.

The wines in question are either from the Golan Heights Winery and its joint venture the Galil Winery; or from the Israeli Teperberg Winery, which proudly displays a map on its website showing vineyards in occupied Palestinian territory.
More info: http://cpavancouver.org/boycottisraeliwines-campaign/

Cosponsors for this event include BDS Vancouver-Coast Salish, Canada Palestine Association, ILPS Canada, Independent Jewish Voices Vancouver, Samidoun Vancouver

Ahmed Manasra once again ordered to four more months in solitary confinement

In the latest outrage in a case that has come to exemplify the Israeli occupation’s war on Palestinian childhood, Ahmed Manasra — now 20 — was ordered to another four months in solitary confinement on 24 November 2022 by an occupation court. Manasra has been imprisoned for over seven years, since he was 13 years old.

After watching his cousin shot dead by settlers before his eyes, suffering a critical injury, experiencing torture and harsh interrogation while separated from his parents, and then being held for years in occupation prisons, Ahmed developed serious psychological illness. Rather than providing him with care or releasing him in response to the numerous appeals of his family and lawyers, Israeli occupation forces instead have held him in solitary confinement for the past year, intensifying his suffering even further.

On 12 October 2015, Manasrah was severely injured while his cousin, Hassan, 15, was killed. Ahmad and Hassan were accused of attempting to stab a settler as part of the ongoing uprising taking place in Jerusalem. Hassan was shot by settlers and killed on the street, while Ahmad was run over by settlers and seriously injured. Video of settlers screaming and cursing at the bleeding Ahmad and yelling that he should die was widely circulated via social media.

He was sentenced to 12 years in occupation prisons — later reduced to 9 1/2 years — over a year later, on 7 November 2016, after the Israeli occupation deliberately delayed his trial in order to impose a higher sentence upon him after he turned 14 years old.

Palestinian lawyer Jamil Saadeh noted upon Ahmad’s conviction that “the occupation deliberately kept the child Ahmed Manasra imprisoned inside a reform center until he reached the legal age for full sentencing under Israeli law, which is the age of 14 years…The court did not take into account what he suffered from the moment of his detention, being wounded, assaulted and cursed, treated inside the hospital as a threat, and screamed at during interrogation by the officers, all of which is documented on video and condemns the occupation.”

Over 400,000 people around the world have signed a petition calling for Manasra’s release. Today, European Union officials called for Manasra’s freedom after observers attended the trial session, noting that solitary confinement of over 15 days is considered a form of torture as well as his psychological vulnerabilities. His lawyer, Khaled Zabarqa, noted that he had recently visited Manasra and that his life and health is at severe risk. On 22 October 2022, Manasra was involuntarily moved to the Ramle psychiatric hospital.

Manasra’s lawyers sought his release after serving two-thirds of his sentence; in response, occupation officials classified his case as a “terrorism case,” preventing them from seeking his early release. Instead, occupation authorities have kept Ahmed in solitary confinement, extended once again today.

Ahmed’s mother made it clear: “Freedom is his healing…He is the son of all Palestinians.”

Ahmed Manasra is a Palestinian political prisoner who has been abused by the occupation all of his life, growing up under colonization and subjected to physical and psychological torture for over one-third of his years.

His case represents the struggle of the nearly 700 children every year who are brought before occupation military courts — not to mention the many more who are subjected to violent night raids, torture and abuse, solitary confinement, settler invasions, home demolitions, abductions of family members, siege, extrajudicial killings and other violations from their earliest moments in life. These crimes against Ahmed and Palestinian children are made possible by the ongoing support to the occupier provided by imperialist powers, including the United States, Canada and the European Union.

Freedom for Ahmed Manasra — and freedom for Palestine, from the river to the sea!

Kick Out Apartheid: Campaigning for justice in sport for Palestine as the World Cup begins

As the World Cup begins, Samidoun is part of a growing global campaign to demand FIFA take action to hold the Israeli occupation accountable for its ongoing crimes against the Palestinian people, including Palestinian sport. The campaign also aims to support anti-normalization efforts in support and boost sports boycott campaigns as well as #BoycottPuma and related actions in the sports world.

Visit the campaign page at Kick Out Apartheid. 

It’s time to score a goal for Palestine!

Israel has violated the principles of FIFA in a variety of ways that would normally warrant disciplinary actions and even a suspension of its membership. However, the politics of FIFA have prevented the organization in the past from taking such action. Its internal by-laws have even been amended to make it more difficult for the Palestine Football Association (PFA) to demand such action. Consequently, it is now the responsibility of civil society to apply the popular pressure necessary to bring this about.

Sportspeople from around the world are wearing wristbands for Palestine and raising the Palestinian flag to show their solidarity throughout the 2022 World Cup. Join us to take action.

One part of the campaign draws attention to the imprisonment of Palestinian children, especially as they are prevented from either viewing the World Cup or playing sport with friends due to occupation and colonialism.

Palestinian children are routinely denied the right to play or even the right to live freely. There are nearly 200 Palestinian children in Israeli occupation prisons right now, and every year, almost 700 kids are brought before occupation military courts.

This year, as you watch the World Cup, it’s time to take a stand for these Palestinian children, kids like 16 year old Shadi Khoury, a team captain and avid soccer fan, who are being beaten and imprisoned without charge.

“I was hoping Shadi would be with us for the World Cup which starts on the 20th. As a football player (soccer), team captain, and a fan, this was a great event for him which we were planning to watch together. Unfortunately, we heard from the lawyer yesterday that the court session will take place on the 23rd. So please continue to hold him and all the children prisoners in your prayers, especially when you are watching the World Cup.”

—Samia Khoury, Shadi’s grandmother

To join this aspect of the campaign, click here to tweet #SoccerNotCells.

To endorse the campaign, click here. Follow the campaign at the Kick Out Apartheid website.

Free the Holy Land 5! Join the global campaign to liberate these Palestinian prisoners in the U.S. #FreeTheHLF5

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network is honoured to join with Within Our Lifetime-United for Palestine and the Coalition for Civil Freedoms to launch a campaign to free the three remaining Holy Land Foundation 5 prisoners in the United States: Ghassan Elashi, Shukri Abu Baker and Mufid Abdelqader.

24 November 2022 marks 14 years since the Holy Land Foundation 5, five Palestinian community leaders, were convicted and imprisoned for providing charity — food and medicine — to orphans and widows in Palestine. Today, three of the five remain imprisoned, some with exceptionally long sentences. After the first jury hearing their case reached a mistrial, the second trial was an exceptional miscarriage of justice, in which the Holy Land 5 were convicted on the basis of anti-Palestinian propaganda, including the anonymous testimony of Israeli intelligence agents.

It is time to act. These three men remain behind bars, locked away from their communities and loving families, and we demand their freedom, alongside the freedom of all Palestinian prisoners. Like the prisoners of the Black Liberation Movement, Leonard Peltier, Alex Saab and others, the Holy Land 5 are political prisoners of U.S. imperialism. 

Visit WOL’s central action page for the #FreeTheHLF5 campaign here.

Take action to #FreeTheHLF5 with the action items below. This list is not exhaustive and we encourage you to come up with creative ideas to mobilize in defense of the HLF5 and in support of Palestinian prisoners:

  • If you represent an organization, sign onto the call to join the campaign to #FreeTheHLF5
  • Donate or host a fundraiser to support the Coalition for Civil Freedoms, a critical organization who has been supporting the Holy Land 5, their families, and many other political prisoners throughout the United States for decades
  • Organize an event, screening, or rally to defend the Holy Land 5 and all political prisoners. Send us the details and we’ll share it. Outside the United States? Protest at a U.S. consulate or embassy and demand the release of the HLF5.
  • Write to Shukri, Ghassan and Mufid using the instructions and addresses listed at the bottom of this page
  • Take pictures with the posters available here and on the WOL site and include the hashtag #FreeTheHLF5
  • Share our post on instagram and the campaign page on social media with your communities

The Campaign to Free the Holy Land Foundation 5

Who Are the Holy Land Foundation 5?

As Within Our Lifetime notes,

The Holy Land 5 are five Palestinian men who were active leaders in the Holy Land Foundation. The Foundation was based in Texas and was once the largest Islamic charity in the U.S. before it was targeted by the Bush administration and zionist forces as part of the racist “War on Terror” and shut down in December 2001, leading to the wrongful conviction and imprisonment of five Palestinian men. Three of them, Mufid Abdulqader, Ghassan Elashi, and Shukri Abu Baker remain imprisoned today. The two others, Abdulrahman Odeh and Mohammed El-Mezain, sentenced to 15 years each, were released in 2020 and 2022 respectively.

The HLF5 were convicted on false charges of “providing material support to terrorism,” despite the fact that they were never even accused of funding the legitimate armed resistance to Israeli occupation and colonization. Indeed, the same charities funded by the Holy Land Foundation were also funded by the International Red Cross and even USAID, the US Agency for International Development. However, the U.S. government, after failing to convict the HLF5 in their first attempt, was allowed twice to bring in an anonymous Israeli intelligence agent to offer even more dubious, torture-produced “evidence” against the Five, alongside pure sensationalism and anti-Palestinian, anti-Arab racism.

Ghassan Elashi was born in Gaza City, and lived there until age 14. He and his family then moved to Cairo, Egypt, where he eventually got his Bachelor’s degree in accounting from Ain Shams University in 1975. He lived in Saudi Arabia and London for a couple of years before finally migrating to the United States in 1978. He lived in Ohio for several months and then moved to Florida, where he got his Master’s degree in accounting from the University of Miami in 1981. Soon afterwards, Mr. Elashi began working in a company that created the world’s first Arabic computer. In 1985, Mr. Elashi married Majida and moved to Culver City, Calif. near Los Angeles. They lived there for about seven years before moving to Richardson, Texas near Dallas in 1992. There, he worked at a family-owned computer business and served as a chairman and volunteer for the HLF. Mr. Elashi and Majida have six children: Noor, Huda, Asma, Mohammad, Osama and Omar.  “I do not apologize for feeding orphans and needy families. I know what the government’s goal was, it was to make an example of me. But they failed, because I felt a love from my community that I couldn’t imagine,” he said.

Shukri Abu Baker, of Palestinian and Brazilian heritage, was born in Brazil in 1959. At age 6, he and his family moved to Silwad, Palestine, where they lived for a couple of years. In 1967, the family left to Kuwait and lived there for about a decade. Mr. Abu-Baker migrated to the United States in 1980, where he got his Bachelor’s degree in business administration from Orlando College. During that time, he also helped launch the first mosque in central Florida. After marrying Wejdan in 1982, Mr. Abu-Baker moved to Indianapolis, Indiana. There, he worked as an office manager for the Muslim Arab Youth Association. In 1990, they relocated to Culver City, California, near Los Angeles where he and a few friends opened the Holy Land Foundation. Then in 1992, the family moved to Dallas and the HLF moved with them. He and Wejdan have four American-born daughters: Zaira, Sanabel, Nida and Shurook. You can read Shukri’s Notes from Prison on his blog: https://notesfromshukri.wordpress.com/

Mufid Abdelqader was born in Silwad, Palestine in 1959, and lived much of his young adult life in Kuwait. In 1980, he migrated to the United States to receive a college education. He lived in Irving, Texas for a few months before moving to two Oklahoma cities, first Claremore, then Stillwater. To fund his tuition at Oklahoma State University, Mr. Abdelqader briefly worked as a dishwasher at an Italian Restaurant and a cashier at Wendys. He received his Bachelor’s of Science degree in Civil Engineering in 1984. In 1985, he married Diane. He received his Master’s Degree in Civil Engineering from Oklahoma State University in 1994. The family lived in Oklahoma City for several years before finally moving to Richardson, Texas in 1996. He and Diane have three daughters. Since 1996, Mr. Abdelqader worked for the city of Dallas as a Senior Project Manager in the public works and transportation departments. Mufid is a singer, served as a volunteer counselor in his community, and volunteered for the HLF.

The Holy Land 5 Case

The Holy Land Foundation was repeatedly targeted by Zionist organizations in a series of reports and investigations because of its effective work in providing support to occupied Palestine. The HLF was a large charity that raised millions of dollars for impoverished people in occupied Palestine, providing much-needed support and blunting the effects of the occupation on the Palestinian people. Leaders of the Foundation were placed under surveillance by the FBI since 1993 while notorious Islamophobic, racist and Zionist commentators like Steven Emerson repeatedly attacked the Foundation.

The situation of the Foundation was made more precarious in the post-Oslo era, with the adoption of first financial sanctions and then criminal law creating a list of “Foreign Terrorist Organizations,” a list that was explicitly created in order to criminalize and repress opposition to the “Middle East peace process,” which was in reality a process for the liquidation of the Palestinian cause. While the Elashi brothers’ business, INFOCOM, was raided by the FBI on allegations of selling computer technology to people in Libya, Syria and occupied Palestine, in early September 2001, the post-September 11 climate of intensified racism and “War on Terror” propaganda further propelled the attack on the Holy Land Foundation. Using the extremely broad powers of the Treasury Department, the HLF’s funds were frozen, offices raided, and it was declared a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist” organization.

It was in 2004 that the homes of the Holy Land Foundation Five — Ghassan Elashi, Shukri Abu Baker, Mufid Abdelqader, Mohammed el-Mezain and Abdulrahman Odeh — were raided and the men arrested and not until 2007 that their trial began. Despite the admission of anonymous testimony from Israeli intelligence agents in court — who could not be properly subject to cross-examination by the defense — the first trial ended in a mistrial, with initially all 12 jurors voting for acquittal and then one changing his mind at the last minute.

As Within Our Lifetime notes, “One of the jurors noted that the case seemed ‘strung together with macaroni noodles. There was so little evidence.’ The jury issued not-guilty verdicts on nearly every one of the 197 charges until one of the jurors suddenly changed their mind and claimed they never agreed to those verdicts. Later, evidence came out to suggest that this juror was improperly influenced by those who sought to see the HLF5 imprisoned.”

While the HLF5, their families, and supporters for justice in Palestine celebrated, the government refused to accept defeat and once again brought the HLF5 before the court in Dallas, again exhibiting sensationalist, unproven and unrelated testimony from Israeli occupation intelligence agents. Noor Elashi, the daughter of Ghassan Elashi, said, “It was the only time in the history of the United States that a witness inside a courtroom was allowed to remain anonymous, so the defense couldn’t cross-examine him.” There was one prior similar incident, however — the case of Abdelhaleem Ashqar and Mohammed Saleh in Chicago, Palestinians charged on more dubious “terror” allegations, once again facing occupation agents in court granted a veil of anonymity. The Holy Land Foundation Five’s family members’ political affiliations were cited as a form of even more dubious “evidence” against them.

In the end, the HLF5 were convicted and granted extraordinarily long sentences. “Shukri Abu Baker and Ghassan Elashi were given 65-year sentences each. Abdulrahman Odeh, Mohammed El-Mezain, and Mufid Abdulqader were sentenced to 15 to 20 years each. Two of Ghassan Elashi’s brothers, Bayan and Basman Elashi, were tried and convicted seperately of charges stemming from InfoCom and the Holy Land Foundation. The brothers were arrested in 2002, spent two years in solitary confinement, and went to trial in 2004. They each received 84-month sentences, and were released from prison in 2009 before being deported to Gaza.”

Abdulrahman Odeh and Mohammed el-Mezain were finally released in 2020 and 2022. When El-Mezain was released, he was detained by ICE — US immigration agent — and then deported to Turkey. Shukri Abu Baker, Ghassan Elashi and Mufid Abdelqader remain behind bars — while Abdelqader is scheduled for release in 2025, Elashi and Abu Baker are sentenced to 45 more years in US prisons. They earlier spent many years behind bars, including a number of years in ultra-repressive, maximum security “Communications Management Units.” All of their legal appeals have so far been exhausted, which is why it is so critical to engage in the political and popular struggle for their liberation.

It is time to organize and act for their freedom! The Holy Land 5 are — like Georges Abdallah, jailed in France for 38 years, and Palestinian prisoners in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and elsewhere — part of the Palestinian prisoners’ movement and the Palestinian people. They are also part of the struggle of political prisoners locked in U.S. jails for confronting imperialism, capitalism, colonialism, racism and oppression of all forms.

Resources

Here are some resources you can use to organize for the Holy Land Five:

Write The Holy Land 5

Writing to prisoners is an important part of showing solidarity and building morale. Whether you are writing to Palestinian prisoners in Zionist jails, Georges Abdallah in France, or the Holy Land 5 and other political prisoners in the U.S., your letters show these imprisoned strugglers that they are not forgotten, abandoned or isolated despite all attempts to do so, and they also show the jailers that these prisoners have external support.

Please remember that any letters sent to the HLF5 are liable to be opened and read by prison staff. Avoid writing anything sensitive that could be read into by guards and prison officials. Make sure to include both their name and their register number on the envelope.

SHUKRI ABU BAKER 32589-177
USP BEAUMONT
U.S. PENITENTIARY
P.O. BOX 26030
BEAUMONT, TX 77720

GHASSAN ELASHI 29687-177
USP MCCREARY
U.S. PENITENTIARY
P.O. BOX 3000
PINE KNOT, KY 42635

MUFID ABDULQADER 32590-177
FCI SEAGOVILLE
FEDERAL CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
P.O. BOX 9000
SEAGOVILLE, TX 75159

Download and use these posters

Free the Holy Land 5 (Download PDF)

Free Ghassan Elashi (Download PDF)

Free Shukri Abu Baker (Download PDF)

Free Mufid Abdelqader (Download PDF)

17 November, London: Boycott M&S! Free all Palestinian Political Prisoners!

6.30pm, Thursday 17 November.
M&S Oxford Street, WC1 1AP.
FB Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1745289842516958/

Boycott M&S, Britain’s longest & strongest commercial backer of Israeli occupation of Palestine! Join our picket of the flagship M&S store on Oxford Street, London.

This month, Palestinians held by Israel without charge or trial – so-called “administrative detention” – concluded a 19-day hunger strike. The political prisoners declared their action “a cry of rejection and intifada”. Administrative detention, as described by them, “steals lives as well as land and history”. In the RCG’s latest call for a solidarity picket of M&S, we demand the release of the 800 people held under administrative detention, and of all the over 4,650 Palestinians politically imprisoned by Israel and in complicit and imperialist countries.

Britain’s attacks on Palestine predate even the establishment of the occupying Israeli state – British imperialism enables the oppression, murder, detention and torture of Palestinians. In 2022 alone, Israel killed at least 120 Palestinians, imprisoning more than 2,000.

The working class in Britain must stand with emboldened Palestinian resistance in their struggle, fighting back in Britain to break all ties with Israel, oppose racist Zionist ideology and Britain’s imperialist ruling class.

Victory to the Intifada!
Revolutionary Communist Group – Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism!
frfi.co.uk // northlondonfrfi@gmail.com

17 November, NYC: Free them All – Abolition Across Borders

Thursday, 17 November
5:30 pm
VH214, New York University
NYC

LSJP and @nyu_epic are co-hosting a panel titled Free Them All: Abolition Across Borders. The event will take place on Thursday, November 17 at 5:30 PM in VH214 at New York University and on Zoom.

Last year’s historic escape by 6 Palestinian freedom fighters from an occupation prison brought attention to this long-standing history of solidarity as Palestinian organizers drew connections to the Attica Prison Riot of 1971, which inspired a Palestinian uprising in the Ashkelon prison.

Speakers will include Dylan Saba from @pal_legal and Hussein from the NY/NJ chapter of Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network @samidounnynj, as well as other U.S.-based abolitionist organizers. Byul Yoon, co-founder of Dissenters (https://wearedissenters.org/) and a 1L at NYU Law, will facilitate. We will discuss the connected histories and common struggles of folks organizing for liberation in Palestine and the United States.

Please RSVP here if you plan to attend: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1uufYGvT11Peb7IMVaZgKv2rtGm9TShyBu2kFvd5LqCg

Graphic by @jahnavi.arts

19 November, NYC: “The Holy Land Five” Documentary Screening & Community Call to Action

“The Holy Land Five” Documentary Screening & Community Call to Action
When: Saturday November 19th at 7:00 pm
Where: New York University
Organized by Within Our Lifetime – United for Palestine

Join Within Our Lifetime – United for Palestine next Saturday 11/19 at NYU for a screening of the Al Jazeera documentary “The Holy Land Five” as part of the call to action to #FreeTheHLF5 who were unjustly convicted and imprisoned in the U.S. fourteen years ago this month for the crime of sending and food and medicine to orphans in Palestine. Fourteen years later, three of the five remain in prison: Shukri Abu Baker, Ghassan Elashi and Mufid Abdulqader. It’s time to bring them home.

Limited capacity! RSVP for location:
tinyurl.com/HLF5screening

While this event is limited capacity, we will continue to hold events and educate and build towards the campaign to #FreeTheHLF5 both online and offline, from our campuses to our communities.

We encourage student and activist organizations around the world to host their own screening of the documentary which is available in two parts on YouTube (here and here) and to advocate for the freedom of Shukri Abu-Baker, Ghassan Elashi and Mufid Abdelqader.

In addition, WOL is fundraising for the Coalition for Civil Freedoms who have spearheaded efforts calling on the Biden Administration to release the Holy Land Foundation 5. You can donate to our fundraiser via Instagram here:
https://www.instagram.com/linking/fundraiser?fundraiser_id=489828713113075

To learn more about CCF’s work, visit: https://www.civilfreedoms.org/

#FreeTheHLF5 #FreeAllPoliticalPrisoners #FreeThemAll #FreePalestine #WithinOurLifetime