NORTON META TAG

Showing posts with label Fatah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fatah. Show all posts

21 June 2024

Sign the petition: "I will not attend" 21JUN24


I signed the petition telling Pres Biden, Rep Jennifer Wexton D-VA, Sen Tim Kaine D-VA and Sen Mark Warner D-VA not to attend if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu does come to address Congress. I also called the White House, Rep Wexton's and Sen Kaine's offices, they were all closed. I did speak to an aid at Sen Warner's office about the Gaza war and told her Sen Warner has to take a stand against the genocide being committed in Gaza by Israel, against the genocide Hamas is committed to carrying out against Israel, against the arming of illegal radical Israeli settlers in the West Bank attacking Palestinians. I told her Sen Warner's positions on these issues has to go farther, be stronger against the wanton, criminal violence being committed by Israelis against Palestinians and by Palestinians against Israelis. I told her if Sen Warner has to oppose weapons and ammunition shipments to Israel to stop the violence then he needs to be strong enough to do that. War is not the answer.War is not the answer. I also told her Sen Warner needs to boycott Israeli PM Netanyahu's address to Congress if he does come to speak. She said she will inform Sen Warner of my opinion. Will she????? I had to try. From Demand Progress.....

Here is the e mail I sent to Pres Biden, Rep Wexton ( Representative ), Sen Kaine and Sen Warner 

( Senators )

 'The Gaza war has to stop,Pres Biden has to take a stand against the genocide being committed in Gaza by Israel, against the genocide Hamas is committed to carrying out against Israel, against the arming of illegal radical Israeli settlers in the West Bank attacking Palestinians. Pres Biden's positions on these issues has to go farther, be stronger against the wanton, criminal violence being committed by Israelis against Palestinians and by Palestinians against Israelis. If Pres Biden has to oppose weapons and ammunition shipments to Israel to stop the violence then he needs to be strong enough to do that. War is not the answer. Cease-fire now! I also believe Pres Biden needs to boycott Israeli PM Netanyahu's address to Congress if he does come to speak.'

FROM DEMAND PROGRESS

U.S. Representatives Ro Khanna and Jim Clyburn have joined a growing number of congressional Democrats who say they will NOT attend Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech before Congress.1

The Israeli military has killed 35,000 Palestinians and 200 aid workers in Gaza. Food, water, and medical aid has been stopped from reaching people in Gaza, causing a million people to face starvation.

Instead of engaging with international partners to broker a diplomatic peace deal, Netanyahu has been actively opposing a ceasefire. Our leaders cannot lend legitimacy to Netanyahu by attending his speech while the onslaught against Palestinians continues. Our leaders can no longer support Netanyahu and the Israeli military with weapons and funding.

Sign the petition: Urge Congress to call for a permanent, immediate ceasefire and end offensive military support for Israel.

Senator Bernie Sanders was the first to speak out against congressional leaders inviting Netanyahu and say he wouldn’t attend the Prime Minister’s speech. Now, many others are joining, just as many others have joined the calls to end our offensive military support for Israel. A permanent ceasefire is the only way forward in Gaza, but Netanyahu is unwilling to broker a deal.

When Democratic congressional leaders signed the invitation to Netanyahu, they handed Mike Johnson and Mitch McConnell a political gift. The GOP is using the speech to try to villainize anyone who doesn’t attend. And last time Netanyahu gave a speech in front of Congress, he railed against Democrats and the Obama administration.

Our leaders must change U.S. policy in Gaza to stop the ongoing atrocities.

Sign the petition: Permanent ceasefire now. Stop sending offensive weapons to Israel.

Thanks for taking action,

Joey and the team at Demand Progress

Sources:

  1. Huffington Post, "Rep. Ro Khanna Joins Other Lawmakers In Boycotting Netanyahu's Speech To Congress,” June 16, 2024.


18 December 2010

Sorry, Hamas, I'm Wearing Blue Jeans 16DEZ10 & Christians Against Religious Freedom 14DEZ10

TWO articles on religious fanaticism in the U.S. and Gaza from Mother Jones
A defiant Palestinian feminist from Gaza reflects on being secular in a religious land.
Palestinian feminist Asma Al-Ghoul arrived to our meeting at a Gaza coffee shop sporting blue jeans and a T-shirt—in stark contrast to the Islamic headscarves and tent-like dresses worn by the vast majority of Gazan women.
It's not just clothing that sets this 28-year-old secularist apart. She once publicly chastised a senior Hamas military leader—her uncle—who threatened to kill her, and she continues to publish gutsy articles, read banned books, and defy discriminatory policies. "Gaza needs all the liberal, secular people to stay here," she insisted, when I asked why she had declined opportunities to live abroad.
For three years, Israel has enforced a devastating blockade of the Gaza Strip aimed at isolating Hamas, the Islamic militant group that won Palestinian parliamentary elections in 2006 and seized control of this Palestinian territory in a 2007 civil war. (Fatah, a more moderate Palestinian faction, retained control of the West Bank.) Since then, Hamas has introduced restrictive new laws, including prohibitions against women using male hairdressers or smoking hookah in public. Hamas police have shut down musical concerts and interrogated suspected couples. Principals at government schools have reportedly pressured even Christian girls to wear the Islamic headscarf. Through it all, Asma has remained devoted to secularism, and was recently awarded a prestigious Human Rights Watch grant for her "commitment to free expression and courage in the face of political persecution." But will she be able to help build the inclusive civil society she seeks?
The oldest of nine children in a "secular but not bourgeois" family, one of Asma's earliest memories is the sound of Israeli soldiers' boots coming to raid her home in the middle of the night. Rafah, her home city near the Egyptian border, is one of the most conservative and deprived communities in Gaza, and a frequent target of Israeli bomb strikes and incursions.
To the dismay of her relatives, Asma stopped wearing a headscarf. "I didn't want to be two characters—one secular, the other Islamic," she says.
After attending university in Gaza, she took a reporting job at a local Arabic newspaper, Al-Ayaam. Her hard-hitting blog posts, tweets, and articles have chronicled what she calls "the corruption of Fatah and the terrorism of Hamas."
In late 2003, Asma married an Egyptian poet—a "love marriage," which challenged the arranged marriage tradition practiced by most Gazans. The couple moved to Abu Dhabi and had a son named Naser, but divorced after a year and a half. Asma and her son moved in with her family in Gaza City, where Asma continued working as a journalist.
To the dismay of some relatives and acquaintances,  in 2006 Asma decided to permanently remove her Islamic headscarf. "I didn't want to be two characters—one secular, the other Islamic," she says of the choice. To her relief, Asma's immediate family—including her father, an engineering professor at Gaza's Islamic University—supported her autonomy. "If your father or husband is secular," Asma says, "only then can you be free."
During the 2007 civil war, Asma attended a journalism course in South Korea, where she published a scathing Arabic article titled, "Dear Uncle, Is This the Homeland We Want?" The article recalled fond childhood memories of her father's brother, a Hamas military leader—then assailed him for turning against his own people and using the family home to interrogate and beat Fatah activists. In response, Asma's uncle threatened to kill her. A year later, Asma wrote her way through the trauma of the 2008-2009 war between Israel and Hamas militants, which claimed the lives of 13 Israelis and about 1400 Gazans. Often, she slept at her office for fear of getting killed on the way to her home, a mere five-minute walk away.
"I felt as if Israeli military planes were blind," Asma recalled. "They attacked everything and everybody. I saw dead children...As a woman and as a human being, I don't believe in revenge, because it just brings more blood. But people said to me during the war, ‘You see? This is your peace.'"
While Asma has befriended liberal Jewish activists in Gaza, she has never entered Israel. In 2003 and again in 2006, the Israeli government denied her permission to travel through Israel to the West Bank, which is territorially separate from Gaza, to receive awards for her writing.
Recently Asma garnered media attention for two incidents with the Hamas police. In the summer of 2009, she walked on a public Gaza beach with a mixed gender group, and visited a former male colleague and his family at a beachside villa. Asma and her friends were interrogated by Hamas moral police, and the men were forced to sign papers promising not repeat their "inappropriate" interactions with women. Asma later received anonymous death threats and was followed and closely monitored by police.
But there are glints of hope for secularists in Gaza. This August, during the Islamic holy month of Ramadan, Asma and three foreign activist friends biked up the Gaza coastline in defiance of a Hamas ban on female bicycle-riding. To Asma's delighted surprise, local Hamas police officers pursued two motorcyclists who had followed and harassed her. And she found that most civilians "were shocked in a funny way. They said, 'Let's go! Bravo!' They asked, 'Are you fasting [for Ramadan]?' And I said, 'Yes, I'm fasting!'"
Asma's biking adventure led her to conclude that the discriminatory laws against women are "flexible." She now believes that Hamas is "between two fires—how to keep civil society satisfied, and how to satisfy extreme groups."
But Asma has begun to question her own commitment to staying in Gaza.
Her brother Mustafa was arrested and jailed by Hamas police last week for participating in street protests against Hamas's recent shutdown of Sharek Youth Forum. The nonprofit, which organized camps and afterschool programs for more than 60,000 Gazan children, is accused of storing pornography on its computers.
Asma never worked for Sharek, but she admired the organization's work. Sharek was perhaps best known for organizing gender-segregated beachfront activities for the annual children's summer games, sponsored by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency. This past summer, the tents erected for these games were repeatedly torched by masked gunmen who threatened to kill UNRWA staff members. Anonymous fliers spread prior to the torchings derided UNRWA and Sharek for "teaching schoolgirls fitness, dancing, and immorality."
"I used to criticize Sharek for being too conservative because they didn't allow music for office employees," Asma told me with a sad, fatigued sigh during a phone interview last Friday. "Sharek is a small example of what Hamas wants to do with this society. Later there will be big examples."
These days, when Asma is not overcome with worry about her imprisoned brother's fate, she is reading, writing, and following the news, including coverage of the failing peace negotiations between Israel and Fatah. She regards these talks as a "sad fairytale where everyone knows the ending." She's acquired a smuggled Arabic copy of Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie and insists, "We should read it before we judge it." She's also finishing the manuscript to her novel, titled City of Love and Taboo, which explores the Islamization of Gaza. She's hoping to publish it in both Arabic and English.
"Everything is taboo in Gaza now," she says, explaining the book's title. "Yet, at the same time, people still touch and feel and love."
Ashley Bates is is an editorial intern at Mother Jones.

Christians Against Religious Freedom

A group of atheists recently managed to scrounge up $2,400 to put ads on four municipal buses in Fort Worth. The New York Times reports:
The reaction from believers has been harsher than anyone in the nonbeliever’s club expected. Some ministers organized a boycott of the buses, with limited success. Other clergy members are pressing the Fort Worth Transportation Authority to ban all religious advertising on public buses.
....The ads have incited anger in some places. Vandals destroyed two bus ads in Detroit, ruined a billboard in Tampa, Fla., and defaced 10 billboards in Sacramento. One billboard in Cincinnati was taken down after the landlord received threats....But nowhere has the reaction of believers been so forceful as in Fort Worth, to the delight of Fred Edwords, the national director of the United Coalition of Reason.
....Some of the fiercest criticism has come from black religious leaders. The Rev. Kyev Tatum Sr., president of the local Southern Christian Leadership Conference, has called for a boycott of the buses, saying the ads are a direct attack during a sacred time in the Christian calendar....While Mr. Tatum and about 20 other pastors have urged their congregations to avoid the buses, a smaller group met recently with the transportation authority’s president to demand that the policy allowing religious advertising on buses be reversed Wednesday at a meeting of the authority’s board. The bus system in nearby Dallas bans all religious ads.
Religious people sure are touchy. They don't seem to mind competing with each other, so what's the problem with competing against atheism? Seems like a fair fight to me.
But this is what happens whenever a minority group of any kind tries to demand reasonable treatment: the majority group instantly takes it as a vicious, personal attack. The same dynamic played out when it was blacks vs. whites, men vs. women, or gays vs. straights. Acceptance of a minority group on equal terms is almost universally deemed threatening to a majority group that considers its superior status to be something akin to natural law. Welcome to the latest incarnation of the culture wars.