ALL EYES ON
JERUSALEM – NEWSLETTER BY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR STEFANIE FOX
09 MAY 2021 FROM OUR STAFF AND
MEMBERS/STATEMENT
https://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/all-eyes-on-jerusalem/
Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin recalling a conversation he had in July 1948 with
Ben-Gurion: “We walked outside, Ben-Gurion accompanying us.
[Yigal] Allon repeated his question, ‘What is to be done with the Palestinian
population?’ Ben-Gurion waved his hand in a gesture which said ‘Drive them
out!’ Rabin added, “I agreed that it was essential to drive the inhabitants
out.”
Newsletter #1
I’ve been intending to begin this weekly member
newsletter for a long while, as a place to share analysis and updates, workshop
organizing strategy, and lift up what is happening throughout our organization
and the broader movement for Palestinian rights. What a devastating week to
start. The horrors on the ground in Palestine/Israel are enormous, as the
Israeli government propels the imminent settler theft of homes in Sheikh
Jarrah bulldozes homes in Silwan, storms Al Aqsa mosque to attack Palestinians
at prayer, and protects rioting mobs of settlers as they accost
Palestinians.
As we train our eyes and hearts on the crisis in
Jerusalem, it feels important to start where this story begins: 73 years
ago.
The Nakba, the catastrophe for
Palestinians caused by the founding of the state of Israel remains a fraught
topic for many Jews. The actions of the Israeli government today are grounded
in the founding of the state: there is a straight line between Sheikh Jarrah today
and the devastation wrought by Zionist militias who displaced and dispossessed 750,000
Palestinians depopulated and destroyed 400 villages, and created the blueprint
for the ongoing ethnic cleansing and apartheid that Israel continues to
perpetrate against Palestinians.
My heart is shattering over and over for
Palestinian comrades both in Jerusalem and afar, living the exhaustion and
terror of this moment, and reliving, through it, the past seven decades of
unrelenting trauma from Israeli persecution and violence. As Yara Asi writes on Twitter: “Watching
Jerusalem this week is almost too much. This has been my whole life…And my
parent’s lives. And most of my grandparent’s lives. They didn’t have social
media, just stories passed on that every Palestinian has. Not a single
Palestinian doesn’t have stories.” The oppression and also the
beautiful resistance on display in Jerusalem is, for Palestinians, the same
story with a new timestamp.
But for those in the Jewish community newly
horrified at the images coming out of Jerusalem, the reflex is to
compartmentalize: this is the rightwing settlers; this is Netanyahu
maneuvering; this is different. So our task, as organizers who take seriously
the responsibility to move our community, is to insist on the consistency of
what we’re seeing. The Nakba wasn’t a single event, it is a
structure. It is an organizing principle.
And the fact is we cannot understand the current
crisis in Jerusalem without connecting it directly to the goals established at
the outset of the state. When I say the Nakba was a blueprint
– it’s not a metaphor. The Nakba was – and IS – the plan.
The very well–documented goal of the Israeli
government has always been, explicitly, to steal the maximum amount of land
with the smallest number of Palestinians.
The horrors in Jerusalem are the latest attempt by
the Israeli government to accomplish that same, unrelenting objective. As
this excellent 2016 Al Shabaka report, this report
from Al Haq
in 2019, and the recent Human Rights Watch report on
Israeli Apartheid detail: Israel’s “master plans” for Jerusalem are explicitly
focused on accomplishing the “Judaization” of the city. Urban planning in a
settler-colonial apartheid regime means driving out, dispossessing,
disenfranchising, and expropriating the land and homes of Palestinians. The
regime of colonialism and apartheid in Israel is implemented through an
interlocking, holistic system of state violence: administrative, judicial,
psychological, military. In this context, it is clear that the brutal Israeli
police and settler violence against Palestinians in Jerusalem is not a “clash,”
a “conflict” or an “eruption.” It is the deliberate execution of Israel’s
longstanding attack on Palestinian lives, land, and freedom; it is the unabated,
ongoing Nakba.
This acknowledgment is key to responding with
genuine solidarity. As Al Haq wrote in their report on apartheid: “Truth and
acknowledgment is one facet of justice. By first acknowledging that the
Palestinian people a whole, have been impacted by Israel’s settler-colonial and
apartheid regime since 1948, we lay the foundation of a collective strategy
upon which the Palestinian people and solidarity groups from across the globe
can develop accountability efforts..”
It’s not an accident that in spite of plentiful
documentation and the constant assertion from Palestinians, it took me – and
still takes many Jews like me – far too many years to acknowledge the
totalizing structure and plain reality on the ground in Palestine/Israel. The Israeli
government, supported by most American Jewish institutions, has worked from its
inception at the dual aims of continuing the Nakba while
obscuring it from view. At a time when so many of us wake up each day to these
horrifying images of Israeli violence against Palestinians, it is astonishing
to watch some in our communities work to forget with such callous will and
determination. Not ignore, but ardently, institutionally, erase.
Such a great catastrophe unfolding for 73 years
requires enormous complicity on every level: Corporations like Elbit and G4S
facilitate and profit from the police and prison systems in Israel. The Jewish
and Christian Zionist organizations driving these evictions in the US channel
money to settler groups in Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan and into vicious attacks on
the movement for justice in Palestine. Police exchange programs support, back,
glorify, and strengthen the tactics of Israeli apartheid. And the US government
sends $3.8 billion taxpayer dollars each year to fund Israeli injustice against
Palestinians. What is happening in Jerusalem is not an aberration, but the
devastating outcome of shared values and goals between the US and Israel.
So, how do we show up to this moment? Mohammed
el-Kurd, a key leader on the ground in Sheikh Jarrah, says it clearly: “You can help
us by placing political pressure, boycotting, divesting, being with us in
person or protesting abroad. You can help us by understanding that Sheikh
Jarrah is a microcosm of Israeli settler-colonialism in Palestine.”
Here are a few thoughts and ideas about what we can
bring as organizers, as those living in the US, and as Jews in solidarity with
Palestinians this week:
1. Demand
immediate action from the US government. Insist the State Department
demand an end to Israel’s illegal evictions of Palestinians and demolitions of
their homes, by signing this petition to
Secretary of State Tony Blinken, and by supporting the rally outside
the State Department on Tuesday in person or online. Our JVP Action team is
working to push Members of Congress to apply pressure on the US State
Department. 15 has already spoken out, but it should be 535. Follow the
up-to-date thread of all the
members we’ve seen speak out, and if your
representative isn’t on the list, call them immediately.
2. Listen to and
amplify Palestinian voices, and resist the government and
corporate censorship trying to shut them out. Hundreds of
Palestinians and others sharing on-the-ground video and information from Sheikh
Jarrah has had their videos deleted and/or accounts suspended on Instagram
(which is owned by Facebook); we are coordinating with our Facebook campaign
partners and working to get media attention to keep
pressure on. Listen to and share, share, share the voices of Palestinians on
the ground and around the world. Use
#SaveSheikhJarrah, #SaveSilwan in all your social media posts.
3. Escalate
international pressure where we know it counts: Boycott, Divest and Sanction
Israel. There’s a reason the Palestinian Civil Society calls for boycott, divestment, and sanctions. BDS campaigns work. They tell the story of who profits from
apartheid, break up governmental and corporate complicity, sever ties that
uphold Israeli injustice, and build pressure on a global scale. From our Deadly Exchange
campaign to corporate targets like AnyVision, HP, and G4S, to
targeting the settler organizations like Nahalat Shimon International and
Ateret Cohanim (both of which have tax-deductible status in the US), we need to
explore every opportunity to mobilize, organize and escalate.
4. Stop the blank
check. The $3.8 billion a year we send to Israel directly funds Israeli
injustice in and beyond Jerusalem. We must shift US policy from protecting
Israeli impunity and funding Israeli war crimes to holding Israel accountable.
This month saw the introduction of Betty McCollum’s watershed Palestinian Children
and Families Act, which is a critical first step on that road. H.R.
2590 is the first legislation of its kind to ensure US taxpayer funds stop
paying for: The Israeli military arrest, torture, and imprisonment or
Palestinian children; The Israeli government’s demolition and destruction of
Palestinian homes and communities; and Further Israeli annexation of Palestinian
land. Make sure your representatives support this historic bill.
5. Help our Jewish
family face catastrophe. It is our responsibility and mandate to bring in
our fellow Jews who are freshly waking up to the horrors in Jerusalem, and to
invite them to the kind of remembering that resists the lies we’ve been fed,
creates real solidarity, and prompts powerful action. Invite your mom to this panel, bring your
childhood best friend to our Nakba commemoration rally next Saturday with
partners (details soon), consider hosting an event with the Facing the Nakba curriculum.
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