Colorado Palestine Solidarity Campaign News

Colorado Palestine Solidarity Campaign News

August 25, 2007

Charging Anti-Semitism To Silence Dissent

Charging Anti-Semitism To Silence Dissent

By Ida Audeh

07 August, 2007
Countercurrents.org

The charge of anti-Semitism is used by supporters of Israel to silence and discredit voices that conflict with Zionist orthodoxy. Two recent examples illustrate this point: The publication of Jimmy Carter's book Palestine Peace not Apartheid triggered a well-orchestrated campaign of vilification and character assassination of a former president whose "crime" was to characterize Israeli policies in the occupied territories as apartheid. (South African anti-apartheid activists say it is much worse.) The March 2006 publication of John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt's essay "The Israel Lobby" in the London Review of Books was accompanied by the familiar charge of anti-Semitism directed at two university professors who simply analyzed the disproportionate power of the Israel lobby AIPAC in shaping US Middle East policy. To anyone who follows the US Middle East policy, their conclusions were not news, but the publication of their article unleashed a flood of abuse on two establishment academics.

CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE


Ida Audeh is a Palestinian-American who lives in Boulder, Colorado. Her interviews with Palestinians who have lost land and their livelihoods to Israel's wall have been published on the Electronic Intifada (www.electronicintifada.net), an alternative source of information about "the question of Palestine, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the economic, political, legal, and human dimensions of Israel's 40-year occupation of Palestinian territories." She can be reached at idaaudeh@yahoo.com

August 13, 2007

Lakewood family builds bridges for peace

Lakewood family builds bridges for peace

The road to achieving Middle East peace is being paved - right here in Lakewood. Zenat Shariff Belkin and Mark Belkin and their two daughters, Nadia, 16, and Arriana, 14, have opened their hearts and home to two 16-year-old girls, Tamara, a Palestinian from Jerusalem, and Etti, an Israeli from Ber Sheva.

Tamara and Etti have traveled a long way from the Middle East toColorado to participate along with Nadia Belkin,a junior at Lakewood High School, in the 14 th Annual Building Bridges for Peace 2007, a flagship program of Seeking Common Ground (SCG), a Denver-based non-profit organization which is dedicated to empowering individuals with the skills "to change the world by creating peaceful communities through integration, socialization, communication and leadership development."

Over the past two weeks, the girls have worked diligently together in daily workshops from 8:30-4:30 for the first four days followed by an emotionally intensive week in Allen's Park. They were involved in many activities and projects in the course of the week. Many of the activities, such as "In Your Shoes," encouraged the girls to not only share their feelings, but to better understand the viewpoints of the "enemy" by communicating and connecting with each other. For example, they had to respond to the question, "How do you feel when"...with a variety of endings to the questions such as: "How do you feel when you are called a terrorist?" and "How do you feel when you have to get through a check point?" They learned the importance of listening to each other and finding common grounds and similarities that could help them relate to each other and understand each other. The themes of some other workshops included: Identity, Gender, The Wall, the Army, and September 11 th; all of the workshops helped the girls to express their emotions and inner-most feelings, sometimes causing them to be brutally honest. There were emotional outbursts, shouting, accusing and crying...but it was a starting point, and in order to live together peacefully, they learned that they must first and foremost, communicate.

From Allen's Park, the group returned to Denver for a celebration brunch and final farewell. It was a unique opportunity to witness the progress that had been achieved during the past week. Yara, a Palestinian girl living in Tira, near Tel Aviv, said, "you need to trust a person because he is a person, not a Jew." Lama, a Palestinian girl living in Jerusalem said, "The biggest problem is the lack of communication." Emilyn Inglis, a SCG song leader, said, "It is a time to glimpse into what the other is feeling and recognize our common humanity."

The Building Bridges for Peace program, established in 1994, has grown from 14 participants the first year to 62 present participants from the United States, Israel, and Palestine. At this year's 14th Annual Celebration Brunch, Erin Breeze, the Program Director of Building Bridges for Peace, said this was the first year that men were invited to participate in the program and 16 young men attended this year's program and worked alongside the female leaders in addressing and solving conflicts; it was also the first year that Native Americans were invited to attend in an effort to work on the dispute of the Badlands National Park on the Pine Ridge Reservation. Dr. Paige Baker, who grew up on the Fort Berthel Reservation in North Dakota is the new Superintendent of the Badlands National Park; he is building bridges by working together with respective representatives. This is also the first year that Dr. Ivan Vujacic, Ambassador of Serbia to the United States, joined in the celebration of these amazing young people. At the end of the brunch, the participants sang together on stage, Israelis, Palestinians, Israeli Palestinians, Americans and Native Americans. They were one voice and as Tamara emotionally expressed, "We are one family." There were hugs, embraces and tears as the girls said farewell. The promise of peace was evident in the bridges they had built together- as Nadia explained the inner meaning of the bridge she had created with her group -it wasn't perfect and there were many obstacles and even tragedies along the way, but this bridge held the hope of paving the path for peace .

August 2, 2007

News from Research Journalism Initiative - Palestine

Research Journalism Initiative
CLICK HERE FOR RJI HOMEPAGE
PO Box 24464, Denver, CO., 80224

RJI News, July 2007

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Hello from Palestine,

Since the beginning of the year, we have been working to establish a direct link between American classrooms and the West Bank of Palestine. By producing documentary films and facilitating live video conferences between Palestinian and American students, we hope to shed light on the realities of life under Occupation.


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Invasion in Nablus - Click Here for video

On June 28th, approximately 100 jeeps invaded the downtown and old city of Nablus as well as the nearby Balata Refugee Camp. The Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) arrested at least 30, killed 1 and blocked the entrance to a hospital. Terrified residents were forced to remain in their homes during the day and a half operation. As the video shows, among the arrested were two medical relief volunteers, who provide medicine and food supplies during times of forced military closure. They were arrested in violation of the 4th Geneva Convention, which allows them access to do their work during such times. Click the [link] above to watch the video.

RJI: Invasion of Nablus Video - Click Here

RJI: Fire during an Incursion Video - Click Here
"The IOF invades Balata camp on almost a daily basis. Sometimes they arrest people or demolish houses and other times they simply taunt residents with loudspeakers or bulldozers, which are always accompanied by a handful of jeeps. They normally come in the early hours of the morning (midnight-3am), however on this particular night they came at 10 pm. The video shows, at best, the army's neglect and at worst, the army's desire to terrorize the camp's residents. The streets emptied when the army arrived and when a fire egnited from an overheated falafel stand, the army refused access to a firetruck until the fire went out. The army used a sound grenade before leaving the camp. Click on the picture to watch the video."

IMEMC: "Massive Israeli forces invade Nablus City, 30 kidnapped, 8 soldiers wounded" - Click Here for Article

IMEMC: "Palestinian killed in Balata refugee camp" - Click Here for Article

Ma'an: "Violent Israeli incursion into Nablus, 8 soldiers reportedly injured" - Click Here for Article

Ma'an: "Israeli forces kill Al-Aqsa member in ongoing Nablus incursion" - Click Here for Article

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The Research Journalism Initiative is dedicated to changing the way students learn about socio-economic, religious and geopolitical conflict by providing students a direct link to regions of conflict abroad. RJI volunteers living in the West Bank produce video documentaries and facilitate live video conferences between Palestinians and high school students in the United States in order to encourage dialogue and present Palestinian points of view in American classrooms. RJI is a non-profit organization funded entirely by individual donations and our own savings; please consider supporting our work by making a contribution.

Thank you for your continued support,
RJI staff

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Support Our Efforts

At this time, RJI is requesting donations to defer the costs of living, travel, internet access and production equipment. If you have the means, a contribution is a very direct way to affect change and work toward a better future here. All donations support our volunteers in the West Bank and enable us to continue producing quality, unique content about the realities of life under occupation. Any amount will make a real difference. Click [HERE] to make a donation.

Join Our Mailing List by Clicking Here!

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