ANTI-ZIO=NAZI GOEBBEL'S PR CAMPAIGN

NOVANEWS

Another silent walk-out in protest of Israel’s PR campaign

Guest post, Christo­pher Clark

 

On December 2nd, an event entitled “Over­com­ing Terror: A True Story” was set to take place on the Uni­ver­sity of Mass­a­chu­setts campus in Amherst, Mass­a­chu­setts. It was sponsored by the Student Alliance for Israel (SAFI) and the Uni­ver­sity of Mass­a­chu­setts Hillel House. IDF Sergeant Kenny Sachs was the orator, an on-call speaker for Israeli pro­pa­ganda groups Upstart Activist and Divest­ment Watch.

Though the topic of dis­cus­sion happened in Gaza, the event descrip­tion never named Pales­tini­ans. Instead, “ter­ror­ists”  was the term used to describe those who “attacked” Sergeant Sachs at the Erez check­point in northern Gaza. The rest of the descrip­tion being a muddled account of a shootout between Sachs and afore­men­tioned “ter­ror­ists” in an attempt to create the center periphery story of Sachs losing his ability to play bas­ket­ball after being shot in the leg. He said, “That was one of the hardest things I’ve ever heard.”

 

The Western Mass­a­chu­setts Coalition for Palestine organized this protest in sol­i­dar­ity with the Pales­tini­ans silenced by the illegal Israeli occu­pa­tion. Vis-á-vis the silent walk-out protests at Arizona State Uni­ver­sity and Michigan State Uni­ver­sity, we taped the children’s names of those murdered in Gaza during Operation Cast Lead to our shirts. By being inten­tional in using silence as a means of non-violent protest, we were invoking the silencing effect of the IDF in Palestine – of the military occu­pa­tion, the sep­a­ra­tion wall, of the stag­ger­ing number of Pales­tini­ans killed. Kenny Sachs served in the IDF until 2003 in Jenin, Gaza, Lebanon, and Tulkarem.

There are voices who will never be able to give their account of this military occu­pa­tion, effec­tively silenced without their story being able to echo through­out history. This video is an attempt to provide the rudi­men­tary means to bring life into those who have been killed and can no longer voice their absten­tion to the forceful annex­a­tion of Pales­tin­ian land by insidious Zionist policies.

 

Israel has been making attempts to rebrand itself in the United States by sending soldiers to humanize the occu­pa­tion, to reverse the roles of a violent occupier into passive victims of “terrorist” attacks, using the soldier’s inability to play bas­ket­ball for instance as the pivotal point of this narrative. This, of course, leaves out the option for Pales­tini­ans to illu­mi­nate the occu­pa­tion and the struggle for justice – recanting here the brutal histories of Gaza, Jenin, and Lebanon.

By empha­siz­ing the personal nature of this lecture, Student Alliance For Israel again denies the legit­i­macy of their claim that they want to encourage all opinions, create con­struc­tive
dialogues, or foster pathways to peaceful co-existence for all peoples. As a coalition, we disregard this notion of co-existence and peaceful dialogue so long as Israel continues the ethnic cleansing in Palestine. As activists inter­ested in justice, we refuse to acknowl­edge the shallow attempt to depoliti­cise this event. Despite multiple oppor­tu­ni­ties, Student Alliance For Israel has declined any sort of academic, public, moderated debate.

 

In doing this action, we are also in accor­dance with the call for a boycott, divest, and sanctions movement against Israel. Until Israel is held respon­si­ble for their crimes against humanity, until they remove all troops from occupied ter­ri­to­ries, until they accept the right of return, and abandon the sys­tem­atic policy of carving up the land – we will continue to boycott Israel to the fullest extent. Israel is a colonizer-settler state which has forcibly expelled the indige­nous people from their land for decades.

Despite con­demn­ing inter­na­tional accounts of their domestic policies, Israel is still being financed by eco­nom­i­cally powerful companies and countries. As a form of non-violent resis­tance, the boycott movement as a necessity needs to swell and multiply. We see hope on the horizon, and as a coalition, we are attempt­ing to foster ways to reach those ends until Palestine is free, imbued with joy­ful­ness and sovereignty.

 

 

Christo­pher Clark is a third-year student at Hampshire College in Amherst, MA. He is studying resis­tance com­mu­ni­ties and the Middle East. He is a member of Students for Justice in Palestine as well as the Western Mass­a­chu­setts for Palestine.

 

The Western Mass­a­chu­setts Coalition for Palestine was formed in the wake of the Israeli gov­ern­ment attack on the Freedom Flotilla envoy headed to Gaza in May 2010. We are comprised of student groups from the campuses in the area, community orga­niz­ers, pro­fes­sors and faculty members, and concerned citizens. We envision a Palestine free of a sep­a­ra­tion wall, a military occu­pa­tion, air raids, check­points and road­blocks, and a racist system of further neo-colonialism. To get in contact with us, find us on Facebook or email western-mass-coalition-for-palestine-@googlegroups.com

 

 

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