Dorothy Online Newsletter

NOVANEWS

Dear All


The first is a summary statement about Ben White’s new book, Palestinians in Israel .  I was very impressed with his former book,Apartheid : A Beginner ’s Guide, which is a good description of the book.  Well worth readinOnline Newsletterg, even for long time activists.  I trust that this book about Palestinians in Israel will be equally good.

 

Item 2, Catrina Stewart’s report on “The Bedouin vs Israel ’s Bulldozers” is about the battle that Israeli Bedouin’s are waging against the government’s attempts to displace them.

 

Item 3, “Unholy alliance” reports a meeting between Israel ’s ambassador to the UN, Ron Prosor, and right-wing anti-Semitic and Islamophobic Marine Le Pen.

 

Item 4 are headings from Mondoweiss for November 5.  A blog always worth reading.

 

Item 5 is the latest update from the recent 2-boat flotilla to Gaza , with a very different story from the ones reported in the Israeli media, and, so far as I have seen, also different from the ones reported in the media generally.

 

Item 6 is a new entry in Mahsanmilim [‘warehouse of words,’] another website that you should familiarize yourself with if you have not  yet done so.  Thanks to its 2 founders, it is full of tales and videos from Palestine , often of Palestinian suffering, sometimes tales with a different slant, as is this brief one, “Generosity at Qalandia.”

 

The talk here today is less about Iran and more about the impending strike tomorrow that will shut down Israel if it takes place.  My guess is that if Netanyahu and Barak decide after all to strike at Iran it will be to demobilize Israelis from their attempts to have socio-economic justice.  Still, I hope and hope and hope that Israel stays far from Iran ’s shores, except, of course, if some day there will be peace here and we can go to visit our neighboring and near neighboring countries.

 

All the best,

Dorothy

 

=====================================

1.  Ben White Palestinians in Israel

 

http://occupiedpalestine.wordpress.com/2011/10/06/benyabads-new-book-palestinians-in-israel-with-foreword-by-mk-haneen-zoabi-available-for-pre-order/

 

Segregation, Discrimination and Democracy

Palestinians in Israel considers a key issue ignored by the official ‘peace process’ and most mainstream commentators: that of the growing Palestinian minority within Israel itself. What the Israeli right-wing calls ‘the demographic problem’ Ben White identifies as ‘the democratic problem’ which goes to the heart of the conflict. Israel defines itself not as a state of it’s citizens, but as a Jewish state , despite the substantial and increasing Palestinian population. White demonstrates how the consistent emphasis on privileging one ethno-religious group over another cannot not be seen as compatible with democratic values and that, unless addressed, will undermine any attempts to find a lasting peace. Individual case studies are used to complement this deeply informed study into the great, unspoken contradiction of Israeli democracy. It is a pioneering contribution which will spark debate amongst all those concerned with a resolution to the Israel/ Palestine conflict.

 

2,  Independent

Sunday, November 6, 2011

 

Catrina Stewart

The Bedouin vs Israel ’s Bulldozers

 

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/the-bedouin-vs-israels-bulldozers-6256918.html

 

The Bedouin vs Israel ‘s bulldozers

Catrina Stewart

 

Friday, 04 November 2011

At the top of an unmarked track leading into the small village of Alsra , in the Negev desert, somebody has placed a triangular road sign barring the entry of bulldozers. They will come, nevertheless, for every family in this village has been served with a demolition order by the Israeli authorities.

 

The indigenous Bedouin Arabs have eked out an existence in the desert for generations, but despite being citizens of Israel , their communities do not exist officially. Alsra, and others like it, does not appear on any official map; does not connect to any roads, and does not receive basic services from the state , such as electricity or sewage treatment.

 

By contrast, Jewish families have been encouraged to settle in this part of the country to make the desert “bloom” and small, gated farming communities – fully serviced with water and electricity – have sprung up close to the Bedouin villages.

 

For the Bedouin, however, worse is to come. Under a sweeping new proposal, dubbed the Prawer report, Israel is seeking to corral 30,000 Bedouin living in the Negev ‘s “unrecognised” villages – some little more than tented encampments – into destitute Bedouin townships, a move that human rights groups say will not only dispossess a people of their ancestral lands but also shatter a disappearing way of life.

 

Those townships are some of the poorest, most overcrowded and crime-ridden communities in Israel , a far cry from the farms where the Bedouin can tend their livestock.

 

“It is our second naqba,” says Khalil Alamour, a teacher from Alsra. Naqba is the Arabic for catastrophe and refers to the events of 1948, when hundreds of thousands of Arabs fled their homes or were driven out during fighting as the State of Israel was formed, many of them doomed to become refugees. “There will be no more Bedouin.”

 

Although nobody knows for sure which communities will be affected, the residents of Alsra, that existed long before the creation of the Jewish state , believe it is almost certain to go.

 

Sitting on the shaded veranda of an attractive brick home, Mr Alamour says that this land has remained in his family’s hands for generations. He produces original ownership deeds, stamped by British Mandate officials in 1921. His family paid taxes on the land until the 1950s, when Israel ceased to collect it.

 

But like every other house in this village, it was built without a permit, permits that are impossible to obtain in light of a 1965 planning law that ignores the existence of the Bedouin villages. The Israeli government says that it wants a solution to the unchecked spread of Bedouin communities in the Negev , with many officials viewing the Bedouin as squatters on state land.

 

Meeting Bedouin leaders this week, the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said they were facing an “historic opportunity”.

 

“The plan will allow the Bedouin, for the first time, to realise their assets and turn them from dead capital into living capital – to receive ownership of the land, which will allow for home construction according to law and for the development of enterprises and employment,” he said.

 

But despite a £200m sweetener that accompanies the plan, the Bedouin are incensed that such an important decision has been made without consulting them. “The Bedouin are not against a plan… but the issue is to consult with them and see what their needs are,” says Mansour Nsasra, an Israeli Bedouin researching his PhD at Exeter University .

 

Moving them to townships, he says, “is not a solution “.

 

The Prawer plan envisages a five-year implementation, where Bedouin will be compensated for up to 50 per cent of their land claims. But swathes of Bedouin internally displaced in the 1950s will be ineligible, while those who hope to receive compensation must not only agree to evacuate their lands but also meet complicated criteria, meaning that the eventual payout will be much less, according to Israel’s Association for Civil Rights.

 

Some 160,000 Bedouin live in the Negev , a people whose plight is generally forgotten in the context of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Today, they live on 5 per cent of the Negev , roughly half of them in designated towns; the remainder in 45 villages, 35 of which are still unrecognised and receive no services from the state.Every Bedouin has closely followed the fate of Al Araqib, an hour’s drive away from Alsyra, which has been destroyed 29 times by Israeli soldiers in the past year. The villagers return every time to rebuild, only for the soldiers to knock it down again to make way for the planting of a new forest. Many fear that what is happening in Al Araqib is a “dry run” for the expulsion of Bedouin who resist in other communities. Mr Alamour faces far more than just losing his home if the government’s proposals come to fruition. “My only ambition is to maintain my lifestyle, my traditions and values,” the teacher says. “This is what I will lose if they transfer my family to the townships.”

 

In the 1970s, Israel built seven designated towns for the Bedouin in the Negev , persuading thousands of Arabs to move through a mixture of force and inducements. Rahat is the largest of these, home to 53,000 people. It is also one of the poorest cities in Israel , with a soaring birthrate, 37 per cent unemployment and 50 per cent of its residents living below the poverty line by the most conservative estimates.

 

In his office, Rahat’s mayor is feeling particularly gloomy. He looks at the map behind his desk of the densely populated city and asks nobody in particular where a new influx of Bedouin can go. “It will create a new intifada in the Naqab [ Negev ]. It is impossible to transfer 30,000 people,” Faiz Abu Sahiban says. “We tell them: ‘Stay where you are and ask for your rights’.”

 

Outside the municipality, several Bedouin youths are haring around a parking lot in a souped-up Toyota , a reminder of the lack of opportunity and jobs facing many of the city’s residents today. The city has suffered from chronic underinvestment. Rahat receives an annual budget of 153 million shekels (£26.4m) from the Israeli government, less than half of the 380m shekels (£65.7m) that goes to Kiryat Gat, a nearby Jewish town roughly equivalent in size, according to the municipality. If Rahat agrees to take in 3,000 Bedouin living in villages on its immediate outskirts, the Israeli government will give it 100,000 shekels (£17,300) for each one, Mr Abu Sahiban says. ” It is a bribe for the city. They refuse to develop [Rahat] until we accept the offer.”

 

Speaking to local residents, there is a sense of hopelessness in this city and the Bedouin are unconvinced that the government has their best interests at heart. The uprooting of the Bedouin in the 1970s was a “huge failure”, says Naif al-Tlalka, 65, a resident of Rahat who moved to the city in 1981 when his family was forced from their homes for a second time after being driven off their land in the western Negev in the 1950s.

 

“We used to laugh at the people who lived in these conditions. We used to say they lived in boxes,” he says with a wry smile, as he fondly watches his many grandchildren playing in the yard.

 

“How I wish I could go back to a time before, where I could hear the sound of the wind, the birds and the animals and smell the clean air.”

 

Desert dwellers

 

* The Bedouin are traditionally desert dwellers, who until the past 50 years or so lived nomadic or semi-nomadic lives in some of the harshest environments known to man.

 

* They are scattered across the Middle East, from Saudi Arabia to Syria to Israel , and have been described as the “true wanderers” of the desert.

 

* In times past, the Bedouin lived in tents, the camel their workhorse, as they roamed the desert, moving from pasture to pasture, unhindered by the lack of artificial national boundaries that have hemmed in the Bedouin the last century or so.

 

* Famed for their desert hospitality, they would feed and water a visitor for three days and extend protection to them for a further three days.

 

* To varying degrees, the Bedouin have seen their traditional nomadic and pastoral traditions disappear, as creeping urbanisation, drought and government policy have guided them towards a more settled and conventional life.

 

* When Wilfred Thesiger, the explorer, wrote about the Bedouin in the Arabian Empty Quarter in the 1940s and 1950s, he believed that he was recording a dying way of life.

 

Indeed, the warring and raiding by the different tribes that he so memorably described is now a thing of the distant past and the camel has long been replaced by the motor car. While many Bedouin still live in tents across the Middle East , many others have settled in permanent, mostly agricultural communities, their homes made of brick or mortar.

 

* In the Negev desert, the Bedouin are typically engaged in farming goats and sheep. Pre-1948, 90,000 Bedouin lived in Palestine . Only 11,000 remained after the new state was formed, the remainder having either fled or been driven out during fighting.

 

3.  Haaretz

Sunday, November 06, 2011


Unholy alliance: Israel ‘s right and Europe ‘s anti-Semites

Politicians like Le Pen have exchanged the Jewish demon-enemy for the criminal-immigrant Muslim, but they have not really discarded their ideological DNA.

 

http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/opinion/unholy-alliance-israel-s-right-and-europe-s-anti-semites-1.393941

 

By Adar Primor

Tags: France Islam

 

Marine Le Pen hit the jackpot. She invited about 100 diplomats to a luncheon last week during a visit to UN Headquarters in New York . Four accepted: There were the envoys from Trinidad and Tobago , Armenia and Uruguay , who obviously are of no concern to her at all. But the entrance of the fourth guest, Israeli UN Ambassador Ron Prosor, made the event a sensation and worth her whole trip.

 

No official American representative agreed to meet with France ‘s extreme-right leader. Neither did any leader of the Jewish community. She failed in her attempt to stage a photo op at the Holocaust Museum , and skipped the visit. The French ambassador to the UN sent a sharp message that she is persona non grata in the United Nations building. But the Israeli envoy? He shook her hand and spoke of the importance that must be accorded to a wide variety of opinions.

 

“We flourish on the diversity of ideas,” Prosor said. “We talked about Europe , about other issues and I enjoyed the conversation very much,” Prosor was quoted as saying. Even before he went into the hall where the luncheon was being held, he told shocked reporters that he was a “free man.”

 

The Foreign Ministry now claims there was a misunderstanding; the ambassador “thought he was attending an event hosted by the French UN delegation. When he realized his error, he skipped the meal and left.” User comments on leading French news websites over the weekend were derisive, including all the French equivalents of LOL and ROFL in response to the explanation.

 

No one believes it was a coincidence. Prosor is a proven professional. He would certainly want to forget the fact that he became the first representative of the Jewish state to meet with a leader of the National Front. He would probably be happy to smash the camera that documented the smiling encounter. But his mistake did not happen in a vacuum. It has the odor of a symptom. The odor of a very unholy alliance being formed between members of the Israeli right-wing and a number of the most nationalistic and anti-Semitic figures in Europe . Over the past year, among visitors to Israel were the populist Dutch leader Geert Wilders, the Belgian racist Filip Dewinter and the Austrian successor to Jorg Haider, Heinz-Christian Strache.

 

These politicians, like Le Pen, have exchanged the Jewish demon-enemy for the criminal-immigrant Muslim. But they have not really discarded their ideological DNA. The Israeli seal of approval they seek to get is intended to bring them closer to power. Le Pen herself has decided to leave behind the anti-Semitic scandals of her father, Jean-Marie. She wants to make the National Front a popular and legitimate party.

 

She is already popular (19 percent in the polls). Legitimate? In two interviews she gave to Haaretz in the past, she attacked President Jacques Chirac for his historic 1995 declaration in which he took, in the name of France , responsibility for Vichy war crimes. She adamantly refused to denounce French fascist crimes and showed that she cannot really disengage from her father, his heritage and her party’s Vichy and anti-Semitic hard core.

 

It is easy to guess what would happen to an Israeli ambassador if he found himself at an event hosted by the “disgraced” Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas – or, perish the thought, at a Hamas or Hezbollah event. The earth would tremble. Even tar and feathers would not be enough under such circumstances. But Le Pen is blonde and she has blue eyes. Oh, and she hates Muslims.

 

Let us hope the incident at the United Nations will not give her votes that will allow her to repeat her father’s sensational results in the 2002 French presidential elections, and go on to a second round in the upcoming French elections.

 

We must see a complete and public disavowal by Israel to prevent an ostensibly minor incident from becoming an accident of history.

 

4.  The latest headlines from Mondoweiss

 November 5, 2011

http://us1.campaign-archive1.com/?u=8d38ef747c2061bb9c6137961&id=d0e69fa4c0#mctoc6

 

Strategic asset or rogue state? Israel ’s threats to Iran ‘concern’ Pentagon

They were sailing for us

‘We will continue to challenge the blockade w/ more boats’

Breaking: Gaza flotilla stopped by Israeli warships

Flotilla controversy within Occupy Wall Street shows Palestine continues to be a fault line

Ultrazionists have met the enemy and he is… Tom Friedman !

Times readers respond to Goldstone

Goldstone needs a reality check

JTA wonders why ‘Jewish influence’ is so ‘pervasive’ in our politics

‘The Forward’ embraces neoconservatives

 

5. 

boat logo

 

 

 

 

 

Latest update on the Freedom Waves to Gaza Boats November 6, 2011

 

The take over of the Tahrir and the Saoirse was violent and dangerous. Despite very clear protests from the occupants of the two boats that they did not want to be taken to Israel , they were forcibly removed from the boats in a violent manner. The whole take over took about 3 hours. Many of those on the Canadian boat were beaten.

 

It began with Israeli forces hosing down the boats with high pressure hoses and pointing guns at the passengers through the windows. Fintan Lane , on theSaoirse, was hosed down the stairs of the boat. Windows where smashed and the bridge of that boat nearly caught fire. The boats were corralled to such an extent that the two boats, the Saoirse and the Tahrir collided with each and were damaged, with most of the damage happening to the MV Saoirse.  The boats nearly sunk, the method used in the take over was very dangerous.

 

The Israeli forces initially wanted to leave the boats at sea but the abductees demanded that they not be left to float unmanned at sea, for they would have been lost and possibly sunk. David Heap, a Canadian delegate, was tasered and beaten.  All belongings of the passengers were taken off them and crew and they still do not know if and what they will get back.  6 prisoners were released-both of the Greek Captains, 2 of the journalists and 2 delegates. The passengers remain in Givon detention center and many, including Kit Kittredge of the U.S. , have not been able to make phone calls.

 

Those remaining are being asked to sign deportation papers which state that they came into Israel illegally and that they will not attempt another effort to break the Gaza blockade. If they sign they will not be allowed into Palestine , through Israel , for 10 years.  Obviously their goal was to go to Gaza not Israel , and a signature could validate Israel ‘s right to blockade Gaza , so they refuse to sign.  This will mean longer detention. Their continued detention is designed to force them to agree to abandon their legal rights and has nothing to do with the security of Israeli civilians – just like the blockade of Gaza ‘s civilians is clearly punitive and has nothing to do with the security of Israeli civilians

 

Our State Department has not been an advocate for its citizens. They would rather join Israel in stating that we are terrorists. Obama on Thursday said the passengers on these boats are defying Israeli and American law. He must have been confused. It’s the other way around.   State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the U.S. was renewing its call to Americans “not to involve themselves in this activity,” and warned of possible consequences.

 

WE NEED ALL OF YOU TO GET ON THE PHONE TODAY AND CALL:

 

U.S. Emergency Consular Services  202-647-4000

and the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv  011-972-3-519-7575

 

Tell them you want them to insist Israel free the prisoners immediately and end its siege of Gaza .  

 

Just a few phone calls can make a difference.  

 

Thanks for all you do.

 

Jane Hirschmann and Felice Gelman

 

Passengers on boats to Gaza beaten, denied visits by lawyers and access to families;

misled by U.S. consular authorities

 

Although Freedom Waves to Gaza organizers have not yet had direct communication with the people taken into custody by Israeli armed forces as they tried to peacefully sail to Gaza last week, information is emerging that Israeli armed forces tactics in confronting the non-violent activists have been violent and dangerous.  This despite claims from the IDF spokesperson that “every precaution will be taken for the safety of the activists.” 

 

Prisoners include U.S. citizen Kit Kittredge, a delegate on the Tahrir from Quilcene , WA , and Jihan Hafiz, a U.S. citizen and journalist from Democracy Now, the national news program.  Both have been advised by the U.S. consul in Israel to sign an Israeli deportation agreement.  Both have refused because the statement says they came into Israel illegally and will not attempt another effort to break the Gaza blockade. Both statements are untrue.

 

A letter from Canadian David Heap, smuggled from the Givon prison, states that he was tasered and beaten when the Israeli Navy attacked the Tahrir.  Irish prisoner, Fintan Lane , in a telephone call from Givon prison, reported that the takeover of the Saoirse was also violent.  The Tahrir and the Saoirse were forced by Israeli warships to crash into each other, crippling both ships. 

 

Palestinian Israeli Mad Kayal, a delegate aboard the Tahrir, who was arrested and released confirms these reports. “As a Palestinian, I was not surprised at how the IDF treated us,” said Kayal, after his release, noting this kind of abuse is a daily reality for the 1.5 million people of Gaza , who are indefinitely detained in an open-air prison. “However, for the Canadians and other Westerners onboard, it was a complete shock.”

 

“Israeli brutality and the unnecessary use of force against non-violent protests are well documented. What has happened to the passengers on the Tahrir and theSaoirse is just a tiny fraction of the daily abuse directed at Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank as part of Israel ‘s occupation policy,” said U.S. coordinator Jane Hirschmann.  “Nonetheless, all people – Palestinians under occupation and peace activists kidnapped and imprisoned – have human rights under international law that civilized governments must respect.  The purpose of the boats’ voyage to Gaza was to demonstrate that Israel continually violates those laws, and that the U.S. government cares more about Israel than about its own citizens.”

 

WWW.USTOGAZA.ORG

 

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