Message from Catholic leader in Gaza
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- Written by Fr Manuel Mussallam - Gaza Fr Manuel Mussallam - Gaza
- Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
- Hits: 2974 2974
Note: A message has arrived from courageous and widely admired pastor of the Catholic Church in Gaza, Fr Manuel Mussallam, written on 20 January, speaking of the plight of his community in the wake of the Israelis' vicious assault. Here is what this veteran of the long struggle says.
From the Church of God in Gaza: Peace and blessings upon you, as we pray to God to lift man's anger and shower Gaza with his mercy and kindness.
Gaza was suffering prior to the war, it suffered during the war and it will continue to suffer after the war.
Hundreds of people have been killed and many more injured in the Israeli invasion. Our people have endured the bombing of their homes, their crops have been destroyed, they have lost everything and many are now homeless. We have endured phosphorus bombs which have caused horrific burns, mainly to civilians. Like the early Christians our people are living through a time of great persecution, a persecution which we must record for future generations as a statement of their faith, hope and love.
Many families fled to United Nations (UNRWA) schools where they thought they would be safe. But with 50-60 people to a room, no electricity, water, bedding or food and nowhere to wash, living conditions are terrible.
Emergency aid has not yet arrived at the Church and because they are too frightened to venture onto the streets our people cannot reach the warehouses which hold Red Cross and UNRWA relief supplies. We trust in God but appeal to the whole world and in particular the Church to help Gaza. Your prayers and your kindness will be our salvation.
The war has affected everyone in Gaza. A teacher fled to our school with her husband and four children. He was hit by shrapnel from an Israeli bomb and his legs badly injured. She is distraught and terrified and when I spoke to her she was desperately looking for clean water to make a bottle for her baby.
The Church has lost a 26 year old Catholic man, Naseem Saba, who was killed in an Israeli air raid on 7 January. The day before, Israeli jets destroyed his family home where he lived with his three uncles.
As well as the destruction and physical injuries the mental trauma of our people is incalculable. They will need help and support for years to come. They will have to find somewhere to live and we will need centres for those injured and disabled in the shelling, special schools for traumatised or orphaned children and a whole array of rehabilitation services.
Clean water is scarce so both our schools in Remal and Zaitoon provide local people with water from an artesian well, dug through the generosity of Austrian donors. The school's generator produces electricity for the nearby bakery as there have been no bread deliveries for weeks. People say: “The priest has become a baker," and it’s true - we are glad to be able to do it.
The war must end now. The world has to find a solution for the Palestinian people and not simply revert to the position they were in before it began. The borders with Israel must be redrawn and the occupation, which began 60 years ago, has to end.
The status of Palestinian refugees must be resolved pursuant to the Right of Return, and East Jerusalem must be the Palestinian state capital. We must tear down the Apartheid Wall, open the border crossings, free Palestinian detainees and remove Israeli settlements so the land can be returned to its original Palestinian owners.
Peace is only possible if it embraces justice. If the world grants the Palestinian people their human rights there will surely be peace in the Middle East.
From all the people of Gaza we thank you, our friends everywhere, for your constant prayers and particularly for the support which we urgently need and we hope will reach us soon. We thank His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI for his stance in calling for peace in the Middle East and for his generous support to the poor of Gaza. And we thank all bishops, priests, pastors, monks and nuns across the world for remembering us in their prayers.
On behalf of every Gazan, we share your prayers and say to the world: “From now on, let no one cause me trouble, for I bear on my body the marks of Jesus. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit, brothers. Amen.” (Galatians 6: 17-18)
- Father Manuel Musallam is the Pastor of the Catholic Church in Gaza. (His message was relayed by Stuart Littlewood.)
How Israel drowns dissent
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- Written by Seth Freedman Seth Freedman
- Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
- Hits: 3350 3350
Firefighters turned their hoses on a peaceful anti-war protester last week. Their attitude reflects a worrying shift in public opinion
Last week, at the height of Operation Cast Lead, a group of Israeli firemen threw their hats into the political ring, albeit in somewhat undiplomatic and uncivilised fashion. During a peaceful anti-war vigil outside a Tel Aviv air force base, several members of the fire brigade turned on one protester, drenching her relentlessly with water from their hoses, before approaching her and ordering her into the station in order to "give us all head".
Their actions were, while wholly illegal, none the less emblematic of a massive shift in Israeli public opinion over the last few years, according to Sharon Dolev, the woman on the receiving end of the assault. A veteran activist, Dolev has suffered a great deal during her 20 years of campaigning in the Israeli peace camp ("death threats, being shot with rubber bullets, hate mail, beatings"), but said that this incident was "the first time that the establishment felt safe in [taking action such as this]".
"It used to be a big deal if bus drivers criticised protests and vigils in public," she recalls, "since as employees of the state, they were not allowed to express political opinions in uniform." Now, however, the firemen felt so secure of escaping punishment that they even bombarded her with firecrackers during the attack, telling her "now you know what it's like to live in Sderot".
When video evidence emerged on an Israeli news website of her ordeal, readers' comments were predictably scathing of Dolev and her fellow protestors for daring to speak out in the first place against the IDF's operation. "Of the 380 comments, all but 10 were in support of the fire brigade," said Dolev. "Some readers even called openly for our murder, urging the police to shoot us, or saying 'Why use water – use acid instead'."
In her view, the inexorable shift of the Israeli
public towards out and out hostility and hyper-defensiveness was
inevitable from as far back as 1967, when the West Bank was first
conquered. "We used to hold signs at protests reading 'The occupation
will corrupt'," she told me. "Now, we can see that it has [come to
pass]. As a society, we have lost our ability to see clearly; we have
let fear blind us. Once, calling someone a racist was the harshest
accusation you could make. Later, you began to hear people say 'I know
I'm a racist, but...'; nowadays [during Cast Lead], we heard 'I know
I'm talking like a Nazi, but at least the Nazis knew how to deal with
their enemies'."
Despite others employing Nazi comparisons to
describe Israeli military actions, Dolev isn't comfortable with such
terminology herself, not least because it derails the debate about the
issues at hand. "It's all too easy for the Israeli authorities to say
'we didn't build an Auschwitz for the Palestinians, so everything's
ok', but in reality everything is not ok." She believes that history
has come full circle, and that instead of learning the lessons of the
Holocaust, "we have become the racists ourselves".
"Isn't Gaza a ghetto?" she continues. "OK, we don't use the Palestinians' hair for cushions, but the [stage is being set for the] same kind of process of dehumanisation here." Working in a joint Israeli-Palestinian organisation in Gaza in 1989 gave Dolev her first exposure to "the banality of evil", she says. "It wasn't seeing a soldier get scared and shoot into a crowd, but rather seeing a girl sitting in her house and getting shot by a stray bullet. And then, when she needed to be transferred to a Cairo hospital, the Shabak officers saying only she could cross, and no one else. A 12-year-old girl, in a vegetative state, and they wouldn't even let her mother accompany her. That is the banality of evil."
In her eyes, the Israeli public has allowed its leaders and military to get away with such punitive measures simply because they have allowed fear to override all other emotions: "Fear turns us into beasts," she says flatly. "I remember in my first week at school, aged six, we were taught how to blockade the classroom in case a terrorist got into the playground. While some fear is justified, there is not enough reason to make the public terrified on a daily basis." The media are just as responsible as the government for perpetually scaring ordinary Israelis, she believes. "Fear sells papers," she says cynically.
Such defensiveness allowed the police to get away with imprisoning some 700 activists over the course of Operation Cast Lead, she believes; many on the most spurious of charges. "They arrested some on the charge of disturbing public order, others on even vaguer charges. And some were even detained for 'damaging the nation's morale' – a charge which doesn't even exist [in the statutes]. There is no law in Israel anymore."
As well as her experience at the hands of the fire brigade, Dolev also points to the kind of sloganeering in the election campaign as proof that the bedrock of democracy on which Israel is founded is beginning to look far less solid. "When you have Lieberman declaring 'No loyalty, no citizenship', you start to worry about what point we've come to." However, she is undeterred in her struggle on behalf of the peace camp, believing that hope is not lost in terms of convincing the Israeli public of an alternative to perpetual war and aggression. A firm promoter of the Arab Peace Initiative, she is convinced that the proposal is the best way to resolve the decades-old conflict.
"It's the biggest carrot ever offered to the Israeli people," she says. "One-state or two-state is a non-issue; whatever the two peoples agree on I would take with both hands. All that matters is that there are borders, and that those living within the borders are given full rights and citizenship. However, I worry about [Israeli Jews] becoming a minority, because after all we've taught them over 60 years of how to treat minorities, it's become dangerous to be a minority ourselves ... "
Mercy Corps Action Alert: Ensure immediate, continuous humanitarian access to Gaza
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- Written by Mercy Corps Mercy Corps
- Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
- Hits: 3155 3155
http://org2.
Ensure immediate, continuous humanitarian access to Gaza
Although there is a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, I am concerned
that Gazan families most basic needs are still going unmet.
About 5,000 homes have been destroyed and over 20,000 homes damaged by
recent warfare in Gaza. Families need immediate assistance and supplies.
But aid agencies say they are still unable to get relief supplies into
Gaza reliably and in sufficient quantities to help war-affected families.
I ask you to please help Gaza's families by pressing for rapid and
continuous humanitarian access into Gaza.
Thank you.
Union calls for "End to Bloodshed in Gaza"
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- Written by United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE) United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE)
- Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
- Hits: 3005 3005
16 January, 2009
Meeting in Pittsburgh January 15 and 16, UE’s General Executive Board adopted a statement condemning the current war in the Gaza Strip. The union’s national leadership body reiterated the position adopted by delegates to UE’s 70th Convention in 2007, which called for "replacing the lopsided pro-Israel policy of the U.S. with a good faith, even-handed effort to achieve lasting peace between Israel and Palestine based on full justice and mutual respect." The GEB called on the incoming Obama administration to move quickly to initiate such a new policy.
Statement on the Conflict in Gaza
We are appalled by the rising death toll and human suffering that have resulted over the past few weeks from the worsening conflict between Israel and Palestine, in particular Israel's military assault on Gaza. While we in no way condone the provocative and senseless firing of rockets into Israel by Hamas, the Israeli response shows a complete disrespect for human life and violates all standards of international law. More than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed so far, and of those, more that 300 are children. Close to 5,000 have been wounded already, as the fighing continues.
In a scathing statement, the International Committee of the Red Cross, which carefully avoids taking sides in conflicts, has accused the Israeli army of failing to meet its obligation under international humanitarian law to care for and evacuate the wounded and to recover the bodies of those killed in the fighting, many of whom are women and children.
Even before the current military offensive began in late December, the humanitarian situation in Gaza was dire. Gazans live in poverty with one of the highest population densities in the world – 1.4 million people crowded into a territory just 25 miles long and approximately 5 miles wide. Malnutrition is widespread, and conditions have been made worse over the past three years by Israel’s economic blockade causing severe shortages of food, medical supplies, heating and cooking oil and other essentials. Many Gaza civilians have lost access to safe drinking water and to electricity, in the recent fighting. The Vatican said in recent days that the conditions in Gaza “increasingly resemble a big concentration camp.”
Delegates to UE's 70th Convention in September 2007 adopted a resolution on the need for change in U.S. foreign policy. On the Israel-Palestine conflict, it called for "replacing the lopsided pro-Israel policy of the U.S. with a good faith, even-handed effort to achieve lasting peace between Israel and Palestine based on full justice and mutual respect." The resolution said that the current "one-sided" U.S. policy "perpetuates injustice, instability, and the threat of war," and pointed out that, "U.S. aid to Israel far exceeds that of any other country, although Israel is by far the richest country receiving U.S. aid."
We agree with the January 2 statement issued by U.S. Labor Against the War (USLAW), a leading labor voice for peace with which UE is affiliated, which said in part:
"The U.S. government supplied Israel with the military means to carry out this attack and has generously underwritten the Israeli government and military with tens of billions of U.S. tax dollars. Our government’s failure to condemn this latest action makes it complicit. The economic crisis which daily deepens in the U.S. requires that we seriously reorient our foreign policy and stop spending hard earned taxpayer dollars on proxy wars and reinvest the needed resources right here at home… We urge all parties to agree to an immediate cease fire and seek peaceful and lasting solutions. Recent history demonstrates that bombings, rocket attacks, blockades and military invasions won’t provide the best road to peace and security for the peoples of the region. Quite the contrary, such actions perpetuate the cycle of death, destruction, fear and heightened insecurity among the people of all countries, including us here in the U.S…”
Senzeni Zokwana, president of the International Federation of Chemical, Energy, Mine and General Workers’ Unions (ICEM, with which UE is affiliated) and president of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) in South Africa, issued a statement for the ICEM that calls on all parties to address the serious humanitarian needs in Gaza. “There must be the immediate opening of border crossings to ensure that the people of Gaza are supplied with food, water, fuel and medical treatment. The Israeli blockade of Gaza must be immediately lifted and full, unimpeded and urgent access for medical teams allowed.”
UE reiterates its position in favor of peace, security, justice and mutual respect for the Palestinian and Israeli peoples. We add our voice to the many voices calling for an immediate end to the killing and the suffering. We call on the new Obama administration to immediately inaugurate a new U.S. policy that addresses the needs and aspirations of the Palestinians as well as of Israelis, and that will bring about true peace on the basis of human rights principles.
UE General Executive Board
January 16, 2009
http://www.ueunion.org/ueactionupdates.html?news=451
UNRWA Operational Update
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- Written by UNRWA UNRWA
- Published: 22 January 2009 22 January 2009
- Hits: 2946 2946
UNRWA Operational Update 19 January Health Centres
Food Distribution
Shelters
Access
Damages to UNRWA installations
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