May 20, 2010 7 PM: Commemorating the 62nd Anniversary of the Nakba in Palestine, with Ghassan Kanafani at Cambridge Public Library
Commemorating the 62nd Anniversary of the Nakba in Palestine,
Please join us for an evening of readings from the work of Palestinian writer Ghassan Kanafani
This event is free.
When
Thursday May 20th, 2010
7:00 PM
Directions
Where: Lewis Room, Cambridge Public Library, Central Square
Address: 45 Pearl St Cambridge, MA 02139
Public Transportation
accessible by bus and red line, Central Sq stop, wheelchair accessible
Featuring:
- Sameer Abu-Alsaoud
- Laila Murad
- Nada Samih
- Dara Bayer
- Lana Habash
- Spiritchild
- Viviane Saleh-Hanna
- Gina Rodriguez, and
- Ashanti Allston, former political prisoner
There will be readings of Kanafani’s work, musical performance, a photo exhibit, and Palestinian food.
From Ghassan Kanafani’s “Returning to Haifa”, 1969:
“What happened to you, Said?” “Nothing. Nothing at all. I was just asking. I’m looking for the true Palestine, the Palestine that’s more than memories, more than peacock feathers, more than a son, more than scars written by bullets on the stairs. I was just saying to myself: What’s Palestine with respect to Khalid? He doesn’t know the vase or the picture or the stairs or Halisa or Khaldun. And yet for him, Palestine is something worthy of a man bearing arms for, dying for…. Tens of thousands like Khalid won’t be stopped by the tears of men searching in the depths of their defeat for scraps of armor and broken flowers. Men like Khalid are looking toward the future, so they can put right our mistakes and the mistakes of the whole world…”History:
This May marks the 62nd anniversary of the Nakba (Arabic for “catastrophe”) in Palestine in 1948 when over 935,000 Palestinians (85% of the indigenous population of Palestine at that time) were forced off their land, in some cases at gunpoint, in other cases through massacres or threats of massacres like the massacre at Deir Yassin. As a result, 530 of an estimated 550 total villages were completely destroyed or depopulated. “Israel” was founded on the racist ideology of zionism. It has followed the expansionist and genocidal logic of white supremacy and colonialism for over sixty years. Today, the genocide in Palestine continues: from the planned expulsion of thousands of Palestinians in the West Bank, to the demolition of Palestinian homes in occupied Al Quds (Jerusalem), to the continued siege of the people of Gaza– deprived of food, water, electricity, and medicine– to the mass detention of over 11,000 Palestinian political prisoners. Ghassan Kanafani, beloved Palestinian writer, was murdered by Zionist forces in 1972. His work reminds us of the spirit of resistance that has sustained the Palestinian people for generations.
Please join us.
**The Cambridge Public Library is not a sponsor of this event.May 3, 2010: Boston Activists Disrupt Israeli Innovation Weekend at Museum of Science
Boston, MA, May 3, 2010 – Local activists protested the so-called “Israeli Innovation Weekend” (IIW) at the Museum of Science in Boston through multiple, disparate actions on Sunday. IIW’s sponsors, including the Consulate General of Israel to New England, were left flummoxed by the activists’ efforts and largely unable to prevent their successful, multi-pronged disruption of the event.
Protesters targeted IIW because it was part of a state-sponsored campaign to “greenwash” Israel’s discriminatory, apartheid regime and atrocious human rights record. IIW was officially sponsored by the Israeli Consulate, which also played a major role in funding and planning the event; nearly half of IIW’s steering committee was composed of Consulate staff and the Consulate was one of the top donors.
Throughout the day, protesters maintained a visible public presence outside the Museum. Protesters held signs drawing attention to Israeli “innovation” in technologies of death such as white phosphorus and cluster bombs, parodying the exhibit’s slogan, “Healing the World Through Technology.”
Across the street from the Museum, demonstrators also prominently displayed a large Palestinian flag from the adjacent East Cambridge Lechmere Viaduct Bridge. The protesters’ message was seen by hundreds of Museum visitors and passing tour groups, many of whom called out or honked horns in expressions of solidarity.
Meanwhile, inside the Museum, lone activists stealthily replaced the IIW program with a duplicate program, virtually identical in appearance but which highlighted themes of the Israeli science and technology sectors’ complicity in water theft and other abuses. The front of the program named Israel “The World’s Leader in Cutting-Edge Apartheid Technologies,” while inside the program, titles of IWW lectures were re-printed with altered titles. For example, “Sunshine and Sustainability: Israeli Leadership in Solar Technology” was renamed “Sustainable Darkness: Israeli Innovations in Torture Technology and Extra-Legal Maneuvering,” while “Sharing Water in the Middle East—Israel’s Cross-Border Water Resource Strategy” became “Strategic Water Appropriation in the Middle East: Might Makes Right.” IIW organizers were overheard multiple times expressing anger and frustration at their inability to determine who was “plastering” the exhibit with this literature.
Download a copy of the brochure here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/30892732/mos-flier
Activists surreptitiously distributed this material for more than two hours before finally being discovered and asked to leave the Museum. Yet Museum staff were observed reading the alternative program and several expressed sympathy with the activists’ cause as they were escorted out of the Museum.
Finally, yet another group of activists infiltrated the last panel lecture of the day, entitled “Israeli Technology: An Investor’s Perspective.” As the panel began, two participants unfurled a giant banner reading “Don’t Invest in Israeli Apartheid.” After the activists were shouted down by the audience and removed by Museum security, others continued to disrupt the session every five to ten minutes, individually standing up and interrupting the lecture by condemning investment in Israeli technology, calling for justice for Palestinians, or singing liberation songs.
One disrupter referred the audience to the report about war crimes in Gaza by the UN inquiry commission led by South African jurist Richard Goldstone if they truly wanted to know more about Israeli technological innovation. Another declared that investing in Israel was investing in the dispossession and genocide of indigenous people. Yet another sang a re-written, Palestine-specific version of Sweet Honey in the Rock’s Chile Your Waters Run Red Through Soweto. In sum, the activists made it impossible for the event to proceed and visibly agitated the audience.
Video of the activists’ disruption,
In another positive sign of Israel’s increasing marginalization, there were so few people in actual attendance of the lecture that after all the activists had been removed, there was more security present in the auditorium than attendees.
The Boston-area activists were pleased to be part of a larger, international campaign that refuses to let the Israeli government “greenwash” its occupation and devastation of Palestinian life by presenting itself as a leader in scientific innovation and green technology, a campaign that is part of the larger movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) against Israel. Just days earlier, activists in Scotland held a three-day protest of a similar such exhibition of Israeli science and technological innovation at their national Parliament building, a demonstration that included 400 tiny coffins to represent the children massacred in the 2008-2009 war on Gaza: http://indymedia.org/uk/en/2010/05/450182.html
The BDS movement is an international response to the call from Palestinian society to boycott, divest from, and sanction the Israeli government until it ends its occupation and dismantles the Wall inside the West Bank, recognizes the equal rights of Palestinian citizens, and respects the right of return of Palestinian refugees. To learn more about the call for BDS, and to read about other organizations engaged in BDS work who also support the protest of the greenwashing of Israel, see:
http://www.bdsmovement.net/ – site of the global BDS movement; you can read the call for BDS here
http://www.pacbi.org/ – site of the Palestinian campaign for Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel
http://www.endtheoccupation.org/ – site of the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation
April 25, 2010: Benefit Fundraiser for The Children of Gaza at UMass Boston
Benefit Fundraiser for The Children of Gaza
When: Sunday, April 25, 2010, 3:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Where: UMass Boston Campus Center • 100 Morissey Blvd • Ballroom • Dorchester
The Maia Project – Water for Gaza
You Are Invited to a Benefit Fundraiser for
The Children of Gaza
Your contributions will provide the Beit Hanoun Preparatory School for Boys in Gaza with a clean water supply system
Founded in 1988, the Middle East Children’s Alliance is a nonprofit organization working for the rights and well-being of children in Palestine, Lebanon and Iraq. MECA sends shipments of aid, builds playgrounds and supports projects that make life better for women and children.
When MECA asked the children in Bureij Refugee Camp in Gaza what they could do to help them, they responded that what they wanted more than anything was to have a clean glass of water to drink at school. Because of the Israeli occupation and the diversion of water to the settlements in the West Bank and Israel, the water table has been lowered to such an extent that the water in Gaza is almost undrinkable and causes disease.
Your contributions of 11,000 dollars will provide the children at the Beit Hanoun Preparatory School for boys with clean water.
Join us for an afternoon of speakers, slide show, music, fundraiser sale and refreshments
Speaking at the event:
Noam Chomsky – Professor emeritus of linguistics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Laila Farsakh - Assistant professor of political science, the University of Massachusetts Boston.
Nancy Murray – President, Gaza Mental Health Foundation
Ziad Abbas, Associate Director, Middle East Children’s Alliance
Slide Show: Skip Schiel, photographs from Gaza
Music: Traditional Arabic music
Suggested donation: $25 (no one will be turned away)
All proceeds of this event will go to the Middle East Children’s Alliance – the Maia project
Make your tax-deductible contribution to: MECA – Maia Project www.mecaforpeace.org
(When making an online contribution, be sure to put the name of our school Beit Hanoun Preparatory School for Boys under “gift on behalf of”)
For any questions, or if you would like to volunteer, please email water4gazaboston@gmail.com
An Evening with Kamal Aljafari: at Harvard Film Archive Friday April 9, 2010
Please join us for film screenings of Palestinian director Kamal Aljafari, currently a Benjamin White Whitney Scholar and Radcliffe-Harvard Film Study Center Fellow.
| An Evening with Kamal Aljafari
Special Event Tickets $12
THE ROOF & PORT OF MEMORY Friday April 9 at 7pm The haunting films of Kamal Aljafari (b. 1972) mix documentary, fiction and personal memoir to render complex portraits of the Palestinian communities in Ramleh and Jaffa, now part of Israel. While providing a rare look at the everyday lives of Palestinian Israelis, the films are more than simply sociopolitical treatises of often-overlooked communities and neighborhoods in danger of dissolving. Aljafari instead astutely balances fiction and nonfiction to capture the fragile rhythms of lives lived in a kind of permanent displacement and the strange limbo of neighborhoods subtly yet inexorably transforming. Although the Ramleh and Jaffa depicted in Aljafari’s films have managed to avoid the raw hardships of life in the occupied territories, they cannot avoid the paradoxes of the occupation itself, filed as they are with lives and buildings frozen in time even as they are part of the Israeli present. Pointedly political, Aljafari’s films wonderfully embed their ideology into a cinematic poetry graced by light humor. Aljafari has established an international reputation not only with his films but also with gallery shows exhibited around the world. A graduate of the Academy of Media Arts in Cologne, this year he has been based at Harvard as a Film Study Center-Radcliffe Fellow. He has an installation opening on April 28th at the Radcliffe Gallery entitled “Not Without Me.” This screening is presented by the Harvard Film Archive, the Boston Palestine Film Festival and the Film Study Center, Harvard. See below for details of films screened, or visit the HFA website. Screenings are followed by a reception with the filmmaker |



