Tag Archives: Palestine

Israel Apartheid Week 2011 March 7th to March 22nd

Israeli Apartheid Week (IAW) is an annual international series of events held in cities and campuses across the globe. The aim of IAW is to educate people about the nature of Israel as an apartheid system and to build Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaigns as part of a growing global BDS movement. Last year, Israeli Apartheid Week (IAW) took place in more than 40 cities across the globe.

SDS strives to amplify the voices that have been silenced by blockades, travel restrictions and racism to show that Palestinians continue to persevere despite the oppressive system they face. We support the peaceful popular resistance movements that demand self determination, equality and respect from the Israeli government. Until the Israeli government respects human rights, the right of return and other international laws, and ends their apartheid policies we will continue the struggle in solidarity with the Palestinian people. We strongly oppose government funding to the Israeli government or any other government that commits crimes against humanity and we are working towards implementing BDS policies in Houston.

So this year, Houston will host IAW once again! Scroll down for our list of events:

March 7th – Dabke Flashmob
Butler Plaza in front of MD Anderson Library
11 am – 1 pm

We’re going to meet and dance dabke at 11, 11:20, 11:50, 12:20, and 12:50. This is a great way to get people’s attention, hand out information on BDS and the Palestine issue, and have fun! Come out and bring your friends for the dance party!!

March 10th – Movie Screening of Slingshot Hip Hop
Sedition Books, 901 Richmond Avenue, Houston, TX 77006
7 pm

Movie screening of Slingshot Hip Hop. Here’s the trailer:

March 21st – Women’s Panel on Feminism Under Occupation
MD Anderson Library, Honors College, 212L
7 pm

Sabreena Da Witch (Palestinian hip hop artist) will come speak on a panel of women activists about feminism in Israel/Palestine and how occupation and war have affected women and their rights.
Co-sponsored by the Student Feminist Organization

March 22nd – Viva Palestine Outdoor Concert
Lynn Eusan Park (behind the Hilton hotel, right in front of Cougar Village dorms)
4 pm – 6 pm

Sabreena Da Witch, Mohammad Al-Farrah, and many more musicians will be coming to perform at UH! Free food, nice weather, and awesome music!

IAW2011handbill [PDF] | Facebook Event for IAW | Israeli Apartheid Week International Website

Mohammed Omer brings stories of Life and Death in Gaza to UH

Students for a Democratic Society hosted Palestinian journalist Mohammed Omer Wednesday April 7th. Mohammed Omer has reported for numerous media outlets, including the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, Pacifica
Radio, Electronic Intifada, The Nation, and Inter Press Service. He is also founder of the Rafah Today Blog. In 2008, he was awarded the prestigious Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism. His ambition is “to get the truth out, not as pro-Palestinian or anti-Israeli, but as an independent voice and witness.”

Omer spoke about his personal experiences reporting from the Gaza strip, in addition to the personal hardships he has faced. SDS would like to thank the many students, professors, and people from the community who came out to listen to his brilliant presentation.

The Daily Cougar published a photo of this protest in the Thursday April 8th Paper:

And published this article in the Monday April 12th issue:

International journalist and Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism award winner Mohammed Omer presented “Reflection on Life and War in Gaza,” at the University Center as part of his international speaking tour.

The ongoing Palestinian-Israeli conflict affects the Gaza Strip, home to 1.5 million Palestinians, in many ways, but Omer said on this speaking tour he wants to talk about life more than war.

Omer emphasized that not all stereotypes put on this region are true. For example, Omer said unlike many religious clashes that occur in this area, the accusation that Palestinian Muslims and Christians don’t live together peacefully is false.

“My news editor in Norway told me that there is a lot of attention in the American media that the Christian community in Gaza are oppressed,” Omer said. “I asked them (Christian students in Palestinian schools) if they experience any problems … they didn’t mention any difficulties.”

Omer mentioned that Father Manuel Musallam, the senior Roman Catholic priest in Gaza, told him that is, “absolutely not the case here. We are all Palestinians.”
Read the Full Article

Israeli Apartheid Week a Smashing Success

From March 8th to March 12th, SDS at UH hosted a week of events in solidarity with Palestinian struggle as part of Israeli Apartheid Week. We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the numerous groups and individuals that helped make this week of events possible, and thank everyone who participated in our panels and demonstrations as well as attended the events and spoke with us. This list will be incomplete, but we want to thank our Panelists; Adam, Sally, Busi, Nick, Brother Ester, and Gretta, as well as David at South Park Annex, Michelle in Industrial Design, Palestinians for Peace and Democracy, IEC Islamic Education Center, Amnesty International at UH (for being totally cool about us stealing their room by accident) and the dozens of students who helped us paint border walls, hand out fliers and attended our events. We bit off a lot with this week of events and feel like it came off very well, thanks to all of y’all!

This post starts with a recap of what we did with links to our documentation, and is followed by the press coverage that we received.

Here is a recap of what we did:

Monday

Sally Presenting

We hosted a Sally went to the west bank with the Middle East Fellowship’s Palestine Summer Encounter. Sally spoke in particular about the situation in Hebron, where a small group of far right Israeli settlers have been able to paralyze social life and create an intense IDF military presence. Adam spoke about going to Israel on a Birthright Israel trip, and going to a protest in the village of Jayyous against the Apartheid Wall, with the Israeli group Anarchists Against the Wall.

Adam Presenting

We opened this event and all of our panels by reading a statement from the BNC (Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee) in support of the Israeli Apartheid Week events being held around the world.

Due to technical dificulties, we lost the audio from Sally’s talk (Sorry Sally!!), but Adam’s talk is online here.

Tuesday

Front side of our apartheid wall

From 11am to 2pm on March 9th, SDS at UH set up a “border wall” in the middle of Butler Plaza, in front of the MD Anderson library in the center of the University of Houston campus. The wall had art, information and really cool maps that presented information about the occupation of the Palestinian West Bank and US military aid to Israel.

Street Theater Against the Occupation

We handed out a flier with information about the wall being built in the west bank that is confiscating Palestinian land and dividing communities. We also staged some street theater stopping folks on their way to the library, and when they lacked the proper permits to visit the library, detaining them in front of the wall, this gained a lot of attention, and we got in a lot of conversations. We talked to folks that agreed with us 100%, folks who thought we were wrong and stupid, folks who had no idea about what was happening with the conflict, folks who were veterans of the Israeli Defense Forces, and folks who had a lot of misconceptions about the conflict based on what they had heard about the conflict from TV.

We feel that this event was very successful in raising awareness and discussions about Israel’s oppressive, apartheid policies and presenting our position and information to the UH audience. At least hundreds, more likely multiple thousands of people saw the wall that we constructed in the center of campus during the most busy part of the week. It clearly created a buzz on campus that people continued to talk about during the week. Houston Indymedia Coverage of the Border Wall and Street Theater

Wednesday

Panel on South African Apartheid

On Wednesday we hosted a Panel on Anti-Apartheid Movement in Houston in Solidarity with the people of South Africa, which addressed parallels with the struggle against Israel’s apartheid policies against Palestinians. Speakers included (from right to left) Brother Ester King, alumni of Texas Southern University, veteran of Organization for Black Student Unity and Afro Americans for Black Liberation and currently a board member of Palestinians for Peace and Democracy, Busi Peters, alumni of the University of Houston, founder of Women Healing and Empowering Women (WHEW) and organizer with Creative Women Unite and Nick Cooper, Alumni of Rice University and organizer with Houston Indymedia and Food Not Bombs.


The full panel was recorded and is online here.

Thursday

Greta Berlin of Free Gaza Movement

On Thursday March 11th, we hosted Gretta Berlin of the Free Gaza Movement spoke about their efforts to break the siege of Gaza by sending aid by boats from Cyprus, and screened the film To Shoot an Elephant, a documentary made by Spanish activists during “Operation Cast Lead” Israels war on the civilian population of Gaza where more than 1,400 people were killed. Houston Indymedia Coverage of all our Panels

Friday

Boycott Caterpillar

On Friday March 12th, SDS and our friends and allies went to the Caterpillar sales facility on the Northwest Freeway. This was our concluding event and we feel like we ended on a strong note. We protested, holding signs on the feeder road of 1960 during rush hour traffic, from 3:30, until a little after 5, as the workers of Caterpillar left, reading our signs and listening to our chants.

We chanted “Caterpillar you cant hide, you’re constructing apartheid” “Caterpillar – Human Killer” and “Demolition isn’t right, we wont die without a fight.” Most drivers seemed perplexed by the protest, but we got dozens of honks, one man actually parked in a lot hundreds of feet away and walked down the sidewalk to thank us for protesting against Caterpillar and to support justice for Palestinians.

Caterpillar Group Photo

We concluded the event by gathering and talking about Rachel Corrie, an American peace activist who was crushed to death by an Caterpillar bulldozer being driven by an Israeli soldier while trying to prevent a house demolition in the Gaza Strip. This upcoming Tuesday March 16th is the seven year anniversary of her death, and we read some of her writings aloud. We concluded by thanking everyone for coming, and having a victory dinner at a nearby Denny’s.

Caterpillar, Inc. continues to sell its D9 and D10 bulldozers to Israel where they are militarized and used to bulldoze homes, uproot olive trees, build the Apartheid Wall, and kill civilians. In addition to constituting violations of international law, of the US Arms Export Control Act and of its own corporate code of conduct, Caterpillar is playing a a special role in strengthening Israeli Apartheid and perpetuating injustice against Palestinians. [Flier on Caterpillar from US Campaign to End the Occupation (PDF)] Houston Indymedia Coverage of the Caterpillar Protest

Press Coverage

Coverage from the Daily Cougar:

“Last year, more than 40 cities participated in Israeli Apartheid Week, and this week, Students for a Democratic Society of UH are observing it in Houston.

Israel was established as a sovereign state in 1948, after the holocaust and World War II. As a result, Palestinians were forced to move out of their homes and into the West Bank and Gaza regions. This attracted much international attention, and the conflict is still going on today.

The week-long SDS events have included lectures, demonstrations and film screenings aimed at raising awareness about Israel’s controversial policies toward Palestinians and to gather support for the international Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign.”
Read Full Article

Daily Cougar Opinion:
Apartheid doesn’t categorize Israel A critique that we think is pretty off base
Palestinians facing real issues in Israel A rebuttal by an SDSer

Dana and Rob from SDS were on the Arab Voices Radio Show on KPFT 90.1fm Audio Here (we are in the second half)

Interesting hella critical coverage from the Jewish Herald Voice Newspaper:
From the Jewish Herald Voice
Houston’s largest institution of higher learning is the latest campus to be targeted by the anti-Israel propaganda campaign, “Israel Apartheid Week.”

On March 9, University of Houston students erected a mock-Israeli “apartheid wall” on Butler Plaza, in front of the central campus’ main library, during peak midday traffic time. The plywood display was scrawled with messages reading: “Boycott, Divest, Sanction”; “Right of Return”; and “Refugee of My Own Land.” The display also featured graphics showing maps, military aircraft, weapons and bloody handprints. Half-a-dozen participants approached passers-by with fliers and conversation.

Tuesday’s demonstration was part of a weeklong series of IAW programs at and through UH, planned for March 8 to 12. These programs, which also included planned lectures, a film screening and protest – all were organized by the UH chapter of Students for a Democratic Society.
Read Full Article

Jewish Herald Voice Followup:
Campus experts evaluate local IAW-responses

Israeli Apartheid Week at UH

Since it was first launched in 2005, Israeli Apartheid Week (IAW) has grown to become one of the most important global events in the Palestine solidarity calendar. Last year, more than 40 cities around the world participated in the week’s activities, which took place in the wake of Israel’s brutal assault against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip. IAW continues to grow with new cities joining this year. This year Houston is one of these cities. UH SDS is excited to host a week of events from March 8th to the 12th as part of this global week of action in solidarity with the Palestinian Struggle

IAW will feature lectures, film screenings, cultural activities, and demonstrations aimed at raising awareness about Israel’s apartheid policies toward Palestinians and to gather support for the international Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign. The demands of the BDS campaign are:

1. Ending Israel’s occupation and colonization of all Arab lands and dismantling the Wall;

2. Recognizing the fundamental rights of the Arab-Palestinian citizens of Israel to full equality; and

3. Respecting, protecting and promoting the rights of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes and properties as stipulated in UN resolution 194.

Check out the Facebook Event. Here is a flier with the events we are hosting and information about it below:

Download a flier to print and pass out in your hood: IAWflierforUH8by11final

Monday March 8th
Young activists from Houston share their experiences traveling to Palestine/Israel and supporting social movements against the occupation. Adam and Sally will share photos, video and speak about their recent trips to the West Bank. 7pm in room 212 L of the Honors College (spiral staircase to second floor on the right side of the library).

Tuesday March 9th
A street theater demonstration against the occupation. We will be setting up a checkpoint in Butler Plaza and distributing information about checkpoints, roadblocks, the apartheid wall and other restrictions on freedom of movement that characterize the occupation. In Butler Plaza (in front of the library) from 11am-2.

Wednesday March 10th
A discussion hosted by Houston participants in the Anti-Apartheid struggle in solidarity with South Africa. We hope to learn some of the lessons from the international solidarity movement which struggled and defeated white minority rule in Apartheid South Africa. 6pm in the Caribbean Room in the University Center.

Thursday March 11th
A screening of the film “To Shoot an Elephant” about Israel’s Operation Cast Lead, which killed more than 1,400 people in Gaza in December of 2008 and January of 2010. The film will be followed by a talk from Greta Berlin a long time Palestine solidarity activist who has been working to break the siege on Gaza. 7pm in the Baltic Room in the University Center.

Friday March 12th
UH SDS is calling for a protest at the Catepillar sales facility on the Northwest Freeway(290) at 12800 Northwest Freeway [map] We will be carpooling from UH, meeting at the University Center and leaving by 2:45.

Why Protest Caterpillar?

Caterpillar, Inc. continues to sell its D9 and D10 bulldozers to Israel where they are militarized and used to bulldoze homes, uproot olive trees, build the Apartheid Wall, and kill civilians. In addition to constituting violations of international law, of the US Arms Export Control Act and of its own corporate code of conduct, Caterpillar is playing a a special role in strengthening Israeli Apartheid and perpetuating injustice against Palestinians. [Flier on Caterpillar from US Campaign to End the Occupation (PDF)]

Friday the 19th: 2 great speakers come to UH

This Friday Feb 19th, Students for a Democratic Society is really excited to help host both
Ali Abunimah and Ashanti Alston at the University of Houston.

Ashanti & Ali

At noon, Ali Abunimah will speak in the Atlantic Room in the University Center Underground

At 2pm, Ashanti Alston will speak in the Bluebonnet Room, upstairs in the University Center

[UC on campus] [Map of rooms inside the UC]

Ali Abunimah is one of the most dynamic and well-informed speakers on Palestine. He is the Executive Director of The Electronic Intifada and a writer and commentator on Middle East and Arab-American affairs. His articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, The Financial Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Jordan Times, Lebanon’s Daily Star and Ha’aretz, among others. He is frequent guest on local, national and international radio and television, including public radio and television, CNN, MSNBC, Fox, the BBC and many others. Abunimah lectures frequently at colleges in the United States. He received his BA from Princeton University and MA from the University of Chicago. Abunimah travels often to the Middle East and is a full-time researcher in social policy at the University of Chicago. His first book, One Country: A Bold Proposal to End the Israeli-Palestinian Impasse, was published in 2007 and makes a compelling case for a one-state solution based on legal equality for Israelis and Palestinians.
Help us Promote: Facebook Event | Flier Ali will also be speaking in the evening at the Hilton Garden Inn, by the Galleria – 3201 Sage Rd. at 6:45pm. More info at Palestinians for Peace and Democracy website

Ashanti Alston is a former member of the Black Panther Party and Black Liberation Army, and was a political prisoner for over 12 years. He publishes the zine “Anarchist Panther” and has spent time in Chiapas, Mexico, studying the autonomous structure of Zapatista communities. Ashanti resides in New York, where he is presently the national co-chair of the Jericho Amnesty Movement, and an active member of Estacion Libre, the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, and Critical Resistance. He will be speaking about race, resistance, cross-border struggles and anarchism.
Help us Promote: Facebook Event | Flier Ashanti will also be speaking at SHAPE Community Center’s Harambe Building at 7:30pm. More info at the Sedition Books Website

Social Movements for Social Justice Film Series

Film Series for first half of the semester

This semester, Students for a Democratic Society will be hosting a film series looking at social justice movements, From Texas to Cali to the Occupied Territories. These screenings take place in the University Center of the University of Houston. All screenings are free and will continue with more films after spring break.

Thursday Feb 11th 7pm in the Caspian Room of the UC The Least of These

Detention of immigrant children in a former medium-security prison in Texas leads to controversy when three activist attorneys discover troubling conditions at the facility. This compelling documentary film explores the role – and limits – of community activism, and considers how American rights and values apply to the least powerful among us.

Monday Feb 22nd 7pm in the Pacific Room of the UC Bilin Habibti (Bil’in my love)

Bil;in is a community facing division by the Israeli security wall: more than half of the village is about to be absorbed by a neighboring Jewish settlement. The villagers confront the Israeli army with creative, weekly demonstrations and direct actions. The army replies with arrests, teargas and bullets. Armed with a camera, the Israeli director Pollak comes to Bil’in as an activist. During his stay, Bil’in turns into the symbol of resistance against the “safety fence” and the Israeli occupation. A film that demonstrates that a different middle east is possible; that the conflict can be transformed by solidarity between Palestinians and Israelis

Thursday March 4th 7pm in the Caspian Room of the UC Short films on the struggle to defend Education in California and elsewhere.

As people throughout the country struggle under the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, the Regents of the University of California voted to raise tuition 32%. March 4th is a national day of action to defend education, and we will be watching films about the struggles of students, staff and faculty to defend public education.

Nov 16th Screening of Life in Occupied Palestine and presentation by Sahar Abusada

LifeinoccupiedpaelstineMonday November 16 at 7 pm, Students for a Democratic Society will be presenting the film “Life in Occupied Palestine” and hosting Houston activist Sahar Abusada.

The Film is based on the presentations of Anna Baltzer a Jewish American human rights and Palestine solidarity activist, based on her visits to occupied Palestine.

Sahar Abusada will present her experiences working to help the Palestinian people, including working with Palestinians for Peace and Democracy providing aid to the people of Gaza, and the solidarity movement in general.

The event will be held in the UC underground, World Affairs Lounge (that’s the area with all the flags). Refreshments will be served!

Please invite your friends to the Facebook event as well.

Anarchists Against the Wall bring stories of struggle against Israeli Apartheid to UH

Schachaf Polakow of Anarchists Against the Wall

Schachaf Polakow of Anarchists Against the Wall

Students for a Democratic Society at UH hosted Anarchist Against the Wall member Schachaf Polakow as came to McAllen, TX and Houston to share videos and images of the ongoing struggle against Israeli aggression in the occupied territories. His presentations were part of AAW’s North American tour to raise funds to cover the thousands of dollars in legal fees the AAW and Palestinian activists  face for their arrests and detentions.

Polakav explained that AAW began in 2003 and has worked in solidarity with Palestinian popular committees on a number of actions and regular protests against Israeli aggression. AAW members only participate in actions when they’re invited to villages and they meet with the village popular committees to decide what kind of actions and collaborations will take place.

The videos highlighted sit-ins to stop the demolition of olive trees, Israeli and international solidarity activists cutting fences restricting Palestinian freedom of movement, and Palestinian and Israeli activists reclaiming lands in illegal Israeli settlements.

Shachaf also spoke about corporate involvement in the Israeli occupation. In McAllen, Shachaf explained that Israeli companies provided much of the security equipment and training currently used in the US-Mexico border. He mentioned that Caterpillar, the company that provides bulldozers to the Israeli gov, has been included in President Obama’s economic stimulus plan. A new website www.whoprofits.org lists companies invested in Israel.

To contribute to AAW: Click Here

Saleema’s Inkpot Covered the event:
Schachaf Polakow of Anarchists Against the Wall (video) | Schachaf Polakow Speaks (analysis)

Some of the videos from the presentation are online, check them out