Intro: "Pulitzer prize-winning American writer Alice Walker is on board an international flotilla of boats sailing to Gaza to challenge the Israeli blockade. Here she tells why."
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker will join the flotilla of ships next week that will try to break Israel's maritime blockade of the Gaza Strip. (photo: AP)
Why I'm Joining the Freedom Flotilla to Gaza
25 June 11
Pulitzer prize-winning American writer Alice Walker is on board an international flotilla of boats sailing to Gaza to challenge the Israeli blockade. Here she tells why.
hy am I going on the Freedom Flotilla II to Gaza? I ask myself this, even though the answer is: what else would I do? I am in my 67th year, having lived already a long and fruitful life, one with which I am content. It seems to me that during this period of eldering it is good to reap the harvest of one's understanding of what is important, and to share this, especially with the young. How are they to learn, otherwise?
Our boat, The Audacity of Hope, will be carrying letters to the people of Gaza. Letters expressing solidarity and love. That is all its cargo will consist of. If the Israeli military attacks us, it will be as if they attacked the mailman. This should go down hilariously in the annals of history. But if they insist on attacking us, wounding us, even murdering us, as they did some of the activists in the last flotilla, Freedom Flotilla I, what is to be done?
There is a scene in the movie Gandhi that is very moving to me: it is when the unarmed Indian protesters line up to confront the armed forces of the British Empire. The soldiers beat them unmercifully, but the Indians, their broken and dead lifted tenderly out of the fray, keep coming.
Alongside this image of brave followers of Gandhi there is, for me, an awareness of paying off a debt to the Jewish civil rights activists who faced death to come to the side of black people in the American south in our time of need. I am especially indebted to Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman who heard our calls for help - our government then as now glacially slow in providing protection to non-violent protesters - and came to stand with us.
They got as far as the truncheons and bullets of a few "good ol' boys'" of Neshoba County, Mississippi and were beaten and shot to death along with James Chaney, a young black man of formidable courage who died with them. So, even though our boat will be called The Audacity of Hope, it will fly the Goodman, Chaney, Schwerner flag in my own heart.
And what of the children of Palestine, who were ignored in our president's latest speech on Israel and Palestine, and whose impoverished, terrorised, segregated existence was mocked by the standing ovations recently given in the US Congress to the prime minister of Israel?
I see children, all children, as humanity's most precious resource, because it will be to them that the care of the planet will always be left. One child must never be set above another, even in casual conversation, not to mention in speeches that circle the globe.
As adults, we must affirm, constantly, that the Arab child, the Muslim child, the Palestinian child, the African child, the Jewish child, the Christian child, the American child, the Chinese child, the Israeli child, the Native American child, etc, is equal to all others on the planet. We must do everything in our power to cease the behaviour that makes children everywhere feel afraid.
I once asked my best friend and husband during the era of segregation, who was as staunch a defender of black people's human rights as anyone I'd ever met: how did you find your way to us, to black people, who so needed you? What force shaped your response to the great injustice facing people of colour of that time?
I thought he might say it was the speeches, the marches, the example of Martin Luther King Jr, or of others in the movement who exhibited impactful courage and grace. But no. Thinking back, he recounted an episode from his childhood that had led him, inevitably, to our struggle.
He was a little boy on his way home from yeshiva, the Jewish school he attended after regular school let out. His mother, a bookkeeper, was still at work; he was alone. He was frequently harassed by older boys from regular school, and one day two of these boys snatched his yarmulke (skull cap), and, taunting him, ran off with it, eventually throwing it over a fence.
Two black boys appeared, saw his tears, assessed the situation, and took off after the boys who had taken his yarmulke. Chasing the boys down and catching them, they made them climb the fence, retrieve and dust off the yarmulke, and place it respectfully back on his head.
It is justice and respect that I want the world to dust off and put - without delay, and with tenderness - back on the head of the Palestinian child. It will be imperfect justice and respect because the injustice and disrespect have been so severe. But I believe we are right to try.
That is why I sail.
"The Chicken Chronicles: A Memoir" by Alice Walker is published by Weidenfeld and Nicolson. A longer version of this article appears on Alice Walker's blog: alicewalkersgarden.com/blog.
After the excitement of the Arab Spring, has the Palestine issue slipped out of view, asks Emine Saner
Just over a year ago, in the middle of the night, Israeli commandos boarded a Turkish ship in international waters just off the coast of Israel, opened fire and killed nine activists. The Mavi Marmara was one of six ships in the Freedom Flotilla, which was attempting to break the Israeli blockade of Gaza, and the actions of Israel's military brought widespread international condemnation.
This time, as Freedom Flotilla II sets sail over the next week, with 10 ships carrying many of the same activists who travelled last year, including Swedish writer Henning Mankell, American human rights campaigner Hedy Epstein, and writer and academic Alice Walker, the Israeli government's response will be closely watched.
This week Ron Prosor, Israel's ambassador to the UN, wrote a letter saying: "Israel calls on the international community to do everything in their ability in order to prevent the flotilla and warn citizens … of the risks of participating in this type of provocation." The purpose of the flotilla, he said, is "to provoke and aid a radical political agenda". He later added: "We are very determined to defend ourselves and to assert our right to a naval blockade on Gaza."
"The threats of violence won't deter us," says Huwaida Arraf, one of the flotilla organisers. "Nobody is going in to this lightly, but we feel it has to be done. Israel has to realise its violence against us is not going to stop our growing civilian effort to challenge its illegal policies. The size of this flotilla, the number of people involved in organising it, even after Israel killed nine of our colleagues last year, is testament to that."
She says half a million people applied for the few hundred places: depending on how many of the 10 boats are seaworthy in time, there should be around 400 people on the flotilla.
The campaign began in August 2008, when 44 activists on two small fishing boats set off from Cyprus and managed to reach Gaza. Later that year, the Free Gaza Movement, as it became known, organised several other voyages, usually sending single boats containing small but symbolic supplies such as medicine and toys, and volunteers, including doctors, lawyers and politicians. Amid allegations of violence and hostility from Israel's naval forces at sea, the activists decided they would need to send a flotilla, and after months of fundraising and negotiating with NGOs from other countries, particularly Turkey, several ships met in the Mediterranean sea in May last year with the intention of reaching Gaza.
"We didn't make it to Gaza and we lost a lot of colleagues," says Arraf, "but one of the things that was achieved was that people realised what Israel's policies meant, and the violence Israel was using to maintain them. We think our action will put pressure on Israel to end its blockade on Gaza, and we hope the respective governments of all the people participating will take action and do what they should be doing, instead of having their nationals putting their lives at risk like this."
There is a danger, says Chris Doyle, director of the council for Arab-British understanding, of the Palestinian issue being overlooked - in the west at least - as focus shifts to countries going through the extraordinary changes in the Arab spring. "There is a danger that people forget how important this issue is, and that it is boiling. It is still an unresolved issue. At a time when international politicians - Obama, Cameron, Sarkozy and others - are concentrating so much on other areas of the region, the issue of Palestine has not gone away."
"Everyone has been so amazed and shocked at the beauty of the Arab revolutions, seeing these incredibly brave and wonderful citizens, that it quite naturally seizes the attention, but at the heart of the Arab revolutions is Palestine," says Karma Nabulsi, an academic and expert on the Middle East. "I would say it hasn't been properly covered in the west, but Palestine is central to what people - the Arab media, the people who are participating in the Arab revolutions - talk about all the time."
So where does Palestine fit into the Arab spring? Doyle says: "A Palestinian spring is more than possible. Many senior people within Fatah and the Palestinian authorities have been saying this is the way to go because the negotiations are not seen as credible, and they will have to adopt different tactics. I think that, on the one hand, those tactics could be against the Israeli occupation, but also it represents a threat to the Palestinian authority itself, both to Fatah and Hamas."
The flotilla "gives people heart and encouragement, that the struggle for freedom has friends and supporters", says Nabulsi. "What the flotilla did last year, these plucky little boats, was bring the entire world to look at what [the Israeli government] were doing. Not just because of the brutality of the response of the military, but it shows how simple gestures get to the heart of the issue - breaking through the silence and the siege, and all the things that seem so big and impossible to do. They did it and they're going to do it again, and that's what is so remarkably brave."
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Thank you.
Ms. Walker, you ask yourself why you are doing this and you say, "What else would I do?"
You might organize a flotilla to Congo where the level of genocide is in the MILLIONS and rapes go on as a battle tactic all the time.
You might go to Nepal where the caste system condemns children to a life of sexual slavery.
You might go to Sudan where slavery continues unabated.
For that matter, you might go to any American city where the lives of vast numbers of African American youth are in grave danger every day.
The US and England have caused the death and displacement of millions in recent time.
But if you must go to Palestine....I hope you will bring letters to gay Arabs who have to sneak over to Israel to express their love and sexuality since homosexuality is against the law under the Palestine Authority.
I hope you will bring letters to Saudi women whose struggle has a gripping resemblance to the civil rights protests. (and where homosexual men are sentenced to death!)
I hope you will go with a flotilla to insist on equal rights for women, for gay people, and for freedom to practice religion in the many nations where it is impossible.
If you would like to honor their memory, please speak out against the ongoing anti-Semitic desecration of graves and Synagogues. Speak out against the thinly veiled anti-Semitism throughout British academia.
To write in an British Newspaper without mentioning any of the anti-Semitism in England is also unworthy of you.
And as I wrote before, your apparent indifference to the status of gays in Palestine and throughout the Middle-East (outside of Israel) is curious to say the least.
You are a great figure in our culture....what you do and say matters. This should be reconsidered.
But the disproportionat e outrage is peculiar.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (photo) shut down pages on his social network that were calling for an uprising in Palestine to begin on May 15, the date marked by Palestinians as the Nakba.
Since the 6th of March, several Facebook pages have called for a third intifada. They garnered up to half a million supporters.
Facebook made the decision to pull at the request of the Israeli authorities.
from voltairenet
... more google ...
peaceful protests work. violent ones work against you.
(Continued below.)
..."One (person's) 'terrorist' is another (person's) freedom fighter." I abhor violence, but the fact that the Palestinians have just as much right(s) to defend themselves must be recognized and accepted. What would you do if you were in their shoes? Would you just sit back and let it happen if very similar things were happening to you and your people? If you would, you truly would be a coward. But now you even decry in a cowardly fashion the rights and duties of a large group of non-violent protesters taking action in a very heroic fashion on behalf of their brothers and sisters, and fellow human beings, in Palestine who live under conditions very much like South African apartheid, which was abolished for very good reasons, that nobody, that no people, should have to live under. Therefore, get with the program of supporting the courageous instead of the program of the majority of cowards. There are no excuses for Israel's fascism! And all of this madness having been far too long carried out against the Palestinians must finally come to a complete end, now! Go Freedom Flotilla II!!!!!
Today there is an estimate that almost US wars in middle east have created 8 million refugees!!! To say nothing of hundreds of thousands of deaths....
And Ms. Walker, you ask yourself regarding why you are on the flotilla..."Wha t else would I do?"
Very strange....very strange.
If Hamas or the Palestinian Authority are banning driving by women, that would be related.
124 Israeli children have been killed by Palestinians and 1,463 Palestinian children have been killed by Israelis since September 29, 2000
Over 1400 (mostly civilians) were killed in Gaza (10 x 20KM sand strip with 1.5 million people)were killed by IDF - mostly civilians.
at 1st i was skeptical about this flotilla. i thot that carrying letters had little point and was just confrontational . why not send needed supplies thru legitimate means? alice walker changed my mind. peaceful protests bring attention to the hardships and misery created by the blockade.
i think that when the israelis board the ship, the passengers sd simply hand over the letters to the military and ask that they be delivered. i hope that the letters, by showing support for the palestinians, are careful not to imply that violence is supported. i hope that the flotilla is a demonstration that problems need to be addressed rather than continuing this endless cycle of violence and oppression.
i still worry about the flotilla and hope that neither side pushes this situation to the point of violence. if it does, it will only result in the usual finger pointing and possibly needless death.
NO this is NOT true. This is again Israeli propaganda.
the entire world, as well as israel, knows that this flotilla consists of unarmed peaceful protesters. let's see how israel responds to an obviously peaceful protest. if israel has 1 once of sense, they will merely take possession of the letters and deliver them intact to the palestinians. if they do otherwise, and continue to choke an entire population with its usual intransigent and excessive reactions, israel will earn nothing but contempt and disgust.
it is inflexible attitudes like yours, unwilling to see that israel is part of the makings of its own problems and unwilling to recognize that others besides israelis have rights that will end in the destruction of israel.
Gaza sea border belong to GAZA - NOT Israel.
Israel BLOCKADE of GAZA is criminal.
Gaza fishing boats are destroyed by IDF to feed its people - What facts I am missing?
I often wonder why so many supporters of Israel think that this is supposed to be a one way war. Israel has the most sophisticated ammunition and have used it. The other side has retaliated with way inferior ammunition. Israel continues to encroach on Palestinian lands, brutally, & placing and paying settlers, who have no right to be there and to be in dangerous regions.
My sympathies go to both sides and it is a total shame that many generations have lived in danger for so long and know nothing else.
Much luck to Ms. Walker and all of the brave activists.
I will never be able to understand how they, of all people, can treat the Palestiniens in the same way as they were treated themselves.
People of this country are so sympathetic and their memory is short-circuited . It wasn't so long ago Palestinians were dancing in the streets to show their love/hate for America. We were mourning and burying our people.
What JEWISH person was in the 911 ATTACK on America???
I am sorry Alice Walker, you are not Joan of Arc of America. I do pray for you and everyone safety and return back to the States.
this is known PROPAGANDA - please Google truth.
Mar 8, 2008 – Did CNN fake footage of 'Palestinians dancing in the street' after the ... Well, THOSE IMAGES WERE SHOT BACK IN 1991!!!
And Google also: Five Dancing Israelis Arrested On 9/11
And take a look at New Yonkers dancing on the street month ago when US/Obama killed.
Do not see much difference - same mentality/dumb crowd.
My prayers are with you and everyone on your flotilla, for your protection from the Satanic, fascist forces of apostate and extremist Judaism and their supporters; and I will be with you in spirit on your courageous journey. God be with you and protect you!
For those who might be interested, and who have Facebook pages, please go to the campaign to change your FB profile picture to the one supporting the "U.S. Boat to Gaza" campaign.
See my FB page for an example:
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001109486383
AND(!) for instructions on how to obtain the image and make the change:
http://www.justforeignpolicy.org/act/audacityofhope/supportactions
4 Israelis were killed by these "daily bombing". Stupid - but compare it to 10 activists/civil ians killed last year (including 19 year old US citizen - bullet in the head.
May 28
Overnight, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip fired a rocket at the Eshkol Regional Council. No injuries or damage were reported. This was the first such attack in six weeks.[144][145]
[edit]June
June 15
At about 9:30 pm, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip fired a Qasssam rocket at the Eshkol Regional Council. The projectile landed in an open area, and no injuries or damage were reported. The Color Red siren sounded in the region.[146]
June 21
After nightfall, Palestinians in the Gaza Strip fired a mortar shell at the Eshkol Regional Council, followed half an hour later by a Qassam rocket fired at the same area. No injuries or damage were reported in either attack. The incident affected an Israeli national civil defense drill the following day. Israel responded with an airstrike on an infiltration tunnel in the central Gaza Strip, causing no injuries.[147][ 148]
The report says Dogan had apparently been "lying on the deck in a conscious or semi-conscious, state for some time" before being shot in his face.
www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/10/01/flotilla
Please read whole article - UN vote - etc.
"vessels challenging Israel's economic blockade of Gaza, had its propeller cut while in Athen's harbor today. A spokesman contacted by the Monitor said that the damage was a deliberate act of sabotage"
Speculating what terrorist nation is able to do that ....
Wonder what terrorist organization did that?
Is OBAMA going to kill their leader? Invade the terrorist country?
I don't understand all the people who have responded with defenses of Israel. There is no defense for what Israel is doing to the people of Gaza. All the world should be outraged at Israel's crimes. Someday, Israel will push its racism to a tipping point and the world will turn against it. I hope that day comes soon. A reformed Israel is the key to peace in the Middle East. Israel needs a regime change -- but i'm not for a Bush/Obama style regime change complete with bombing and sanctions. It would be enough to cut Israel off from US aid and support.
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