The decision by the Jerusalem municipality to force the Salahiya family from their home is part of the Israeli government’s plan to evict Palestinians from the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood in occupied East Jerusalem and build a Jewish-only neighborhood instead. #SaveSheikhJarrah
This is part of a larger plan to build a ring of Jewish-only neighborhoods around the Old City, forcing more and more Palestinians from their homes in Jerusalem.
At least 280 Palestinian households in Jerusalem, consisting of 970 people, including 424 children, are at risk of forced displacement by the Israeli government, according to the UN.
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This is a crisis moment. We have been watching the ongoing Nakba unfold in Sheikh Jarrah, for months, for years, for decades and now as ever, we need to be listening and be led by Palestinian voices and uplift their resistance.
Yesterday was chilling and triggering. We send love and healing to the congregation of Beth Israel, and to all Jews and people everywhere scarred and wounded by this violence. Healing takes care and community. Here are some resources for ourselves and our loved ones:
As we recover, we recommit to dismantling antisemitism in all its forms. And we recommit to resisting any version of safety reliant on Islamophobia or the presence of police. Freedom and safety for any of us relies on freedom and safety for all.
We recommit to opposing all forms of anti-Muslim bigotry and hatred, and stand guard against those who use Islamophobia to divide our communities.
Omar Asad's death was not spontaneous or natural, but the direct result of brutal abuse and neglect by Israeli soldiers.
The US should demand accountability for the Israeli state violence against this Palestinian American man — not merely call for an “investigation."
The Israeli military and Western media’s euphemistic, obfuscatory approach to reporting Omar’s murder is reminiscent of the way American law enforcement and media report police murders in the US.
One of many examples is the murder of George Floyd in May 2020.
When Derek Chauvin suffocated George Floyd by kneeling on his neck for over 9 minutes, the MPD sent out a press release headlined “Man Dies After Medical Incident During Police Interaction.” Media outlets echoed this false narrative until bystander camera footage disproved it.
On Jan 6, white nationalists at the Capitol displayed Israeli flags AND signs of genocidal antisemitism.
Why? Support for Israel is NOT support for Jewish safety.
Antisemitic Zionists are common in right-wing movements — the sources of the most tangible threats to Jewish lives.
Many white nationalists both hate Jews and love Israel.
Depending on their specific ideology, they may admire Israel as a model ethnic supremacist state, share its Islamophobic and anti-Arab views, and/or want Jews to be corralled in their own state far away from the US.
Read this excellent article by @BenLorber8 to learn more about antisemitic, Zionist white nationalists and their worldview, which gravely harms Palestinians, Jews, Muslims, and people of color.
Time is running out to save Hisham, who is barely responsive and suffering from severe kidney failure after 140 days (4.5 months) of hunger strike.
We demand the immediate release of Hisham as well as all Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails.
Despite detaining him since October 2020, Israeli authorities have never charged Hisham abu Hawwash with a crime or allowed him to stand trial. His original detention order was for 6 months, but they have successively renewed it and can do so as many more times as they please.
For prisoners, hunger strikes are the last and only available form of resistance; though the process is grueling and potentially life-threatening, it is also a reclamation of control over their bodies, and a testament to Israel’s failure to suppress their struggle for freedom.
Naftali Bennett announced yesterday that he plans to double the number of Israeli settlements in the Golan Heights this year.
The Golan gets less attention because it viewed as de-facto Israeli territory within Israel but the region has its own history of expulsion and violence.
During the 1967 war, almost 130,000 Syrians were expelled from their homes in the Golan Heights. A number of them waited on the other side of the Syrian border, believing they would be able to return home.
Still to this day, many Golan residents live as refugees in Syria.
The Israeli government officially annexed the Golan in 1981. This led to mass repression of the remaining Syrian Druze community and the beginning of Israeli settlement construction.
The move was condemned by the U.N. and the Golan was not recognized as Israeli by any country.