Archive for January, 2009

TEST-DRIVE: A REPORT FROM PORT AUTHORITY BUS TERMINAL

Friday, January 16th, 2009

Carnage in Gaza. Iraq. Afghanistan. A tanking economy with all the misery that brings. These dark days of winter weigh heavy on us grannies. It would be tempting to take a small break and indulge ourselves in a little Obama-phoria, but this is not time to take our hands off the wheel and this is not a group of slackers. Meetings, demonstrations, vigils and actions crowd our calendars and yesterday the phone-a-thoners were back in action.

Noon was shape-up time at Port Authority Bus Terminal and eight grannies set up shop in the South Terminal. We seemed to be invisible to the very young police officers on patrol, but not to the folks to-ing and fro-ing on New Jersey Transit.

2009_01_15portauth1.jpg

Twenty minutes in, two members of the security staff approach and ask to see our permit and a print out of Wolin v Port Authority is produced. It is a polite, respectful encounter. The upshot: we are given instructions for obtaining a future permit and we keep leafleting, talking, calling. The bottom line: Port Authority is a good, solid venue for outreach. However, the permitting process is beyond cumbersome (read Byzantine) and along with our permit application we must submit samples of our leaflets for “review”. So the jury is out — we will make application at 8:30AM on January 22 for January 29 (don’t ask!) and we shall see what happens. Can the content of our literature be censored in a public space? Stay tuned.

Before we sign off, we want to take a moment to recognize the extraordinary work of some of our sisters and brothers in the ongoing struggle for peace and justice…

…. the marchers to the single drum, who breathe life into the
March of the Dead.

…. the dedicated vigilers and tireless travelers.

…. the ones who refuse to back down,
and the legal eagles who defend
them.

…. the letter-writers, leaflet drafters, sign-makers, phoners, marchers, singers and all good citizens who continue to make meaningful mischief in the face of unspeakable misery.

Your example fuels us all and inspires each of us to reach further and work harder.

2009_01_portauth2.jpg

Thank you.

- Fran Sears
photos, Eva-Lee Baird
Granny Peace Brigade

Please join our next Phone-A-thon at…
Noon – 1:30PM
Thursday January 29
Port Authority Bus Station,
South Terminal (entrance on 8th Ave between 40th & 41st Streets)
Main floor

The Possible, Desirable, and Necessary in Gaza

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

My comment regarding the Israeli – Palestinian Conflict sent to President-elect Obama’s website.

I grew up during the Second World War and I remember the warm feeling I had when Israel was formed in 1948, and how at Hunter College I empathized with Jewish students celebrating the 5th Anniversary of the founding of Israel. I believe many have not had reason/opportunity to do so, but for some reason I did later come to know what the founding of the State of Israel caused the Arab Palestinians: The Holocaust was carried out in Europe; subsequently Arab Palestinians lost a significant part of their homeland, where they and Mizrahi and other Jews had lived — lived not without conflict but without widespread displacements.

Never have I heard of any acknowledgement to the Palestinians of their justifiable distress and anger for their having had to move to make possible the establishment of Israel; nor have I ever heard an apology — obviously not that these would resolve the issue but the missing acknowledgement and apology are indicative of lack of understanding or lack of awareness of cause and effect. A result is that Palestinians have been viewed by many as spoilers, not as people with a grievance that required redress In effect, they were required to make compensation for criminal acts (The Holocaust) in which they had no part.

What has happened and is happening to the Palestinians in occupied Gaza is so horrid — for me beyond words to express. And, as is known, we, the United States, provide the wherewithal for the carrying on of this campaign against Gaza.

There have been blockades – land, sea, and air – imposed by Israel. Isn’t this an act of war? Some of the results of the blockades have been life threatening. And so Gaza sends rockets; Israel responds with sophisticated ’state of the art’ power/technology. The residents of Gaza are told to remove themselves from areas of hostilities — where are they to go? They do not have bomb shelters. They are totally vulnerable. And we, the U.S., have rationalized our non-support for a cease-fire!

United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 virtually has been ignored. Settlements are developed and expanded in the occupied West Bank with U.S. approval — implicit and explicit (President Bush’s allowing, in a televised talk with the former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, that some settlements were ‘facts on the ground’). The Palestinians were expected to accept, as part of a plan for a Palestinian state, a system of West Bank ‘Bantustans’ proposed by then Prime Minister Ehud Barak and rejected by the then President of the Palestine National Authority Yasser Arafat, toward the end of President Clinton’s second term. Many were incredulous that the plan was rejected.

President-elect Obama, many do not know the post-Second World War history of this part of the Middle East. You do. Please, your incoming Administration, your Office as honest broker, should acknowledge publicly that the Palestinians, as well as the Israelis, have justifiable claims, and should insist that inhumane action against the Palestinians by the occupying power end, that Israeli/Palestinian cease-fires become effective forthwith, and that concrete steps be taken for the creation and necessary support of a viable sovereign Palestinian state.

President-elect Obama, our taxes must not support unacceptable policies and action. This does not lessen the view of Israel as a U.S. ally. In addition, the Palestinians should receive acknowledgement of the loss of part of their pre-1948 homeland. These will not be unreasonable actions to undertake but to do so will require the will of your Administration to promote these actions as (and here I borrow, out of context, from a statement of Archbishop Tutu) possible, desirable, and necessary.

=============

These days this matter has, I know, been of great concern to all of us, and I know we have various views. I think it is generally believed that the lack of a fair resolution of the Israel/Palestine conflict is not the only factor but is a significant one in U.S./Middle East antagonisms.

- Barbara Walker
Granny Peace Brigade