International

[ International ] [ Main Menu ]


  


54647


Date: June 10, 2024 at 09:20:13
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: How are Palestinian leaders of non-violent resistance treated?

URL: https://x.com/mehdirhasan


Mehdi Hasan reposted Sophie McNeill@Sophiemcneill
16h
How are Palestinian leaders of non-violent resistance treated?

👇Left: My friend Issa Amro from Hebron described by NYT as the
Palestinian Gandhi, beaten unconscious by settlers last week

👆Right: Bassem Tamimi leader of Nabi Saleh protests after he spent 9
months in Israeli prison




Responses:
[54651] [54655] [54658] [54666] [54653] [54648]


54651


Date: June 10, 2024 at 11:05:54
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Issa Amro, 'Human Rights Defender of the Year in Palestine'

URL: https://www.frontlinedefenders.org/en/profile/issa-amro



UN OFFICE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS APPEAL
2015
Urgent Appeal
UN OFFICE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER
THE GUARDIAN ARTICLE
2015
Palestine field post: 'I am not your normal human rights campaigner'
THE GUARDIAN
NEWSWEEK ARTICLE
2015
Inspired by Gandhi, A Palestinian Resists Israeli Settlements
NEWSWEEK
UN OHCHR ‘HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER OF THE YEAR IN PALESTINE’
AWARD
2010
Issa Amro works to document human rights violations in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories.
UN OFFICE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER OF HUMAN RIGHTS
ONE WORLD MEDIA AWARD
2009
In 2009 Issa won the One World media award in 2009 for his involvement in
B’Tselem’s “Shooting Back” project, which provides media training and
distributes cameras to Palestinians to document settler and military abuse.
B'TSELEM

Our struggle is about occupation, future, history, homeland. Other human rights
campaigners document issues, or try to change the situation without working
on the ground. Here we live our reality, we experience directly the brutality. We
will never give up.

Issa Amro is a prominent human rights defender and founding member of many
non-violent organisations in Hebron who work peacefully against Israeli
occupation of the West Bank. Amongst these organisations are the Hebron
branch of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), the Arab Non-Violence
Network and the Hebron Defenders. Issa is involved in monitoring the
application of international human rights and humanitarian law in the Occupied
Palestinian Territories.

Issa is founder and coordinator of Youth Against Settlements (YAS), a group of
human rights defenders that strengthens the local community’s steadfastness
against the expansion of illegal settlements and documents human right
violations. For local and international media YAS is often the first source of
information from the ground.

In their center, located in Tel Rumeida/ Hebron, the group regularly receives
groups of local and international activists, observers and diplomats to teach
them about the reality under occupation. The group further aims at educating
young Palestinians in nonviolent resistance through nonviolent action, media,
and advocacy work.

Through resilience campaigns YAS also helps families suffering from
settlements and other occupation activities to remain in their homes. As part of
the campaign, YAS has built up and maintains the first kindergarten for
Palestinian children in Hebron’s H2 area.

One of the main flagship campaigns of YAS is its yearly Open Shuhada Street
Campaign, which is implemented both in Palestine and internationally. Direct
actions and activities for human rights are implemented on a continuous basis,
as for example with Hebron Defenders. This nonviolent action group was set up
to protect local people at risk from settler violence.


Responses:
[54655] [54658] [54666] [54653]


54655


Date: June 10, 2024 at 11:26:37
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Issa Amro, did he like music? Go to concerts?



He wasn't stronger or displace Hamas.

He wasn't more powerful than Sinwar, and Sinwar called
the shots.

Palestinians needed a Ghandi, they chose Hamas.





Responses:
[54658] [54666]


54658


Date: June 10, 2024 at 11:52:29
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: lol


you're nutso


Responses:
[54666]


54666


Date: June 10, 2024 at 16:06:48
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: lol




When you can't confront the argument, discredit the
poster.

Propaganda rule #3.

LOL, indeed.




Responses:
None


54653


Date: June 10, 2024 at 11:10:46
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Interview w/Bassem Tamimi, Palestinian grassroots activist, human righ

URL: https://icahd.org/2021/10/29/icahd-uk-interview-with-bassem-tamimi-palestinian-grassroots-activist-described-by-the-european-union-as-a-human-rights-defender-and-designated-by-amnesty-international-as-a-prisoner-of-conscience/


ICAHD UK Interview with Bassem Tamimi – Palestinian grassroots activist,
human rights defender, and prisoner of conscience

Posted on October 29, 2021, by ICAHD UK & filed under ICAHD Interviews,
News, One Democratic State Campaign.

Palestinian grassroots activist, described by the European Union as a human
rights defender, and designated by Amnesty International as a prisoner of
conscience

Bassem, I know that you are from Nabi Saleh, a Palestinian village that has
become known for its weekly demonstrations against confiscation of your land
for settlement construction. Please tell us a little about your background.

Yes, my name is Bassem Tamimi, and I am from Nabi Saleh, 20 kilometres
northwest of Ramallah, a small village with around 530 people. I grew up in a
small family with one older sister, but we are part of the Tamimi family, which is
a big family in the West Bank. Four hundred years ago, the Tamimis came to
Nabi Saleh from Hebron and another part of the family is in a different village.
My parents and grandparents were born in Nabi Saleh. I attended school in
Nabi Saleh until the fourth grade and then I went to a neighbouring village for
more schooling. We walked five kilometres in the morning and evening to get to
it. After the tenth grade, I enrolled at Birzeit University because I wanted to
attend science classes. I then went to the Beirut Arab University for one year
but after that the Israeli authorities didn’t allow me to leave Palestine to study.

When the First Intifada started, I was involved in protesting and so the Israeli
authorities started arresting me. I couldn’t continue my education in the West
Bank because schools and universities were closed. When they opened again, I
returned in 1995 and 1996 to finish my first degree in economics. After that, I
did my Masters’ degree in international law.

I want to say more about my village of Nabi Saleh because this village is part of
the history of Palestine, so it experienced the Ottoman period under Turkish
rule and then it was under the British Mandate. The people of Nabi Shalen have
always resisted outside control. Now we also have the settlement of Halamish
which controls more than 80% of our land. The settlement was started in 1976
and when that happened, we began our struggle to stop the construction of the
settlement. The Israeli High Court issued an order to halt the construction for a
year, but it resumed after people from the Likud party went to the authorities
who decided that the settlers could return to building in the West Bank. When
the settlers came back, they put up a fence around the land they wanted but
each day they would move the fence a little bit more so that they could annex
additional land to expand their settlement. We now live under the shadow of
that settlement.

As you have lived under a brutal military occupation your entire life, can you
describe in more detail the atmosphere in the village as you grew up and how
this influenced how you raised your children?

Life under occupation is hard; everything is difficult for us. It is not normal to
have to live this way. Here in Nabi Saleh, we want to retain our human dignity, so
we feel that we have a duty to resist the occupier and not to accommodate it.
We believe that nobody can respect you if you accept the occupier.

When I was young and in school, we celebrated special days such as Land Day
and the International Peace Day. We always made special preparations to
remember the National Day of Palestine in our history. I was nine years old
when our parents and grandparents started demonstrating against the
settlement construction of Halamish on our land. I saw the tear gas. I heard
rubber bullets being shot. I saw a lot of soldiers in my village.

When I did my science studies at Bir Zeit University, I participated in the youth
movement there and then during the First Intifada Israeli authorities arrested
me and over the years, that has happened many times. The last time was in
2013. While I was in prison I was tortured, and it left me paralyzed for a while.

I married in 1994 and in 1996 our first child was born. When the Second
Intifada started, there was much activity. There were a lot of Paletinian political
prisoners and as a family we participated in demonstrations to remember them,
and we also joined the Nakba demonstrations. The Israeli army arrested me
during the Second Intifada in 2003/2004, they also raided my home many
times. We knew we needed to protect our homes from the settlers and by 2009
we felt we couldn’t keep silent so to protect the colonization of our land, we had
to take responsibility through action.

We are involved in resistance because we want our freedom and everything we
value and believe in. I have lost a lot of people from my family. My uncle, my
sister, my brother-in-law, and two of my nephews were killed by the occupier
and so were some of my friends - a lot of people. Actually, my sister died when
she went to see her twelve-year old son who was being held in an Israeli
military court. She was pushed by the soldiers and fell down the stairs and
broke her neck. At the time, I was in jail myself.

Because Nabi Saleh is an active village in resistance, we have high percentage
of detainees. Most of our relatives have been in jail. Many youths have been in
jail. Even the first woman who was arrested was from Nabi Saleh – she is my
cousin. It means that this culture resistance is part of our daily life. As a family,
we participated together in demonstrations to show that other Palestinian
families can follow our example. And I think that we succeeded and that we
have been a model to others.

Once when talking to my daughter about the Occupation, she asked me about
being fearful. I told her she should not be led by fear but to focus on bringing
change and for that she must be strong and brave. I believe that in this struggle
we must go beyond fear to win our humanity.



Can you say something about violent versus non-violent resistance?

I am part of the Paletinian people who say that we are part of the revolution; we
resist because we want our freedom. When I was part of the resistance during
the First Intifada, we used forms of non-violent resistance and it strengthened
my belief that there are a lot of ways to resist. At that time, for me it was not
about violent resistance or non-violent resistance. But then during the Second
Intifada I saw that when Palestinians used armed resistance and suicide bombs,
it played into the media and was not reported fairly. I decided that we must
chose non-violent resistance as the acceptable way.

We started talking to people to convince them to only use non-violent
resistance. Then Israel started building the Wall and it caused villagers, the
owners of the land, and farmers to start protest activities to protect their land.
We used the power of the people in front of the armed enemy who used
violence. We came with our moral power in front of military forces. I believe that
non-violent resistance is better and a more moral way to identify ourselves to
get back our land from the colonizer.

When we started our demonstrations in Nabi Saleh in 2009, we were the model
of non-violent resistance to convince our people that this is the model that
should be used because we can’t just talk.



What has it meant to you and the people of Nabi Saleh to have Israeli activists
join you during demonstrations in your village when you stand up to the Israeli
army?

In my life, I have suffered a lot. I’ve been jailed nine times. Twenty-one people
from my family have been killed. It’s the actions of the occupier that causes us
so much suffering, but we don’t have hatred in our hearts. We don’t have any
problem with people because of religion or personal beliefs. We are against
colonization, capitalism, and imperialism. All of these are our enemy and the
people who believe in those things.

It was strange when Israelis came to act with us because before that happened,
I didn’t have any relationship with them. The image that I had of Israelis were
the soldiers doing the shooting, the mad woman who pushed my sister in the
courthouse, the officer who tortured me and made me paralyzed, and the
settlers who stole my land.

It was strange for me to see Israelis come to our village, more than a few – a lot
– who had changed their beliefs and become more human. I think that when I
saw them and learned about what they believe in, it allowed us to come
together to resist together. They have become part of our struggle. We hope
that the Israeli peace activists will increase in number to help change what
most other Israelis believe. I think that Israelis are the victim because they
accept to be the occupier.



You have said that the Oslo Accords were a mistake and that you now speak of
one state.

I believe that the Oslo Accords have resulted in the second Nakba of the
Palestinian people. Agreeing to them made the Palestinians accept the
Occupation, living with the occupier and acknowledging Israel on 78% of
Palestine. Accepting the designation of Areas A, B and C has allowed the
Israelis to take more of our land from the river to the sea. The Israelis do not
want to give is anything because they don’t believe in peace and justice. The
two-state solution is no longer an option. I think that we must unite our struggle
to build one state over all historic Palestine where we can live together because
we do not hate anyone because of their religion. We must build one state
without colonization, and this will be a long struggle. We ask for civil rights for
each one.



Can you give us an update on what is happening with the Popular Struggle
Committees in the towns and villages?

Our committee participates in every place possible with non-violent resistance.
But I think that the Popular Struggle is in a weak period because there is
division between the Palestine Authority and the Palestinian people. We need a
unified leadership, and a strategy needs to be identified that we can get
internationals to support. All the Palestinians need to be part of our struggle –
every day - to bring the change we want.



In your opinion, what are the best ways for internationals to demonstrate their
solidarity with Palestinians?

Internationals can’t come here just for tourism. If people come to do Palestinian
cooking or dabka dancing, it’s part of learning about our culture and identity but
I think that much more support and solidarity is needed. We don’t need your
tears because we have a lot of tears from tear gas. And we don’t want the
people to see us victims because we are freedom fighters. Internationals must
support us in any way that is necessary. I think that we need more than
emotion, we need your actions on the ground. Come here to learn and then go
back to struggle to build an international movement to help us achieve peace.
Do your duty. You must take responsibility for what is happening here. You can
do a lot.

Bassem Tamimi is the father of Ahed Tamimi who at aged 16 slapped an Israeli
soldier outside their home. Her mother, Naiman, was arrested shortly after her
daughter for filming the incident. Both were imprisoned for eight months. The
family’s home received a demolition order in 2010. Bassem is part of the One
Democratic State Campaign.


Responses:
None


54648


Date: June 10, 2024 at 10:25:00
From: mitra, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Like he was at a Concert for Peace ??!?*$#!!




The middle of a war is not a time for non-violent
protest.

Hamas made sure of that at a CONCERT for PEACE !!!


Responses:
None


[ International ] [ Main Menu ]

Generated by: TalkRec 1.17
    Last Updated: 30-Aug-2013 14:32:46, 80837 Bytes
    Author: Brian Steele