UNAC
STATEMENT ON ISRAEL/U.S. WAR ON GAZA’S NAKBA PROTESTS AT APARTHEID WALL
For
more than 70 years, Palestinians have endured the crimes of ethnic cleansing,
dispossession, disenfranchisement, destruction, and death at the hands of
apartheid Israel, with the unqualified backing of the United States, as well as
the tolerance of this ongoing trampling on humanity and justice by the
international community.
As
Israelis celebrate the May 14, 1948,
anniversary of the establishment of their state, Palestinians on May 15 mark
the Nakba (“Catastrophe”), the violent ethnic cleansing that forcibly expelled
more than 800,000 Palestinians from more than 500 towns and villages that were
destroyed or abandoned and annexed. The 1967 occupation drove out
thousands more. Today, six million refugees live in the Occupied Territories of
Gaza, the West Bank, Jerusalem and the Golan Heights, in squalid refugee camps
in adjoining countries, and in the diaspora dispersed worldwide. Those who
remain in Israel live as second-class citizens.
Palestinians
in Gaza have especially suffered. They struggle to live in the world’s
largest open-air prison without sufficient access to the basics of survival –
food, water, health care, electricity, work, and the freedom to come and
go. Israel has maintained this ongoing Nakba in the expectation that new
generations of Palestinians would despair and abandon the dream of return. It
is clear that Palestinians will not capitulate.
Despite
the crippling siege, since March 30 Gazans have courageously initiated the
Great March of Return. Thousands of Palestinians have held unarmed protests at
Israel’s apartheid wall to demand the right to return to their homes as
guaranteed by international and human rights laws and conventions. The
Israelis have systematically met the protesters with live sniper fire (using
weapons supplied by the U.S.), rubber bullets, and gas. As of Monday
morning, May 14, at least 90 Palestinians have been killed and close to 10,500,
including children, have been wounded. The slain Palestinians were between the
ages of 14-42 and the majority were young men in their 20’s. The snipers had no
hesitation in targeting journalists and Red Cross rescuers. This is a
massacre, and it is anticipated that many more
will die and suffer terrible injuries in the demonstrations culminating this
week.
The
Trump administration has given the green light to the right-wing Zionist
government of Israel by declaring that Jerusalem is the capital of Israel and by moving the U.S. embassy there. This
has led to increased repression for the Palestinian people, ranging from more
arrests of children like Ahed Tamimi to the massacres
of unarmed protesters in Gaza. But this joint U.S./Israeli aggression
does not end with Palestine: In recent days, we have witnessed major Israeli
missile attacks on Syria following U.S. missile attacks. These are
clearly also aimed at Hezbollah, which recently won an election in Lebanon, and
they are aimed at Iran. The U.S. withdrawal from the Iran nuclear agreement,
formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, must be seen in this
light. These moves threaten to throw the entire Middle East into one of
the most destructive wars the world has witnessed.
Palestinians
and their supporters have organized demonstrations nationally and
internationally. It is essential that we all do what we can to
demonstrate solidarity during this period of escalating attacks on the
Palestinian people.
These
are the actions we call for:
· Join
demonstrations called by Palestinians and stand in solidarity.
· Support
BDS, the Right to Resist, and the Right of Return, along with compensation.
· U.S.
dismantle the Embassy in Jerusalem.
· End all
U.S. aid to Israel – military, economic, political.
·
U.S. Hands Off
Syria, Iran and Yemen.
5/14/18