Dear Jessie & Matthew


Dear Jessie & Matthew, 
I am writing as a follow up to our phone call last week.   
We appreciate the Congressman's recent comments about his personal pain as a result of racism. Similarly, Palestinan children are a "walking threat for no reason other than" their ethnicity. 
However, we find the Congressman inconsistent when he says that "change happens in a democracy set against the alternative that only might makes right" in reference to the militarisation of the US police yet does not acknowledge the military detention, interrogation, & abuse of children in violation of international humanitarian law as addressed in HR 2407.
Please watch this short documentary video & invite our representative to do the same. It profiles the stories of sons and families who have lived through abuse at the hands of the IDF."Detaining Dreams": https://youtu.be/7rw69pLILqw
And, please remind the Congressman that child detention and incarceration has increased by 6% in Israel since the outset of COVID. 
I had requested that you send me the CRS report you referenced so when you didn't send, I found it and have attached links below for your convenience.:


Frankly, we find it difficult to reconcile the contradiction in our Representative who on the one hand speaks openly about how, "in America, we have committed ourselves to the noble idea that ordinary people can govern themselves - and do so freely", yet, stands by silently as our taxpayer dollars fund an occupation of an entire people.
You know we are just a handful of the many in NYS 19 who feel committed to addressing this injustice - we see it as one SMALL step the Congressman can take to right a wrong. We voted for you because we heard him say he stood for justice - we expect him to stand with us now.
When you have had a chance to review the Congressional Report and the video, we request a follow up meeting to get the final answer from Congressman Delgado.

Thank you,

Cheryl Qamar
Naomi Allen
Bob Gelbach
Felice Gelman
Tarak Kauff
Fred Nagel

The Banality of Racism and the Tearing Down of Statues

The Banality of Racism and the Tearing Down of Statues

As long as those stone or bronze testaments to a "heritage" or a "way of life" remain fixed in their places, they will continue to permeate our sense of what is just and acceptable in human relations.

In a spurt of public sphere transformations ignited by Black Lives Matter protests in the U.S. and worldwide, hoary statues and monuments symbolizing racist and colonial histories are being rapidly toppled, defaced, and removed. Among them are those honoring Confederate leaders (Richmond, Norfolk, Alexandria, and Portsmouth in Virginia; Montgomery, Birmingham, and Mobile in Alabama; Louisville, Kentucky; Jacksonville, Florida; Houston, Texas; Camden, New Jersey), the genocidal adventurer Christopher Columbus (St. Paul, Minnesota; Boston, Massachusetts), and slave traders, colonialists, and propounders of racist philosophy and policies (Bristol, London, Oxford, Edinburgh in the UK; Antwerp, Belgium; Hamilton, New Zealand). 

In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio has long supported the retention of the controversial Columbus statue towering over the city’s eponymous Circle, even while vowing to remove symbols of “hate.” The murder of George Floyd and the ensuing swell of protests globally and locally to demolish both the symbols and the practices of structural racism have not changed his stance. Meanwhile, at a press conference last Thursday, New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo made a convoluted argument for keeping statues honoring Columbus intact. As reported by CNN:
"The Christopher Columbus statue represents in some ways the Italian American legacy in the country, and the Italian American contribution in this country," he said. "I understand the feelings about Christopher Columbus and some of his acts which nobody would support, but the statue has come to represent and signify appreciation for the Italian American contribution to New York so for that reason I support it."
In other words, the guy who set in motion the liquidation of tens of millions of indigenous people has come to represent “the Italian American contribution” to the U.S., thus making it anti-Italian to absent him from daily public view. Perhaps it would be more respectful of Italians to sever the association?  

Columbus is a durable favorite in the world of identity politics. In a 1992 essay, “Deconstructing the Columbus Myth: Was the ‘Great Discoverer’ Italian or Spanish, Nazi or Jew?” the ethnic studies scholar Ward Churchill explored the macabre absurdity of multiple ethnic groups claiming him as one of their own. His conclusion: Columbus stands not as any one of these but rather as “the penultimate European of his age, the emblematic personality of all that Europe was, had been, and would become in the course of its subsequent expansion across the face of the earth.” Churchill finds an apt analogy for Columbus in the fictional character Hannibal Lecter, the urbane, refined cannibal who dines on the livers of those he kills by candlelight, the organs paired with a good wine and tasteful music. Churchill observes, “Ultimately, so long as Lecter is able to retain his mask of omnipotent gentility, he can never be stopped. The socio-cultural equivalent of Hannibal Lecter is the core of an expansionist European ‘civilization,’ which has reached out to engulf the planet.” 

Today’s dethroners of the august slaughterers we hold so dear have by their actions already renovated public discourse; numerous pundits have remarked upon the rapidity of this shift. As Churchill reckons, “If we force ourselves to see things clearly, we can understand. If we can understand, we can apprehend. If we can apprehend, perhaps we can stop the psychopath before he kills again.” 
What purpose did these stolid artifacts that are now being dismantled serve? The French theorist of propaganda Jacques Ellul might say they were crucial machinery in the “propaganda of integration,” his designation for modes of enculturation which are so all-encompassing as to be imperceptible. When most people speak of propaganda, they refer to what he calls the “propaganda of agitation”—which would include, for example, the Pope’s exhortation to die in a Crusade in the service of Christ, the Nazi spectacle captured in the film Triumph of the Will, or George W. Bush’s “You’re either with us or with the terrorists”—all designed to arouse passions that lead to immediate action. 

The propaganda of integration, conversely, is so quiet and pervasive it goes unnoticed. It instills an enthusiasm for conformity in individuals through the repetition of customs, rituals, and habits; it stabilizes society by planting ideologies so subtly and permanently in our souls that it effects a “persuasion from within.” In the United States, for example, television commercials, “historical” information installed in national park welcome centers, the presence of God on our coins, and the singing of “The Star-Spangled Banner” at sporting events all scramble symbols of faith, consumerism, liberty, nature, community, wholesome fun, and patriotism into one deliciously indivisible mix.  What some would call “propaganda” or even “indoctrination,” others would simply call the everyday facts of our lives.

Theorists of propaganda have long sought to explain the difference between “propaganda” and “education”—with little success, as education is an essential element of socialization, inducting people into the belief system of their particular society.  Education and propaganda both find their venues in a wide swath of sites and institutions both inside and outside the walls of formal schooling. Statues of public figures deemed venerable, with plaques explaining their inestimable “contributions” to the lives of those who succeeded them, are among these venues. They dot the landscape and come to seem like integral, inevitable parts of that landscape. As a consequence, they come to seem like integral, inevitable parts of social life and human experience.

The British social psychologist Michael Billig used the term “banal nationalism” to describe the cumulative cognitive effect of those items that regularly signal what is normal and indubitable about everyday life. As with Ellul’s “propaganda of integration,” they are so omnipresent and thus so unremarkable as to be invisible. For Billig, the national flag is most potent in its “unwaved” state—that is, when it sits, passive and unsaluted but always in eyesight, in front of schools, the post office, and on people’s lawns. It is but one of the “reminders of nationhood [that] serve to turn background space into homeland space.” Others can be found in cultural artifacts such as Gone With the Wind, mall parking spots reserved for veterans only, and a “World Series” that does not extend beyond national borders. 

Similarly, as long as those stone or bronze testaments to a “heritage” or a “way of life” remain fixed in their places, they will continue to permeate our sense of what is just and acceptable in human relations. Those who despoil them lay bare the insidious banality of racism. Like football players taking the knee, they are disrupting civilization as we know it. This is an essential public service.

Harriet Malinowitz is Lecturer in Writing at Ithaca College and a member of Jewish Voice for Peace.

I am white. I am American.

I am white. I am American. I have lived in a white American community for almost 80 years. I am Jewish.  Many of my Jewish relatives live in Israel.  They have lived in an Israeli Jewish community their whole lives.  We have grown up in two societies that have been ‘wonderful’  for us -as white in the US and as Jewish in Israel.   BUT - This historic moment has brought both of us to a fuller awareness of our own conditioning to the systemic oppression structured into each of our societies.  On the streets of NYC, in Rabin Square in Tel Aviv, voices black and white, Jewish and Arab, are crying out. “No Justice!  No Peace!”   Parallels in our two societies are being raised. “George Floyd” and “Ilya Halak!” “We can’t breathe!”  I am humbled to see our minds and hearts opening, our societies on the verge of historic change. As a Senior, still ‘social distancing,’ still ‘sequestering at home,’ what can I do? There are films I can recommend about our police systems: “Arrested for Being Black” (13 min;) and “Detaining Dreams” (21 min). Zoom meetings that speak to my society and to Israeli society:  A panel “Children in Detention: An Intro to the No Way to treat a Child Campaign” featuring Kwame Holmes  PhD, Scholar in Residence, Human Rights Program, Bard college and Shaina Low, US Advocacy Officer, Defense for Children International in Palestine.  Arising out of the mutual segregation, suffering and suffocation in our societies, breaking through the occupation of our minds, we can participate in this moment of awakening, and must work together to combat racism.  .


Jane Toby

Justice for Iyad, Justice for George

https://midhudsonnews.com/2020/06/06/letter-to-the-editor-justice-for-iyad-justice-for-george/

One week ago Israelis and Palestinians took to the streets to demand justice for Iyad al-Hallaq, a Palestinian man with autism who was killed at point-blank range by police officers in Jerusalem’s Old City. The police later claimed he was holding a weapon: it was his lunch in a paper bag. Protestors’ signs read “Justice for Iyad, Justice for George,” a reference to the unarmed Black man killed last week in Minneapolis. Solidarity of Black leaders—Malcolm X, Huey B. Newton, Angela Davis, June Jordan, and now Black Lives Matter—standing against the occupation of the Palestinian people and for their liberation is almost as old as Israel itself. Why? Because Black Americans grasp that their support empowers their cause, not diminishes it. Similarly, Palestinians have always seen parallels between their oppression and racism in America.

Now, thanks to Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN), we have the opportunity to send Israel a message. H.R. 2407, the “No Way to Treat a Child Act,” would prohibit any of our $3.8 billion in foreign aid to Israel from continuing their practice of military detention and abuse of children. Supporters of this bill, including 26 co-sponsors, believe we must take concrete steps to hold Israeli police accountable for their violations of Palestinian children’s rights. If you agree and live in Congressional District 19, please sign this open letter to Rep. Delgado:


Lisa Mullenneaux

Email to Rep. Delgado

Hello, Matthew. We want to thank you for your time and look forward to our Congressman's response. SO, just to recap our key points:

1. We are asking Representative Delgado to co-sponsor HR. 2407, the “No Way to Treat a Child Act” introduced by Representative Betty McCollum.

2. The bill in question would prohibit the use of foreign assistance funds to support the military detention, interrogation, abuse or ill treatment of children in violation of international law. The bill would apply broadly to all recipients of U.S. military aid or assistance. The bill also prohibits such funds from being used to support certain practices against children, including torture, sensory deprivation, solitary confinement, and arbitrary detention.

3. The bill would also authorize the Department of State to provide funding to NGOs to monitor and assess incidents of Palestinian children being subjected to military detention and would provide treatment and rehabilitation to Palestinians under 21 who were subject to military detention as children.

4. Although the law would apply universally, Israel deserves special mention as the largest recipient of US military aid and as a specially favored ally with the continued and well-documented abuse of children in the Palestinian territories and Gaza.

5. Americans and, increasingly, American Jews, do not support the level of US military aid to Israel and are not in favor of our government’s unquestioning support of Israel’s extremely right wing government.

6. Any politician who describes him or herself as a progressive must support a progressive foreign policy.  This means a foreign policy centered in human rights and diplomacy rather than military intervention and weapons sales.  Co-sponsoring HR 2407 is one small step in creating the change we need to see in our foreign policy. In addition, UNICEF has called for the immediate release of all Palestinian Children detained in Israeli prisons & detention centers due to the heightened risk of COVID-19.

7. Representative Delgado’s revered predecessor Maurice Hinchey stands as an excellent example of a progressive politician unafraid to stand up for the human rights of Palestinians and others.  He was re-elected repeatedly despite strong opposition from the Israel lobby. Our taxpayer dollars should not be used to abuse children and no progressive politician should be afraid to say so. While we were disappointed that our meeting with Representative Delgado was cancelled,  we trust that you will convey our message. While we would suggest that this is not so much a complicated decision as it is a sensitive one, we want you and the Congressman to know that we are here to support him should he take this action and can mobilize many in the district to, in effect, "get his back" should he decide to take this principled, progressive stance.

We respectfully request a response from the Representative by June 2 so we can report to our constituencies who are awaiting his decision. Thank you,

H.R. 2407 Committee