NY Gaza Freedom March - Report Back Video in 5 Parts

NY Gaza Freedom March - Report Back

Video in 5 parts - Abdeen Jabarra’s intro, Fida Qishta on life in Gaza, Michael Ratner on his experiences in the West Bank and the architecture of apartheid, Jenna Bitar on her experiences as the youngest member of the march, and Ali Abunimah on Gaza, Cairo, and the growing international movement standing up to Israeli apartheid.

Like an Earthquake: CODEPINK reports on the Gaza Freedom March

This will probably be the last post of the Live Blog of the Gaza Freedom March since CODEPINK started indexing news and solidarity actions relating to the march.

Important links in the below post are the news pieces about the march, solidarity actions, and, most importantly, The Cairo Declaration.

January 7, 2010

Dear Friend,

The 1,362 people from the Gaza Freedom March are just returning home, full of stories about a wild week in Cairo, in the Egyptian border towns of Al Arish and Rafah, in Gaza for those who got inside, and in the West Bank and Erez crossing for those who went to Israel. And people like you, all around the world, people, held solidarity actions that focused world attention on the plight of the Palestinians in Gaza.

It was a rough week for many--battling Egyptian police on the streets, getting rebuffed by our own embassies, joining the hunger strike, debating the Egyptian offer of allowing only 100 people into Gaza. Through it all, however, we can be proud of our many accomplishments:

By focusing worldwide attention on the siege, we lifted the spirits of the isolated people of Gaza. "For us, a population of 1.6 million being imprisoned and starved, the gratitude we express to you, the Gaza freedom marchers, is immense. Thank you all from the depth of our hearts!" - Mohammed Omer, Gaza

We put the spotlight on the negative role Egypt is playing in maintaining the siege and we put pressure on the highest levels of the Egyptian government. "Your presence in Egypt was like an earthquake," said Suzanne, an Egyptian student. "You did more good politically by protesting in Egypt than you could have ever done in Gaza." Check out the hundreds of press hits on the march from dailies around the world!

We forced the Egyptian government to make a concession by letting 100 delegates into Gaza. That delegation took in tens of thousands of dollars in humanitarian aid, allowed Palestinians to see long-lost family members, recorded stories they will disseminate broadly, and put up a stunning mosaic memorial, created by muralist Kathleen Crocetti, in a central location in Gaza City in the name of the international community.
View the photos of the
Women's Contingent in action and the whole Gaza Freedom March and solidarity actions from photographers around the world!

We signed on to a lawsuit against the Egyptian government for building a wall to block off the tunnels that have become the commercial lifeline for the people in Gaza.

We reinvigorated our own determination to keep struggling to lift the siege! A new international network formed that can coordinate future work and, initiated by the South African delegation, the Gaza Freedom March committee and various members drafted the Cairo Declaration that outlines a program for moving forward. View and sign on to the Declaration here.

With gratitude,
Ann, Dana, Desiree, Emily, Farida, Gael, Gayle, Janet, Jodie, Kit, Kitty, Liz, Marina, Medea, Nancy, Paris, Rae, Suzanne, Tighe and Whitney


Ali Abunimah's Account of the Gaza Freedom March

Gaza Freedom March: detained at the US embassy
Ali Abunimah writing from Cairo, Live from Palestine, 7 January 2010

Medea Benjamin (left) and Kit Kettredge outside the US embassy.
Egyptian police in uniform and plain clothes surrounded US citizens attempting to visit the US embassy.

On the afternoon of 28 December 2009, I was with several persons who accompanied CODEPINK cofounder Jodie Evans to the US Embassy in Cairo to present a letter from Massachusetts Senator John Kerry in which he expressed "strong support" for citizens of his state who were traveling to Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and requesting they be given "every courtesy." In fact, we were turned away at the first checkpoint at a side street off Corniche al-Nil leading up to the embassy, and told to come back the next morning.

At 9:45am on 29 December, Evans, myself and two other Gaza Freedom March participants came back to the embassy. We explained that we wished to see Ambassdor Margaret Scobey to discuss why Egypt had prohibited more than 1,300 persons including hundreds of Americans, from going to Gaza to take part in a peaceful march with Palestinian civil society against the siege of Gaza.

My account of the "siege" at the US embassy during the Gaza Freedom March

وكـالــة مـعـا الاخباريـة: مسيرة غزة و اعلان القاهرة 2010

و لتكريس فكرة أن مؤسسات المجتمع المدني الدولية و حركات التضامن لم تعد تقبل بما يفرض عليها و على الشعب الفلسطيني من الأعلى و بالذات في قضايا تتعلق بالحد الأدنى من حقوق الانسان و الديمقراطية, و من خلال استلهام تجربة النضال الجنوب أفريقي و الحملة الدولية ضد نظام الأبارتهيد العنصري, أصدر المشاركون في فعاليات مسيرة غزة نحو الحرية و ثيقة تاريخية بكل المقاييس في 1.1.2010 أطلقوا عليها( أعلان القاهرة (End Israeli Apartheid Cairo Declaration:) التخلص من نظام الأبارتهيد الاسرائيلي) و الشروع في تشكيل جبهة أممية على نمط ما كان يطلق علىه في جنوب أفريفيا الحركة الديمقراطية المتحدة UDM تعمل على تطبيق ما نص عليه الاعلان المذكور.

تميز الاعلان بوعي سياسي نضالي واضح في فهمه للقضية الفلسطينية و خلوه من الشعارات الطنانة و التحول بشكل واضح في اتجاه تطبيق و تفعيل نداء المقاطعة الفلسطيني الصادر عام 2005 و العمل على ايجاد أاليات نضالية لتطبيق الشرعية الدولية بدءا من التأكيد على حق عودة اللاجئين و لاشرعية نظام الأبارتهيد الممارس في فلسطين 1948 وبالتالي الدعوة للمساواة الكاملة بين سكان فلسطين التاريخية. الية التطبيق النضالية واضحة و من خلال التنسيق مع منظمات الكفاح السعبي و العمل المدني الفلسطيني المتعددة من نقابات و مؤسسات و جامعات...الخ. و قد ركز الاعلان أيضا على أهمية الشروع بتشكيل لجان من المواطنين في الدول المختلفة لتطبيق توصيات القاضي ريتشارد جولدستون لملاحقة الجنرالات و الوزراء الاسرائيليين كمجرمي حرب ووضعهم خلف القضبان.

الالية المقترحة هي التركيز على المقاطعة بأشكاها المتعددة و عدم الاستثمار من شركات لها علاقة بالاحتلال و الوصول لفرض عقوبات على دولة اسرائيل كدولة عنصرية مارقة على القانون.

Egyptians organizing upcoming Gaza-related events in Cairo today, tomorrow #GFM - Ali Abunimah

I received this information today about ongoing Gaza-related activities in Cairo and have been told I can publish it:

*Tonight at 7 pm screening of "Gaza on Air" by Samir Abdullah at al Markaz el Saqafa el cinemaeya at 37 Cherif Street, near Talat Harb Sq. Presented by Arab Lofty.

*Tomorrow at 9 am people will go in support of a legal action by Ibrahim Yousri at the Megles al Dawla (a high court refered to as the Council of State). Going to this is unlikely to be contencious, it is just in support of a legal action. Yousri has asked for some internationals and Palestinians to sign on to the lawsuit. This would involved giving your name and passport number, though he assures us it is a totally seperate system than the security system we have been dealing with. The court is near the Russian embassy, on Giza street, the same street as the French embassy. The court is between Tahrir Sq and the French embassy.

*At 11:00, the April 6th movement has called for a protest in support of the lawsuit and opposed to the wall between Gaza and Egypt to block the tunnels. It will be at Ramis St and 26 July St. It is beside Nasser station metro, at 2 min walk. Egyptians will be protesting and are asking us to be there.

Gush Shalom: Uri Anvery on Gaza Freedom March and Egyptian Wall of Shame

The Iron Wall

SOMETHING ODD, almost bizarre, is going on in Egypt these days.

About 1400 activists from all over the world gathered there on their way to the Gaza Strip. On the anniversary of the “Cast Lead” War, they intended to participate in a non-violent demonstration against the ongoing blockade, which makes the life of 1.5 million inhabitants of the Strip intolerable.

At the same time, protest demonstrations were to take place in many countries. In Tel-Aviv, too, a big protest was planned. The “monitoring committee” of the Arab citizens of Israel was to organize an event on the Gaza border.

When the international activists arrived in Egypt, a surprise awaited them. The Egyptian government forbade their trip to Gaza. Their buses were held up at the outskirts of Cairo and turned back. Individual protesters who succeeded in reaching the Sinai in regular buses were taken off them. The Egyptian security forces conducted a regular hunt for the activists.

The angry activists besieged their embassies in Cairo. On the street in front of the French embassy, a tent camp sprang up which was soon surrounded by the Egyptian police. American protesters gathered in front of their embassy and demanded to see the ambassador. Several protesters who are over 70 years old started a hunger strike. Everywhere, the protesters were held up by Egyptian elite units in full riot gear, while red water cannon trucks were lurking in the background. Protesters who tried to assemble in Cairo’s central Tahrir (liberation) Square were mishandled.

In the end, after a meeting with the wife of the president, a typical Egyptian solution was found: one hundred activists were allowed to reach Gaza. The rest remained in Cairo, bewildered and frustrated.

WHILE THE demonstrators were cooling their heels in the Egyptian capital and trying to find ways to vent their anger, Binyamin Netanyahu was received in the president’s palace in the heart of the city. His hosts went to great lengths to laud and celebrate his contribution to peace, especially the ‘freeze” of settlement activity in the West Bank, a phony gesture that does not include East Jerusalem.

Hosni Mubarak and Netanyahu have met in the past – but not in Cairo. The Egyptian president always insisted that the meetings take place in Sharm-al-Sheikh, as far from the Egyptian population centers as possible. The invitation to Cairo was, therefore, a significant token of increasingly close relations.

As a special gift for Netanyahu, Mubarak agreed to allow hundreds of Israelis to come to Egypt and pray at the grave of Rabbi Yaakov Abu-Hatzeira, who died and was buried in the Egyptian town of Damanhur 130 years ago, on his way from Morocco to the Holy Land.

There is something symbolic about this: the blocking of the pro-Palestinian protesters on their way to Gaza at the same time as the invitation of Israelis to Damanhur.

ONE MAY well wonder about the Egyptian participation in the blockade of the Gaza Strip.

The blockade started long before the Gaza War and has turned the Strip into what has been described as “the biggest prison on earth”. The blockade applies to everything except essential medicines and the most basic foodstuffs. US senator John Kerry, former candidate for the presidency, was shocked to hear that the blockade included pasta – the Israeli army in its wisdom has designated noodles as a luxury. The blockade is all-embracing – from building materials to school children’s copy books. Except for the most extreme humanitarian cases, nobody can pass from the Gaza Strip to Israel or the West Bank, nor the other way round.

But Israel controls only three sides of the Strip. The Northern and Eastern borders are blocked by the Israeli army, the Western border by the Israeli navy. The fourth border, the Southern one, is controlled by Egypt. Therefore, the entire blockade would be ineffective without Egyptian participation.

Ostensibly, this does not make sense. Egypt considers itself as the leader of the Arab world. It is the most populous Arab country, situated at the center of the Arab world. Fifty years ago the president of Egypt, Gamal Abd-al-Nasser, was the idol of all the Arabs, especially of the Palestinians. How can Egypt collaborate with the “Zionist enemy”, as Egyptians called Israel then, in bringing 1.5 million brother Arabs to their knees?

Until recently, the Egyptian government had been sticking to a solution that exemplifies the 6000-year old Egyptian political acumen. It participated in the blockade but closed its eyes to the hundreds of tunnels dug under the Egyptian-Gaza border, through which the daily supplies for the population were flowing (for exorbitant prices, and with high profits for Egyptian merchants), together with the stream of arms. People also passed through them – from Hamas activists to brides.

This is about to change. Egypt has started building an iron wall – literally - along the full length of the Gaza border, consisting of steel pillars thrust deep into the ground, in order to block all tunnels. That will finally choke the inhabitants.

When the most extreme Zionist, Vladimir Ze’ev Jabotinsky, wrote 80 years ago about erecting an “Iron Wall” against the Palestinians, he did not dream of Arabs doing just that.

WHY DO they do it?

There are several explanations. Cynics point out that the Egyptian government receives a huge American subsidy every year – almost two billion dollars – by courtesy of Israel. It started as a reward for the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty. The pro-Israel lobby in the US Congress can stop it any time.

Others believe that Mubarak is afraid of Hamas. The organization started out as the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, still the main opposition to his autocratic regime. The Cairo-Riyadh-Amman-Ramallah axis is poised against the Damascus-Gaza axis that is allied with the Tehran-Hizbullah axis. Many people believe that Mahmoud Abbas is interested in the tightening of the Gaza blockade in order to hurt Hamas.

Mubarak is angry with Hamas, which refuses to dance to his tune. Like his predecessors, he demands that the Palestinians obey his orders. President Abd-al-Nasser was angry with the PLO (an organization created by him to ensure Egyptian control of the Palestinians, but which escaped him when Yasser Arafat took over). President Anwar Sadat was angry with the PLO for rejecting the Camp David agreement, which promised Palestinians only “autonomy”. How dare the Palestinians, a small, oppressed people, refuse the ”advice” of Big Brother?

All these explanations make sense, yet the Egyptian government’s attitude is still astonishing. The Egyptian blockade of Gaza destroys the lives of 1.5 million human beings, men and women, old people and children, most of who are not Hamas activists. It is done publicly, before the eyes of hundreds of millions of Arabs, a billion and a quarter Muslims. In Egypt itself, too, millions of people are ashamed of the participation of their country in the starving of fellow Arabs.

It is a very dangerous policy. Why does Mubarak follow it?

THE REAL answer is, probably, that he has no choice.

Egypt is a very proud country. Anyone who has been in Egypt knows that even the poorest Egyptian is full of national pride and is easily insulted when his national dignity is hurt. That was shown again a few weeks ago, when Egypt lost a soccer match with Algeria and behaved as if it has lost a war.

“Consider that from the summit of these Pyramids, forty centuries look down upon you,” Napoleon told his soldiers on the eve of the battle for Cairo. Every Egyptian feels that 6000 - some say 8000 – years of history look upon him all the time.

This profound feeling clashes with reality at a time when Egypt’s situation is getting more and more miserable. Saudi Arabia has more influence, tiny Dubai has become an international financial center, Iran is becoming a far more important regional power. Contrary to Iran, where the Ayatollahs have called upon families to limit themselves to two children, the Egyptian birthrate is devouring everything, condemning the country to permanent poverty.

In the past, Egypt succeeded in balancing its internal weaknesses with external successes. The whole world considered Egypt as the leader of the Arab world, and treated it accordingly. No more.

Egypt is in a bad situation. Therefore, Mubarak has no choice but to follow the dictates of the US – which are, in fact, Israeli dictates. That is the real explanation for his participation in the blockade.

WHEN I spoke today at the demonstration in Tel-Aviv, after we had marched through the streets to protest against the blockade, I refrained from mentioning the Egyptian part in it.

I confess that I liked the people I met during my visits to Egypt very much. The “man in the street” is very welcoming. In their behavior towards each other there is an air of tranquility, an absence of aggression, a particular Egyptian sense of humor. Even the poorest keep their dignity in crowded and often miserable conditions. I have not heard them grumble. In all the thousands of years of their history, Egyptians have risen in revolt no more than three or four times.

This legendary patience has its negative side, too. When people are resigned to their lot, this may prevent economic, social and political progress.

It seems that the Egyptian people are ready to accept everything. From the Pharaohs of old right down to the present Pharaoh, their rulers have faced little opposition. But a day may come when national pride will overcome even this patience.

As an Israeli, I protest against the Israeli blockade. If I were an Egyptian, I would protest against the Egyptian blockade. As a citizen of this planet, I protest against both.