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Call out to the Croatian diaspora: Most beautiful in folk costume being selected – Croatia Week

Posted By on January 30, 2022

(Photo: Udruga Steak)

ZAGREB, 30 January 2022 Registration is open for girls of Croatian origin from all over the world to compete for the title of the Most Beautiful Croatian in National Folk Costume Outside of Croatia which will be held in July.

For the ninth year in a row, the competition, which is organised by theSteak Associationand is growing in popularity, will see girls of Croatian origin from the likes of Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Bolivia, Chile, Hungary, Paraguay, Germany, USA, Sweden, Switzerland, again compete for the title.

The pageant is aimed at connecting Croatians from all over the world, as well as preserving and promoting traditional Croatian culture.

The rules state that girls need to be between 18 and 32 years of age, of Croatian origin, and must wear the folk costume from the place where they or their ancestors originate from.

Kinga Deniz Dancze (Dane) from Hungary (Photo credit: Udruga Steak)

This years event, which will be held again in Tomislavgrad, Bosnia and Herzegovina, will take place from 4-9 July 2022.

Girls who participated online in 2020 can re-apply for this years traditional selection. The number of participants is limited, so book your place on time.

Registration is now open and the Croatian Heritage Foundation and the Steak Association invite girls to now apply. For more details how to register, you can email:[emailprotected]

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Call out to the Croatian diaspora: Most beautiful in folk costume being selected - Croatia Week

IGNOU to start offering PG diploma in migration and diaspora from January 2022 session via ODL mode – The Indian Express

Posted By on January 30, 2022

The School of Interdisciplinary and Trans-disciplinary Studies, IGNOU, has launched a Post Graduate Diploma in Migration and Diaspora (PGDMIDI), which will be offered from January 2022 session.

The duration of the programme is one year and it will offer in open and distance learning (ODL) mode. The diploma course covers both theoretical and project works. The main objectives of the programme are to impart the skills by using social science knowledge and tools to understand/make sense of the current issues and concerns relating to the global movement of people, products and ideas and hence helping various stakeholders including those who are in policy to engage more meaningfully with the world unfolding before them.

The course fee is Rs 6100 and the registration fee is Rs 200. The interested candidates can register for the programme atignouadmission.samarth.edu.in. Candidates with a bachelors degree in any field of study from a recognised university are eligible to apply.

The programme is open for professionals working in foreign trade, UN organisations, embassies and external ministries, migrant and diaspora organizations etc. the programme helps in providing an informed understanding of migration processes, the role of diasporas in development, development-migration nexus, information for policies, planning and researches, various regulations related to international migration, best practices in migration and diaspora engagement, human rights issues of migrant communities etc.

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IGNOU to start offering PG diploma in migration and diaspora from January 2022 session via ODL mode - The Indian Express

Will There Be an Armenian Diaspora in 100 Years’ Time? – The Armenian Mirror-Spectator

Posted By on January 30, 2022

Victims of Their Own Success

Interestingly the diasporas that assimilate and disappear are the ones that have the greatest success and face the least amount of persecution (excluding pogroms and genocide), such as the Armenian diaspora in India.

They are the victims of their own success, said Derluguian.

Today the US, Russia and France constitute the main parts of the diaspora. In all three, Armenians are not persecuted nor live in ghettos.

Ask yourself, what are the chances of your kids marrying an Armenian? And then their kids? And if someone is only one quarter Armenian [ethnically] or less even, then what keeps them attached to their Armenian part? asked Derluguian.

Multi-Ethnic Armenians

However, the prospects are not all negative. Preserving ones ethnic roots in the 21stcentury has become decidedly easier with civilized nations now accepting of and open to multiculturalism.

Over the last 20 or so years it has even become cool to have a second identity [ethnicity], said Derluguian.

Those with only partial Armenian heritage are often just as, if not more, enthused about their heritage as full blown Armenians living abroad or in Armenia. Indeed, those that marry into an Armenian household tend to adopt themselves into the new culture.

One of the things that surprised me most when I first visited the Armenian community in the US, was how active American, Mexican etc. women that married Armenian men were in the Armenian community including the Armenian Church, said Derluguian.

Indeed, these diaspora institutions (the church, schools etc.) have been and continue to be the backbone of the Armenian communities abroad and their ongoing existence is crucial to preserving the diaspora.

The Pleasure Principle

Being an Armenian in the diaspora cant be too difficult, said Derluguian.

This alludes to the pleasure principle which dictates that people seek maximum pleasure and minimum pain. In the case of the Armenian diaspora, this includes emotional pain attached to the negative situations associated with Armenia.

Armenia and being an Armenian has to be an attractive prospect [either economically or culturally]. Armenia needs to generate cultural products, said Derluguian, adding, everyone knows/knew the Sabre Dance [by Aram Khachaturian]. This made Armenians feel proud to be associated with that.

As such much depends on the success of the Armenian state which in turn heavily depends on the level of involvement from the diaspora. The latter is arguably the Armenian states greatest economic asset and potential and is so far heavily underutilised for a variety of reasons.

It must be a mutually reinforcing ascendant relationship. Without a successful national state diaspora could dissipate as soon as in another generation or two, yet the Republic of Armenia is unlikely to succeed without the diaspora either, said Derluguian.

Connection Is Vital

Of the three fundamentals peasantry, segregation (ghettos) and an independent homeland that kept the Armenian identity alive over several thousand years, only one truly exists today.

In order for the Armenian diaspora to have longevity, its members need to have strong links with the Armenian diasporan organizations and institutions.

Beyond, and indeed perhaps instead of that, even a small level of attachment to the Republic of Armenia will strongly foster the Armenian identity into the next generation/s regardless of how multi-ethnic an individual might be. Things such as an Armenian passport or a home in Armenia will almost certainly solidify a person and their familys connection to their Armenian roots.

The realities of the 21stcentury with its technological and social advances make preserving the Armenian diaspora easy and hard in equal measure.

Unlike in times gone by, Armenians are no longer forced together to form a diaspora. It is now a choice. Equally unlike in times gone by, Armenians are no longer facing persecution and active pressures to assimilate. Therefore, it is a free choice and one that is the diasporas to make.

(Avo Piroyan is a London-based contributor.)

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Will There Be an Armenian Diaspora in 100 Years' Time? - The Armenian Mirror-Spectator

Kofi Osei Williams takes a seat on the next episode of Diaspora Link – GhanaWeb

Posted By on January 30, 2022

Diasporian News of Friday, 28 January 2022

Source: http://www.ghanaweb.com

play videoDiallo Sumbry hosts Kofi Osei Williams

In the next episode of Diaspora Link, Kofi Osei Williams, the CEO, and president of KOW Enterprises takes us through his background and provides details about life with his family in their hometown Brooklyn.

He also shares his views on how Diasporans can take their identity back, his first experience on the African continent, and how he ended up in Guinea with his brother right after high school.

He gives us an insight into why he started the Black Star travel group with the purpose of letting people see that Africa is a beautiful place.

Watch this episode on Sunday, January 30 at 5 p.m. GMT (9 a.m. PT/ 12 p.m. ET) exclusively on GhanaWeb TV.

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Kofi Osei Williams takes a seat on the next episode of Diaspora Link - GhanaWeb

13 Lunar New Year Traditions From Around the World – Fodor’s Travel

Posted By on January 30, 2022

Usher in the Year of the Tiger with these traditions hailing from Vietnam to Malaysia.

Chinese New Year is possibly considered the most significant and important festival on the Lunar Calendar. This year, the Year of the Tiger, officially begins on February 1 and so marks many traditions and cultural activities Asian families must adhere to in the lead-up to the big day. Lucky foods must be cooked and eaten, a visit to the temple to honor those no longer with us is mandatory, and cleaning the house is imperative to remove any evil spirits and bad energy for a fresh start to a new year.

With millions of Chinese migrants around the world, the Lunar New Year is not restricted to just the walls of China but has expanded all across Asia. Each country, region, and even sub-regional communities have their own traditions, showing the diversity of the Asian diaspora. My childhood involved a visit to the temple with my aunty and uncle, as well as going shopping with my mom for new clothes, but my friends in Vietnam, Singapore, and Malaysia have other family traditions I didnt even know existed, which I love hearing about. Here are a few of my favorite Lunar New Year traditions that you too can incorporate into your new year celebrations.

! Happy New Year!

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13 Lunar New Year Traditions From Around the World - Fodor's Travel

The Kashmir Files, movie on the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus, advertised at Times Square in New York on Republic Day by volunteers – OpIndia

Posted By on January 30, 2022

In a matter of pride to Hindus in India, Vivek Ranjan Agnihotris upcoming movie The Kashmir Files which is based on the true events of the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus in Jammu and Kashmir, was held high at the Times Square in New York for two continuous days citing the occasion of 73rd Republic Day.

The Global Kashmiri Pandit Diaspora that works for the Kashmiri Hindus all around the globe, had volunteered to celebrate the 73rd Republic Day in Manhattan by coordinating the display of banners of The Kashmiri Files at the worlds most expensive outdoor advertising site.

Director Vivek Ranjan Agnihotri, extremely honored, said that it was a matter of pride for his team as The Kashmir Files was advertised at the Times Square. He also shared the video on Twitter and thanked the Global Kashmiri Pandit Diaspora for their support.

The New York Co-ordinator of Global Kashmiri Pandit Diaspora, Mohan Wanchoo meanwhile stated that the movie represents true picture of what happened to Kashmiri Hindus 32 years ago. The Kashmiri Hindus were tortured, slaughtered, raped and murdered just because they were Hindus, he added.

The movie reportedly takes the audiences back to year 1989 when an unprecedented insurgency began in Kashmir and a vast majority of Hindus were forced to leave the valley. According to the reports, approximately 100,000 of an estimated Kashmiri Pandit population of 140,000 left the valley between February and March 1990. More of them left in the following years so that, by 2011, only around 3,000 families remained in the valley.

The Kashmir Files stars Mithun Chakraborty, Anupam Kher, Darshan Kumar, Pallavi Joshi, Chinmay Mandlekar, Puneet Issar among the prime cast. The Sardar Udham actor, Darshan Kumar also shared the video of banners at Times Square and thanked the Global Kashmiri Pandit Diaspora for their coordination. A dream come true moment seeing your poster on those amazing billboards, he tweeted.

However, this is not the first Indian movie that has grabbed the attention at Times Square, New York. Earlier, Salman Khans Tubelight, Akshay Kumars Atrangi Re were advertised on the electronic billboards in New York City. Also, in November 2021, music director Ilaiyaraaja had made it to the Times Square as a part of his collaboration with Spotify.

It is worth noting that a major commercial intersection The Times Square of New York is an entertainment centre and a tourist destination, also referred to the heart of the world. The hoardings at Times Square cant be ignored for it being the busiest pedestrian areas. Reports mention that approximately 330,000 people pass through Times Square daily.

The film The Kashmiri Files was scheduled for its theatrically worldwide on 26 January 2022, coinciding with Indias 73rd Republic Day, but was postponed due to Covid-19 pandemic, especially the spread of the Omicron variant.

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The Kashmir Files, movie on the exodus of Kashmiri Hindus, advertised at Times Square in New York on Republic Day by volunteers - OpIndia

Palestine Demands Transferring Sick Detainee to Civil …

Posted By on January 30, 2022

The Commission of Detainees and Ex-Detainees Affairs has accused Israel of conspiring to kill the sick Palestinian detainee, Nasser Abu Hamid, after refusing to transfer him to a civil hospital despite his critical health condition.

Abu Hamid, 49, was earlier transferred to a clinic in Ramla prison from Barzilai hospital.

The sick prisoner should be immediately transferred to a civil hospital and receive medical treatment, the commission said in a statement, warning against keeping him in the prisons clinic, where he has no access to advanced medical equipment required to monitor his condition.

The statement stressed that Abu Hamid still cannot use his limbs and is moving around in a wheelchair, adding that he needs permanent assistance to meet his daily needs.

It held the prison administration fully responsible for Abu Hamids situation and considered his transfer from Barzilai an official decision to execute him.

The Israeli occupation forces arrested Abu Hamid in 2002 and sentenced him to life in prison. His charges include resisting the occupation and participating in the establishment of the al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, the military wing of the Fatah movement in Jenin.

Abu Hamid, whose mothers house was demolished by Israeli forces several times, began to suffer in early January 2021 from severe chest pains and difficulty in breathing.

The prison doctors diagnosis, which was not based on any laboratory tests, showed that he was suffering from a normal infection and only needed to take antibiotics.

His health condition began to deteriorate in August when he experienced excruciating chest pain before discovering a lung tumor.

The tumor was removed along with 10cm of circumference before being transferred again to the prison, where his condition worsened.

Although the doctors stressed that chemotherapy for Abu Hamid is a dire necessity, the Israeli prison authorities deliberately procrastinated.

Abu Hamid, from Al-Amari camp, Ramallah, is one of five brothers who were sentenced to life by the Israeli authorities. Their sixth brother was killed by Israeli forces.

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Palestine Demands Transferring Sick Detainee to Civil ...

Civil Society and the Question of Palestine – NGO Action News – 27 January 2022 – occupied Palestinian territory – ReliefWeb

Posted By on January 30, 2022

THIS PAGE MAY CONTAIN LINKS TO THIRD-PARTY WEB SITES. THE LINKED SITES ARE NOT UNDER THE CONTROL OF THE UNITED NATIONS AND THE UNITED NATIONS IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONTENT OF ANY LINKED SITE OR ANY LINK CONTAINED IN A LINKED SITE. THE UNITED NATIONS PROVIDES THESE LINKS ONLY AS A CONVENIENCE, AND THE INCLUSION OF A LINK OR REFERENCE DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT OF THE LINKED SITE BY THE UNITED NATIONS. THIS NEWSLETTER IS A PROJECT OF THE DIVISION FOR PALESTINIAN RIGHTS, AND IS INTENDED TO PROVIDE INFORMATION ON NGO ACTIVITIES RELEVANT TO THE QUESTION OF PALESTINE . NGOS INTERESTED IN CONTRIBUTING INFORMATION ON THEIR ACTIVITIES SHOULD COMMUNICATE IT BY EMAIL.THE DIVISION RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE THE FINAL SELECTION WITH REGARD TO MATERIAL TO BE INCLUDED IN THIS NEWSLETTER. IT CANNOT TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OF THE INFORMATION.

Middle East

On 24 January, Adalah published an article informing that the Israeli Ministerial Committee for Legislation approved new versions of the Temporary Order on Citizenship and Entry into Israel which has been renewed 21 times over the last 18 years. According to Adalah, this law bans, among others measures, the unification of Palestinian families in Israel, resulting in the impossibility for Palestinians with Israeli citizenship married to Palestinians from the West Bank and the Gaza Strip to live together in Israel.

On 23 January, Gisha informed that dozens of Palestinian Christians living in Gaza and represented by Gisha finally received holiday permits to visit the holy sites and family outside of the Strip despite initially being denied by Israel. The successful outcome followed Gisha filing seven petitions in recent weeks against Israels Ministry of Defense and military authorities on behalf of Palestinian Christians living in Gaza.

On 21 January, 7amleh published an article calling for the Israeli spyware industry to be stopped immediately following recent reports of the use the Pegasus spyware program developed by the Israeli company NSO Group, by the Israeli police. 7amleh stressed that Israel has upheld a policy of censorship and surveillance against Palestinians over the years, targeting their privacy, including their personal data, and even suppressed their freedom of expression based on discriminatory legislation and using programs such as Pegasus. 7amleh argued that the Israeli company has not only developed Pegasus through testing on Palestinians, but has approached spying technologies as a lucrative business to expand abroad, undermining digital rights globally and called on UN experts to take urgent action to denounce these violations of human rights, including in the digital realm.

On 21 January, al-Haq issued a statement criticizing the decision by the European Commission to suspend its funding to the organization, despite failing to clarify and substantiate the factual and legal grounds of its suspension. Al-Haq informed that this decision has been taken in May 2021, following an investigation on potential breach of obligations or irregularities based on a report by the Israeli government that accuses the misuse of European donors funds by Palestinian civil society organizations to fund terroristic activities, adding that members of a Parliamentary Group submitted questions in the European Parliament in December 2021 about the funding suspension.

On 19 January, al-Haq, Addameer and Habitat International Coalition informed that they sent a joint submission on apartheid to the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (OPT), arguing that Israel has been entrenching and maintaining a discriminatory regime pertaining to apartheid over the Palestinian people, through its laws, policies and practices in the OPT since 1967.

North America

On 27 January, American for Peace Now (APN) will organize a webinar with Barak Ravid, an Israeli journalist, to discuss his new book, Trumps Peace. According to APN, Ravids latest book presents the previous U.S. Administrations effort to push the so-called Deal of the Century to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and considers the dynamics in Washington, Jerusalem and the broader Middle East that blocked the Israeli annexation plan of the West Bank but allowed for the normalization agreements.

On 26 January, the Jerusalem Fund organized a webinar entitled Environmental Prejudice in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Several representatives of Premiere Urgence Internationale participated in this discussion, including Anthony Dutemple, Head of Mission for in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Abbud Al-Shareef, West Bank Field Coordinator, and Hazem AlMadhoun, projects manager.

On 21 January, Americans for Peace Now (APN) issued a statement urging the U.S. Administration to demand determined Israeli action to confront West Bank settler violence following a new violent attack by settlers against a group of Israeli peace activists who were helping Palestinian villagers plant olive trees. APN further stated that the U.S. Administration must clarify its opposition to any Israeli policy or practice of displacing Palestinians in Area C or systematically denying them growth.

On 21 January, Foundation for Middle East Peace (FMEP) published the podcast Another Week in the Life of the Status Quo in Palestine as part of the series Occupied Thoughts. In this episode, FMEP discusses with Amjad Iraqi, an editor and writer at +972 Magazine, recent developments and the status quo that defines Israeli policies and rule over Palestinians.

On 19 January, J Street issued a statement expressing deep concerns at the forced eviction of a Palestinian family and the demolition of their home in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah on the previous day. J Street urged the U.S. Administration to take public action to promote peace and to stop the slide toward one state and permanent occupation. It also, called on the administration to investigate whether any U.S.-supplied defense equipment was used to help carry out this eviction and demolition in violation of U.S. law. On 20 January, the Churches for Middle East Peace also published a statement as well to oppose this latest demolition and urged the U.S. Administration to intervene to end the forced displacement of Palestinians from Sheikh Jarrah.

United Nations

On 24 January, United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) announced the renewal of a four-year agreement with UNICEF to extend support to Palestine refugee children, adolescents, and women in its fields of operations. UNICEF and UNRWA will primarily cooperate in the fields of child and social protection, education, health, advocacy and emergency preparedness. This cooperation is meant to enhance humanitarian coordination including in time of crisis, increasing capacity to analyse risks and increase preparedness to mitigate crises.

On 20 January, the UNRWA West Bank field office issued a statement condemning the demolition of the home and eviction of a Palestinian family in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem. UNRWA recalled that this case is not unique as many Palestine refugee families in different parts of Sheikh Jarrah alone (over 200 persons, many of whom are children) currently face an imminent threat of eviction by Israeli authorities.

This newsletter informs about recent and upcoming activities of Civil Society Organizations affiliated with the United Nations Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People. The Committee and the Division for Palestinian Rights of the UN Secretariat provide the information as is without warranty of any kind, and do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, or reliability of the information contained in the websites linked in the newsletter.

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Civil Society and the Question of Palestine - NGO Action News - 27 January 2022 - occupied Palestinian territory - ReliefWeb

Secular democracy and the future of Palestine – Mondoweiss

Posted By on January 30, 2022

The two-state solution continues to lose support in Palestine. More and more Palestinians are realizing that that the so-called peace process has only resulted in the the production of new Israeli facts on the ground, and new repressive practices that make a functioning Palestinian State impossible. No wonder then that a recent poll conducted by the Jerusalem Media and Communication Center indicates growing support for a one-state solution among the Palestinians at the expense of the two-state solution.

The irony, though, is that the facts on the ground do not seem to have convinced the Palestinian leadership, right or left! Instead of fighting to crush Zionism and its apartheid policies in Palestine, the leadership of the PLO tries to coexist with it. Their argument, which have been shared by some international scholars and activists over the years, is that the two-state solution is supported by an international consensus, notwithstanding the fact it is nothing more than an unjust solution dictated by Israel and the US that it ignores our basic rights as humans. In this article I argue that the only hope for us, Palestinians, lies in an anti-apartheid form of resistance that mobilizes the components of the Palestinian people and international civil society and that ultimately leads to the establishment of single state in Palestine.

It is an established fact that Israel is an apartheid state. The latest reports by Human Rights Watch and even Israels most respected human rights organization, BTselem, not to mention reports by so many Palestinian human rights organizations, have concluded that the regime between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea is an apartheid regime.

In fact, Apartheid Israel has reached its long dreamed of goal, namely Israeli sovereignty over all of historic Palestine, with non-viable enclaves providing a ghetto autonomy in which the remnants of the Palestinian people can slowly diminish. This has left Israel holding a highly undesirable package, however: a territory containing more than 4.5 million politicized Palestinians with no independent state of their own, fragmenting Israel as effectively as Israel itself has fragmented Palestinians national community. The problem remains as old as the conflict itself: what to do with the people, when all Israel wants is the land?

The two-state solution, as I have always been arguing, is a racist solution par excellence to this dilemma in that it is based on separating communities based on their ethno-religious identities, derived from the late 19th century ethno-nationalist ideology that led to the emergence of racist dogmas like Nazism, apartheid and Zionism.

It contradicts the democratic principles of 20th and 21st centuries, and as many intellectuals have argued, the conditions for an independent sovereign Palestinian State have been killed off anyway by the irreversible advance of the settlements in the West Bank. In sum, the racist two-state solution which does not provide Palestinians with their basic rights, including freedom, equality, and return of refugees to the towns and villages from which they were ethnically cleansed in 1948.

The question, then, is how to dismantle apartheid?

One problem to answering this question has been the absence of a clear-cut political program offered by oppressed Palestinians. The right-wing elite in Palestine has sidelined serious and critical Palestinian intellectuals and activists who argue for alternatives to the two-state paradigm they benefit from. The situation, however, has lately changed, especially after the demise of Edward Said, Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, Hisham Sharabati and some principled left-wing leaders who posed a serious challenge to the two-state dogma. The emergence of the BDS movement and the rise of popular resistance in the West Bank, 1948, and Gaza, together with the rise of principled voices calling for secular democracy in mandate Palestine, all have paved the way for an alternative solution, one that guarantees Palestinian fundamental rights. Hence, the BDS call of 2005 in which Palestinians have asked the international community to live up to its responsibilities and boycott apartheid Israel, divest from it and from companies benefiting from its violations of human rights in Palestine and impose sanctions against it until it complies with international law. Palestinian civil society has learned the South African lesson very well. BDS is, however, a rights-based movement that has refrained from endorsing a political solution.

But some activists have been working on an alternative, one that divorces itself from racist solutions, whether limited administrative autonomy, as proposed by the Camp David Accords and the Oslo Accords, or a two-state solution that provides the Palestinian people with token independence.

These activists demonstrate we are left with one option only: a secular democratic state for all its citizens regardless of religion, ethnicity, or race. It is obvious that there are challenges for the one-state solution like those challenges the South African anti-apartheid activists had to deal with after the collapse of that white supremacist regime. A secular democratic formula necessarily means the dismantling of the apartheid privileges that assign third-class citizenship to Palestinian citizens of Israel, and deprive the 1967 Palestinians of their fundamental human rights. A secular democratic formula will definitely guarantee the right of return of those Palestinian refugees who have been living in miserable refugee camps in Syria, Jordan and Lebanon. Interestingly, two-staters have always argued that the two-state solution is in line with international law notwithstanding the fact that it deals with the rights of only one third of the Palestinian people, and denies the internationally-sanctioned rights of Palestinian refugees and third-class citizens of apartheid Israel.

What a secular democratic State basically means for us is the elimination of the military occupation of the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and Jerusalem, unification of all Bantustans and ghettos in Palestine, the return of Palestinian refugees and their compensation, civil rights and freedom. As the late Palestinian intellectual giant Edward Said put it back in 1999: the notion of an Egyptian State for the Egyptians, a Jewish State for the Jews, simply flies in the face of reality. What we require is a rethinking of the present in terms of co-existence and porous borders. And that can only materialize in a secular democratic state between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean.

So where are the Palestinian voices in mainstream media?

Mondoweiss covers the full picture of the struggle for justice in Palestine. Read by tens of thousands of people each month, our truth-telling journalism is an essential counterweight to the propaganda that passes for news in mainstream and legacy media.

Our news and analysis is available to everyone which is why we need your support. Please contribute so that we can continue to raise the voices of those who advocate for the rights of Palestinians to live in dignity and peace.

Palestinians today are struggling for their lives as mainstream media turns away. Please support journalism that amplifies the urgent voices calling for freedom and justice in Palestine.

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Secular democracy and the future of Palestine - Mondoweiss

From the river to the sea, Palestinians are not free – +972 Magazine

Posted By on January 30, 2022

Britains Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi is either totally unaware of the oppressive system of rule under which Palestinians in Israel-Palestine are living, or he simply doesnt care. Last week, following a summit to tackle antisemitism on university campuses, Zahawi announced that any students in the U.K. heard chanting the pro-Palestinian slogan From the river to the sea Palestine will be free should be referred to the police. Reducing the chant to a Hamas rallying cry, the education secretary claimed that the slogan promot[es] the murder of Jewish people.

Zahawis comments represent the latest move to silence speech critical of Israel in the U.K. After proscribing Hamas as a terror organization in its entirety late last year in a move analysts see as counterproductive to Britains own foreign policy in the region the government is preparing to bring forward a bill to outlaw the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign in support of Palestinian rights. Meanwhile, government pressure on universities to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) definition of antisemitism continues to generate new threats to pro-Palestine speech on British campuses.

This is by no means the first time the slogan has come under fire, though it is perhaps the first case of direct government intervention on the matter. In late 2018, for example, CNN fired Marc Lamont Hill, an African-American author and activist, after comments he made at a UN plenary on the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, which included calling for a free Palestine from the river to the sea. The remarks drew immediate censure from pro-Israel groups, with the Anti-Defamation League asserting that those who chant this slogan are calling for an end to the State of Israel.

It is regrettable, though by now entirely unsurprising, that governments and major news corporations are far more concerned by slogans than by the oppressive reality on the ground in Israel-Palestine. At the same time as these debates are playing out abroad, Israel continues to consolidate its domination over the entire territory between the river and the sea, where Palestinians do not enjoy the same rights as Jews. In this context, Zahawis comments reveal far more about the U.K.s acquiescence to Israeli apartheid than they do about the motives of those calling for Palestinian liberation.

Ever since Palestinians began using the slogan as far back as the 1960s (long before Hamas was established), pro-Israel groups have denounced it as implying either the destruction of Israel, the destruction of the Jewish people, or both. Such assertions are often followed by a question to the effect of: Why arent they calling for freedom alongside Israel? Calling for a free Palestine from the river to the sea, it is argued, must therefore reflect a desire to throw the Jews into the sea.

Activists greet one of the Scandinavian Freedom Flotilla ships as it arrives on the Brighton coast, southern Britain, June 5, 2018. (Ahmad Al-Bazz/Activestills.org)

Such arguments are deeply steeped in the settler colonial logic of elimination at the heart of Zionism, which insists on seeing Jewish and Palestinian liberation as a zero-sum game. When this logic is reflected back onto Palestinians, it is considered inevitable that their freedom will necessarily come at the expense of Jewish safety. But why is it so hard to imagine a reality in which Palestinians and Jews are both free and equal between the river and the sea?

When we call for a free Palestine from the river to the sea, wrote Palestinian commentator Yousef Munayyer last year, it is precisely the existing system of domination that we seek to end. The system to which he refers is based, at its core, on Israels unceasing quest to minimize Palestinian presence on the land while expanding Jewish presence: bantustanization of Palestinian communities on the one hand, and Judaization of the territory on the other. Under such a system, Jewish lives are inherently worth more than Palestinian lives, and no Palestinian even those afforded the relative privilege of Israeli citizenship can ever truly be free.

It is enough to reflect back on events from this month alone to illustrate this simple reality. Israel began 2022 by escalating its campaign to displace and dispossess Bedouin citizens in the Negev/Naqab, many of whom are already refugees from the Nakba in 1948. A new Jewish National Fund afforestation project aimed to confiscate more land from the village of Sawa al-Atrash, representing the latest stage in the process of concentrating Bedouin in smaller and smaller areas to enable the expansion of new Jewish communities on their land.

Nearly half of the 200,000 Naqab Bedouin live in villages that the state refuses to recognize, meaning they are not provided with basic infrastructure and services like healthcare and education. A resident of the unrecognized village of Atir, which a few years ago faced the threat of a similar afforestation project, said at the time that it was as if a plant brought over from Europe has more rights than a non-Jew who was born and raised here. A few kilometers to the west, the unrecognized Bedouin village of al-Araqib was recently demolished for the 196th time.

Palestinian Bedouin in the Naqab/Negev, protest on Road 31 near the village of Sawa al-Atrash, against the an afforestation plan carried out by the Jewish National Fund (JNF), January 13, 2022. (Oren Ziv)

If recent weeks have shown that Bedouin communities in the Naqab are worthless in the eyes of the Israeli authorities, they have shown too that in the occupied West Bank, the lives of Palestinians dont matter at all. How else can you explain the killing by state forces of two elderly Palestinian men who posed no threat to anyone Haj Suleiman al-Hathaleen in his late 60s, and 80-year-old Omar Abdalmajeed Asad since 2022 began?

The utter neglect for human life on display in both cases still cant fail to astonish. In the former, the driver of a truck contracted to the Israeli police had entered the Palestinian village of Umm al-Khair in the South Hebron Hills to confiscate illegal cars; when Hathaleen, a veteran activist against Israels military rule, refused to step aside to allow the truck through, the driver drove straight into him, crushing and dragging him underneath the truck for several meters before driving off. Hathaleen was rushed to hospital, spent several days in a coma, and then died from his wounds.

In the latter case, Israeli soldiers arbitrarily stopped Asad while he was driving home after having played cards with friends in his village of Jiljilya, near Ramallah, on one of the coldest nights of the year. Soldiers reportedly pulled him out of his car, handcuffed, blindfolded, and gagged him, before they removed his jacket and threw him face-down onto the ground. Within a few minutes, Asad had died of a heart attack.

Meanwhile, in occupied East Jerusalem, Judaization continues apace. Dozens of families in Sheikh Jarrah remain under imminent threat of eviction at the hands of settler organizations with the backing of Israeli courts, in accordance with the Legal and Administrative Matters Law, which enables Jews to reclaim property other Jews owned in East Jerusalem prior to 1948; there is, of course, no equivalent law enabling Palestinian refugees to reclaim property in West Jerusalem or anywhere else across Israel which they owned before the Nakba.

The remains of the Salhiyeh family home that was demolished by Israeli authorities, in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, January 19, 2022. (Jamal Awad/Flash90)

The war against Palestinian presence in Sheikh Jarrah is being spearheaded by settler organizations, but it was the Jerusalem Municipality that ordered the expulsion earlier this month of the Salhiyeh family from their home in the neighborhood. At the municipalitys behest, special forces police cut electricity to the house in the dead of night before raiding the property, throwing stun grenades and violently arresting several of the family members and solidarity activists present, and then finally demolishing the home. All this under the cynical pretext of building a school, while empty plots just meters away that could serve that purpose are gifted to Jewish organizations.

This, then, is what Palestinians mean when they call for freedom from the river to the sea. Because in every part of the land between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, Palestinians are far less free than Jews. And this is a mere snapshot of the reality on the ground over the space of just a few weeks without even mentioning the unlivable conditions in the besieged Gaza Strip, the most restricted bantustan of all.

Calling for an end to this oppressive system is not antisemitic, and it is not a call for the murder of Jews. Rather, it is an invitation for Palestinians and Jews alike to imagine themselves as free and equal in this land, liberated from the oppressive power relations that prevail today. Rather than criminalizing the slogan, the British government should be working toward this aspirational future. And the first step is recognizing the present reality for what it is.

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From the river to the sea, Palestinians are not free - +972 Magazine


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