More than 400 activists took part in a tree planting event in the Palestinian village of Burin near Nablus in the West Bank earlier this month to demonstrate solidarity with local Palestinians and human rights activists. The event was organized by Rabbis for Human Rights and funded by a New Israel Fund emergency grant.
Only two weeks earlier, settlers from the nearby illegal outpost of Givat Ronen attacked Rabbis for Human Rights activists in Burin. Unfortunately, this violence is nothing new. For years, Jewish settlers have targeted this area, frequently rampaging through the hillsides, burning and uprooting the olive trees of local farmers.
Rabbis for Human Rights Executive Director Avi Dabush said, “This picture of hundreds of Israelis, including those injured by Jewish terrorists returning to the scene of the attack two weeks after it occurred, represents a significant victory. We declared that we will not give in to violence and that we will return to the field to stand in solidarity with Palestinian olive farmers against those who regularly attack them. And that is what we did.”
Other organizations who took part in the rally included Mothers Against Violence, Zazim — Community Action, Combatants for Peace, Mehazkim – Fighting for a Progressive Israel, MachsomWatch, Omdim Beyachad (Standing Together), Breaking the Silence, Peace Now, and Torat Tzedek – Torah of Justice.
Zazim said, “Our community has rallied for the cause and we arrive here this morning to demonstrate that our answer to violence and hatred is partnership. They uproot and we plant until the occupation ends.”
Statement of the Humanitarian Country Team on the imminent eviction of the Salem Family in Sheikh Jarrah in East Jerusalem
Joint Statement
United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs occupied Palestinian territory
Jerusalem, 18 February 2022
Today, representatives of the Humanitarian Country Team in Palestine, comprising United Nations Agencies and international and Palestinian NGOs, met with the Salem family in the occupied East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah. The family of 12, including six children and the elderly mother, Fatima Salem – all of whom are Palestine refugees – faces eviction during March from their family home of 70 years.
The announcement of the scheduled eviction has recently raised tension in the Jerusalem neighbourhood, with clashes involving Palestinian residents, Israeli settlers, and Israeli Security Forces resulting in property damage, multiple injuries and arrests, including the arrest of eight children since Friday 11 February. The Salem family itself and their neighbours have been subject to attacks with pepper spray and stones resulting in injury and property damage.
The Salem family is one of 218 Palestinian families, comprising 970 individuals, including 424 children, living in East Jerusalem, mainly in the neighbourhoods of Sheikh Jarrah and Silwan, that are currently facing the threat of forced eviction by the Israeli authorities.
The United Nations has repeatedly called for a halt to forced evictions and demolitions in the occupied West Bank, including East Jerusalem: under international humanitarian law, forcible transfers of protected persons by the occupying power are forbidden regardless of their motive.
Active steps must be taken to de-escalate the situation before another crisis erupts; we urge all political and community leaders to refrain from provocative action and rhetoric. Israeli authorities must take steps to ensure the protection of civilians, including Palestine refugees.
For more information, please contact Ofir Feuerstein at feuerstein@un.org
Buchvorstellung und Gespräch mit Barbara Yelin, Barbara Beuys, Paul-Moritz Rabe, Judith Heitkamp, Monika Franz, Rupert Grübl, Leon Bazuin (u.a.)
23.02.2022 | 19.00 Uhr
Rotterdam, im Herbst 1944: Der neunzehnjährige Jan Bazuin erlebt den Hungerwinter. Täglich muss Brennmaterial und Essbares ‚organisiert‘ werden. Sein Vater droht, ihn von den Deutschen abholen zu lassen, wenn er nicht auszieht. Einziger Lichtblick ist die Freundin Annie. Doch Anfang Januar 1945 ändert sich alles. Jan wird zur Zwangsarbeit nach Bayern verschleppt…
Das kürzlich entdeckte Tagebuch des jungen Niederländers Jan Bazuin überrascht durch seinen ungekünstelten, jugendlichen und selbst in größter Not optimistisch klingenden Ton. Die Aufzeichnungen enden am 23. April 1945, kurz nach Jans riskanter Flucht aus dem Lager in München-Neuaubing, also genau von dort, wo das NS-Dokumentationszentrum derzeit die Einrichtung eines Erinnerungsortes plant.
Der Text ist für die Forschung eine wichtige Quelle. Vor allem aber führt er ganz voraussetzungslos und intensiv vor Augen, wie ein Jugendlicher Deportation und Arbeitslager in den letzten Monaten des Zweiten Weltkriegs erlebte. Die Zeichnerin Barbara Yelin hat die knappen, schnörkellosen Notizen illustriert und macht so das Geschehen auf unheimliche Weise präsent. Paul-Moritz Rabe hat das Tagebuch editiert und mit einem Nachwort versehen.
Die Tötung von Anführern ist kein wirksames Mittel der Terrorbekämpfung. Der IS, al-Qaida und ihre Ableger nähren sich aus den Krisen weltweit.
Ein Beitrag von Mohammad Abu Rumman, Politikwissenschaftler und Direktor des Politics and Society Institute in Amman. Von 2018 bis 2019 war er Minister für Kultur und Jugend in Jordanien
Hier der Link zu IPG (IPG-Journal Newsletter / FES)
Zoom-Podiumsdiskussion mit der Filmemacherin Ofra Bloch | (Mit Entgelt)
Jerusalem-born trauma expert Ofra Bloch forces herself to confront her personal demons in a journey that takes her to Germany, Israel and Palestine. Set against the current wave of fascism and anti-Semitism sweeping the globe, AFTERWARD delves into the secret wounds carried by victims as well as victimizers, through testimonies ranging from the horrifying to the hopeful. Seen as a victim in Germany and a perpetrator in Palestine, Bloch faces those she was raised to hate as she searches to understand the identity-making narratives of the Holocaust and the Nakba, violent and non-violent resistance, and the possibility of reconciliation. The film points towards a future – an “afterward” – that attempts to live with the truths of history in order to make sense of the present.
Bassam Aramin lives in Jericho in the West Bank. At the age of 17, he was incarcerated and spent 7 years in an Israeli jail. He is the former Palestinian Co-director of the Parents Circle – Families Forum.
Thomas Casagrande, Dr. phil., teacher and political scientist. He published books on the history of “Volksdeutsche” in the Waffen-SS.
Pamela Cohn is a film curator, nonfiction story consultant, and writer. Learn more about Pamela: >> http://www.pamelacohn.com/
Aleksandar Dimitrijevic, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst. He works as a lecturer at the International Psychoanalytic University – IPU, Berlin and in private practice. >> http://berlinpsychoanalyst.com/about/