company:palestine

  • London protest demands Israel end ’unprecedented attacks’ on Palestine
    Mattha Busby - Sat 11 May 2019 18.12 BST
    March included unionists, MPs and activist Ahed Tamimi, jailed for slapping Israeli soldier
    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/may/11/israel-end-attacks-on-palestine-london-protest-demands

    Thousands have demonstrated in central London to demand an end to the “unprecedented attacks” against the Palestinian people at the hands of Israel.

    Marching from Portland Place to Whitehall, a diverse crowd chanted “Palestine will be free” and called for the right of Palestinian refugees to return to their homes, while holding banners calling on the UK to stop arming Israel, as part of a demonstration organised by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign and the Stop the War Coalition, among others.

    Protesters gathered next to the cenotaph to hear speeches from the Palestine Liberation Organisation’s (PLO) representative, union officials, MPs and campaigners.

    Ahed Tamimi, who became a symbol of resistance for the Palestinian people after she was jailed for slapping soldiers outside her home in the West Bank, took to the stage and said she refused to be defined as a victim, but instead a freedom fighter. (...)

    • Ahed Tamimi Leads March For Palestine
      May 13, 2019 12:49 AM
      https://imemc.org/article/ahed-tamimi-leads-march-for-palestine

      On May 11, 2019, commemorating the 71st anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba or “catastrophe”, hundreds of protesters marched through the streets of London in solidarity with the Palestinian people, Maan News reports.

      During 1948, the Palestinian Nakba, an estimated 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly expelled from their homes when the state of Israel was created on the ruins of hundreds of Palestinian villages and towns.

      The march, organized by the Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC), and led by Palestinian icon Ahed Tamimi, 17.

  • US court throws out lawsuit against academic boycott of Israel | The Electronic Intifada

    https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/us-court-throws-out-lawsuit-against-academic-boycott-israel

    A federal judge in Washington, DC, on Monday dismissed a lawsuit against the American Studies Association over its decision to support the boycott of Israeli academic institutions.

    The ruling is a significant blow to efforts by Israel lobby groups to use courts to harass, intimidate and silence supporters of Palestinian rights in US universities – a tactic known as lawfare.

    In April 2016, several current and former members of the ASA filed the lawsuit against the group over its 2013 resolution backing the academic boycott.

    In his 20-page ruling, US District Judge Rudolph Contreras wrote that the plaintiffs had no standing to file a lawsuit seeking damages on behalf of the ASA, and that their individual damage claims came nowhere near the $75,000 minimum required for them to seek relief in federal court.

    At most, the individual plaintiffs could seek damages of a few hundred dollars to cover membership dues they allege were misappropriated, but they would have to find some other venue to pursue their claims, the judge found.

    “The court basically said, in no uncertain words, that the plaintiffs suing ASA lied when they claimed to have ‘suffered significant economic and reputational damage.’” Radhika Sainath, senior attorney with the civil rights group Palestine Legal, told The Electronic Intifada. “But, as the court explained, ‘nowhere’ in the lawsuit could the plaintiffs explain what that damage was. It didn’t pass the smell test.”

  • Israel is using an online blacklist against pro-Palestinian activists. But nobody knows who compiled it

    Israeli border officials are using a shadowy online dossier as an intelligence source on thousands of students and academics

    The Forward and Josh Nathan-Kazis Aug 07, 2018

    https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/the-blacklist-used-by-israel-against-pro-palestinian-activists-1.6359001

    Last December, Andrew Kadi flew to Israel to visit his mother. As he walked through Ben Gurion International Airport, officials pulled him aside and said that the security services wanted to speak with him.
    Kadi is among the leaders of a major pro-Palestinian advocacy group, and border authorities always question him when he travels to Israel to see his family. This time, however, something was different.

    During his second of what ended up being three interrogations, spanning more than eight hours, Kadi realized that much of what the interrogator knew about him had come from Canary Mission, an anonymously-run online blacklist that tries to frighten pro-Palestinian students and activists into silence by posting dossiers on their politics and personal lives.

    Kadi’s interrogator asked question after question about organizations listed on his Canary Mission profile. A pro-Palestinian organization that Kadi had been involved with but that wasn’t listed on his Canary Mission profile went unmentioned. Hours later, a third interrogator confirmed what Kadi had suspected: They were looking at his Canary Mission profile.

    Canary Mission has said since it went live in 2015 that it seeks to keep pro-Palestinian student activists from getting work after college. Yet in recent months, the threat it poses to college students and other activists has grown far more severe.
    The site, which is applauded by some pro-Israel advocates for harassing hardcore activists, is now being used as an intelligence source on thousands of students and academics by Israeli officials with immense power over people’s lives, the Forward has learned.
    Rumors of the border control officers’ use of the dossiers is keeping both Jewish and Palestinian activists from visiting relatives in Israel and the West Bank, and pro-Palestinian students say they are hesitant to express their views for fear of being unable to travel to see family.
    >> Twitter account of Canary Mission, group blacklisting pro-Palestinian activists, deactivated
    Meanwhile, back on campus, pro-Israel students are facing suspicion of colluding with Canary Mission. The students, and not the operatives and donors who run it from behind a veil of anonymity, are taking the blame for the site’s work.

    The dossiers
    Canary Mission’s profiles, of which there are now more than 2,000, can run for thousands of words. They consist of information about the activist, including photographs and screenshots, cobbled together from the internet and social media, along with descriptions of the groups with which they are affiliated.
    The phrase, “if you’re a racist, the world should know,” appears on the top of each page on the site.
    In addition to the thousands of profiles of pro-Palestinian students and professors, Canary Mission has also added a smattering of profiles of prominent white supremacists, including 13 members of Identity Evropa and a handful of others.
    The site’s profiles appear to be based entirely on open source intelligence that could be gathered by anyone with a computer. But the researchers are thorough, and some of what they post is exceptionally personal. Canary Mission’s profile of Esther Tszayg, a junior at Stanford University whose profile went online in May, includes two photographs of her as a young child and one taken for a campus fashion magazine.
    “It feels pretty awful and I really wish I wasn’t on that website,” said Tszayg, the president of Stanford’s chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace, a pro-Palestinian group.
    Canary Mission’s profile of Rose Asaf, a leader of the local chapter of JVP at New York University, includes nearly 60 photographs of her and screenshots of her social media activities. It went online in November of 2017, when she was a college junior.
    Liz Jackson, a staff attorney at the legal advocacy group Palestine Legal, said that she was aware of one case in which Canary Mission posted old photographs a student had deleted a year before. The student believes that Canary Mission had been tracking her for over a year before they posted her profile.
    Some of what Canary Mission captures is genuinely troubling, including anti-Semitic social media posts by college students. But often, the eye-catching charges they make against their subjects don’t quite add up. A profile of an NYU freshman named Ari Kaplan charges him with “demonizing Israel at a Jewish event.” In fact, he had stood up at a Hillel dinner to make an announcement that was critical of President Trump’s decision to move the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem.
    “It’s really weird when they’re trying to have someone who looks like me [as] the face of anti-Semitism,” said Kaplan, joking that he looks stereotypically Jewish.
    The border
    It’s these profiles that Israeli border control officers were looking at when they interrogated Kadi, who is in his 30s, and is a member of the steering committee of the U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights. Kadi is a U.S. citizen, but his mother and her family are Palestinian citizens of Israel.
    Kadi’s case is not unique. In April, before deporting Columbia University Law School professor Katherine Franke and telling her she will be permanently banned from the country, an Israeli border control officer showed her something on his phone that she says she is “80% sure” was her Canary Mission profile.
    The officer, Franke said, had accused her of traveling to Israel to “promote BDS.” When she said that wasn’t true, the officer accused her of lying, saying she was a “leader” of JVP. He held up the screen of his phone, which appeared to show her Canary Mission profile, and told her: “See, I know you’re lying.”
    Franke, who had previously sat on JVP’s academic advisory council steering committee but at that time had no formal role with the group, told the officer she was not on JVP’s staff. The officer deported her anyhow.
    “Canary Mission information is often neither reliable, nor complete, nor up to date,” said Israeli human rights attorney Emily Schaeffer Omer-Man, who represents activists and human rights advocates denied entry to Israel. Schaeffer Omer-Man says that the site, as such, shouldn’t legally qualify to be used as the basis for a deportation decision by border control officers, as it doesn’t meet reliability standards set by Israeli administrative law.
    Yet incidents like those experienced by Franke and Kadi are on the rise. Schaeffer Omer-Man said that clients for years have said that they suspected that their interrogators had seen their Canary Mission profiles, based on the questions they asked. More recently, she said, clients have told her that border control mentioned Canary Mission by name.
    Rumors of these incidents are spreading fear among campus activists.
    “I have family in Israel, and I don’t expect I will be let in again,” said Tszayg, the Stanford student.
    Palestine Legal’s Liz Jackson said that a large majority of people who get in touch with her organization about their Canary Mission profile are mostly worried about traveling across Israeli borders. “That really puts the muzzle on what people can say in the public sphere about Palestine,” Jackson said.
    Israel’s Ministry of the Interior, which oversees the country’s border control agency, did not respond to a question about whether it is ministry policy for its interrogators to use Canary Mission as a source of information on travelers. It’s possible that the officers are finding the Canary Mission dossiers on their own, by searching for travelers’ names on Google.
    But absent a denial from the interior ministry, it’s also possible that the dossiers are being distributed systematically. When Schaeffer Omer-Man reviews her clients’ interrogation files, as attorneys have the right to do under Israeli law, she has never seen a mention of Canary Mission. What she has seen, however, in summaries of the interrogations, are references to material provided by Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs, the arm of the Israeli government tasked with opposing the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement worldwide, largely through a secret network of non-governmental organizations that help it defend Israel abroad.
    The Israeli connection
    When Gilad Erdan, the strategic affairs minister, took over his agency in 2015, the Ministry of Strategic Affairs and Public Diplomacy, as it is officially known in English, had a tiny staff and a small budget. In just a few years, he has turned it into a major operation with a budget of over $100 million over two years, according to reporting by the Israeli investigative magazine the Seventh Eye.
    At the core of the MSA’s operation is a network of more than a hundred non-governmental organizations with which it shares information and resources. “A key part of the strategy is the belief that messaging by ‘real people’ is much more effective than plain old hasbara [propaganda] by official spokespersons,” said Itamar Benzaquen, an investigative journalist at the Seventh Eye, who has done extensive reporting on the MSA.
    The Forward has learned that the people who run Canary Mission are in direct contact with the leadership of Act.il, a pro-Israel propaganda app that is a part of the network, and has benefited from a publicity campaign funded by the MSA, according to Benzaquen’s reporting.
    The founder and CEO of Act.il, Yarden Ben Yosef, told the Forward last fall that he had been in touch with the people who run Canary Mission, and that they had visited his office in Israel.
    Neither Canary Mission nor the MSA responded to queries about their relationship to each other.
    The operators
    Canary Mission has jealously guarded the anonymity of its operators, funders, and administrators, and its cloak of secrecy has held up against the efforts of journalists and pro-Palestine activists alike.
    Two people, granted anonymity to speak about private conversations, have separately told the Forward that a British-born Jerusalem resident named Jonathan Bash identified himself to them as being in charge of Canary Mission.
    The Forward reported in 2015 that Bash was the CEO of a pro-Israel advocacy training organization, Video Activism, that appeared to have numerous ties to Canary Mission. At the time, Bash denied there was any relationship between the organizations.
    Neither Canary Mission nor Bash responded to requests for comment.
    The response
    As Canary Mission has become an increasingly prominent feature of the campus landscape, students have adapted to its threat. Increasingly, student governments vote on divestment resolutions by secret ballot, partly in an attempt to keep Canary Mission from profiling student representatives who vote in favor.
    Student activist groups, meanwhile, strategically mask the identities of vulnerable members. Abby Brook, who has been a leader in both the Students for Justice in Palestine and JVP groups at George Washington University, said that her fellow activists had strategized about who would be a public-facing leader of the group, and shoulder the risk of appearing on Canary Mission. When her profile went up last year, she was ready.
    “We made strategic decisions within our organization about who would be out-facing members and who would be in-facing members, knowing that Canary Missionwould have different consequences for different people,” Brook said. She said that the names of members of her chapter of SJP who are Palestinian are not listed publicly, and that those individuals have stayed off of Canary Mission.
    “We deliberately keep those people private,” Brook said. “I’m not Palestinian; I won’t be prohibited from being able to go home if I’m listed on Canary Mission. It has a lot less consequences for me as a white person.”
    While Brook’s Palestinian colleagues have been able to hide their identities while being active on the issue, others have chosen not to take the risk. Palestine Legal’s Jackson said that she has fielded questions from students who want to take political action in support of Palestinian rights, but have been afraid to do so because of what being listed on Canary Mission could mean for their families. One student activist told Jackson she wanted to be a leader in SJP, but asked Jackson if getting a Canary Mission profile could damage her family’s naturalization application.
    “I said I don’t know, honestly,” Jackson said.
    Another student told Jackson that she had wanted to write an op-ed about the Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, a controversial piece of federal legislation that critics say could limit free speech, but that she was afraid to be published because she wanted to be able to go visit her grandparents in the West Bank, and couldn’t risk being profiled on Canary Mission.
    For students who do find themselves on Canary Mission, there is little recourse. Canary Mission has posted a handful of essays by “ex-canaries,” people who have written effusive apologies in return for being removed from the site. Jackson said that some profiles have been temporarily removed after the subjects filed copyright complaints, but that they were reposted later with the offending images removed.
    There do not appear to have been any defamation suits filed against Canary Mission. The authors of the profiles are careful about what they write, and pursuing a lawsuit would place a heavy burden on the plaintiff. “Students who are naturally concerned about the reputational damage of being smeared as a terrorist usually don’t want to go through a public trial, because that only makes it worse,” Jackson wrote in an email. “It’s tough to take on a bully, especially in court. But litigation is not off the table.”
    Campus spies
    In the meantime, Canary Mission’s utter secrecy has created an atmosphere of suspicion on campuses. While the operatives behind Canary Mission hide behind their well-protected anonymity, pro-Israel students take the blame for its activities, whether or not they were involved.
    A number of students listed on the site who spoke with the Forward named specific pro-Israel students on their campuses who they suspected of having informed on them to Canary Mission.
    Tilly Shames, who runs the local Hillel at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, said that Canary Mission has led to suspicion of pro-Israel students on her campus. “It has created greater mistrust and exclusion of pro-Israel students, who are assumed to be involved in Canary Mission, or sharing information with Canary Mission, when they are not,” Shames said.
    Kaplan, the NYU sophomore, said that he’s now wary talking to people who he knows are involved in pro-Israel activism on campus.
    “I’ll want to be open and warm with them, but it will be, how do I know this guy isn’t reporting to Canary Mission?” Kaplan said. He said he didn’t intend to let the suspicions fomented by Canary Mission keep him from spending time with other Jewish students.
    “I’m not going to live in fear; I love Jews,” he said. “I’m not going to not talk to Jewish students out of fear of being on Canary [Mission], but it would be better to have some solidarity from the Jewish community of NYU.”
    For more stories, go to www.forward.com. Sign up for the Forward’s daily newsletter at http://forward.com/newsletter/signup

  • Le conseil de la ville de Dublin (capitale de l’Irlande) a voté une motion BDS, de boycott de HP, et une demande au gouvernement irlandais d’expulser l’ambassadeur israélien !

    The Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign (IPSC) tonight warmly welcomed the vote by Dublin City Council to formally support and endorse the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement for freedom, justice and equality. The motion, voted for tonight by a majority of Councillors, also commits the council to discontinue all business contracts it has with Hewlett-Packard (HP) and its spin-off DXC Technology due to these companies’ provision and operation of “much of the technology infrastructure that Israel uses to maintain its system of apartheid and settler colonialism over the Palestinian people.” In a separate motion, the council voted to call on the Irish government to expel the Israeli Ambassador.

    http://www.ipsc.ie/bds/dublin-city-council-votes-to-support-palestinian-bds-movement-discontinue-hp-co

    Dublin devient la première capitale européenne à soutenir le BDS en faveur des droits des Palestiniens et rejette Hewlett Packard pour complicité avec l’apartheid israélien
    Palestinian Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions National Committee (BNC), le 11 avril 2018
    https://www.bdsfrance.org/dublin-devient-la-premiere-capitale-europeenne-a-soutenir-le-bds-en-faveu

    #Palestine #Irlande #Dublin #Sanctions #BDS #Boycott #HP

  • http://www.millebabords.org/spip.php?article30913 - Milles Bâbords

    L’avocat franco-israélien, Salah Hamouri, a été à nouveau arrêté par les autorités israéliennes le 23 août 2017. Ce rassemblement entend rappeler fermement à la France son devoir d’agir pour la libération immédiate de notre compatriote.
    Des courriers ont été envoyés aux autorités françaises et israéliennes, mais il est maintenant indispensable de communiquer plus largement et d’interpeller les autorités qui n’interviennent pas pour défendre l’avocat Salah Hamouri.
    Les manifestants demanderont à être reçus par les services préfectoraux.
    P.-S.

    Association France Palestine Solidarité
    c/o La Cimade, 8 rue Jean-Marc Cathala, 13002 Marseille
    PALESTINE 13 - Groupe marseillais de l’AFPS
    asso.palestine13 chez gmail.com, www.assopalestine13.org

    #MillesBâbords #SalahHamouri #Solidarité

  • Interdiction d’Al-Jazeera en Israël : que faut-il en penser ? – Culture et politique arabes
    https://cpa.hypotheses.org/6339

    Cette affaire a au moins un mérite, celui de rappeler l’ordinaire des pratiques israéliennes dès lors qu’il s’agit de la liberté de la presse ! L’aura internationale de la chaîne qatarie fait que ce dossier a été quelque peu évoqué dans les médias mais les interdictions décrétées par les autorités israéliennes sont aussi anciennes et nombreuses que les prétextes pour les justifier. Pour s’en tenir à l’actualité récente, on peut ainsi rappeler le raid de l’armée israélienne, le 29 juillet dernier, dans les locaux de Palmedia. Cette société, installée à Ramallah et qui propose ses services à de grands groupes étrangers, est accusée de « fabrication de matériau susceptible d’inciter au terrorisme ». Un an plus tôt, la chaîne Palestine Today (qui continue à émettre depuis Gaza), trop « jihadiste » au goût de Tel-Aviv, avait été brutalement fermée et plusieurs de ses journalistes jetés en prison.

    Ces interdictions très peu démocratiques du droit à l’information s’appliquent au territoire plus ou moins « légitime » de l’État israélien puisque la chaîne Al-Musawa, préparée à Ramallah mais diffusée depuis Nazareth (avec des financements de l’Autorité palestinienne), s’est vu infliger vers la même époque une fermeture de 6 mois, pour « atteinte à la souveraineté israélienne ». Mais il peut aussi arriver que le gouvernement israélien fasse taire les voix palestiniennes qui ne lui conviennent pas bien au-delà de ses frontières. On se souvient ainsi qu’en mars 2016, le bureau du Premier ministre israélien s’est vanté d’avoir fait exclure, à sa demande, la chaîne Al-Aqsa d’Eutelsat, un satellite européen, mais de droit français…

    #cpa #palestine

  • L’Irlande se préparerait à reconnaître la Palestine
    Times of Israel Staff 9 février 2017
    http://fr.timesofisrael.com/lirlande-se-preparerait-a-reconnaitre-la-palestine

    L’ambassadeur d’Israël en Irlande, Zeev Boker, aurait informé mardi Jérusalem dans un message d’avertissement des intentions de Dublin de bientôt reconnaître officiellement la Palestine en tant qu’Etat.

    Un responsable israélien a été cité jeudi dans Haaretz déclarant qu’une annonce de Dublin sur la reconnaissance de la Palestine a déjà été possible, mais que l’adoption par Israël de la loi controversée légalisant les avant-postes avait rendu une telle décision bien plus probable.(...)

  • Serving the Leviathan | Jacobin
    https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/01/iran-rafsanjani-ahmadinejad-khamenei-reform

    Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the chairman of Iran’s Expediency Discernment Council, died of a heart attack on January 8, 2017. Various factions immediately tried to claim this “pillar of the revolution” in the name of their competing political objectives. The wily politician would have surely recognized this technique of marshaling the spirits of the dead to score points for short-term political gain.

    Temperate “principalists” (usulgarayan), technocratic conservatives (eʿtedaliyyun), and reformists (eslahtalaban) — that is, much of the Iranian political class — saw something in the elderly statesman’s legacy worth appropriating. In this way, his death mirrors his life: during his sixty-plus years of political activity, he became many things to many people, while his ultimate objectives often remained opaque, if not virtually impossible to discern.

    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and others often painted this postrevolutionary pragmatist as a corrupt and arrogant patrician who had cast aside revolutionary austerity in favor of decadent opulence. The accusation resonated far beyond Ahmadinejad’s supporters, aligning with popular slogans that denounced the two-time president as “Akbar Shah” (meaning King Akbar, Great Shah) and compelling ordinary citizens to scrawl dozd (thief) on many of his campaign posters during the 2005 presidential campaign. He was also known to many as “the shark” (kuseh) on account of his inability to grow a fully fledged beard, though others felt it described his political modus operandi to a tee.

    By 2009, however, he seemed to have aligned himself with the Green Movement, drawing closer to the reformists he once opposed. His intermittent criticisms of the Ahmadinejad government endeared him to many, who began to see him as one of the few establishment voices willing to openly defy the administration and by extension, his old ally, the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. He became inextricably linked with the trope of “moderation,” a powerful idea in a country on the precipice, especially after the UN imposed sanctions of 2006.

    Many others remained skeptical, however, unable to forget his reputation as an arch-Machiavellian. They recycled urban legends about his family’s wealth, reinforcing his image as a power-obsessed wheeler-and-dealer.
    Resisting the Shah

    Born in 1934, Akbar Hashemi Bahremani grew up on his family’s small farm in the village of Bahreman in the Nuq district of Rafsanjan, Kerman province. At the behest of his father, he studied in a traditional maktab, but was still expected to help tend to the animals and orchards in a region renowned for its prized pistachio. His paternal uncle was a cleric who often took to the village pulpit, and at the age of fourteen, he left for Qom to study at the Shiʿi seminary, the chief center of Islamic learning in Iran.

    Through the Maraʿshi brothers (Akhavan-e Maraʿshi), Kazem and Mehdi, fellow Rafsanjanis, with whom he lived for a number of years, Akbar quickly came to know Seyyed Ruhollah Khomeini, then a relatively junior mojtahed and esteemed teacher of philosophy and mysticism. In Rafsanjani’s memoir, The Period of Struggle, he recalls how he was immediately captivated by the “majesty” of Khomeini’s visage and demeanor. Thus began an extremely close and fruitful relationship that would last the remainder of Khomeini’s lifetime. Indeed, Rafsanjani’s final resting place is alongside his political and spiritual patron.

    In Qom, Rafsanjani rapidly got involved in political life and activism and found himself attracted to the militant Devotees of Islam (Fadaʾiyan-e Islam), led by Seyyed Mojtaba Mirlowhi, better known as Navvab-e Safavi or “Prince of the Safavids,” whose meetings he would attend at every opportunity. The group tried to convince the Qom seminary to agitate for a strict and unforgiving nomocratic order, but with little success. Under the guidance of Grand Ayatollah Boroujerdi, the overwhelming majority of the Qom seminary rejected the message of the Fadaʾiyan, at one point running them out of town.

    Rafsanjani was studying in Qom during the years of anticolonial fervor after Prime Minister Mosaddeq nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (BP). He encountered Mosaddeq’s one-time clerical ally, Ayatollah Seyyed Abolqasem Kashani, who became one of the Fadaʾiyan’s initial patrons. Kashani eventually turned on Mosaddeq, and, in August 1953, a joint CIA-MI6 orchestrated coup d’état ousted the prime minister.

    After the revolution, even while expressing his support for the national movement, Rafsanjani blamed Mosaddeq’s National Front and the communist Tudeh Party for their role in weakening the seminary during this period. But he still recalled with pride how the former prime minister contributed to printing and distributing his translation of The Journey of Palestine, a translation of a popular book on Palestine written in Arabic by Akram Zwayter, a Jordanian ambassador to Tehran. Published in semi-illicit form in 1961, this book marked the beginning of a long career in which he became the most prolific statesman-cum-author of the postrevolutionary era.

    In 1955, Navvab was executed by firing squad, but vestiges of the Fadaʾiyan persisted, creating a vital network of clerical and lay activists in the country’s mosques and bazaars. Rafsanjani became an important organizer inside the country, following Khomeni’s exile in 1964. In January 1965, he was arrested by the Shah’s infamous secret police, SAVAK, for his role in the assassination of the pro-American premier, Hassan ʿAli Mansur. Later recollections by members of the Islamic Coalition Society have since admitted it was Rafsanjani who supplied the weapon. From 1958 until the revolution he was arrested on several occasions. He persisted in his activism despite the abuse and torture he suffered at the hands of the SAVAK, publishing illegal periodicals and distributing Khomeini’s communiqués from Najaf. It was also in 1958 that he married ʿEffat Maraʿshi, the daughter of a fellow cleric from Rafsanjan. His companion of almost sixty years, she would come to exude a formidable matriarchal presence on the Iranian political scene throughout the 1990s and 2000s.

    Rafsanjani also managed to travel to the United States and Japan during these years. Many regard the latter as especially formative for his worldview and proclivity toward the seemingly indigenous, albeit technologically advanced, version of modernization he would seek to exact during his own time in power. He also penned a volume on the nationalist icon Amir Kabir (who died in 1852), who tried to streamline the Qajar court’s expenditures, consolidating the weak Iranian state in Tehran while importing technical and military know-how. That Rafsanjani died on the anniversary of Amir Kabir’s murder has only fueled the flood of hagiographies.
    Internal Divisions

    On February 5, 1979, Rafsanjani made his first public appearance facing the world’s media with Khomeini during Mehdi Bazargan’s introduction as prime minister of the Provisional Revolutionary Government. He began his government apprenticeship as deputy interior minister, and soon found common ground with another junior minister, Seyyed Ali Khamenei, who held the same role in defense. More importantly, Rafsanjani also served on the revolutionary council, a secretive body dominated by clerics loyal to Khomeini that was created in lieu of a legislative branch of state.

    Rafsanjani and Khamenei were on a pilgrimage to Mecca when they learned that radical students, who called themselves the Muslim Student Followers of the Imam’s Line, had overrun the United States embassy on November 4, 1979. They had by this time become leading officials of the Islamic Republic Party (IRP), and Bazargan’s resignation thrust both men into the limelight. Rafsanjani took over the interior ministry and organized the first presidential elections of 1980. In the spring of that year, he was elected to the Majlis (parliament) and became speaker, a post he turned into a personal stronghold for most of the following decade.

    Rafsanjani remained steadfastly loyal to Khomeini and led the clerical front that ultimately marginalized competing revolutionary organizations in the early 1980s. But their relationship was not always easy. Together with Khamenei, Rafsanjani lobbied Khomeini to allow clerical candidates into the first presidential election; his mentor’s refusal paved the way for the victory of layman Abolhasan Bani-Sadr. Only after much of the IRP leadership was killed in the Hafte Tir bombing did Khomeini relent and allow Khamenei to run for president in the summer of 1980.

    They also seem to have disagreed about the war with Iraq. According to various sources, including Khomeini’s son Ahmad, the Grand Ayatollah wanted to bring the conflict to an end after taking back the southwestern city of Khorramshahr in April 1982, but Rafsanjani, among others, prevailed on him to prepare an offensive into Iraqi territory.

    As the 1980s progressed, Rafsanjani’s role within the state system far surpassed his formal title of parliamentary speaker. In international settings, he was treated like the state’s foremost figure. The West — including the Reagan administration — relied on him to end kidnappings in Lebanon, and he became known as the real power behind the scenes.

    By 1985, the fervent anti-Americanism he had previously displayed gave way to the realization that a tactical accommodation with the “Great Satan” was necessary. In a risky and ultimately unsuccessful move, he agreed to hold talks with a delegation led by national security adviser Robert McFarlane, which surreptitiously visited Tehran in October 1986 with much-needed weapons for the war effort. The Iran-Contra revelations severely embarrassed both Reagan and Rafsanjani, and the whole affair had major repercussions for the domestic scene. Nevertheless, two decades later, the Rafsanjani clan published a book including the delegation’s fake passports and the inscribed Bible Reagan gave to Rafsanjani to underscore the cooperation between these erstwhile adversaries.

    Rafsanjani was at the heart of several crucial developments during the last years of Khomeini’s life. Many believe he took part in the efforts lead by Ahmad Khomeini and minister of intelligence, Mohammad Reyshahri, to persuade the revolutionary leader to withdraw his support for his designated successor, Hossein ʿAli Montazeri. He certainly had motivation: Montazeri’s relative and close associate, Seyyed Mehdi Hashemi, and his people were responsible for leaking the details of McFarlane’s visit. In early 1988, Rafsanjani had to navigate a major internal crisis when Prime Minister Mir-Hossein Mousavi resigned and noted — in a secret letter to Khamenei — that other figures, including Rafsanjani, had gravely eroded his authority.

    That same year, the USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655 over the Persian Gulf, killing almost three hundred civilians. Rafsanjani gloomily indicated during a Friday prayer speech that the tragedy was not an accident and warned that the United States would now intensify its involvement in the Iran-Iraq conflict. This likely contributed to Khomeini’s acceptance of UN Security Council Resolution 598, which initiated the ceasefire between the two countries and which he famously compared to drinking a “poisoned chalice.”
    Consolidation

    Following the Iran-Iraq War and the death of the revolutionary patriarch in June 1989, many wondered if the revolutionary state and its institutions could survive without the uniquely charismatic Ayatollah Khomeini. Even before his death, the ruling establishment proved vulnerable as militant groups such as the People’s Mojahedin Organization and the Forqan, which opposed the political clerisy’s ascent, had assassinated several senior figures in the regime. Khamenei and Rafsanjani both survived attempts on their lives in this period, ensuring that these two friends would decisively shape the post-Khomeini political order.

    Rafsanjani played a key role in elevating Khamenei as Khomeini’s successor, but the more intimate details of his lobbying have yet to be fully revealed. It occurred as the Iranian elite was reeling, both politically and emotionally. Khomeini’s death came after a period of incapacitation, but it nevertheless caught senior state figures unprepared. As a result, the Assembly of Experts, the clerical body in charge of selecting and supervising the guardian jurist (vali-ye faqih), had to decide how best to handle the succession. Rafsanjani took to the podium and declared that Khomeini had stated his preference for Khamenei, despite his lack of clerical rank and authority. The latter was not an Ayatollah, let alone a marjaʿ al-taqlid (source of emulation or Grand Ayatollah).

    Khamenei’s accession unfolded in tandem with major constitutional amendments and changes in the revolutionary state’s institutional structure. The position of vali-ye faqih (often referred to nowadays as the “supreme leader”) was radically revised. No longer was his capacity to act as a source of emulation for the faithful, namely the criterion of marjaʿiyyat a prerequisite for the office. Instead, Khamenei had an “absolute mandate” to rule. At the same time, the office of prime minister was abolished, leaving a directly elected president, which Rafsanjani promptly assumed. These moves quickly consolidated power between the longstanding allies.

    At this moment, Rafsanjani was at the peak of his powers. Many have speculated that he placed his ally in this role because he was counting on Khamenei’s lack of religious credentials and limited influence among the clergy, to keep him relatively weak. Arguably, it was a calculation that would come back to haunt him in the last decade of his life.

    His two presidential terms have become associated with the period of the nation’s reconstruction. In the first few years, his partnership with Khamenei proved most efficacious. First in the 1990 Assembly of Experts’ elections — but most decisively in the 1992 Majles elections — they used the guardian council’s arrogation of the prerogative to supervise elections and thereby disqualify candidates to rapidly marginalize the so-called Islamic left, which included groups like the Association of Combatant Clerics, the so-called Imam’s Line, and the Mojahedin Organization of the Islamic Revolution. All of whose members had been Ayatollah Khomeini’s stalwart supporters and advocated for anti-imperialism and a radical foreign policy, state control of the economy, and the egalitarian redistribution of wealth.

    In response to the country’s very real internal and external economic and political challenges, Rafsanjani and Khamenei conspired to cast aside the Left. Thus, in 1992, they either saw disqualified or campaigned against a raft of sitting MPs and left-leaning regime loyalists, including Behzad Nabavi, Asadollah Bayat, Hadi Ghaffari, Ebrahim Asgharzadeh, and the infamous Ayatollah Sadeq Khalkhali. In fact, only 20 percent of incumbents earned reelection that year.

    Consequently, the traditional right dominated the Fourth Majles, adding to the duo’s firm grip on the intelligence and security apparatuses, the state institutions regulating the Shiʿi clergy, the levers of economic power and patronage — including the ministry of petroleum — and a vast network of religious endowments. Despite starting from a position of weakness, Khamenei began to strengthen his hold on economic and military power. In Rafsanjani’s second term, a mild rivalry started to color their relationship.

    With the Left on the sidelines, Rafsanjani pursued what amounted to a neoliberal agenda of privatization and structural adjustment. He also created a regional détente with the Gulf states, above all Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, which had bankrolled Saddam Hussein’s war effort with US support. Journalist Mohammad Quchani approvingly called Rafsanjani’s tenure the era of “depoliticization,” where “expertise” firmly supplanted “commitment.” Technocratic competency and state-directed economic liberalization without corresponding political reforms became the order of the day. Saʿid Hajjarian — a former intelligence officer who became a preeminent reformist strategist — recalled a meeting with Rafsanjani in which the president disdainfully shrugged off the very notion of political development, a euphemism for “democratization.”

    But after ejecting much of the Islamic left from the ranks of government, Rafsanjani was himself forced to cede primacy over the cultural and intellectual spheres to the traditional right. His brother Mohammad had to give up his long-standing control of state radio and television, while the future president Mohammed Khatami publicly resigned from the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance, replaced by arch-conservative Ali Larijani (who has since joined the ranks of centrist principalists).

    The traditional right’s own predominantly mercantilist interests often conflicted with Rafsanjani’s efforts at economic liberalization. As a result, he had to pursue a more modest reform program. Resistance from below also appeared. In 1992, a tentative subsidy reform on foodstuffs and energy — which would only be implemented, ironically, under the Ahmadinejad government — coincided with inflation hovering around 50 percent, leading to tumultuous provincial bread riots.

    Moreover, the privatizations that did take place were far from straightforward. Selling shares to para-statal and quasi-statal organizations sparked allegations of crony capitalism and corruption that the Fourth Majles eventually had to redress through legislation, even if the issue was never satisfactorily resolved. Moreover, one of Rafsanjani’s key allies, Gholam Hossein Karbaschi — mayor of Tehran from 1989 to 1998 — played a crucial role in the capital city’s “urban renewal.” He sold off state-owned land below market value to the connected and well-heeled and exempted large developers from zoning laws, creating a speculative real-estate boom in which certain segments of the political and economic elite were seen to massively profit.

    Rafsanjani also helped create the Islamic Free University, which provided higher education to hundreds of thousands of students unable to enter the state system because of the competitive national examinations. Nevertheless, the university has been criticized for introducing market logic into education and thus exacerbating existing class divisions.

    As Kaveh Ehsani writes, the Rafsanjani administration had decided that “the Islamic Republic needed to first create its own loyal, Islamic (but neoliberal) middle class.” Rafsanjani, however, ultimately failed to develop an entrepreneurial class that could fully implement his neoliberal agenda. Attempts to do so — particularly through his half-hearted wooing of expatriate businessmen who had fled on the eve of the Islamic Republic — were largely met with scorn. The Executives of Reconstruction Party, heavily populated by the president’s kin, including his outspoken daughter Faʾezeh, would belatedly attempt to consolidate this new technocratic order in 1996.

    Meanwhile, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) was invited by the government as a quid pro quo for its services during the war, to help reconstruct the country’s severely depleted infrastructure. Khamenei shrewdly capitalized on this development to augment his institutional power.

    This period also saw a slew of intellectuals, writers, and activists assassinated, arrested, and/or tortured. The long list even extends into the Khatami era and includes ʿAli Akbar Saʿidi Sirjani, Faraj Sarkuhi, Shapur Bakhtiar — the Shah’s last prime minister, who had tried to oust the Islamic Republic with Saddam Hussein’s support — and Sadeq Sharafkandi, secretary-general of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran. These killings have been strongly linked to the Iranian security apparatus, but the extent of Rafsanjani’s involvement remains unclear. Regardless, his objective of consolidating the regime he had been instrumental in building extended — with or without his direct participation — into neutralizing, by any means, dissenting and subversive voices.
    Between the Establishment and Reform

    When Mohammad Khatami became president in the June 1997 elections, many observers — including Rafsanjani — were surprised. In fact, the departing president would eventually admit that he had voted for Ali Akbar Nateq Nuri, the establishment candidate. Nor was he temperamentally disposed to the ethos of the emerging “reformist” camp, which rallied around Khatami. Their emphasis on political, rather than economic, change and openness in the media and intellectual spheres starkly contrasted with the ambitions and priorities of his own administration.

    In fact, between 1997 and 2001, the former president tilted more toward the conservatives, when the right wing became concerned the reformist coalition was taking control of the chief reins of government. In 2000, Rafsanjani ran for parliament in Tehran and sparked a major political crisis. He initially did not rank among the first thirty seats, but was reinstated after a known dissident was disqualified. The media waged a campaign against what they regarded as brazen interference, and Rafsanjani relinquished his seat at a high cost to the Khatami front.

    Entrenched as leader of the expediency council — a body whose influence grew in periods of mediation between parliament and the guardian council — Rafsanjani effectively helped stymie the reformist-dominated Sixth Majles, repeatedly kicking key reforms into the long grass. As a result, the public grew disenchanted with the reformers, seeing them as incapable of implementing their program.

    In 2005, Rafsanjani once again ran for president, arguing that only he could fix a deadlocked political system. His quixotic campaign used roller-skating young women to hand out posters to bemused drivers in Tehran. But Ahmadinejad’s insurgent candidacy derailed his plans and forced an unprecedented run-off. Rafsanjani scrambled and succeeded in winning the support of many moderates, dissidents, and artists, including the late ʿAbbas Kiarostami, who warned of a Chirac-Le Pen scenario.

    When the veteran candidate appeared at Tehran University to this end, he responded to students chanting the name of Akbar Ganji — an imprisoned journalist and public intellectual, who had famously characterized Rafsanjani as Iran’s very own Cardinal Richelieu — by saying conditions in prisons today were far better than under the Shah’s regime. In his final televised campaign interview, he unpersuasively apologized for not holding events outside Tehran in what appeared to be a last-ditch pledge to improve the plight of the neglected provinces.

    His defeat — which he half-heartedly attributed to security forces’ interference — effectively aligned him with the reformist camp he had previously been at odds with. By 2006, he recognized that Ahmadinejad threatened both the Iranian state and the fragile détente with the West that he and Khatami had laboriously engineered. For the last decade of his life, he would repeatedly call for moderation, speaking out against excesses and cautiously supporting Mir-Hossein Mousavi in the 2009 elections.

    Despite warning Khamenei about possible tampering on the eve of the vote and using his Friday prayer address to call for the release of scores of reformists in July 2009, Rafsanjani managed to keep his place within the state apparatus. Rather than directly challenge Khamenei — as Mousavi and Karroubi would — he retained his position as head of the expediency council.

    During the second Ahmadinejad administration, Rafsanajani stayed in the media spotlight, published his much-anticipated annual volumes of political diaries, and continued to lobby at the regime’s highest levels. Despite having few obvious cards to play, Rafsanjani drew on his myriad relationships across ministries, economic institutions, political factions, the bazaar, the clergy, and even the IRGC. He also compelled his son, Mehdi, to return home and face a jail sentence so that opponents couldn’t use the charge that his child was abroad and in the pay of foreigners against him politically.
    Transformation or Rebranding?

    In 2013, after remaining on the fence until the last hours of the registration window, Rafsanjani announced his bid for president without securing the customary approval from Khamenei, who rebuffed his attempts to discuss the matter. The guardian council rejected him on health grounds, paving the way for his protégé Hassan Rouhani, whom Rafsanjani had persuaded not to drop out, to carry the centrist ticket and win in the first round.

    Even in his final years, after he had lost many of the institutional levers he had once wielded so dexterously, Rafsanjani managed to interject himself at crucial political moments and tilt the balance of forces in one direction or another. These interventions were not without significance or merit. His continued support for Rouhani and the nuclear accord with the P5+1 helped alleviate the atmosphere of securitization, economic distress, and growing militarization that had characterized the Ahmadinejad years. When he decried the Western sanctions that “had broken the back” of the nation, he belittled the conservative attempts to portray the accord as a sellout.

    In recent years, prominent intellectuals like Akbar Ganji and Sadeq Zibakalam have debated whether Rafsanjani’s apparent “conversion” to reform represented a truly genuine transformation or another example of his essential Machiavellianism. But a more pertinent question would be what opportunities for contestation and increasing democratic accountability and pluralism were engendered as a result of his interventions and the unforeseen repercussions of elite competition and cleavage.

    On the one hand, his role as mediator between the ruling establishment and the reformists in these final years played an important part in assuaging the contradictions between popular expectations and the reality of regime governance. Since the late 1990s elite competition has taken place on the terrain of electoral and constitutional politics, and Iran’s sizeable urban population and middle classes were periodically summoned to provide momentum to their own mediated demands. A process that also harbored the potential for sparking deeper political transformation, and a renegotiation of the social contract defining the relationship of government and the governed.

    In the short term, reforms included resolving the nuclear impasse; returning to competent, technocratic economic management; lowering inflation and youth unemployment; releasing Green Movement leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Karroubi, and Zahra Rahnavard; and loosening political and cultural restrictions.

    But in the long term, the reformist horizon strove for something like a new constitutional settlement that would place the supreme leader under close supervision — if not call for his direct election — hold the security apparatuses accountable, and reverse the guardian council’s powers over elections. Reformist activists, as well as political currents with negligible official representation, saw Rafsanjani’s funeral procession as one more opportunity to articulate these manifold demands, proving even his posthumous relevance to the political balance of power.

    Rafsanjani initiated a deeply personal form of statecraft, one that could not bring about a structured perestroika, but did enable the Islamic Republic to survive crises and challenges. Rafsanjani and Khamenei’s chief objective had always preserving the regime they helped build. The question of how to achieve this — and their material and institutional stake in it — rankled their relationship in later life and still divides the country.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akbar_Hashemi_Rafsanjani

    #Iran #politique #islam

  • Keep City Plaza Open

    City Plaza is a refugee accommodation and solidarity space in the heart of Athens, Greece.

    Following the closure of the borders when the EU trapped almost 65,000 refugees in Greece, the Greek government created more than 49 detention centers, hotspots and camps. City Plaza offers a safe and dignified alternative to these places where the conditions are wretched, unclean and inhumane.
    On the 22nd of April 2016 refugees, volunteers and solidarity activists occupied City Plaza Hotel which had been closed for 7 years.
    126 rooms on 7 floors. A reception, bar, dining room, kitchen, storage, play ground, health care center, roof terrace, classroom and library.
    CIty Plaza is supported exclusively through political solidarity and individual donations.

    400 people live together at City Plaza.
    The numbers: More than 100 families 165 children, 100 men, 115 women, 35 locals, activists and volunteers.
    Refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, Kurdistan, Iran, Iraq, Palestine, Pakistan & Gambia

    Self-organisation is at the heart of City Plaza.
    The philosophy: We live together. We work together. We struggle together.
    The foundations of the day to day running of City Plaza lie in solidarity and collective participation. Refugees, locals, activists and volunteers work together in this way.

    Your donation will go towards the essential working groups of City Plaza
    Kitchen
    – 3 meals a day for all, that’s 1,200 meals a day
    Health Care Center
    – Daily appointments with doctors and nurses & coordination with public hospitals, working to resolve refugee-specific health care services
    Storage space and distribution of supplies for basic needs
    – Everyday the people of City Plaza are given supplies to provide for basic needs (toiletries, washing powder, supplies for babies etc) but supplies are currently low.
    Maintenance of the building
    – A team of volunteers working for maintenance. City Plaza has not yet had enough funding to provide heating for the building.
    Language Classes
    – Greek for children, English for adults and children, German for adults and children

    https://www.youcaring.com/refugeeaccommodationandsolidarityspacecityplaza-716186

  • L’oubli de la Palestine - Le journal de Personne
    http://www.lejournaldepersonne.com/2016/10/loubli-de-palestine

    Le monde va mal...
    de plus en plus mal
    surtout pour celui qui croit qu’il va bien,
    qu’il va mieux, de mieux en mieux...
    qui croit au progrès des sciences de la vie,
    à la mort de la mort...
    Quoi encore ?

    L’optimisme est devenu impossible :
    tout n’est pas pour le mieux
    dans le meilleur des mondes possibles.

    Le pire est à venir.
    Certains le nomment : Empire...
    Le pessimisme est de rigueur :
    tous les idéaux se meurent.
    Les mortels n’ont rien fait d’autre
    que rendre le leurre immortel.

    L’erreur n’est pas humaine mais souveraine.
    Non seulement elle règne
    mais elle imprègne aussi tous les esprits...

    Cherchez l’erreur !
    Pas difficile dans un monde
    qui vit et meurt pour du beurre !
    Un funeste marché...
    un infecte marchand qui s’offre au plus offrant.
    Ne leur demandez surtout pas l’heure
    parce qu’ils ne vous la donneront pas gratuitement...
    elle est payante.
    Elle vous coutera même très cher,
    parce qu’elle vous indique jusqu’à quel point
    vous avez erré,
    jusqu’à quel point vous êtes dans l’erreur .

    Cherchez l’erreur
    devant ce trou béant...

    Cherchez l’erreur
    en parcourant notre astre errant,
    avec une queue sans tête...
    qu’on appelle planète...

    Sommes-nous tous devenus bêtes ?
    En quête d’un dieu ou en quête de la bête ?
    Diable, on dirait que Sheitan fait la fête.
    Ses adeptes sont partout
    les maîtres de l’erreur et de la défaite...
    L’heure c’est l’heure
    et je m’en vais vous la donner de bon cœur :
    Vous avez oublié la PALESTINE,
    bonté divine, vous avez oublié la PALESTINE.
    En Chine, au Japon...
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE.
    En Inde, au Pakistan,
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE.
    Au Brésil et dans tous les pays émergeants,
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE.
    A l’extrême ou au proche Orient,
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE.
    En Russie ou en Mésopotamie,
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE...
    En Europe, en Afrique ou en Asie,
    vous avez oublié la PALESTINE...
    Oublié, oublié, oublié...

    Imbéciles de tous les pays, repentez-vous...
    et dénoncez l’horreur... je veux dire l’erreur.
    La PALESTINE, c’est notre vérité enfantine...
    C’est ce qui rend vrai le vrai,
    c’est ce qui rend juste le juste et bon le bien.
    Si elle n’existe plus, plus rien n’existe.
    C’est la PALESTINE qui donne un sens
    à tout ce qui nous est propre, approprié...
    un sens à toute légitime propriété...

    Ils l’ont désappropriée, usurpée et dépouillée
    sous les yeux du monde entier,
    sans provoquer de réaction conséquente
    ni de condamnation flagrante.
    L’immonde poursuit ses colonies
    et personne ne s’en soucie...
    comme si nous espérions tous la fin du monde.
    L’éclipse, l’apocalypse.
    On distribue les prix de la paix,
    en remerciant celui qui brandit l’épée.

    Je réclame de toute mon âme
    le prix Nobel de la paix aux seuls êtres au monde
    qui ne la connaitront jamais
    parce que nous les avons déjà enterrés vivants :
    les palestiniens de PALESTINE.

    On cherche les poseurs de bombes
    jusque dans leur tombe...
    On a peur que ça explose
    alors qu’on fait tout pour que ça explose...
    On a peur de la mort
    alors qu’on devrait avoir peur du jugement dernier,
    peur d’apprendre que Dieu existe,
    c’est LUI qui va nous faire payer
    notre oubli de la PALESTINE...
    Oubli de la divine...
    divine
    divine
    divine
    divine
    divine

    JUSTICE !

  • Don’t Call Us ’Israeli Arabs’: Palestinians in Israel Speak Out - Opinion -
    Palestinian citizens of Israel are its Achilles’ heel; they refuse to become Zionists, refuse to leave Israel, and refuse to vanish into thin air. And, increasingly, they are refusing to remain silent.

    Sam Bahour Sep 26, 2016
    read more: http://www.haaretz.com/opinion/.premium-1.744398

    When Israel’s founding fathers removed by force the native Palestinian Arab population living where they intended to establish their state, they murdered or displaced more than 80% of that population.
    This act of ethnic cleansing — to borrow one of Benjamin Netanyahu’s newly found phrases — was given a name in Arabic: the Nakba, or catastrophe. The Palestinian Muslims, Druze and Christians who remained in what became Israel have been, and are today, approximately 20% of the population. These are indigenous Palestinians and their descendants, who have had Israeli citizenship imposed upon them.
    ’48ers, Palestinian Arabs, ’insiders’ – just not ’Israeli Arabs’
    For over half a century, Israel has preferred the designation Israeli Arabs, focusing on their Israeliness and attempting to obliterate any trace of Palestinian from their identity. Among Palestinians in exile or the West Bank, they’re referred to as ‘48ers, referring to the year of the Nakba, or as those living “on the inside,” meaning inside the 1949 armistice line, better known as the Green Line. Now, a new cohort of Palestinian thinkers inside Israel writing 68 years after the Nakba reaffirm that they are not just Arabs, but Palestinian Arabs, and that while they may be “in Israel,” they are not Israel’s: they are their own masters.
    These Palestinian citizens of Israel are its Achilles’ heel; they refuse to become Zionists, refuse to leave Israel, and refuse to vanish into thin air. And, increasingly, they are refusing to remain a silent, or passive, player.
    This increasingly assertive minority in Israel spoke out in a new think tank report published this month by The Palestinian Arab Citizens in Israel hosted by the Oxford Research Group and supported by the I’LAM Arab Center for Media Freedom Development and Research in Nazareth and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. [Full disclosure: While completely independent, this project is also a sister project of the Palestine Strategy Group, of which I’m a secretariat member.]

  • Avant de tirer sur un Palestinien, le sniper israélien lui demande : « où veux-tu être touché ? » -
    AURDIP - 8 septembre | Gideon Levy et Alex Levac pour Haaretz |Traduction JPP pour l’AURDIP
    http://www.aurdip.fr/avant-de-tirer-sur-un-palestinien.html
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=76&v=_P8eMMS7WqU

    (...) Dans un premier temps, les habitants du camp ont pensé que les soldats étaient venus pour démolir la maison de Mohammed al-Shobaki, qui a attaqué au poignard un soldat des FDI en novembre dernier et qui avait été tué ensuite. Cependant, il est vite apparu que les troupes avaient d’autres intentions, mais ils ne savaient pas lesquelles.

    En observant la scène

    Ce jour-là, tout le camp est monté sur les terrasses, observant la scène, et Amassi ne fait pas exception. Sa maison a deux terrasses : une, avec un garde-corps pas très haut, où les gens s’installent les chaudes nuits d’été ; et au-dessus, une terrasse non fermée, pour la citerne à eau et l’antenne parabolique. Amassi est monté sur la terrasse supérieure pour avoir une meilleure vue. C’est dangereux à cet endroit : pas de clôture, ni rien pour se mettre à couvert. Les équipes de Ma’an et de la chaîne de télévision, Palestine Aujourd’hui, se sont placées sur la terrasse de l’immeuble adjacent, qui offre une meilleure protection contre les soldats. Les affrontements ont lieu entre les soldats et des lanceurs de pierres dans la rue principale du camp, le calme prévaut ici, sur cette colline élevée où se situe ce quartier.

    Les troupes investissent quelques maisons – une trentaine selon Musa Abu Hashhash, chercheur de terrain de l’organisation israélienne des droits de l’homme B’Tselem – et ils fouillent quelque 200 maisons, creusant des trous dans des murs pour y embusquer des tireurs. Vers 9 h du matin, Amassi est en train de parler aux journalistes sur la terrasse d’à côté. Soudain, il entend un soldat qui s’est déployé sur le balcon de l’immeuble du dessous l’interpeller en arabe : « Où veux-tu la recevoir ? ». Amassi est pétrifié. Il sait ce que cela veut dire : dans quelle partie de ton corps veux-tu être touché par ma balle ? (...)

    traduction de l’article signalé ici : https://seenthis.net/messages/525570

  • Why is Benjamin Netanyahu trying to whitewash Hitler? | The Electronic Intifada
    https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/why-benjamin-netanyahu-trying-whitewash-hitler
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnXS146cxLE

    Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly asserted that Adolf Hitler had no intention of exterminating Europe’s Jews until a Palestinian persuaded him to do it.

    The Israeli prime minister’s attempt to whitewash Hitler and lay the blame for the Holocaust at the door of Palestinians signals a major escalation of his incitement against and demonization of the people living under his country’s military and settler-colonial rule.

    It also involves a good deal of Holocaust denial.

    In a speech to the World Zionist Congress in Jerusalem on Tuesday, Netanyahu asserted that Haj Amin al-Husseini convinced Hitler to carry out the killings of 6 million Jews.

    Al-Husseini was the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, the highest clerical authority dealing with religious issues pertaining to the Muslim community and holy sites during the 1920s and ‘30s, when Palestine was under British rule.

    He was appointed to the role by Herbert Samuel, the avowed Zionist who was the first British High Commissioner of Palestine.

    In the video above, Netanyahu claims that al-Husseini “had a central role in fomenting the final solution. He flew to Berlin. Hitler didn’t want to exterminate the Jews at the time, he wanted to expel the Jews. And Haj Amin al-Husseini went to Hitler and said, ‘If you expel them, they’ll all come here.’ ‘So what should I do with them?’ he asked. ‘Burn them!’”

    • En même temps, le point de vue Mufti Al-Hussein=Hitler, Palestiniens=Nazis est développé depuis longtemps. Au procès Eichman par exemple, il y a toute une littérature qui grossit le trait à dessein. Comment faire d’un supporter, instrumentalisé, du régime nazi un chef et un décideur...

      The Mufti was in many ways a disreputable character, but post-war claims that he played any significant part in the Holocaust have never been sustained. This did not prevent the editors of the four-volume Encyclopedia of the Holocaust from giving him a starring role. The article on the Mufti is more than twice as long as the articles on Goebbels and Göring, longer than the articles on Himmler and Heydrich combined, longer than the article on Eichmann—of all the biographical articles, it is exceeded in length, but only slightly, by the entry for Hitler.’[289][290]

      Un exemple http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/21212

      The Mufti had signed a pact with Hitler in 1941 to assure mutual cooperation in the mass murder of the Jews, receiving Hitler’s promise to help the Mufti create a “Juden Rein” Palestine.

      The Mufti would also live to inspire his young relative and protégé, Yassir Arafat, to forge the PLO and its covenant , also dedicated to exterminating the state of Israel.

      voir aussi les références (floues ?) au lien de parenté entre le grand mufti et Yasser Arafat

    • Inusable grand mufti de Jérusalem

      Régulièrement, des ouvrages « découvrent » les sympathies nazies du leader palestinien Amin Al-Husseini ; régulièrement, les dirigeants israéliens en tirent parti pour dénoncer l’antisémitisme congénital des Arabes. Car c’est bien l’objectif de ces pseudo-recherches historiques que de justifier l’occupation des Territoires et l’oppression des Palestiniens.
      http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2010/05/ACHCAR/19109

      Der Spiegel pas le site sésinfo.
      http://www.desinfos.com/spip.php?article573
      Contrairement à une croyance répandue, le mouvement politico-religieux islamiste n’est pas né pendant les années 60 mais pendant les années 30.

      Le succès de ce mouvement n’a pas été inspiré par l’échec de Nassérisme, mais par la montée du Nazisme.

      Jusqu’à 1951, toutes les campagnes visant à mobiliser le peuple n’étaient pas dirigées contre des puissances coloniales, mais contre les Juifs.

      C’est l’organisation des « Frères musulmans », fondée en 1928 [par le grand-père de Tariq Ramadan NDLR], qui a établi l’Islamisme comme un mouvement de masse. La signification de cette organisation pour l’Islamisme est comparable à celle du Parti bolchevique pour le communisme au 20ème siècle : jusqu’à présent, il est l’élément de référence en termes d’idéologie et représente le noyau dur de l’organisation, qui a inspiré de manière décisive toutes les tendances d’islamistes suivantes, y compris Al-Qaida, et qui les inspire encore à ce jour.

    • Le point sous paywall :
      Nazisme et islamisme : les liaisons dangereuses - Le Point
      http://www.lepoint.fr/histoire/nazisme-et-islamisme-les-liaisons-dangereuses-16-10-2015-1974088_1615.php

      Dans l’avant-propos au livre de Matthias Küntzel, qui a reçu l’Independent Publisher Book Award, Boualem Sansal espère que cet ouvrage suscitera un large débat autour des liaisons très dangereuses entre nazisme et islamisme. On peut l’espérer, en effet. Car le chercheur allemand nous livre une généalogie inédite sur la haine du juif, « colonne vertébrale » depuis ses débuts de l’islamisme moderne, qui connaît un essor foudroyant à partir des années 30.

      Pour appuyer sa démonstration, Küntzel examine le parcours de deux figures majeures mal connues du public français. La première est le prédi...

      Atlantico.
      Jihad et haine des Juifs : ce point commun entre l’essor du nazisme et de l’islamisme
      http://www.atlantico.fr/decryptage/jihad-et-haine-juifs-point-commun-entre-essor-nazisme-et-islamisme-matthia
      A ceux qui pensent que l’islamisme se nourrit de la tragédie du peuple palestinien, ce livre montre que cette assertion est contredite par l’histoire de l’islamisme radical, dont la rhétorique violemment antijuive a précédé la création de l’Etat hébreu. Extrait de « Jihad et haine des Juifs - Le lien troublant entre islamisme et nazisme a la racine du terrorisme international », de Matthias Küntzel, publié aux éditions du Toucan

  • IsraPresse Netanyahou exige la fermeture de la chaîne Palestine 48 - IsraPresse
    http://www.israpresse.net/netanyahou-exige-la-fermeture-de-la-chaine-palestine-48

    Le Premier ministre Binyamin Netanyahou, qui détient également le portefeuille de la Communication, a demandé au directeur général de ce ministère, Shlomo Filber, d’œuvrer à la fermeture de la nouvelle chaîne de télévision financée par l’Autorité palestinienne. La chaîne, « Palestine 48 », qui diffuse depuis Nazareth, s’adresse aux Arabes israéliens et diffuse des émissions visant à renforcer leur « identité palestinienne », rapporte le site d’informations de droite Aroutz 7.

  • À Amman, John Kerry a dirigé un théâtre de l’absurde
    Mazin Qumsiyeh – Middle East Eye
    publié le mercredi 19 novembre 2014
    http://www.protection-palestine.org/spip.php?article13173

    Des documents déclassifiés confirment aujourd’hui les analyses de nombreux auteurs qui ont longtemps soutenu que, juste après la guerre de 1973, la direction de l’OLP, dont Mahmoud Abbas (du Fatah) et Nayef Hawatmeh (du Front démocratique pour la libération de la Palestine – FDLP), a commencé à souhaiter une résolution qui était loin d’assurer les droits fondamentaux des Palestiniens, en échange de la promesse d’une autodétermination.

    Il y a certaines positions inflexibles qui excluent d’en arriver à ces positions capitulardes où l’on abandonne 78 % de la Palestine historique pour nous contenter de ce qu’un officiel américain a présenté en 1973 comme une « entité croupion », et à laquelle on se réfère maintenant communément en disant, l’Autorité palestinienne dans (des parties de) la Cisjordanie et Gaza. Mais il y a un obstacle majeur, la « relation spéciale constante » entre Israël et les États-Unis dont parle Kerry, conçue pour de nombreuses décennies d’un lobbying sioniste persistant à Washington.

    Mais de plus en plus de gens, à l’extérieur du cercle étroit des politiciens, s’expriment ouvertement en faveur des droits palestiniens. La plupart des gens savent que les négociations entre occupés et occupant ne nous mèneront nulle part parce que quelque chose ne colle pas.

    Israël tire 12 milliards de dollars par an de son occupation et cela, sans compter les milliards de l’argent des contribuables US ni les milliards des ventes d’armes vendues comme ayant été « testées au combat » (sur les cobayes de Gaza).

    La liberté n’est jamais accordée gratuitement par l’oppresseur privilégié à l’opprimé, elle doit être arrachée et exigée avec douleur et sacrifice. La résistance de l’intérieur doit se compléter d’un soutien de l’extérieur comprenant des volets comme les campagnes qui grandissent pour les boycotts, désinvestissements et sanctions (BDS).

    Beaucoup espèrent que des politiciens feront preuve de leadership et prendront des mesures pour instaurer des changements positifs, mais la plupart d’entre nous savent que nous, les peuples, nous devons agir en premier, et que telle est la voie pour changer l’histoire.

    Beaucoup d’internationaux montrent une solidarité parce que la Palestine aujourd’hui est le paratonnerre qui expose l’hypocrisie et le racisme, de la même manière que l’Afrique du Sud a constitué un tel flambeau dans les années 1980.

    La plupart des gens maintenant comprennent qu’à moins que les droits humains et le droit international soient respectés uniformément, le « Moyen-Orient » (l’Asie de l’ouest) et le monde tout entier risquent de continuer leur descente vers le désordre et le meurtre, avec, comme approche de l’existence, « la raison du plus fort est toujours la meilleure ».

    Nous devons tous continuer et nous efforcer de prendre les différents chemins qui mènent à la justice et à la coexistence. En attendant, laissons le théâtre politique de l’absurde jouer devant une salle vide, à Amman et ailleurs.

    Mazin Qumsiyeh est l’auteur de « Partage de la Terre de Canaan » et de « Résistance populaire en Palestine ». Il enseigne à l’université de Bethléhem et est directeur du Musée Palestine d’histoire naturelle.

    Middle East Eye : http://www.middleeasteye.net/column...
    Traduction : JPP

  • Palestine occupée : Une histoire peu connue : les camps de concentration et de travail d’Israël en 1948-1955 - Yazan al-Saadi
    http://www.ism-france.org/analyses/Une-histoire-peu-connue-les-camps-de-concentration-et-de-travail-d-Israe

    Une grande partie des circonstances sinistres et sombres de la purification ethnique sioniste des Palestiniens à la fin des années 1940 a progressivement été exposée au cours du temps. Un aspect - rarement étudié ou discuté en profondeur - est l’internement de milliers de civils palestiniens dans au moins 22 camps de concentration et de travail, dirigés par les sionistes, qui ont existé de 1948 à 1955. On en sait un peu plus maintenant sur les contours de ce crime historique, grâce à la recherche exhaustive menée par le grand historien palestinien Salman Abu Sitta et du membre du centre palestinien de ressources BADIL, Terry Rempel.

    Des civils palestiniens capturés lors de la chute de Lydda et de Ramleh autour du 12 Juillet 1948 et emmenés dans des camps de travail. Dans la chaleur de juillet, assoiffés, sous la garde de soldats, un enfant leur apporte un peu d’eau
    (Photo : Salman Abu Sitta, Palestine Land Society)

    Voici les faits.

    L’étude - qui va être publiée dans le prochain numéro de Journal of Palestine Studies - s’appuie sur près de 500 pages de rapports du Comité international de la Croix-Rouge (CICR), rédigés pendant la guerre de 1948, qui ont été déclassifiés, mis à la disposition du public en 1996, et découverts par hasard par un des auteurs en 1999.

    En outre, les auteurs ont recueilli les témoignages de 22 anciens détenus palestiniens de ces camps civils, à travers des entretiens qu’ils ont eux-mêmes conduits en 2002, ou documentés par d’autres à d’autres moments.

    Avec ces sources d’information, les auteurs, comme ils disent, ont reconstitué une histoire plus claire de la façon dont Israël a capturé et emprisonné « des milliers de civils palestiniens comme travailleurs forcés » et les a exploités « pour soutenir son économie en temps de guerre. (...) »

  • Palestinians become first customer of Israel’s Leviathan gas field -
    By Eran Azran | Jan. 6, 2014
    Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/business/1.567216

    The first customer to sign up to buy gas from Israel’s giant Leviathan field is the Palestine Power Generation Company, which is developing an electric power plant near Jenin.

    The three Israeli partners in Leviathan – Avner, Delek Drilling and Ratio — told the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange on Sunday that PPGC had agreed to buy $1.2 billion worth of gas over a 20-year period that will begin when the field begins producing.

    The 4.75 billion cubic meters of gas the Palestinian utility is buying is relatively small compared to the contracts a host of Israeli gas consumers have signed for gas from the Tamar field. Nevertheless, it marks the first-ever contract for Leviathan gas.

    “I believe a strong and stable economy shared by the two sides will bring peace and stability to the entire region, so that everyone will enjoy prosperity and economic growth,” said Yitzhak Tshuva, whose Delek Group controls two of the Leviathan partners.

    Leviathan has an estimated 538 billion cubic meters of reserves and it may have petroleum as well. PPGC has the right under the contract to reduce the amount of gas it buys.

    The news of the contract came out of the end of the trading day on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, so that the impact of the sale wasn’t reflected in the partners’ share prices. Ratio rose 3%, Avner , 0.8% and Delek Drilling by 0.3%. Delek Group, which controls the latter two companies, climbed 1% by close.

    The biggest of the Leviathan partners, Noble Energy, is based in Texas and trades on Wall Street.

    PPGC is constructing a $300 million, 200-megawatt power plant that will take 30 months to complete. It is controlled by the Palestine Electric Company but counts other shareholders as well.

    The Palestinian Authority accounts for 8% of all electricity consumption in Israel and the West Bank, with annual consumption growing at about 6%.

    The agreement include several conditions, among them final approval to develop the Leviathan field by the sellers as well as all the regulatory approvals to export gas as well as financing. The buyers also conditioned their side of the deal on completing the construction of the power plant.

    Under the gas-export policy established by the Israeli government, gas sold to the PA and to Jordan will be considered part of Leviathan’s export quota. All told, 40% of Israel’s natural gas can be exported under the rules approved by the cabinet last year.

    Last week, the Leviathan partners reported progress in talks with the Australian energy company Woodside, which agreed in principle over a year ago to take a 30% stake in the field for $1.25 billion. Reports says that the two sides have agreed that Woodside will pay several-hundred million dollars more than the original agreement called for as prospects are growing that the gas will be exported by pipeline to regional customers, mainly Turkey, instead of as liquefied natural gas to East Asia.

  • Palestine-Israel Journal: The West Bank Wall as Canvas: Art and Graffiti in Palestine/Israel

    http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=1350

    The West Bank Wall as Canvas: Art and Graffiti in Palestine/Israel

    by Christine Leuenberger

    The philosopher John Austin has pointed out that we always do things with words. The terms we use to describe the West Bank barrier reveal our politics.1 For its Israeli proponents, it is the “security” or “anti-terrorist” fence. For its Israeli opponents and for Palestinians, it is the “apartheid,” “segregation,” “separation,” “colonization,” “demographic” or “annexation” wall. The barrier consists partly of a concrete wall in populated areas and an elaborate fence system in rural areas. The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs maintains that the “security fence” is nothing like the Berlin Wall. Indeed, there are differences.

    The maximum height of the Berlin Wall was 3.65 meters; the West Bank wall is up to 8 meters high. Where the barrier turns into concrete slabs it becomes a canvas. Palestinian, Israeli and international graffiti artists make the gray concrete speak in multiple tongues. This has sparked “conflict tourism.” Tourists get bused into Abu-Dis, a neighborhood cut off from Jerusalem by the barrier, to stand in the shadow of the wall and read its voices.

    #israël #palestine #murs #fontières #art #occupation #colonisation

  • Le siège de Gaza ---> 70 % de la population sous le seuil de pauvreté

    via Amina Bitar, responsable du groupe défense Palestine à Arendal (Norvège)

    1,1 million sur 1,6 sont enregistrés comme réfugiés auprès de l’UNRWA, l’agence onusienne qui s’occupe des réfugiés palestiniens

    44 % d’entre eux ont moins de 14 ans

    L’âge moyen est 18 ans

    La croissance de la population est de 3,2 en moyenne, une des plus forte du monde

    72 % de la population vit en zone urbaine

    Taux d’alphabétisation :
    –- 97 % pour les hommes
    –- 88 % pour les femmes

    Taux de chômage estimé à environ 40 %

    70% de la population vit sous le seuil de pauvreté...

    Tous ces chiffres sont du PNUD ou de l’UNWRA

    https://dl.dropbox.com/s/811q7i4x17owtz4/gazaimaging.jpg

    #gaza #palestine #israël #occupation

  • Les contacts secrets : le sionisme et l’Allemagne nazie, 1933 – 1941

    Par Klaus Polkehn, Journal of Palestine Studies – 1976 traduit de l’anglais par Djazaïri

    http://mounadil.wordpress.com/2013/01/27/le-sionisme-et-le-regime-nazi-un-texte-important-de-klaus-polkeh

    S’interroger sur la réaction du mouvement sioniste face au fascisme allemand qui, pendant ses douze années au pouvoir, a assassiné des millions de juifs relève du tabou aux yeux des leaders sionistes. Ce n’est que rarement qu’on peut tomber sur des preuves authentiques ou des documents au sujet de ces questions. Cette enquête rassemble des informations recueillies jusqu’à tout récemment sur certains aspects importants de la coopération entre les fascistes et les sionistes. La nature des choses veut que cette enquête ne présente pas une image complète. Cela ne sera possible que quand les archives (surtout celles qui sont en Israël) dans lesquelles les documents concernant ces évènements sont enfermés à double tour seront accessibles aux chercheurs universitaires.

  • World Bank says Red-Dead project feasible | The Jordan Times
    http://jordantimes.com/world-bank-says-red-dead-project-feasible

    The Red Sea-Dead Sea Water Conveyance Project is feasible, according to a World Bank study, but it will have manageable social and environmental effects.

    Une conclusion inverse de la Banque aurait été étonnante. On est assuré de voir qu’elle pense que les effets seront gérables...
    Voir les études sur le site de la Banque
    http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTREDSEADEADSEA/Resources/Feasibility_Study_Report_Summary_EN.pdf
    http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTREDSEADEADSEA/Resources/Environmental_and_Social_Assessment_Summary_EN.pdf
    http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTREDSEADEADSEA/Resources/Study_of_Alternatives_Report_EN.pdf

    #Red-Dead-Sea-water-conveyance-project #Jordan #water #Palestine #Israel #Red-Dead

  • Palestine-Israel Journal: The West Bank Wall as Canvas: Art and Graffiti in Palestine/Israel

    http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=1350

    by Christine Leuenberger

    The philosopher John Austin has pointed out that we always do things with words. The terms we use to describe the West Bank barrier reveal our politics.1 For its Israeli proponents, it is the “security” or “anti-terrorist” fence. For its Israeli opponents and for Palestinians, it is the “apartheid,” “segregation,” “separation,” “colonization,” “demographic” or “annexation” wall. The barrier consists partly of a concrete wall in populated areas and an elaborate fence system in rural areas. The Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs maintains that the “security fence” is nothing like the Berlin Wall. Indeed, there are differences. The maximum height of the Berlin Wall was 3.65 meters; the West Bank wall is up to 8 meters high. Where the barrier turns into concrete slabs it becomes a canvas. Palestinian, Israeli and international graffiti artists make the gray concrete speak in multiple tongues. This has sparked “conflict tourism.” Tourists get bused into Abu-Dis, a neighborhood cut off from Jerusalem by the barrier, to stand in the shadow of the wall and read its voices.

  • Le sionisme et l’Empereur Guillaume

    Par Klaus Polkehn, Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol.4 N°2 (1975) traduit de l’anglais par Djazaïri
    http://mounadil.wordpress.com/2012/12/02/le-sionisme-et-limperialisme-allemand-un-texte-majeur-de-klaus-p

    Les échecs des troupes allemandes sur le front de l’est, n’avaient cependant pas permis aux assistants sionistes de Ludendorff d’obtenir des succès dignes de ce nom. Entre temps, le gouvernement allemand avait refusé de s’engager avec les sionistes sur la Palestine.

    Par contraste, les sionistes qui activaient en Angleterre avaient eu plus de réussite. Le 1er novembre 1917, la déclaration Balfour était publiée et l’orientation du mouvement sioniste était dorénavant décidée. L’homme derrière la déclaration était Chaim Weizmann qui avait fondé ses choix pro-britanniques avec des arguments semblables aux propositions que Herzl avait faites à Guillaume II et aux sionistes Allemands.


    Nous pouvons raisonnablement dire que si la Palestine passait dans la sphère d’influence britannique, et si la Grande Bretagne encourageait la colonisation juive là-bas, nous pourrions avoir d’ici vingt à trente ans un million de Juifs sur place ; ils développeraient le pays, le ramèneraient à la civilisation et seraient un poste de garde très efficace pour le canal de Suez.

    La déclaration Balfour embarrassait les sionistes Allemands aussi bien que le gouvernement allemand. Weizmann déclarera plus tard :

    D’un autre côté, le gouvernement allemand était profondément affecté par le parti que pouvait en retirer le gouvernement britannique. Il interpella tous nos représentants en Allemagne pour essayer de leur explique que le gouvernement allemand aurait fini par faire la même chose, mais qu’il n’avait pu [encore] le faire à cause de son alliance avec la Turquie qui l’obligeait à avancer lentement sur ce dossier.

    Le 5 janvier 1918, le ministère allemand des affaires étrangères transmettait au professeur Otto Warburg et au Dr Arthur Hantke, des membres de la direction sioniste qui siégeaient à Berlin, une note explicative où on lisait :

    « En ce qui concerne l’entreprise de la communauté juive et des sionistes en particulier, nous saluons… particulièrement l’intention du gouvernement impérial ottoman de promouvoir le développement d’une colonie juive en Palestine par la garantie de la liberté d’émigration et de colonisation dans la limite des capacités d’absorption du pays. Le gouvernement impérial ottoman, qui a toujours fait preuve d’une attitude amicale à l’égard des Juifs, leur accorde une autonomie régionale et le libre développement de leur culture en accord avec les lois du pays. »

    Cette déclaration n’était qu’une manière d’essayer de se tirer d’embarras et restait bien en deçà de la Déclaration Balfour. Sur le front de Gaza, les troupes turques et les contingents allemands battaient en retraite et le rêve allemand d’exercer une emprise impériale en Orient disparaissait. Il n’y eut pas de réaction visible de la part des sionistes allemands à la déclaration du ministère allemand des affaires étrangères. Il était loin le temps où les sionistes faisaient des déclarations de ce genre : « Je comprends le sionisme comme étant avant tout in des grands mouvements européens d’expansion… Nous voyons l’avenir de l’empire turc comme allant avec le destin futur de l’Allemagne. »