Honoring Mandela, PSLS is proud to provide legal support to growing BDS movement

Reflecting on the meaning of Nelson Mandela's legacy, Palestine Solidarity Legal Support redoubles our commitment to providing legal advocacy to the growing Boycott Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement in the United States.  

We are honored to support those who actively work to end the system of "pass laws", "bantustans", and legally enshrined inequalities that Palestinians face daily, comparable to the system of oppression that Mandela fought against in Apartheid South Africa. 

A leader of the current student movement for Palestinian rights, 

Rahim Kurwa, said it best: "Honor Mandela by viewing Palestine with the same moral clarity as apartheid South Africa".

 Rahim's piece explains how today's divestment campaigns on US campuses continue the legacy of the divestment struggle to end apartheid South Africa.  PSLS is proud to provide legal backup to the boycott and divestment movement, and considers Mandela's legacy and the anti-Apartheid struggle around the world as a beacon for all working for freedom and justice in Israel/ Palestine. 

apartheid graphic

apartheid graphic

December 9, 2013, By Rahim Kurwa, active member of Students for Justice in Palestine and currently a graduate student in the Sociology Department at the University of California, Los Angeles.

In today’s edition of the Daily Bruin you can read wonderful interviewswith Professors at UCLA who were a part of the 1970s and 1980s struggle against apartheid in South Africa. Apartheid is the term coined by whites in that country to refer to a political system in which whites systematically dominated the native black population - using a comprehensive set of separate laws to keep the black population unfree and unequal. The paper also includes a warm essay by Eitan Arom reflecting on the University of California’s relationship to Mandela, how he and Winnie Mandela were seen as inspirational figures, how the anti-apartheid movement helped UCLA discover its "moral center," and how the fight for South African liberation awakened a sense of internationalism among UCLA students.

Arom’s essay includes a prayer that "we can only hope to see with the same moral clarity as [Mandela] did, or at least for leaders like him to open our eyes when we don’t."

Today, however, we have an opportunity to put the lessons of Mandela and South Africa into practice by looking at the question of Palestine with the same moral clarity.

In 1974 there were pass laws that restricted where blacks could travel within their country. Students protested Polaroid, the company that supplied the film to create the pass-books that repressed millions on the basis of their skin color. Today, Hewlett Packard operates an analogous system in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, providing the biometric identification systems used to restrict the freedom of movement of Palestinians in their own country.

In 1974, there was a network of blacks-only areas, known as “bantustans,” outside of which blacks were not allowed to go. These bantustans were turned into independent black mini-states, cut off from each other and denied access to the resources of the South African state. Today, the West Bank is carved up into much the same network of isolated islands, cut off from water resources, fertile lands, and each other. Those islands are surrounded by a system of segregated roads and a network of checkpoints and walls (that we are invested in) that attempt to make their isolation permanent. Comparing the Palestinian territories in the West Bank to the bantustans from South Africa’s past, South Africa’s International Relations Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane said ”the last time I saw a map of Palestine, I couldn’t go to sleep…It is just dots, smaller than those of the homelands, and that broke my heart.”

image

Bantustans in South Africa

image

The West Bank’s Palestinian areas:

In 1974, blacks in South Africa were systematically denied the right to education, the right to vote, the right to a fair judicial process. Today Palestinians yearn for the same basic equalities.

In 1974, the University of California was invested in many American corporations that did business with and propped up the apartheid system. These companies were happy to sell the apartheid government whatever it wanted, at a steep price, and the University of California invested in those companies because it knew it could get a high return on its investment.

Students at the University of California, led by figures such as Tim Ngubeni, Sam Law, Pedro Nogueira, and hundreds of other women and men whose names have fallen from the historical record, recognized their complicity in this oppressive system. They understood that it was their obligation to stop the University of California from investing in American companies that supported apartheid. From approximately 1974 to 1986, they organized to force the UC Regents to divest from South Africa. It required no small measure of moral clarity to work day after day to achieve something that was not promised, and for a long time never seemed likely to happen.

As we mark the death of Nelson Mandela and think about his legacy here at UCLA, we must recognize that 1974 and 2014 are not so different. Today we are investing in a very similar kind of apartheid. A new set of corporations are providing the goods and services that are required in order to deny Palestinians the same basic freedoms that blacks in South Africa were denied for so long. And a new set of students are joining the divestment movement across the state. If Mandela’s legacy lives on, it must be in our constant effort to understand our relationship to systems of oppression. It must be in our struggle for divestment from oppressive systems like the prison industrial complex in our own country and the apartheid system operating in Palestine today.

It should come as no surprise that there is a long history of South African solidarity with the Palestinian people, who like black South Africans are jailed, beaten, and killed while struggling for their own freedom. Nelson Mandela expressed his solidarity with the Palestinian struggle in simple but compelling terms. Today, Desmond Tutu actively supports the divestment campaigns of SJPs at the University of California, and Ahmed Kathrada, who spent 26 years in prison alongside Mandela, works to free Palestinian prisoners subjected to conditions he, Mandela, and many others once faced.

In the same interview in which she compared the situation in Palestine to her country’s own past, Nkoana-Mashabane declared that "the struggle of the people of Palestine is our struggle." Today we must join her in solidarity with the Palestinian people, or else bury the legacy of Nelson Mandela.

PSLS presentation on repression of student activism at US Human Rights Network conference in Atlanta- December 8

On Sunday, December 8, 2013, Dima Khalidi, Director of Palestine Solidarity Legal Support, presented during the "Emerging Issues" portion of the US Human Rights Network's annual conference in Atlanta, Georgia.  The presentation, entitled: Repression of Student Activism for Palestinian Human Rights – An Emerging Battle over Free Speech on Campus, highlighted the kind of backlash students advocating for Palestinian rights have been facing on their campuses, from criminal prosecutions for speech activities, to disciplinary sanctions, to smear and intimidation campaigns, to surveillance and infiltration.  Read more here.

Action Items to support Palestinian American activist Rasmea Odeh

Rasmea Odeh, a 65 year old Palestinian American active in Chicago's Palestinian community, plead not-guilty at her arraignment on immigration fraud charges on November 13, 2013 in a Detroit federal court.  No date has been set for the next status hearing or for the trial.  Please continue to show your support for Rasmea by taking these Action Steps: 1) Sign the petition to drop the charges against Rasmea: http://www.iacenter.org/rasmeaodehpetition/

2) Call and send photos of support for Rasmea!

3) Join the Facebook page: Drop The Charges Against Rasmea Now! and Tweet using #justice4rasmea

4) Have your organization sign or write a solidarity statement (email to: stopfbi@gmail.com).  See the PSLS/CCR organizational sign-on statement here.

------------------------------------------

AAAN Statement:

October 23, 2013

Rasmea

The Arab American Action Network (AAAN) condemns the politically-motivated  

arrest

 and indictment of Rasmea Yousef Odeh, our beloved Associate Director.  The sixty-five year old was arrested at her home yesterday by agents from the Department of Homeland Security, alleging an immigration violation on a 20-year-old application.  Rasmea, who has made it her life's work to serve and help empower Palestinian and Arab families, is the victim of another witch-hunt by our federal law enforcement agencies, which continue to violate the civil rights of Arabs and Muslims with impunity, particularly those who are critical of U.S. support for Israel's crimes against the Palestinian people.

Rasmea is a leading member of Chicago's Arab and Muslim communities, and her decade of service here has changed the lives of thousands of people, particularly disenfranchised Arab women and their families.  She has been with the AAAN since 2004, and as Associate Director, is responsible for the management of day-to-day operations and the coordination of our Arab Women's Committee, which has a membership of close to 600 and leads our work in the areas of defending civil liberties and immigrant rights.  She is a mentor to hundreds of immigrant women, as well as many members of our staff and board, and is a well-known and respected organizer throughout Chicagoland, the U.S., and the world.

Earlier this year, Rasmea received the 

"Outstanding Community Leader Award"

from the Chicago Cultural Alliance, which described her as a woman who has "dedicated over 40 years of her life to the empowerment of Arab women, first in her homes of Palestine, Jordan, and Lebanon, where she was an activist and practicing attorney, and then the past 10 years in Chicago."

Rasmea is a community icon who recently completed a Master's degree in Criminal Justice from Governors State University.  She overcame vicious torture by Israeli authorities while imprisoned in Palestine in the 70s, and is a proud reminder of the millions of Palestinians who have not given up organizing for their rights of liberation, equality, and return.

It is appalling that our government is now attempting to imprison her once again.  We condemn this attack on our friend and colleague Rasmea, as well as the broader pattern of persecuting Arabs and Muslims who are outstanding and outspoken leaders in their communities in the U.S.

Rasmea's attorneys have requested a continuance of her next hearing, originally scheduled for November 1st in Detroit, so we will have details soon on mobilizing to support her there.

For more information, see 

www.stopfbi.net

, visit 

facebook

, and email

cppr@aaan.org

.

************

Support Rasmea!

Send us your pictures!

Right now we want to get Rasmea's story out there! We are calling on everyone to send us their picture holding up the following message:

"I am ________ and I support Rasmea!"

You can fill in the blank with any self-identifier: your name, your occupation, or any other description.  Some examples may be:

"I am a stay-at-home dad and I support Rasmea!"

"I am a youth organizer and I support Rasmea!"

"I am a supporter of Palestinian human rights and I support Rasmea!"

Hold the sign up and snap a selfie, then send it to 

cppr@aaan.org

. Put it up as your Facebook/Twitter profile pic, Google Account image, or anything else! Just remember we may use your image in future publications and informational pamphlets that get published online or distributed as hard copies.

PSLS, CCR and 64 other rights groups sign statement opposing indictment of Palestinian-American activist Rasmea Odeh

October 23, 2013 The below-signed organizations are deeply disturbed by and stand opposed to the indictment yesterday of Rasmea Yousef Odeh, a Palestinian-American community activist who has dedicated 10 years to the Chicago Arab-American community, working with women on issues ranging from promoting literacy and political education to addressing domestic violence and anti-Arab and Muslim sentiment.

Rasmea’s indictment for alleged immigration fraud comes at a time when advocates for Palestinian rights and immigration rights activists have been facing increasing pressure all over the country.  Exactly three years ago, 23 anti-war and Palestinian rights activists were subpoenaed to testify before a Grand Jury, and several of their homes were raided by the FBI.    There have been no indictments against the 23 activists subpoenaed in 2010, presumably because of a lack of evidence. It is no coincidence that federal prosecutors are now targeting Rasmea, who is a pillar in the same community.

The 2010 raids, the Grand Jury subpoenas that accompanied them, and this indictment against a 65 year old woman who suffered for a decade in Israeli prisons before coming to the U.S. in 1995, are a clear signal that federal authorities, along with Israel and its supporters in the U.S., are continuing to search for ways to intimidate and silence those who are effective advocates for Arab American communities, and who speak out for Palestinian rights.

In the last year alone, Palestine Solidarity Legal Support, in partnership with the Center for Constitutional Rights, and in collaboration with the National Lawyers Guild and other organizations, has documented over 75 cases of intimidation and legal bullying. These include perceived surveillance, FBI contacts, and discriminatory enforcement of laws against advocates for Palestinian rights.  Rasmea’s arrest and indictment must be viewed within this wider context of widespread attempts to intimidate people into silence on one of the most pressing human rights issues of our time.  Rasmea’s indictment is also an illustration of increasingly draconian enforcement of immigration laws, which have left immigrant communities devastated at the hands of Obama’s Department of Homeland Security.

Rasmea is an exemplary citizen who recently finished a Master’s degree in Criminal Justice, and has a law degree from Jordan.  She has overcome amazing odds after being convicted by the Israeli military court system in 1969 for her alleged association with a leftist Palestinian nationalist group that the U.S. designated a terrorist organization.  The military courts operate exclusively to subjugate occupied Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza.  They routinely bypass all but a modicum of due process, and justify holding individuals without charge or trial for months and years, often in abusive conditions and subject to torture.  Rasmea’s activism against the Israeli occupation in the 1960s resulted in her imprisonment in Israeli prisons for 10 years, and it is surely her community activism in the U.S. that has made her, and by extension, the community that relies on her, the target of this indictment.

We call for solidarity with Rasmea as she undergoes a difficult legal battle.  Please support Rasmea at her November 13 or 14 appearance in federal court in Detroit, Michigan.  (Please stay tuned for an exact date, which is not yet set.) We are also asking all supporters to call Barbara McQuade, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan in Detroit, at 313.226.9501 or 313.226.9100, from 8 AM to 4 PM CST, to demand that she Drop the Charges Now.  For further action items, please see the Arab American Action Network alert. 

SIGNED:

Al-Awda New York, Palestine right to Return Coalition

American Friends Service Committee           

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee

American Muslims for Palestine

Arab Jewish Partnership for Peace and Justice in the Middle East

AROC: Arab Resource & Organizing Center

Bay Area Committee to Stop Political Repression (BACSPR)

Bay Area Women in Black

Boston Coalition for Palestinian Rights

Boycott Israeli Apartheid Campaign - Vancouver

Brooklyn College Students for Justice in Palestine

Canada Palestine Association

Center for Constitutional Rights

Chicago Movement for Palestinian Rights

College and University Workers United

Committee for a Just Peace in Israel and Palestine

Committee for Open Discussion of Zionism 

Council on American-Islamic Relations – Chicago

CUNY Law Students for Justice in Palestine

Friends of Deir Ibzi'a

Grassroots Global Justice Alliance

Hampshire College Students for Justice in Palestine 

International League of People’s Struggles

INCITE! Women and Trans* People of Color Against Violence 

Independent Jewish Voices-Vancouver

Interdenominational Advocates for Peace (IDAP)

International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network

Jadaliyya

JEWS SAY NO!

Jewish Voice for Peace

Jewish Voice for Peace – Bay Area

Jewish Voice for Peace - Chicago 

Jewish Voice for Peace - Detroit

Jewish Voice for Peace -- Philadelphia

Jews for Palestinian Right of Return

Justice for Palestinians, San Jose, CA

Labor for Palestine

Legalease Collective, CKUT, Montreal

Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign

Muslim Defense Project of the National Lawyers Guild - New York Chapter

National Lawyers Guild Free Palestine Subcommittee

National Lawyers Guild Chicago

National Students for Justice in Palestine

New York City Labor Against the War

NYC Queers Against Israeli Apartheid

PAWA: Palestinian American Women's Association

Palestine Aid Society 

Palestinian Christian Alliance for Peace (PCAP)  

Palestine Solidarity Group - Chicago

Palestine Solidarity Legal Support

Queers Against Israeli Apartheid (Toronto)

Red Sparks Union – Vancouver

San Francisco Women in Black

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Socialist Action

Solidarity: a socialist, feminist, anti-racist organization

Sunbula: Arab Feminists for Change

The Dream Defenders

Unitarian Universalists for Justice in the Middle East

United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC)

US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel

US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation

US Palestinian Community Network

WBAI Justice and Unity Campaign 

Women of Colour Collective at the McGill Faculty of Law 

Voice of Palestine

 

 

CCR, JVP Submit Amicus Brief in Appeal of “Irvine 11” Convictions

The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) filed a joint Amicus brief in support of the appeal to overturn the convictions of the “Irvine 11” – ten students who were criminally prosecuted for peacefully protesting a speech by Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren in 2010.  Each of the students stood up at different points during the speech, made a short statement condemning Israel’s human rights violations, and walked out, occupying no more than five minutes of the one hour event.  They were arrested, and then prosecuted after a year-long investigation.

These students, like university students across the country, have regularly and vigorously protested speakers and public officials without consequence, much less arrest.  CCR and JVP asked the court: why was this case worthy of criminal prosecution while similar protests, both before and after, were not?

The brief underscores the likelihood that the protest was punished not because it “substantially impaired” the meeting, as required by the California law under which they were charged, but because the message of the protesters "substantially offended the sensibilities of the [event] organizers and the state." California law and the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution prohibit precisely this type of political prosecution.

Said Dima Khalidi, Cooperating Counsel with the Center for Constitutional Rights and Director of Palestine Solidarity Legal Support: "This prosecution did not happen in a vacuum.  There has been widespread repression of speech advocating for Palestinian rights across the country - by government agencies, universities and organizations that promote Israeli policies against Palestinians.  It must therefore be viewed as part and parcel of efforts to intimidate and silence a viewpoint that is consistently drowned out by mainstream orthodox positions in the U.S. that are unconditionally supportive of Israel, whatever its human rights record.”

The Brief also puts this case in a historical context, showing how discriminatory enforcement of vague laws has been used to suppress other movements for social change, including the Civil Rights and anti-war movements.  The California appellate court has a duty, as the U.S. Supreme Court has dictated in response to past repression of critical movements, to ensure that these students’ First Amendment rights are protected against the whims of local law enforcement, prosecutors and courts who have the power to stifle dissenting viewpoints.

Said Rebecca Vilkomerson, Executive Director of JVP, “There is a reason for the dramatic difference in the way these students were treated for challenging an Israeli public official, and the way JVP members and others are treated for engaging in similar protests.  Widespread Islamphobia and attempts to suppress views supportive of Palestinians surely contributed to a decision to go after these students.”

Read the full Amicus brief here. 

Civil rights orgs stand up to protect Cal. State Professor attacked for criticizing Israel on university server

Is there a First Amendment right to advocate for Palestinian rights on a state university server?  Yes!  In its latest attack on free speech at California campuses, the Amcha Initiative again attempts to silence opposing political views by distorting the law.  Amcha claims that Cal. State Northridge professor David Klein is required to get permission from university trustees before promoting the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israeli institutions on a university server.  But the law Amcha cites merely requires permission from trustees to use the Cal. State University name to imply an official endorsement of a boycott.  As the Cal. State administration itself determined in an investigation into the matter, no reasonable person would interpret Prof. Klein's "Boycott Israel" website as implying that the university officially endorses the views expressed.  Professor Klein's website is political expression on a matter of grave public importance.  He does not need permission. Universities must ensure that debate on Palestine/Israel remains unfettered and academic freedom is protected. For more details on the legal issues, please read the letter from the National Lawyers Guild Los Angeles Chapter to the trustees of California State University.

New Guide Addresses Legal Issues Commonly Faced by Palestine Solidarity Activists

Monday, September 9, 2013 As the academic year starts up at colleges across the country, Palestine Solidarity Legal Support (PSLS) and the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) are pleased to announce the publication of a Know Your Rights booklet for Palestinian rights activists-  Legal and Tactical Guide: Palestinian Human Rights Advocacy in the U.S. The Guide is intended to help activists, both on and off campus, identify potential legal issues and how they might be approached, and to provide basic information about individual rights in a given situation.  It includes sections on First Amendment rights and common ways that free speech rights are infringed, issues specific to campus activism, potential criminal charges arising from rights activism, and legal issues around boycott, divestment and sanctions campaigns.

Legal and Tactical Guide- Palestinian Human Rights Advocacy in the U.S

FRONT PAGE KYR

FRONT PAGE KYR

PSLS, in partnership with CCR and in collaboration with the National Lawyers Guild and other organizations, has been responding to the increasing legal attacks and intimidation campaigns against Palestine solidarity activists around the US with direct representation and advocacy on behalf of activists, advocacy work on key policy issues, and legal education efforts.  The Guide comes at the end of PSLS’s first year of work identifying and beginning to tackle the ways that Palestine solidarity activists are being repressed.   “We’re excited that this resource will be available for Palestinian rights activists who will find many of these issues familiar, but may not know what they can do about them,” said Dima Khalidi, CCR Cooperating Counsel and PSLS Director.  “Our hope is that it will encourage people to identify in advance how and when legal problems may arise in their advocacy work, and to seek our help in fighting back against attempts to stifle their speech on this critical issue.”

"This is a fantastic resource, one that every Palestinian and Palestine solidarity activist in the U.S. should read and store in her book bag, briefcase, and glove compartment,” said Hatem Abudayyeh, National Coordinating Committee member of the United States Palestinian Community Network (USPCN, www.uspcn.org) and one of the activists raided by the FBI and subpoenaed to a federal grand jury in September of 2010 for his Palestine support work (www.stopfbi.net).  “We have history and morality on our side; and now, with this document, we will also be equipped to fight back legally against the repression we face."

"As student organizers, we face so much legal bullying that relies on a lack of knowledge about our rights. This guide is exactly what we need - with it and the support of PSLS, we will be better prepared against baseless threats and intimidation, and we can focus our efforts instead on our organizing for Palestinian human rights," said Taliah Mirmalek, a student at UC Berkeley and a member of Students for Justice in Palestine.

While the Guide is meant to be used independently by activists, PSLS encourages individuals and groups to reach out to report incidents of repression, to get legal and advocacy help when facing backlash, and to request workshops or other more tailored discussions about how to protect and advance their rights.

Contact PSLS if you:

  • Face attempts to shut down, smear or hamper your activism

  • Think your First Amendment rights to organize and protest have been violated

  • Need legal advice about BDS or other campaigns

  • Experience verbal or physical intimidation or assault

  • Experience different treatment than other individuals or groups by university or government officials

  • Have questions about your rights to engage in activism

  • Need resources or trainings for your group

 Website: palestinelegalsupport.org

Email: info@palestinelegalsupport.org

Phone: (312) 212-0448

Access the Guide here:  Legal and Tactical Guide- Palestinian Human Rights Advocacy in the U.S

Palesinian Human Rights Advocacy - last page

Palesinian Human Rights Advocacy - last page