MIM(Prisons) is a cell of revolutionaries serving the oppressed masses inside U.$. prisons, guided by the communist ideology of Marxism-Leninism-Maoism.
Under Lock & Key is a news service written by and for prisoners with a focus on what is going on behind bars throughout the United States. Under Lock & Key is available to U.S. prisoners for free through MIM(Prisons)'s Free Political Literature to Prisoners Program, by writing:
MIM(Prisons) PO Box 40799 San Francisco, CA 94140.
In yet another act of terrorism, Shareen Abu Akleh, a
Palestinian-amerikan journalist, was targeted and killed by the
illegitimate state of I$rael and its military. The I$raeli state, its
occupation of Palestine, and its armed forces are and have been backed
by the united state’s ruling class since 1932. On 11 May 2022, while on
the job, covering an I$raeli military raid on the Jenin refugee camp in
the West Bank, she was maliciously assassinated.
Shareen Abu Akleh became a thorn in the side of the I$raeli state as
a result of her continuous on the spot coverage of daily state
repression, human rights violations, and Palestinian genocide. She
covered many detentions, home demolitions (which Palestinian homes were
targeted in, and demolished to force them to relocate for I$raelis)
military raids of schools and universities, and Masjids, and killings of
Palestinians. This brave frontline work placed her on I$raeli hit
lists.
Shareen Abu Akleh was a journalist for decades and a Palestinian
revolutionary-nationalist, who being a trailblazer in her field,
inspired many Palestinian and Arab wimmin to serve their people through
the work of liberation journalism.
Her funeral brought out tens of thousands of supporters, mostly
Palestinian, in Jerusalem. As pallbearers carried sister Shareen, the
I$raeli military attacked them, and further disrupted the occasion with
malicious zionist violence against Palestinian nationals.
Sadly, the colonization of Palestine, the Apartheid regime of I$rael,
and violent and fatal repression of native inhabitants is all apart of
the imperialist system. What does imperialism look like? It looks like
land theft, it looks like millions of people living without power or
plumbing, it looks like bombing and shelling of homes, schools,
hospitals and finishing the job by attacking refugee camps. It looks
like storming universities, confiscating study materials, it looks like
the process of erasing an entire human group, and that’s exactly what’s
taking place in Palestine. There will be many who call for justice for
Shareen Abu Akleh, but the sad truth is that justice for her and justice
for the Palestinian nation can only be achieved with the end of the
I$raeli occupation.
FREE THE LAND!!! FREE
PALESTINE!!!
The Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) movement is a grassroots
initiative that began in the early 2000’s to gain international support
for the occupied Palestinian nation against I$rael’s continued military
suppression, genocide and land theft.
In recent years the BDS movement has indeed gained international
support, even in the face of reactionary pro-imperialist backlash from
the states who support genocide, land theft and military crimes.
The goal of BDS is to isolate I$rael on the international field by
upholding the “simple principle that Palestinians are entitled to the
same rights as the rest of humanity”.
Students around the world have been pressuring their schools and
universities to join the ‘Academic Boycott’, initiated in 2004 by the
Palestinian campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of I$rael
(PACBI). As student activism again comes to life here in the United
$tates, it is important that students engage in internationalist
frameworks. Amerikan student activists should support the academic
boycott of I$rael, which is part of the overall BDS movement. Students
should do this not as a mere moral cause, but the understanding that
over 50% of the U.$. states strongly support the I$raeli
military-apartheid-colonization, so much so that 35 states have Anti-BDS
laws. They support the frequent military raids of Palestinian
universities under the pretext of ‘countering terrorist activities’, the
imprisonment and murder of student activists peacefully protesting,
closure of schools and the recent I$raeli military move to arbitrarily
control what is and isn’t taught in universities. A new government
procedure allows the military to restrict visiting professors who teach
subjects supposedly ‘not relevant to Palestinians’.
In the United $tates, the free flow of ideas has begun to be brought
to an end. Book bans, Don’t Say Gay laws, the backlash against Critical
Race Theory, what’s next? Will the same reactionaries rally police/
military force to suppress your student demonstration? The book Chican@ Power and
the Struggle for Aztlán has been banned in prisons in many parts of
occupied Aztlán. Will the reactionaries prevent your free thought?
NEWSFLASH THEY ALREADY ARE! Students in North America should pressure
their institutions to join the Academic boycott and the wider BDS
movement. END ALL COLLABORATION WITH THE ILLEGITIMATE STATE, until
Palestine is free.
MIM(Prisons) adds: One of the first essays many
students of MIM study is On Contradiction by Mao Zedong. In it
Mao explains how change must come from within. The liberation of
Palestine depends on an effective national liberation struggle from
within Palestine, but it can be assisted by resistance to the funding
and arming of the I$raeli state by Amerikans whose government is the
primary prop of I$rael. A strong anti-imperialist movement in this
country would be able to limit the sale of military goods to I$rael,
Ukraine and anywhere else where the empire wants to fight wars against
its enemies without sending its own troops.
Notes: (1) ‘Palestinian-american journalist
assassinated,’ Monical Hill, FreedomSocialist,vol.43,no.3 (2)
‘Academic fortify boycott of Israel’, Raya Fidel,
FreedomSocialist,vol.43,no.3
The Republic of Aztlan extends our arms in solidarity with the
Palestinian people. Why should the liberation of Palestinian people be
so important to us Chicanos? It is because we share the legacy of
colonialism; a struggle for national liberation; a common destiny when
it came to empire-building of white nations; we share the common
experience of forced expulsion from our homelands; and we share the same
oppressor – world imperialism.
We will examine the five reasons that the Chicano nation should find
solidarity with our oppressed nation brothers and sisters in
Palestine:
We share a common thread of 100+ years of colonization;
We share a common thread of a struggle for national liberation;
The commonality in our histories is that both Palestinians and
Chicanos share a common destiny and historical role when it comes to
world imperialism. In the U.$. the doctrine of manifest destiny
justified land theft and genocide as a divine right of a specific
nation’s people. In the U.$. those people were the Euro-Amerikan
settlers. In Palestine, the Arabs face land theft and genocide which is
based on a belief that I$raelis have the religious right to said land
and therefore exterminating Palestinians and taking their land is an
unfortunate necessity in creating a supposed Jewish state.
With this idealist religious justification, forced expulsion has been
unleashed on the Palestinian people. We recall that in the 1950s,
Operation Wetback expelled 1-2 or more million Mexican people whether
they were born in the U.$. or Mexico didn’t matter.
Our oppressors are the same - world imperialism. At this point, the
primary contradiction in the world is with imperialism and the oppressed
nations. This is how Chicano liberation is inextricably linked to
Palestinian liberation.
The I$raeli-Palestinian conflict is not the product of ancient ethnic
nor religious hatred, nor is it about modern religious hatred either. It
is the tragic clash between two peoples with claims to the same land –
one claim being idealist and the other being historical materialist. It
is the outcome of a 100-year-old colonial occupation by Zionists and
later I$rael, backed by the British, the United States, and other major
imperial powers. This project is about the national bourgeoisie of a
persecuted religious minority in Europe speaking for all Jews in every
corner of the world (from Russia, Iraq, Ethiopia, Spain, the United
$tates, etc.) into building a powerful homeland granting them protection
which will be gained through eradication of an indigenous population. It
is about the rendering of the Palestinians as non-people, writing them
out of the historical narrative as if they never existed and denying
them basic human rights. It depends on the metaphysical idea that all
Jewish groups from all around the world all with different history,
language, culture, territory, and psychological make up all belong to
one nation because of religion. It feeds off of the anti-semitic idea
that Jews are outsiders in the various respective countries they reside.
Yet to state these incontrovertible facts of European colonization —
supported by innumerable official reports and public and private
communiques and statements, along with historical records and events —
sees I$rael’s defenders level charges of anti-Semitism and racism. We
ask the question: what is more anti-semitic? The claim that says zionism
requires an ethnic cleansing and assimilation of various historically
Jewish communities around the planet into the model European Jewish
groups? Or the claim that says Jews don’t belong in our country and they
should live in their own place where no one has to deal with them?
Edward Said, a Palestinian intellectual of the famous book
“Orientalism” who grew up in British occupied Palestine summarized:
“This is a unique colonialism that we’ve been subjected to where they
have no use for us. The best Palestinian for them is either dead or
gone. It’s not that they want to exploit us.”
Zionism was birthed from the evils of anti-Semitism. It was a
reaction to the discrimination and violence inflicted on Jews,
especially during the savage pogroms in Russia and Eastern Europe in the
late 19th century and early 20th century that left thousands dead. The
Zionist leader Theodor Herzl in 1896 published “Der Judenstaat,” or “The
Jewish State,” in which he warned that Jews were not safe in Europe, a
warning that within a few decades proved terrifyingly prescient with the
rise of German fascism.
Britain’s support of a Jewish homeland was always colored by
anti-Semitism. The 1917 decision by the British Cabinet, as stated in
the Balfour Declaration, to support “the establishment in Palestine of a
national home for the Jewish people” was a principal part of a misguided
endeavor based on anti-Semitic tropes. The British elites, including
Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, also believed that Jews could never be
assimilated in British society and it was better for them to emigrate.
It is telling that the only Jewish member of Prime Minister David Lloyd
George’s government, Edwin Montagu, vehemently opposed the Balfour
Declaration. He argued that it would encourage states to expel its Jews.
“Palestine will become the world’s ghetto,” Balfour warned.
This partially turned out to be the case after World War II when
hundreds of thousands of Jewish refugees, many rendered stateless, had
nowhere to go but Palestine. Often, their communities had been destroyed
during the war or their homes and land had been confiscated through
fascist brutality. Those Jews who returned to countries like Poland
found they had nowhere to live and were often victims of discrimination
as well as postwar anti-Semitic attacks and even massacres.
These first Jewish settlers knew they needed an imperial patron to
succeed and survive just like the early Euro-Amerikan settlers needed
sponsors from their old countries. Their first patron was Britain, which
sent 100,000 troops to crush the Palestinian revolt of the 1930s and
armed and trained Jewish militias known as the Haganah. The savage
repression of that revolt included wholesale executions and aerial
bombardment and left 10% of the adult male Arab population killed,
wounded, imprisoned or exiled. After the British left after the
contradiction between the settlers and the British became antagonstic,
the Zionists’ second patron became the United States, which now,
generations later, provides more than $3 billion a year to I$rael.
I$rael, despite the myth of self-reliance it peddles about itself, would
not be able to maintain its Palestinian colonies without its imperial
benefactors. This is why the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement
historically frightened I$rael. It is also why Chicanos should support
the economic boycott of I$rael as well.
The early Zionists bought up huge tracts of fertile Palestinian land
and drove out the indigenous inhabitants. They subsidized European
Jewish settlers sent to Palestine, where 94% of the inhabitants were
Arabs but once colonialism began to look bad in the post-World War II
era of decolonization, the colonial origins and practice of Zionism and
I$rael were whitewashed and conveniently forgotten in I$rael and the
West. In fact, Zionism — for two decades the coddled step-child of
British colonialism — re-branded itself as an anti-colonial
movement.”
“Today, the conflict that was engendered by this classic
nineteenth-century European colonial venture in a non-European land,
supported from 1917 onward by the greatest Western imperial power of its
age, is rarely described in such unvarnished terms,” Khalidi writes.
“Indeed, those who analyze not only I$raeli settlement efforts in
Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the occupied Syrian Golan Heights but the
entire Zionist enterprise from the perspective of its colonial-settler
origins and nature are often vilified. Many cannot accept the
contradiction inherent in the idea that although Zionism undoubtedly
succeeded in creating a thriving national entity in I$rael, its roots
are as a colonial settler project (as are those of other modern
countries: the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand). Nor
can they accept that it would not have succeeded but for the support of
the great imperial powers, Britain and later the United States. Zionism,
therefore, could be and was both a national and a colonial settler
movement at one and the same time.”
Much like the United $tates, I$rael too was started by the outcasts
of the old world who were more useful in the new world (North America
and Palestine respectively) than the old (Europe). Through venturing
through North America old colonialism was able to gain a major section
of primitive accumulation (land conquest and enslavement of our First
Nation and New Afrikan brothers), and transform itself into modern
imperialism; and through the outpost that is I$rael, modern imperialism
was able to export its finance capital safe and sound into middle east
proper.
One of the central tenets of the Zionist and I$raeli colonization is
the denial of an authentic, independent Palestinian identity. During the
British control of Palestine, the population was officially divided
between Jews and “non-Jews.” One time I$raeli Prime Minister Gold Meir
said:
“There was no such thing as Palestinians … they did not exist.”
This erasure, which requires an egregious act of historical amnesia,
is what the I$raeli sociologist Baruch Kimmerling called the
“politicide” of the Palestinian people. Khalidi writes, “The surest way
to eradicate a people’s right to their land is to deny their historical
connection to it.” Chicanos have been subjected to the same name erasure
by the U.$. government’s push to call us Hispanics, Latinos, or Mexicans
and erase our Chicano name which is fundamentally based on national
identity.
The creation of the state of I$rael on May 15, 1948, was achieved by
the Haganah and other Jewish groups through the ethnic cleansing of the
Palestinians and massacres that spread terror among the Palestinian
population. The Haganah, trained and armed by the British, swiftly
seized most of Palestine. It emptied West Jerusalem and cities such as
Haifa and Jaffa, along with numerous towns and villages, of their Arab
inhabitants. Palestinians call this moment in their history the Nakba or
the Catastrophe.
Since 1948, Palestinians have heroically mounted one resistance
effort after another, all unleashing disproportionate I$raeli reprisals
and demonization of the Palestinians as terrorists. But this resistance
has also forced the world to recognize the presence of Palestinians,
despite the feverish efforts of I$rael, the United States, and many Arab
regimes to remove them from historical consciousness. The repeated
revolts, as Said noted, gave the Palestinians the right to tell their
own story, the “permission to narrate.”
I$rael is an apartheid state that rivals and often surpasses the
onetime savagery and racism of apartheid South Africa. Modern I$raeli
society is infested with metaphysical racial chauvinism with “Death to
Arabs” being a common popular chant at I$raeli soccer matches. I$raeli
mobs and vigilantes, including thugs from right-wing youth groups such
as Im Tirtzu, carry out indiscriminate acts of vandalism and violence
against dissidents, Palestinians, I$raeli Arabs. The government of
I$rael has promulgated a series of discriminatory laws against non-Jews
that eerily resemble the racist Nuremberg Laws that disenfranchised Jews
in Nazi Germany. The I$raeli educational system, starting in primary
school, is an indoctrination machine for the military. The I$raeli army
periodically unleashes massive assaults with its air force, artillery
and mechanized units on the largely defenseless 1.85 million
Palestinians in Gaza, resulting in thousands of Palestinian dead or
wounded.
The Zionists could never have colonized the Palestinians without the
backing of Western imperial powers whose motives were driven by
anti-Semitism. Many of the Jews who fled to I$rael would not have done
so but for the virulent European anti-Semitism, that by the end of World
War II saw 6 million Jews murdered. I$rael was all that many
impoverished and stateless survivors, robbed of their national rights,
communities, homes, and often most of their relatives, had left. It
became the tragic fate of the Palestinians, who had no influence in the
European pogroms or the Holocaust, to be sacrificed on the altar of
hate.
Don’t forget that the Obama administration resupplied I$rael in the
middle of their slaughter of innocents in Gaza in 2014. Obama, Biden,
Trump the democrats and racist corporate media are all complicit with
the war crimes against humanity that I$rael is committing. On top of
this, the various police forces of Amerikkka utilizes exchange programs
with the state of I$rael to trade intelligence and train in I$raeli
tactics of suppressing Palestinian resistance in the urban areas. Those
same tactics will be implemented on the ghettos, barrios, and
reservations to discipline entire communities of oppressed nations. Back
in the George Floyd uprisings, the streets were littered with gas
canisters which claimed “Made in I$rael.” It got to a point Palestinian
activists were sharing counter-police tactics online for us in how to
deal with those tear gas and police tactics.
As revolutionary nationalists, we highlight the necessity for
solidarities for not only our nations but for all oppressed nations to
gain their self-determination. We also call to combat anti-semitism and
metaphysical views of what nations are which give to movements like
Zionism in the first place. For these reasons, the Republic of Aztlan
and the Chicano Nation finds solidarity with Palestine. From the river
to the sea, Aztlan and Palestine will be free!
On 28 December 2021, Hisham Abu Hawash of the Islamic Jihad Movement
in Palestine has gained a victory against I$rael’s counter-revolutionary
“administrative detention” policy. Hawash’s lawyer, Jawad Boulos, has
stated that I$rael pledged for Hawsah’s release on 26 February 2022 and
therefore the hunger strike will end.(1)
Hawsah is a 40-year-old father of 5 and a member of the Islamic Jihad
Movement in Palestine. He is among several Palestinian revolutionaries
waging a hunger strike in protest of I$rael’s unjust policy, which locks
up Palestinians without any due trial. He has faced 8 years of time
imprisoned with 4 of those years under administrative detention.(2)
The Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine (PIJ) rightfully threatened
counter-attacks if Hawsah ever died in custody.(3)
Palestinians across the occupied land have gone in protests
supporting the strikers. One protest in the West Bank city of Ramallah,
on 6 January 2022, included signs which read: “Those starving behind
bars feed the universe with dignity” – a slogan we extend to hunger
strikers not only in Palestine but across the world.(4)
The
Reactionary Policy of Administrative Detention
Administrative detention is a form of arrest or imprisonment done
without trial – usually for issues of “terrorism” or rebellion. Many
imperialist countries use the tactic of administrative detention to
control unruly populations/groups.(5) In the United $tates for example,
around 182,869 migrants from the Third World were held in detention
centers through this method in 2020.(6) Despite the more advanced and
developed contradictions between I$rael and Palestine, compared to
oppressed nations in the United $tates and Euro-Amerika the year after,
I$rael held a mere 1,595 Palestinians in administrative detentions.
Amerika has truly earned the title “Big Satan” in contrast to I$rael’s
“Little Satan” status on this front.(7) The administrative detention
policy of the I$raelis work through the arrest and detention of
Palestinian revolutionaries and activists. The idealists arguing for
I$rael will say that administrative detention has been applied to
I$raelis as well – notably, against ultra-chauvinist zionist terrorists
and unruly settlers. Throughout the years, only 9 I$raelis were held in
administrative detention; Palestinians and Arabs number in the
thousands.(8) Any sober minded person and materialist will be able to
recognize that the exception proves the rule in this case like so many
often times.
DOWN WITH ADMINISTRATIVE DETENTION!
THOSE STARVING BEHIND BARS FEED THE WORLD’S DIGNITY
Notes: 1. Joseph Krauss, “Palestinian prisoner ends hunger
strike in deal with Israel” Associated Press, January 4th
2022
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. “Israel’s Policy of Administrative Detention,” European
Parliament
6. “United States Immigration Detention Profile,” Global
Detention Project
7. “Prisoners society: Israel issued 1,595 administrative
detention orders against Palestinians in 2021,” Press TV
8. “Stop Administrative Detention,” Prisoner Support Human
Rights Association
On 6 September 2021, 6 Palestinian prisoners of war have escaped an
I$raeli maximum security prison known as Gilboa by digging a tunnel with
plates and panhandles.(1) The tunnel was 72 meters long, and the I$raeli
Security Agency has suspected that the excavation had started around
November of 2020.(2) This incident is being talked of as the most
significant prison break in the history of Palestine.
The 6 Palestinian prisoners were members of Palestinian nationalist
organizations (The al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades and the al-Quds Brigades)
which have resisted the I$raeli occupation.(3) Out of the 6, four of the
escaped freedom fighters were serving life sentences.(4)
In response to the prison break, the I$raeli Prison Service (IPS),
launched a lockdown on Palestinian prisoners: break time has been cut to
one hour a day; prison canteen has been closed; and the number of
captives able to walk in the yard has been decreased. 400 prisoners, who
have been deemed “Jihadist” and a threat to the security of the prisons,
have been separated from one another as well. On top of this, family
visits have been completely taken away by the pigs.(5) For our readers
on the inside, these tactics by the I$raeli prison pigs to punish all
for the actions of some sound similar as the United $tates and I$rael
are very similar in character. Both are settler-colonial states, and
both trade and exchange tactics/information used to better repress their
respective oppressed nations.
The Day of Rage
In response to this crackdown, I$raeli prisons faced strikes and
riots. In Katziot prison, seven cells were set on fire by Palestinian
prisoners and hunger strikes have been set to begin in Gilboa on Friday,
17 Septemebr 2021.(6) The Palestinian Prisoners Affairs Commission has
declared that 1,380 prisoners have joined the hunger strikes.(7)
Outside of the prison walls, the nationalist organization Hamas has
declared a “Day of Rage” on the Friday of September 10th.(8) At the
al-Aqsa mosque, supporters of the escaped freedom fighters have
organized a sit in protest after the end of prayer. The I$raeli forces
stormed the mosque in response to the protest and killed one man and
arrested another. The man killed was a Palestinian doctor named Hazem
al-Jolani.(9)
About a week after the escape, the 6 prisoners were recaptured into
imprisonment. One of the freedom fighters, Yaqoub Mahmoud Qadri, was put
in solitary confinement with nothing but a blanket and was subjected to
physical and psychological torture.(10) All other prisoners involved in
the escape were sent to separate high security prisons as well.(11)
Internationalism in the
Prison Movement
While studying Engels’ writings on the bourgeois state, Lenin said
the following:
“Engels elucidates the concept of the ‘power’ which is called the
state, a power which arose from society but places itself above it and
alienates itself more and more from it. What does this power mainly
consist of? It consists of special bodies of armed men having prisons,
etc., at their command.”(12)
As Lenin explains, prisons serve a class purpose in maintaining power
in class society. In the world we live in today, the bourgeois class
utilizes prisons to control their “unruly” populations under their
command. Under socialism and proletarian dictatorship, prisons will
exist as well (albeit under principles of rectification and
rehabilitation learned from the past socialist experiences rather than
punishment for punishment’s sake). For the case of not only the 6
prisoners of war who escaped Gilboa, but also for all prisoners in
Palestine and all prisoners in the United $tates, their facilities are a
material form of capitalist-imperialist power locking them up in their
every move. Here in the United $tates, we have had historic moments of
prisoners fighting against the repression and seeking for redemption and
liberation through class struggle. The Attica uprising of 9 September
1971 is a prime example of that class struggle. With Attica as the
battle cry of the revolutionary prison movement in the United $tates, we
hope to reach that cry across the oceans and to Palestine itself.
From Attica 2 Gilboa!
Down with the I$raeli Prison Service! Down with the Department of
Corrections!
Bibliography1. Toi Staff, September 14,
2021, “Jailbreak probe said to find 11 Gilboa prisoners started tunnel
dig in November.” Times of Israel2.
Ibid.3. The Palestine Chronicle, September 6, 2021,
“Six Palestinian Prisoners Break out of Gilboa Prison after Digging
Tunnel”4. Ibid.5. Middle East
Eye, September 10, 2021, “Palestinian killed during ‘day of rage’
solidarity protests for prison escapees”6. Khaled
Abu Tomaeh, September 14, 2021, “Palestinian prisoners to begin hunger
strike Friday,” The Jerusalem Post.7.
Ibid.8. Ibid.9.
Ibid.10.Yeni Safak, September 16, 2021,
“Palestinian prison escapee to keep fighting for freedom.”11. Middle East Eye, October 1, 2021, “Israel: Recaptured
Palestinian jailbreakers transferred to solitary confinement”12. Vladimir Lenin, August 1917, “State and
Revolution.”
25 May 2017 - Actions in cities around the world were taken today to
mark 40 days since 1500 Palestinian political prisoners have been living
on salt and water alone to protest the conditions of their confinement.
The message at these rallies made clear connections between the struggle
against long-term solitary confinement, detention without trial, lack of
health care and restrictions on contact with families and the broader
anti-colonial struggle. At a local demonstration, this connection was
also made to struggles here on occupied Turtle Island.
Signs reading “Palestine Will Be Free” and “Withhold Aid to Israel”
lined the sidewalk in front of the Israeli consulate as Aarab Barghouti,
the son of political prisoner
Marwan
Barghouti, spoke to the crowd in San Francisco. Aarab spoke of not
being able to enter Jerusalem, the city where ey was born. Aarab told of
eir sister visiting their father to plead that ey not risk eir health in
a hunger strike. But Marwan Barghouti responded that, “I’m doing this
because I haven’t been able to touch any of you for 15 years. I’m doing
this because we have more than 5000 Palestinian prisoners who haven’t
been charged or had their day in court.”
The participants this correspondent spoke with were all quick to speak
of colonialism and the seizure of land when asked why so many
Palestinians languished in Israeli jails. They spoke of the one-sided
violence and the resistance that Palestinians made to it that led to
their imprisonment. Everyone knew that the United $tates is the biggest
prison state in the world today. But when asked why, only half (of a
small sample size) made the same connections to land grab and national
oppression in this country. Others spoke of the “Prison Industrial
Complex”, free labor, profits, outdated laws and a system that works
against the poor. This correspondent pointed out that MIM(Prisons) has
research on their website debunking some of the common ideas held about
the “PIC,” and for-profit prisons in the United $tates.
The relative silence around the colonial question here on occupied
Turtle Island is somewhat understandable. We do not have an apartheid
state like Israel has in the occupied territories of Palestine. The
internal semi-colonies here have democratic rights for the most part,
and integration has progressed in many ways. Meanwhile, the struggle for
land is only popular among indigenous people on the reservations that
are isolated enclaves on this vast land.
Nonetheless, MIM(Prisons) was not the only group trying to make the
connection. One speaker opened with, “Here on Ohlone Nation, we stand on
stolen land and we stand in solidarity with another indigenous nation.”
The representative of the Arab Resource and Organizing Center mentioned
ICE detainees currently on hunger strike and prisoners in California who
recently went on hunger strike for similar conditions. A speaker from
the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN) talked about the
leading example the Palestinian prisoners were making in solidarity with
all those fighting colonialism. Ey went on to say, “We hope the movement
on this territory can take direction and inspiration from those
imprisoned here for political and social crimes.”
One protestor told this correspondent that they’d been fighting in
solidarity with the liberation of Palestinians since 1967. This persyn
was one who saw prisons in the United $tates being used for the same
purposes as they are used in I$rael. Ey told a story of meeting some
young Israelis:
“I was in Brazil four years ago, on a bus, and there was a group of
young Israelis who recently completed their military service. I had on
this bracelet, which says ‘Free Gaza.’ So we started talking, and they
were freaked out, meeting a U.S. citizen [saying these things]. They
were arguing, well, we didn’t do anything to the Palestinians that the
Amerikans didn’t do to Native Americans and Blacks. As if that was a
justification.”
Young Israelis see the connection and so should we. Another persyn we
spoke to pointed out how Israelis train the NYPD. So it goes both ways.
But the United $tates is the imperialist power and I$rael would not
exist without its decades of patronage. The liberation of Palestine
remains at the forefront of the struggle for national liberation of all
oppressed nations today because of the blatant lack of democratic rights
and self-determination. Just as the recent hunger strike finds its
strength and base in a strong national liberation movement, the prison
movement in the United $tates last peaked when Black, Chican@, Puerto
Rican and Indigenous liberation movements reached a peak some 50 years
ago. Without making these connections again, today’s growing prison
movement will fizzle out in reformism and false promises.
Many attending the protest were interested to check out Under Lock
& Key, and were inspired to hear about the
USW
petition campaign to oppose the Israeli bombing campaign in August
2014. In turn, our movement should find inspiration in the heroic
strike going on in Israeli prisons today, and the continued struggle of
the Palestinian people for freedom from settler occupation.
UPDATE: As this article was being reviewed by our editor news
broke that the strike had ended and a settlement reached after more than
800 prisoners didn’t eat for 40 days. The terms of the agreement with
the Israeli state are many, and full details have not been released.
They include many improvements to family contact and visitations, access
to educational materials, medical conditions for the sick, access to
better foods and cooking, better sports equipment and addressing high
temperatures and overcrowding. In addition, a prisoners’ committee has
been established, providing a mechanism for addressing future issues.
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network released the following
statement:
“On this occasion of the prisoners’ victory, we know that there is a
long struggle to come, for liberation for the prisoners and liberation
for Palestine. We urge all of the Palestinian communities, supporters of
Palestine and social justice organizers who took to the streets, drank
salt water, engaged in hunger strikes, expressed their solidarity and
organized across borders and walls to celebrate the victory of the
prisoners with events and actions on 4-6 June, in Celebrations of
Dignity and Victory.
“In these celebrations, we will recognize the power of the Palestinian
people to defeat the occupier and the colonizer, honor the prisoners and
their steadfastness, and emphasize the ongoing struggle. These
celebrations are an occasion to escalate our demands for Palestinian
freedom – for the liberation of Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian
people, and the entire land of Palestine.”(1)
Yesterday was Palestinian Prisoners’ Day. Yesterday was also two days
after the fifteenth anniversary of intifada hero Marwan Barghouti’s
illegal abduction from Ramallah in the occupied West Bank.
It is on this day that American-backed Israelis, in action opposing the
two-state solution, chose to put Palestinian reconciliation and national
unity symbol Marwan Barghouti in solitary confinement.(1)
Solitary confinement is a practice widely implemented as a form of
discipline and political repression in the #1 prison state in the world,
the United States. Used to repress protests of inhumane conditions,
solitary confinement is itself widely considered inhumane particularly
when done for long periods of time. Some Palestinians have been in
solitary for years. Other kinds of worse treatment often accompany
solitary confinement. It seems likely that Marwan Barghouti will be in
solitary for several days at least.
A long-time prisoner himself with an immediate interest in the outcome
of the protest like any of the other “security prisoners” in Israeli
prisons, Barghouti was reportedly leading a large prisoner hunger strike
against inhumane and illegal treatment of thousands of Palestinians in
Israeli prisons. One of the things the prisoners are demanding is an end
to solitary confinement, which it seems Barghouti could be in until the
hunger strike ends. A mass hunger strike in 2014 lasted two months.(2)
Reactionaries are trying to get the public to associate the open hunger
strike with the murder allegations against Barghouti. They are
suggesting Barghouti is the only reason for the strike. The
hunger-striking prisoners’ demands include an end to health negligence
and an end to detention without trial. I$rael is holding hundreds of
Palestinians without Israeli citizenship in administrative detention.
Because of multiple anniversaries in 2017 related to the colonization
and occupation of Palestine, massive protests would have happened
whether Barghouti was alive or not.
Many in various countries do consider Marwan Barghouti – one of several
imprisoned members of the Palestinian Legislative Council, belonging to
different parties – to be Palestine’s “Mandela,” a potential future
Palestinian president. Barghouti was taken by the imperialist settler
formation and Amerikan outpost named “Israel” fifteen years ago and
subjected to a show trial in a kangaroo court. An intifada figure and
strong supporter of Palestinian nationalism and independence before and
after being abducted, Barghouti is reportedly able to unite various
groups of Palestinians in a way that few are. Many people in various
countries already support Barghouti’s release.
Barghouti supported the Oslo Accords in the past. Azanian Anglican
archbishop Desmond Tutu nominated Barghouti for the Nobel Peace Prize in
June last year. At his show trial, Barghouti noted in Hebrew that he was
a figure for peace for two peoples.
Barghouti has supported trying different approaches, permitted under
international law, to ending an occupation that is illegal. Months and
years after major waves of protest and resistance, there are still
thousands of Palestinians in I$raeli prisons for resisting the illegal
occupation and settlement. One of them happens to be Barghouti.
Since the I$raeli goon squad kidnapped Barghouti in 2002, the highly
influential and extremely wealthy United $tates has had many years of
chances under various presidents to secure Barghouti’s release. It
hasn’t happened. Two-term Democratic president Barack Obama didn’t do
it. Instead, Obama deceived Palestinians and gave Israel a
record-breaking aid package. Obama sought to protect the image of
Democrat warmongers and do-nothings, and the United States’ image, after
now-President Trump won the U.S. election and it became obvious that the
United States was going to lose its undeserved standing as a peacemaker.
The West Bank and East al-Quds (“Jerusalem”) already had tens of
thousands of illegal settlers at the time of Ariel Sharon’s al-Aqsa
provocation against the two-state solution in 2000. For years the United
States has verbally supported the two-state solution and verbally
opposed settlement construction, in land universally understood to be
occupied territory, while hampering the two-state solution and
supporting settlement construction in actuality. Whether Barghouti would
ever be president or not, Barghouti’s continued detention is hampering
processes Palestinians need to go through to arrive at important
decisions with a higher level of unity.
The two-state solution isn’t total liberation of Palestine. Many
Palestinian leaders and figures mediating Palestine’s international
struggle support it. Some Palestinians consider the two-state solution a
temporary step. According to survey reports, many support some
approaches to it more than they support others. Though not always
agreeing with or emphasizing some approaches to the two-state solution,
Marwan Barghouti has supported it.
Despite internal disagreement about specific issues and
non-Palestinians’ demoralizing statements about the ability to end and
reverse settlement activity, the Palestinian nation as a whole is still
struggling for the two-state solution in the midst of U.S. hindrance and
the intransigence of some Zionist and non-Zionist elements in Israel.
Palestinians and various Arabs and Muslims do not support the two-state
solution any less than the Amerikans, who take advantage of conflict and
violence in the Middle East, do. As discussed on this website [see
notes], even Hamas and Iran support the two-state solution more than the
United States does in reality.
Israelis have a chance to oppose West Bank annexation, oppose West Bank
settlement activity, and support Palestinian independence. They have a
chance to live in relative peace by ending their idolatrous attitude
toward the United States and ending their dependence on that hegemonic,
rogue aggressor for support in the midst of worsening conditions.
However, the I$raeli entity stupidly chose to put Barghouti in solitary
yesterday. In a month and a half is the fiftieth anniversary of the 1967
Israeli occupation of the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the Syrian
Golan. It is possible the Hunger Strike for Freedom and Dignity will
still be going on then.
Regardless of intent or how anyone feels about the two-state solution,
the broad Palestinian unity around the prisoners’ hunger strike may be
helping to promote Palestinian reconciliation and unity in other areas,
and advance the two-state solution. That is true even though some of
what the hunger strikers and prisoners are asking for could be won
without freeing prisoners or winning a sovereign independent Palestinian
state.
In the United States, there are also hunger strikes including strikes
over solitary confinement.(3) So-called intersectionality in the
Palestine-United States context is sometimes discussed in terms of
pursuing equality with oppressors within a single state. Unity of
Palestinians with various perspectives inside and outside prison,
though, has the potential to contribute to Palestinian nationalism.
Within U.S. prisons, unity of various whites and people in different
non-white nations (including the Chican@ nation, the New Afrikan nation,
and First Nations) often targets repression affecting many different
prisoner demographics. This benefits the oppressed and activists inside
prison, and can benefit fights for the self-determination of oppressed
nations. Often this has nothing do with uniting Amerikans in general, or
with advancing integrationism, which is a dead-end. Incarceration in the
United States, and incarceration of so-called security prisoners and
other Palestinians in I$raeli prisons, show oppressed nations’ need for
self-determination.
In response to the Palestinian prisoners’ hunger strike, some are
downplaying Palestinian unity or trying to take advantage of differences
and discourage supporters by saying the strike is just about Barghouti.
Yet, many different movements in Palestine have members in Israeli
prison and are supporting the strike.
In a statement on the hunger strike, Barghouti refers to “mass”
arbitrary detention and mistreatment and opposes occupation.(4)
Barghouti refers to “the nation” to which prisoners belong, and “every
national liberation movement in history.” Barghouti identifies Israel as
an occupying power. The prisoners’ suffering is related to the suffering
of the Palestinian nation.
“The eldest of my four children is now a man of 31. Yet here I still am,
pursuing this struggle for freedom along with thousands of prisoners,
millions of Palestinians and the support of so many around the world.
What is it with the arrogance of the occupier and the oppressor and
their backers that makes them deaf to this simple truth: Our chains will
be broken before we are, because it is human nature to heed the call for
freedom regardless of the cost.”
Among other things, Barghouti addresses collective punishments.
“Palestinian prisoners and their families also remain a primary target
of Israel’s policy of imposing collective punishments.”
“Among the hundreds of thousands of Palestinians whom Israel has taken
captive are children, women, parliamentarians, activists, journalists,
human rights defenders, academics, political figures, militants,
bystanders, family members of prisoners. And all with one aim: to bury
the legitimate aspirations of an entire nation.”
Some are using the failures of Amerika’s phony leadership as an excuse
to oppose the two-state solution, Palestinian nationalism in general,
and peace efforts in general. This is unfortunate. The United States
must be opposed. In the international sphere, there needs to be new
leadership in coordination with Palestine. Other countries need to
influence Israel. Palestinian officials must give up any remaining
illusions they might have about the Amerikans. The United States has
proved uninterested in taking serious steps to resolve the conflict. In
fact, it promotes and benefits from it. The United States, itself an
illegitimate settler entity, is hegemonic, just gets in the way of real
peace efforts, and is losing whatever credibility it had in the context
of Mideast peace. The AmeriKKKan population has repeatedly proved
willing to support or go along with U.S. aggression in the Middle East
and, as a whole, is interested in the so-called Israeli-Palestinian
conflict only enough to make things worse. The Amerikan population
doesn’t really care about Jews and Muslims overseas. When it seems to
care about their conditions, it exploits them for chauvinistic,
jingoistic and warmongering purposes and to justify Amerikan corruption
in the Middle East.
This writer understands why Israeli activists would want to focus on
opposing their own country or its policies. However, globally there
needs to be more opposition to the United States in order to advance
Palestinian liberation. Various elements inside and outside Israel are
accepting U.S. hegemony and failing to support Marwan Barghouti’s and
other political prisoners’ release while opposing Palestinian
nationalism and supporting amalgamation with settlers. That is unwise.
Israelis and the world must act to immediately end the folly of refusing
to negotiate with Palestinian prisoners, and end the abuse of hunger
strike leaders and participants. Marwan Barghouti and other leaders or
political prisoners must be freed from solitary confinement and must be
freed from prison. The practice of taking Palestinians to be imprisoned
in Israel must stop. The world’s countries must support Palestinian
independence and sovereignty regardless of the United States’ priorities
and exert pressure and influence so that demands of the hunger-striking
prisoners are met as long as Palestinians are in I$raeli prisons.
On 18 October 2015, an early twenty-something Eritrean migrant by the
name of Habton Zerhum, was unjustly shot by an Israeli security guard
and then beaten by a mob of racist Israeli vigilantes in the town of
Beersheba. He later died from his wounds. Zerhom’s murder was the result
of an earlier event where an Arab-Israeli citizen with a gun and knife
allegedly killed an Israeli soldier, stole his weapon and opened fire on
a crowd, injuring nine. In the mayhem that followed, a video shows
Zerhom crawling for cover when a security guard walks up and shoot him
at close proximity. As Zerhom lay in a pool of his own blood, he is
cursed, kicked and hit with a rack of chairs by a racist mob of Israeli
Jews. It was later reported that the security guard mistook Zerhom for
an attacker.
According to other news reports Zerhom worked in a plant nursery and was
in Beersheba to renew his work visa. Zerhom, who migrated to Israel to
seek a better way of life, “was a modest man, quiet, and he tried to do
his job as best as he could” said his employer, Sagi Malachi.
Immediately following the incident, Yaakov Amidror, former national
security adviser to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated, “It is a
disgrace to Israeli society, and those that carried out this lynching
need to be found and brought to justice.” What is interesting is that
Amidror used the word lynching to describe the brutal murder of Zerhom
but not the murders of thousands of Palestinian people since 1947.
The settler “state” of Israel has been rocked by knife-wielding
Arab-Israeli protestors reacting to rumors that the Israeli government
was planning to ban Palestinians from accessing Jerusalem’s Temple Mount
which is home to Islam’s third most holiest site - the Al-aqsa Mosque.
Israel has occupied this site since 1967. But the current Arab-Israeli
conflict is rooted far beyond Israeli occupation of the Temple Mount. It
is rooted in historical land-theft, genocide and colonization of the
Palestinian people by the imperialist Israeli settler state. Israel’s
rise to power and dominance in Palestine began in the late 1800’s when
European Jews formed a movement called zionism which sought to establish
a Jewish state in Palestine. Jews began arriving en masse in Palestine
in the early 1900s, angering the Arab population who had been the
majority in the region since AD 600. In 1947, to quell a potential
uprising by Arab Palestinians, the United Nations proposed dividing the
region into an Arab state and a Jewish state, which the Palestinians
rejected of course. Not to be deterred from inhabiting a land which it
felt it was entitled based upon Biblical prophecy, the settler state of
Israel forcibly came into being on 14 May 14 1948.
The Palestinian intifadas (uprisings) are a natural reaction to almost
seven decades of brutal Israeli occupation of their homeland.
Palestinian revolutionary nationalism developed as a response to Zionism
and its frequent land-thefts and unauthorized settlement expansions into
Palestinian territories. But Israel’s bullying, colonization and
subjugation of the Palestinian people wouldn’t be possible without the
nearly $3 billion Israel receives annually in U.S. military aid. This
aid guarantees the United States a strategic military ally in the Middle
East. Clearly the U.S. government is an accomplice to the crime of
genocide committed by Israel against defenseless Palestinian men, women
and children.
Don’t think it’s genocide? According to the “Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide” adopted by the
United Nations General Assembly in 1948, genocide means “any of the
following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnic, racial or religious group, such as: killing members of
the group; causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the
group; deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life
calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; and
forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.” Taking
the United Nations’s definition of the crime of genocide into
consideration, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that the
settler state of Israel is committing mass genocide against the
Palestinian people via outright murder, bombing campaigns, embargoes,
land thefts, forced migrations, unlawful arrests and detentions, etc. A
Jewish people who once suffered genocide at the hands of Hitler and his
Nazi regime have themselves assumed the role of neo-Nazis by committing
genocide upon the Palestinians because of their ethnic-Arab background
and Muslim and Christian beliefs.
The Israeli colonialism/imperialism that the Palestinian people are
confronted with on a daily basis is equal in its intensity and brutality
to the English, French, Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese and american variety
which nearly wiped out entire populations of Indigenous natives in
Central and South America beginning in 1492; the abduction of Africans
from their homeland in the 15th century; the lynchings and mass slavery
and incarceration of Blacks beginning in 1619; and the colonial
oppression which the Haitian people successful resisted during the
Haitian revolution from 1790-1802, leading to their independence and the
establishment of the first Black Republic in the world in 1804.
Those of us who embrace and practice revolutionary internationalism must
stand in solidarity with the Palestinians and oppressed people all over
the world who are engaged in national liberation struggles for their
right to self-determination. All power to the Palestinian people!