Refugees Once Again: Palestinians from Iraq, Resettlement, and Solidarity through SupportMore than 1350 Palestinians are arriving in the US as part of a re-settlement process aimed at emptying the no-man's land desert camps in which Palestinians have been languishing since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. This workshop seeks to discuss the reasons for Palestinian expulsion from Iraq, their conditions in the desert camps, and the work of national and local bodies in the US to help re-settle the arriving Palestinians. The workshop will seek to coordinate national support, and build up local committees throughout the US.
International law and Gaza: War crimes, Accountability, and SolidarityThis workshop seeks to revisit the war crimes committed in Gaza between December 2008 and January 2009 during Israel's 22-day aerial and ground offensive, Operation Cast Lead. In the aftermath of the offensive, the National Lawyers Guild conducted a fact-finding mission that investigated Israel's alleged war crimes in the 140-square mile Territory against a 1.5 million person population already enduring 60 years of occupation and 18 months of a debilitating siege that had prohibited access to basic goods including clean water, flour, rice, and bread. This workshop will present in pictures and narratives, the war crimes committed by Israel, discuss the political context surrounding the offensive, explore the Goldstone Report and other international efforts to hold Israel to account, and strategize about ongoing campaigns for accountability and lifting the siege.
Justice in PalestineThe Palestinian-Israeli conflict touches on all Americans as it has figured centrally in U.S. foreign policy at least since 1968 when the Johnson Administration provided Israel with its first supersonic aircraft in order to achieve a military edge over its Arab neighbors. While this history makes it incumbent upon all Americans to participate in finding a solution to the conflict today--the major stakeholders in the struggle for Palestinian self-determination are Palestinians themselves.
Since the establishment of Israel in 1948 and the consequent displacement and dispossession of Palestinians, the Palestinian national body has been fragmented several times over. Today Palestinian identity is bantustanized into those who are citizens of Israel vs. those who are residents of East Jerusalem vs. those who are under occupation in the West Bank vs. those who are under occupation and siege in Gaza vs. those who live in refugee camps throughout the Arab world vs. those who exist in a global diaspora. Such fragmentation limits the potential for organizing among Palestinians to decide on a collective future and its concomitant strategy. Moreover, external involvement both imperial (i.e., the US) as well as regional (i.e., Iran, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Lebanon) has divided Palestinians into broad categories of "good" and "bad" in relation to the U.S. and European political establishment. In order to transcend these divisions and engage in a process of self-represented self-determination, Palestinians in the U.S. seek to coalesce themselves into a cohesive body that can join other parts the world over from South America, Canada, Europe, the Arab world, the Occupied Territories, and Israel. The PMA seeks to begin this conversation, agree in theory on its value, encourage its attendees to join the USPCN and participate in its Second Popular Conference, and to introduce a resolution to the general Forum body.
La Ley Internacional y Gaza: Crimenes de Guerra, Reponsabilidad y SolidaridadThis workshop seeks to revisit the war crimes committed in Gaza between December 2008 and January 2009 during Israel's 22-day aerial and ground offensive, Operation Cast Lead. In the aftermath of the offensive, the National Lawyers Guild conducted a fact-finding mission that investigated Israel's alleged war crimes in the 140-square mile Territory against a 1.5 million person population already enduring 60 years of occupation and 18 months of a debilitating siege that had prohibited access to basic goods including clean water, flour, rice, and bread. This workshop will present in pictures and narratives, the war crimes committed by Israel, discuss the political context surrounding the offensive, explore the Goldstone Report and other international efforts to hold Israel to account, and strategize about ongoing campaigns for accountability and lifting the siege.
Refugiados De Nuevo: Palestinos de Iraq, Reasentamiento y Solidaridad por médio del ApoyoMore than 1350 Palestinians are arriving in the US as part of a re-settlement process aimed at emptying the no-man's land desert camps in which Palestinians have been languishing since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003. This workshop seeks to discuss the reasons for Palestinian expulsion from Iraq, their conditions in the desert camps, and the work of national and local bodies in the US to help re-settle the arriving Palestinians. The workshop will seek to coordinate national support, and build up local committees throughout the US.
Justicia en PalestinaThe Palestinian-Israeli conflict touches on all Americans as it has figured centrally in U.S. foreign policy at least since 1968 when the Johnson Administration provided Israel with its first supersonic aircraft in order to achieve a military edge over its Arab neighbors. While this history makes it incumbent upon all Americans to participate in finding a solution to the conflict today--the major stakeholders in the struggle for Palestinian self-determination are Palestinians themselves.
Since the establishment of Israel in 1948 and the consequent displacement and dispossession of Palestinians, the Palestinian national body has been fragmented several times over. Today Palestinian identity is bantustanized into those who are citizens of Israel vs. those who are residents of East Jerusalem vs. those who are under occupation in the West Bank vs. those who are under occupation and siege in Gaza vs. those who live in refugee camps throughout the Arab world vs. those who exist in a global diaspora. Such fragmentation limits the potential for organizing among Palestinians to decide on a collective future and its concomitant strategy. Moreover, external involvement both imperial (i.e., the US) as well as regional (i.e., Iran, Egypt, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, and Lebanon) has divided Palestinians into broad categories of "good" and "bad" in relation to the U.S. and European political establishment. In order to transcend these divisions and engage in a process of self-represented self-determination, Palestinians in the U.S. seek to coalesce themselves into a cohesive body that can join other parts the world over from South America, Canada, Europe, the Arab world, the Occupied Territories, and Israel. The PMA seeks to begin this conversation, agree in theory on its value, encourage its attendees to join the USPCN and participate in its Second Popular Conference, and to introduce a resolution to the general Forum body.