Archive for February, 2009

National Lawyers Guild Delegation: War Crimes in Gaza invasion

What We Found in Gaza

Strong Indications of Violations of the Laws of War, U.S. Law, and War Crimes Found in the Gaza Strip

NLG Delegation

GAZA CITY – We are a delegation of 8 American lawyers, members of the National Lawyers Guild in the United States, who have come here to the Gaza Strip to assess the effects of the recent attacks on the people, and to determine what, if any, violations of international law occurred and whether U.S. domestic law has been violated as a consequence. We have spent the last five days interviewing communities particularly impacted by the recent Israeli offensive, including medical personnel, humanitarian aid workers and United Nations representatives. In particular, the delegation examined three issues: 1) targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure; 2) illegal use of weapons and 3) blocking of medical and humanitarian assistance to civilians.

Targeting of Civilians and Civilian Infrastructure

Much of the debate surrounding Israel’s aerial and ground offensive against Gaza has centered on whether or not Israel observed principles of proportionality and distinction. The debate suggests that Israel targeted Hamas i.e., its military installations, its leaders, and its militants, and in the process of its discrete military exercise it inadvertently killed Palestinian civilians. While we have found evidence that Palestinian civilians were victims of excessive force and collateral damage, we have also found troubling instances of Palestinian civilians being targets themselves.

The delegation recorded numerous accounts of Israeli soldiers shooting civilians, including women, children, and the elderly, in the head, chest, and stomach. Another common narrative described Israeli forces rounding civilians into a single location i.e., homes, schools which Israeli tanks or warplanes then shelled. Israeli forces continued to shoot at civilians fleeing the targeted structures.

We spoke to Khaled Abed Rabbo, who witnessed an Israeli soldier execute his 2-year-old and 7-year-old daughters, and critically injure a third daughter, Samar, 4-years old, on a sunny afternoon outside his home. Two other Israeli soldiers were standing nearby eating chips and chocolates at the time on January 7, 2009. Abed Rabbo recounts standing in front of the Israeli soldiers with his mother, wife and daughters for 5 – 7 minutes before one of the soldiers opened fire on his family.

We spoke to Ibtisam al-Sammouni, 31, and a resident of Zaytoun neighborhood in Gaza City. On January 4th, the Israeli army forced approximately 110 of Zaytoun’s residents into Ibtisam’s home. At approximately 7 am on January 5th, the Israeli military launched two tank shells at the house without warning killing two of Ibtisam’s children: Rizka, 14 and Faris, 12. When the survivors attempted to flee Israeli forces shot at them. Her son Abdullah, 7, was injured in the shelling and remained in the home among his deceased siblings for four days before Israeli forces permitted medical personnel into Zaytoun to rescue them. After medical personnel removed the injured persons, an Israeli war plane destroyed the house and it crumbled over the lifeless bodies. The dead remained beneath the rubble for 17 days before the Israeli Army permitted medical personnel to remove their bodies for burial.

We spoke to the family of Rouhiya al-Najjar, 47, who lived in Khoza’a, Khan Younis. Israeli forces ordered her neighborhoods residents to march to the city center. Rouhiya led 20 women out of her home and into the alley. They all carried white scarves. Upon entering the alley, an Israeli sniper shot Rouhiya in her left temple killing her instantly. Israeli forces prevented medical personnel from reaching her body for twelve hours. These are only some of the accounts that we’ve collected.

Israeli forces also destroyed numerous buildings throughout the Gaza Strip during the recent incursion. Guild delegates viewed the remains of hundreds of demolished homes and businesses – in addition to the remains of the American School in Gaza, damaged medical centers, and the charred innards of UNRWA warehouses. While in situations of armed conflict, collateral damage and mistakes can occur, the circumstances surrounding the cases that the delegation investigated indicate deliberate targeting rather than collateral damage or mistake. Specifically:

The American School at Gaza, which was hit with two F-16 missiles on January 3, 2009, killing the watch guard on duty. According to Ribhi Salem, the school’s director, the Israelis gave no warnings. Mr. Salem stated that the school had come to an agreement with resistance groups not to use school grounds and there had never been resistance activity on the property.

United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA)

John Ging, the Director of Gaza Operations for UNRWA reported that Israeli forces fired missiles at UNRWA schools in Gaza City, Jabalyia and Bet Lahiya. The United Nation compound in Gaza city was also hit with white phosphorous shells and missiles. Ging noted that al United Nations buildings and vehicles all fly UN flags, are marked in blue paint from the top, and that during hostilities the UN personnel remained in constant contact with Israeli authorities.

Misuse of Weapons

Our delegation has heard allegations of the use of DIME (Dense Inert Metal Explosive) weaponry, white phosphorus and other possible weapons whose use in civilian areas is prohibited. We have also heard of the use of prohibited weapons, such as flachettes. We have found our own evidence of the use of flachette shells, which we will combine with evidence collected by Amnesty International to push for further investigation. We have not found any conclusive evidence of the use of DIME, though we believe that this warrants further investigation and disclosure by the Israeli military.

Our findings overwhelmingly point to the use of conventional weapons in a prohibited manner, specifically, the use of battlefield weaponry in densely populated civilian areas. Customary international law forbids the use of weapons calculated to cause unnecessary suffering. We found evidence that Israel used white phosphorus in extensively throughout its three-week offensive in a manner that led to numerous deaths and injuries. For example, Sabah Abu Halima, 45, lived in Beit Lahiya with her husband, seven boys, and one girl. It was midday and she and her entire family was home. Within minutes she felt her home shaking and missiles fell through the rooftop. She fell to the ground upon impact. When she looked up she saw her children burning.

Preventing Access to Medical and Humanitarian Aid

Under customary international humanitarian law, the wounded are protected persons and must receive the medical care and attention required by their conditions, to the fullest extent practicable and with the least possible delay. Parties to a conflict are required to ensure the unhindered movement of medical personnel and ambulances to carry out their duties and of wounded persons to access medical care. Speaking to medical workers and the family of victims, NLG delegates documented serious violations of this provision. Among the stories documented include:

Zaytoun neighborhood, which came under attack and invasion by ground foces on January 3, 2009. The Palestinian Red Crescent received 145 calls from Zaytoun for help, but were denied entry by Israel. Bashar Ahmed Murad, Director of Emergency Medical Services for the Palestinian Red Crescent Society told us that “a lot of people could have been saved, but hey weren’t given medical care by the Israelis, nor did the Israeli army allow Palestinian medical services in.” When paramedics were finally allowed to enter on January 7, Israeli forces only gave them a 3-hour “lull” to work and prohibited ambulances into the area. Instead they forced paramedics park the ambulances 2 kilometers away and enter the area on foot. Murad told delegation members how they had to pile the wounded on donkey carts and have the medical workers pull the carts in order to help the most people possible in the short time they were given. After the 3 hours were over, the
Israeli army started shooting toward the ambulances. The Red Crescent was not able to reach that area again to evacuate the dead until January 17, 2009 when the Israeli army pulled out.

Al-Shurrab Family

On January 16th, Israeli forces shot at the jeep of Mohammed Shurrab, 64 years of age, and two of his sons, Kassab and Ibrahim, aged 28 and 18 as they were returning from their fields. Mohammad was shot in the left arm and Ibrahim was shot in the leg. The elder son, Kassab, sustained a fatal bullet wound to the chest, being shot multiple times after being ordered out of the car. Mohammad, bleeding from his wound, contacted the media, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and a number of NGOs via mobile phone in order to acquire medical assistance. Israeli forces denied medical relief agencies clearance to reach them until almost 24 hours after Mohammad, Ibrahim and Kassab had been shot. Earlier that morning, Ibrahim had succumbed to his wound and died. Mohammad Shurrab and his sons were shot during a so-called “lull” in Israeli ground operations, which Israeli forces had agreed to in order to allow humanitarian relief to enter and be
distributed in the Gaza Strip. As such NLG delegates fail to see how this denial of medical access to the wounded Shurrab family could have been absolutely necessary and not simply arbitrary.

International humanitarian law also prohibits attacks on medical personnel, medical units and medical transports exclusively assigned to carry out medical functions. Delegate members saw ambulances seriously damaged and destroyed, some apparenly deliberately crushed by Israeli tanks. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society and the Palestinian Ministry of Health informed delegates that 15 Palestinian medics were killed and 21 injured in the course of Israel’s assualt.

Conclusions

This delegation is seriously concerned by our initial findings. We have found strong indications of violations of the laws of war and possible war crimes committed by Israel in the Gaza Strip. We are particularly concerned that most of the weapons that were found used in the December 27 assualt on Gaza are US-made and supplied. We believe that Israel’s use of these weapons may constitute a violation of US law, and particularly the Foreign Assistance Act and the US Arms Export Control Act.

A report of our initial findings will be compiled and submitted to, among others, members of the United States Congress. We intend to push for an investigation by the United States government into possible violations by Israel of US law. We also hope to contribute our finding and efforts to other efforts by local and international lawyers to push for accountability against those found responsible for the egregious crimes that we have documented.

Members of the Legal Delegation

Huwaida Arraf (New York, Washington DC)
huwaida.arraf@gmail.com
Palestine: 0599-130-426
USA: 1-202-294-8813

Noura Erekat (Washington DC)
noo194@yahoo.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-510-847-4239

James Marc Leas (Vermont)
jolly39@gmail.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-802 864-1575 and 1-802 734-8811(cell)

Linda Mansour (Ohio)
Lindamansour@aol.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-419-535-7100 and 1-419-283-8281 (cell)

Rose Mishaan (California)
roseindigo7@gmail.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-917-803-2201

Thomas Nelson (Oregon)
nelson@thnelson.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-503-709-6397

Radhika Sainath (California)
radhika.sainath@gmail.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-917-669-6903

Reem Salahi (California)
reemos@gmail.com
Palestine:
USA: 1-510-225-8880

The Growing Trend Toward Fascism, Lieberman’s anti-Arab ideology wins over Israel’s teens

Lieberman’s anti-Arab ideology wins over Israel’s teens

From Jewish Voice for Peace

The chilling article below, from this weekend’s (February 6th, 2009) Haaretz, appears at first to be disturbing simply for what it says about a growing segment of Israel’s next generation of voters-an open, even proud, racism and an attraction to fascism, in the form of support for Avigdor Lieberman, chairman of the Israel Beitenu party, which is poised to become Israel’s third largest party in Tuesday’s election.  The key selling point of the party in this election is a “loyalty oath” that would be a prerequisite for citizenship rights, clearly directed at Israel’s Palestinian Israeli citizens.

But the article illuminates (or darkens) far more.  Such as the horrifying prospect of highschoolers campaigning for Lieberman by screaming “Death to the Arabs!” in the streets and consciously explaining that this helps them prepare to enter the army.  As the article quotes:

“Sergei Leibliyanich, a senior, draws a connection between the preparation for military service in school and student support for the right: “It gives us motivation against the Arabs. You want to enlist in the army so you can stick it to them. The preparation gives you the motivation to stick it to the Arabs and we want to elect someone who’ll do that. I like Lieberman’s thinking about the Arabs. Bibi [Benjamin Netanyahu] doesn’t want to go as far.”

The further you read, the clearer it is that this a phenomena that draws strength from so many of the issues facing Israeli society:  not just virulent Anti-Arab racism, but a reliance on violence, the emphasis on militaristic values, the broken education system, and the crumbling of democratic principles.  But perhaps, at root, the problem, as the article indicates, is this:

“The Israeli reality can no longer hide what it has kept hidden up to now – that today no sentient mother can honestly say to her child: ‘Next year things will be better here.’ The young people are replacing hope for a better future with a myth of a heroic end. For a heroic end, Lieberman fits the bill.. In a reality in which you can’t honestly tell your children, ‘Tomorrow will be better,’ in which the realization has finally sunk in that no deal or accord is about to happen, not now or 10 years from now – they react in a hysterical, survivalist fashion. In such a situation, the commitment to humanist values can be viewed as a luxury that we as a society cannot afford.”

Lieberman’s anti-Arab ideology wins over Israel’s teens

Haaretz, February 7, 2009

By Yotam Feldman

The Yisrael Beiteinu youths gather for a final consultation as dozens of elderly party supporters slowly make their way into the white tent where the movement’s conference is being held, behind the Plaza Hotel in Upper Nazareth.

The youths, ages 16-18, many of them good friends from school, had stood for a long time before the event began at the intersection near the hotel, waving Israeli flags and shouting “Death to the Arabs” and “No loyalty, no citizenship” at passing cars.

In the tent, they deliberate over what to shout when Lieberman enters: Calling out “The next prime minister” may sound a bit presumptuous with regard to the leader of what’s likely to be the third-largest party in the next Knesset. But during a week when Yisrael Beiteinu won the highest level of support in mock high-school polls – the sky’s the limit.

Not even the investigation of several close Lieberman aides, announced by the state prosecutor that very morning, could dampen their enthusiasm. To the sounds of kitschy Russian music, the party’s candidates take their places behind a long table. The young people gather right in front of the stage and lovingly greet the new heroes of the right. Even Lieberman’s rather colorless deputy, MK Uzi Landau, evokes strong, passionate cheers. But these pale in comparison to the reaction when the party chairman makes his entrance.

Now the youths are beaming, holding their flags aloft and shouting so loudly it makes them hoarse: “Here comes the next prime minister!” If not in the upcoming election, then maybe in the one after that, when these young people will vote for the first time.

The conference concluded with the singing of the national anthem, which the young attendees sang aggressively in the style of Beitar Jerusalem fans. On the bus back to the center of Upper Nazareth, one of the youths offers this explanation for his excitement about the party:

“This country has needed a dictatorship for a long time already. But I’m not talking about an extreme dictatorship. We need someone who can put things in order. Lieberman is the only one who speaks the truth.” Adds Edan Ivanov, an 18 year old who describes himself as being “up on current events”:

“We’ve had enough here with the ‘leftist democracy’ – and I put that term in quotes, don’t get me wrong. People have put the dictator label on Lieberman because of the things he says. But the truth is that in Israel there can’t be a full democracy when there are Arabs here who oppose it.

“All Lieberman’s really saying is that anyone who isn’t prepared to sign an oath of loyalty to the state, because of his personal views, cannot receive equal rights; he can’t vote for the executive authority. People here are gradually coming to understand what needs to be done concerning a person who is not loyal.”

Do these ideas fit with what you’re learning in civics lessons?

Ivanov: “In my opinion, school doesn’t tell it like it is. In school, you want to get a matriculation certificate, you need the grades, but you don’t learn the truth there. The truth you learn from the neighborhood, from the street. I don’t mean the street in a negative sense – I mean that you learn the truth from what’s happening here.”

What’s happening here?

“We have a problem: Upper Nazareth is surrounded by minorities. There are lots of incidents with them. Women are scared to walk in the streets, and people are afraid they’ll be stabbed. No one knows what to do about it at this point. There are people who live here and during a war they act as a fifth column. It will only be possible to make peace with them after we make war.”

Is that why people shout “Death to the Arabs”?

“The people who shout ‘Death to the Arabs’ – they mean death to those who support terror. There are Druze and Bedouin, too, and we have lots of friends who are minorities and we have no problem with them. By the way, there are also a lot of Arabs who come with us to demonstrations and shout ‘Death to the Arabs,’ meaning ‘death to everyone except me.’”

Also at universities

The young people of Upper Nazareth are not alone. As noted, Yisrael Beiteinu was victorious overall in the mock elections held in 10 high schools across the country, and organized by comedian Shabi Zaraya and Ben Ravsky of Sky Productions.

Granted, these polls weren’t based on a representative sample, statistically speaking. The voting in some cases was even held while the fighting was going on in Gaza, which likely affected the results. But the preferences of the 2,877 students polled are at least indicative of a certain mood.

Yisrael Beiteinu came in first with 19.76 percent of the vote, followed closely by Likud with 19.5 percent, Labor with 15.85 percent, Kadima with 14.11 percent and Yisrael Hazaka (Strong Israel) with 9.12 percent. Meretz got the lowest percentage of votes, just 2.9 percent, and not a single vote was cast for an Arab party.

Young people’s enthusiasm for Lieberman is also evident in the sample polls conducted at the universities. In one conducted on January 20 at the College of Administration, Lieberman’s was the third-largest party, garnering 24 seats, after Likud (34) and Kadima (29). Even at normally left-leaning Tel Aviv University, Yisrael Beiteinu doubled its strength in relation to the sample poll conducted there ahead of the previous election, receiving 12 seats.

The party’s leaders are not surprised. “Young people like to hear clear messages,” Landau says. “They want a unified message. We state our positions plainly. They’re fed up with the other candidates’ zigzags.”

Alex Miller, who is coordinating the party’s activities for young people and was the youngest MK ever elected to the Knesset (at age 28), explains at the conclusion of a panel discussion with students at Ben-Gurion University:

“Loyalty is the most burning issue for the youth. They’re about to go in the army and therefore national honor is important to them. They want someone whose word is good, who stands behind his principles. Avigdor Lieberman projects strength.”

One group that is not quite as thrilled with Yisrael Beiteinu’s meteoric rise is high-school civics teachers, who now find themselves in quite a dilemma: On the one hand, this is a legitimate political party that obtained the approval of the Central Election Committee and has representatives in the Knesset. Presumably, some of the teachers also support the party.

On the other hand, the messages expressed by party representatives in the schools contradict the most basic principles in the civics textbooks that are supposed to be used in the classroom. It’s not clear how a teacher would explain to his students that linking citizens’ duties with citizens’ rights can run counter to democratic principles, and at the same time introduce a party representative who calls for denying civil rights to anyone who does not enlist in military or national service.

Moshe Slansky, a civics teacher at ORT Singalovsky School in Tel Aviv, did not keep quiet when confronting the discrepancy between the principles of democracy that are taught, and the messages of Yisrael Beiteinu representatives.

On “election day” at the school on January 5, MK Miller drew boisterous applause when he gave a fiery speech denouncing anyone who dared to demonstrate against the operation in Gaza, and called for “the people who support those who fight against us” not to be given equal rights.

Slansky requested a chance to speak and addressed the students: “If anyone repeats the undemocratic things said here by Miller on my exams, I will deduct points from his grade.” The high-schoolers responded with a hail of boos.

“I told Miller I couldn’t grasp what he meant to say, because one of the most important democratic principles that we teach is the limits of authority, and freedom of expression,” Slansky said this week.

“After they booed, I realized I didn’t have a chance there. It was a very unpleasant feeling, obviously. I understand that there’s an issue of election propaganda, but when a candidate speaks this way to students whose critical abilities are lacking, who don’t have that broader view – it just shows how much work I have left to do.”

Is it upsetting?

“Of course it’s upsetting, but what should we do? Just give up? Stop teaching civics? To blame the school for the students being intolerant and non-pluralistic is to make a very dire accusation. It’s the society in which we live. I can’t be the last one to put on the brakes. I do my best.”

Miller claims that the teacher “misunderstood my intention” and that, in any event, he is not concerned by the supposed contradiction between his party’s messages and the school curriculum. In fact, Miller expects his party’s success to alter the education system’s messages.

“What they’re learning is what there is right now,” he says. “As we’ve said, one of the key issues for us is to regulate loyalty, and I hope that as soon as legislation is enacted, they’ll study it as a basis, as law.”

Why do youths accept messages that contradict what they learn in school?

Miller: “They have a home, they have a family, they have access to the media and they hear things. If there’s something they don’t like, they can talk about it with the teachers. There’s nothing wrong with asking a teacher why she’s teaching a subject like this and not like that.”

The polling results at the ORT Singalovsky School show that the students were not very impressed with Slansky’s remarks: Yisrael Beiteinu came in second with 34.5 percent of the vote, trailing Likud which earned 35 percent. Kadima was a distant third with just 9 percent of the student votes.

Independent thinking

A relatively calm political discussion took place this week at the Tchernichovsky School in Netanya. While party representatives, seated behind a table covered with an ugly purple tablecloth, laid out their worldviews, the female students fixed each other’s hair and the male students passed notes to one another.

The Yisrael Beiteinu representative, Yitzhak Aharonovitch, did receive some cries of support when he presented his positions, most notably concerning the connection between loyalty and citizenship. When the votes were counted, civics teacher Haim Wolloch heaved a sigh of relief.

Wolloch, a short fellow wearing glasses with thick purple plastic frames, happily announced that Yisrael Beitenu had won just 16 percent of the vote, which is pretty close to its standing in national polls. On the other hand, the comments students are making don’t necessarily indicate that there has been much success in inculcating democratic principles.

“Israeli Arabs don’t support the state and yet they receive money and a seat in the Knesset,” says 11th-grader Nicole Parnasa. “Serious measures need to be taken to make them aware of what they’re doing. Someone who doesn’t declare his loyalty to the state, who has no patriotism, should have his citizenship taken away. Anyone who’s against the operation in Gaza, for example – that’s a kind of disloyalty. Anyone who burns the flag, that’s disloyalty. The military operation was for the sake of the country, after we kept quiet for eight years, so now they don’t support it?”

“There was a demonstration by Israeli Arabs during Operation Cast Lead,” complains Daniela Nisani, another 11th-grader. “It’s such chutzpah: You live in this country and you don’t support it? Let them go to Hamas.”

Sergei Leibliyanich, a senior, draws a connection between the preparation for military service in school and student support for the right: “It gives us motivation against the Arabs. You want to enlist in the army so you can stick it to them. The preparation gives you the motivation to stick it to the Arabs and we want to elect someone who’ll do that. I like Lieberman’s thinking about the Arabs. Bibi [Benjamin Netanyahu] doesn’t want to go as far.”

Wolloch, the civics teacher, isn’t fazed: “The children think independently and we can’t limit their thinking. Yisrael Beitenu is a protest movement definitely challenging the way the country is run.”

Does this challenge conform to the democratic principles you’re seeking to inculcate?

Wolloch: “A lot of kids speak in slogans without really understanding their implication. We advocate loyalty to the country, and then if someone says that they’re not loyal, the students react in accordance with their age. The school conveys democratic messages and each person takes whatever he takes from that. But they also take things from their homes and from other places. You can’t say that we are solely responsible for shaping their outlook. We try to teach tolerance.”

Miriam Darmoni-Sharvit, a former civics teacher who is overseeing the implementation of the Kremnitzer Commission’s recommendations concerning democracy education (which were drawn up in 1995 and stressed the goals of the civics curriculum), believes there is a fundamental problem with the educational system: The values of some of the teachers themselves are somewhat shaky.

Darmoni-Sharvit: “In Israel, teaching democracy is not a priority for anyone, and it’s clear that there’s a problem with teachers’ democratic values. When we teach about human rights, we teach that duties and rights are not to be linked – that a citizen has certain rights regardless of any duty he did or did not fulfill.

“Many people, including school officials, have a very firmly entrenched view, based on years of experience, that a right is dependent upon fulfillment of a duty. That someone who doesn’t serve in the army, who doesn’t declare loyalty to the state, shouldn’t receive rights. There are teachers who may go by the book, but it doesn’t convince the students, and some teachers feel the same way.”

She goes on to note that part of the problem in democracy education stems from the substantial gap between the students’ knowledge of the subject, as expressed in exams and in classroom discussion – and the application of these values in their everyday lives.

“On the first level, of conveying the basic principles of democracy, the teachers are quite successful … On other levels, such as inculcating democracy as a worldview and translating these values to the classroom, we see other things. You can have discussions in civics class and study entire texts, and then suddenly a boy says to a girl, ‘Shut up, you slut,’ and the teacher doesn’t stop everything right then and there. When that happens you lose the connection between what’s being taught and what’s happening. In my daughter’s class, the kids told a joke that went something like: ‘How long does it take an Arab woman to get rid of the trash? Nine months,’ and the teacher didn’t stop or say anything to them about it.”

Fear at the fringes

A big part of the problem, says Darmoni-Sharvit, is the teachers’ fear of addressing political issues. Fear that makes learning technical and formal, for the most part.

“They’re all afraid of it, but you see it mostly at the fringes,” she says. “Religious teachers and teachers in settlements think the Education Ministry’s program is very leftist, so they teach it in a very technical way, just so the kids can pass the matriculation exam. There are circles that have essentially disengaged from the state and its democratic values, and the kids are definitely hearing this in school. With the Arabs it’s even more complicated: They’re very careful to avoid discussions because of the fear that nationalist positions will come out, which will reach the ministry inspector or the principal and endanger their jobs. So they teach the subject in an even more technical fashion than the religious Jewish teachers.”

Do schools also teach messages that contradict democratic education?

“In the school system there’s a discrepancy between the official curriculum and the ‘unofficial’ curriculum [including what's known as Shelach], Land of Israel studies that have a nationalist bent, and preparatory workshops for the army and the Gadna pre-military youth corps. The [Holocaust-related] trips to Poland could have been an occasion to teach broader humanistic understanding, but they end up being all about ‘Then we were weak and now we are strong – We won’t give them another chance to kill us.’

“When I talk in civics class about the Arab minority, and about its uniqueness in being a majority that became a minority, my students argue and say it’s not true that they were a majority. When I go to the history teacher and ask her why the students don’t know that in 1947 there was a certain number of Arabs here, and in 1948 there was a different number, she becomes evasive and says it’s not part of the material.”

The failure of the school system is evident not just in student’s opinions, but sometimes in their actions, too. There have been a number of disturbing incidents: On the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day last year, dozens of Jewish youths attacked two Arab youths after seeing a message on ICQ urging them “to put an end to all the Arabs walking around the Pisga [Pisgat Ze'ev]“; youths took part in the violence against Arabs in Acre last October; and just this week, Jewish youths from Tiberias went after a young Arab with clubs as he was walking on the city’s boardwalk.

Interviewed by phone this week, Education Minister Yuli Tamir acknowledged that she herself is skeptical about the ministry’s success in instilling democratic values:

“Lieberman’s growing strength indicates that there is deep confusion about everything related to democratic values, and this obligates the system to conduct a profound reckoning regarding its ability to instill these values. Civics studies are very technical, the children are not internalizing the profound values because, in the Israeli context, these values are perceived as leftist. If you go on the ministry’s Web sites that deal with citizenship, you’ll find all of these principles, but the teachers are afraid to talk about it, because there’s a labeling that occurs when one makes statements about equality or civil rights.”

The schools seem to be speaking in two voices. Is there a gap between democratic education and patriotic education?

Tamir: “Israeli society is speaking in two voices: We see ourselves as a democratic society, yet we often neglect things that are very basic to democracy. These things are not at the top of the Israeli agenda. If the students see the Knesset disqualifying Arab parties, a move that I’ve adamantly opposed, how can we expect them to absorb democratic values?”

Prof. Ilan Gur-Ze’ev, whose specialty is the philosophy of education, argues that the political positions of Israeli youths derive in part from historical ignorance:

“It’s not that they don’t know what Lieberman says. It’s that they don’t understand the implications of what Lieberman says. They may know how to quote phrases like ‘What we need is an iron fist in a silk glove.’ If you think about such a metaphor – are they able to really appreciate what such a phrase means, are they aware of its connection to the fascist tradition? Are they capable of linking this phrase to the tradition in which it was originally used? They know slogans. They don’t know history.”

Gur-Ze’ev also offers an original explanation for young people’s tendency to support Lieberman:

“The Israeli reality can no longer hide what it has kept hidden up to now – that today no sentient mother can honestly say to her child: ‘Next year things will be better here.’ The young people are replacing hope for a better future with a myth of a heroic end. For a heroic end, Lieberman fits the bill.

“Outwardly they may say that Lieberman will bring about a better future,” the professor adds, “but have them talk with a psychologist or with a philosopher and these mantras will implode. In a reality in which you can’t honestly tell your children, ‘Tomorrow will be better,’ in which the realization has finally sunk in that no deal or accord is about to happen, not now or 10 years from now – they react in a hysterical, survivalist fashion. In such a situation, the commitment to humanist values can be viewed as a luxury that we as a society cannot afford.”

SF Immigrants claim racial profiling, police abuse at Supervisors hearing

Residents Claim racial targeting, police abuse

San Francisco Chronicle, February 10, 2009

(02-09) 19:15 PST — Dozens of San Francisco residents said Monday that they have been victims of alleged racial profiling and police abuse and that the perceived racism has led to widespread distrust of police in the Latino community.

Several speakers at the City Hall hearing said they have been pulled over and given tickets because they had a rosary hanging from their vehicle’s rearview mirror. Others said they had been harassed about their identification or immigration status while they worked, walked or drove home. One family said their car was impounded, after it was hit by a city vehicle, because the father had an Oregon driver’s license. Now they’re selling the car to pay the impound fees.

Police officials said they have strict policies against racial profiling but acknowledged that more work needs to be done to avoid the appearance of harassment. Supervisor David Campos, who called the hearing, demanded internal reforms and said he would introduce legislation to deal with the problem if the Police Department does not.

Advocates said Latino residents have been targeted by police since a controversy erupted last summer over the city’s sanctuary city ordinance, which prohibits the use of city funds to help enforce federal immigration laws. The city came under fire after The Chronicle reported that authorities had flown some illegal immigrant youths to their home countries even after they were convicted of felonies; others were sent to unlocked group homes and escaped.

Police acknowledged Monday that there was an increase in the number of traffic stops last year as part of a larger crime-fighting strategy, and defended the police presence as important in deterring violent crimes. Yet speakers said they were being targeted simply for the way they look.

Rigoberto Rodriguez, 41, said he has yet to get back his green card from police after being stopped on Jan. 15 at 16th and Mission streets for holding an open container of alcohol.

“I didn’t get a citation. I was searched and handcuffed, and nothing was found – but my green card was taken by police,” he said, adding that the card cost him $400. “I can pay a ticket. I know what I was doing was not proper, but what I don’t feel good about is that I should have to go through the process of getting back my ID because of a capricious decision by a police officer.”

Police officials said the department spends hours training new recruits about the issue of racial profiling and has strict policies prohibiting traffic stops without probable cause. They encouraged people to report any abuse to the department’s Office of Citizen Complaints.

That office, however, has a less-than-stellar reputation: A 2007 audit found it to be mismanaged, understaffed, overburdened and slow to complete investigations.

However, criminologist Lorie Fridell – who has been working with the city for two years to evaluate and reform its processes – said the agency is working with the community to respond to these concerns.

Still, after more than three hours of testimony Monday, Capt. Greg Corrales said the department needs to work harder.

“I’m as dismayed as anyone regarding any allegations that someone is being pulled over for no reason. It’s totally unacceptable,” said Corrales, who heads the department’s traffic unit. “Officers have to follow the law, but they also have to use discretion, and pulling someone over because there’s a rosary hanging from their mirror is not good discretion.”

Campos, a former police commissioner who represents the largely Latino Mission District, said many violent crime investigations are hindered by a lack of cooperation from witnesses.

“I hope the department takes this hearing as an opportunity to address the problem,” he said. “It’s not surprising that many people are afraid to come forward and report crimes given the level of fear.”

E-mail Marisa Lagos at mlagos@sfchronicle.com.

Comment:

Editor,

In “S.F. residents claim racial targeting, police abuse” (Feb. 9, 2009), police claim their checkpoints, where they impound cars of undocumented immigrants, are needed for neighborhood safety because their statistics show that a high proportion of unsafe drivers are unlicensed. Hogwash.

Among US citizens, most are allowed to get drivers licenses, so you might expect that a among US citizens who drive without licenses a higher proportion might be unsafe or irresponsible. But among undocumented immigrants, none are allowed to get licenses, and yet most need to drive to get to work, take children to doctors etc. So there’s no reason to expect a higher proportion of unlicensed immigrant drivers to be unsafe, or irresponsible, let alone violent. There’s no justification to SFPD’s claim that traffic stops stop violent crime. Yes, it is racial profiling, plain and simple.

Neighborhoods rightly demand a stop to violent crime, and in response, SFPD sets up neighborhood traffic stops that harass and intimidate the entire neighborhood rather than target crime. ” Why is it middle-school kids know where to get guns but the police department claims they don’t know where they come from?

See SF Gray Panthers webpage on immigrants in San Francisco

Links to other publicity on this hearing:

Residents Claim Racial Bias In SF Traffic Stops

Allegations of SFPD Profiling of Latinos, KCBS

New supervisor to drive hearing on racial profiling

Article:Residents claim racial targeting, police abuse:/c/a/2009/02/09/BAO715QDEC.DTL

Article:Residents claim racial targeting, police abuse:/c/a/2009/02/09/BAO715QDEC.DTL

Answering a Question of Color:  SFPD to face inquiries regarding racial profiling



Immigrants forced to march through Phoenix in chains and prison stripes.

Chained Immigrants on Parade: Who Will Stand Up to the Sick Antics of a Racist Sheriff?

Southern Poverty Law Center,  Feb 10, 2009

Last week in Maricopa County, Ariz., more than 200 Latino immigrants were chained, dressed in prison stripes and forced to march down a public street from a county jail to a detainment camp in a desert industrial zone outside Phoenix.

Along the way they were filmed by television news crews and guarded by at least 50 Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) deputies, wearing body armor and combat fatigues, armed with shotguns and automatic rifles. At least two canine units were present; a Sheriff’s Department helicopter hovered overhead.

The massive show of force was pure stagecraft for a blatant and dehumanizing publicity stunt orchestrated by Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. The MCSO gave no indication that any of the immigrant prisoners were particularly violent or presented a grave danger to the public.

According to a MCSO press release, 220 immigrants were transferred to a “Tent City” surrounded by electrified fencing. “This is a population of criminals more adept perhaps at escape,” Arpaio stated in the press release. “But this is a fence they won’t want to scale because they risk receiving a shock – literally.”

The press release further detailed how the immigrants will be treated like any other prisoners, “with two exceptions.” First, “Arpaio wants them to be instructed in American immigration laws, as a way to help them understand that the violation of these laws has serious consequences not only to them but to society as a whole.” Second, immigrants who violate jail rules will be put on a desert chain gang. “This chain gang will work to clean the areas [of the nearby desert] which have been impacted by human trafficking trade,” the release stated.

Humiliating prisoners by putting them on parade began in Imperial Rome. In modern times it’s been widely denounced as a barbarous practice. In March 2003, after the Iraqi government paraded five captured U.S. soldiers in front of television cameras, then U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld protested that it was a violation of the Geneva Convention.

The Phoenix New Times pointed out that Arpaio’s immigrant parade was scheduled for the same day that MCSO Captain Joel Fox was scheduled to appear in court to appeal a $315,000 fine levied against him for channeling an illegal $105,000 campaign donation to the Republican Party in the name of a shadowy entity called the “Sheriff’s Command Association.”

“Which event do you think average news consumers will remember on Thursday – an administrative hearing concerning a convoluted tale of campaign finance laws, or the image of 200 Mexicans in stripes marching in chains down a public street?” asked the New Times. “Yeah, we thought so, too.”

Arpaio is lionized by Minutemen vigilantes and other nativist extremists for his controversial “287(g)” arrangement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which empowers the MCSO, a local agency, to enforce federal immigration law.

Many Latinos taken into custody in recent months by MCSO 287(g) squads have been pulled over for minor traffic violations, such as a broken headlight or an improper lane change, and then arrested when they’re unable to produce proof of citizenship or a valid visa. The operations, several of which have been concentrated in predominately Latino neighborhoods and conducted in some cases by MCSO officers wearing black ski masks, have drawn widespread accusations of racial profiling.

Maricopa County Supervisor Mary Rose Wilcox, an outspoken critic of Arpaio’s immigrant-bashing antics, told the Associated Press that today’s parade was “one of the most inhumane things I’ve ever heard.”

“[Arpaio’s] trying to justify this as a ‘budget savings,’ and I’m just appalled. It’s just another publicity stunt,” Wilcox said. “I don’t think you can segregate people that way, and we’re going to get all kinds of violations against us.”

For more on this story, read Douglas Rivin’s “Media-Hound Sheriff Arpaio Marches Immigrants Through Town Square for Fox “News” Cameras”.


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