Monday, 15 May 2023
Marking the ongoing injustice of the Palestinian Nakba
On May 15 Palestinians and their allies around the world mark the Nakba ( Catastrophe in Arabic) the time when more than 750,000 Palestinians, about half of the Arab population in Palestine at that time, were forced out of their homes and lands and saw Palestinian villages wiped off the map in places like Yassin, Lydda, Tantura by the hands of Zionist para-military groups like Haganah, that later formed the core of the Israeli Defense Force, Ergun and the Stern Gang. to establish the state of Israel.
The 1948 founding of Israel was preceded and accompanied by a massive ethnic cleansing operation to remove as many of the Muslim and Christian inhabitants as possible. During Israel's "war of independence," Palestinians were driven from their homes, never to be allowed to return. Hundreds of towns were razed; villagers were massacred. Their very existence on the land was nearly wiped from history as Israel built new towns over the ruins. This devastating event is given almost no attention in history books or by the mainstream news media but is essential in understanding the ongoing violence in Israel-Palestine and the Middle East in general.
Following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I and the establishment of the Palestine Mandate, the British colonial power began implementing its plan of creating a Jewish state on Palestinian land. At the same time, the Zionist movement was lobbying Western powers to support the mass migration of Jews to Palestine and recognize a Jewish claim to the land. In 1917, the Balfour Declaration declared British support for a "national home for the Jewish people" in Palestine, and that's how the Day of Nakba officially began.
The notorious declaration was made in a letter written by Britain's then-Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour, to Baron Rothschild, a leader of the British Zionist movement. The letter was endorsed by Britain's then-Prime Minister David Lloyd George..The letter stated the British would "use their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object". For Zionists, this was a clear victory.
The vast majority of Palestinian refugees, both those outside the 1949 armistice lines and those internally displaced, were barred by the newly declared state of Israel from their right to return to their homes or the reclaiming of their property, and in doing so Israel violated international law. It is the defining event that formed and solidified the Palestinian liberation struggle.
To understand the Nakba is to first confront its sheer scale and totality. Before the Nakba there was a large, deeply rooted, and essentially ancient Arab society in most of what, within a few months, became the Jewish state of Israel. In effect, one day it was there, as it had been for living memory, and the next day it was gone. An entire society, with the exception of relatively small groups in a few places, simply vanished.
After World War I, the League of Nations broke the Ottoman Empire up into territories assigned to different colonial powers. The lands that today constitute Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories were placed under British rule, but with two explicit and incompatible purposes: Britain was already committed to supporting the recently established Zionist movement that sought to create “a national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine.
Then in Britain came the notorious 1917 Balfour Declaration and the Palestine mandate, in which the overwhelming Palestinian majority was simply referred to as “existing non-Jewish communities,” with “civil and religious rights,” but not political ones.
With the Balfour Declaration, the government of the time was seeking Jewish support for its war efforts, and the Zionist push for a homeland for Jews, which was becoming an emerging political force. In 1917, Jews constituted 10% of the population, the rest were Arabs. Yet Britain recognised the national rights of a tiny minority and denied it to the majority This was a classic colonial document which totally disregarded the rights and aspirations of the indigenous population. In the words of Jewish writer Arthur Koestler: “One nation solemnly promised to a second nation the country of a third.”
It was a shock to the Arab world, which had not been consulted and had received promises of independence of its own in the post-war break up of the defeated Ottoman Empire. The Palestinians have always condemned the declaration, which they refer to as the "Balfour promise" saying Britain was giving away land it did not own.
The Balfour Declaration constituted a dangerous historical precedent and a blatant breach of all international laws and norms, and this act of the British Empire to “give” the land of another people for colonial settlement created the conditions for countless atrocities against the Palestinian people. Balfour, in a 1919 confidential memo, wrote:
“Zionism, be it right or wrong, good or bad, is rooted in age old traditions, in present needs, in future hopes, of far greater import than the desires and prejudices of the 700,000 Arabs who now inhabit that ancient land”
The discriminatory language used by Sir Arthur Balfour and seen in the Balfour Declaration and the British Mandate reveal the prejudiced rational behind British foreign policy in Palestine. A month after the Balfour Declaration on 2 December 1917, the British army occupied Jerusalem. In 1923, the British Mandate for Palestine came into effect, and included the entire text of the Balfour Declaration. Through the Mandate, Britain would go on to rule Palestine for three decades.
As a result of all of this the Palestinian people were denied the right to independence and statehood, and were treated as refugees in their own land. The Nakba resulted in the destruction of much of Palestinian society and much of the Arab landscape was obliterated by the Zionist state. And in the post 1948 period the Palestinians became second class citizens, subject to a system of military occupation by a government that confiscated the bulk of their lands.
Even the word 'Nakba' was banned by the Israeli Minister of Education in 2009, and was removed from school textbooks. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanayah said at the time that the word was tantamount to spreading propoganda against Israel. But the word Nakba is the term that about a fifth of Israel's population, the Palestinians use to describe this day.
The influx of Zionists to Palestine, supported by the British, was however was met with fierce Palestinian resistance and is very important to note that the Palestinian leadership in Al-Quds at the time insisted on continuing negotiations with the British to resolve the simmering tensions, Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam, a Syrian leader living in Haifa since 1922, began calling for resistance against the British and the Zionists. In 1935, Al-Qassam was surrounded by British forces and killed along with some of his men. His resistance inspired many Palestinians.
By 1936, an Arab resistance erupted against British imperialism and Zionist settler colonialism and by 1939, the Palestinians found themselves fighting two enemies: British colonial forces and Zionist militia groups.
And although the British had backed mass Jewish immigration to Palestine, the colonial power began to limit the number of Jews arriving in the country in an attempt to quell Arab unrest.This new limit on immigration upset the Zionists and they launched a series of terrorist attacks on British authorities to drive them out, while at the same time the Zionists continued to further advance their dream of creating a Jewish state on Palestinian land.
The Zionist strategy of expelling Palestinians from their land was a slow and deliberate process. According to Israeli historian Ilan Pappe, Zionist leaders and military commanders met regularly from March 1947 to March 1948, when they finalized plans to ethnically cleanse Palestine. As Zionist attacks on the British and Arabs escalated, the British decided to hand over their responsibility for Palestine to the newly founded United Nations.
In November 1947, the UN General Assembly proposed a plan to partition Palestine into a Jewish state and an Arab one. Jews in Palestine only constituted one-third of the population - most of whom had arrived from Europe a few years earlier - and only retained control of less than 5.5 percent of historic Palestine. Yet under the UN proposal, they were allocated 55 percent of the land. The Palestinians and their Arab allies rejected the proposal. The Zionist message was simple: Leave the land or be killed. The Zionist movement accepted all this on the grounds that it legitimized the idea of a Jewish state on Arab land. But they did not agree to the proposed borders and campaigned to conquer even more of historic Palestine.
As the date (May 14, 1948) selected by the British for their Palestine Mandate to expire approached, Zionist forces hastened their efforts to seize Palestinian land. In April 1948, the Zionists captured Haifa, one of the biggest Palestinian cities, and subsequently set their eyes on Jaffa. On the same day, British forces formally withdrew, and David Ben-Gurion, then-head of the Zionist Agency, proclaimed the establishment of the state of Israel. Overnight, the Palestinians became stateless. The world’s two great powers, the United States and the Soviet Union, immediately recognized Israel.
As the Zionists continued their ethnic cleansing campaign against the Palestinians, war broke out between neighboring Arab countries and the new Zionist state. The UN appointed Swedish diplomat, Folke Bernadotte, as its mediator in Palestine. He recognized the plight of the Palestinians and attempted to address their suffering. His efforts to bring about a peaceful solution and halt to the ongoing ethnic cleansing campaign ended when he was assassinated by the Zionists in September 1948.
Nevertheless the UN continued to push for an armistice deal between Israel and those Arab countries. Bernadotte was replaced by his American deputy, Ralph Bunche. Negotiations led by Bunche between Israel and the Arab states resulted in the latter conceding even more Palestinian land to the newly founded Zionist state. In May 1949, Israel was admitted to the UN, and its grip over 78 percent of historic Palestine was consolidated. The remaining 22 percent became known as the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
75 years later over 7 million Palestinians live as refugees or
exiles, and are stull denied the right to return to the land from which they, or their
family, were forcibly expelled. A right which is enshrined in
international law. Palestinians who remained in the State of Israel, and
those in the occupied territory, many of whom are refugees, face a
sertheless the UN continued to push for an armistice deal between Israel and those Arab countries. Bernadotte was replaced by his American deputy, Ralph Bunche. Negotiations led by Bunche between Israel and the Arab states resulted in the latter conceding even more Palestinian land to the newly founded Zionist state. In May 1949, Israel was admitted to the UN, and its grip over 78 percent of historic Palestine was consolidated. The remaining 22 percent became known as the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
This is the Palestinian peoples history, and it is essential we should be allowed to talked about. It is it not wrong to question, when other regimes oppress, we question them too, we have a duty to criticise and condemn, when fundamental freedoms and rights are violated. Any state that acts aggressively is open to criticism. All human beings are entitled to human rights.
This period of time is what we remember today, and also now marks the anniversary of those killed during the Great Return March in Gaza in 2019. Thousands of Palestinians, stuck in the blockaded Gaza strip, initiated protests that started in Gaza as a way to draw attention to the living conditions in Gaza, where currently more than 1.3 million Palestinian refugees live, but more importantly as a march for the right of return.
This Great March characterized the use of peaceful activism by Palestinian citizens since the early 2000s. These mobilizations aim to defend land rights, rights to resources, mobility through non-violence and sometimes innovative actions to attract international attention demanding their right to return to their homes from which they were expelled in 1948. They were also condemning the continued occupation and siege. Hundreds of people were killed during these marches, including children, disabled protesters, journalists and paramedics.
There is no peace in stolen lands, especially when people still cry for liberation and the right to return to their lands.The fact is the Nakba never ended. It continues every day as Palestinians are evicted from their homes in East Jerusalem and the West Bank to be replaced by illegal Jewish-only settlements. It continues as Israel’s occupation obstructs and severely restricts Palestinians’ attainment of rights and fundamental freedoms, including: the right to life, the right to liberty and security of person, and their right to an adequate standard of living.
Notably, Israel continues to violate Palestinians’ right to freedom of movement within and from the Occupied Palestinian Territories through its closure policy made up of the Annexation Wall and its associated permit-regime in the West Bank, and its prolonged closure of the Gaza Strip, which has made Gaza uninhabitable for Palestinians.
In the Gaza Strip, in particular, Palestinians continue to be severely deprived of their liberty as a result of Israel’s unlawful closure, amounting to collective punishment. In Gaza, Palestinians are trapped in a humanitarian crisis without adequate water or electricity as they are prevented from returning to their lands inside what is now Israel.It continues with sniper attacks on Palestinians in Gaza, encroachment of illegal settlements across the West Bank and extreme limitations placed on Palestinians' movements within and between towns, courtesy of IDF-staffed checkpoints and all in violation of international human rights law and in denial of the fundamental aspirations of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which sought “the advent of a world in which human beings shall enjoy … freedom from fear and want”.
Palestinians still have no state and no equality, Refugee camps still exist all over the world and a majority of Palestinians live in the diaspora and Palestine is occupied in the most brutal way possible.
For the nearly six million Palestinians who live between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River, the Nakba remains an ongoing process, as Israel uses a range of tools to restrict their livelihoods.
They remain vulnerable to expulsion, watching an ever-increasing share of their land become off-limits. About half of the occupied West Bank is already inaccessible to Palestinians, designated as military zones or nature reserves, or set aside for future Israeli settlements.The Israeli military control large parts of the West Bank and Gaza is completely sealed and “monitored” by Israeli ships, fighter planes and tanks.
Against their will, the Nakba has divided the Palestinian people between Gaza and the West Bank. Still searching for justice and dignity who despite the international attention that the Nakba has received over the years, the state of Israel to this day has not yet recognized the Nakba, nor their responsibility for what happened in 1948.
The right of return for Palestine refugees is a right guaranteed by international law and enshrined in UN General Assembly resolution 194. Knowing that the displacement of Palestinians is still being practiced by Israel today in the West Bank and Gaza, the question of the ongoing Nakba needs to be addressed to achieve justice and peace in the region. The right for Palestinian refugees to return to their land must be the precondition for a dialogue for peaceful coexistence between Israel and Palestine.
The development of Israeli settlements in occupied Palestine is deemed a breach of international law, and thus by doing business in these settlements, many international companies are contributing to the economic viability of settlements and are normalising Israeli annexation of Palestinian land,and aiding in promoting discrimination, oppression and injustice.
As a result the Nakba still reverberates today because Al Nakba is constant and continuing, felt through all aspects of Palestinian life, whether in Israel. the Occupied Territories, the refugees camps, or even in settled Palestinian communities abroad.
The Nabka is not a static event, but rather an ongoing reality for Palestinians.The Nakba is felt each time a Palestinian family is forcibly removed from their home. The Nakba is felt each year that the crushing siege on Gaza continues, and with each Israeli air strike. And the Nakba is felt each time Israeli forces violently raid some of Islam's holiest sites, as was the case with the numerous attacks on the Al Aqsa compound during Ramadan recently.
Only Last Tuesday, Israeli military forces intentionally and indiscriminately bombed families in Gaza and over the the past week, apartheid Israel’s airstrikes on the over 2 million Palestinians under siege in Gaza have killed, so far, 31 Palestinians, including 7 children and shockingly, in just five months, Israel's occupation forces and illegal settlers have murdered at least 144 Palestinians.This daily violence cannot be allowed to continue.
Today, as we observe the sad sombre event of the Nakba lets be more determined than ever to stand up to Israeli policies of apartheid. It is more important than ever that the international community keep defending Palestinian human rights, support Palestinian protests against forced housing demolitions and land theft and put real pressure on Israel to end its occupation and comply with international law. To take all measures within international law to hold Israel accountable for its ongoing strategy resulting in ongoing human rights violations and international crimes committed against the Palestinian People, including forcible transfer, colonization and apartheid.
Let. continue too use this occasion to reaffirm the inherent dignity and rights of Palestinians and to assert the right of the Palestinian people, as a whole, to self-determination, which includes the right to permanent sovereignty over natural wealth and resources and the right of return of Palestinian refugees, in order to achieve justice and durable peace for the Palestinian People.
The ongoing occupation of Palestinian land also makes the Boycott Divestment Sanctions (BDS) campaigns all the more urgent and necessary.Lets remember that Palestinians will never to give up and be content to mourn the ghost of Palestine. They still belong to their land, and though time drifts, for the Palestinians their memory is never erased, still proudly belonging to the land of their ancestors, where their hearts and minds can never leave. It is time for the leaders of the world to understand that there is no homeland for the Palestinians except Palestine.
As we recount today the unique personal stories of those
who lived through the Nakba and recognise the Palestinians who daily live under occupation in the West Bank imprisoned by
an Israeli wall, and the over 2 million currently living under military
siege in Gaza, denied a series of fundamental rights, that include the
freedom to move, access to clean water, food, medicine and electricity
Let's today remember that the Palestinians will remains unbroken, so lets continue to stand
with them today in solidarity and keep demanding that they are allowed to move freely
again in their own land and are given keep back the dignity and respect
and basic rights that they all deserve as human beings.
In attempt to understand the catastrophe, here is a small reading list of
key books on the Israel-Palestine conflict, from Ghada Karmi, Mahmoud
Darwish, Naji al-Ali, Ilan Pappe, Edward Said, Shlomo Sand, and more.
http://www.versobooks.com/blogs/3210-nakba-day-reading-list?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=US+UTM+Nakba+Day+reading+list
Friday, 12 May 2023
Growing Free
The hands of the clock move faster
The spirit of youth fading away
Friends going to sleep
In the mornings gone forever
Moments of time
Increasingly darker
Dreams defaced
By forces of fascism
Worry lines etched deeper
Instead of those of laughter
Remembering all in same boat
Keep searching for the light
So close the door on malice
Stop menace from entering
To distract inner fear
Try to keep on dancing
Celebrate life's rich diversity
Music still releasing joy
Sources of synergy
Allowing awakening
Releasing gratitude of now
In precious moments
As the end approaches
Enabling us to be
More conscious neighbours
Not restricted by fields of negation
That define and shut down
Without inhibition
Refuse to let passions expire
Forces of life on the loose
Unchained, unbound.
Monday, 8 May 2023
Jack Cade’s Rebellion
Jack Cade’s Rebellion began on this day 1450 when Kentishmen, led by Jack Cade, marched to London to protest against laws introduced by King Henry VI. It was one of the most important popular uprisings to take place in England since the Peasant's Revolt of 1381https://teifidancer-teifidancer.blogspot.com/2016/06/wat-tyler-and-peasants-revolt-of-1381.html It began as an orchestrated demonstration of political protest by the inhabitants of south-eastern England against the corruption, mismanagement, and oppression of Henry VI's government. especially with high taxes, the incompetence of Henry VI's advisers and especially the war with France that had lately seen the loss of Normandy at the end of 1449. .
Cade’s method of tackling this, was to draft and distribute a manifesto entitled The Complaint of the Poor Commons of Kent which was issued in spring 1650..This document set out the grievances of the people he was representing, and listed fifteen complaints and five demands that he wished the king to tackle.
The rising, the most extensive popular movement between 1381 and the sixteenth century, was relatively limited in its aims and was certainly not directed at the overthrow of the social order.although they did call for some social change, notably to the Statute of Labourers, which made peasants subject to compulsory labour, social change was not the rebel's root concern.
Instead, most of these minor gentry wanted an end to poor government. They did not call for sweeping social change, but for the removal of certain councillors, the return of royal estates that had been granted out, and improved methods of taxation.
And although Cade's Rebellion has sometimes been characterised as a peasant uprising. similar to the Peasant's Revolt. such is not really the case. Cade's Rebellion certainly attracted numbers of peasants, but the evidence suggests that Cade's support was fairly widely based, and that the strength of his leadership lay in his ability to act as a spokesmen for all the social groups that supported him and who objected to the political climate of the times. Even churchmen joined the rebels, including the rector of Mayfield and the Prior of St Pancras in Lewes.With the nobles of England glowering threateningly at each other, and the government, bankrupted by the years of war in France, beginning to collapse, England in the middle of the 15th century was desperately in need of a strong leader.
The man who came forward as claimant for this position Jack Cade self-proclaimed "Captain of Kent." is something of a mystery man; even his name is uncertain. Some of his followers called him John Mortimer, and claimed that he was related to Richard, Duke of York, and also that he had fought for France against England in the Hundred Years War. He appeared to history out of nowhere in the spring of 1450, and by sheer dint of personality became the recognized leader of the Kentish protests. Cade became a hero to the ordinary small landowners of Sussex and Kent, who called him ‘John Mend-All’ for restoring order and justice
Cade gathered about 5,000 supporters from the south east of England and met the King at Blackheath in early June 1450. Cade refused to back down forcing the King to flee. Later that month Cade's army defeated a section of Henry's army at Sevenoaks and the rebels marched on London.
At first they were welcomed by the Londoners, who were in sympathy with many of Cade's aims. The rebels stormed the Tower of London but just failed to take the fortress. They killed the Archbishop of Canterbury and Henry's treasurer, Sir James Fiennes, as well as the Sheriff of Kent, who had their heads cut off and placed on poles kissing each other.
As fear spread through the ruling class the king, in an attempt to appease the rebels and quieten the unrest in his own camp, sent two high profile names on Cades hit list to the Tower. However, Lord Saye, the former treasurer, and the equally unpopular William of Crowner, the Under-Sheriff of Kent were not sufficient scapegoats. Cades army was advancing, and many royal soldiers were wavering in their loyalty, so much so that they were disbanded by their demoralised commanders. Henry VI left London, seeking refuge at Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire.
Moving forward from Southwark on 3rd July, Cade crossed London Bridge, struck his sword on the London Stone, and proclaimed himself Lord Mayor. The rebels were buoyed with success and confidence as they were joined by many from the City.
The idea of the Tower being attacked forced Lord Scales and the Aldermen to hand over Lord Saye and William Crowmer to the rebels. The pair were taken to the Guildhall and quickly given token trials, which ended in their execution, and their heads stuck on high poles and carried triumphantly through the streets by the exultant mob.
At first Cade was able to maintain a level of discipline among his men, although, it was perhaps inevitable that order would give way to chaos. Looting and brawling soon heightened the tension; goodwill from many Londoners began to turn into resentment. Cade had done his best to stop the killing, raping and looting, but without success. This turned the Londoners decisively against him and may have alienated his own respectable followers as well.
Within days, the insurgents had outstayed their welcome. Lord Scales, making what, to him, must have felt like a one-man stand, managed to instil some resolve into the Tower garrison, while the people of the city were rallied to fall into line by their own councillors. In the dead of a July night, a mix of soldiers and citizens cleared the streets and forced Cade’s men back onto London Bridge for a ferocious showdown. Fighting raged all night. When dawn broke, the northern half of the bridge was back in royal hands. While, the rebels huddled together at the southern end. However, before Scales could mount a further assault to regain the rest of the bridge, Archbishop John Kemp, Lord Chancellor, intervened. It was time for political negotiation.
The Lord Chancellor sent William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, to talk to the rebels.Probably sensing that his followers were ready to drop Cade presented his set of demands to the Bishop and obtained a promise that they would be met in full The Bishop produced official pardons, ready to be offered to anyone willing to lay down their arms and give up the rebel cause.
The general pardon of the king was gladly accepted by most of the rebels and citizens, but many were hanged as traitors and to frighten off others.And neither the king nor Parliament had agreed to any of the rebel's demands, and neither seemed prepared to do so anytime soon,
The rebels quickly dispersed. Cade himself was at Dartford on the 8th and Rochester on the 9th, where he discovered that the government was offering a thousand marks for him alive or dead. He left two days later in disguise.The new Sheriff of Kent, Alexander Iden, pursued Cade and caught him on July 12, 1450, at a little hamlet near Heathfield in Sussex. The hamlet is now known as Cade Street. There Cade was mortally injured, and he died on his way back to London
Unsurprisingly, Henry took the opportunity to make an example of him and he had a mock trial enacted out with Cade then being posthumously hung, drawn, and quartered. His limbs were sent back to various parts of Kent, and his head was displayed on a pole on London Bridge. Cade’s Articles of Complaint went the way as his body. and the heads of other leaders of his cause were put alongside to keep him company. The wheel had come full circle, but its barbed axle had gored into a weak and unstable government and tore open a wound that would never heal. The rebellion had exposed the king as weak and vulnerable
And although The Jack Cade Rebellion had been unsuccessfuL and quieted and dismissed shortly after Cade's death, the feeling of rebellion in England did not die down so easily. For example, it inspired ideas of revolt in many other counties in England besides Kent. Many of Cade;s followers from the county of Sussex, such as the yeomen brothers John and William Merfold, organized their own rebellion against King Henry VI. Unlike Jack Cade's revolt, however, the men in Sussex took Cade's ideas a step further in that they made declarations to reform that were much more radical and aggressive This animosity could have been due to the fact that the King had gone back on his proclamation of pardon for Jack Cade, which made many of the rebels distrust the King's government.
The suspicion that the King wanted all followers of Cade dead inspired the rebels to take a more drastic view of the reformation of English rule. They stated that the men of Sussex planned on killing the King and all his Lords, replacing them with twelve of the rioters own men. These revolts organized by the young Sussex men rallied smaller numbers of followers than that of the Cade rebellion, but still had an effect on the societies in England. For example, all the riots and looting taking place in English counties gave people an excuse to go on rampages of destruction for their own personal gain while being absolved of blame by claiming that their behavior was a rebellion against the King.and all theses centuries later we're still working the kind of change that many of Cade's supporters dreamed off.
The behavior of these later rebels can be seen as having been directly inspired by Jack Cade.Also, the larger battles over the crown of England, known as the Wars of the Roses, were clearly inspired by views of Cade's rebels.
The story of Jack Cade’s Rebellion was later dramatized by Shakespeare in his play, Henry VI and in other tales he can be see portrayed as a Robin Hood character, .
Saturday, 6 May 2023
Not My King : A Poem for Charles Philip Arthur George Mountbatten-Windsor
On wasteful day of decadence
A pantomime of pure delusion
No time for celebration or jubilation
As millions of us suffer in poverty
With all this opulence and gold
It's too sickening to behold
Despite docile culture of servility
The daily media dosage of propaganda
I am not the Crowns obedient servant
I am a citizen! A proud Welsh republican
Owe neither deference nor allegiance to a king
An archaic representative of privilege and power
Imposed on the people without consent
Who despite inheriting £650m tax free
Can't pay for his own coronation
Amidst the pomp and pageantry
Dazzling displays of obscenity
No stuffing of quiche for the many
Who need a fairer.equal society
God save the people from a monarchy
That stops us from having true democracy
This land no longer needs feudal overlords
Palaces and thrones of gross immorality
We need an end to this gilded superiority
Time to elect our own head of state
And when current folly is no more
A new dawn, a red republic formed
We will dance around in revelry.
Wednesday, 3 May 2023
On the Death of Khader Adnan: Please Write to the Foreign Office and Demand they Press Israel to end its use of Administrative Detention and release Palestinian political prisoners.
After an 86-day hunger strike in administrative detention, Palestinian prisoner Khader Adnan died in Israel’s Ramle prison cell yesterday morning. Israeli officials refused to grant Adnan his freedom despite being informed by a Physicians for Human Rights Israel medic that he was facing “imminent death.”
The death of Khader is a reminder of the
deadly cost that Palestinians pay for challenging Israel’s apartheid and
a military justice system rigged against them,
Khader died in protest at the Israeli authorities’
systematic arbitrary detention of Palestinians and cruel and inhumane
treatment of prisoners. Palestinian detainees frequently use hunger
strikes to challenge such policies, risking their health and lives in
order to demand the rights that Israel denies them.
Khader 45 a modest baker by trade ftom Arrabeh, Jenin, had nine children with his wife
Randa, 41 who tirelessly campaigned for his release. Since 2004 he had been
arrested 13 times by Israeli authorities, due to his affiliation with
the political wing of Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) movement. While
PIJ’s armed wing has carried out attacks on Israeli civilians, Khader
Adnan himself was never charged with any involvement in acts of
violence. In total, he spent eight years in detention, including nearly
six years in administrative detention without charge or trial.
Khader, helped introduce the practice of protracted hunger strikes by individual prisoners as a form of protest. Palestinian detainees have mostly used hunger strikes to challenge administrative detention, a controversial tactic in which more than 1,000 Palestinians and a handful of Israelis are currently being held without charge or trial.
Khader first grabbed international headlines and inspired solidarity protests over a decade ago, when he staged a 66-day hunger strike against his administrative detention. That galvanized hundreds of other prisoners to join the strike, which ended with a deal for his release. He was later arrested again. Through all levels of Palestinian society. from squalid refugee camps in Gaza to wealthy businesses in the West Bank. Palestinian prisoners in Israeli detention are celebrated as national heroes. Israel considers Palestinian prisoners to be terrorists.
Before his last arrest, which led to his death Khader was arrested a dozen times and spent nearly a fifth of his life in Israeli prison, and became a potent symbol of Palestinian resistance to Israel’s open-ended occupation, now in its 56th year. His use of hunger strikes as a bargaining chip against Israeli authorities. during two other strikes in 2015 and 2018 that lasted 56 and 58 days, respectively motivated many other desperate Palestinians in administrative detention to refuse food.
Israel’s prison service said Khader had been charged with “involvement in terrorist activities” following his February arrest. Last week, an Israeli military court denied him bail. A hearing on his appeal was repeatedly postponed.
Khader's nearly eight years in Israeli prisons,were mostly spent in administrative detention, a standard practice that allows Israel to indefinitely imprison someone without ever charging them with an offence. Political prisoners like Khader are then detained based on secret evidence not available to them or their lawyer, and kept imprisoned without ever facing trial.
With some of
them staying in jail for up to 11 years according to human rights groups. Israeli jail
authorities keep Palestinian prisoners under deplorable conditions
lacking proper hygienic standards. The inmates have also been subjected
to systematic torture, harassment, and repression.
Palestinian detainees have continuously resorted to open-ended hunger strikes in an attempt to express their outrage at the practice.
Palestinian detainees have continuously resorted to open-ended hunger strikes in an attempt to express their outrage at the practice.
Ever since Israel occupied the West Bank, East Jerusalem
and Gaza in 1967, Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails have resorted
to hunger strikes as a form of protest to win collective or individual
rights.Since then, there have been many more mass and group hunger strikes. Prisoners have demanded improved
conditions, to be allowed family visits, or an end to solitary
confinement.
Hunger strikes are a form of resistance that has long been understood as a weapon of last resort
by the powerless and disenfranchised. designed to provoke feelings
of guilt in others, especially those in positions of authority. Most
hunger strikers involve either a
time-limited symbolic refusal of food, or – in more extreme cases – a
prolonged fast, limiting themselves to a liquid
diet.
Over the first three days without food, the body uses up its store of
glucose for energy. Then, the liver starts processing body fat, and the
body enters “ketosis”, producing ketones to use as fuel.
Once the fat store is exhausted, the body enters “starvation mode”
and starts harvesting muscles and vital organs for energy. At this
stage, the loss of bone marrow becomes life-threatening. Hunger strikers
can last anything from 46 to 73 days before dying.Indeed, death has been the outcome of many hunger strikes as in the case of the 1981 Irish Republican prisoners’ strike which saw. Robert Gerard "Bobby " Sands (Roibeard Gearóid Ó Seachnasaigh ) die at 1.17am on 5th of March 1981 after being on hunger strike for 66 days in the Long Kesh Maze Prison in Northern Ireland to protest against British treatment of political prisoners.
Over the next few months, 9 other republican prisoners followed him, the culmination of a 5 year struggle in the prisons of Northern Ireland demanding jail reforms and the return of special category status allowing them to be treated as prisoners of war , allowing them the privileges of POW's as specified in the Geneva Convention.
Humans can generally live for up to seven days without food or water, depending on their health.
If only liquids are taken, a human can survive for up to 30 to 45
days. To last longer than that, hunger strikers must keep their physical
activity down to a minimum.
As with other forms of resistance within
and outside prison walls hunger strikes are acts of resistance through
which Palestinians assert their political existence and demand their
rights. It is vital to sustain and nurture this resistance. In addition
to giving strength to and supporting the prisoners in their struggle for
rights, this form of resistance continuously and powerfully inspires
hope among Palestinians at large and the solidarity movement. It is our
responsibility to both support Palestinian prisoners – and to work for a
time when Palestinians no longer need to resort to such acts of
resistance through which their only recourse is to put their lives on
the line.
At first glance, such acts of self-destruction might seem oddly
irrational or self-defeating. Many forms of resistance , such as a
classic workers’ strike – aim to place economic and other costs on
opponents. Yet with the hunger strike, the most severe costs are
suffered by protesters, who risk pain, bodily damage and as id the case pf Khader Adnan: death.
Nonetheless, detainees know that the refusal of food can shame the
authorities who bear ultimate responsibility for the lives of those in
their custody.By striking, hunger strikers also exert some measure of control
against a system that micromanages their lives and strips them of
agency. They demonstrate that they are sovereign over their own bodies
and that the most serious decision of all – over life and death – is
still in their hands.
As Guantanamo detainee Lakhdar Boumediene put it, "They could lock me up for no reason and with no chance to argue my
innocence. They could torture me, deprive me of sleep, put me in an
isolation cell, control every single aspect of my life. But they
couldn’t make me swallow their food."
Also for detained migrants and refugees, the choice of such an extreme
technique is powerful evidence of the cruelty they are subject to in
detention, and their moral determination to resist. Caged and herded
like animals, they exhibit the characteristically human capacity of
mastering their natural appetites in pursuit of a higher ideal.
Through hunger strikes, prisoners no
longer remain silent recipients of the prison authorities’ ongoing
violence: Instead, they inflict violence upon their own bodies in order
to impose their demands. In other words, hunger strikes are a space
outside the reach of the state’s power. The body of the striking
prisoner unsettles one of the most fundamental relationships to
violence behind prison walls, the one in which the state and its
prison authorities control every aspect of their lives behind bars and
are the sole inflictors of violence. In effect, prisoners reverse the
object and subject relationship to violence by fusing both into a single
body - the body of the striking prisoner – and in so doing reclaim
agency. They assert their status as political prisoners, refuse their
reduction to the status of “security prisoner”, and claim their rights
and existence. While authorities across the world frequently attempt to
dismiss hunger strikers as pathological and mentally ill, the strike is
in reality a careful and deliberate form of political action. As such,
hunger striking should be respected as an expression of the fundamental
human right to protest, as set out in Article 20 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
This means that authorities must refrain
from force-feeding, and all other forms of intimidation and listen to
the just claims of detainees regarding their treatment. “Khader Adnan is the first Palestinian detainee to die as a result of a
hunger strike since 1992. When his life was at risk, Israeli authorities
refused Khader Adnan access to the specialized care he needed in a
civilian hospital and instead left him to die alone in his cell. The
appalling treatment of such a high-profile detainee is the latest
alarming sign that Israeli authorities are growing increasingly brazen
in their contempt for Palestinians’ rights and lives, and increasingly
reckless in their cruelty towards Palestinians,” said Heba Morayef,
Amnesty International’s Regional Director for the Middle East and North
Africa.
Undoubtedly, Khader Adnan was a notable symbol of the Palestinian prisoners’ struggle for freedom. Israel’s regime of mass arrests and imprisonment of Palestinians is an evident systematic effort to embed its criminal occupation and apartheid over Palestinian life. According to Israeli human rights group https://hamoked.org/ Israel currently holds more than 1,000 Palestinian detainees in administrative detention, meaning they are being held without charges or trial. This is the highest number being kept on record in three decades and as of last month, 4,900 Palestinians are being held in Israeli prisons as political prisoners. Amongst these are 160 child prisoners, 30 female prisoners, and 554 serving life sentences for resisting occupation and ethnic cleansing.
Administrative detention orders issued by the Israeli military against
Palestinians are based on secret evidence and are almost automatically
approved by the military courts which operate in the occupied West Bank.
Detainees cannot challenge the grounds of their detention – a denial of
their right to due process.
Israel’s systematic and discriminatory use of administrative
detention against Palestinians forms part of its system of domination
and oppression and constitutes the crime against humanity of apartheid.
Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal
Court, imprisonment in violation of fundamental rules of international
law also constitutes a crime against humanity, if committed as part of a
widespread or systematic attack against a civilian population.
On Tuesday afternoon, hours after his death, Israeli authorities
moved forward to perform an autopsy on the hunger striker’s body,
against Adnan’s final will that his body not be cut open and autopsied
in the event of his death.
According to statements made to the press by Adnan’s legal team, an
appeal was submitted to the Israeli courts to ban the autopsy. And more than 24 hours after his death, Khader Adnan’s family have yet to
receive his body back for burial despite a petition filed by his lawyer
on Tuesday. Amnesty International is calling on Israeli authorities to
expedite the release of Khader Adnan’s body to his family to enable a
dignified burial, as required under international humanitarian law and
international human rights law.
The Israeli regime is so unhinged it goes as far as systematically abusing and brutalizing children in Israeli military detention.Khader's life of resistance and martyrdom will live on with us. His death should be a jolting wake-up call for those who have remained silent as Israel has continued its ploy to demolish Palestinian lives for decades via endless imprisonment and the grander prison of military occupation, settler colonialism, and apartheid.
While not prohibited under international humanitarian law,
administrative detention is only lawful if employed for imperative
security reasons. Israel’s routine and extensive use of administrative
detention renders it arbitrary, therefore violating international human
rights and humanitarian law. Also, in contravention of international
law, it is used in a deeply discriminatory manner. Please write the Foreign Office to demand they press Israel to end its use of administrative detention and release Palestinian political prisoners
Friday, 28 April 2023
Unparalleled Dimensions
Exhausted by the days
But constantly dreaming,
Looking waiting searching
To reset the horizon.
Sprinkling magic
On stunted rebel roots,
Crushing tory weeds
Replaced by insurgent shoots.
Wildness unstoppable
Beyond routes unsustainable,
The parasites of living
Taking never giving.
I throw seed bombs
Nurtured with love,
Against the darkness
To grow and resist.
Among nature’s tapestry
Colours of red and green,
Destroying the past
Creating the future.
Untangling old deviations
Forging divergent directions,
A sanctuary transcending pain
Heart uplifted,. mind revived.
As new stems emerge
The garden matures,
With prospering buds
That embeds and endures.
Scents of change permeate the air
Providing sustenance to others,
Infused with fragrance of compassion
As poisonous nexus no longer invade.
Thriving with possibility
Continue seeking alternative ways,
Dissolving walls and barriers
Raking away the disarray.
Wednesday, 26 April 2023
Marking the Horrific Anniversary of the Bombing of Geurnica
Guernica- Pablo Ruiz Picasso
During the Spanish Civil War on the afternoon and early evening of Monday, April 26th, 1937, the German and Italian fascist air forces destroyed the sacred city of Basque People, Guernica in a raid lasting three hours. The war crime was ordered by the Spanish nationalist military leadership and carried out by the Congor Legion of the German luftwaffe and the Italian Aviazone Legionairre. Designed to kill or main as many civilians as possible, Operation Rugen was deliberately chosen for a Monday afternoon when the weekly town market would be at its most crowded. Guernica, in the Basque country where revolutionary sentiment among workers was deep, was defenceless from the bombers, which could fly as low as 600 feet.
The prototype of all future bombing raids, the Junker and Heinkel bombers of the Legion Condor visited a hell on earth in the form of bombs weighing up to 1000lbs across the town of 10, 000 people. Heinkel fighters, according to press reports, machine gunned the fleeing crowds as they sought escape into the surrounding fields.
The airplanes made repeated raids, refuelling and returning to drop more bombs. Waves of explosive, fragmentary, and incendiary devices were dumped in the town. In total, 31 tons of munitions were dropped between 4.30 in the afternoon and 7.30 in the evening. In the aftermath of the raid, survivors spoke of the air filled with the screams of those in their death throes and the hundreds injured. Civilians fleeing the carnage in the fields surrounding the town were strafed by fighter planes. Human and animal body parts littered the market place and town center, a horror soon immortalised by Pablo Picasso's Guernica.
Guernica was effectively wiped of the map. From a population of 5,000 some 1,700 residents were killed and a further 800 injured. Three quarters of the buildings were raised to the ground. Farms four miles away were flattened.
The savage and barbarous attack was a deliberate attempt to terrorise and intimidate the workers of Republican Spain. Spanish nationalist general Emilio Mola had spoken of destroying the industry of Barcelona and Bilbao in order to cleanse the country. In other words, the Nationalists would endeavour to destroy the industrial proletariat. As the historian Paul Preston wrote in Spanish Holocaust, the Nationalist forces had launched a scorched earth policy during their rapid advance through Spain, most notably in Badajoz, where many hundreds of revolutionary workers were machine gunned to death in the city's bullring.
The fascist government of Berlin and Rome were only to glad to assist Franco in his 'cleansing' of the Spanish population, as both a geo-political necessity and as a test for their military command, new military technology and fighting forces. At his trial for war crimes at Nuremberg, the leading Nazi Hermann Goering would tell the tribunal that he had urged Hitler to send German forces to stem socialism in the Iberian theatre and to test out the Luftwaffe.We should never forget.
Guernica was effectively wiped of the map. From a population of 5,000 some 1,700 residents were killed and a further 800 injured. Three quarters of the buildings were raised to the ground. Farms four miles away were flattened.
The savage and barbarous attack was a deliberate attempt to terrorise and intimidate the workers of Republican Spain. Spanish nationalist general Emilio Mola had spoken of destroying the industry of Barcelona and Bilbao in order to cleanse the country. In other words, the Nationalists would endeavour to destroy the industrial proletariat. As the historian Paul Preston wrote in Spanish Holocaust, the Nationalist forces had launched a scorched earth policy during their rapid advance through Spain, most notably in Badajoz, where many hundreds of revolutionary workers were machine gunned to death in the city's bullring.
The fascist government of Berlin and Rome were only to glad to assist Franco in his 'cleansing' of the Spanish population, as both a geo-political necessity and as a test for their military command, new military technology and fighting forces. At his trial for war crimes at Nuremberg, the leading Nazi Hermann Goering would tell the tribunal that he had urged Hitler to send German forces to stem socialism in the Iberian theatre and to test out the Luftwaffe.We should never forget.
Franco, who ruled Spain as a fascist dictator for nearly forty years, from 1936 until his death in 1975, even claimed the attack on Guernica never took place. They tried to blame the Basques, claiming it was just Republican propaganda but the truth is Germany deliberately bombed the town to destroy it and observe in a clinical way the effects of such a devastating attack, practicing a new form of warfare, where only civilians were the targets.In October 1937, a Nationalist officer told a Sunday Times correspondent: 'We bombed it, and bombed it, and bombed it and Beuno why not. '
Pablo Ruiz Picasso one of the most important Spanish and universal artists of all time, in what is considered to be his most famous painting is his monumental anti-war painting Guernica. The picture still resonates with clarity, capturing the full terror and horror of this terrible moment in history.The work was an order of the government of the Second Spanish Republic during the period of the Civil War in 1937. The work commissioned to Picasso would be exhibited in the Pavilion dedicated to Spain at the International Exhibition in Paris of this same year. The aim of the artwork was to use the art to spread the horror that Spanish society was living during those years of war.
It seems that Picasso was going through a inspiration crisis, he had not advanced in the project for months, but he suddenly found a theme for his work when receiving the news of the bombings on the 26th of April of 1937 by the German Condor Legion on the Basque village of Guernica. Picasso ended his artwork in just 7 weeks.
The commander of this legion was Colonel Wolfram von Richthofen, cousin of the famous I World War aviator Manfred von Richthofen, known as the Red Baron, who would also recognize the cruelty of the bombing.
It is said that in the middle of the creative process in his studio in Paris, a group of Gestapo officials knocked on Picasso’s door and got stunned with the Guernica. Staring at the magnificent work and the horror that it spread, they asked him: Have you done THAT? To that question, Picasso answered, full of hate: “You did THAT, Nazis”.
Picasso never wanted to give his own explanation about the artwork and so, many theories have arisen trying to explain the symbolism of the painting and the intentions of the artist.
What can be assured is that the painting symbolizes the barbarism and terror produced by the war. It became the emblem of the harrowing conflicts of European society of the early twentieth century as well as the premonition of the suffering caused by the Second World War.
Guernica , massive in size, it is twenty-five and a half feet long and more than eleven and a half feet in height, composed in mixture of black and gray and white, is a picture of an air raid, and all it's horror..
Concerning the symbolism of this cubist work, we find several elements worthy of analysis. The work is divided into two groups: the one of the animals and the one of the human beings. At the center of the composition horse stands trampling on a warrior. This is a symbol of the European totalitarian regimes and the repression exerted by their dictators – Franco, Hitler and Mussolini. The horse is a clear allusion to death, as its nose and teeth forms a skull.
The warrior holds in his right hand a broken sword, a symbol of defeat. In it, a hidden flower can also be found. It represents the renewal of life, which would be a neccesary but tough and not so clear period for the victims.
The mythological figure of the Minotour, half bull half human, perfectly reflects the struggle between the human and the bestial side of the war. Regarding the people depicted in the painting, the protagonism of one women stands out. In spite Picasso was married to one woman and expecting a child from another one, When Picasso painted Guernica, he was maintaining a relationship with the French artist Dora Maar, whose face appears holding a candle in the painting, reflecting with this the little light that illuminated the life of Picasso in that tragic moment. As an allusion to his sentimental situation, they also appear in the picture. Dora photographed the entire creation process leaving by doing it a very important document for the history of Art.
The photographs published by the press of the bombing over Guernica and its brutallity were the inspiration of Picasso and the reason for the lack of color in his work. It is a symbol of the darkness of that terrible period of the Spanish history.
Guernica was exhibited in the Spanish Pavilion at the Paris International Exposition and in 1939 was sent to New York on a tour for the benefit of the Spanish Refugee Committee. When World War11 broke out later that year, Picasso requested that Guernica
and a number of his other works be held at the Museum of Modern Art
(MoMA) on extended loan. After the war, most of these works were
returned to Europe, but Picasso asked that Guernica and its
preliminary studies be kept by MoMA giving the museum clear instructions - the canvas belonged to the Spanish people and would only be given back "when they have recovered the freedoms that were taken away from them."
Its eventual return
to Spain in 1981–eight years after Picasso’s death–was celebrated as a
moral endorsement of Spain’s young democracy.
Francisco Franco
ruled over Spain as dictator for the rest of Picasso’s life, and the
artist never returned to his native country. In 1967, Franco restored
some liberties, and in 1968 his government made an effort to recover Guernica.
Picasso refused, clarifying that the painting would not be returned
until democracy was reestablished. In 1973, Picasso died in France at
the age of 91. Two years later, Franco died and was succeeded as Spanish
leader by King Juan Carlos I, who immediately began a transfer to
democracy. Spain then called for the return of Guernica, but
opposition by Picasso heirs who questioned Spain’s democratic
credentials delayed its transfer until 1981. Finally, Picasso’s former
lawyer gave his assent to the transfer.
On September 10, 1981, Guernica
arrived in Madrid under heavy guard. The painting was to be housed in a
new annex of the Prado Museum, only two blocks from the Spanish
parliament, which had been the scene of an abortive military coup in
February 1981. King Juan Carlos defused the revolt by convincing
military commanders to remain loyal to Spain’s democratic constitution.
On October 25 1981—the 100th anniversary of Picasso’s birth—Guernica
went on exhibit to the public behind a thick layer of bullet-proof
glass. to protect it from possible harm in a country still struggling to deal with its very recent, dark past. Picasso’s preparatory sketches for the painting, likewise
protected behind thick glass, were housed in adjacent rooms. The threat
of terrorism against the highly politicized work required high security,
and visitors passed through a metal detector to view the paintings.
Because the painting had been damaged in its years of travel, curators
at the Prado said it was unlikely that Guernica would ever go on tour again.
A number of groups in Spain, particularly Basque nationalists, objected strongly to Guernica‘s
permanent exhibition in Madrid. Complaints escalated after the painting
was relocated to the new Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid in 1992 and it has become the star attraction.
Since the 1997 opening of the Guggenheim Bilbao Museo, Basque
nationalists have been calling for its transfer there.
The prophetic description of anonymous warfare, the blankets of darkness and death dropped over civilian populations still resonate. To the degree we realise the truth expressed in this work, Guernica stands as possibly the greatest painting of the 20th Century.
Like all great art, its power transcends time, and can symbolize something current and topical for individuals of any era. During the Vietnam War, the painting became the backdrop for anti-war vigils in the museum. These were quiet, poignant protests against the horrors of war. But in 1974 an Iranian political activist, who claimed to be protesting Richard Nixon’s pardon of William Calley after his role in Vietnam’s My Lai massacre, vandalized the painting, using red spray paint to write “KILL LIES ALL” across it. The paint was easily removed and the work undamaged. The vandal, who ironically later became an art adviser, waxe
The atrocity that was Guernica horrified the world and helped shift public opinion towards the Spanish Republican Cause, but shamefully the British Government stuck steadfastardly to its non intervevention line. The fascists hated liberalism and humanity, their ideology was one of evil destruction, 'Long Live Death' they cried. Guernica represented their creed, with one of the Fascist Generals declaring " Like a resolute surgeon, free from false sentimentality, it will cut the diseased flesh from the healthy body and fling it to the dogs. And since the healthy flesh is the soil, the diseased flesh, the people who dwell on it, fascism and the army will eradicate the people and restore the soil to the sacred national realm... Every socialist, Republican, every one of them, without exception, and needless to say, every Communist, will be eradicated, without exception.' An ideology of unfettered hate, and evil., an ideology that is still trying to tear the world apart.
The attempts by the Francoist rebels for many years to make the world believe that this war crime, this crime against humanity, was the work of the democratic Basque authorities was fortunately rendered useless by foreign correspondents, such as George L Steer and Noel Monks, who told the world the truth about what happened. Following this first attempt, more have followed, even to today, to downplay its historical importance and reduce the number of victims.
The destruction of Guernica was part of Franco's wider, brutal campaign against the existence of the Spanish Republic. This campaign led not just to widespread destruction of property, but thousands of civilian casualties too, as well as widespread displacement. Many sought refuge abroad, as many as 3,800 Basque children were evacuated to England and Wales for the duration of the war. The British Government at the time callously refused to be responsible for the children, but throughout the summer children were dispersed to camps throughout Britain. Eight of these colonies were here in Wales. They were received with a mixture of hostility and kindness, but they had all managed to escape the grips of Franco's fascist Spain.
After Guernica , George Steers eyewitness account in The Times described what he saw as 'without mercy, with system', words that remain tragically pertinent to the bloody legacy of carpet bombing in conflicts ever since. Conflicts that continue across the world, that allow humanity to descend into darkness.Guernica represnted the first instance of a new kind of war. The Blitz followed it, then Dresden and the fireboming of Tokyo. Then Hiroshima, followed by the saturation bombing of Vietnam, on to the tragedies of Afghanistan, Iraq, Temen, Somalia, Syria, Palestine, Ukraine etc.
After Guernica , George Steers eyewitness account in The Times described what he saw as 'without mercy, with system', words that remain tragically pertinent to the bloody legacy of carpet bombing in conflicts ever since. Conflicts that continue across the world, that allow humanity to descend into darkness.Guernica represnted the first instance of a new kind of war. The Blitz followed it, then Dresden and the fireboming of Tokyo. Then Hiroshima, followed by the saturation bombing of Vietnam, on to the tragedies of Afghanistan, Iraq, Temen, Somalia, Syria, Palestine, Ukraine etc.
So we must remember Guernica ,and its legacy, we must make sure the fascists are stopped in their tracks, we must not let them pass., we must carry on singing no pasaron to whatever disguise they dress themselves up in, because today , throughout Spain and Europe, there is an ideological current that feeds into the same hatred and misery and ' principles' that guided the births of fascist, nazi, Francoist totalitarians.
To this day, the scenes of catastrophic suffering recorded in Guernica are a black mark on Spanish history.Bit since the bombing, Guernica has become a symbol for peace. The town has a peace museum and a peace park. and survivors of the air raid have over the year joined forces with others from Dresden and Hiroshima to campaign against war.
Sirens symbolically blare across Guernica today at the precise moment when fascist warplanes carpet-bombed it during the Spanish Civil War. We should never forget this grim reminder of humanity's continuing capacity for evil..It is important to remember for future generations, so that horrors like this never happen again.We much continue to be enraged by crimes against humanity, and together we should try to work together for peace
Extract from poem written by Paul Eluard, a surrealist poet and friend of Picasso, in August, 1937.
Lovely world of cottages
Of the night and fields
Faces good in firelight good in frost
Reusing the night the wound and blows
Faces good for everything
Now the void fixes you
Your death will serve as a warning
Death the heart turned over
They made you pay your bread
Sky earth water sleep
And the misery of your life.
Lovely world of cottages
Of the night and fields
Faces good in firelight good in frost
Reusing the night the wound and blows
Faces good for everything
Now the void fixes you
Your death will serve as a warning
Death the heart turned over
They made you pay your bread
Sky earth water sleep
And the misery of your life.
Guernica - A.S Knowland
Irun- Badajoz - Malaga - and then Guernica
So that the swastika and the eagle
might spring from the blood-red soil,
bombs were sown into the earth at Guernica,
whose only harvest was a calculated slaughter.
Lest freedom should wave between the grasses
and the corn its proud emblem, or love
be allowed to tread its native fields,
Fascism was sent to destroy the innocent,
and, goose-stepping to the exaggerated waving
of the two-faced flag, to save Spain.
But though the soil be saturated with blood
as a very efficient fertiliser, the furrow
of the ghastly Fasces shall remain barren.
The planted swastika, the eagle grafted
on natural stock shall wither and remain sere;
for no uniformed force shall marshall the sap
thrilling to thrust buds into blossoms, or quicken
the dead ends of the blighted branches;
but the soil shall be set against an alien crop
and the seed be blasted in the planting.
But strength lies in the strength of the roots.
They shall not pass to ruin Spain!
Reprinted from
The Penguin Book of
Spanish Civil War Verse (1980)
Further Reading:-
The Spanish Civil War - Hugh Thomas
Penguin (1965)
They Shall Not Pass:
The Spanish People at War
-Richard Kissh (1974)
Spanish Civil War Verse (1980)
Further Reading:-
The Spanish Civil War - Hugh Thomas
Penguin (1965)
They Shall Not Pass:
The Spanish People at War
-Richard Kissh (1974)
Guernica: The history and art of:-
Guernica - Paul Eluard - P Picasso - Victory at Guernica
Music: Richard Wagner and Herbert Von Karajan
Monday, 24 April 2023
Rana Plaza - ten years on
On 24 April 2013, over 1,100 people were killed and thousands more were
injured in the collapse of a building on the outskirts of Dhaka, Bangladesh which housed several garment
factories making clothes for Benetto, Primark, Matalan, Mango , Costa
and other major brands.
The fate of the Rana Plaza building turned into a
tragedy because workers were forced by their bosses to come to work in a
place inspectors had previously ordered closed for safety reasons.It
would be the worst factory tragedy in the history of the Garment
industry.
The predominately female workforce was
pressured by management in to work that fateful day despite large
structural cracks having been discovered in the building just the day
before. The catastrophe that was entirely preventable was followed by a heightened struggle for justice for the Rana Plaza workers and safe factories for all. Campaigners and trade unions in Bangladesh heroically forced action – despite facing powerful, even violent, opposition.
The tragedy exposed the dire conditions in much of the world's fashion
industry – and the corporate elite which profit from them.and meant no longer could consumers, workers or
governments simply turn a blind eye to the dangers facing workers every day. And saw a growing cohort of consumers behaving as citizens,
people who are no longer satisfied with opaque supply chains, the
unethical treatment of people. and reignited a conversation about the social responsibility of clothing companies. There were rumblings of this movement in the 90s when Nike and GAP were exposed for using child labour in sweatshops. But the conversation had stalled somewhere in the mid-2000s as fast fashion brands increased in size and offering. More than ever before people wanted to know the dirty little secrets
behind the brands, and who they could buy from with a clear conscience.
There is also now thankfully greater awareness about how our clothes are produced .given that well-known high street brands are understood to be among the companies who were sourcing clothes from the Rana Plaza building
Ten years since the deadliest garment factory disaster in history,
industry leaders say working conditions have improved in the country,
mainly thanks to an accord on fire and building safety that was signed
by dozens of brands in the immediate aftermath of the collapse.
But the power imbalance between big brands and Bangladeshi suppliers
persists, and victims are still campaigning for justice and
compensation.
Marking the 10th anniversary, UK MPs and campaign groups have issued
calls for solidarity with garment workers. 19 MPs have signed an Early
Day Motion (EDM) in the House of Commons on the anniversary.
The EDM, sponsored by Labour MP Apsana Begum says that the House “is
concerned at the ongoing poor labour conditions, low wages and unsafe
work environments, with a high incidence of work-related accidents and
deaths, faced by workers in the garment sector worldwide;
“is alarmed at the ongoing suppression of trade union and collective
bargaining rights in the garment industry and that since the covid-19
pandemic there is evidence of worsening health and safety standards,
increased gender discrimination and reports of concerning levels of
workplace gender-based violence and harassment;
“recognises that without the ability to organise, workers are
inhibited from fully securing improved working conditions and/or
challenging abuse; and believes that all workers deserve a workplace
that provides them with a living wage, decent working conditions and
trade union rights including the right to refuse unsafe work, to take
strike action and collectively bargain.”
Former Labour frontbenchers Rebecca Long-Bailey, John McDonnell and
Richard Burgon are among the signatories, along with Plaid Cymru MP
Hywel Williams, SNP MP Carol Monaghan and former Labour leader Jeremy
Corbyn.
On Sunday, campaigners from the Rana Plaza Solidarity Collective
organised a ‘Cost of Fashion’ walking tour visiting high street stores
on Oxford Street in London. The group, which includes NGOs and campaign
groups including War on Want, No Sweat and Labour Behind the Label,
commemorated those who died in the building collapse and called for
brands to “put people before profits”.
The Rana Plaza Solidarity Collective is calling on all clothing
companies to sign up to the International Accord, to ensure a disaster
like Rana Plaza never happens again.The Accord
– set up by the global union federations IndustriALL and Uni Global –
was first signed in May 2013 in the aftermath of the international
outrage at what happened. It is about creating an inspection and
remediation program to mitigate fire, building, electrical and boiler
safety risks for factory workers, along with providing complaints
mechanisms for workers to file grievances about health and safety
concerns and violations of their right to organise. However,
many clothing brands including Levi’s have not joined the Accord. Despite over 50,000 people have signed a petition calling for them to do so.
The unfortunate
truth is that, a decade on, poor labour conditions, low wages and unsafe
work environments – with a high incidence of work-related accidents and
deaths – still persist in the garment sector worldwide. By signing the Accord, brands would
have to allow independent safety inspectors into those supplier
factories as well as guaranteeing basic health and safety provisions for
workers.
Tyrone Scott, from anti-poverty campaigning charity War on Want said:
“The deadly Rana Plaza disaster was not an unavoidable accident – it
was an entirely preventable disaster. Rana Plaza workers who made
clothes for several UK high street fashion brands had previously raised
safety concerns but were ignored. A decade on and garment workers are
still facing unsafe working conditions and poverty wages. Clothing
brands must urgently sign the International Accord on Fire and Building
Safety and commit to guaranteeing safe workplaces, for genuine justice
for the victims of Rana Plaza – and for all garment workers.”
In Pakistan, unions have taken the
example of the Bangladesh Accord and are working to adapt it to their
own national circumstances. Starting in 2018, labour organisations in
Pakistan have been campaigning for a Pakistan Accord on Fire and
Building Safety.
The Pakistan Accord is a legally
binding agreement between global unions, IndustriALL and UNI Global
Union, and garment brands and retailers for an initial term of three
years starting in 2023. The factory listing of these brands would cover
approximately 300-400 facilities in Pakistan. The program in Pakistan
will include key features from the 2021 International Accord.
35 global brands and retailers have now signed the Pakistan Accord. We should carry on calling
on major brands and retailers to sign the Pakistan Accord and demand
the industry protects progress so that a disaster like Rana Plaza never
happens again.
As we remember the victims of Rana Plaza their families, husbands, wives, children, mothers and
brothers, all left mourning a loved one.Let's not forget that no individual has been yet held accountable for corporate manslaughter
for the Rana Plaza disaster. While the factory owner, Sohel Rana, has
been charged with murder, his trial has been delayed and he was recently presented bail.
Some survivors and families of victims claim they are yet to receive any compensation. Most of the survivors of the collapse are still living in poverty. According to a recent study conducted by ActionAid Bangladesh, some 55 per cent of survivors remain unemployed, mainly due to their physical injuries.
"Some survivors now beg for a living. Our primary demand is for all
survivors to receive compensation for their lifetime of lost income,
amounting to 48 lacs taka [approximately US$45,660] each,” says Mahmudul
Hasan Hridoy, president of the Rana Plaza Survivors Association of
Bangladesh. But so far, the provision of fair compensation has been
elusive.
We must continue to demand compensation , medical treatment for life for all those effected and judgement for the culprits involved, while we carry on expressing our anger at companies who disregard their workers safety in their supply chains in their thirst
for profit.
Whether it’s in the UK or Bangladesh or
beyond, all workers deserve a workplace that provides them with a
living wage, decent working conditions and trade union rights including
the right to refuse unsafe work.We should continue to tell the fashion industry to make human rights and basic safety non-negotiable for all .
Saturday, 22 April 2023
Earth Day 2023 : Invest in our planet
Every year on April 22, marks Earth Day. Earth Day didn’t come out of nowhere. The seeds for action were
incubated in the fertile ground of anti-war, civil rights, and women’s
rights protests of the 1960s. In 1962, Rachel Carson’s bestseller Silent Spring pulled
the curtain back on the dangerous effects of pesticides and helped spur
public awareness about the links between environmental degradation and
public health.
Seven years later in 1969, an oil slick on Cleveland’s polluted Cuyahoga River caught fire, National media coverage by Time magazine and National Geographic helped shine a light on the injustices of chemical waste disposal.By 1970, the American public was just waking up to the disastrous
implications of environmental degradation. The first Earth Day was
envisioned by one of its founders, the former Wisconsin Senator Gaylord
Nelson, as a way to “shake up the political establishment,” and broaden
national attention to environmental issues through teach-ins,
demonstrations, and other advocacy.
Rallies were organised and on 22 April 1970, 20 million people took to the streets across the United States to protest environmental destruction.and by the
end of the year, the US federal government established the Environmental
Protection Agency and over time, this movement gained momentum
and now has over one billion people observing this day with great
enthusiasm every year, with participation from approximately 192
countries.The basic call for action back in 1970 was the same as
it is for us today: that we must limit pollution, along with greed, and listen to scientists if we want an Earth that continues to be habitable.
From tiny microorganisms to humans and giant whales, all forms of
life reside on the beautiful planet Earth. This planet provides them
with all the essentials required for a healthy and happy life, such as
shelter, food, air, and other necessities.
Earth is often referred
to as "Mother Earth" because of its nurturing qualities. However,
unfortunately, due to our selfish desires, we have started to harm the
planet. It is crucial to provide proper attention and care to Earth's
failing health.
Every year, Earth Day is commemorated with a different theme that
highlights the various challenges facing our planet. According to https://www.earthday.org/ the official global organiser of the event, the theme for
Earth Day 2023 is "Invest in Our Planet". a call to action for
governments, organisations, and individuals to collaborate and invest in
protecting our planet to ensure a healthy and sustainable future for
all. This day is an opportunity for governments, organisations, and
individuals to reflect and renew their commitment to investing in the
health and wellbeing of our planet by protecting and healing our
environment.
Investing in our planet is crucial for the survival and prosperity of
future generations, and it requires a collective effort to preserve our
natural resources. We need to make conscious decisions, take action
towards sustainable living, minimise environmental degradation, invest
in clean energy solutions, and promote efficient use of resources.
The
Covid-19 pandemic made the interconnectedness of our world and the
impact that our actions have on it more apparent than ever before.
However, it also showed us that we can make significant positive changes
by working together towards a common goal.
One of the biggest challenges the Earth is facing is climate change.
The effects of climate change are increasingly becoming apparent, with
rising temperatures, droughts, floods, and the loss of biodiversity.
Climate change is a devastating force, leading to a hungrier and more vulnerable world. It destabilises economies, fuels conflict, cripples productivity and weakens social structures. It’s the most vulnerable people in the world who are disproportionately exposed to extreme weather events, more reliant on natural resources, and least able to cope with and adapt to environmental impacts. Between 1998 and 2017 of all natural disasters, 90% were climate related. When farmers suffer from drought, communities face devastating floods year after year, or when businesses don’t have sustainable electricity, more complex crises can arise. Climate change deeply impacts every emerging economy, sector, supply chain, and industry. There are 3.3 billion people whose lives are at risk and highly vulnerable due to climate change and over 130 million people will be pushed into poverty by climate change by 2030.
Urgent action is needed to transition to a more sustainable way of
living and reduce our carbon footprint.
There are many ways to invest in our planet, and we can all make a
difference. For instance, we all can do many things to help mitigate the
effects of climate change.
Our collective action will preserve and restore natural resources,
biodiversity, and ecosystem services and consequently heal our Earth.
Simple changes in our daily habits like reducing our use of single-use
plastics, using public transport or cycling instead of driving, and
eating more plant-based diets can all have a significant impact. We can
invest in sustainable agriculture practices and support initiatives that
restore degraded land and ecosystems. We can also support organisations
and initiatives working towards environmental sustainability and
conservation by advocating for policies that promote the use of
renewable energy, participating in events, signing petitions, and
joining organisations that work towards protecting the Earth.
Businesses also have a role to play. Many companies have already
taken steps towards becoming more environmentally sustainable by
investing in renewable energy, reducing waste, and adopting sustainable
practices throughout their operations, but there is still much more that
can be done. Businesses should continue investing in technologies that
reduce their carbon footprint, work towards a circular economy, and help
drive the transition to a more sustainable future.
Governments also have a responsibility to tackle climate change and
environmental degradation. Through infrastructure, policies, and
legislation, governments can incentivise sustainable practices, attract
investments in renewable energy, and protect natural habitats and
wildlife. Also, governments can invest in supporting education and
awareness campaigns that help to raise public consciousness about
environmental issues.
One other thing you can do to honor the Earth this Earth Day is to educate yourself about the connection between climate change and capitalism.
Our capitalist economic system is fundamentally incompatible with a healthy planetary ecosystem, says Naomi Kline in This Changes Everything.
We live on a planet with finite resources, but our economic system is
premised on infinite growth. Capitalism demands unfettered growth of
consumption, but our survival and that of many other species requires a
contraction of humanity’s growth and consumption. Our choice, says
Kline, is to fundamentally change our economic system, or to allow
nature to change it for us. The first will be hard, but the second even
harder. So we must change our economic system.
This means challenging some of our most
cherished myths: the myth that capitalism and democracy are equivalent,
the myth that capitalist societies are the most happy, the myth that
capitalism was proven to be the “one true economic system” with the fall
of the Soviet Union, the myth that consumers have all the power in a
capitalist system, and that most pernicious myth of all, the myth that there are no alternatives.
We can unlearn capitalist ways of
thinking. Capitalism infects all of our relationships: with other
people, with other-than-human beings, and with the Earth. Consider the
way we “value” other people and how we sometimes calculate whether what
we get from them is more than what we give in return. Think about your
relationship to the place you live. Is it a place you “use”, or is it a
world you inhabit, cherish, and care for? We learned these ways of
thinking, and we can unlearn them.
In no uncertain terms, it is impossible to sustainably
interact with nature while adhering to a strict capitalist structure.
Capitalism must maintain the maximal abuse of natural resources to
increasingly produce in order to raise profit.
Almost half of the food produced globally is wasted. This
is impossible to rationalize given that currently, aside from the recent
pandemic, 20,000 people die of hunger daily.
However, from a capitalist economic outlook, this makes
perfect sense because the goal is profit maximisation. The equilibrium
for profit maximisation is such that production at this scale of wastage
provides the highest net profit. Based on capitalism’s greedy increase
in profit, all other assumptions must be made in line with, and only
with, an outcome of profit maximisation.
We are witness to the global deterioration and irreversible
destruction caused by capitalism. Global warming, pandemics, epidemics,
habitat loss, pollution, disease, economic inequality, extremism,
crime, deforestation, and social instability are just some of the global
problems that are directly linked to capitalist greed.
We spend billions in healthcare to reverse damages such as
obesity because corporations produce harmful food. They do not intend to
poison us deliberately; but they do, in fact, because they choose to
adhere to a capitalist system that commands profit maximisation at any
cost.
There is no inherent social morality or ethics within
capitalism other than enforceable legal parameters. Sustainable living
within a strictly capitalist system is paradoxical. We have confirmed
through decades that greed overcomes compassion and capitalism trumps
harmony.
For the wealthiest few this is acceptable due to
opportunities that extreme wealth affords. But today, the discussion is
no longer one of classism but of survival.
When we eventually deplete all natural resources, as we are
quickly doing, we all perish together. Whether we face storms or
starve, in the long run there will remain nothing for even the
wealthiest few.
Unless the prevalent capitalist system is tackled and reformed
on a global scale,the world’s environmental problems –
climate change, pollution and food security among them – will lead to a
mass extinction event.
Earth Day reminds us all of our urgent need to take action for our planet and to commit to restoring her health
and wellbeing. By working together, we can protect mother earth for future
generations as we move towards a more sustainable future. Let us make Earth Day 2023 a turning point in our collective efforts
towards safeguarding the environment. For a truly equitable future, feel-good investment is simply not enough. Moving forward, Earth Day must be restored
to its radical roots, bringing millions of people together around the
globe to voice a common call for systemic, anti capitalist change.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)