This petition was circulated this morning by a group of well known peace activists, Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, and Neve Gordon. In their words, “Every so often someone comes along who is so brave and so inspiring that you just can’t sit by and remain silent when you learn they need your help. We’re writing to you today about one of these rare people.” His name is Ezra Nawi. Ezra is the quintessential liberal peace activist, a Jewish Israeli of Iraqi descent who speaks fluent Arabic, a gay man in his fifties, and a plumber by trade, an average working stiff.
But average he is not.
Ezra Nawi is one of Israel’s most courageous human rights activists.. will likely go to jail in less than 30 days.
His crime? He tried to stop a military bulldozer from destroying the homes of Palestinian Bedouins in the South Hebron region. These homes and the families who live in them have been under Israeli occupation for 42 years. They still live without electricity, running water and other basic services. They are continuously harassed by Jewish settlers and the military.
Earlier, Bernard Davishai, a fellow activist, wrote this about Ezra:
(Ezra) is a tireless human rights activist, who has established unique connections, and affections, with the villagers in the South Hebron hills. I have often sat in the back of his truck, being ferried to stand watch over fields that would not be plowed were it not for his courage and resourcefulness. I have seen Ezra stand, dignified, against settlers who regard him something the way Klansmen regarded Jewish northerners who came to bear witness against Jim Crow. He is the subject of a poignant film. He is also my plumber, as it happens, and he does not overcharge his customers.
Ezra is now facing jail: “His ‘crime,'” writes Neve Gordon, in a comprehensive report, “was trying to stop a military bulldozer from destroying the homes of Palestinian Bedouins from Um El Hir in the South Hebron region. These Palestinians have been under Israeli occupation for almost 42 years; they still live without electricity, running water and other basic services and are continuously harassed by Jewish settlers and the military – two groups that have united to expropriate Palestinian land and that clearly have received the government’s blessing to do so.”
You can watch if you need to know more in this video:
or you can read more about Nawi from David Shulman.
Nawi’s friends, who include the well known activists cited above, have launched a campaign to generate tens of thousands of letters to Israeli embassies all over the world before he is due to be sentenced in July. They’ve asked for our help.
Click HERE to join the campaign. One click is all that is necessary. Thanks.
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On 23 April Israeli soldiers arrested a Palestinian journalist in the village of Um al Kheir and declared the village a closed military zone after settlers from the nearby settlement of Karmel resumed construction of a road on Palestinian land. The proposed road passes within a few meters of Palestinian homes, animal enclosures and gardens. Due to a pending legal action in Israeli court filed by Um al Kheir villagers, settlers had previously suspended construction but resumed the work Thursday afternoon.
When he observed internationals filming the road construction, the Karmel settlement security guard called the Israeli military. Soldiers arrived quickly, and when internationals asked for an explanation, they were told to wait for police. Police arrived shortly and stated that the bulldozer was being used for “military work.” At 12:00pm, an officer arrived in a second military jeep and declared the area a closed military zone for 24 hours. Soldiers forced the journalists and internationals to leave, and arrested a journalist who did not leave immediately.
Villagers from Um al Kheir reported on Friday that work on the road had been suspended …
Representatives from the United Nations Refugee Works Administration (UNRWA) were also present during the work because the villagers have refugee status. Residents of the Bedouin village of Um al Kheir bought the land the village currently occupies, including the land being used for construction of the settler road, fifty years ago. They were forced to move the village from its original location near Arrad in 1948, after the creation of the state of Israel.
VIDEO – West Bank Bedouins fight road construction – 03 May 09
"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."
Thanks Oui. The video just in case anyone wishes to view it:
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The reordering of the Negev will be achieved in two stages. First, most of the 70,000 Negev Bedouin who live in 45 unrecognized villages will gain a new legal designation under an amendment to the 1981 Law on Public Land being hurried through the Knesset. The “Eviction of Trespassers” amendment will give officials the power to classify anyone as a trespasser living on state lands without going through lengthy court procedures. The designation can be applied retroactively to encompass Bedouin who have “trespassed” in the past three years.
The trespass law will criminalize the Bedouin, as well as their villages. Offenders — anyone who tries to encamp or farm on his historic lands — will face six months in jail and a fine. Repeat offenders will get two years of imprisonment and a doubled fine. Bedouin villagers will be obliged to prove that they are not trespassing. It will not be possible for a defense lawyer to argue that the villages have existed since before the creation of the state, or in other cases that the land villagers now dwell where they were moved by the state when their original lands were confiscated. To avoid being designated as trespassers, the villagers will therefore have to register their lands individually. Given the extant court decisions that unrecognized villages are built on state land, the chances of winning this argument are virtually nil.
Regional Council for the Unrecognized Villages
"But I will not let myself be reduced to silence."
Embedding was disabled on this video, but here is the URL:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eQoWJt5wfJ8