Filed Under:  Letter to the Editor, Opinion

New Orleans should be an apartheid-free city

29th March 2016   ·   0 Comments

New Orleans has a history rooted in the struggle for justice. There were moments in time where the right thing (abolition, desegregation, women’s suffrage) wasn’t always the popular thing. At New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee (NOPSC), we know that our choice to support equity for Palestinians may be unpopular. We also know that it is right.

Prior to 1948, the land that is today Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, was all called Palestine. Palestinian Muslims, Christians and Jews all lived peacefully on the land.

Violence had erupted a few times since Zionists began settling Palestine in the 1800s, but it escalated following the Holocaust, as Zionist inciters and British imperial interests encouraged stateless Jews from Eastern Europe to make Palestine their homeland.

By 1949, the year Israel became a state, thousands of indigenous Palestinians had been displaced–either killed in the violent attacks on their native villages or forced into refugee camps.

The issue is not the emigration of an oppressed people to a land looking for a better life; it’s that the oppressed became the oppressor. Being oppressed never gives a marginalized group the right to subjugate another group.

Since 1967, Israel has been complicit in a military occupation of the West Bank of Palestine. Israel illegally confiscates privately owned Palestinian property; imprisons Palestinian citizens for years without charge; and uses checkpoints to restrict the movement of Palestinians, even during childbirths and medical emergencies. In Gaza, the situation is even worse because citizens are denied access to food and medicine due to the Israeli-imposed blockade.

As appalling as the Israeli-instituted humanitarian crisis is, what we find absolutely inexcusable is that the United States is funding this occupation. Louisiana can’t balance its budget enough to pay for public education, yet, as taxpayers, we send $10.2 million a day to Israel in military aid alone. That money belongs here at home to build up our infrastructure, not Israel’s military.

In 2005, Palestinian civil society asked the world to participate in an international economic justice campaign until Israel 1) tears down the apartheid wall and returns to the 1967 borders, 2) grants full rights to Palestinian citizens of Israel, and 3) allows Palestinian refugees the right to return home. This campaign is called Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS).

In the BDS movement, consumer boycotts target companies that profit from the occupation. The list of products includes everything from diapers to food.

NOPSC will not sit by idly as Israel perpetrates countless human rights violations and breaks abounding international laws. Join BDS NOLA by 1) vowing to STOP buying Sabra and Tribe, 2) asking your local grocery store to stop carrying Sabra and Tribe, and 3) signing our online petition demanding that the City Council pass a resolution making it illegal to carry products that directly support the Israeli occupation.

– New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee

This article originally published in the March 28, 2016 print edition of The Louisiana Weekly newspaper.

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