Lajee Center UK Arts & Cultural Tour 2012

16 Palestinian refugees from Lajee Center in Aida Refugee Camp, Bethlehem will be touring the UK for 17 days in June on their 3rd UK Arts and Cultural Tour. The tour will stretch from Aberdeen all the way south to London. Events will include Dabka shows, photography exhibitions, film screenings, and range of public presentations about refugee rights and political prisoners.

They will be staying in Dundee from Saturday 9th June to Monday 11th June. Come and see them perform at the Justice for Palestine festival in the City Square, Dundee on Saturday 9th June from 12 – 4pm.

Lajee Tour Facebook Page

Lajee Centre, Aida Refugee Camp, Bethlehem

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Justice for Palestine festival in Dundee

On Saturday 9th June, Tayside for Justice in Palestine is organising a Justice for Palestine festival in Dundee. It will take place from 12pm  – 4pm in the City Square.

This event will highlight a number of isues linked with the Palestinian struggle and the Israeli occupation, including the issue of refugees, the Nakba, the Israeli settlements and the Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions campaign.

Performers will include a group of young Palestinian dancers from the Lajee Cultural Centre based at Aida refugee camp in Bethlehem and Loadsawimminsignin, the Dundee Rep women’s singing group.

There will also be a new art installation by Dundee artist, Pat Donachie, entitled Medals of Shame.

There will a range of speakers which will be announced nearer the day, as well as stalls selling Palestinian produce and providing information about different aspects of the Palestinian struggle and the Israeli occupation

 

Lajee Dabka troupe perform in the shadow of the wall in Aida refugee camp, Bethlehem. (Photo: Rich Wiles)

 

 

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Still Life: Tales from the West Bank

7.30pm   Friday 8th June 2012    Tin Roof Arts Centre, Ure Street, Dundee.

The venue will be clearly sign posted and there will be free parking in and around the Arts Centre.

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Nakba Day in Ni’lin

Our right is to return, and definitely we will.

an israeli soldier hitting a palestinian protester during the nakba demo at Ni'lin,photo by : hassan daboos
Last Tuesday, in an event named “Historical return demonstration to Al Ramleh city” dozens of young Palestinians successfully broke through the Ni’lin military checkpoint on the morning of Nakba Day. The unannounced event gathered 50 activists that together marched towards the checkpoint separating the village from Palestinian lands occupied in 1948 and 1967.

As the demonstration was passing the checkpoint it was attacked by Israeli military and three of the activists were arrested. One of them was Naji Al Tamimi, coordinator of the popular committee in the village of Nabi Saleh. Many activists however made it across the checkpoint and pushed on into the Palestinian lands of 1948, carrying the flags of their nation as well as banners and sign saying”Our right is to return, and definitely we will.”

Later in the evening a second protest was held in Ni’lin as the villagers marched towards the apartheid wall separating the village from its olive groves. The demonstration was attacked by Israeli soldiers hiding under camouflage covers in the fields. The soldiers chased the protestors towards the village but did not manage to make any arrests. Two people were however injured by rubber coated steel bullets.

More information on Ni’lin village’s struggle against the occupation is available from their website

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Global Appeal for Stories of Palestinian Displacement

BADIL is delighted to announce the launch of the new ‘Ongoing Nakba Education Center’ (ONEC) website – www.ongoingnakba.org

The participatory website uses multi-media tools to build a significant advocacy resource relating to the historic and ongoing displacement of the Palestinian people. The website is already online in both english and arabic, although it is constantly being updated and developed with new tools. In this regard, BADIL is launching an international call to Palestinians everywhere, and to non-Palestinians working to support the dissemination of stories of Palestinian displacement.

We are seeking multi-media tools such as photographs, short films, or audio recordings through which stories of Palestinian displacement are told. These tools can relate to any period of Palestinian history and can be in either english or arabic.

These tools may include photo stories of demolitions or mass displacements, oral history audio recordings or interviews with or by displaced people, short films about an issue or area of displacement, or any other related multi-media productions.

This call may be particularly relevant to photographers, film-makers, journalists, oral history programs, academics, or activists working around these issues, but this call is not limited to professionals in these areas. We are not only seeking finished professional productions, or materials made with professional equipment. Raw collections of photographs, unedited film or audio can also be very valuable to the project and BADIL’s experienced team will work to turn raw materials into strong edited advocacy tools about displacement. In all cases, people contributing materials will be credited for their work.

If you are have any potential multi-media advocacy tools, or are interested in producing some, please contact BADIL for further information on the below email:

rich@badil.org     www.ongoingnakba.org

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Progress for Prisoners’ Movement: Palestinian Prisoners’ Mass Hunger Strike concludes after agreement is reached

Progress for Prisoners’ Movement:

Palestinian Prisoners’ Mass Hunger Strike Concludes After Agreement is Reached

Ramallah, 15 May 2012 – After nearly a full month of fasting, around 2,000 Palestinian political prisoners ended last night their mass hunger strike upon reaching an agreement with the Israeli Prison Service (IPS) to attain certain core demands. Addameer lauds these achievements of the prisoners’ movement and can only hope that Israel will implement any policy changes in good faith. Addameer especially commends those individuals who engaged in open hunger strike for over two months, displaying remarkable steadfastness in the struggle for their most basic rights.

The demands raised in the collective hunger strike, which was launched on 17 April, included an end to the IPS’ abusive use of isolation for “security” reasons, which currently affects ­­­­19 prisoners, some of whom have spent 10 years in isolation, and a repeal of a series of punitive measures taken against Palestinian prisoners following the capture of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, including the denial of family visits for all Gaza prisoners since 2007 and denial of access to university education since June 2011. Prisoners also called for an end to Israel’s practice of detaining Palestinians without charge or trial in administrative detention. Eight prisoners, including five administrative detainees, had already begun their hunger strikes as early as the end of February.

The details of the agreement signed last night by the prisoners’ committee representing the hunger strikers was recounted today to Addameer lawyer Fares Ziad in his visit to Ahed Abu Gholmeh, who is a member of the committee, and to Addameer lawyer Mahmoud Hassan during his visit to Ahmad Sa’adat in Ramleh prison medical clinic, who conveyed what he was told last night when members of the committee came to Ramleh to announce the end of the hunger strike.

According to Ahed Abu Gholmeh, the nine members of the hunger strike committee met yesterday with a committee consisting of IPS officials and Israeli intelligence officers and determined the stipulations of their agreement. The written agreement contained five main provisions: the prisoners would end their hunger strike following the signing of the agreement; there will be an end to the use of long-term isolation of prisoners for “security” reasons, and the 19 prisoners will be moved out of isolation within 72 hours; family visits for first degree relatives to prisoners from the Gaza Strip and for families from the West Bank who have been denied visit based on vague “security reasons” will be reinstated within one month; the Israeli intelligence agency guarantees that there will be a committee formed to facilitate meetings between the IPS and prisoners in order to improve their daily conditions; there will be no new administrative detention orders or renewals of administrative detention orders for the 308 Palestinians currently in administrative detention, unless the secret files, upon which administrative detention is based, contains “very serious” information.

For the five administrative detainees on protracted hunger strikes, including Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahleh, who engaged in hunger strike for a miraculous 77 days, their administrative detention orders will not be renewed and they will be released upon the expiration of their current orders. These five have been transferred to public hospitals to receive adequate healthcare during their fragile recovery periods. In regards to Israel’s practice of administrative detention as a whole, Ahmad Sa’adat further noted that the agreement includes limitations to its widespread use in general. Addameer is concerned that these provisions of the agreement will not explicitly solve Israel’s lenient and problematic application of administrative detention, which as it stands is in stark violation of international law.

Addameer has observed that Israel has consistently failed to respect the agreements it executes with Palestinians regarding prisoners’ issues. For this reason, it will be essential for all supporters of Palestinian political prisoners to actively monitor the events of the next few months to ensure that this agreement is fully implemented. As a human rights organization committed to the international standards of the rights of prisoners, Addameer will also continue to monitor closely the conditions inside Israeli prisons in order to assure that conditions meet compliance with international human rights and humanitarian law.

On the day commemorating 64 years since the Palestinian Nakba, it is regrettable that it has taken the near-starvation of Palestinian political prisoners en masse to call attention to their plight; it is therefore imperative to take this opportunity to not only applaud their achievements but also to push forward lobbying efforts on their behalf and demand a just and permanent resolution for their cause. Addameer extends its utmost gratitude to the dedicated activists and institutions, including members of civil society and the diplomatic community, who have supported the Palestinian prisoners in their campaign for dignity.

Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association

Website: www.addameer.org

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Jewellery inspired by the Palestinian struggle

This gallery contains 1 photo.

Colette Brown is a final year jewellery student at Duncan of Jordanstone College of Art and Design in Dundee. For her degree show, Colette has created jewellery, inspired by the Palestinian struggle against Israeli occupation and oppression, to commemorate al-Nakba … Continue reading

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Co-op boycotts companies that export produce from Israeli settlements

The Co-operative Group, one of the five largest food retailers in the UK, has ended trade with companies that export produce from Israeli settlements in the West Bank. The Co-op took the step as an extension of its existing policy which has been not to source produce from illegal settlements that have been built on Palestinian land in the West Bank.

The Co-op’s decision will immediately affect four suppliers, Agrexco, Arava Export Growers, Adafresh and Mehadrin. Other companies may be affected by the policy.

However, the Co-op’s boycott is only of produce sourced from illegal Israeli settlements and not of all Israeli goods.

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Stop the racist JNF’s ‘charity shoot’

Friday 11th May
8am til late
Venue: Cowan’s Law, nr Glasgow

See https://www.facebook.com/events/404408166246386/
Every day brings news of more Israeli atrocities in Palestine: killings, house demolitions and Palestinian families thrown into the street. The racist JNF (Jewish National Fund) is at the heart of the grim action, either planting trees to cover up the ruins of ethnically cleansed villages or even taking part directly in evicting Palestinian families to make way for Jewish settlers.

Anger in the UK at the JNF’s crimes is rising. Their fund-raising activities now take place in secret in London, while scores of Members of Parliament are calling for an investigation into JNF activities.

Provocatively, the JNF is now organising a fund-raising charity shoot at a venue called Cowan’s Law near Glasgow on May 11th. This shooting event is intolerable considering that the JNF works with the murderous Israeli military and paramilitary forces to ethnically-cleanse unarmed Palestinians. Stop the JNF UK calls on supporters of Palestinian rights from across the UK and all those disturbed by the Israeli policy of shooting unarmed Palestinians to come to Cowan’s Law on Friday May 11th to ensure this provocation does not take place.

When peaceful Palestinian demonstrators march on Israeli guns to oppose Israeli dispossession and colonisation, we can do no less here in the UK when those who would finance the crimes have a disgusting “charity shoot.”

How to get there:
Location of Cowan’s Law:
Map: http://www.cowanslaw.com/findingus.html
Nearest village: Moscow (4 miles east of Kilmarnock)

Public transportation:
Nearest train/bus station: Kilmarnock
o From Glasgow Central GLC to Kilmarnock KMK (first train 06:30), journey time 4-50 minutes direct service, every 30 minutes, £5.70 single fare
o From Edinburgh Waverley EDB to Kilmarnock KMK (first train 05:55), journey time between 2-2.5 hours with at least 1 one change depending on service, every 30 minutes, £16.40 single fare
o Glasgow-Kilmarnock bus timetable: http://www.stagecoachbus.com/PdfUploads/Timetable_8485_04%20-%20Kilmarnock%20-%20Glasgow.pdf
£4.50 for a single, £6 for a day return

*** There will be some space available in cars travelling through from Glasgow and Edinburgh. To reserve a space or to offer space in your car, contact Jimmy on 07749 139 597 ****

OR Email: uk@stopthejnf.org

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TfJiP activists on May Day march in Dundee

TfJiP activists on the Dundee 2012 May Day march

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