top
Palestine
Palestine
Indybay
Indybay
Indybay
Regions
Indybay Regions North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area North Coast Central Valley North Bay East Bay South Bay San Francisco Peninsula Santa Cruz IMC - Independent Media Center for the Monterey Bay Area California United States International Americas Haiti Iraq Palestine Afghanistan
Topics
Newswire
Features
From the Open-Publishing Calendar
From the Open-Publishing Newswire
Indybay Feature

Bay Area Jews Renounce the Jewish Right to Return!

by Anti-Zionism Activist
As a non-Jew, I recognize the extra courage and self-honesty Jews must have to confront the racism that is Zionism and in Zionist Israel. Bravo to this group for organzing and pulling off this event successfully.
I went to be a witness and participate as a videographer/historian to get on tape this historic event: Jews who believe in justice and therefore refuse the so-called “Aliyah” or the Jewish right to return to Israel, until all the Palestinian refugees also are allowed their inalienable Right to Return to their ancestral homeland of Palestine-Israel.

At 20 minutes to noon, I was the only one there, and then another woman showed up who was also non-Jewish. Then the Jewish Puerto Rican poet Aurora Levins Morales (?) showed up in a black and white kaffiyeh. It was looking like a no-show but all of a sudden a couple groups showed up and we had a respectable showing of about 30 people at least. Apparently most were Jews, but there were many non-Jews, and at least one Palestinian woman. Barbara Lubin and Ute Walker from Middle East Children’s Alliance was in attendance, as were a couple people from Jewish Voice for Peace, and Dr. Susan Greene.

Chants included “Bush, Sharon, You must learn, Justice begins with the Right to Return”. The poet Aurora read her poem. There were a couple more speakers denouncing the Israeli persecution of the Palestinian people and demanding equal rights for the Palestinian people in Israel.

According to their press release, “What we’re calling for today is simple: for Israel to follow all the international laws and UN Resolutions that say Palestinian refugees should be allowed to return home. This point has been a consistent roadblock in the so-called roadmap to peace. I don’t see any real progress made for a just peace until Israel take this basic step,” a quote attributed to Michael-David Sasson. The Palestinian refugee population is the largest refugee population in the world, consisting of an estimated 4.5 million Palestinians. International Law and UN Resolutions 194 affirms that these refugees have the right to return to the land from which they were displaced.

I interviewed one young Jewish man named Eric who said he believes that Israel as a Jewish state that discriminates against non-Jews is not a benefit to Jews. He believes in equal rights for all whether there is a one-state or two-state solution to the conflict. When asked if he considered himself a secular or a religious Jew, he said basically he is a non-practicing Jew, however he would like to be more of a practicing Jew, but currently he is turned off by Zionism and the way organized Jewry in general supports the racist state of Israel.

After a while, the group marched off down the street shouting out chants.

In London, last August, much fuss was made of a press conference called by about 40 prominent British Jews who likewise wanted to publicly renounce their right to return (“Aliyah”) until the Palestinian refugees were allowed their Right to Return. I was wondering when American Jews would step up to the plate as well to do the same. I am encouraged to have witnessed the fine group of people who stood for justice today. Unfortunately there was not any mainstream media coverage of the event today. Hopefully, more events like this will take place and the media will begin to take notice.
Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by gehrig
Sorry, Windy Out Wendy, I could only get to your use of the word "self-honesty" before I laughed out loud. You wouldn't know honesty if it landed a blimp in your bathroom.

How did the Jewish ones -- not counting the "many non-Jews" out of the thirty people you said there, making me wonder pretty seriously about your use of the word "many" -- respond when you told them that they were Japhethites, not Israelites, and that Ashkenazi Jews are therefore a fraud?

@%<
by another anti-zionist
Just one comment about a comment someone made: " Sure, we think the only country on the earth that must be annihilated is Israel"

Speak for yourself! The ONLY country? Pa-lease. I think most governments fall into the same category, and I really hope that's what you meant by their "country."

As an anti-capitalist american, I gotta laugh. You're a marxist, but you think that Israel is the only "country" on earth that must be annihilated?!?!?! Damn. And here I thought I was the one who was confused!
by Mr Joyce




100 San Francisco Jews protest Israel's refusal to extend same right to Palestinians expelled from their land.


SAN FRANCISCO - About 100 San Francisco Jews renounced on Thursday their right to immigrate to Israel to protest the country's refusal to extend the same right to Palestinians expelled from their land.

Chanting "Palestine will be free," protesters handed in a petition to the Jewish Community Federation in San Francisco declaring their renunciation of Israeli citizenship rights, know as Aliyah.

The group, which included 30 marchers carrying a petition of 100 names, called the act a ritual atonement in honor of the looming Jewish holy day of Yom Kippur on October 5.

The protesters claim that Israel's offering automatic citizenship to overseas Jews while denying the same right to Palestinians forced off their homeland in Israel and the occupied territories amounted to "apartheid."

"This is hypocritical," said Eric Romain, one of the protest's organizers. "It is a betrayal of our legacy as Jews."

Aliyah, the automatic right for Jews around the world to immigrate to Israel, was established in 1950 following the World War II Holocaust and the establishment of the Israeli state in 1948.

But, the protestors said, hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were forced off their land and into refugee camps at that time and in subsequent wars, the protestors said.

Since then most have been denied the right to return, and the issue has long been a key sticking point in peace negotiations between Israel and Palestinian officials.

The group claimed to represent the sentiments of a large portion of the San Francisco area's estimated 225,000 Jews.

However, Sam Salkin, head of the Jewish Community Federation, a leading San Francisco Jewish charity group, called the protestors "a small group of fringy young people".

"I don't think they are representative of the Jewish community."
We are 100% volunteer and depend on your participation to sustain our efforts!

Donate

$230.00 donated
in the past month

Get Involved

If you'd like to help with maintaining or developing the website, contact us.

Publish

Publish your stories and upcoming events on Indybay.

IMC Network