Thursday, January 29, 2009

British Shoes Against Israeli Bombs

FROM UK INDYMEDIA: 800 people are dead, over 257 of which are children. Around the world there have been militant protests and this weekend saw the second UK national demonstration since the invasion took place in London. Between 50,000 and 100,000 people took part in the march which went from London's Hyde Park to the Israeli embassy. Other demonstrations and actions took place across the country over the whole weekend.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Author's Voice Gets a New Life


Barbara Hodgson hears how the work of a late New York writer is living on in Newcastle.
WHEN opinionated New York poet and short story author Grace Paley died in 2007, at the age of 86, she left behind a surprisingly small collection of work. The simple reason was that, as a political activist, she had so many other things going on in her life. Yet her writing made a lasting impression on many people – not least Newcastle University lecturer Jackie Kay who is taking part in a celebration of Paley’s work next week. Jackie, herself a well-known writer and recipient of an MBE in 2006 for her services to literature, says Paley has greatly influenced her ever since she first discovered the American’s work during her 20s. "Her short stories are so full of voice," says Jackie, now 47, "and it’s very real, about real people and real lives."

Paley, who grew up in the Big Apple in a Jewish immigrant family, wrote humorous, meandering stories and was considered one of the great practitioners of the modern short story, creating a unique style by blending different voices and a modernist, self-consciousness of form.As well as having a great deal of her time tied up in activism during and after the Vietnam War, she was known to put family and friends before her art.Between 1959 and 1985, she published three collections of stories: The Little Disturbances of Man; Enormous Changes at the Last Minute and Later the Same Day. A winner of several awards, she was elected to the Academy of American Arts and Letters and was named New York’s first state author in 1986.
Jackie, who lives in Manchester but works in Newcastle, lecturing in English, first discovered Paley’s work while also reading other US women writers Alice Walker and Toni Morrison. Vivid and detailed, they were "very refreshing" to her. "I was very excited to see what they were doing with language," she remembers. "It felt like a living language, not a written language."
She adds: "Grace Paley had this way of using her own political vision, her own ideas and her own life, and transforming that entire story. I really liked how she did that. The stories seemed very articulate to me."
It’s something Jackie herself tries, and clearly achieves, in her own work. Born in Edinburgh to a Scottish mother and a Nigerian father, Jackie was adopted by a white couple at birth and was brought up in Glasgow, then read English at Stirling University.
Her experience and childhood search for a cultural identity inspired her first, award-winning, collection of poetry, The Adoption Papers, in 1991, which uses the different voices of an adoptive mother, a birth mother and a daughter. Since then, she’s won several awards, with work inspired by topics such as Afro-Caribbean history, blues-singer Bessie Smith and the life of musician Billy Tipton, and branched out into writing for the stage and television, poems for children, short stories and novels, again using different narrative voices.
"When I write I try to create an authentic voice," she explains, and mentions her delight at one reader telling her that hers was the first book they’d ever read through to the end. "And I like experimenting with different forms. Different ideas can attract different forms." And because she finds it’s the initial idea for a piece of writing that directs whether she writes a poem or a novel, she again finds herself taking a new direction. She’s in the middle of a first-hand account of her own journey in tracing her biological father in Nigeria."It was such a strange and bizarre experience, I saw no point in making it up. It’s a true story; like the old saying, ‘truth is stranger than fiction’."
She discovered her father is a born-again Christian and her current working title for her story is Tracing. But next week, it’ll be Grace Paley’s story that Jackie will be helping to relate to audiences at Culture Lab in Newcastle University.Over the afternoon and evening of next Saturday, January 31, there will be readings, a film screening of an interview with the author and a dramatisation of one of her stories.
Jackie will read extracts of Paley’s work and her own, joining fellow writers and admirers Naomi Alderman, Kasia Boddy, Lennie Goodings, Peter Reynolds and Ali Smith. "We’re celebrating the woman and what she gave the world," she says.
"She didn’t produce that much, as half the time she was involved with political activity and in the peace movement. She lived her life."If not a household name, Paley is certainly remembered by those who knew her best as a good neighbour and friend, says Jackie, who hopes the event will give Paley more of the recognition she says she deserves. "She’s a writer’s writer, and a writer of the people: it’s quite interesting to be both."
For tickets to The Transatlantic Short Story: The Grace Paley Celebration on January 31, contact Melanie Birch at melanie.birch@ncl.ac.uk or on (0191) 222-7619. The event runs from 2pm to 6pm, then the 7pm session includes readings from the authors. Visit http://www.northernwriterscentre.com/events for more information.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Bloody Gaza Protest


A Catholic priest who splattered a mixture of his blood and paint on an Israeli memorial plaque during a protest yesterday said it was a symbolic act and nothing compared to the killing taking place in Gaza.
About 1000 people marched through central Wellington protesting against Israel's air and ground offensive in Gaza and calling on the New Zealand Government to end its neutral stance.
Father Gerard Burns, the parish priest of Te Parisi o te Ngakau Tapu in Porirua, was one of the protest leaders and smeared the blood and paint on the Yitzhak Rabin peace memorial. Mr Rabin was prime minister of Israel from 1974-1977 and again from 1992-1995. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1994 and was assassinated by a right-wing Israeli radical in 1995.
Kiwi Friends of Israel called for Father Burns to apologise for his actions.
"Kiwi Friends of Israel strongly supports the right of all New Zealanders to have a robust debate on the rights and wrongs of Israel's policies but attacking peace memorials isn't legitimate behaviour. "The desecration is doubly contemptible given Mr Rabin's lifelong commitment to peace and stability in Israel and Palestine."
Father Burns does not agree Mr Rabin's commitment to peace was "lifelong", but rather he "converted" to peace later in life.
The paint was a "symbolic action" and a "denunciation of the (Israeli) state, not an attack on the Jewish faith.
"I have a great esteem for the Jewish faith. I mean the founder of Christianity was Jewish ... but, the Israeli state is another beast altogether." The prophets of Judaism would be criticising Israel's actions, Father Burns said. An Israeli flag was also burnt at the protest.
There was no comparison between the burning of a flag, or painting of a monument and the killing taking place in Gaza, he said. As for the New Zealand Government's response, Father Burns believes "not taking a side is taking a side. It's to say you accept what's going on". He said despite being a small country New Zealand had shown in the past, with opposition to South African rugby tours (during the apartheid era), banning of cluster bombs and anti-nuclear stance, that it could spark global change.
Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully said earlier the Government was not prepared to choose sides.
He said the Government's stance was in line with the international community, including the United Nations and European Union.
Father Burns did not find it strange that a New Zealand Catholic priest should take a stand against an Israeli-Palestinian conflict. "One of the people that I am very keen to support is the Christian Palestinians. It's not just Jews against Muslims. It's a political war with some religious implications.
"Denouncing injustice is a priestly role ... I might be failing in my duty if I didn't do it." Catholic Church spokeswoman Lyndsay Freer told The New Zealand Herald priests were entitled to their individual views. The New Zealand church's stance echoed Pope Benedict's address last week.
"We feel that in the interests of peace and dignity dialogue must take place, and the killing must stop, from both sides."
New Zealand's Tertiary Education Union (TEU) today called on the Israeli and Palestinian governments to "respect the peaceful role that education institutions play in communities" and keep war out of Palestine's schools and tertiary education institutions.
Their call follows the bombing of a Gaza school yesterday that killed over 40 people.
- NZPA

Friday, January 16, 2009

Tribute to Grace in Chicago


Saturday, Feb 14, 4:30-5:45pm Boulevard Room A,B,C 2nd Floor S191 Hilton Chicago.
There's a Grace tribute scheduled for the AWP (Associated Writing Programs) convention: Tribute to Grace Paley by Glad Day Books. (Bárbara Selfridge, Eva Kollisch, Gerry Albarelli, Leora Skolkin-Smith, Robert Nichols) Grace Paley, who died at age 84 in 2007, was a beloved writer and activist. She was also, in her last decade, an editor and publisher. Grace's fellow publisher/writer/activist husband Bob Nichols and other Glad Day authors pay homage to the writing and life of the woman who was their supporter, publisher and friend. Included is documentary footage of Grace at home and reading her own stories and from Fidelity, her posthumous collection of poems.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Jewish Women Occupy the Toronto Israeli Consulate

http://www.radio4all.net:8080/files/newsnet@ckut.ca/1193-1-occupation070109.mp3Toronto: Wednesday January 8, 2009 Time: 10:25 am

A diverse group of Jewish Canadian women are currently occupying the Israeli consulate at 180 Bloor Street West in Toronto. This action is in protest against the on-going Israeli assault on the people of Gaza.

The group is carrying out this occupation in solidarity with the 1.5 million people of Gaza and to ensure that Jewish voices against the massacre in Gaza are being heard. They are demanding that Israel end its military assault and lift the 18-month siege on the Gaza Strip to allow humanitarian aid into the territory.

Israel has been carrying out a full-scale military assault on the Gaza Strip since December 27, 2008. At least 660 people have been killed and 3000 injured in the air strikes and in the ground invasion that began on January 3, 2009. Israel has ignored international calls for a ceasefire and is refusing to allow food, adequate medical supplies and other necessities of life into the Gaza Strip.

Protesters are outraged at Israel's latest assault on the Palestinian people and by the Canadian government's refusal to condemn these massacres.They are deeply concerned that Canadians are hearing the views of pro-Israel groups who are being represented as the only voice of Jewish Canadians. The protesters have occupied the consulate to send a clear statement that many Jewish-Canadians do not support Israel's violence and apartheid policies. They are joining with people of conscience all across the world who are demanding an end to Israeli aggression and justice for the Palestinian people.

FOLLOW UP:
Police arrest 8 protesters at Israeli consulate
Updated: Wed Jan. 07 2009 1:30:39 PM www.ctvtoronto.ca

Judy Rebick

Toronto police have arrested eight Canadian Jewish women who occupied the Israeli consulate on Bloor Street. The group carried out the occupation to show their opposition to Israel's military operations in the Gaza Strip and its two-year economic blockade of the territory, Miriam Garfinkle, a spokesperson, told ctvtoronto.ca on Wednesday. The most prominent of the eight arrested is Toronto activist Judy Rebick. But the group also includes Israeli filmmaker B.H. Yael, peace activists and students, she said. Police will be taking them to 52 Division, Garfinkle said.

A senior officer at 52 Division said the protesters would be taken to 53 Division, where they will face tresspassing and failure-to-disperse charges. In a news release forwarded by Montreal-based Palestinian and Jewish Unity, the protesters said: "Protesters are outraged at Israel's latest assault on the Palestinian people and by the Canadian government's refusal to condemn these massacres.

"They are deeply concerned that Canadians are hearing the views of pro-Israel groups who are being represented as the only voice of Jewish Canadians. The protesters have occupied the consulate to send a clear statement that many Jewish-Canadians do not support Israel's violence and apartheid policies. "

The Israeli consulate at 180 Bloor St. W. has been the scene of two major protests since Israel began its operation against the Palestinian Islamic militant group and political party Hamas on Dec. 27. Israeli has said it is carrying out the operation to end Hamas's ability to launch rocket attacks against its territory. According to Palestinian and UN figures, about 300 of the more than 670 killed inside Gaza have been civilians.There were also protests in Israel against the war on Gaza.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Children of Ni'lin Protest Gaza Attack

This blog will post instances of non-violent actions for peace and justice from all over the world. Today these are some photos of a demonstration by children in Palestine.

From http://ramallahonline.com:

On Tuesday, the 6th of January 2009, the children of Ni’lin village, west of Ramallah held a protest against the Israeli military strike in Gaza. Dozens of kids waved flags and carried pictures of the casualties of their Gazan neighbours.

Those children know already what this is all about, as the town of Ni’lin has been facing a harsh repression against the weekly peaceful demontrations against the Wall for the last 6 months. There, Israeli violence killed a least 3 teenagers and dozens were injured and imprisoned. A child holds a picture of Arafat Khawaja who was shot by an IDF soldier at a demonstration in the village on December 28th 2008, during the protest against the Israeli military strike in Gaza.