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Politics

Was the New York Primary fair?

BY: Nisreen Eadeh/Staff Writer Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton claimed victories in New York last night during the primary election. New York is Trump’s home state and the state Hillary Clinton served as U.S. Senator, making it an important win for both of them. However, these wins may not be a true representation of the … Continued

Hishmeh: A major task ahead for Abbas

By George S. Hishmeh, Special to Gulf News
Published: 18:14 April 14, 2016

There is no doubt that US policy toward the Middle East, specifically the Palestinian Israeli conflict, has been to date a failure and it is very unlikely that the Obama administration will undertake any new steps that will revive Arab affection toward his administration since his term in office is expiring in the coming months even though he may be visiting Saudi Arabia in the near future.

Likewise, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly rejected a US proposal to increase US financial and military aid by 20 per cent to a total $3.6 billion a year. Israel had demanded the increase to compensate for the nuclear deal with Tehran in 2015 which Israel claims has accelerated the arms race in the region and adversely affected their strategic position. A recent book review in The Washington Post “makes it difficult to dispute [the book’s] central premise that American military engagement in the Greater Middle East has not been crowned with success.”

The book, titled America’s War for the Greater Middle East by Andrew J. Bacevich, has been reviewed by Celeste Ward Gventer, a former deputy assistant secretary of defence who reportedly consults on a variety of defence and security issues in Europe and the Middle East. This disheartening situation is giving more Arab support for the upcoming step by Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to submit once again this month a proposal for a UN Security Council resolution condemning the expansion of illegal Israeli colonies within the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. He is due in New York in the coming few days.

The Palestinians are still encouraged by a 2011 UN resolution that agreed by a 14-1 vote that these colonies are illegal and demanded an immediate halt to all Israeli colonies. But the US then vetoed that resolution. Needless to say, the Obama administration cannot continue burying its head in the sand, now that the Israeli occupation is about to mark its 50th year in full control of all the Palestinian territories except for the Israeli-besieged Gaza Strip. Moreover, that year, 1967, also marked the start of its illegal colony expansion into the occupied region without any effective condemnation from the leading Western nations.

Conflict not abating

At present, there are nearly 600,000 Israeli colonists in occupied East Jerusalem, where the Palestinians hope to establish their capital, and the West Bank. What’s more appalling has been the revelation by Peace Now, considered a dovish Israeli group that tracks colony construction, which said that Israel began building, according to the Associated Press, an additional 1,800 new colonies in the West Bank in 2015. Whether the US will once again veto the anticipated UN resolution remains to be seen. This month marks the anniversary of the horrifying massacre in the Palestinian village of Deir Yassin in 1948, when two extremist Jewish militias, Irgun and Lehi, massacred over 100 Palestinians, including women and children. In a statement, the Washington-based delegation of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) described the massacre as “part and parcel of a systematic plot to depopulate Palestinian villages and empty the land of its people.”

The Palestinian-Israeli conflict in the Occupied Territories has not abated. Human Rights Watch disclosed that the number of Palestinian children being arrested by Israeli police has skyrocketed since last October, when a wave of violence began in the West Bank and Gaza. By February 2016, 440 Palestinian children had been arrested, compared to 182 the year before. As of March, 41 children had been killed. Parents complained that they no longer felt safe letting their children outside to play Meanwhile, Israeli Occupation Authorities (IOA) destroyed 523 Palestinian homes and civilian structures in the West Bank since the start of 2016, with an increase of 275 per cent from last year, according to the Palestinian Centre. The Palestinian news agency, WAFA, reported that extremist Israeli colonists resumed last Monday their provocative tours to Al Aqsa Mosque, a historic Muslim holy compound in occupied Jerusalem. Jewish organisations continue calling for mass visits to the holy site to mark the beginning of the Jewish Passover holiday.

The situation in Gaza remains dire. A UN report underlined that “more than 1,500 children were orphaned, an estimated 27,000 children had their homes completely destroyed and 44,000 children were displaced at the time of the survey.”

Needless to say, Abbas has a major task ahead in securing a unanimous vote by the UN Security Council, hopefully avoiding a second US veto, a step that might be crippled by the ongoing US presidential election.

George S. Hishmeh is a Washington-based columnist. He is a former editor in chief of the Daily Star.

Source: gulfnews.com

Bernie Sanders gets Massive Applause: Treat Palestinians with ‘respect and dignity’

BY: Nisreen Eadeh/Staff Writer During last night’s Democratic presidential debate hosted by CNN, Wolf Blitzer asked Bernie Sanders if Israel had the right to defend itself during the 2014 assault on Gaza. The Vermont Senator defended his previous statements of saying he is pro-Israel, but that Israel’s attack was “disproportionate.” Sanders went further to say … Continued

Amal Clooney: A Figure of Hope for Everyone but the Palestinians

Photo from www.alaraby.co.uk BY: Nisreen Eadeh/Staff Writer In a shocking move, everyone’s favorite human rights activist couple is throwing a fundraiser for presidential candidate Hillary Clinton with Haim Saban – an Israeli-American mogul and who considers himself a “protector of Israel.” The event is taking place at the Clooney mansion and costing $34,000 per person to … Continued

Global Solidarity for Justice: Book Review of Freedom is a Constant Struggle

BY: Leila Diab/Contributing Writer  Angela Y. Davis is a political activist, scholar, author, speaker and an ongoing advocate for the exploited and oppressed people in this world. She makes the connections between the past and the current level of injustices and vanishing freedom from Ferguson, Missouri to occupied Palestine. Freedom Is A Constant Struggle opens … Continued

A letter to Hillary, from Gaza

Hillary Clinton, the leading U.S. Democratic presidential candidate, recently told thousands of people at a Washington, DC, conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) that if she is elected she would be a staunch advocate for the Jewish state, that “Israel’s security is non-negotiable. America can’t ever be neutral when it comes to Israel’s security.” Here is a … Continued

Between Bernie, the Vatican, and a Muslim American Liberation Theology

Khaled A. Beydoun

Newsweek

On April 15, the Bernie Sanders campaign will make a visit far from the presidential electoral map: The Vatican. Pope Francis invited the presidential hopeful to a conference addressing social and economic inequality, acknowledging Sanders’ relentless campaign against structural poverty and its attendant perils.

While the presidential field is comprised of five self-identifying Christians, Sanders – a democratic socialist and “proud Jew” – was the lone candidate invited to the Vatican. Yet, a kindred commitment to dismantling systemic poverty, not faith, extended the Pope’s hand to Sanders.

Like Sanders, whose central campaign message is ending poverty, Pope Francis’s Papacy centers on the very same mission. Both harken the socialist and egalitarian principles of the Catholic liberation theology that swept through Latin America in the 1950s and 60s, and the black Muslim philosophy of economic empowerment that emerged during the same period.

This mission to undo systemic poverty is absent within mainstream Muslim American organizations, and seldom uttered from the mouths of its prominent leaders. Until a Muslim American liberation theology remerges, the vast number of Muslims living in poverty, or dangerously close to its bounds, will have to hear this message from a Jew and a Christian.

The Michigan Miracle

Nearly a month ago, the Sanders campaign traveled into Michigan: a key battleground state, also home to a sizable poor and working class Muslim American population. Sanders’ economic talking points, which include a progressive income tax, free public education, and a federal $15 minimum wage, resonated deeply with poor, black and blue-collar Muslim Americans.

In addition, his grand message of “income inequality [as] the great moral issue of our time” spoke directly to the living conditions and core concerns of Muslim Americans – 45 percent of whom live below or dangerously close to the legal poverty line.

Sanders campaigned in the heart of East Dearborn, where “We Accept E.B.T.” signs are just as ubiquitous as the Arabic script adorning store signs, meeting with Muslim American youth and community leaders. His outreach culminated with a raucous rally where Sanders decried the economic neglect, robust unemployment, and predatory Wall Street policies that ravaged the metropolitan Detroit area.

His message was heard, loud and clear. Sanders won the Muslim American vote in Metro-Detroit by a resounding 67 percent clip. A tally that pushed him past the heavy favorite Hillary Clinton, and delivered him a victory that resuscitated his campaign. Trite headlines about “ Muslims voting for a Jew” aside, it was Sanders’ commitment to dismantling structural poverty and equality that resonated deeply with Michigan’s Muslim American voters. Not religion, nor embedded tropes about a religious rivalry.

Indeed, the very message that secured Sanders’ historic Michigan victory will land him in the Vatican this coming Friday. A visit that means far more than collecting delegates or garnering headlines, but re-centering the political focus back on poverty and against the “idolatry of money.”

A meeting, although featuring a Christian and a Jew, Muslim Americans should pay close attention to.

Ignoring Muslim American Poverty

The Pope and Sanders’ shared mission to dismantle poverty also exposes a glaring vid within mainstream Muslim American institutions. During a moment of great sociopolitical and civil rights crisis, Muslim America’s most vulnerable population are those living on the fringes of poverty, economic despair and political neglect. For indigent and working class Muslim Americans in cities like East Dearborn and Philadelphia, Minneapolis and New York City, liberation from poverty is as important a civil right as any.

Poverty not only compounds injury inflicted by Islamophobia and intensifies the scrutiny of government surveillance, but is the core civil rights issue that precedes all other civil rights issues. Poverty exacerbates every imaginable harm, and exposes those bound to it to enhanced violence from the state and private citizens.

Mainstream Muslim Americans organizations have failed, over and again, to include an anti-poverty message and mission to their work. Although nearly half of Muslim America is either mired by poverty or reside dangerously close to its margins, the commitment to undo the vestiges of poverty championed by Sanders and Pope Francis is virtually non-existent within Muslim American institutions.

The democratic socialism driving the Sanders campaign, or the Catholic liberation theology inspiring Francis’s Papacy, is not foreign to Islam. In fact, both are central to it. Dalia Mogahed, the Director of Research at the Institute for Social Policy and Understanding, observes:

“Islam invented this concept [of the “moral economy”], developed and implemented it in real life over continents and centuries, and even created modern banks and investment firms to reflect it. We call it ‘Islamic economics’ and it is the moral economy spelled out and executed, not just theoretical.”

Both classical and modern Islamic scholars, including Columbia University’s Hamid Dabashi, have articulated an “Islamic liberation theology” from the core baselines of economic egalitarianism, communitarianism, and philanthropy. Yet, Muslim American advocacy and civil rights organizations have largely set them aside, and in the process, sidelined the inclusion and interests of poor Muslim American

This failure is, in part, a reflection of their leadership and base constituency – which is overwhelmingly wealthy and middle class, South Asian and Arab. As a result, mainstream Muslim American institutions are not only disconnected from poor Muslim American communities, but are yet to build meaningful grassroots inroads or institute committed efforts to mold leadership from these neglected spaces.

The Sanders campaign, over a course of months, has filled an institutional void that has persisted for decades. Indigenous black Muslim leadership and movements, driven by the precepts of black liberation theology, were the last to prioritize poverty as a primary civil rights issue.

No such urgency exists today, and mainstream Muslim American organizations not only operate far from the Muslim American enclaves stricken by poverty and its disabling effects, but are emaciated by an institutional culture more likely to frown upon, instead of fight, poverty.

Toward A Muslim American Liberation Theology?

Yes, Sanders is Jewish. No, he is not Muslim. But he speaks the language of economic justice and enfranchisement that supersedes religious lines. This is why Muslims in Michigan voted for him in droves, and why, this week, Muslim New Yorkers from Brooklyn, Harlem, Astoria and working class enclaves beyond and in between will seek to help him pull off another historic upset.

During his presidential campaign, Sanders’ message has penetrated deep within poor and working class Muslim communities long neglected by mainstream Muslim American organizations. He has stepped into spaces these organizations have long forgotten about. In the process of seeking to dismantle structural poverty, he has helped to demystify the trope that Muslim Americans are an upwardly mobile, wealthy, economic model minority by politically empowering poor and working class Muslim Americans.

Sanders’ upcoming Vatican visit, for Muslim American leadership and organizations, extends an opportunity to revisit their failure of poor and working Muslim Americans. And perhaps, put into practice a liberation theology native to our faith, but foreign to our institutions.

Source: newsweekme.com

Six Things You Didn’t Know About The First Lebanese Americans

There is a song by the legendary singer, Wadih El Safi, whose title literally translates into, “Lebanon, oh piece of heaven.” To the millions of Lebanese-Americans, even those who haven’t stepped a foot on the country’s versatile terrain, Lebanon is just that. As the image of this tiny, 10, 452 km squared piece of paradise … Continued

Heritage Month: Arab Americans in the Foreign Service

BY: Sevan Araz/Contributing Writer A diplomat serves a unique role to bridge political and cognitive gaps in an increasingly tense and polarized global climate. The international community provides a platform for peace processes, especially in the Arab World, where conflicting geopolitical interests have led to the exploitation of sectarian and ideological lines. Diplomacy has taken on … Continued

The Double Standard in U.S. Refugee Resettlement

BY: Nisreen Eadeh/Staff Writer In September of last year, Secretary of State John Kerry pledged to bring 85,000 refugees into the United States, including 10,000 Syrians. At the time, this number seemed impressive, despite comparisons to the pledges of European countries like Germany that said it could take 500,000 refugees in one year. Both of … Continued

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