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“Your walls will never cage our freedom”: Black-Palestinian solidarity video goes viral

posted on: Oct 20, 2015

We are not statistics,” Black and Palestinian narrators proclaim in unison, as they draw attention to the racist violence to which both of their communities are subjected. “When I see them, I see us.”

Over 60 leading Black and Palestinian activists, artists, and scholars appear in a new video by Black-Palestinian Solidarity. The video, which was trending on Facebook the day after it was released, features musician Lauryn Hill, actor Danny Glover, author Alice Walker, musician and filmmaker Boots Riley, hip hop group DAM, actor Yousef Erakat, scholar Cornel West, and many more.

Participants in the video hold signs with phrases like “Your walls will never cage our freedom”; authorities “mark our children as criminal”; and “I remember: Deir Yassin, Greensboro, Gaza, Charleston,” referring to cities in which there have been massacres of Palestinians and Black Americans.

Lauryn Hill holds a sign in the video that reads “Free all political prisoners.” Omar Barghouti, a Palestinian scholar and leader in the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, appears with the message “From occupied Palestine, in solidarity with protesters rising up in Baltimore and Ferguson.” Columbia University Palestinian-American scholar Rashid Khalidi also holds a sign saying “We suffer from an incurable malady: hope.”

Renowned scholar and activist Angela Davis is featured in the video with a sign reading “Racism is systemic. Its outbursts are not isolated incidents.” Explaining why she considers the message so important, Davis said “Mutual expressions of solidarity have helped to generate a vigorous political kinship linking Black organizers, scholars, cultural workers, and political prisoners in the U.S. with Palestinian activists, academics, political prisoners, and artists.”

“Palestinians have spoken out passionately against racist police violence in Ferguson and Baltimore as Black people have vehemently stood up in defense of Rasmeah Odeh,” Davis continued, referring to a Palestinian-American activist who faces prison time and deportation for what she says was a false confession obtained through Israeli torture. “These powerful images represent a journey from struggle against tyranny to a collective hope for a just future,” Davis added.

The participants, who are in a variety of different organizations, say “Black-Palestinian Solidarity is not an organization but rather a space for solidarity and important conversations about it.” They have launched a website, and say they plan to continued doing more work in the future.

Palestinian legal scholar Noura Erakat said she first thought of the idea for the video during Israel’s U.S.-backed attack on Gaza in the summer in 2014, code-named Operation Protective Edge. In the 51-day military assault, which Israeli leaders described as the latest act of “mowing the lawn” in the densely populated strip, an independent investigation by the U.N. found that 2,251 Palestinians — roughly two-thirds of whom were civilians, including 299 women and 551 children — were killed, and 11,231 more — including 3,540 women and 3,436 children — were injured, over 1,000 of whom are now permanently disabled. On the other side, six civilians in Israel and 67 Israeli soldiers were killed.

Source: www.salon.com