Sunday, November 30, 2014

Take Action: Free Palestinian professor and political leader Abdel-Alim Da’na!


[Photo on the left:] Abdel-Alim Da’na, for the Electronic Intifada

20 Palestinians were arrested throughout the West Bank on Thursday, 27 November, in a series of night-time raids in Al-Khalil (Hebron), Jenin and elsewhere by the Israeli occupation military. Among those arrested was Abdel-Alim Da’na, 65, a prominent long-time leader in the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and a professor at Palestine Polytechnic University in al-Khalil, who had previously served nearly 17 years in occupation prisons. Take action now and demand the immediate release of Abdel-Alim Da’na and an end to the raids and imprisonment of Palestinian political leaders.

His home was attacked and raided in early dawn hours by occupation forces; his son, Bashar Abdel-Alim Da’na, has been detained in administrative detention without charge or trial since April 20 of this year. Da’na suffers from several diseases, including high blood pressure and diabetes.

He has been politically visible denouncing recent Israeli attacks on Jerusalem, as well as challenging the role of the Palestinian Authority, saying that the PA was derelict in its duty to the Palestinian people for pursuing negotiations while Israeli soldiers and settlers were attacking the Palestinian people of Jerusalem.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network notes that Da’na is clearly being targeted for his political activity and views and is being held as a prisoner of conscience. He has a long legacy of struggle for the Palestinian people and is being targeted because, despite age and illness, he continues to speak out for the full rights of the Palestinian people.

[Photo on the right:] Bashar Abdel-Alim Da’na, Abdel-Alim Da’na’s son, held in administrative detention without charge or trial

In 2011, Da’na was interviewed by the Electronic Intifada about his time in occupation prisons. He is also well-known for his role in the 1970s in involving Israeli citizens, particularly Arab Jews, in joining the Palestinian resistance. The full interview with Abdel-Alim Da’na is below, on the history of Palestinian prisoners’ resistance. During his 17 years in prison, he spent 4 years held together with Ahmad Sa’adat, today the imprisoned General Secretary of the PFLP.


Interview from the Electronic Intifada:

Ben Lorber, contributor to The Electronic Intifada, interviewed Abdel-Alim Da’na in his Hebron home on 8 November 2011.

Ben Lorber: How long were you in prison?

Abdel-Alim Da’na: I spent 17 years in Israeli prisons. In 1972 I spent more than one year, and in 1975, they gave me 17 and a half years. I was released by an exchange of prisoners between PLO and Israel in 1985. I spent ten years and two months in jail. Then they arrested me in the first intifada, the first uprising, and I spent four years without a trial, as an administrative detainee. Then I spent about one year or more, and then in 2004 I spent one and a half years.

BL: How were you treated inside prison?

AD: The Israeli management inside the prisons is very difficult, and they mistreated us inside the prisons. Dozens of people inside the prisons were absolutely crazy, I saw many go crazy because of the very bad conditions inside the prison. More than two hundred detainees died inside the prisons. I have written many books and essays about the prisoners inside the prison. I wrote a book about the 94 prisoners who died inside the prisons, and I am going to continue to speak about the other men who died inside the prisons because some of them were killed because of interrogations, and some of them were not given suitable treatment. In interrogations I spent more than a hundred days inside isolated cell without anybody, and they used all kinds of torture to take information from me. Not only me, but many persons, many detainees.

And you must believe me that the situation is very difficult, very hard. Because we are inside the prisons, everything is confiscated, including our freedom, and we haven’t enough food, our family can’t visit us inside the prison freely, and they mistreat our families when they visit us.

BL: How did prisoners resist the occupation from within the prison?

AD: We had many hunger strikes, and were used to struggling inside the prison to make our life possible. For example, the first hunger strike was in 1970 — this strike was to put an end to Israeli mistreatment of our prisoners. The guard or the policemen said “Issa, come in!” He beat him. Why? “Because I don’t like him!” And when you speak to the guard, you had to say “please sir, ok sir” and you had to bend your head. We saw that they are treating us in a very ugly, very inhumane way. This was the first hunger strike. And we succeeded in this hunger strike in 1970, to put an end to the guards’ mistreatment of prisoners.

And then we called to bring us newspapers. They at first brought us a newspaper called which was [written and published] by Israel intelligence, by Shabak [Shin Bet]. We wanted to change this. So Ashkelon prison had a big strike, they continued with this strike for forty eight days, so as to bring freely Arab magazines and Arab newspapers and Arab books inside the prisons. And the Israelis consented to bring in the books! We called this very important for the prisoners — it changed our lives.

We did not have radio transmitters. We were smuggling transistor radios, but the Israeli authority considered it very dangerous. In September 1985 we had an important hunger strike, we continued it for 13 days. The police minister discussed with us about this hunger strike. We had six representatives among the prisoners — I was one of them — and we discussed our demands and we forced them to permit us to bring a radio. And this made a revolution inside the prisons!

[Photo on the right:] Abdel-Alim’s granddaughter with a poster of Bashar, demanding his freedom

BL: How did you organize and educate yourselves inside the prison?

AD: Every political organization makes their systems and law. There were Fatah, PFLP,DFLP, and these were the three main organizations [in the 1980s]. All the organizations did their best to find books. At first, we hadn’t books, we hadn’t newspapers, we hadn’t papers or pens [with which] to write, but we smuggled many things like these. Also, once we smuggled books into prisons, we smuggled papers and pencils and we copied the books by hand to give to our friends.

Everyone, when they enter the prison, must learn to read and to study. When some people enter the prison, they cannot read or write, and we put an end to their illiteracy. Some of them are very famous journalists now, some are poets, some are writing in the newspapers and writing research. I have many names of these people who couldn’t read or write, and now they are very respectable members of Palestinian culture, men in the Palestinian Authority and writers of all sorts.

BL: What did you teach the prisoners?

AD: We had many educational programs inside the prison; for example, the leftist organizations like PFLP or DFLP had programs in philosophy, political economy, Lenin’s books, and all of the Marxist-Leninist texts. It is a part of our culture.

The education rate inside the prisons is very high. This is true for all the Palestinian people. We are a highly-educated people, and for this we are proud, and we do our efforts to put an end to illiteracy. Now, as the United Nations reports, Palestinian people are one of the highest-educated people. The rate of Palestinian people who are educated is 90 percent, which is more than any Arab country and many countries in Asia and Africa. This makes us proud of our people.

BL: What Marxist-Leninist books did PFLP teach the prisoners?

AD: Dialectical philosophy. All the Lenin books. Das Kapital.

BL: All of Das Kapital?

AD: Yes! It was large, and very difficult, but we studied it. Because we studied political economy, we were dependent on it. Engels’ The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State: I explained this book more than ten times, I admire this book. It is very important. Also Gramsci’sPrison Notebooks. And we read [Che] Guevara, and many Marxist-Leninist theoreticians.

We also had [internal] prison magazines we wrote by hand. For example, Fatah had one or two magazines inside the prison, and also PFLP had a magazine, al-Hadaf [The Goal]. We wrote these magazines by hand, with pencils, and some people put drawings in the magazines, and some prisoners wrote poems, some wrote tales and short stories.

BL: Did you also write about political theory and philosophy inside the magazines?

AD: Yes of course, we wrote about political theory and philosophy inside the magazines, and political economy, many Marxist-Leninist essays inside these magazines. And we also had essays where we discussed our situations inside the prisons, and news, and our relationship with other organizations.

BL: Israel’s policy of mass imprisonment and torture attempts to break the political resistance and will of the Palestinian people, but prison life only increases political resistance and revolutionary will …

AD: Israel can arrest hundreds of people, thousands of people, but in spite of that Israel cannot put an end to the revolution and Palestinian resistance. Since 1967, Israel has been arresting people, but it cannot end the resistance. Israel has mistreated all the prisoners and detainees, but we have a soul. We do not enter prison because we rob or rape or anything, but because we resist the occupation authority, because we resist Israel’s procedures against our people.

And the Palestinian people support the prisoners in demonstrations, in protesting, and support them by money, and by visiting the families of prisoners — these prisoners are the heroes of our people. And the prisoners who enter these prisons live in a nationalist atmosphere and a resistance atmosphere.

BL: When prisoners learn about resistance and revolution in the past and in other countries, does this help them understand how the Palestinian resistance is part of the revolution all over the world?

AD: Yes, we consider ourselves a part of the international revolution. We did not have relations with the world revolution because we were inside the prison, but we are with any movement that struggles for its freedom, for its liberty, and we support all the movements all over the world who want to determine themselves and their own people.

BL: Speaking of world revolution, how does the Arab Spring relate to the Palestinian struggle?

AD: I say it is a very good revolution and a very civilized revolution, and this reflects that the Arab people want to live in a democracy like other people all over the world, to elect their governors and dismiss them! We are proving ourselves as Arabs.

In one sense, I do not [see] us as Palestinians, I [see] us as Arabs. We are all speaking Arabic, from Morocco to Amman, and Islam is our culture, and we have cooperated with each other on many many things. We have the same culture, the same happiness. Imperialism divided us, because when we are divided it can exploit us, and exploit our wealth. All of the Arabs are with us as Palestinians, because they know we are under occupation … all their revolutions call to dismiss Israeli occupation from the occupied territories, and the uprising people believe in Palestine.

And they know that Israel was not established against Palestinians, it was established to weaken the Arab world, so that imperialism and capitalism can exploit all the wealth in the Arab world. The Arabs who are torn and not united will see that their interest is to make a union between them.

BL: But in the struggle against imperialism, religion has become very influential since the 1990s. In the Palestinian resistance now you have many people turning to Hamas’s fundamentalism instead of PFLP’s secular leftism. Why?

AD: You see, the Marxist-Leninist theory failed. Not because it is wrong, but because its applications failed. For example, the Soviet Union failed to apply this theory, and this affected many leftist organizations. The people want to search for other ideologies to explain the world and to struggle against imperialism and colonialism, and of course Israel. And for them, the religious ideology serves to explain all the difficulties that they face.

BL: How does the PFLP feel about Hamas?

AD: It considers Hamas as a nationalist organization that struggles against occupation. But we have many differences with it, because it explains the world and situations not like us, you see. And it is not considered a historical resistance organization. It began in 1987, but we have leftist national organizations that began a half century ago.

BL: What do you think of Hamas’ prisoner deal?

AD: We appreciated this bargain, yes.

BL: But the PFLP was holding a large hunger strike at the same time.

AD: When we began the hunger strike we did not know that there would be a bargain between Hamas and the Israel authority, and it is not in the interest [of the hunger strikers]. If they knew there was going to be an agreement, they would not have begun the strike. But in spite of this the strike was not bad, it ended solitary confinement.

BL: Why were you arrested?

AD: Because I resisted the occupation, and in 1972 I organized the students in the West Bank to resist the occupation. And I made contact between an Arabic and Israeli organization to resist the occupation authority, and some of them have been arrested from the Israeli side, and some escaped outside the country.

BL: Do you mean the socialist anti-Zionist political organization Matzpen?

AD: Not Matzpen, with the Israeli Black Panthers. We helped each other organize and cooperate with many things against the occupation. Also with some Haredim, some very religious men who believe that establishing a Jewish state is against God’s will. They consider Zionism as against Judaism and against God’s will — Neturei Karta and other organizations. To prove they were with us, for example, they brought weapons for us! I did not use it, but they smuggled weapons to us to prove they were with us to resist against the Israeli occupation. We cooperated with them in many branches of struggle. Also, they brought us instruments to press magazines.

The Black Panthers sang many songs — one of their songs went “I went to the labor office, so as to work. They asked me, ‘where are you from?’ I said, ‘From Morocco!’ They said ‘get out!’ I went to the labor office, so as to work. They asked me ‘where are you from?’ I said ‘From Poland!’ They said ‘Ah yes! Bring him a cold drink!’”

***

TAKE ACTION!

1. Send the letter below to demand the immediate release of Abdel-Alim Dana. He is being held as a political prisoner for his public advocacy for Palestinian rights. International pressure can help free him! 

2. Join an action or start an action in your city to defend Jerusalem, Palestine and Palestinian political prisoners. Protests are taking place in cities around the world for Jerusalem and Palestine. Join a protest at an Israeli consulate or embassy, or hold an educational event.

3. Join the movement for boycott, divestment and sanctions. Isolate Israel for its mass political imprisonment of Palestinians. Boycott products like HP and SodaStream, and demand an end to security contracts with G4S, which operates in Israeli prisons. Learn more at bdsmovement.net.

PFLP calls for increased solidarity in the face of ongoing Israeli attacks


On the eve of the International Day of Solidarity with the People of Palestine, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) called on the people of the free world to increase solidarity with Palestinian people.

The statement issued on November 29 to mark the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.

The International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People came at a time Israel escalated its systematic and racist campaign against the Palestinian people, the statement said.

The statement pointed to the Israeli Judaization schemes in occupied Jerusalem, settlement expansion, mounting break-ins into al-Aqsa Mosque, and the Jewish plans to establish the alleged Temple on the ruins of al-Aqsa.

The PFLP also pointed out that the negotiation process only brings losses to the Palestinian people and cause.

“We appeal to you through this statement at a time when our cause is facing difficult circumstances and conditions at all levels and in all areas. We are experiencing a time when the Zionist aggression and repression continues and escalates against our people in various areas, especially against our people in Jerusalem and Gaza, and more recently through the targeting of our people in occupied Palestine 1948 attacking and undermining their existence.”

"To the progressive and democratic forces of the world, we call on you to redouble your efforts to support our just cause, and to expose all the policies of the occupation and its institutions against our people", according to the statement.

The PFLP called upon Arab and Islamic Nation to get ready for the historic battle against the occupation’s ambitions in the area.

For his part, MP Kais Abed al-Karim called on the international community and institutions to bear their responsibility and to protect the Palestinian people from the Jewish settlers’ fierce attacks.

On the anniversary of the 1947 UN vote to partition Palestine and the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, the international community must realize its duty towards our people’s rights for the establishment of an independent state, he said.

Time has come to exercise more pressures on the occupation state to abide by international resolutions and laws and to halt settlement expansion and confiscation policy, he stressed.

He emphasized the need to prosecute Israeli leaders at international courts for committing crimes against humanity in Palestine.

On the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, unite the people of the world to end the racist colonial occupation of Palestine!


Since the United Nations General Assembly vote in 1977 designating November 29 as the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People, who are struggling to achieve the national rights of return, self-determination and independent statehood, as recognized by the United Nations on multiple occasions and votes.

The International Day of Solidarity this year coincides with the intensifying racist, Zionist occupation attack against the Palestinian people, their land and their rights. There is a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing and land confiscation for the construction of colonial settlements, the Judaization of Jerusalem, and the threats to Al-Aqsa Mosque of temporal and spatial division in a prelude to its destruction and the establishment of the “temple,” and the Israeli war machine continues its killing, displacement, siege, detention and torture.

2014 was adopted by the United Nations as the Year of Solidarity with the Palestinian People. The occupation state has in no way halted its occupation and aggression and instead has shown unequivocally once more that it continues to implement its assault on justice, peace and the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, and reject all resolutions of the United Nations and the will of the people of the world. Increasingly, its deceptive façade of democracy is slipping before the eyes of the world and it is being exposed as a racist, exclusionary regime of terror far from any vision of human rights. The Zionist entity’s political current today aims at transforming the nature of the conflict to a religious conflict that would expand throughout the region and threaten all peoples of the area, targeting once more the dispossession of the indigenous Palestinian people from their lands, including those of our people who stand steadfast in their land occupied by the Zionist forces since 1948.

In the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian people, it must be clear that the long years of futile and damaging negotiations have done nothing but inflict great damage on the Palestinian people and their cause while providing cover for the ongoing Israeli crimes, violations and attacks. These negotiations do not serve the interests of justice or peace, but the ambitions of the occupier who would claim all of Palestinian land and deny all Palestinian national rights.

The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine salutes the peoples, movements and nations of the world who stand with the Palestinian people and express their solidarity today. We urge the escalation, expansion and development of the solidarity movement, to challenge and defeat the attempts of the occupation state and its allies to deceive the global public by exposing the nature of the Zionist colonial settler project and expand the circle of international support for the Palestinian people, and isolate, boycott and sanction Israel. It is only by achieving and recognizing the Palestinian people’s rights that the values of freedom, justice, democracy, tolerance and peace may triumph in the world.

On this day, the Front also urges Palestinian national unity to emerge from the crisis of the Palestinian national liberation movement to rebuild Palestinian institutions on the basis of democracy, pluralism and commitment to Palestinian national rights and resistance and rejects the approach of negotiations and reliance on U.S. domination. The Palestinian struggle on the official international level must be escalated in the United Nations and its institutions, and without hesitation, Palestine must join the international treaties and organizations, including acceding to the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court to bring the Zionist leadership to trial and prosecution for their crimes against our people.

On this occasion, the Front salutes those who have fallen for Palestine’s freedom and liberation, wishes a speedy recovery to the wounded and freedom to the prisoners, and appeals to the Arab and Islamic peoples to prepare to confront the Zionist state as it continues its expansion over the entire land of Palestine and threatens the future of the region and its people.

PFLP calls for a state of emergency to help our people in Gaza after the sinking of homes due to flooding


The Front alerts all of its cadres and organizations to act to serve the people in the affected areas in Gaza

The winter rainstorms that have returned to trouble the people in various areas in the Gaza Strip, come in addition to the calamities suffered by our people, especially following the Zionist aggression on Gaza and the resulting disruption and destruction impacting various aspects of life in the Strip, said the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. There are severe problems of homelessness, displacement, destroyed homes, an electricity crisis, unemployment and extreme poverty, and now, the new problem, the flooding of the homes of thousands in low-lying areas in Gaza, Beit Hanoun, Central and South Gaza and disruption in sewage pumping due to the intensity of the rain and the heavy flooding. This has been particularly intense in what is known as the “tunnel” area in Sheikh Radwan and has further impacted many displaced people living in shelters, or who have been living in their partially destroyed homes.

The PFLP calls on all official agencies of the government, the civil defense, the relief agencies and the municipalities, hospitals, health centers and the National and Islamic Forces to declare a state of emergency to take action to help people facing the flooding of their homes, and assist displaced and affected people immediately and without delay.

The Front also calls upon the national reconciliation government and civil defense crews and municipalities to solve the problem of sewage pumps in the Sheikh Radwan area so as to not result in a major disaster.

We urge the masses of our people to strengthen bonds of solidarity and collect emergency aid to support people affected, including clothing and blankets, to work to alleviate their suffering. Fateh and Hamas bear a major responsibility in the aggravation of these problems, by prioritizing bickering over fault at the expense of our people and their suffering, noted the Front.

The Front commits to mobilize all of its members and institutions to support affected people throughout Gaza and to bear its national responsibilities. It urges the consensus government to act to alleviate the suffering of our people and escalate the pressure to end the siege on Gaza and fully open all of the crossings to address one of the key sources of these problems.

The PFLP and Palestinian Progressive Youth Union joined in and organized relief efforts in Sheikh Radwan and in eastern Gaza, ferrying people who were flooded in from the area and distributing blankets, clothing and coats for the cold weather. Comrade Basil Atawneh noted that the humanitarian situation is severe and worsened considerably by the flooding and cold. He pointed to the need for immediate reconstruction and ending the obstacles that have been placed in the path of the people, stressing the absolute rejection of the “Serry plan” that seeks to legitimize and administrate the siege on Gaza, deny Palestinian self-determination and delay reconstruction. “The Front will do all it can with all of its efforts to achieve a decent life for our people,” Atawneh said.

PFLP: The arrest of the leaders of our people will not stop the struggle



The arrest of the leaders of the Palestinian people will not stop our struggle for liberation and return, for which thousands of Palestinians have given their lives, said the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, noting that the occupation prisons have held its finest leaders and cadres throughout the history of the Front.

Zionist occupation forces arrested Comrade Abdel-Alim Da’na, a prominent and historical leader of the Front, in an early-morning raid on his home amid a series of raids and arrests of dozens of youths in al-Khalil on November 27; this comes within the framework of continued and escalating aggression against our people in Jerusalem, the West Bank, and occupied Palestine ’48. The occupation will fail to achieve its objectives and we will continue our march of struggle until our land is freed from every soldier and settler.

The Front praised the legendary steadfastness of Comrade Da’na, who spent 17 years in the occupation prisons and has been a model for our comrades in his determination, both in his national role as a political leader and within the interrogation rooms, where he was held dozens of times during his youth, refusing to confess to the occupier’s interrogators.

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Democratic Palestine, revolutionary English-language Palestinian magazine, to relaunch


Democratic Palestine is a revolutionary Palestinian magazine in the English language dedicated to the struggle for liberation and return, published bi-monthly by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. With the 47th anniversary of the PFLP, the Front is re-launching its English-language publication, which has been a consistent source of information, mutual revolutionary dialogue and discussion regarding the Palestinian struggle for return and liberation, and regarding the revolutionary movements of the world, for decades.

Democratic Palestine was previously published from 1984 through 1993, as the successor publication to the earlier English-language publication, the PFLP Bulletin.

Democratic Palestine is a space for engagement with broad progressive forces around the world, and development of relation of mutual solidarity that will strengthen and support the struggle for a democratic and liberated Palestine, in the context of a global struggle against imperialism, Zionism and their allies. It is committed to strengthening a revolutionary internationalist discourse around the Palestinian liberation movement and examining the struggle in its international, Arab and Palestinian context.

Submissions of writing, news, commentary and art are welcome for the initial and subsequent issues of Democratic Palestine. Submissions may be made for publication under your name, under a pseudonym or through a pseudonymous/anonymous email, or without a byline. We also welcome your thoughts, ideas, and proposals for the magazine – please contact us at democraticpalestinemag@gmail.com.

Democratic Palestine is published with the following aims:
– conveying the political line of the PFLP and other progressive Palestinian and Arab forces
– providing current information and analysis pertinent to the Palestinian liberation struggle, as well as developments on the Arab and international levels
– serving as a forum for building relations of mutual solidarity between the Palestinian revolution and progressive organizations, parties, national liberation movements and countries around the world.

We look forward to working to reinvigorate the international revolutionary exchange of ideas in the struggle for Palestine and the struggle for liberation, for socialism, and for justice everywhere in the world.

Occupier’s home demolition threats will be met with increased confrontation and steadfastness


The threats of the Prime Minister of the occupation state, Benjamin Netanyahu, to demolish the homes and strip the Jerusalem IDs of the families of Ghassan and Uday Abu Jamal in occupied Jerusalem is a criminal and dangerous escalation which will only be met with greater confrontation, steadfastness and resistance to stop these plans, said the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine on November 23.

Perhaps the Zionist occupier deludes himself that through such illegal actions and the imposition of laws and the use of military power to expel the indigenous residents of Jerusalem from their homes and villages where they were born, raised and inherited from their ancestors, or by the continuing policy of home demolitions, the Judaization of Jerusalem and mass arrests, that he will be able to stop the popular uprising and growing resistance. However, our Palestinian people in Jerusalem have proven again and again that such measures will fail before the growing flames of intifada and the popular willingness to sacrifice and struggle despite Zionist terror, said the Front.

The Front saluted the masses of our people in Jerusalem and addressed the families of the martyrs, the defenders of dignity who stand against repression, terror and Zionist policies, calling on them to continue to confront these attacks with vigor.

The Front noted that the struggle in Jerusalem is not a religious battle, but is instead a battle of existence for the Palestinian people against a racist entity determined to eliminate the indigenous people from the occupied land, robbing it from its rightful owners. The Zionist schemes aim to exploit the religious status of the city in order to hold Jerusalem under the complete control of the occupier and to justify its systematic state terror against the Palestinian people, and to turn the liberation struggle into a “religious conflict between Palestinians and Jews.”

The Front urged the masses of the Palestinian people and the diaspora to raise the level their organizing and activities to support our people in Jerusalem, to escalate the popular movement and resistance in the West Bank and fuel the fire of Intifada, build sustainable struggle and hit the occupier; including forming popular committees in each camp to confront occupier and settler terror. In this battle, said the Front, there is no place for neutrality or for leaving our people in Jerusalem alone to confront the occupation.

The Front demanded that the Palestinian leadership implement strong action to support the steadfastness of our people in Jerusalem through financial support and political action to confront the Zionist schemes in the United Nations and all international arenas, demanding an end to systematic Zionist state terror. In particular, the Front urged the immediate accession to the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court to put the occupation on trial for its criminal policies against our people, and noted that it is appalling that there is until now no substantive action that has been taken to make this a reality beyond media statements.

PFLP: so-called “Jewish nation-state” bill is a renewed declaration of war on the Palestinian people


The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine denounced the adoption by Netanyahu’s cabinet of the so-called “Jewish nation-state” bill as a renewed declaration of war on the historical and civil rights of the Palestinian people inside 1948 occupied Palestine.

It reflects the overt racism of the state, and attempts to “legalize and legitimize” the existing policies of discrimination, racism and oppression that have been attacking our people for the past 66 years. This is part and parcel of a strategy to pave the way for further collective expulsions, continuing Nakba, and the ongoing Judaization of Palestinian land, the Front noted.

One of the objectives of this bill is to falsely portray the occupation state’s seizure of land and expansion of colonies, annexation of Jerusalem, division of Al-Aqsa mosque, undermining of Muslim and Christian holy sites, and crimes in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine as a “religious conflict” or “religious struggle,” noted the Front

The Front called for confronting this racist legislation by escalating the level of confrontation with the racist state at all levels, on the Palestinian, Arab and international fronts. In particular, the Front noted, it is critical to build a national strategy to protect the rights of the Palestinian people and emphasize the nature of the Palestinian cause as one of a national democratic liberation struggle against a settler colonial racist state, and to quickly accede to international treaties and conventions, particularly the International Criminal Court, to prosecute the leaders of the occupation state for their crimes. In addition, the Front emphasized the importance of the continuing and growing movement to boycott and isolate the occupation state at all levels and strip it of its façade of legitimacy.

PFLP soul-searching: the rise and fall of Palestine’s socialists


When news reports alleged that the two cousins behind the Jerusalem synagogue attack on 18 November were affiliated with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a level of confusion reigned. Why the PFLP? Why now?

The attack killed five Israelis and wounded others. It was, to a degree, an expected addition to a violent episode caused by police-sanctioned right-wing violence and abuse targeting the Palestinian population of the illegally occupied East Jerusalem. Much of the violence targeting Palestinians is systematic, involving severe restrictions on Palestinian movement, targeting houses of worship, and nightly attacks by Jewish mobs assailing Arabs, or anyone who may be suspected of being one. It also included the hanging, lynching and burning alive of Jerusalem's Arab residents.

Palestinians responded in kind. But most of their violent responses seemed to be confined to individual acts, compelled by despair, perhaps, but certainly removed from the organized nature of armed-resistance.

Then, Ghassa and Odai Abu Jamal attacked the synagogue. The initial assumption was that the attack was also the work of individuals, before reports began linking them to the PFLP.

Suddenly, the discussion shifted, from the relevance of the attack to the difficult situation in Jerusalem (both cousins were Jerusalemites) to something entirely different pertaining to the Marxist group’s current standing between two dominant forces: a Fatah-led government in Ramallah, whose leadership has long-abandoned armed struggle, and an Islamic-dominated resistance groups led by Hamas in Gaza. Is the PFLP carving a new place for itself in anticipation of a third intifada? Or was the attack an anomaly? Was it ordered by the group’s core leadership? And where is the PFLP heading anyway?

To begin with, there can be no easy answers...

...adhering to the fighting spirit of a socialist, militant and radical movement, the PFLP is also forced to co-exist within a corrupt political structure; opposing it, while benefiting from it at the same time. Many NGOs are loosely affiliated with PFLP members, which gives the group a degree of physical presence, but deprives it from the chance to openly confront Mahmoud Abbas operated political apparatus in Ramallah.

It matters little whether the cousins who attacked the synagogue in Jerusalem were affiliated with the PFLP or not; the repeated muddled statements by the group - justifying the attack, explaining it, owning it and disowning it all at once - matters more. This confusion is becoming symbiotic of the PFLP following the signing of Oslo. And while there are those who employ clever language to maintain the group’s radical status, NGO perks and socialist prestige, others expect a more serious discussion of what the PFLP is and what it stands for after two decades of political failure, of which the PFLP, like Fatah and Hamas, should also be held accountable.

Palestinian prisoners call for increased solidarity and struggle in the face of ongoing attacks and repression


The branch of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine inside Israeli prisons issued the following statement on November 24, from behind the bars of the Zionist jails :

To the struggling Palestinian masses, who struggle for the sake of freedom…
To the free people of the world…

We call on you through this statement in a time when our cause is facing difficult circumstances and conditions at all levels and in all areas. We face a time when the Zionist aggression and repression continues and escalates against our people in various areas, especially against our people in Jerusalem and Gaza, and more recently through the legislative targeting of our people in occupied Palestine 1948 attacking and undermining their existence.

This coincides with the escalating attack by the fascist so-called prison service management against the Palestinian political prisoners under various pretexts and justifications, including prohibiting all reactions in response to the actions of the right-wing government. For some time, they have been attempting to attack the steadfastness of the prisoners through decisions and laws in the recent period, especially following the declaration of war against the prisoners since mid-June. Since that time, we are facing a severe campaign of repression, harassment and punishment impacting all aspects of our captive lives.

The denial of family visits and lengthening the time between one visit and another have prevented prisoners from seeing their loved ones and relatives. In addition, limiting the amount of money a prisoner may have in his or her “canteen” (prison commissary) account to 400 NIS only, which is insufficient to provide the most basic needs, particularly in light of brutal price increases in the canteen. In addition, the prison authorities have cut the number of satellite channels in the prisons, allowing three only: two Hebrew channels, the Zionist Channel 2 and 10, and Al-Arabiya news. All of this is apparently not enough; this has been followed by large night-time raids by heavily armed forces and repressive campaigns waged by special units like the “Massada” unit that murdered political prisoner Mohammed al-Ashqar in 2007 in Negev prison.

To the progressive and democratic forces of the world, we call on you to redouble your efforts to support our just cause, and to expose all the policies of the occupation and its institutions against our people.

PFLP denounces racist injustice in Ferguson and the United States, supports resistance against oppression


The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine stands with the people of Ferguson, and throughout the streets of the cities of the United States, who have taken to the streets once more after the prosecution and the U.S. legal injustice system as a whole failed to indict Darren Wilson, the police officer who killed Michael Brown in cold blood, meaning that he will not face trial or prosecution for this state-sanctioned murder of a young Black man by the police.

This comes as no surprise; the United States’ legal system is historically and at present a perpetrator of massive violence and imprisonment against Black people, just as U.S. imperialism is such a perpetrator against people and nations around the world.

As Palestinians, we are familiar with the injustice of colonial, racist courtrooms, mechanisms of a racist state, that sentence our people to prison en masse while wrapping the perpetrators of crimes, murders and genocide against our people in a cloak of “legality.”

And this system which we recognize all too well from the occupation regime in Palestine has learned well from this same system and structure which has existed for centuries in the United States, the key ally and strategic partner of the occupier.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

A Brief Profile of the Far-Leftist PFLP


The Popular Front for Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), a far-left Palestinian group, claimed responsibility for the attack on a synagogue on Tuesday that left five Israelis dead and seven wounded, and said the two assailants, the cousins Oudai Abu Jamal and Ghassan Abu Jamal, were its members. The group saluted the attackers and praised their killing of Israelis. After the attack, the group claimed responsibility and said that the attack was a natural result to the crimes committed by Israel, which has been occupying Palestinian territories for decades.

In a statement, Khalil Maqdesi, a member of the Central Committee of the PFLP, said: "The operation in Jerusalem is a natural response to the ongoing racist policies and crimes of the occupation, and it is the occupation that is responsible for the escalation in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine. We are witnessing lynching, the targeting of Palestinians, demolishing homes, confiscating land, building colonies and taking unprecedented measures against Muslim and Christian holy sites in Jerusalem on a daily basis."

Student Democratic Pole to French Consul: “Get out of Bir Zeit University!”


Dozens of student organizers from the Democratic Pole, the leftist student bloc at Bir Zeit University, protested and confronted the visit of the French consul of the University on Wednesday, November 19. The students declared him unwelcome at the University, as the representative of a colonialist state. Further, they demanded the liberation of Georges Ibrahim Abdallah, Lebanese Arab political prisoner in French prisons, who was active in the Lebanese Communist Party and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and has been imprisoned since 1984 with the full support of the United States and the occupation state.

Friday, November 21, 2014

PFLP: Israelis will not be safe before Palestinians


(Ma'an) The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine on Thursday officially mourned two of its members Ghassan and Udayy Abu Jamal who were killed Tuesday after carrying out an attack on an Israeli synagogue, saying that the attack shows that Israelis will not be safe until Palestinians are.

In a statement released by the leftist militant group, Khalil Maqdesi, a member of the central committee, called the attack "a natural response to the ongoing racist policies and crimes of the occupation, and it is the occupation that is responsible for the escalation in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine." 

"The PFLP will continue to target every institution of the occupation. No place in Jerusalem should be safe so long as the Palestinian people are not safe. 'Security' cannot be built on the backs of the Palestinian people. The only result of the occupation attacks on Jerusalem will be continued and escalating resistance among the Palestinian masses."

Although the statement stopped short of claiming the attack, which left five Israelis dead, it clarified PFLP's position that "resistance" to Israeli occupation was necessary by any means necessary.

"Resistance is our only path; there is no other way in which Palestinians can liberate their land and achieve their rights. Resistance includes many methods of struggle, including, centrally, armed resistance and armed struggle. Revolutionary violence is necessary in order to confront and overthrow the colonization of our land and the confiscation of our rights," Maqdesi said in the statement.

"We are witnessing lynchings, the targeting of Palestinians, demolishing homes, confiscating land, building colonies, taking unprecedented measures against Muslims' and Christians' holy sites in Jerusalem on a daily basis."

Maqdesi also highlighted in the statement that the Jewish neighborhood of Har Nof where the synagogue attack took place was built on the ruins of the Palestinian village of Deir Yassin, site of one of the worst massacres by Zionist militias in the 1948 war that led to the creation fo Israel and the expulsion of more than 750,000 Palestinians from their homes.

Maqdesi also stressed that despite the attack on the synagogue, the Palestinian struggle is one for national liberation and not against the Jewish people.

"The PFLP is not a religious organization and our resistance is not based on religious convictions. We are struggling to liberate Palestine from a settler colonial project imposed on our people. Occupiers and racists do not belong to the land of Palestine; there are, and must be, consequences and repercussions for the theft of our land and our rights."

"The PFLP also wants to send its message to a billion and a half Muslim brothers and sisters that our fight is not with Jews and is not based on religion; it is about justice, liberation and return to the homeland, and this is your struggle," he said in the statement.

"Our message today to the Jewish people around the world is that the Palestinian-Israeli conflict was never a conflict between Muslims and Jews. Palestine has embraced the Jewish community for hundreds of years. What stands between us is this colonial project." 

"We know that thousands of Jews around the world are true and genuine voices for the struggle, leading boycott movements and joining the Palestinian struggle for liberation on a daily basis. We salute each and every one of them," he added.

The PFLP on Wednesday and Thursday organized celebrations throughout Gaza Strip for the attack. 

They raised Palestinian and PFLP flags as well as posters of the two Palestinians who carried out the attacks while handing out sweets.

PFLP central committee member Sameer Bakir said on the occasion: "Everyone was waiting for who can stop this cancer growing in Jerusalem."

"The Palestinian presidency's condemnation of the operation which came as a natural response to the menacing of settlers and excessive crime is deplorable," he added, stressing the larger context of Israeli colonization and discrimination against Palestinians in Jerusalem.

PFLP leader in the Gaza Strip city of Khan Yunis Hani al-Thawabta, meanwhile, said that armed resistance is the only path to freeing all Palestinian land.

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Jerusalem Synagogue Attack: Motivation Was Not Religion But Revenge For 1948 Massacre, Says PFLP


“Look, Palestinian youth in Jerusalem, they don’t just wake up one morning and grab a knife and say, ‘I want to kill the first Israeli that I see,’” said Khalid Maqdesi, spokesperson and member of the PFLP’s Central Committee. “This is the result of daily oppression that Palestinians are facing every hour, every minute of their life. … They’re going to resist and that’s how we read this operation.”

Two men who were reportedly members of the PFLP’s armed wing, the Abu Ali Mustafa Brigades, attacked the synagogue during morning prayers with meat cleavers and a gun Tuesday. 

“This synagogue is an institution we don’t look at it from a religious perspective. This institution was built on confiscated Palestinian land,” Maqdesi said. “Settlers and soldiers are legitimate targets as far as the PFLP is concerned..."

The synagogue is just minutes away from a former Palestinian village, now remembered as the site of the “Deir Yassin massacre.” An Israeli offensive in 1948 killed more than 100 of the village’s estimated 400 residents. The massacre happened during a time of Palestinian unity and is remembered as a turning point in the conflict. It is not known if the attackers were aware of the synagogue’s history.

Profile: Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)


The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) was formed as a resistance movement by the late George Habash after the occupation of the West Bank by Israel in 1967.

Combining Arab nationalism with Marxist-Leninist ideology, the PFLP saw the destruction of Israel as integral to its struggle to remove Western capitalism from the Middle East...

It boycotted Palestinian elections in 1996, but three years later the PFLP accepted the formation of the Palestine Authority and sought to join Yasser Arafat's administration.

The group's deputy secretary general and former military wing commander, Abu Ali Mustafa, was allowed by the Israel authorities to return to the West Bank from Syria.

Considered a moderate within the group, Mustafa succeeded the ailing Habash in 2000. However, he was killed the following year when an Israeli military helicopter fired rockets at the PFLP's office in Ramallah - a sign, said some analysts, of how Israel saw the PFLP as a continuing force...

Although the PFLP has in the past called for the "liberation" of all of historic Palestine, the group's national congress declared in 2000 that it accepted the "new realities" created by the Oslo accords could not be ignored.

It instead sought the establishment of a Palestinian state with Jerusalem as its capital, the withdrawal of Israeli soldiers to the 1967 borders, the dismantling of Jewish settlements on occupied territory, and the right of return for Palestinian refugees.

However, in 2010 Saadat warned against peace talks with Israel and said the Middle East conflict could only be resolved through the creation of a state shared by Palestinians and Jews.

He said negotiations were "nothing but a cover for the continuation of an Israeli policy built on the continuation of occupation".

Occupation is responsible for escalation in Jerusalem


“The operation today in Jerusalem is a natural response to the ongoing racist policies and crimes of the occupation, and it is the occupation that is responsible for the escalation in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine. We are witnessing lynchings, the targeting of Palestinians, demolishing homes, confiscating land, building colonies, taking unprecedented measures against Muslims’ and Christians’ holy sites in Jerusalem on a daily basis,” said Khalil Maqdesi, member of the Central Committee of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine.

“Every day, thousands of supporters of the PFLP – and our entire Palestinian people – resist occupation in Jerusalem and throughout Palestine. There will be more of these kinds of actions so long as the occupier’s assault continues,” Maqdesi said. “The PFLP will continue to target every institution of the occupation. No place in Jerusalem should be safe so long as the Palestinian people are not safe. ‘Security’ cannot be built on the backs of the Palestinian people. The only result of the occupation attacks on Jerusalem will be continued and escalating resistance among the Palestinian masses.”

“Resistance is our only path; there is no other way in which Palestinians can liberate their land and achieve their rights. Resistance includes many methods of struggle, including, centrally, armed resistance and armed struggle. Revolutionary violence is necessary in order to confront and overthrow the colonization of our land and the confiscation of our rights,” said Maqdesi.

“Oppressed people are determined to seek their freedom. It is the responsibility of the so-called ‘international community’ to hold Israel accountable for its attacks on the Palestinian people. It is the occupier who should be labeled ‘inhuman’. Instead, their settlement building, their killings, their mass attacks on Palestinian rights are met with approval and silence by the United States and the European Union, who have shown themselves to be consistently on the side of Israel, on the side of colonialism and imperialist hegemony,” said Maqdesi.

“What is being called ‘Har Nof’ was in fact built on the ruins of the village of Deir Yassin, ethnically cleansed in 1948 and hundreds of Palestinians slaughtered at the hands of the Haganah and Zionist terror organizations, as they expelled hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their land – refugees who have been struggling to return to their land, and to liberate their land, for over 66 years,” Maqdesi said.

“The PFLP is not a religious organization and our resistance is not based on religious convictions. We are struggling to liberate Palestine from a settler colonial project imposed on our people. Occupiers and racists do not belong to the land of Palestine; there are, and must be, consequences and repercussions for the theft of our land and our rights,” said Maqdesi.

“The spontaneous response and demonstrations by the Palestinian people from Beddawi refugee camp to Dheisheh refugee camp to Gaza, and even on social media, the masses outside and inside Palestine, who chanted for Ghassan and Oday Abu Jamal, embraced the Palestinian armed resistance and the path of liberation,” said Maqdesi.

“The response of the occupation that we are expecting is a criminal one – this is the nature of the occupation. Arresting the entire Abu Jamal family, threatening them with orders to demolish their homes, terrorizing the entire neighborhood of Jabal al-Mukabbir, which they blocked in with concrete blocks; beating the brothers of the martyrs – these are the people that we must embrace, protect, and care for, in the face of the occupier’s attacks,” said Maqdesi.

“Our message to the Palestinian people inside Palestine and in exile is that you have maintained your resilience and resistance to the occupier for 66 years. You are strong and have the ability to continue on the path of struggle. No power can liquidate your cause. The PFLP reaffirms its commitment to you, and your cause, and your rights. We call upon all Palestinian political forces to unify under the banner of the Palestinian heroic people, to protect their sacrifices, and unite to march forward toward a new stage and a new intifada,” said Maqdesi.

“The PFLP is committed to redirecting and recentering the compass of the region and its people on the central issue – towards Palestine, towards Jerusalem, confronting Zionism and imperialism; away from sectarian wars and chaos in the region. Palestine is still the issue, and Jerusalem is at the heart of this struggle,” Maqdesi said. “Today, the PFLP has a message to the Arab people, that your battle is with imperialism and Zionism and not with each other, and that the fragmentation of the Arab people can only benefit the occupier who is colonizing your beloved Palestine. The masses must awaken and shake the collective consciousness of the Arab nation to confront the real enemy.”

“The PFLP also wants to send its message to a billion and a half Muslim brothers and sisters that our fight is not with Jews and is not based on religion; it is about justice, liberation and return to the homeland, and this is your struggle,” said Maqdesi.

“Our message today to the Jewish people around the world is that the Palestinian-Israeli conflict was never a conflict between Muslims and Jews. Palestine has embraced the Jewish community for hundreds of years. What stands between us is this colonial project. We know that thousands of Jews around the world are true and genuine voices for the struggle, leading boycott movements and joining the Palestinian struggle for liberation on a daily basis. We salute each and every one of them. And for those Jews who are misled by the Zionist discourse, Israel is nothing but a deathtrap for both Jews and Arabs. Racism can never resolve conflicts, and apartheid is not a solution. You must stand by the side of the oppressed, and not the oppressor; raise your voice against the Zionist criminals who are oppressing our people in your name,” Maqdesi said.

“As for the threats of Netanyahu and Yaalon to our people,” Maqdesi said that they are “worthless and carry no weight and reflect a racist settler mindset that thinks that through coercion and oppression we will become silent and defeated. The battle with the occupation will not be limited to Jerusalem. It is going to expand to every inch of Palestine, and through the borders of Palestine. Today, also, the PFLP wants to send a message to the solidarity movement with Palestine, to intensify their efforts and their struggle to support the resistance on the path of establishing a democratic Palestine where all people live in equality and freedom.”