60 Years is enough!
Take Handala to the Streets!!
“Handala was
born to survive… I will continue within him even after I die.”- Naji Al-Ali
On May 15, the international community will take to the streets to mark Al-Nakba
or the the defining moment in 1948, when two thirds of the
indigenous population of Palestine was ethnically Catastrophe, cleansed for the
establishment of the Jewish state of Israel. This day will be an
important opportunity to demand that the legally recognized Right to
Return for Palestinian refugees is upheld and that all Palestinians are
allowed to return to their homes, land and families from which they have been
exiled for 60 years.
Art has always accompanied political struggle and revolution. In the
face of oppression, and seemingly insurmountable odds, art and culture holds
communities together, often at great sacrifice. Handala, Naji Al-Ali's iconic little cartoon boy, a Palestinian refugee, stands as
a testament to the incredible ability of the Palestinian people to resist the
daily assaults by Israel on their ability to live a viable life and stand firm
in their steadfast demand for self determination. Handala beautifully
and powerfully reminds the world that the Palestinian people will never give up
their right to return
Throughout 2008, we envision
a sea of Handalas taking to the
streets and taking over global television screens as the international community stands with the Palestinian people. To enable this to happen we
have created easy to use downloadable images of Handala in a variety
formats including:
- A small pdf for hand held Handalas or face masks, widow posters or posters that kids can carry,
- Medium and large pdfs for stick posters, cutouts, and banners.
- Stencil templates
- And instructions for building a large scale and lightweight Handala puppet.
The website www.handala.org will also have background information on Naji Al
Ali’s and his Handala image, 100 cartoons, a fact sheet on the Right
of Return and links to international and national solidarity efforts that
are aligned with the calls of the Palestinian Popular Conference and the
Palestine call for Boycott, Divestments and Sanctions.
Key Follow up: All we ask in return is that anyone using the image at
the protests on May 15 or throughout the year, drop us an email afterward, commenting
(250 words max) on your experience using the images along with two or three
images of your action with Handala to put up on the website!!
To send photos,
comments, for more information about this project, or if you have any problems
with downloads, get in touch with us! handala6040@yahoo.com
Endorsed by:
the US Palestinian Popular Conference, the International Jewish
Solidarity Network and the Local Nakba Committee
Dear Colleague,
The very fragile truce between Israel and Hamas concerning Gaza which began on 19 June can easily be broken at any time. Calm will be maintained only if it is a prelude to further positive development. There are many in Israel, in Gaza, and in the West Bank who think the truce will be short lived. On 24 June, there were three rockets fired from Gaza on the Israeli Border town of Sderot causing no injuries but constituting a breach in the five-day truce. Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for the attack saying it was an answer to the Israeli military raid in the West Bank city of Nablus in which two Islamic Jihad members were killed.
Thus, it is important to try to structure the truce with some bold steps to restore the economy, to offer possibilities for a better life in Gaza, and to break the cycle of violence and counter violence.
I am sending a brief article on the truce as the start of a New Deal. I propose the creation of a Gaza Development Authority. I would be pleased if you could share the article so that we can use the opportunity of the truce to build a momentum for cooperative economic structures.
Sincerely, Rene Wadlow, Representative to the United Nations, Geneva,
Association of World Citizens
Israeli-Hamas Truce : A New Deal
Rene Wadlow *
The truce between the Israeli government and the Hamas-led authorities of the Gaza strip began on Thursday morning 19 June 2008. The truce was mediated by Egypt and holds the possibility for new relationships if strong follow-up measures are taken quickly. There are many in Israel, in Gaza, and in the Fatah-led West Bank who believe that the truce will be short lived and will not change the deep divisions among Palestinians and between Palestinians and Israelis.
Nevertheless, after a year-long economic embargo, frequent Israeli air strikes and incursions, and a steady rain from Gaza of rocket fire on near-by Israeli cities, the truce opens some doors for creative action.
Measures to re-establish and develop the economy of Gaza are important as the embargo has crippled and in some cases destroyed manufacturing and agriculture, much of which was destined for the Israeli market. The Gaza Strip is 25 miles long and 6 miles wide with some one and a half million people who depend on imports for most basic goods and on export for livelihood. The Israeli blockade has led to a very difficult economic and social situation in Gaza with high unemployment, poor health facilities, a lack of food and other basic supplies.
There is also a need to break the psychological barriers which can be overcome by cooperative economic measures. A possibility for socio-economic recovery of Gaza would be a trans-national economic effort that would being together energy, knowledge and money from Gaza, Israel, the West Bank and Egypt .
A possible model is the trans-state efforts of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) of the US New Deal. The TVA was a path-making measure to overcome the deep economic depression of the 1930s in the USA. In May 1933, the Roosevelt administration and the Congress created the TVA. In his message to Congress, Roosevelt suggested that the Authority should be a “corporation clothed with the power of Government but possessed of the flexibility and initiative of a private enterprise. It should be charged with the broadest duty of planning for the proper use, conservation and development of the natural resources of the Tennessee River drainage basin and its adjoining territory for the general social and economic welfare of the Nation…This in a true sense is a return to the spirit and vision of the pioneer. If we are successful here, we can march on, step by step, in the development of other great natural territorial units.”
The central idea back of the TVA was that it should do many things, all connected with each other by the concrete realities of a damaged river full of damaged people. To do all these well, it had to be a public corporation: public, because it served the public interest and a corporation rather than a government department, so that it could initiate the flexible responsible management of a well-run private corporation. As Stringfellow Barr wrote in Citizens of the World “The great triumph of the TVA was not the building of the great dams. Great dams had been built before. Its greatest triumph was that it not only taught the Valley people but insisted on learning from them too. It placed its vast technical knowledge in the pot with the human wisdom, the local experience, the courage, and the hopes of the Valley people, and sought solutions which neither the Valley folk nor the TVA technicians could ever have found alone. It respected persons.”
The Gaza strip is not one of the great natural territorial units of the world, and respect for persons has been in short supply. However, only a New Deal is likely to break the cycle of violence and counter-violence. A Gaza Development Authority, an independent socio-economic corporation devoted to multi-sector and trans-national planning and administration would be an important start in a new deal of the cards. Such a Gaza Development Authority would obviously have Hamas members but also persons chosen for their expertise as well as persons from community organizations.
The Israeli-Hamas truce must be accompanied by strong socio-economic structures which can hold during periods of inevitable future tensions. A Gaza Development Authority can be a framework for these strong follow up measures to the truce.
Rene Wadlow, Representative to the United Nations, Geneva, Association of World Citizens and editor of the on-line journal of world politics and culture,
www.transnational-perspectives.org
Posted by: Rene Wadlow | June 27, 2008 at 02:44 AM