Saturday, April 28, 2012

BDS Red Hot Chili Peppers urged to abandon Israel gig

Open letter from Lebanon to the Red Hot Chili Peppers: “Come to Lebanon, but not to Israel: Until All Palestinians Have the Right of Return"

25 April 2012

Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers,

Last November you played at a benefit for Palestinian refugee children at Cafe de Paris in London. Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. Fighting for the implementation of this right is the central tenet of the Palestinian Boycott National Committee and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI). As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.
Come to Lebanon on September 6th, but honor the 2005call from Palestinian Civil Society, and do not go to Israel on September 10th. Come to Lebanon and learn of the oppression we have also endured at the hands of the Israeli army and its collaborators; unlearn the myths Israel propagates. The soil that Arabs have cultivated for centuries, in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, has been militarily occupied for decades by Israel. The Palestinians have been denied their right to return to their land solely because they are not Jewish. The essence of Israeli colonialism in the region is about control over the land using military mechanisms that also prevent refugees from returning. Your participation in last year's event supporting Palestinian refugees suggests you sympathize with Palestinian refugees' struggle for the right of return.

Numerous bands and artists have already heeded Palestinian Civil Society’s 2005 Call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel as a reaction to its occupation, apartheid and denial of Palestinian refugees inalienable right to return to their homes, as stipulated in UN resolution 194. Music cannot be isolated from politics. A visit to Israel is viewed by Israel, and internationally, as implicit support for Israeli policies and indifference to the victims of Israeli crimes. Ilan Pappe, an anti-Zionist Israeli historian and strong supporter of the BDS, recently wrote: “The cultural image in Israel feeds the political decision in the west to support unconditionally the Israeli destruction of Palestine and the Palestinians.”

We ask you to follow in the steps of Cat Power, the Pixies, Gorillaz Sound System, Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron, Carlos Santana, Bono/U2, Devendra Banhart, among others, who did not perform in Israel, and to support the call for boycott that was recently embraced by Roger Waters and Pete Seeger. In the letter Roger Waters wrote announcing his support of a cultural boycott of Israel, he said:

My conviction is born in the idea that all people deserve basic human rights. My position is not anti-Semitic. This is not an attack on the people of Israel.

This is, however, a plea to my colleagues in the music industry, and also to artists in other disciplines, to join this cultural boycott.

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls...

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then. Most recently:

1. 2006: More than 1000 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel in the 33-day most aggressive onslaught by Israel. The July 2006 war was regarded as a crime against humanity and a war crime by a tribunal of international judges.

2. 2006 to present: Millions of Israeli cluster bombs (from the July 2006 war) and land mines (from the 22-year occupation) still contaminate Lebanese agricultural land. These bombs continue to kill and injure people.

3. May 15, 2011: Israeli soldiers shot and killed 11 civilians and injured more than 100. These unarmed civilians were on the Lebanese border with Israel, and had been calling for their legal and legitimate right to return to their homes in Palestine.

4. 1948 to present: Israel continues to deprive 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon from their right of return to their homes and land and villages from which they were forced to leave at gun point in 1948. The refugees are not allowed to return only because they are not Jewish!

In response to Israel's Freedom Flotilla massacre, the prominent Scottish writer, Iain Banks, wrote in the Guardian that the best way for international artists, writers and academics to “convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation” is “simply by having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.”

We urge you not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.

We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people's struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon

Read the full article, here.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Jews in the News: Jews Rock Hall of Fame, A Minyan of Marvel ...

Jews in the News: Jews Rock Hall of Fame, A Minyan of Marvel Heroes tagged:

Posted by Nate Bloom in Arts & Culture

Nate Bloom blogs on this week’s Jews in the News.

Jews Rock the Hall of Fame

Last December, when the inductions for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame were announced, I wrote a similar column item to the one below. If you missed that item, here it is again with some updates. The induction ceremony took place on April 15 and will be televised on HBO on Saturday evening, May 5 (many encore showings).

Individual inductees: (1) singer-songwriter LAURA NYRO (1947-97), was born Laura Nigro, the child of secular parents. Her maternal grandparents were Russian Jewish, as was her father’s mother. Her paternal grandfather was Italian Catholic. Nyro wrote very well-crafted songs that others turned into big hits, including “Wedding Bell Blues,” “Stoned Soul Picnic,” and “Eli’s Coming.” Ovarian cancer claimed her. She was inducted by a tearful BETTE MIDLER, 66, who said at the ceremony: “In a world of imitators . . . she was a complete original. She was an ornament on the Earth.”  (2) DON KIRSHNER (1934-2011), inducted as a “non-performer,” he was the genius producer/executive who was critical to the creation of most of the best rock music of the early-to-mid ‘60s. His stable of in-house songwriters included CAROLE KING, NEIL SEDAKA, BARRY MANN, CYNTHIA WEIL, and NEIL DIAMOND. He created the Archies and the Monkees rock bands. King, 70, inducted him, saying: “He was one of the most significant influences on popular music in the 20th century.”

Bands: (1) The Red Hot Chili Peppers, a hard rockin’ band: the original line-up (and Hall inductees) includes two Jewish members: JACK IRONS, 49, the original drummer, and HILLEL SLOVAK, the original lead guitarist. Born (1962) in Israel, the son of Holocaust survivors, Slovak’s great talent was overwhelmed by drugs and he died (1988) of an overdose. (2) The Beastie Boys, the best “white” rap group of all-time, its line-up has always been: Adam Yauch, 47, ADAM HOROVITZ, 45, and MIKE DIAMOND, 46. Although the band has sometimes touched on Jewish themes– the ‘two Adams’ come with asterisks. Horovitz is the son of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother, while Yauch is the son of a Jewish mother and a non-Jewish father. Both were raised secular. Yauch, long a devout Buddhist, is sadly fighting cancer, and wasn’t able to be at the ceremony. (3) Guns ‘N Roses: STEVEN ADLER, 46, the group’s original virtuoso drummer. He’s battled a serious drug problem for decades.

A Minyan of Marvel Heroes

Opening on May 4, is “The Avengers,” which is based on a Marvel Comic created by co-created STAN LEE, 89, who has a cameo in the flick.  A number of the most famous Marvel heroes are assembled to fight a new, terrible enemy. Robert Downey, Jr. appears for third time in a film as “Iron Man.” SCARLETT JOHANSSON, 27, who acted with Downey in “Iron Man 2,” reprises her role as Natasha Romanoff, AKA the Black Widow.  This flick has pretty good advance “buzz.”

TV Updates and Premieres

I previously wrote that the new HBO series, “Girls,” has four young women as its lead characters: series creator LENA DUNHAM, 25, whose mother is Jewish, plays Hannah Horvath; ZOSIA MAMET, 23, the daughter of playwright DAVID MAMET, 64, plays Jewish character Shoshanna Shapiro; Allison Williams, the daughter of NBC anchor Brian Williams, plays Marnie Michaels; and I just found out that JEMIMA KIRKE, 27, who plays Shapiro’s English cousin, Jessa Johansson, is the daughter of a non-Jewish father (former “Bad Company” drummer Simon Kirke) and a Jewish mother, LORRAINE DELLAL, 60.  Lorraine’s father, JACK DELLAL, 83, is a famous and very wealthy British real estate developer whose parents were Iraqi Jews. Lorraine’s mother, ZEHAVA HELMER, is a former Israeli stewardess.  The premiere Israeli center for dance, the Suzanne Dellal Center in Tel Aviv, was funded by Jack in memory of Lorraine’s sister, who died in childhood.

“The Conversation” is a talk show on the Lifetime network that began on April 26. New episodes air Thursday at 11PM. Host Amanda De Cadenet, who is famous in Britain, interviews famous women.  The premiere show guests were Jane Fonda, Zoe Saldana, GWYNETH PALTROW, and SARAH SILVERMAN (this episode can be seen on the Lifetime web site). Other famous Jewish woman scheduled to appear on the eight-episode series include DIANE VON FURSTENBERG (May 17), DONNA KARAN (June 7) and IVANKA TRUMP (June 14).  A reviewer for “USA Today” wrote:  “‘The Conversation’ is a series that’s smart, often funny and not the least bit cheesy. (unlike much Lifetime programming).”

Nate Bloom writes a weekly column on Jewish celebrities, broadly defined, that appears in the Atlanta Jewish Times, the Cleveland Jewish News, the American Israelite of Cincinnati, the Detroit Jewish News, and the New Jersey Jewish Standard. It also appears bi-weekly in j., the Jewish news weekly of northern California. Most of the items in Bloom’s weekly newspaper column differ from the items in his bi-weekly column on interfaith celebrities for InterfaithFamily.com. If you wish to contact Nate Bloom, e-mail him at middleoftheroad1@aol.com .  The author welcomes questions and celebrity “tips,” especially about people you personally know.


Thursday, April 26, 2012

Campaign to urge Red Hot Chili Peppers to cancel Tel Aviv gig ...

Boycott, divestment and sanctions activists and supporters around the world continue to urge popular US rock group the Red Hot Chili Peppers to cancel their gig in Tel Aviv, scheduled for September.

The US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel has been at the core of social media campaigns directed towards the Red Hot Chili Peppers, on Twitter (directing activists to tweet their boycott support to the @chilipeppers account) and on the RCHP’s facebook page. Israeli activists with Boycott From Within! have drafted a letter to the band, telling them not to cross the international picket line.

There is also an online letter by Israeli activist Tali Shapiro that is quickly gathering signatures of support, encouraging the RHCP to reject playing for an audience segregated by Israeli apartheid policies. “I and my friends, who are prohibited from from attending your show by military law and force, will be happy to rock out, once equality is practiced in this region,” the letter states.

Open letter by BDS activists in Lebanon

And the campaign continues to gather momentum. Today, BDS activists in Lebanon put out an open letter encouraging the band to cancel their Israel performance and “not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.” 

If RHCP cancel their gig and respect the 2005 Palestinian-led call for boycott until Israel abides by international law, it would be huge — and the band would join the growing list of artists and musicians who have decided not to cross the boycott line, including U2, the Pixies, Cat Power and Elvis Costello. 

Online daily Al-Akhbar English reported today that RCHP performed at a fundraiser last year for the London-based Hoping Foundation, which supports projects for Palestinian refugee children. The report stated that the band helped raise more than $500,000. 

In their open letter, printed in full in the Al-Akhbar article, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon said: 

Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. … As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.

As we reported back in November, the Lebanese BDS campaign had been attacked and litigated against by a concert promoter who was unhappy when BDS activists had protested a concert by a musician who had performed in Israel prior to the Beirut gig. But despite intimidation, Lebanese BDS activists remain a powerful and influential group. Their letter continues:

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls…

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then.

… We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people’s struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

End "Israeli" War Crimes: Settlers Raise Israel's Flag On Top Of ...

Illegal Jewish Squatters Desecrate the Ibrahimi Mosque
by Saed Bannoura

A group of extremist Israeli settlers raised Israeli flags on top of the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the southern West Bank city of Hebron- the fourth holiest sites in Islam, for the first time ever since Hebron fell under Israeli occupation in 1967.

 The Milad News Agency reported that head of the Waqf and Endowment Department in Hebron, Zeid Al-Ja’bary, slammed the provocative move and stated that “this is an attack against the religious and historic stature of this site to millions of Muslims around the world”.

He added that this is a “seriously dangerous provocative act” targeting the holy site.

It is worth mentioning that Israeli Prime Minister, and his fundamentalist coalition partners, decided to consider the Ibrahimi Mosque, also referred to as the “Cave of Patriarchs”, as part of the Jewish Heritage sites, a move that was meant to preclude the Palestinian attempt to have the UNESCO officially include the Old City of Hebron on its list of historic and archeological cities.

Hebron Governor, Kamel Hameed, held the Israeli government responsible for provocative acts and attacks carried out by extremist settlers in Hebron.

Hameed told the Milad News Agency that “writing street names in Hebrew, renaming the mosque, and placing iron and electronic gates on its entrances are provocative acts that are meant to prevent the Muslims from entering it”.

He added that the Ibrahimi Mosque “is in the hearts and minds of Millions of Muslims around the world”, and added that Israeli settlers are pushing the region into instability.

Hebron Mayor, Khaled Al Aseely, stated that this act is part of Israel’s violations against Islamic Holy sites and the historic heritage of the region, and falls under Israel’s ongoing violations, including the Israeli decision to consider the mosque as part of the “Jewish heritage sites”, a decision that was rejected by numerous human rights and cultural institutions around the world.

 Source

End "Israeli" War Crimes: Israel army chief: Other nations could ...

Israel's military chief said Thursday that other countries have readied their armed forces for a potential strike against Iran's nuclear sites to keep Tehran from acquiring atomic weapons.

Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz did not specify which nations might be willing to support or take direct action against Iran and have thousands more die for the Israeli agenda. Still, his comments were one of the strongest and he kept a straight poker face.  Does Israel have any support? Does Israel have backing of other countries to strike the Islamic Republic to prevent what it says is from developing nuclear arms.

"The military force is ready," Gantz said. "Not only our forces, but other forces as well."

"We all hope that there will be no necessity to use this force, but we are absolutely sure of its existence," he told The Associated Press, adding that he was not speaking on behalf of any other nation.

Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes, and that it does not aim to develop atomic weapons.

Israel, which views a Iran as an existential threat, has said it will not allow Tehran to acquire a nuclear bomb. It cites Iranian calls for Israel's destruction, but yet in the following video above an 

 

Israel's key ally, the United States, favors diplomacy and economic sanctions and has said military action on Iran's nuclear facilities should only be a last resort if all else fails. U.S. logistical and diplomatic support would likely be crucial to any potential Israeli strike.

Washington and other major powers have imposed a series of crippling economic sanctions while opening a dialogue with Iran.

Gantz said that in his assessment Iran is seeking to develop its "military nuclear capability," but that the Islamic Republic would ultimately bow to international pressure and decide against building a weapon.

The key to that pressure, he said, were sanctions and the threat of a military strike.

Gantz's stance on Iran's intentions appeared to put him at odds with Israel's political leaders, who have staked out a more hardline position. Gantz denied that was the case Thursday, saying there was no internal disagreement over Iran's aims.

But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told CNN on Tuesday that international sanctions have not changed Iran's behavior, and that the country continues to enrich uranium — a key step toward developing a weapon.

The sanctions "haven't rolled back the Iranian program or even stopped it by one iota," Netanyahu said appearing like he can't wait to start war war 3.

 

End "Israeli" War Crimes: Barak told Clinton about plans to Judaize ...

911 Architect Ehud Barak and War Criminal Bill Clinton
by

In "Israel's Strategy to seize Jerusalem, on display for all to see," in the National, Joseph Dana shows the Israeli government plot of purging Palestine:

Ehud Barak is rumoured to have informed former president US Bill Clinton that Israel had no intention of relinquishing sovereign control over Jerusalem and delineating clear borders around the holy city. The Palestinians of East Jerusalem, Mr Barak purportedly told Mr Clinton, were an unfortunate reality that Israel would deal with in due time.

More than a decade later, Israel is demonstrating exactly how it intends to deal with the Palestinians of East Jerusalem. The strategy has a number of fronts: dispossess Palestinians through the creation of national "heritage parks" that lay claim to land through archaeological speculation; deprive Palestinian areas of necessary municipality services; and deny almost every building permit required for natural Palestinian growth in the city. In short, take as much land as possible while making Palestinians' lives as difficult as possible....

Jerusalem remains the beating heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The systematic land reallocation and continuing Palestinian expulsions are perhaps the best examples of Israeli policy in historic Palestine over the past 60 years. Yet, as My Neighbourhood demonstrates [a new short film about Sheikh Jarrah, produced by Just Vision, the production outfit responsible for the successful 2009 documentary Budrus], not all Israelis and Palestinians buy into the hysterical rhetoric of their respective leaders. In fact, increasing numbers prefer to embrace non-traditional methods of co-habituation and nonviolent resistance to combat the sinister forces which surround them.

 Source

End "Israeli" War Crimes: Zio-Nazi group attacks academics critical ...

Zio-Nazi propaganda poster

From Khalid Amayreh

A small supremacist Jewish group is launching a smear campaign against a number of professors and academics on North American campuses for daring to criticize racist Israeli policies against native Palestinians.

The group, called Campus Watch and headed by David Horowitz, an extremist Zionist stalwart, has published advertisements inciting to hatred against a number of prominent professors on American campuses.

The academics are accused of vilifying Israel and of indulging in hate speech that would endanger the very existence of the apartheid Israeli state.

However, it is widely thought that the witch-hunt campaign is aimed first and foremost at silencing legitimate criticisms of murderous and brutal Israeli practices. College campuses are considered the last bastion of liberalism in the United States where right-wing Jewish robber barons and Christian Zionist groups are joining forces to suppress freedom of speech and expression.

Howowitz and his group readily ignore the manifestly Nazi-like discourse in Israel, or what is referred to as Talmudic Nazism, such as denying the very humanity of non-Jews, the genocidal trends harbored by supremacist Jewish groups like Chabad and the nefarious conduct of Jewish settlers in the West Bank.

Last year, the most famous rabbi in Israel, Ovadia Yosef, was quoted as saying during a Sabbath homily that non-Jews are effectively donkeys and that the Almighty created them solely to serve Jews.

"Goyem," Yossef said " were born to serve us."

Yossef is the spiritual mentor of the fundamentalist party, Shas, which represents Jews from the Middle East. He has hundreds of thousands of faithful followers.

A rabbi affiliated with the Chabad cult, was heard on video claiming that a Jew could without the slightest compunction murder a gentile in order to extricate an organ from the victim if the Jew needed one. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cYBsDwjezQI&feature=email

The academics targeted by Horowitz and his so-called "Freedom Center" include the following: Bill Ayers, University of Illinois, Chicago (emeritus); Khalid Abu Alfadl, University of California, Los Angeles, Law School; Hamed Algar, University of California, Berkley; Joseph Massad, Columbia University; Julio Pino, Kent State University, Manljeh Nasserabad, NY University; Carlos Munoze, Jr. University of California, Berkley; Timothy Michell, Columbia University; Abha Sur, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; and William J. Tompson, University of Michigan. Dearborn.

In the advertisement the Horowitz group urged citizens and students to contact the president of local universities and ask them to publicly condemn their faculty's participation in activities deemed anti-Israeli, such as opposing the Israeli lebensraum and ethnic cleansing policies in the West Bank.

Many intellectuals around the world have compared the Israeli approach toward the Palestinians with the Nazi policies in Europe.

Last month, the famous German poet Guenter Grass described Israel as the most dangerous state in the world.

Even liberal Jewish intellectuals made Zionist-Nazi analogies on several occasions. However, such criticisms have utterly failed to redirect Israel toward peace and civility as the Israeli Jewish society continues to drift toward Jewish fascism and jingoism.

This fascism, one of whose manifestations is the current Israeli government which is made up of fanatical and genocidal settlers, is viewed with particular gravity around the world since Israel is widely believed to possess a large stockpile of nuclear weapons. 

Many observers also think the Israeli-American fixation on the Iranian nuclear program is first and foremost intended to divert attention away from Israel's huge nuclear arsenal used to maximize and spread Jewish hegemony and supremacy in the region and beyond.

 Source

End "Israeli" War Crimes: Zionists call for burning “Arab students” at ...

NAZARETH, (PIC)-- A Zionist racist movement has called for the killing of Arab students at Hebrew University in Jerusalem after participation in Tuesday's protest in solidarity with the prisoners in occupation prisons. 

The Zionist movement "Im Tirtzu" published, on Wednesday (25/4), on its website pictures of the Arab students, who participated in the demonstration, titled "On the Independence day Arabs are in solidarity with the terrorists" in reference to their support for Palestinian captives in occupation jails on Nakba anniversary. 

After a while, the website was filled with hate messages against the Palestinian students. Messages like: “They must be burned", "Despicable", "They must be killed”, “Go to Gaza”, “Terrorists”, “This is the Hebrew University not the Arabic University .. go to Beir Zeit” and “They must be expelled from the university."

The Arab MK Hanin Zoubi stated that Arab students' activities at the Hebrew university bothered the racist Zionists, "this is a proof of the fairness of our political position and stands," she said.

She added, in a press statement on Wednesday, that Jewish racism is a sign of political bankruptcy and fear. "Our answer is through political struggle as the way to gain our rights and to foil attempts of the racists to gang up on us," she said.

"Racism in Israel goes beyond hostile policies to legislation for hostility, that is practiced in playgrounds and streets by police and statements made by the clergy," she stressed.

 Source

Campaign to urge Red Hot Chili Peppers to cancel Tel Aviv gig ...

electronicintifada.net

Red Hot Chilli Peppers - Source | Jakalito, Flickr

Boycott, divestment and sanctions activists and supporters around the world continue to urge popular US rock group the Red Hot Chili Peppers to cancel their gig in Tel Aviv, scheduled for September.

The US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel has been at the core of social media campaigns directed towards the Red Hot Chili Peppers, on Twitter (directing activists to tweet their boycott support to the @chilipeppers account) and on the RCHP’s facebook page. Israeli activists with Boycott From Within! have drafted a letter to the band, telling them not to cross the international picket line.

There is also an online letter by Israeli activist Tali Shapiro that is quickly gathering signatures of support, encouraging the RHCP to reject playing for an audience segregated by Israeli apartheid policies. “I and my friends, who are prohibited from from attending your show by military law and force, will be happy to rock out, once equality is practiced in this region,” the letter states.

Open letter by BDS activists in Lebanon

And the campaign continues to gather momentum. Today, BDS activists in Lebanon put out an open letter encouraging the band to cancel their Israel performance and “not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.”

If RHCP cancel their gig and respect the 2005 Palestinian-led call for boycott until Israel abides by international law, it would be huge — and the band would join the growing list of artists and musicians who have decided not to cross the boycott line, including U2, the Pixies, Cat Power and Elvis Costello.

Online daily Al-Akhbar English reported today that RCHP performed at a fundraiser last year for the London-based Hoping Foundation, which supports projects for Palestinian refugee children. The report stated that the band helped raise more than $500,000.

In their open letter, printed in full in the Al-Akhbar article, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon said:

Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. … As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.

As we reported back in November, the Lebanese BDS campaign had been attacked and litigated against by a concert promoter who was unhappy when BDS activists had protested a concert by a musician who had performed in Israel prior to the Beirut gig. But despite intimidation, Lebanese BDS activists remain a powerful and influential group. Their letter continues:

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls…

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then.

… We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people’s struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

No related posts.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Refrain Playing Israel: BDS Lebanon write OPEN LETTER to Red ...




The Red Hot Chili Peppers have been urged to abandon a planned gig in Israel, after it emerged that they performed at a pro-Palestinian gig that raised over US$500,000.  Their gig is thus seen as a "normalization" attempt.  



See more about normalization here: http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1850

The superstar band, who have won seven Grammy Awards and sold over 65 million albums worldwide, are due to perform in Tel Aviv on September 10, days after gigs in Beirut and Istanbul.

Activists are urging them to cancel the show in the Jewish state, pointing out that the group has previously claimed to support the Palestinian cause.

In November last year the band performed at a variety show for the Hoping Foundation in London, raising £392,000 (US$630,000).

The Foundation supports projects for the children of Palestinian refugees who were displaced when Israel was violently created in 1948.

In an open letter to the band, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel (CBSI) in Lebanon urged the band to cancel the concert.

"Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land...As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel," the letter says.

The "Californication" stars have never played in Israel before and Asad Ghsoub, a CBSI spokesperson, called on the band to continue its support of the Palestinians.

“The fact that the Red Hot Chili Peppers have recently done a fundraiser for Palestine in London means they are aware of what is happening and are attuned to the Palestinian question. We expect more from them,” he said.

Supporters of Palestinian human rights have long urged international musicians to boycott Israel, which they accuse of being an apartheid state for its harsh occupation of the West Bank and belligerent policies towards native Palestinians.

Among those who have declared that they will not play in the country until abuses of Palestinians end are U2, Roger Waters and Gorillaz.

Ghsoub said the concert would provide legitimacy to the oppression of Palestinians and said if they were to cancel it would make a "huge" difference.

"The Israelis are using this to say everything is fine and to whitewash whatever they are doing [to the Palestinians]."

"(If they canceled) it would be a huge event. If artists saw that the Red Hot Chili Peppers did not go it could encourage others not to go."

In January Belgian singer Lara Fabian cancelled a gig in Lebanon after it emerged that she had sung at a Zionist campaign celebrating the 60th anniversary of the creation of Israel, known by Palestinians as the Nakba– the catastrophe.

French-Moroccan comedian Gad Elmaleh also pulled out of a planned trip to Lebanon in 2008 after allegations that he had been supportive of the Israeli army.

The full text of the letter can be read below.

Open letter from Lebanon to the Red Hot Chili Peppers: “Come to Lebanon, but not to Israel: Until All Palestinians Have the Right of Return"

25 April 2012

Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers,

Last November you played at a benefit for Palestinian refugee children at Cafe de Paris in London. Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. Fighting for the implementation of this right is the central tenet of the Palestinian Boycott National Committee and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI). As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.
Come to Lebanon on September 6th, but honor the 2005call from Palestinian Civil Society, and do not go to Israel on September 10th. Come to Lebanon and learn of the oppression we have also endured at the hands of the Israeli army and its collaborators; unlearn the myths Israel propagates. The soil that Arabs have cultivated for centuries, in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, has been militarily occupied for decades by Israel. The Palestinians have been denied their right to return to their land solely because they are not Jewish. The essence of Israeli colonialism in the region is about control over the land using military mechanisms that also prevent refugees from returning. Your participation in last year's event supporting Palestinian refugees suggests you sympathize with Palestinian refugees' struggle for the right of return.

Numerous bands and artists have already heeded Palestinian Civil Society’s 2005 Call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel as a reaction to its occupation, apartheid and denial of Palestinian refugees inalienable right to return to their homes, as stipulated in UN resolution 194. Music cannot be isolated from politics. A visit to Israel is viewed by Israel, and internationally, as implicit support for Israeli policies and indifference to the victims of Israeli crimes. Ilan Pappe, an anti-Zionist Israeli historian and strong supporter of the BDS, recently wrote: “The cultural image in Israel feeds the political decision in the west to support unconditionally the Israeli destruction of Palestine and the Palestinians.”

We ask you to follow in the steps of Cat Power, the Pixies, Gorillaz Sound System, Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron, Carlos Santana, Bono/U2, Devendra Banhart, among others, who did not perform in Israel, and to support the call for boycott that was recently embraced by Roger Waters and Pete Seeger. In the letter Roger Waters wrote announcing his support of a cultural boycott of Israel, he said:

My conviction is born in the idea that all people deserve basic human rights. My position is not anti-Semitic. This is not an attack on the people of Israel.

This is, however, a plea to my colleagues in the music industry, and also to artists in other disciplines, to join this cultural boycott.

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls...

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then. Most recently:

1. 2006: More than 1000 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel in the 33-day most aggressive onslaught by Israel. The July 2006 war was regarded as a crime against humanity and a war crime by a tribunal of international judges.

2. 2006 to present: Millions of Israeli cluster bombs (from the July 2006 war) and land mines (from the 22-year occupation) still contaminate Lebanese agricultural land. These bombs continue to kill and injure people.

3. May 15, 2011: Israeli soldiers shot and killed 11 civilians and injured more than 100. These unarmed civilians were on the Lebanese border with Israel, and had been calling for their legal and legitimate right to return to their homes in Palestine.

4. 1948 to present: Israel continues to deprive 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon from their right of return to their homes and land and villages from which they were forced to leave at gun point in 1948. The refugees are not allowed to return only because they are not Jewish!

In response to Israel's Freedom Flotilla massacre, the prominent Scottish writer, Iain Banks, wrote in the Guardian that the best way for international artists, writers and academics to “convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation” is “simply by having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.”

We urge you not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.

We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people's struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon


Red Hot Chili Peppers urged to abandon Israel gig | Al Akhbar English

The Red Hot Chili Peppers have been urged to abandon a planned gig in Israel, after it emerged that they performed at a pro-Palestinian gig that raised over US$500,000.

The superstar band, who have won seven Grammy Awards and sold over 65 million albums worldwide, are due to perform in Tel Aviv on September 10, days after gigs in Beirut and Istanbul.

Activists are urging them to cancel the show in the Jewish state, pointing out that the group has previously claimed to support the Palestinian cause.

In November last year the band performed at a variety show for the Hoping Foundation in London, raising £392,000 (US$630,000).

The Foundation supports projects for the children of Palestinian refugees who were displaced when Israel was violently created in 1948.

In an open letter to the band, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel (CBSI) in Lebanon urged the band to cancel the concert.

"Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land...As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel," the letter says.

The "Californication" stars have never played in Israel before and Asad Ghsoub, a CBSI spokesperson, called on the band to continue its support of the Palestinians.

“The fact that the Red Hot Chili Peppers have recently done a fundraiser for Palestine in London means they are aware of what is happening and are attuned to the Palestinian question. We expect more from them,” he said.

Supporters of Palestinian human rights have long urged international musicians to boycott Israel, which they accuse of being an apartheid state for its harsh occupation of the West Bank and belligerent policies towards native Palestinians.

Among those who have declared that they will not play in the country until abuses of Palestinians end are U2, Roger Waters and Gorillaz.

Ghsoub said the concert would provide legitimacy to the oppression of Palestinians and said if they were to cancel it would make a "huge" difference.

"The Israelis are using this to say everything is fine and to whitewash whatever they are doing [to the Palestinians]."

"(If they canceled) it would be a huge event. If artists saw that the Red Hot Chili Peppers did not go it could encourage others not to go."

In January Belgian singer Lara Fabian cancelled a gig in Lebanon after it emerged that she had sung at a Zionist campaign celebrating the 60th anniversary of the creation of Israel, known by Palestinians as the Nakba – the catastrophe.

French-Moroccan comedian Gad Elmaleh also pulled out of a planned trip to Lebanon in 2008 after allegations that he had been supportive of the Israeli army.

The full text of the letter can be read below.

Open letter from Lebanon to the Red Hot Chili Peppers: “Come to Lebanon, but not to Israel: Until All Palestinians Have the Right of Return"

25 April 2012

Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers,

Last November you played at a benefit for Palestinian refugee children at Cafe de Paris in London. Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. Fighting for the implementation of this right is the central tenet of the Palestinian Boycott National Committee and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI). As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.

Come to Lebanon on September 6th, but honor the 2005 call from Palestinian Civil Society, and do not go to Israel on September 10th. Come to Lebanon and learn of the oppression we have also endured at the hands of the Israeli army and its collaborators; unlearn the myths Israel propagates. The soil that Arabs have cultivated for centuries, in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, has been militarily occupied for decades by Israel. The Palestinians have been denied their right to return to their land solely because they are not Jewish. The essence of Israeli colonialism in the region is about control over the land using military mechanisms that also prevent refugees from returning. Your participation in last year's event supporting Palestinian refugees suggests you sympathize with Palestinian refugees' struggle for the right of return.

Numerous bands and artists have already heeded Palestinian Civil Society’s 2005 Call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel as a reaction to its occupation, apartheid and denial of Palestinian refugees inalienable right to return to their homes, as stipulated in UN resolution 194. Music cannot be isolated from politics. A visit to Israel is viewed by Israel, and internationally, as implicit support for Israeli policies and indifference to the victims of Israeli crimes. Ilan Pappe, an anti-Zionist Israeli historian and strong supporter of the BDS, recently wrote: “The cultural image in Israel feeds the political decision in the west to support unconditionally the Israeli destruction of Palestine and the Palestinians.”

We ask you to follow in the steps of Cat Power, the Pixies, Gorillaz Sound System, Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron, Carlos Santana, Bono/U2, Devendra Banhart, among others, who did not perform in Israel, and to support the call for boycott that was recently embraced by Roger Waters and Pete Seeger. In the letter Roger Waters wrote announcing his support of a cultural boycott of Israel, he said:

My conviction is born in the idea that all people deserve basic human rights. My position is not anti-Semitic. This is not an attack on the people of Israel.

This is, however, a plea to my colleagues in the music industry, and also to artists in other disciplines, to join this cultural boycott.

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls...

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then. Most recently:

1. 2006: More than 1000 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel in the 33-day most aggressive onslaught by Israel. The July 2006 war was regarded as a crime against humanity and a war crime by a tribunal of international judges.

2. 2006 to present: Millions of Israeli cluster bombs (from the July 2006 war) and land mines (from the 22-year occupation) still contaminate Lebanese agricultural land. These bombs continue to kill and injure people.

3. May 15, 2011: Israeli soldiers shot and killed 11 civilians and injured more than 100. These unarmed civilians were on the Lebanese border with Israel, and had been calling for their legal and legitimate right to return to their homes in Palestine.

4. 1948 to present: Israel continues to deprive 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon from their right of return to their homes and land and villages from which they were forced to leave at gun point in 1948. The refugees are not allowed to return only because they are not Jewish!

In response to Israel's Freedom Flotilla massacre, the prominent Scottish writer, Iain Banks, wrote in the Guardian that the best way for international artists, writers and academics to “convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation” is “simply by having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.”

We urge you not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.

We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people's struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon

(Al-Akhbar)

Red Hot Chili Peppers urged to abandon Israel gig | US Campaign ...

Al-Akhbar

The Red Hot Chili Peppers have been urged to abandon a planned gig in Israel, after it emerged that they performed at a pro-Palestinian gig that raised over US$500,000.

The superstar band, who have won seven Grammy Awards and sold over 65 million albums worldwide, are due to perform in Tel Aviv on September 10, days after gigs in Beirut and Istanbul.

Activists are urging them to cancel the show in the Jewish state, pointing out that the group has previously claimed to support the Palestinian cause.

In November last year the band performed at a variety show for the Hoping Foundation in London, raising £392,000 (US$630,000).

The Foundation supports projects for the children of Palestinian refugees who were displaced when Israel was violently created in 1948.

In an open letter to the band, the Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel (CBSI) in Lebanon urged the band to cancel the concert.

“Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land…As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel,” the letter says.

The “Californication” stars have never played in Israel before and Asad Ghsoub, a CBSI spokesperson, called on the band to continue its support of the Palestinians.

“The fact that the Red Hot Chili Peppers have recently done a fundraiser for Palestine in London means they are aware of what is happening and are attuned to the Palestinian question. We expect more from them,” he said.

Supporters of Palestinian human rights have long urged international musicians to boycott Israel, which they accuse of being an apartheid state for its harsh occupation of the West Bank and belligerent policies towards native Palestinians.

Among those who have declared that they will not play in the country until abuses of Palestinians end are U2, Roger Waters and Gorillaz.

Ghsoub said the concert would provide legitimacy to the oppression of Palestinians and said if they were to cancel it would make a “huge” difference.

“The Israelis are using this to say everything is fine and to whitewash whatever they are doing [to the Palestinians].”

“(If they canceled) it would be a huge event. If artists saw that the Red Hot Chili Peppers did not go it could encourage others not to go.”

In January Belgian singer Lara Fabian cancelled a gig in Lebanon after it emerged that she had sung at a Zionist campaign celebrating the 60th anniversary of the creation of Israel, known by Palestinians as the Nakba– the catastrophe.

French-Moroccan comedian Gad Elmaleh also pulled out of a planned trip to Lebanon in 2008 after allegations that he had been supportive of the Israeli army.

The full text of the letter can be read below.

Open letter from Lebanon to the Red Hot Chili Peppers: “Come to Lebanon, but not to Israel: Until All Palestinians Have the Right of Return”

25 April 2012

Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers,

Last November you played at a benefit for Palestinian refugee children at Cafe de Paris in London. Your decision to support Palestinian refugees must have come from an understanding that for 64 years Palestinians have been denied the right to return to their land and to be compensated for loss incurred by the Zionist colonization of their land. Fighting for the implementation of this right is the central tenet of the Palestinian Boycott National Committee and the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI). As a result, we find it strange that less than a month after your benefit concert you announced your decision to play in Israel.

Come to Lebanon on September 6th, but honor the 2005call from Palestinian Civil Society, and do not go to Israel on September 10th. Come to Lebanon and learn of the oppression we have also endured at the hands of the Israeli army and its collaborators; unlearn the myths Israel propagates. The soil that Arabs have cultivated for centuries, in Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria, has been militarily occupied for decades by Israel. The Palestinians have been denied their right to return to their land solely because they are not Jewish. The essence of Israeli colonialism in the region is about control over the land using military mechanisms that also prevent refugees from returning. Your participation in last year’s event supporting Palestinian refugees suggests you sympathize with Palestinian refugees’ struggle for the right of return.

Numerous bands and artists have already heeded Palestinian Civil Society’s 2005 Call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel as a reaction to its occupation, apartheid and denial of Palestinian refugees inalienable right to return to their homes, as stipulated in UN resolution 194. Music cannot be isolated from politics. A visit to Israel is viewed by Israel, and internationally, as implicit support for Israeli policies and indifference to the victims of Israeli crimes. Ilan Pappe, an anti-Zionist Israeli historian and strong supporter of the BDS, recently wrote: “The cultural image in Israel feeds the political decision in the west to support unconditionally the Israeli destruction of Palestine and the Palestinians.”

We ask you to follow in the steps of Cat Power, the Pixies, Gorillaz Sound System, Elvis Costello, Gil Scott-Heron, Carlos Santana, Bono/U2, Devendra Banhart, among others, who did not perform in Israel, and to support the call for boycott that was recently embraced by Roger Waters and Pete Seeger. In the letter Roger Waters wrote announcing his support of a cultural boycott of Israel, he said:

My conviction is born in the idea that all people deserve basic human rights. My position is not anti-Semitic. This is not an attack on the people of Israel.

This is, however, a plea to my colleagues in the music industry, and also to artists in other disciplines, to join this cultural boycott.

Artists were right to refuse to play in South Africa’s Sun City resort until apartheid fell and whites and blacks enjoyed equal rights.

And we are right to refuse to play in Israel until the day comes — and it surely will come — when “The Wall” of occupation falls…

It is not only the Palestinians who have been victimized by Israel. We, in Lebanon, have suffered a great deal. Israeli aggressions against Lebanon began in 1948, with the occupation and annexation of 30 Lebanese villages, and have continued regularly since then. Most recently:

1. 2006: More than 1000 Lebanese civilians were killed by Israel in the 33-day most aggressive onslaught by Israel. The July 2006 war was regarded as a crime against humanity and a war crime by a tribunal of international judges.

2. 2006 to present: Millions of Israeli cluster bombs (from the July 2006 war) and land mines (from the 22-year occupation) still contaminate Lebanese agricultural land. These bombs continue to kill and injure people.

3. May 15, 2011: Israeli soldiers shot and killed 11 civilians and injured more than 100. These unarmed civilians were on the Lebanese border with Israel, and had been calling for their legal and legitimate right to return to their homes in Palestine.

4. 1948 to present: Israel continues to deprive 400,000 Palestinian refugees in Lebanon from their right of return to their homes and land and villages from which they were forced to leave at gun point in 1948. The refugees are not allowed to return only because they are not Jewish!

In response to Israel’s Freedom Flotilla massacre, the prominent Scottish writer, Iain Banks, wrote in the Guardian that the best way for international artists, writers and academics to “convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation” is “simply by having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.”

We urge you not to allow your music and talent to be used to whitewash the crimes of this outlaw state.

We urge you to stand with Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and globally by supporting our people’s struggle for equality in our land and on our terms.

Campaign to Boycott Supporters of Israel in Lebanon

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

A Post Wherein I Eat, and Enjoy, Fish | the toasted sprinkle

A few weeks ago, after several months of half-assed planning, The BF and I trekked out to Connecticut for an evening with a few good friends. It had been decided way back in December that it would be absolutely necessary for me to learn some classic Israeli cooking from his friend Zig. It’s an area I know absolutely nothing about and judging by the delicious smells of spices wafting out of Zig’s fridge, I knew I had to learn. Chitlins, allow me to introduce to you one of the most awesome dishes I have had the courtesy of tasting, consuming and enjoying that actually {gasp!} involves fish.

Pick yourself up off the floor, I know that was a statement to rock anyone’s world. The BF nearly went into throes of ecstasy when he saw me happily consuming the halibut on my plate. I mean he’d only been trying for two years to get me to like fish, and suddenly it had happened.

Look at that red peppery goodness.

Now, before you think I’ve gone and tossed all my sea creature prejudices you can just sit right back down and I’ll fix that for you. I do not eat crustaceans, things that crawl on the ocean floor, have more than four legs, or the potential to eat me if it were to come to hand to hand combat. Also, if it smells like cat food, I’m out. You’ll find that covers basically every category of seafood out there.

Little bit of oil and the spice mix - this is how your dish should start.

But Zig is a freakin’ miracle worker. He prepared for us a fish dish that has been in his family for several generations, I do believe. One of those awesome dishes that has a secret ingredient! Can you believe it? Apparently all the great dishes with secret ingredients died out in my family, and so I have been desperately searching for one, and whaddyah know, it crept up in a fish dish.

After adding enough water, this is how thick the sauce should look.

Let me tell you something about Zig. The man is a walking encyclopedia…on tea. I think what I find the most hilarious when I visit his apartment, is that he has a mini wine refrigerator, but it’s all packed with exotic and expensive teas. I mean, if it works, who am I to contradict it? He’s traveled to China simply to search out the best tea regions. He has books, upon books of tea, and he’s actually read them. He can recommend them to you based on what kind of knowledge you wish to gather. I actually have one right now, haven’t read too much of it yet, but the pictures are pretty rad.

Simmering the fishes.

Here’s another thing about Zig. He has “The Glass Man” disease. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, maybe this will help. Remember that movie Unbreakable with Bruce Willis and Samuel L. Jackson, the one that came out a hot second after The Sixth Sense, so everyone was skeptical to see it because they seemed too similar in plot? Well I saw it, and you should too by the way because, hello, Samuel L. Jackson is the man and Bruce Willis is freakin’ hot.

Dinner is served, European style, at 10 pm. (That's why the image is so dark)

But Jackson’s character has brittle bone disease, also called Lobstein syndrome. The wikipedia article has all the specifics but this is what you need to know: obviously if you’re going to have a disease you want the badassest of them all, which can only be determined based upon whether Samuel L. Jackson portrays a character with your disease. Game over, tally the score.

Get all up in that fishy goodness.

Of course this made me incredibly paranoid to meet Zig the first time because I am the biggest klutz I know (remember that whole lack of proprioception thing?). The last thing I wanted was for me to trip, rebound of a wall and then shatter Zig. Believe me, if anyone was going to do it, it’d be me. Luckily, I have visited Zig on a number of occasions, sometimes even consumed alcohol on those occasions, and I have yet to break him. I think Zig’s pretty relieved on that account, and I’m pretty proud of myself too.

But enough chatter, I know you’re all on the edge of your seat waiting for this recipe. I don’t have exact measurements, because all the best family recipes work like that, but I’ll try my best.

Proof that I ate it.

*Just a NoteI suggest buying your spices super fresh at an Indian or Israeli market, it makes all the difference. Otherwise, try looking for good Spanish paprika (not smoked) it has a better flavor than the generic stuff.

The Best Fish Dish

Serves 4

4 large hunks of halibut, scales removed (you want them to look like little steaks)

coarse ground salt

1 head garlic, minced (about 2 heaping tbsp)

1 heaping tbsp cumin

2 heaping tbsp paprika

2 tsp ground cardamom seeds

chili powder to taste (or if you happen to have your own secret Israeli chili blend toss that in there)

about 2 cups water

Season both sides of the halibut with the salt. In a small bowl mix together the spices and garlic. Heat a large skillet over medium heat and warm some oil in it. Add the spices to the oil and cook until fragrant, about two minutes. You should have a nice thick, but viscous, paste. Ladle in the water, 1/4 cup at a time, stirring constantly between additions to create a kind of stew. You want it a little thin, but not too runny.

Bring the sauce to a nice gentle simmer. Add the halibut steaks to the sauce and ladle the sauce of the top of the steaks. Cover the pot and let simmer for about 10 minutes. Flip the steaks and cook for another 10 minutes or until cooked through and tender.

Serve with a large portion of sauce and bread for mopping up the extras.

Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers… « P U L S E

Dear Anthony, Flea, Chad and Josh,

My name is Tali. I’m a citizen of Israel from the privileged side of the apartheid, who supports the Palestinian call for boycott, divestment and sanctions on the state of Israel. It doesn’t take much to get me to talk about the atrocities I witness here everyday, but I’d rather make it as brief as possible, so you’ll actually take the time to read this.

I’m a long time fan and it’s no lip service. I grew up on your songs, like American Ghost Dance and Johnny Kick a Hole in the Sky, but I wouldn’t understand them until much later, when I would join the weekly demonstrations of Palestinian villages against the state’s brutal incursion and theft of their lands. You may have heard the analogy to South African apartheid, which is accurate and then some, but if Israel succeeds, it will look more similar to what the whites had done to the Native Americans.

I can’t explain to you how deeply your lyrics resonate down in these parts, and how bitter it is that you may perform here. I, of course, can’t attend your concert in clear conscience, though I would have loved to.

Your performance would be a crowning achievement for Shuki Weiss, so I’d like to tell you a bit about his role in culturewashing Israel’s war crimes. Weiss and the Israeli government have a special relationship in which they include him in Knesset meetings about outlawing the protesting tool of boycotts [http://maxblumenthal.com/tag/shuki-weiss/], and he sends them VIP tickets to shows he produces [http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/tourism-minister-given-illegal-gift-of-vip-madonna-tickets-1.262006 ]. This is not just corruption within the system, but corruption that serves to whitewash Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinian people, using international artists such as yourself. As quoted in the latter article:

“Tourism Ministry spokeswoman Shira Koa said that the ministry had agreed with the producers of the concert that the event would be used to promote Israel as a safe tourism destination. “Madonna belongs to an exclusive club of mega stars, who draws thousands of fans from abroad to her concerts. For this reason, the ministry authorized an agreement with the producers that would give the ministry video and stills footage of the singer and her entourage, both during the concerts and her visits to tourist sites in Israel, to be used in international marketing campaigns. They also agreed to have four displays at the concert with films promoting Israel, supplied by the ministry, targeting the thousands of foreign tourists… Such promotion campaigns are regular occurrences both in Israel and abroad.”

Please remember that your privilege to speak to a captive audience is not a sign of others’ freedom to do so. When Palestinians express themselves, they pay a heavy price. (This is what happened under the mainstream media’s nose, just this week http://www.awalls.org/protests_in_solidarity_with_hana_shalabi_and_against_the_wall_brutally_suppressed_across_the_west_bank) I hope that you heed the Palestinian call (http://www.bdsmovement.net/call) and choose not to perform in Israel. I and my friends, who are prohibited from from attending your show by military law and force, will be happy to rock out, once equality is practiced in this region. Until then, we’ll be kicking holes in the sky. Care to join?

Sincerely, bitterly, hopefully
Tali

Tuba Skinny cancels show at jazz festival in Israel: Will Hot Chili ...

Tuba Skinny cancels show at jazz festival in Israel: Will Hot Chili Peppers be next to cancel?

“Tuba Skinny cancels show at jazz festival in Israel. Tuba Skinny, a traditional jazz and blues band from New Orleans, planned to perform at the Red Sea Jazz Festival in Eilat, Israel on 21 August.

The international campaign “Don’t Play Apartheid Israel,” and the Israeli group “Boycott From Within” approached Tuba Skinny with the request to honor PACBI’s call for a cultural boycott of Israel.

One week before the show, Tuba Skinny received an open letter with information about the cultural boycott of Israel:

“Jazz festivals take place every summer all over the world, and New Orleans jazz bands are in high demand. Jazz music is loved the world over, so why would it be considered inhumane to play at a Jazz festival?

In the case of the Red Sea Jazz Festival, music takes on a very political role, because of the well-known global BDS movement. The PACBI, (Palestinian Call for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel) has, since 2005, asked musicians to refrain from playing in Israel, and their call, representing Palestinian Civil Society, has become a global movement.

Thus, when a band, like Tuba Skinny, agrees to play in Israel, and break the picket line, it becomes very political”.

Tuba Skinny announced the cancellation of their show in Eilat on their website.

The group has joined the picket line of Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters, Elvis Costello, The Pixies, the late Gil Scott-Heron, Carlos Santana, Pete Seeger, Massive Attack, Faithless, Gorillaz Sound System, The Tindersticks and the Klaxxons.

Will Hot Chili pepper be next to cancel?

The following is a sample petition letter mailed to the Red Hot Chili Peppers:

“I had yet to get a response. If you agree with the content of this letter, please sign this petition to get the Red Hot Chili Peppers to cancel their show in Israel. It seems ridiculous to me that the Red Hot Chili Peppers would even consider crossing the picket line of the global Palestinian liberation movement, that’s been forming since the last time they cancelled.

One thing remains the same though: It’s very hard to reach a band of their stature. I want to make sure that no artist can say they didn’t know. Not about the atrocities of the apartheid State and its brutal occupation, and not about the movement to boycott, divest and sanction it”.

OPEN LETTER from Israeli citizens asks Red Hot Chili Peppers to ...

Today, another OPEN LETTER to the Red Hot Chili Peppers was written.  This letter is from a small but growing group of young people who are Israeli citizens devoted to the promotion of just peace and true democracy in Israel/Palestine.  (SOURCE)  Via, twitter, the Chili Peppers were told: 
Chilipepperscancelplease

April 2012
Dear Red Hot Chili Peppers,
 
We are citizens of Israel who support the Palestinian civil society call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel's policies of racism, apartheid and occupation towards the Palestinian people. As we have recently learned about your planned gigs in Tel Aviv in September of 2012, we write in order to ask you not to come. Our letter is also premised on what we have learned about your activism for human rights throughout the years.
 
Israel's attempts to mask systematic human-rights abuses and decades-long oppression against the Palestinians largely rely on its ability to maintain a progressive and democratic image in the eyes of the international community. Israel often promotes itself as "the only Democracy in the Middle East". However, Israel's apartheid policies are inherent even to something as seemingly light-hearted and joyous as rock concerts: Palestinian fans of your music living in the West Bank, in a land governed by Israel, are under martial-law and will not be permitted to come to Tel Aviv and enjoy your performance.
 
The Palestinian people are being denied some of the most elementary freedoms: the freedom of movement, the freedom to access their stolen agricultural land and the freedom to protest without facing life threatening violence: When they demonstrate against the Israeli government, they face brutal treatment. (http://mondoweiss.net/2011/07/lets-stand-with-shireen-al-araj-and-the-co...)
 
Their relatives in the Gaza strip (44% of whom are children under the age of 14) live under a debilitating siege restricting the badly needed amounts of food, medical supplies, and construction material. (http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/24/gaza-fishermen-gunboats-isra...)
 
In the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan, kids are being abducted from their homes, in violation of international law, and taken to violent police interrogations. (http://www.btselem.org/video/2011/05/child-arrest-silwan)
 
Numerous artists have come to perform here with the good will and intention to use their art as a means of changing Israeli public opinion and spreading the message of peace. However, this has not succeeded (not even with Roger Waters, who now supports BDS). On the contrary; High profile performances, such as your scheduled gig, have served the government’s agenda of whitewashing its war crimes and creating an image of Israel as a “modern state", where celebrities come to perform and see the sights. In reality, some of the sights are situated on occupied land, and over 3 million people, including Palestinian fans of yours, cannot attend concerts in Tel Aviv, even though they are living under Israeli control, namely the occupation.
 
Another fact to consider is the role of the production company hosting your performance, Shuki Weiss Promotion and Production LTD., in obscuring Israel’s atrocities and enhancing its image in the world.Weiss and the Israeli government have a special relationship. Mr. Weiss as attended parliamentary meetings about outlawing boycotts (http://maxblumenthal.com/tag/shuki-weiss/ , more from that meeting athttp://pulsemedia.org/2011/02/14/the-macy-gray-effect/).
 
Mr. Weiss has also sent Israeli officials VIP tickets to shows he produces. This is not just corruption within the system, but corruption that serves to whitewash Israel’s war crimes against the Palestinian people, using international artists such as you:
 
"Tourism Ministry spokeswoman Shira Koa said that the ministry had agreed with the producers of the concert that the event would be used to promote Israel as a safe tourism destination. "Madonna belongs to an exclusive club of mega stars, who draws thousands of fans from abroad to her concerts. For this reason, the ministry authorized an agreement with the producers that would give the ministry video and stills footage of the singer and her entourage, both during the concerts and her visits to tourist sites in Israel, to be used in international marketing campaigns. They also agreed to have four displays at the concert with films promoting Israel, supplied by the ministry, targeting the thousands of foreign tourists... Such promotion campaigns are regular occurrences both in Israel and abroad." (http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/tourism-minister-given-illegal...)
 
It should be noted that prominent artists and public figures have endorsed the BDS campaign. Some examples follow:
Roger Waters: "In my view, the abhorrent and draconian control that Israel wields over the besieged Palestinians in Gaza, and the Palestinians in the occupied West Bank (including East Jerusalem), coupled with its denial of the rights of refugees to return to their homes in Israel, demands that fair minded people around the world support the Palestinians in their civil, nonviolent resistance.
For me it means declaring my intention to stand in solidarity, not only with the people of Palestine, but also with the many thousands of Israelis who disagree with their governments racist and colonial policies, by joining a campaign of Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) against Israel, until it satisfies three basic human rights demanded in international law."
(http://www.alternativenews.org/english/index.php/topics/economy-of-the-o...)
 
Elvis Costello: " There are occasions when merely having your name added to a concert schedule may be interpreted as a political act that resonates more than anything that might be sung and it may be assumed that one has no mind for the suffering of the innocent.
Some will regard all of this an unknowable without personal experience but if these subjects are actually too grave and complex to be addressed in a concert, then it is also quite impossible to simply look the other way.
cannot imagine receiving another invitation to perform in Israel, which is a matter of regret but I can imagine a better time when I would not be writing this. "
http://www.elviscostello.com/news/it-is-after-considerable-contemplation/44
 
Faithless: “ We’ve been asked to do some shows this summer in your country and, with the heaviest of hearts, I have regretfully declined the invitation. While human beings are being willfully denied not just their rights but their needs for their children and grandparents and themselves, I feel deeply that I should not be sending even tacit signals that this is either ‘normal’ or ‘ok’.”
 
Alice Walker: " Going through Israeli checkpoints is like going back in time to American Civil Rights struggle...I am a big supporter of BDS. I frankly think that it is the best, absolutely the best way."
(http://www.middleeastmonitor.org.uk/resources/interviews/3104-alice-walk...)
 
Devendra Banhart: "Unfortunately, we tried to make it clear that we were coming to share a human and not a political message but it seems that we are being used to support views that are not our own,"
(http://www.inminds.com/article.php?id=10428)
 
Mike Leigh: "As you know, I have always had serious misgivings about coming, but I allowed myself to be persuaded by your sincerity and your commitment... And it is because of those special qualities of yours that I am especially sorry to have to let you down. But I have absolutely no choice. I cannot come, I do not want to come, and I am not coming. Eight weeks after our lunch, the Israeli attack on the flotilla took place. As I watched the world very properly condemn this atrocity, I almost cancelled. I now wish I had, and blame my cowardice for not having done so. Since then, your government has gone from bad to worse. I need not itemise all that has taken place ... I still had not faced up to the prospect of pulling out until a few weeks ago, but the resumption of the illegal building on the West Bank made me start to consider it seriously. And now we have the Loyalty Oath. This is the last straw – quite apart from the ongoing criminal blockade of Gaza, not to mention the endless shooting of innocent people there, including juveniles ..."
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2010/oct/18/mike-leigh-cancels-israel-visit)
 
Macy Gray: “I had a reality check and I stated that I definitely would not have played there if I had known even the little that I know now.”
(

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We have learned that not performing is very effective in promoting justice in the region, as Israeli policy makers are coming to understand that the international community does not approve of their brutal policies towards the Palestinian people. Therefore, we are asking you to re-consider your decision to perform in Israel. It is with great admiration of your art and activism that we suggest that a people oppressing another should not have the benefit of enjoying it or cynically using it as a tool of self-justification. In view of the aforementioned facts, you can make a difference and promote justice and human rights, by deciding not to play in Israel at this time!
 
If you are interested in what a group of Israeli citizens who support BDS have to say, please let us know. We would be happy to address any comments or questions you may have. We would also recommend going straight to the source and speaking to representatives of the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI).
 
 
Sincerely,
BOYCOTT! Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from Within
http://boycottisrael.info/
admin@boycottisrael.info