Showing posts with label Gaza solidarity events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaza solidarity events. Show all posts

Gaels Against Genocide In Gaza ✊ are organising a march in Belfast.

Date: 10-February

Time: 1300 / 1pm

Starting Point: Writers Square

Destination: Belfast City Hall


End The Genocide In Gaza

Event Announcement ✊ A Solidarity event will take place in Dublin today in support of Palestinians under threat from 'Israel’s far-right government, the most racist, fundamentalist and fanatic ever.' 

The weekend's breakout from Gaza which saw Hamas launch a counter terrorist operation against the Israeli Apartheid State has unleashed a vicious and vindictive response which could, if not constrained by international pressure, reduce Gaza to another Warsaw Ghetto

If one has to refer to any of the parties as a terrorist state, one might refer to the Israeli government, because they are the people who are slaughtering defenseless and innocent Arabs in the occupied [Palestinian] territories, and we don’t regard that as acceptable. Nelson Mandela - 1990.
 

Gaza 🔴 Emergency Solidarity Rally In Dublin




Yesterday afternoon we took our place at the Tholsel in the pelting rain. I had not realised the vigil was scheduled for this week, mistakenly believing it had been discontinued due to the cessation of Israeli military attacks on Gaza. Seemingly I was not alone in being of that view, our numbers now having dwindled down to no more than ten due to the onset of a feeling that the urgency has gone out of the situation.

Finding out at the last minute that the vigil would go ahead as normal I raced out of work in short sleeves and got soaked. Only one of us seemed to have the sense to turn up equipped for the weather, umbrella in hand. Towards the end one of the regulars told me it was the last vigil ... for now. If the ceasefire breaks and the Israelis resume war against the civilian population of Gaza we will be back on the streets.

Last Day at The Tholsel for Gaza

  • Just as we resist antisemitism, we refuse to dehumanise Palestinians in order to make their deaths lighter on our collective conscience. We sign this statement in order to affirm their humanity and our own. We distance ourselves from South African Jewish organizations whose blind support for Israel’s disproportionate actions moves us further from a just resolution to the conflict – letter signed by 500 prominent South African Jews.

Protesting the Malevolence of the Genocidal Mind

Drogheda's vigil for Palestine

This afternoon I turned up for the third vigil in a row staged by Sinn Fein in opposition to the Israeli War on Gaza, the venue again being The Tholsel in Drogheda’s town centre. With my previous companions busy for one reason or another I headed down on my own, ten minutes late and without my phone and its built in camera

On my own but hardly alone I assumed my place in the group. As with previous weeks there was a sizeable turnout, and no rain from Yahweh to deter us from protesting against the actions of those who tell us they are a government of his chosen people and therefore have licence to murder pretty much in the same way that he murdered his way through the Old Testament.

Heathens At The Tholsel


Today as armed exchanges took place between two very unequal forces in Occupied Palestine, we assembled again at the Tholsel in Drogheda. Our purpose was the same as last week - to oppose the Israeli war of terror on Gaza. There were not as many of us this time but enough to capture attention. The rain probably had an effect, but also the three day ceasefire, now ended, perhaps took some of the perceived urgency out of the matter. Nevertheless, all of us who gathered were aware that people who were alive in Gaza this time last week didn’t make it through. It was their last Friday alive. Israel had murdered them. 

The rain made it uncomfortable, for sure, and it was heartening to observe a van stop and see the driver throw an umbrella to one of the protestors. People help in their own way. While we might have shuffled unceremoniously we could hardly complain about the need to dodge droplets which will certainly not drown us. Try dodging bombs from F-16s. While it is not raining rockets we can afford to stand in the open. 

Sinn Fein organised the vigil. It was as well it did because no other political party in Drogheda seems to be taking a leading role. While some balk at attending Sinn Fein organised events, preferring to question the party leadership’s motives, a more pressing concern at this juncture is why Fine Gael, Labour and Fianna Fail are not organising vigils or protests in the middle of Drogheda. We have crimes against humanity taking place in front of our eyes and it is being met with muted protest from the larynx of the political class. Well lubricated when it comes to cutting benefits or imposing austerity it parches up in the face of mechanised mass murder. I am very much in agreement with the commenter on this site, David Higgins, who while deeply critical of Sinn Fein, sees it doing more to alleviate the suffering in Gaza than the other political parties. One of our local TDs, Labour's Gerald Nash is supposed to be Chair of the Oireachtas Friends of Palestine Group. But how are we to know? What has he said? What has he done? With friends like him …



I went along today with my wife and a Croatian woman whom we first met as we staged our own vigil on the footbridge across the Boyne two weeks ago. We initially fell in with the main body on West Street, but on noticing a gap on one of the stretches filled last week we assumed position there, giving the protest a more rounded appearance and ensuring that nobody got through the junction without seeing some message. It might have looked as if we were putting physical space between ourselves and the Sinn Fein protest but it wasn’t the case. We were all part of the same gathering and reassembled in the one spot at the end to listen to the Sinn Fein speaker inform us that we would be back again next week, applauding politely when she had finished.

Small yes, but a thread in the vitally important cloak of de-legitimacy being weaved around Israel. Palestinian troops, despite their unquestionable courage in legitimately battling the Israeli terrorists in the rubble of Gaza are, in the words of Norman Finkelstein, not going to overcome the sheer military might of the Israeli state with fireworks and Roman candles. While ‘the intensity of the fighting ... surprised Israeli commanders’, and Hamas is 'far from disabled', Israel ultimately does not view Hamas as posing a serious military threat against a state that can summon up vast quantities of US war supplies, and has technological strength in depth. It merely uses the threat from Hamas as a pretext for launching its massacres. What Israel seems to fear most is the pariah status assigned to Apartheid South Africa within the international community. The Palestinians cannot do it alone, any more than the black population of South Africa could. Nor should it be left to do it alone. International and human solidarity requires every shoulder at the wheel.



In the Rain Against Raining Rockets



Yesterday around lunch time along with three other republicans who work on maintaining the Duleek Hunger Strike monument, I attended a vigil in the centre of Drogheda in support of the people of Gaza. They are currently under siege from other people who in a different time and place might have been found starving the population of Leningrad or visiting ruination on the citizens of Stalingrad.

Drogheda Taking to the Tholsel for Gaza

Yesterday afternoon alongside my wife I sauntered into town and crossed the footbridge at the River Boyne outside Scotch Hall Mall. Once we had secured a spot at the bridge’s northern end where no one coming in our direction could avoid us – they had to reach us before they could either turn left or right prior to exiting the bridge – we set up our vigil on behalf of the residents of Gaza who are being subjected to merciless slaughter by the Israeli murder machine.

Friends on the Footbridge - Enemy at the Gates