Solidarity, not charity, for the people of Gaza By Ewa Jasiewicz

December 10th is International Human Rights Day, and it’s time we turned our rhetoric on human rights into reality. Together with the Free Gaza Movement, I’m commemorating Human Rights Day this year in Gaza, a tiny strip of land wedged between Israel and Egypt, home to 1.5 million human beings, and subject to an increasingly brutal war being waged against its civilian population by the state of Israel.

We mounted this mission to give our solidarity to the people of Palestine and to highlight the strangulating conditions Israel causes in besieged Gaza. The inhumane effects of this siege threaten to stunt an entire generation – both in terms of physical and mental growth due to malnutrition, terrorisation by bomb attacks, incursions and the use of sonic booms – but also in terms of the generation of students which have won places at academic institutions around the world but cannot fulfill them, and those undermined on the ground in Gaza by a lack of food, medicine, electricity, materials, and the peace and space to make good use of them in.

The Free Gaza Movement is a grassroots movement of teachers, doctors, activists, union workers, and other ‘ordinary’ people who understand that we cannot wait for governments and other international organisations to present us with top-down solutions to the tribulations of the world, solutions which never quite seem to materialise. Since August, Free Gaza has been sailing ships from Cyprus to the Gaza Strip in acts of nonviolent resistance and civil opposition to the Israeli Occupation and siege of Gaza.

This is direct democracy – the intervention of ordinary people in acts of solidarity capable of changing the world. From resistance in the streets of Greece against state brutality, to Chicago’s window factory workers taking back their workplace, to climate activists radically cutting CO2 at Stanstead, Free Gaza is part of a movement of movements facing a convergence of crises – climate change, capitalism’s evictions and social eviscerations, ongoing brutal wars and occupations, and land, food and water struggles. In the face of these oppressions, workers, activists and academics are responding with a convergence of ideas. Slowly, painfully and joyfully, facing all the difficulties of organising movements, we are showing that it is possible to resist and win gains. The un-official slogan of Free Gaza and of many other grassroots movements is (with a hint of irony), ‘if we can do this, anybody can…’

All of us can and must work to break siege of Gaza. The vicious nature of the siege and ongoing Occupation of Palestine demand nothing less. Accompanying Free Gaza on our present mission are Jonathan Rosenhead and Mike Cushman of the London School of Economics and the British Committee for Universities for Palestine (BRICUP), an organisation of UK-based academics responding to Palestine’s Call for an Academic Boycott of Israel.

Beyond the depravations, poverty and shortages caused by the blockade, over 700 Palestinian students are imprisoned in Gaza: actively prevented by Israel from fulfilling a human right that belongs to every student on earth – the right to education, self-development, and to serve the progression of collective learning, both for their community and the academic communities they will contribute to. They must be free to fulfill their rightful academic destinies and attend the universities which they have been accepted into.

The humiliation of those trying to exit Gaza for medical treatment, the visitation of loved ones and for the right to pursue education also creates the fear of never being able to develop, to learn, to survive, to live, and to love. Freedom of Movement is a basic, human right.

Though we carried in a ton of medical supplies and high-protein baby forumla on our ship, our mission in Gaza this Human Rights Day is not to provide charity, but to give our solidarity to the people of Palestine, break the silence of the world over this continuing calamity, and physically break through the blockade of Gaza in an act of direct resistance against the siege. In the end, the oppression and humiliation of Occupation assaults the humanity of both occupier and occupied and cannot and must not be tolerated any longer.

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Ewa Jasiewicz is a writer, journalist, human rights activist and union organiser. She is currently in Gaza as a volunteer organiser with the Free Gaza Movement.

http://www.FreeGaza.org



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