Friday, June 16, 2017

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The Plot to Sideline Palestine: We Need You to Fight the Truth Battle with Us

 - There is an attempt at sidelining Palestine from international media coverage.
 - We refuse to let this happen. Palestinian rights are paramount and their fight for freedom is a righteous one.
 - We are a non-profit 501(c)3 organization, and all donations are tax deductible.
 - Please read the messages of support from Noam Chomsky, John Pilger and Joshua Frank 
Message from Dr. Ramzy Baroud - Author and Editor of The Palestine Chronicle:
Since the launch of The Palestine Chronicle in September 1999, our mission has never felt so urgent. From the onset of so-called 'Arab Spring' in early 2011 and the wars and military interventions that followed, there has been a deliberate and protracted campaign to sideline Palestine from the news as a non-priority. This campaign involves not only international but also Middle Eastern media.
Yet, while Israel's illegal settlements are in constant expansion, the suffering of Palestinians has never ceased; the Palestinian leadership in the West Bank is mostly pacified and Occupation has become almost an acceptable everyday reality for everyone. Except for the Palestinian people, of course; they are resisting, fighting, waiting at military checkpoints and, very often, dying.
Worse still, various Arab governments are reportedly willing to normalize relations with Israel with little or no pre-conditions. This tendency to dismiss Palestine and to normalize with Israel is not new, but has now  accelerated under the Trump Presidency.
The Palestine Chronicle has been at the forefront of exposing this charade, and fighting with all of its resources to uncover the ongoing plot and those who are behind it. It has worked tirelessly, on a daily basis, to challenge the Israeli-dictated mainstream media narrative on Palestine, through authentic Palestinian news sources, bold commentary and astute analysis.
To make this happen, four editors work every day, gathering news, editing and writing, while backed by a support group of several other people and many contributors. We are all working with very limited resources, but with unwavering determination to keep the Palestine Chronicle English and French website at the forefront of the battle for truth.
No doubt, we aim to win.
We are a non-profit 501(c)3 organization. All donations are tax deductible.
Please fight this battle for truth with us.
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Pilger: Palestine Chronicle: authority and humanity
John Pilger: "In the midst of an institutional media bias against telling the searing truth about Palestine, the Palestine Chronicle is a beacon. History, witness, analysis and ways forward are here, written with authority and humanity. Long may it publish."
Chomsky: Palestine Chronicle: invaluable, independent, trustworthy and reliable.
Noam Chomsky: "The Palestine Chronicle has been an invaluable source of information and analysis about Palestine and related issues, drawing from a wide range of sources, including many that are otherwise inaccessible to the concerned public. An independent voice, it has been trustworthy and reliable. I hope that you will contribute to helping this unique publication to flourish." (Professor Noam Chomsky is an honorary editorial board member of the Palestine Chronicle.)
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Joshua Frank: "The Palestine Chronicle is proof positive that there is hope. Hope that alternative media can, one day, overpower the corporate mainstream. Hope that justice can prevail for all the exploited peoples of the Middle East; that we can overcome our inhumane tendencies."
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UN Last Hurdle before Israel Can Rid Itself of the Palestinians


By Jonathan Cook - Nazareth
Israeli and US officials are in the process of jointly pre-empting Donald Trump's supposed "ultimate deal" to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. They hope to demote the Palestinian issue to a footnote in international diplomacy.
The conspiracy - a real one - was much in evidence last week during a visit to the region by Nikki Haley, Washington's envoy to the United Nations. Her escort was Danny Danon, her Israeli counterpart and a fervent opponent of Palestinian statehood.
Danon makes Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu look moderate. He has backed Israel annexing the West Bank and ruling over Palestinians apatheid-style. Haley appears unperturbed. During a meeting with Netanyahu, she told him that the UN was "a bully to Israel". She has warned the powerful Security Council to focus on Iran, Syria, Hamas and Hizbollah, instead of Israel.
To protect its tiny ally, Washington is threatening to cut billions in US funding to the world body, plunging it into crisis and jeopardising peacekeeping and humanitarian operations.
On the way to Israel, Haley stopped at the UN's Human Rights Council in Geneva, demanding it end its "pathological" opposition to Israel's decades of occupation and human rights violations - or the US would pull out of the agency.
Washington has long pampered Israel, giving it millions of dollars each year to buy weapons to oppress Palestinians, and using its veto to block UN resolutions enforcing international law. Expert UN reports such as a recent one on Israel's apartheid rule over Palestinians have been buried.
But worse is to come. Now the framework of international laws and institutions established after the Second World War is at risk of being dismembered.
That danger was highlighted on Sunday, when it emerged that Netanyahu had urged Haley to dismantle another UN agency much loathed by Israel. UNRWA cares for more than five million Palestinian refugees across the region.
Since the 1948 war, Israel has refused to allow these refugees to return to their lands, now in Israel, forcing them to live in miserable and overcrowded camps awaiting a peace deal that never arrives. These dispossessed Palestinians still depend on UNRWA for education, health care and social services.
UNRWA, Netanyahu says, "perpetuates" rather than solves their problems. He prefers that they become the responsibility of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), which looks after all other refugee populations.
His demand is a monumental U-turn, 70 years in the making. In fact, it was Israel that in 1948 insisted on a separate UN refugee agency for the Palestinians.
UNRWA was created to prevent the Palestinians falling under the charge of UNHCR's forerunner, the International Refugee Organisation. Israel was afraid that the IRO, formed in the immediate wake of the Second World War, would give Palestinian refugees the same prominence as European Jews fleeing Nazi atrocities.
Israel did not want the two cases compared, especially as they were so intimately connected. It was the rise of Nazism that bolstered the Zionist case for a Jewish state in Palestine and Jewish refugees who were settled on lands from which Palestinians had just been expelled by Israel.
Also, Israel was concerned that the IRO's commitment to the principle of repatriation might force it to accept back the Palestinian refugees.
Israel's hope then was precisely that UNRWA would not solve the Palestinian refugee problem; rather, it would resolve itself. The idea was encapsulated in a Zionist adage: "The old will die and the young forget."
But millions of Palestinian descendants still clamour for a right of return. If they cannot forget, Netanyahu prefers that the world forget them.
As bloody wars grip the Middle East, the best way to achieve that aim is to submerge the Palestinians among the world's 65 million other refugees. Why worry about the Palestinian case when there are millions of Syrians newly displaced by war?
But UNRWA poses a challenge, because it is so deeply entrenched in the region and insists on a just solution for Palestinian refugees.
UNRWA's huge staff includes 32,000 Palestinian administrators, teachers and doctors, many living in camps in the West Bank - Palestinian territory Netanyahu and Danon hunger for. The UN's presence there is an impediment to annexation.
On Monday Netanyahu announced his determination to block Europe from funding Israeli human rights organisations, the main watchdogs in the West Bank and a key data source for UN agencies. He now refuses to meet any world leader who talks to these rights groups.
With Trump in the White House, a crisis-plagued Europe ever-more toothless and the Arab world in disarray, Netanyahu wants to seize this chance to clear the UN out of the way too.
Global institutions such as the UN and the international law it upholds were created after the Second World War to protect the weakest and prevent a recurrence of the Holocaust's horrors.
Today, Netanyahu is prepared to risk it all, tearing down the post-war international order, if this act of colossal vandalism will finally rid him of the Palestinians.
(A version of this article first appeared in the National, Abu Dhabi.)
- Jonathan Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His latest books are "Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East" (Pluto Press) and "Disappearing Palestine: Israel's Experiments in Human Despair" (Zed Books). His website is www.jonathan-cook.net.
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Journalism, History and War: Sit, Type and Bleed


By Ramzy Baroud
The typical newsroom set-up, where journalists chase headlines dictated by some centralized news gathering agency - often based in some western capital - does not suffice any more.
In the case of the Middle East, the news narrative has been defined by others and dictated on Arab journalists and audiences for far too long.
This hardly worked in the past but, in the last a few years, it has become even more irrelevant and dangerous.
There are millions of victims throughout the Middle East region, numerous bereaved families, constant streams of refugees and a human toll that cannot be understood or expressed through typical media narration: a gripping headline, couple of quotes and a paragraph or two by way of providing context.
The price is too high for this kind of lazy journalism. There is too much at stake for journalism not to be fundamentally redefined by those who are experiencing war, understand the pulse of the region, fathom the culture and speak the language of the people.
The Arab people have, indeed, spoken and, for years, their words were filled with anger and hope. The haunting cries of Syrians and other Arab nations will forever define the memories of this generation and the next.
But how much is our journalism today a reflection of this reality? This harrowing, blood-soaked reality?
American author and journalist, Ernest Hemingway, once wrote, "There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed."
But modern journalism - at least, the way it is communicated in the Middle East at the moment - hardly bleeds. Under the guise of false objectivity, it remains detached, removed from its immediate reality and is rarely expressive of the seriousness of this difficult transition of our history.
The truth is, however, journalism has not failed. We did. We are the ones still unable to appreciate the gravity of what has befallen our region and, by extension, the world at large. We are the ones still singing the praises of the elites and defending the interests of the few.
As for the people, if we do not neglect them altogether, then we turn their misery into fodder in our political feuds.
Equally inexcusable, we pay little attention to history as if the most significant component of our story is the least relevant one.
It is no secret that orientalist history still defines the way that history is written in the Middle East and about the Middle East. We should reject that, not only as a matter of principle, but also because it is both impractical and false.
This orientalist depiction has afflicted journalism, as well. Why do we allow others to define who we are when we are in the most urgent need to define ourselves
Writing on Palestine for nearly 25 years, I have experienced this strange and persistent dichotomy in both journalism and academia.
Palestine is reported as a recurring, seemingly never-ending 'conflict'. Media coverage of the 'Palestinian-Israeli conflict' always adheres to the same rules, language and stereotypes.
An urgent issue that requires immediate resolution, least because of its regional and global impact, is relegated as if a redundant, uninteresting story.
Many people tend to have short-term memory when the rights of the Palestinians are in question. This feeds quite well into the Israeli narrative, which has aimed to displace Palestinian history altogether, and replace it with something entirely different, albeit a construct; a falsified history.
The latter is not my own conclusion, but a fact, reported in Israeli media itself.
Although files relating to the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestinians are still hidden in Israeli archives, one document, according to Israeli newspaper, Haaretz, has escaped the keen eye of the Israeli censor: file number GL-18/17028.
This file shows the process of how Israel's first Prime Minister, David Ben Gurion, resorted to Zionist historians in the early 1950s to forge an alternative story as to how Palestinian refugees were expelled. He chose the most convincing one, and that became 'history'.
This rewriting of history is ongoing and has tainted the present, as well.
How can journalists, then, unearth the seemingly complex truth, without understanding history - not the version conveniently fashioned by Israel, but the history of pain, suffering and the ongoing struggle of the Palestinians?
To report on Palestine and Israel, without fully fathoming the historical roots of the tragic story, is to merely be content with providing a superficial account of what 'both sides' are saying, which often favors the Israeli side and demonizes the Palestinians.
The Palestine scenario is now repeated everywhere. The narrative on Syria and other conflicts are guided by preconceived wisdom.
Journalism is still failing to break the stronghold of the old paradigm that relegates the people and focuses, instead, on the rulers, the politicians, the governments and the business elites.
This is the media version of what is known in academia as the 'Great Man Theory', a defunct discipline that is sadly used abundantly in the Arab press.
But without the people there is no history, there is no story to be written and change to be expected.
Arundhati Roy is quoted as saying, "There's really no such thing as the 'voiceless'. There are only the deliberately silenced, or the preferably unheard."
The Palestinians and the Arab people already have a voice, and an articulate one. But that voice has been deliberately muted through a massive campaign of misinformation, distortion and misrepresentation.
When Israel and its allies say 'Palestinians are not a people', they essentially say that Palestinians have no identity, no legitimate demands, thus deserve no voice.
When the media silences the voice of the people, they relegate their rights, demands for freedom, change and democracy.
Our answer should not be speaking on behalf of the people, but to actually listen to them; truly listen to them and empower their voices so that they articulate their own aspirations and rightful demands, and express their own identity.
True intellectuals cannot operate outside the realm of history and the Arab region is now undergoing its greatest historical flux in a century.Journalism is not a technical profession, a skill to be honed without a heart, without compassion and a deep understanding of the past and the present.
For journalists to be relevant, they must abandon their position of dictating the news in the same predictable pattern, and delve deeper into the story.
They need to understand that a narrative is lacking - if not at all irrelevant - if it does not begin and end with the people, whose story is not a soundbite, but rooted in a complex reality, in which history should be at center stage.
To be a journalist reporting on the Arab upheaval and not fully fathom the history of the region and the hopes and aspirations of the people, is no longer excusable.
When entire nations are bleeding, it then becomes necessary for journalists to heed Hemingway's advice: "sit down at a typewriter and bleed."
- Dr. Ramzy Baroud has been writing about the Middle East for over 20 years. He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His books include "Searching Jenin", "The Second Palestinian Intifada" and his latest "My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story". His website is www.ramzybaroud.net.

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