BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18846168
SEQUENCE:19006255
CREATED:20211108T072600Z
DESCRIPTION:11/13/21 Saturday  UFCLP Forum:  AFL-CIO, Imperialism,  Zionism and 
 Palestine\n\nSaturday November 13, 2021 2PM PST/5PM CST/6PM EST\nThere has 
 been a strong surge in support  for  Palestinian workers and people during 
 the past year. \n\nFrom CWA UPTE at UC, UESF and CUNY AFT PSC in New York, 
 union locals have voted to oppose US military and economic aid  and 
 supported boycott of Israel.\n\nThis panel will look at this history and 
 the efforts of the supporters of Israel to shut down debate, free speech 
 andto intimidate  trade unionniists and workers to remain silence about 
 apartheid Israel and support for it by the US government, and the AFL-CIO 
 leadership which receives funding from the US government through the 
 National Endowment of Democracy NED.\n\nSpeakers: \nLisa Milos, UPTE UCSF 
 Delegate To SF Labor Council & CWA 2021  Convention\n\nRabab Abdulhadi, 
 SFSU Professor & Chair Of Arab & Muslim Ethnicities & Diasporas 
 Department\n\nCarol Lang, AFT PSC CUNY College Faculty Member\n\nStan 
 Heller, Retired Connecticut  AFT Local 1547* member\n\nFor further 
 information:\ncommitteeforlaborparty(at)gmail.com\nSponsored by United 
 Front Committee For A Labor Party 
 UFCLP\nhttps://www.facebook.com/masslaborpartyusa/\n\nRegister in advance 
 for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIkfu6przkpHNZ2IM8_LwmxMNPmJPoe2urE?fbclid=IwAR3rUA9AIsTdJPEQToyWj8vhNuINcQtMhrCIatJcc-NTN3YSvyO1NkGh1Us\n\nAfter 
 registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information 
 about joining the meeting.\n\nCWA 9119 UPTE UC  Resolution in Solidarity 
 with Palestine\n\nWhereas, Israel receives $2,961.04 million in foreign aid 
 from the US to Israel which translates to $367 aid per individual. Nearly 
 all the US bilateral aid given to Israel is military assistance. Whereas in 
 September 2016, representatives of the two governments assented to a 
 Memorandum of understanding pertaining to military aid to be given from the 
 fiscal year 2019 to the fiscal year 2028. The agreement requires the US to 
 allocate $38 billion to Israel in military aid. It is the single largest 
 pledge made by the US in history.\n\nWhereas, the conflict is a one-sided 
 assault on defenseless Palestinian citizens by overwhelming military force 
 resulting in an obscene difference in the rate at which people are being 
 killed. Tens killed on one side, hundreds killed on the other.\n\nWhereas 
 Israel has targeted and destroyed hospitals, more than 1300 housing units 
 and news agencies, killing women and children in targeted airstrikes, in 
 violation of international law.\n\nWhereas this conflict would be 
 impossible without the United States’ weapons and support, creating 
 humanitarian catastrophes acknowledged time and again by international 
 observers.\n\nWhereas the Palestinian people face restrictions to residency 
 rights, citizenship, civil rights, freedom of movement, allocation of land 
 and resources, access to water, electricity, granting of building permits, 
 and other services (source).\n\nWhereas, Israel has turned Gaza into an 
 open air prison by controlling everything and everyone that is allowed to 
 come in and out of the area including by air and by sea. The population of 
 Gaza Strip is 50 percent children, 97% of the water in Gaza is unfit for 
 human consumption. And the Gaza Strip was said to be unlivable by 2020 by 
 the United Nations.\n\nWhereas, our current social and economic reforms, 
 achieved by labor struggle, are on the chopping block as our unions are 
 under attack under the premise of austerity while our government sends 10 
 million dollars a day to support the Israeli military 
 apparatus.\n\nWhereas, the AFL-CIO has supported the Israeli state by 
 purchasing bonds from Israel.\n\nTherefore, Be It Resolved, that UPTE CWA 
 9119 demands that the AFL-CIO divest from the Israeli state in terms of 
 financial support in the form of bonds and other political support.\n\nBe 
 it Further Resolved, that UPTE CWA 9119 expresses its solidarity with the 
 Palestinian’s call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS), inspired 
 by the movement that helped end apartheid in South Africa; and\n\nBe it 
 Further Resolved, that UPTE CWA 9119 will call on labor bodies to divest 
 from Israel bonds, and cut ties with the Histadrut, Israel's racist labor 
 federation that aggressively discriminates against Arab workers; 
 and\n\npage1image1684768 page1image1686224 page1image1686640 
 page1image1686848 page1image1687056 page1image1687264 page1image1687680\nBe 
 it Further Resolved, that UPTE CWA 9119 asks AFL-CIO and labor officials to 
 make public the exact amount of money it spends using union member’s 
 pension funds in State of Israel Bonds; and\n\nBe it Further Resolved, that 
 UPTE CWA 9119 will stand in solidarity with dockworkers in Italy, South 
 Africa, India, Sweden, Norway, Turkey, the US west coast, and elsewhere, 
 who refuse to handle military equipment and weapons or any other cargo 
 destined for Israel; and\n\nBe it Further Resolved that UPTE support the 
 CWA in moving to stand with the demands of Palestinian labor for full human 
 rights recognized for all people under the UN agreements. Pressing elected 
 officials in its networks to lobby the U.S. government to end all aid to 
 Israel until Israel complies with international law as it relates to the 
 treatment of occupied territories and Arab citizens and dismantles all 
 forms of Jewish supremacy and “all forms of systematic domination and 
 oppression that privilege Jewish Israelis and systematically repress 
 Palestinians, and end the persecution of Palestinians.”\n\nSources\n\nA 
 regime of Jewish supremacy from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea: 
 This is apartheid (2021): 
 https://www.btselem.org/publications/fulltext/202101_this_is_apartheid\nA 
 Threshold Crossed: Israeli Authorities and the Crimes of Apartheid and 
 Persecution (2021): 
 https://www.hrw.org/report/2021/04/27/threshold-crossed/israeli-authorities-and-crimes-aparthei 
 d-and-persecution\nUS Labor Leaders Should Stand With Palestine (2021): 
 https://www.jacobinmag.com/2021/05/us-labor-leaders-palestine-israel-bonds-trade-unions 
 Blacklisted Academic Norman Finkelstein on Gaza, “The World’s Largest 
 Concentration Camp”: 
 https://theintercept.com/2018/05/20/norman-finkelstein-gaza-iran-israel-jerusalem-embassy/\n\nHebron: 
 Palestinian photojournalist looses sight of one eye by Israeli 
 military\n\nhttps://www.ifj.org/media-centre/news/detail/category/press-freedom/article/hebron-palestinian-photojournalist-looses-sight-of-one-eye-by-israeli-military.html\n\n15 
 November 2019 \n\nThe International Federation of Journalists (IFJ), the 
 world's largest organisation of the profession representing 600,000 members 
 in 146 countries around the world, today joined its Palestinian affiliate, 
 the Palestinian Journalists Syndicate (PJS), in denouncing the latest 
 serious attack on a journalist in Hebron.\n\n\nPhoto credit: PJS 
 \nPhotojournalist Moath Amarneh today 15 November lost sight in the left 
 eye after being seriously injured by a rubber bullet fired by an Israeli 
 soldier in the Surif region of the Hebron governorate, where Amarneh was 
 covering a protest against land confiscation. He was rushed to a hospital 
 in Hebron for emergency treatment.\n\nDozens of Palestinian journalists 
 rallied on Sunday 17 November against the targeted attack on Moath Amarneh, 
 protesting with one eye covered.\n\nIn a statement, the PJS condemned the 
 attack, saying that "this deliberate targeting by the Israeli army of a 
 colleague wearing a bullet-proof vest signed "Press". It also called on 
 "international institutions to act quickly to stop this violence against 
 the press in Palestine".\n\nAnthony Bellanger, IFJ General secretary, said: 
 "Once again, the IFJ deplores the attacks on Palestinian journalists by the 
 Israeli military. The IFJ recalls that international law applies everywhere 
 and that no government is above it. It is now time for the United Nations 
 General Assembly to adopt the Convention for the Protection and Safety of 
 Journalists, so that the impunity enjoyed by predators of press freedom and 
 democracy can end in Israel as elsewhere."   \n\nFor more information, 
 please contact IFJ on +32 2 235 22 16\n\nThe IFJ represents more than 
 600,000 journalists in 146 countries\n\nFollow the IFJ on Twitter, Facebook 
 and Instagram\n\nSubscribe to IFJ News\n\nU.S. Unions Are Voicing 
 Unprecedented Support for Palestine\nWhile some national labor groups 
 remain silent, union locals across the country are speaking out to defend 
 Palestinians from Israeli 
 aggression.\nhttps://inthesetimes.com/article/palestine-israel-labor-unions-afl-cio-aft-bds-gaza\n\nJEFF 
 SCHUHRKE MAY 26, 2021\n\n(PHOTO BY STEPHEN ZENNER/SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKET 
 VIA GETTY IMAGES)\n\nWhile a ceasefire announced on May 20 has helped stem 
 some of the deadliest attacks by Israel in the latest round of aggression, 
 Palestinians are still enduring state violence at the hands of the 
 right-wing Israeli government. In response, Palestinian trade unions have 
 been repeating longstanding callsfor the international labor movement to 
 join them in their struggle for freedom — including by supporting the 
 Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions(BDS) campaign, which aims to put 
 economic and diplomatic pressure on Israel to end the occupation. \nOver 
 the past two weeks, several unions in the United States have responded to 
 these calls with an unprecedented outpouring of support for Palestinians. 
 \nOn May 13, Roofers Local 36 in Los Angeles issued a statement that 
 condemns ​“human rights violations perpetrated by the Israeli state 
 against the people of Palestine” and calls on President Biden to 
 ​“immediately halt all economic and military assistance to 
 Israel.”\n“Imperialist aggression, ethnic cleansing and genocide are 
 the enemy of all working people and organized labor must step forward to 
 defend the democratic rights of oppressed peoples everywhere,” the 
 statement says.\n“Many of our members are migrants from oppressed 
 nations, often without documentation. We’re a multinational and 
 multicultural workforce who bond together to improve our conditions,” 
 Cliff Smith, business manager for Roofers Local 36, told In These Times. 
 ​“It’s natural for us to identify with the struggles of oppressed and 
 working people in Palestine or anywhere else.”\nAfter the Israel Defense 
 Forces intentionally bombed a Gaza tower housing the offices of the 
 Associated Press and Al Jazeera on May 15, the NewsGuild-CWA — the 
 union of 24,000 journalists across North America—called the bombing 
 ​“a blatant attack on press freedom that was clearly intended to 
 prevent independent reporting on the [Israeli] government’s 
 actions.”\n“Israel’s attacks on Palestine need to stop now,” said 
 NewsGuild president Jon Schleuss.\nUNITE HERE Local 23, which represents 
 25,000 hospitality workers in cities across the South and Southwest, 
 tweeted out a message of solidarity with ​“the Palestinians in their 
 struggle against oppression and injustice,” while UNITE HERE Local 17, 
 which represents 6,000 hospitality workers in Minnesota, expressed support 
 for ​“all oppressed people” and made specific reference to 
 Palestinians. \nThe 8,000-member Teamsters Local 804 in New York City, 
 comprised primarily of UPS drivers, tweeted the hashtags #SaveSheikhJarrah 
 and #FreePalestine along with the message: ​“Solidarity with oppressed 
 people across the world.”\nAt Google, members of the recently formed 
 Alphabet Workers Union-CWA were involved in drafting a petition circulated 
 by Jewish employees last week calling on the company to support Palestine 
 and reject equating opposition to Zionism with antisemitism. \nAFL-CIO 
 silence\nAlthough many U.S. unions have enthusiastically answered the call 
 for Palestinian solidarity, the national leadership of the AFL-CIO has 
 remained silent. \nAlongside the U.S. government, the AFL-CIO has for 
 decades been one of Israel’s staunchest defenders and a generous 
 financial supporter. Many U.S. labor leaders — including AFL-CIO 
 president Richard Trumka, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union 
 president Stuart Appelbaum, and American Federation of Teachers (AFT) 
 president Randi Weingarten— openly oppose BDS, even as a growing chorus 
 of human rights groups brands Israel as an ​“apartheid 
 state.”\n“The U.S. labor movement must answer the call of our brothers 
 and sisters in Palestinian unions — and join the rest of the 
 international community — in refusing to give cover to Israeli 
 apartheid,” said Yasemin Zahra, chair of Labor Against Racism and War 
 (LARW), a network of unions and other labor organizations that builds 
 international working-class solidarity to oppose U.S. militarism both at 
 home and abroad. \nLast week, LARW called an emergency meeting to discuss 
 labor solidarity with Palestine, receiving over 350 RSVPs from union 
 members across the United States in only 24 hours, Zahra said. In the past 
 week, the group has mobilized hundreds of unionists to send a letter to 
 Trumka and the AFL-CIO’s Executive Council demanding they break their 
 silence and stand with the Palestinian people. \nThe AFL-CIO did not 
 immediately respond to a request for comment.\nMeanwhile, on May 15, the 
 national officers of the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers 
 (UE) — which is not an AFL-CIO affiliate — released a statement 
 of solidarity with Palestine. The union endorsed BDS in 2015.\n“If U.S. 
 unions are seen as tools of the U.S. government when U.S. foreign policy 
 hurts working people abroad,” the UE leaders wrote, ​“how can we 
 expect workers and unions in other parts of the world to stand in 
 solidarity with our struggles?”\nMany of the AFL-CIO’s closest 
 international allies have expressed sympathy and support for Palestinians 
 in recent weeks, including the Canadian Labour Congress, the Trades Union 
 Congress (in the UK), the Irish Congress of Trade Unions and the 
 International Trade Union Confederation.\nSome unions abroad have gone 
 beyond statements and taken bold action. A dockworkers union in the Italian 
 port city of Livorno refused to load weapons bound for Israel, while a 
 South African dockworkers union similarlyboycotted an Israeli cargo ship in 
 the port of Durban. \nIn the English city of Leicester, firefighters 
 refused calls to help remove pro-Palestine activists protesting on the roof 
 of a drone factory, while their union said they ​“stand in support of 
 Palestinian solidarity and the right to protest.”\nThe most powerful 
 collective labor action came from Palestinians themselves when they staged 
 a massive general strike on May 18 across all of historic Palestine. The 
 daylong work stoppage illustrated Israel’s dependence on Palestinian 
 workers, as construction, public transport and municipal garbage collection 
 around the country were brought to a halt.\nChallenging union 
 ​“gatekeepers”\nOne of the most significant displays of U.S. labor 
 solidarity with Palestine in recent weeks came on May 19, when the general 
 assembly of United Educators of San Francisco, Local 61 of the AFT, voted 
 to approve a resolutionendorsing BDS — making it the first K‑12 
 teacher union in the United States to do so. \nA similar BDS resolution is 
 advancing through the elected leadership of United Teachers Los Angeles 
 (UTLA), the second largest AFT local in the nation. According to UTLA 
 organizer Jollene Levid, the elected representatives of over 100 East Los 
 Angeles schools approved the resolution last Wednesday. The resolution 
 still must be approved by two more bodies of UTLA leadership before the 
 local formally adopts it.\nAt the same time, multiple AFT-affiliated 
 graduate worker unions — including the Graduate Labor Organization at 
 Brown University and the Georgetown Alliance of Graduate Employees 
 (GAGE) — put out statements of solidaritywith Palestine over the past 
 two weeks. GAGE members also joined a protest outside the Israeli embassy 
 on May 18.\nThese developments within the AFT are especially significant 
 because the union’s national president, Randi Weingarten, is one of the 
 most pro-Israel, anti-BDS figures in the U.S. labor movement. Under her 
 leadership, the AFT’s national headquarters has invested $200,000 in 
 State of Israel bonds.\nRecently, members of the AFT-affiliated Graduate 
 Employees Organization (GEO) at the University of Illinois at 
 Urbana-Champaign reiterated their 2018call for top officials of both the 
 AFT and Illinois Federation of Teachers to ​“condemn Israel’s 
 murderous aggression and blatant human rights abuses against 
 Palestinians.”\n“We are saddened and disappointed in the hostility that 
 AFT leaders such as Randi Weingarten have expressed to the 
 internationally-respected and non-violent tactic of BDS. Such leaders are 
 out of touch and out of step with the rank and file of our union,” the 
 GEO said. ​“A labor movement that does not fight for justice against 
 the bullies of the world is no labor movement at all.”\nLate last week, 
 community college instructors with AFT Local 1789 in Seattle began 
 circulating a petition—which can be signed by all rank-and-file AFT 
 members — demanding the union’s national leadership ​“issue a 
 public statement condemning the continued oppression of Palestinians by the 
 Israeli state.”\nIn a May 26 statement on her Facebook page, Weingarten 
 expressed support for ​“those in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza who are 
 dedicated to secure self determination, coexistence, shared society, safety 
 and human rights.” \n“I condemn Hamas in the strongest terms,” she 
 added. ​“I mourn the civilians killed on both sides. We can and must do 
 better.” \nEducation International — the global union federation 
 representing teacher unions around the world—issued a statement Wednesday 
 calling on both Israel and Hamas to renounce violence and engage in direct 
 negotiations. The statement was introduced by Weingarten, AFT press 
 secretary Andrew Crook said. \n“U.S. labor institutions traditionally and 
 currently have played a role in legitimizing Israel. We need to hold those 
 U.S. labor institutions accountable for that because Israel is committing 
 war crimes and crimes against humanity,” said Suzanne Adely, co-director 
 of the Food Chain Workers Alliance and president-elect of the National 
 Lawyers Guild.\nAdely, who previously worked for the UAW, is an organizer 
 with Labor for Palestine, Al-Awda New York and the US Palestinian Community 
 Network. She told In These Times that she has personally seen incidents of 
 union ​“gatekeepers” actively trying to ​“keep the Palestinian 
 question outside of labor spaces,” pointing to the example of UAW members 
 in multiple localsvoting to endorse BDS between 2014 and 2016, only to have 
 the union’s International Executive Board undemocratically 
 ​“nullify” those measures. \n“It’s been my experience that when 
 we actually can bring conversations about Palestine into spaces where 
 workers are, the workers are very sympathetic. But the problem is the 
 gatekeepers have worked to keep those conversations out,” Adely 
 explained.\n“I always tell workers, whatever issues they care about are 
 union issues,” Zahra said. ​“The members are the union. The union can 
 be a machine to serve humanity, an instrument for building an equal society 
 for all workers.”\n“We must clearly connect the dots with our members 
 about why the Palestinian struggle for freedom is also our own,” Zahra 
 continued, noting that while millions of working-class people in the United 
 States lack decent housing, healthcare and education, half of the U.S. 
 federal discretionary budget goes to the Pentagon each year — with an 
 annual $3.8 billion in military aid going to Israel.\nShe added that 
 passing resolutions and issuing solidarity statements with Palestine 
 ​“are great first steps,” but unions should ultimately aim to divest 
 from Israeli bonds and help end U.S. military assistance to Israel.\n“For 
 Palestine and for other causes, labor has a lot of power,” said Adely. 
 ​“We need to learn to utilize it — particularly to hold labor 
 leaders accountable.”\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/11/07/18846168.php
SUMMARY:AFL-CIO, Imperialism, Zionism and Palestine-UFCLP Panel
LOCATION:Register in advance for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZIkfu6przkpHNZ2IM8_LwmxMNPmJPoe2urE?fbclid=IwAR3rUA9AIsTdJPEQToyWj8vhNuINcQtMhrCIatJcc-NTN3YSvyO1NkGh1Us\n
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2021/11/07/18846168.php
DTSTART:20211113T220000Z
DTEND:20211114T000000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
