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Updates on Kate Raphael and Jayyous
A) Jayyous Reclaims its Land
B) Protest Against the Wall in Bil'in
C) PRESS RELEASE: ISRAEL ONLY ACCEPTS JEWS WHO SUPPORT SETTLEMENTS
D) Ha'aretz Daily: U.S. peace activist in prison facing second deportation
B) Protest Against the Wall in Bil'in
C) PRESS RELEASE: ISRAEL ONLY ACCEPTS JEWS WHO SUPPORT SETTLEMENTS
D) Ha'aretz Daily: U.S. peace activist in prison facing second deportation
A) Jayyous Reclaims its Land
B) Protest Against the Wall in Bil'in
C) PRESS RELEASE: ISRAEL ONLY ACCEPTS JEWS WHO SUPPORT SETTLEMENTS
D) Ha'aretz Daily: U.S. peace activist in prison facing second deportation
A) Jayyous Reclaims Its Land
December 31, 2004
Despite a large Israeli military presence, the people of Jayyous and
Israeli and international activists today planted olive seedlings on
Jayyous' bulldozed land. 75% of Jayyous land was been cut off from
the village by Israel's Apartheid Wall. Now the Israeli government
is attempting to expand the illegal settlement of Zufim on Jayyous'
land which is isolated between the Apartheid Wall and the Green
Line. Over the last weeks Israeli contractors have bulldozed over
600 olive trees for the expansion of Zufim. The International Court
of Justice recently affirmed that Israeli settlements are a violate
international law.
Twenty farmers from Jayyous who had permits to pass through gates in
the Apartheid Wall and reach their farmland took part in the
replanting. They were by joined by 15 international activists and
150 Israeli activists from Gush Shalom and Ta'ayush who walked to
Jayyous'land from the Israeli side. Eighteen Israeli military
vehicles followed the peaceful protesters as they planted 50
seedlings on the bulldozed land. From there the protesters marched
towards the gate in the Wall. Soldiers tried to stop the protesters
as they approached the Wall, but they continued. Eventually, Jayyous
farmer Sharif Omar and two Ta'ayush activists were allowed to pass
through the gate in the Wall carrying an olive seedling that had
been uprooted by Israeli bulldozers. They then passed the olive
seedling to the protesters on the other side of the fence.
From the other side of the Wall, residents of Jayyous without
permits to pass through the Wall to their land had marched from
Jayyous' main mosque to the gate in the Wall. They were joined by
twenty ISMers and twelve Israeli activists from Anarchists Against
the Wall. When the group of 200 reached the Wall they were met by 50
Israeli soldiers and border police who attempted to aggressively
move them back from the gate. The group held their ground until they
were joined by the three protesters carrying the olive seedling from
the other side. Following speeches, the protesters returned to the
village.
The days activities symbolized Palestinian, Israeli and
international rejection of Israel's illegal settlement policy in
Jayyous and the West Bank, and the determination of activists from
all three communities to prevent the loss of Jayyous'land.
------------------------
B) Demonstration Against the Wall in Bil'in
Monday 27th December 2004
The most recent demonstration against the wall in Bil'in (Tuesday
Decmber 14th) facilitated a two-week stay of construction.
The local community organized a march to take place on the
expiration date of this order and invited members of the Knesset,
Palestinians in public office, ISMers and other internationals to
join them.
At 12.30 in the afternoon on Monday 27th December approximately 200
villagers from Bil'in accompanied by 13 international activists,
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC) member Abed Al Jawad Saleh,
Minister Kadura Fares, and Presidential candidate Mustafa Bhargouti
walked together towards the site where the Wall is being
constructed.
At 1:00 in the afternoon, the march stopped to hear a presentation
on the route of the Wall and the projected growth of the nearby
settlements. This presentation was followed by speeches from those
mentioned by name above and Iede Morrar the Anti Apartheid Wall co-
coordinator for the Ramallah region.
After a brief visit to the construction site, the group returned to
the village at 2:00. Construction is expected to recommence on the
Wall soon. The Bil'in community has expressed interest in protesting
this construction and has asked for international support in
resisting the Wall in Bil'in.
-----------------------------
C) ISRAEL ONLY ACCEPTS JEWS WHO SUPPORT SETTLEMENTS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Decenber 30, 2004
An Israeli judge has agreed to a January 16 hearing on Jewish,
lesbian activist Kate Raphael Bender's appeal of her deportation
from Israel. The judge's decision comes at the same time that
Israel's Internal Security Minister Gideon Ezra has said, "We will
not prevent them (Jews) from entering even if we know they are
coming to resist the (disengagement) plan. There are people coming
for worse causes such as to break down the security fence and
participate in ISM and radical left-wing activities."
Raphael Bender says that: "Ezra's statement makes it clear that
Israel is determined to continue to flagrantly violate international
law. My appeal will challenge this double standard on decisions of
who to accept and who expel from Israel and the Occupied Palestinian
Territories."
The December 28 court decision came on Raphael Bender's 15th day of
incarceration. She was detained during a non-violent protest against
Israel's Apartheid Wall in the West Bank village of Bil'in. Raphael
Bender, a San Francisco-based activist, has spent twelve of the last
sixteen months in the Occupied Palestinian Territories with the
International Women's Peace Service (IWPS).
Raphael Bender expects that she will be held in Tsochar prison in
Sde Nitsan until the January 16 hearing where she will be represent
herself. She argues that it is illegal for the Israeli government to
prevent her from helping to implement the decision the world's
highest legal body, the International Court of Justice (ICJ). The
ICJ ruled in June that Israel must cease construction and remove the
Wall where it has been built on Palestinian land.
The Israeli Ministry of Interior based its deportation order on the
charges that Raphael Bender was participating in "a violent
demonstration", and that she was arrested and ordered expelled from
Israel one year ago. However, videotapes of the December 14 protest
in Bil'in show that the Israeli army was the only party that used
violence. Raphael Bender also argues that previous order to expel
her is illegitimate because the Israeli army has no jurisdiction in
the Palestinian Territories that it occupies illegally.
Raphael Bender explained that, "I am a Jew protecting the Jewish
people by insisting that those acting in our name respect
international law. Jews would not have said that the German
government had a right to deport foreign citizens for resisting the
Nuremberg laws in 1935."
Media Contacts:
Kate Raphael Bender: 972-(0)54-7870198
Lisa Belenky: 415-863-8604 (USA)
ISM Media Office: 972-(0)59-676782
----------------
D) U.S. peace activist in prison facing second deportation
Ha'aretz Daily
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/521447.html
By Daphna Berman
Kate Raphael Bender hadn't planned on spending New Year's Eve in an
Israeli prison, but the Jewish American peace activist from San
Francisco doesn't seem to mind it all that much either. After all,
she was in an Israeli detention facility last New Year's Eve as
well.
Raphael Bender, 45, who was arrested earlier this month during a
protest against the separation fence in the West Bank village of
Bil'in, is awaiting her January 16 court date to appeal the Interior
Ministry's deportation order against her. It her second deportation
order in less than a year.
"The idea of another three weeks or so in a prison is not what I was
hoping for," she said Wednesday from the immigration police's Tzohar
detention facility in the Negev.
Raphael Bender, who was raised in a traditional Zionist family in
Virginia, is one of the founders of Queers Undermining Israeli
Terrorism (QUIT!) and has been volunteering for the International
Women's Peace Service (IWPS) in Salfit since 2002. She was first
arrested a year ago for her participation in a demonstration in
Boudrus and was released on condition that she leave Israel. She
returned to San Francisco, where she had her name officially changed
from Katherine Raphael to Kate Bender, taking on her mother's family
name.
Raphael Bender, as she is now known, would not comment on the
reasons for the name change.
She has briefly considered applying for Israeli citizenship under
the Law of Return, but said that she needed a "really overpowering
reason to assert [her] right to live here as a Jew" before doing so.
"I realize that deportation means I won't be able to come back to
Israel and Palestine for a long time, if ever," she said. "It will
be hard because I've had a life here for quite some time."
A graduate of the Conservative Movement's USY youth program, Raphael
Bender is hoping that a victory next month will enable her to return
here and lead groups of American Jews on tours of the West
Bank. "The Jewish community wants to isolate and insulate themselves
from what's going on here," she said.
The Immigration Police refused several requests to interview Raphael
Bender at their detention facility in the Negev.
A spokesperson for the Interior Ministry said that Raphael Bender's
deportation order was issued because of her interference with Israel
Defense Forces activity and because she entered the country under a
false identity.
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