||| FROM DARCY LEACH for ORCAS FRIENDS WORSHIP GROUP |||
In the name of peace and justice, the Orcas Friends Worship Group (Quakers), would like to share publicly with our island neighbors the fact that we have signed on to the following statement regarding the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. The statement was drafted by several national and international Quaker organizations, which are listed at its conclusion.
For centuries, Quakers have worked for peace. This mission is a practical expression of the nonviolent message of the gospels and the teaching reflected in the many religions around the world: love your neighbor as yourself.
Quakers believe in the inherent worth of every individual and have a history of supporting both Palestinian and Israeli communities in the region. One of our organizations, the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), established the first refugee camps in Gaza in 1949 and continues to work in Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel today. Indeed, we have a longstanding presence in what is now Israel and Palestine, dating back to the 1800s. Quakers established the Ramallah Friends Schools over 150 years ago, one of the first institutions to educate Palestinian women. Palestinian Quakers continue to worship at the historic Friends Meeting House in Ramallah.
With these deep roots, we speak with firsthand knowledge. In a context where entrenched inequality, violence, and injustice have persisted for decades, we anticipated that desperation would eventually boil over – and sadly, it has.
The last six months have been marked by constant grief. The devastating attack by Hamas on October 7th in Israel claimed the lives of 1,163 Israelis and resulted in over 250 people being taken hostage. As of early April 2024, Israel’s subsequent attacks on Gaza have killed at least 33,000 Palestinians, with thousands missing and presumed dead under the rubble.
Since October 7th, over 7,500 Palestinians from the West Bank and thousands more from Gaza, including children, have been imprisoned, many without charge or trial. Shockingly, more than 40 percent of those killed in Gaza have been children, surpassing the global count of child casualties in all other conflicts from 2019 to 2022. Countless children have been orphaned and maimed as a result.
In Gaza, hospitals, schools, universities, aid distribution centers, mosques, and churches have all been bombed and destroyed, leaving no safe space. Over 70% of homes have been damaged or destroyed, with more than 1.9 million people displaced.
Essential systems such as healthcare, water, and sanitation have collapsed, leading to preventabledeaths, surgeries without anesthesia, and pregnant women giving birth in tents and without propercare.
AFSC staff in Gaza have shared horrendous accounts of starvation used as a tool of war. Children in Gazaare starving to death. The World Health Organization predicts that up to 80,000 more lives will be lost todisease and starvation if no immediate action is taken. This crisis surpasses anything many of us have witnessed in our decades of responding to disasters worldwide.
The continued restrictions on aid access and Israel’s failure to respect and protect humanitarian workershave created an environment where it is nearly impossible for organizations to provide assistance. This dire situation has pushed the Gaza population to the brink of extreme food insecurity and imminent famine. Hundreds of local and foreign aid workers have been targeted and killed, and AFSC’s relief staff continue to face extreme insecurity, sharing with us that they are “still alive by chance.”
Disturbingly, instead of increasing aid provisions, major actors such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and other members of the international community have cut off or delayed funding to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA). Unproven Israeli allegations linking UNRWA employees to the October 7th attack have had severe repercussions on the welfare of the most
vulnerable population the agency serves.
Immediate action is needed so that killings and suffering can end. That starts with a permanent ceasefire, the release of hostages and prisoners, and unrestricted humanitarian access in Gaza.
In January, the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel’s actions in Gaza might constitute genocide. Regrettably, Israel has taken no steps to change its behavior since this ruling, ignoring the court’s provisional measures. Western governments, especially the United States, the United Kingdom, and key European states, continue to provide arms and support to Israel. Their complicity, along with
unilateral vetoes preventing repeated ceasefire resolutions at the UN Security Council, raises concerns about international commitments to multilateralism and respect for international legal frameworks.
Finally, Western leaders must look beyond this moment and work towards achieving a just and lasting peace in Palestine and Israel. Violence is not limited to Gaza. More than 500 Palestinians, including more than 100 children, have been killed in the West Bank by Israeli soldiers and settlers since October 7.
Settler and military violence has resulted in the complete depopulation of 16 Palestinian villages, causing fear and tension to permeate the whole population. Restricting worship and access to mosques and churches further infringes on freedom of worship and exacerbates tensions.
Over the last several years, a growing number of international human rights organizations have recognized Israel’s treatment of Palestinians as meeting the legal definition of apartheid. In the face of this pervasive injustice, Quakers stand firm in our witness, as we have throughout history against racial inequality, South African apartheid, and all forms of war.
Even in this time of violence and pain, we hold the belief that a different future, free from injustice and violence, is possible. Lasting peace and reconciliation will be realized when both past and ongoing injustices are acknowledged and addressed, ensuring freedom, dignity, equal rights, and justice for all people living in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Let us work together to make this vision a reality.
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A fair, impartial rendering. My gratitude to Darcy Leach and the Orcas Friends Worship Group for signing on and sharing.
Meanwhile, for those that subscribe to the NYT’s, this expose’ is the conclusion of a 3 yr. investigation into Israel and it’s policy towards Palestine. It’s a real eye-opener for those that havn’t studied the long-term history related to the issue.
The Unpunished: How Extremists Took Over Israel
“This story is told in three parts. The first documents the unequal system of justice that grew around Jewish settlements in Gaza and the West Bank. The second shows how extremists targeted not only Palestinians but also Israeli officials trying to make peace. The third explores how this movement gained control of the state itself. Taken together, they tell the story of how a radical ideology moved from the fringes to the heart of Israeli political power.”
“His (speaking of Smotrich), ultraright allies sometimes referred to the Jewish Department as Hamakhlaka Hayehudit — the Hebrew phrase for the Gestapo unit that executed Hitler’s Final Solution.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/16/magazine/israel-west-bank-settler-violence-impunity.html?unlocked_article_code=1.tk0.kp9_.Y7G0nB8qpLnU&smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
I notice that the author(s) use the volatile words Apartheid and Genocide, which I’ve used in my comments to the New York Times, and which were summarily rejected by the “moderators.” But from the article Michael Johnson shared above, it seems that the NYT is coming around to that difficult conclusion.
I just noticed that they didn’t print the entire statement, so it doesn’t show the organizations that drafted it, as I had promised in our introductory paragraph above. If you’re interested, here is a link to the complete statement, which includes a call for specific actions on the part of all parties to the conflict:
https://afsc.org/newsroom/different-future-possible-quaker-organizations-share-vision-peace-palestine-and-israel
Thank you Darcy. This is a very interesting article, and I now have an even higher level of respect for both the Quakers and the Friends (AFSC). I agree with every one of their stated demands / goals. Years ago there used to be a small local chapter that met weekly here in Eastsound at the Episcopal Church. I wonder if they are still meeting, and if they will also be signing on?
Meanwhile, here’s a short, profound interview with academics Angela Davis and Gabor Mate’ on the role Zionism plays, in not just Palestine, but in worldwide politics today.
“Palestine is the moral litmus test for the world.” Poet Jim Jordan
https://www.youtube.com/live/z69vUN79CXA?si=7zFFZR0K_c0SRuRl