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Resigning from Cohen and Amnesty.
Amnesty's decision to "sponsor" Leonard Cohen's latest ploy to bypass the cultural boycott of apartheid Isarel is the last straw for a longtime Amnesty member.
When I first - and belatedly - began fretting about human rights and political injustice in the wake of the 1990-91 Gulf War, I joined Amnesty International and started writing letters and cards to political prisoners and to a variety of Embassies.
Although I was subsequently drawn deeply into activism of a more explicitly political nature - particularly on the Israel/Palestine issue - I retained my Amnesty membership out of residual respect for the organisation, but also because I wished to be in a position to say "as an Amnesty member myself, I completely disagree with the organisation's stance on..." (fill in the dots as appropriate).
On 30th July I read the "Open Letter to Amnesty International" from 10 admirable organisations involved in seeking justice for the Palestinian people, ranging from PACBI (Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel) through the UK Palestine Solidarity Campaign to the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network. This letter was prompted by Amnesty's decision to sponsor "a new fund that will whitewash the money raised at [Leonard] Cohen's concert in Israel by using it to finance programs for 'peace.'"
What could any reasonable person have against "programs for peace"? Well, one answer is that these include the Peres Center for Peace, described by the Israeli paper Ha'aretz as a "patronising and colonial" organisation that trains "the Palestinian population to accept its inferiority and... to guarantee the ethnic superiority of the Jews", and the Israel Discount Bank, which has branches in three illegal Jewish settlements and hence functions in violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention.
Another answer is even simpler: Leonard Cohen should heed the call from the oppressed Palestinian people not to perform in Israel until that state dismantles its apartheid structures and complies with international law and international humanitarian law, ends the occupation and colonisation of Palestinian territories, and concedes the inalienable Palestinian right of return. By assisting Cohen in his ruse to bypass this boycott, Amnesty International is in fact taking a political stance, in violation of the premise of political neutrality with which it so regularly justifies its failure to side unambiguously with the oppressed. Amnesty is telling us: resistance is futile, the voice of the oppressed is irrelevant, international humanitarian law is a luxury.
I was one of the organisers of the protests held outside Leonard Cohen's four recent Dublin concerts (19th, 20th, 22nd, 23d July) in which we called upon the singer not to perform in Tel Aviv, using the text of his 1960s classic "Please don't pass me by" to deliver a demand for solidarity and engagement with the Palestinian people and against their oppressor, the Zionist Israeli state.
I used to be a Cohen fan. Should Cohen continue with his plan to perform in Israel on 24th September next, I shall consign my Cohen albums to the charity shop, although I'll do so with considerable grief and disillusionment. It is with similar feelings that today I have sent the following message to the Irish branch of Amnesty International:
To whom it conferns: I am terminating my membership of Amnesty. The last straw has been Amnesty's decision to support a cynical scheme dreamt up by Leonard Cohen's PR department to whitewash the fact that he is ignoring the call from Palestinian civil society to respect the cultural boycott of Israel. While I respect Amnesty's policy of not supporting particular political positions and not itself participating in boycott campaigns, on this occasion it is actively supporting actions that undermine a boycott campaign supported by the Palestinians themselves, and doing so by lending support to Israeli organisations the raison d'etre of which is to seek "conciliation" without an end to oppression.
Sincerely - Raymond Deane.
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9I was a small supporter of Amnesty as well. I did support them for what they did with Guantanamo (though I found odd that they did not take a strong position on the occupation of Iraq, but would criticize Guantanamo that it is not the worst of the atrocities of the US, but liberals seem to have a fixation with guantanamo while they turn a blind eye to the brutal occupation of entire countries). After Gaza though I felt I had enough of their "play fair on both sides"... even if "both sides" are uneven and have a history in which one is clearly the oppressor of the other. You can't say "all sides violate the international humanitarian law" and don't mention that one of the sides happens to be occupied by the other, and that one of the sides practice a daily, systematic negation of the humanity of the other side. Not to talk that whatever Palestinians have done wrong, Israel has done it a thousands times more often and worse.
If yo say that the two sides are equally responsible of human rights violations because one side (Palestinians) killed three civilians and the other (Israel) killes one thousand and three hundred, the message of Amnesty is unequivocal: the lives of Palestinians are much, much cheaper than those of Israelis. And that, whether they like it or not, is an imperial and colonial argument. Amnesty, despite all their rhetoric, reproduce a racist argument: that the lives of the colonizers are dearer that those of the colonized. Their whole position on Gaza was too much of hard pill to swallow so I stopped my humbre direct debit with them. But now that they have taken an active part in undermining the boycot, they are showing their true colours without any sense of embarassment. Sickening.
As Desmond Tutu said, if in a case of blatant oppression you declare yourself to be neutral, you are effectively siding with the oppressor. I do not like the "with me or against me" argument, but Amnesty is clearly a human rights talkshop for a liberal sector of the colonialists.
ps. I never liked Cohen though... I find him a depressive, snobby and grey fart.
'If you say that the two sides are equally responsible of human rights violations....' blah blah blah...
Pepe, please show us where Amnesty said this? a link? a quote?
please read and watch:
PDF: 'Israel/Gaza: Operation "Cast Lead": 22 days of death and destruction'
http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/MDE15/015/2009/...n.pdf
I am an active member of Amnesty International, there are many reasons to criticize the organisation, most for its pseudo-democracy and how the London office dominates the agenda. But, then I have never been a member of any organization that didn't have its problems.
In regards to Raymond's criticism, I agree with most of it. And I do not think Leonard Cohen should be allowed to use Amnesty as cover. It smacks of opportunism from both Leonard Cohen and Amnesty International.
Caption: Video Id: HABy2NpK0B8 Type: Youtube Video
July 2009 Amnesty Video about Israeli Attack on Gaza, including the use of white phosphorus
So what stance do Amnesty indeed to take on Cohen?
I read that proceeds go to Israeli & Palestinian peace groups.
I hope Pepe doesn't have any Bob Dylan albums either. He wrote a song featured on his "Infidels" album called "Neighborhood Bully" which comes down heavily on the side of Israel.
This boycotting Israel business gets a bit tedious when one realises how many decent people support it and how much Israel contributes to the world in technology and medicine etc..
Supporting Israeli people is not the same as endorsing Israel's actions.
"Supporting Israeli people is not the same as endorsing Israel's actions."
I fully agree. However Dylan's song clearly endorses Israel's actions.
My mother, Lucila Breatnach (nee Mentxaka-Hellmann) was an active Amnesty member years ago, as was my father Deasún (both died October 2007). Lucila was more: she founded the Dún Laoire branch, designed a mobile display that she set up in the shopping centre there and was also Coordinator for the Andean Region in Ireland. She was also very disappointed with the organisation over their stand (or lack of it) on Ireland (a previous commentator made reference to the location of Amnesty's headquarters in London and the impact of this on their outlook).
I myself have been disappointed with the organisation a number of times; although the headquarters have annually issued a condemnation of Spanish state torture of detainees (Basque separatist activists prominent among the list), the Dublin office has consistently neglected to respond to DIBSC correspondence on its position on that and similar issues and, in the one case when it did, to comply with its undertaking to get back to the DIBSC on the issue.
I personally believe that this facilitation of boycott-dodging and of dirty money laundering is, however, one of the worst things Amnesty has done. It is a sin of commission, not of omission and gives assistance to one of the worst states in recent history in the face of rising international disgust at its actions.
I do think that Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions are an important contribution to offering the beleaguered Palestinians solidarity (at their request) and to setting up a united front of abhorence against the Israeli state's actions. Regrettably, there is little else by way of action open to us and, should we make this a strong response as we did with South Africa, we may be able to force our politicians to assist in putting the squeeze on, by making it difficult for Irish companies to profit by Israel's actions and to propose denying Israel the status of "favoured trading partner" with the EU.
New York, NY, August 18 – Amnesty International has announced today that it will abstain from any involvement in the Leonard Cohen concert in Tel Aviv and will not be party to any fund that benefits from the concert‘s proceeds. A number of media accounts had reported that Amnesty International was to manage or otherwise partner in a fund created from the proceeds of Cohen’s concert in Israel that would be used to benefit Israeli and Palestinian groups. Amnesty International’s announcement today followed an international outcry over the human rights organization’s reported involvement in the Leonard Cohen concert fund, and an earlier international call for Cohen to boycott apartheid Israel.
[....]
On August 5th, eleven groups launched a letter writing campaign to Amnesty International which has resulted in hundreds of emails sent. Among those urging Amnesty International to reject involvement with the Cohen concert are former Amnesty International USA board member Prof. Naseer Aruri, Amnesty International USA’s former Midwest Regional Director Doris Strieter, peace activist Kathy Kelly, and a number of Amnesty International members.
• more at: http://www.pacbi.org/etemplate.php?id=1080