Thursday, September 11, 2008
Friday, August 15, 2008
Wednesday, April 09, 2008
'No Checkpoints in Heaven' - Ramzy Baroud

Dear Editor,
This is my latest article, entitled: No Checkpoints in Heaven, written in the memory of my father, who passed away recently in Gaza.
Thanks and regards
Ramzy Baroud
+++++
No Checkpoints in Heaven
By Ramzy Baroud
I still vividly remember my father’s face - wrinkled, apprehensive, warm - as he last wished me farewell fourteen years ago. He stood outside the rusty door of my family’s home in a Gaza refugee camp wearing old yellow pyjamas and a seemingly ancient robe. As I hauled my one small suitcase into a taxi that would take me to an Israeli airport an hour away, my father stood still. I wished he would go back inside; it was cold and the soldiers could pop up at any moment. As my car moved on, my father eventually faded into the distance, along with the graveyard, the water tower and the camp. It never occurred to me that I would never see him again.
I think of my father now as he was that day. His tears and his frantic last words: “Do you have your money? Your passport? A jacket? Call me the moment you get there. Are you sure you have your passport? Just check, one last time…”
My father was a man who always defied the notion that one can only be the outcome of his circumstance. Expelled from his village at the age of 10, running barefoot behind his parents, he was instantly transferred from the son of a landowning farmer to a penniless refugee in a blue tent provided by the United Nations in Gaza. Thus, his life of hunger, pain, homelessness, freedom-fighting, love, marriage and loss commenced.
The fact that he was the one chosen to quit school to help his father provide for his now tent-dwelling family was a huge source of stress for him. In a strange, unfamiliar land, his new role was going into neighbouring villages and refugee camps to sell gum, aspirin and other small items. His legs were a testament to the many dog bites he obtained during these daily journeys. Later scars were from the shrapnel he acquired through war.
As a young man and soldier in the Palestinian unit of the Egyptian army, he spent years of his life marching through the Sinai desert. When the Israeli army took over Gaza following the Arab defeat in 1967, the Israeli commander met with those who served as police officers under Egyptian rule and offered them the chance to continue their services under Israeli rule. Proudly and willingly, my young father chose abject poverty over working under the occupier’s flag. And for that, predictably, he paid a heavy price. His two-year-old son died soon after.
My oldest brother is buried in the same graveyard that bordered my father’s house in the camp. My father, who couldn’t cope with the thought that his only son died because he couldn’t afford to buy medicine or food, would be found asleep near the tiny grave all night, or placing coins and candy in and around it.
My father’s reputation as an intellectual, his obsession with Russian literature, and his endless support of fellow refugees brought him untold trouble with the Israeli authorities, who retaliated by denying him the right to leave Gaza.
His severe asthma, which he developed as a teenager was compounded by lack of adequate medical facilities. Yet, despite daily coughing streaks and constantly gasping for breath, he relentlessly negotiated his way through life for the sake of his family. On one hand, he refused to work as a cheap labourer in Israel. “Life itself is not worth a shred of one’s dignity,” he insisted. On the other, with all borders sealed except that with Israel, he still needed a way to bring in an income. He would buy cheap clothes, shoes, used TVs, and other miscellaneous goods, and find a way to transport and sell them in the camp. He invested everything he made to ensure that his sons and daughter could receive a good education, an arduous mission in a place like Gaza.
But when the Palestinian uprising of 1987 exploded, and our camp became a battleground between stone-throwers and the Israeli army, mere survival became Dad’s new obsession. Our house was the closest to the Red Square, arbitrarily named for the blood spilled there, and also bordered the ‘Martyrs’ Graveyard’. How can a father adequately protect his family in such surroundings? Israeli soldiers stormed our house hundreds of times; it was always him who somehow held them back, begging for his children’s safety, as we huddled in a dark room awaiting our fate. “You will understand when you have your own children,” he told my older brothers as they protested his allowing the soldiers to slap his face. Our ‘freedom-fighting’ dad struggled to explain how love for his children could surpass his own pride. He grew in my eyes that day.
It’s been fourteen years since I last saw my father. As none of his children had access to isolated Gaza, he was left alone to fend for himself. We tried to help as much as we could, but what use is money without access to medicine? In our last talk he said he feared he would die before seeing my children, but I promised that I would find a way. I failed.
Since the siege on Gaza, my father’s life became impossible. His ailments were not ‘serious’ enough for hospitals crowded with limbless youth. During the most recent Israeli onslaught, most hospital spaces were converted to surgery wards, and there was no place for an old man like my dad. All attempts to transfer him to the better equipped West Bank hospitals failed as Israeli authorities repeatedly denied him the required permit.
"I am sick, son, I am sick," my father cried when I spoke to him two days before his death. He died alone on March 18, waiting to be reunited with my brothers in the West Bank. He died a refugee, but a proud man nonetheless.
My father’s struggle began 60 years ago, and it ended a few days ago. Thousands of people descended to his funeral from throughout Gaza, oppressed people that shared his plight, hopes and struggles, accompanying him to the graveyard where he was laid to rest. Even a resilient fighter deserves a moment of peace.
-Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) is an author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).
QuestionItNow Voices
Labels: Gaza, No Checkpoints in Heaven, Ramzy Baroud
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Five Years into Iraq - Only 3% of American news stories covered the $3,000,000,000,000 War in Iraq in February

Dear America,
This week marks the fifth anniversary of the war in Iraq, but you might not have seen much about it on TV recently. Just 3% of the news in February was dedicated to the war and fewer than one in three Americans know how many American troops have died in Iraq. Believe it or not, a study just released by the Pew Research Center shows that press coverage of the war is at the lowest point since the war began.
Please take a minute now to sign an open letter to the media and demand that major networks increase their coverage of the Iraq war.
The economy and the presidential campaigns are both important stories, but news of the ongoing wars shouldn't fall by the wayside. The media must demonstrate that they can walk and chew gum at the same time. Over 80% of Americans are aware that Oprah Winfrey endorsed Senator Barack Obama for president, while just 28% know how many troops have died in Iraq- even though we are rapidly approaching 4,000 casualties.
An unprecedented detachment between the American public and the men and women at war makes the media's coverage of the conflicts more vital than ever. Just because the coverage has waned doesn't mean our troops aren't facing daily dangers or major issues once they return home.
Men and women continue to serve in Iraq, though you might not realize that just from watching the news. Please sign this open letter and honor the sacrifice of those who have served in the past five years by making sure they remain in the public eye.Please sign this open letter and honor the sacrifice of those who have served in the past five years by making sure they remain in the public eye.
Thank you for your continued support.
Sincerely,
Paul Rieckhoff
Iraq Veteran
Executive Director
Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America
As an aside, the American public can easily track the depressing statistics of the Iraqi civilian dead at IRAQ BODY COUNT. As of this evening, the five year anniversary total is estimated between 82,249 and 89,760.
Happy Anniversary President Bush!
QuestionItNow
Labels: American Media, Iraq Afghanistan Veterans of America, iraq war, Paul Rieckhoff
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Senator Carl Levin stands against torture
Senate Floor Statement on the Army Field Manual Provision in the Intelligence Authorization Conference Report:
02/13/08
I urge my colleagues to support the Intelligence Authorization conference report which includes a requirement that all government agencies, including the CIA, comply with the Army Field Manual on Interrogations in the treatment and interrogation of detainees.
The result will be a single standard of treatment for detainees, a standard consistent with American values and international standards. The Army Field Manual is consistent with our obligations under Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which prohibits subjecting detainees to "cruel treatment and torture." This is the standard to which our soldiers are trained and which they live by.
Consistent with this standard, the Army Field Manual specifically prohibits certain interrogation techniques. These include:
* Forced nudity;
* "Waterboarding," that is, inducing the sensation of drowning;
* Using military working dogs in interrogations;
* Subjecting detainees to extreme temperatures; and
* Mock executions.
Unfortunately, the Bush Administration has insisted that it reserves the right for the CIA to engage in certain "enhanced interrogation techniques." It has been reported that these CIA techniques include "waterboarding." While this Justice Department continues to refuse to say one way or the other, let there be no doubt: waterboarding is torture.
The Judge Advocates General of all four services have told us unequivocally that waterboarding is illegal. Requiring that all government agencies comply with the standards of the Army Field Manual is not mushy intellectualism. It’s hard-headed pragmatism. When we fail to live up to our own standards for humane treatment, we compromise our moral authority. Our security depends on the willingness of others to work with us and share information, information which could prevent the next attack. When we project moral hypocrisy, we lose the support of the world in the fight against the extremists. Requiring a single standard for the treatment of detainees consistent with the Army Field Manual protects our men and women in uniform, should they be captured. It strengthens our hand in demanding that American prisoners be treated humanely, consistent with values embodied in the Field Manual. I urge my colleagues to support the Intelligence Authorization conference report with the provision that standards in the Army Field Manual for treatment of detainees will apply to all elements of the intelligence community.
- Michigan Senator Carl Levin
QuestionItNow
02/13/08
I urge my colleagues to support the Intelligence Authorization conference report which includes a requirement that all government agencies, including the CIA, comply with the Army Field Manual on Interrogations in the treatment and interrogation of detainees.
The result will be a single standard of treatment for detainees, a standard consistent with American values and international standards. The Army Field Manual is consistent with our obligations under Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which prohibits subjecting detainees to "cruel treatment and torture." This is the standard to which our soldiers are trained and which they live by.
Consistent with this standard, the Army Field Manual specifically prohibits certain interrogation techniques. These include:
* Forced nudity;
* "Waterboarding," that is, inducing the sensation of drowning;
* Using military working dogs in interrogations;
* Subjecting detainees to extreme temperatures; and
* Mock executions.
Unfortunately, the Bush Administration has insisted that it reserves the right for the CIA to engage in certain "enhanced interrogation techniques." It has been reported that these CIA techniques include "waterboarding." While this Justice Department continues to refuse to say one way or the other, let there be no doubt: waterboarding is torture.
The Judge Advocates General of all four services have told us unequivocally that waterboarding is illegal. Requiring that all government agencies comply with the standards of the Army Field Manual is not mushy intellectualism. It’s hard-headed pragmatism. When we fail to live up to our own standards for humane treatment, we compromise our moral authority. Our security depends on the willingness of others to work with us and share information, information which could prevent the next attack. When we project moral hypocrisy, we lose the support of the world in the fight against the extremists. Requiring a single standard for the treatment of detainees consistent with the Army Field Manual protects our men and women in uniform, should they be captured. It strengthens our hand in demanding that American prisoners be treated humanely, consistent with values embodied in the Field Manual. I urge my colleagues to support the Intelligence Authorization conference report with the provision that standards in the Army Field Manual for treatment of detainees will apply to all elements of the intelligence community.
- Michigan Senator Carl Levin
QuestionItNow
Labels: Army Field Manual, Carl Levin, Geneva Conventions, torture
Sunday, January 06, 2008
CHANGE?
Last night my wife and I watched a re-run of Robin Williams in "Man of the Year." Watching his performance reminded me how brilliant and insightful this comedian is. Williams hits the nail on the head about so many issues in his rapid-fire delivery it is tough to keep up with him. Still, his performance reminds that too often the American political landscape is littered with influence peddling and shameless hypocrisy.
The recent wins of Barrack Obama, and Mike Huckabee in Iowa, along with the record turnout have the analysts pointing to a growing American hunger for change. Yet, the questions remain ‘will things truly change?’ Will the common good trump the special interests? Will America elect a government that will be focused on the issues that affect the lives, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of everyday Americans?
Interestingly America seems ready to finally discard the Bush/Cheney era politics of fear. The evidence lays in the smack-down of fear monger #1 Rudy Giuliani. The fire-fighter foe scored less than half as well as the self-proclaimed change-agent Ron Paul. Paul took ten percent, and remains within striking distance of the unsettled, and bitterly divided republican field.
Joel Hirshorn has his own take on these recent events and how they relate to Ron Paul in particular:
Change Yes, Ron Paul No
Joel S. Hirschhorn
Ron Pauls obnoxious supporters like more traditional political activists can spin and delude themselves about election results. But the Iowa caucus results could not be clearer: The vast national desire for political change is manifesting itself through support for both Democratic and Republican change-candidates. Despite Paul being flush with money and having a large number of workers in Iowa, he was solidly rejected as the leading change agent.
Even with a huge historic turnout of about 348,000 participants, Paul did not attract significant numbers of independents that could easily participate in the Republican caucuses. They went to Obama, Edwards and Huckabee.
On the Democratic side, of some 232,000 people that turned out for the caucuses, nearly doubling what it was four years ago, about 70 percent wanted change and went for Obama and Edwards, roughly 150,000 participants.
On the Republican side, of the 116,000 participants, about 40,000 change-voters went for Huckabee, compared to 11,600 that chose Paul, giving him fifth place. That 10 percent for Paul was very close to the 9 percent found in a Des Moines Register poll of likely caucus voters (margin of error 3.5 points). Interestingly, like Paul, Huckabee also wants to eliminate the federal income tax.
In both parties, change-voters totaled about 200,000. So Paul received just 6 percent of that large fraction, and just 3 percent of the total of all caucus participants in Iowa. Paul was first in only one county, Jefferson, with 36 percent
Edwards was absolutely correct when he summed things up this way: The one thing that is clear from the results in Iowa tonight is the status quo lost and change won.
With all the hoopla from Paul supporters about younger people being for Paul, thats not what the Iowa results showed. Younger people seeking change and inspiration flocked to Obama, in particular. There was no demographic in Iowa that overwhelmingly went for Paul. Sure, Paul beat Giuliani, but Pauls effort in Iowa was much bigger than Giulianis.
None of these results will impact Pauls supporters nationwide. Earl Ofari Hutchinson wrote a great article on Alternet.org: Ron Paul is Scary, But Those Who Cheer Him Are Even Scarier. He was right when he said: The scariest thing about GOP presidential contender Ron Paul is not his fringe, odd-ball racial views. It is that people take him seriously. But now Iowa has thankfully shown that the vast majority of Americans, especially those seeking political change, reject Paul.
After losing badly in Iowa Paul said: The other candidates talk about tinkering with the status quo. We dont want to tinker; we want to change the status quo. He said that his campaign is on the upswing and gaining support among independents, frustrated Republicans and unhappy Democrats. Just one very big problem: The Iowa results show that all these people are much more likely to vote for other Democratic and Republican change-candidates.
Pauls supporters claim that he will do much better in New Hampshire where Libertarian Party members hold a number of offices. I dont think so. Several polls taken before the Iowa results found Paul at just 5 to 9 percent. Will Paul get a big boost from Iowa? I dont think so. Paul had predicted he could finish in third place in Iowa, and many of his supporters think he will do that in New Hampshire. I dont think so. Paul will likely finish fifth in New Hampshire, in large part because more independents will go to Obama and McCain.
When Paul first ran for president as the Libertarian Party candidate in 1988, he won just 0.54 percent of the vote. Iowa shows that his second presidential bid will not produce much better results. Paul is definitely not tapping in a major way into the national populist movement, major desire for political change, anti-status quo sentiment, or even the anti-Iraq war issue. Clearly, other Democratic and Republican change-candidates are doing much better. This reality will not affect Pauls passionate, cult-like followers that are solidified like cement in their belief that Paul can and should be our next president, something that Paul himself probably never really believed.
[Joel S. Hirschhorn can be reached through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.]
QuestionItNow
The recent wins of Barrack Obama, and Mike Huckabee in Iowa, along with the record turnout have the analysts pointing to a growing American hunger for change. Yet, the questions remain ‘will things truly change?’ Will the common good trump the special interests? Will America elect a government that will be focused on the issues that affect the lives, liberty, and pursuit of happiness of everyday Americans?
Interestingly America seems ready to finally discard the Bush/Cheney era politics of fear. The evidence lays in the smack-down of fear monger #1 Rudy Giuliani. The fire-fighter foe scored less than half as well as the self-proclaimed change-agent Ron Paul. Paul took ten percent, and remains within striking distance of the unsettled, and bitterly divided republican field.
Joel Hirshorn has his own take on these recent events and how they relate to Ron Paul in particular:
Change Yes, Ron Paul No
Joel S. Hirschhorn
Ron Pauls obnoxious supporters like more traditional political activists can spin and delude themselves about election results. But the Iowa caucus results could not be clearer: The vast national desire for political change is manifesting itself through support for both Democratic and Republican change-candidates. Despite Paul being flush with money and having a large number of workers in Iowa, he was solidly rejected as the leading change agent.
Even with a huge historic turnout of about 348,000 participants, Paul did not attract significant numbers of independents that could easily participate in the Republican caucuses. They went to Obama, Edwards and Huckabee.
On the Democratic side, of some 232,000 people that turned out for the caucuses, nearly doubling what it was four years ago, about 70 percent wanted change and went for Obama and Edwards, roughly 150,000 participants.
On the Republican side, of the 116,000 participants, about 40,000 change-voters went for Huckabee, compared to 11,600 that chose Paul, giving him fifth place. That 10 percent for Paul was very close to the 9 percent found in a Des Moines Register poll of likely caucus voters (margin of error 3.5 points). Interestingly, like Paul, Huckabee also wants to eliminate the federal income tax.
In both parties, change-voters totaled about 200,000. So Paul received just 6 percent of that large fraction, and just 3 percent of the total of all caucus participants in Iowa. Paul was first in only one county, Jefferson, with 36 percent
Edwards was absolutely correct when he summed things up this way: The one thing that is clear from the results in Iowa tonight is the status quo lost and change won.
With all the hoopla from Paul supporters about younger people being for Paul, thats not what the Iowa results showed. Younger people seeking change and inspiration flocked to Obama, in particular. There was no demographic in Iowa that overwhelmingly went for Paul. Sure, Paul beat Giuliani, but Pauls effort in Iowa was much bigger than Giulianis.
None of these results will impact Pauls supporters nationwide. Earl Ofari Hutchinson wrote a great article on Alternet.org: Ron Paul is Scary, But Those Who Cheer Him Are Even Scarier. He was right when he said: The scariest thing about GOP presidential contender Ron Paul is not his fringe, odd-ball racial views. It is that people take him seriously. But now Iowa has thankfully shown that the vast majority of Americans, especially those seeking political change, reject Paul.
After losing badly in Iowa Paul said: The other candidates talk about tinkering with the status quo. We dont want to tinker; we want to change the status quo. He said that his campaign is on the upswing and gaining support among independents, frustrated Republicans and unhappy Democrats. Just one very big problem: The Iowa results show that all these people are much more likely to vote for other Democratic and Republican change-candidates.
Pauls supporters claim that he will do much better in New Hampshire where Libertarian Party members hold a number of offices. I dont think so. Several polls taken before the Iowa results found Paul at just 5 to 9 percent. Will Paul get a big boost from Iowa? I dont think so. Paul had predicted he could finish in third place in Iowa, and many of his supporters think he will do that in New Hampshire. I dont think so. Paul will likely finish fifth in New Hampshire, in large part because more independents will go to Obama and McCain.
When Paul first ran for president as the Libertarian Party candidate in 1988, he won just 0.54 percent of the vote. Iowa shows that his second presidential bid will not produce much better results. Paul is definitely not tapping in a major way into the national populist movement, major desire for political change, anti-status quo sentiment, or even the anti-Iraq war issue. Clearly, other Democratic and Republican change-candidates are doing much better. This reality will not affect Pauls passionate, cult-like followers that are solidified like cement in their belief that Paul can and should be our next president, something that Paul himself probably never really believed.
[Joel S. Hirschhorn can be reached through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.]
QuestionItNow
Labels: Barrack Obama, Congressman Ron Paul, Joel Hirshorn, John Edwards, Mike Huckabee, Rudy Giuliani
Monday, December 24, 2007
"The Present Crisis"

"They have rights who dare maintain them...
New occasions teach new duties; Time makes ancient good uncouth;
They must upward still, and onward, who would keep abreast of Truth..."
- James Russell Lowell (1819–1891)
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Labels: james russell lowell, the present crisis
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