Sunday, April 28, 2024

Chelan Harkin: God Did It

Deepest bow of gratitude, love, and appreciation for Chelan Harkin and all that flows through her ― which she offers to us individually and collectively. I have all three of her poetry books. Highly recommended. And now I have preordered and eagerly await the publication of her forth book. My husband and I also often read one or two of Chelan's poems together, sometimes daily. We read God Did It this morning. And loved it. 

I believe that Chelan Harkin's depth of consciousness and love, her journey of deep struggle and healing and awakening, the ways that she illuminates and challenges the great longtime harms and illusions of the status quo, and her wisdom and vision for a transformed world is a gift to us all. 💗

Blessed be. 🙏 Molly

Photo by Molly

GOD DID IT

The light of God
is the only revolutionary.

It's the light in each other
that's been too bright to see.
To look at it directly
would burn down
our separation.

It's the light
that overthrows
hierarchy.

It tosses our small identity
into the sea that cannot be separated
from all.

As Her revolution builds
in our hearts,
humanity evolves.

She is the Great Subversive One
who will speak up
for that which is true
even amidst those armed
with the harshest dedication
to falsehoods.

She is the lead abolitionist.

She is at the front
of feminist marches,
She is the origin of any cause
that brings consciousness
forward.

If any religious dogmatists
or puffed-up men
get mad at me
for the great mercy
of my disruptive poetry
She has told me
to use Her
as my scapegoat.

So I look at them
unflinchingly
with a wry smile
and say,

"Don't blame me.
God did it."

― Chelan Harkin
From Wild Grace

Saturday, April 27, 2024

Deliver Us From Cowardice, Laziness, and Arrogance

Photo by Molly

Deliver Us From Cowardice,
Laziness, and Arrogance

From the cowardice that shrinks from new truth,
From the laziness that is content with half-truths,
From the arrogance that thinks it knows all truth,
O God of Truth, deliver us.

 An Ancient Scholar


This quote is found in The Second Half of Life:
Opening the Eight Gates of Wisdom
by Angeles Arrien

AN EXCELLENT ARTICLE: Students on the Front Line

THIS IS EXCELLENT AND, I BELIEVE, NEEDS TO
BE READ AND SHARED FAR AND WIDE.
― Molly


The Gaza protests are moral, brave, and part 
of a much broader struggle.

By RICHARD (RJ) ESKOW

It’s beginning to look like the rallying cry of 1960’s-era student radicals – “Bring the War Home!” – is becoming a reality on many American campuses.

I visited the University of Maryland on Tuesday, as students protested the genocide in Gaza and their university’s role in it. The big news story that day was the police crackdown at Columbia University. Today, protests and crackdowns are occurring across the country. Predictably, the news coverage has been heavily skewed toward alleged antisemitism, downplaying the students’ moral stand and the horror they’re protesting.

That’s no accident. These students are on the front line in a conflict between global forces, a conflict that most of us have yet to fully grasp. Israel’s assault on Palestine is the tip of the spear for the Global North’s attack on those nations and peoples it sees as a threat. That has always included people inside the Global North who oppose its militarism.

The parallels can be striking. A phalanx of armed police in Texas looks like an occupying army. The barriers and checkpoints surrounding Columbia echo the ones enclosing Palestine. And in a faint but haunting echo of the horror in Gaza, the University of Minnesota has reportedly cut off the water supply to buildings used by demonstrators.

The University of Maryland was quiet by comparison. “We’re quite not at the Columbia level,” one protester told me apologetically. But what matters is presence, not mass; witness, not volume. Witness is immaterial, without weight or momentum. But, like a catalyzing atom in chemistry, a single act of witness can change everything.  It can be the fraction that transforms the whole.

Two days later, we are already seeing signs of a larger transformation.

That’s exactly what the people who run this system fear the most. They understand the threat that popular movements pose to them, often before the rest of us do. That’s why they go to extreme lengths to suppress them. It’s also why they attempt to smear an entire movement with false accusations, in this case of antisemitism. Consider, for example, the observations of NBC News correspondent (and Emmy Award winner) Antonia Hylton as she covered the Columbia encampment:

“I want to clear some stuff up. I didn’t see a single instance of violence or aggression on the lawn or at the student encampment. The student-led protest was peaceful and often very quiet …

“The only moments of conflict or aggression I witnessed took place beyond the gates, out on Broadway Ave. I repeatedly approached people in that crowd. Every single person I approached told me they were NOT a Columbia or Barnard student ... Don’t imply students at Columbia/Barnard are involved in events that they were not present or responsible for.”

 An open society doesn’t smear, discredit, and outlaw an entire group over the actions of a few – or for the actions of what might be agents provocateur. That’s not what democracies do. It is, however, a common totalitarian tactic. Nazis in Germany and antisemites in the US used the same tactic to smear Jews as an unpatriotic, subversive “fifth column” working to undermine their country. White supremacists used it in the 1960s when they said that civil rights workers were Soviet-led Communists and “outside agitators.” Racists use it today to imply that all Black people are criminals.

Decent people aren’t supposed to behave this way.

Somebody should tell Joe Biden. “I condemn the antisemitic protests,” the president said. But which “antisemitic protests” are those, Mr. President? Where is the evidence for “antisemitic protests”? The president’s phrasing slanders the brave young souls who are calling for justice and an end to the slaughter.  It also aligns him with far-right Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY), who claims to be fighting “antisemitism” on campus but has echoed the antisemitic “great replacement theory” in her campaign literature.

Yes, there have been documented incidents of antisemitism, which must always be condemned. But, despite many accusations, extremely few of these incidents have been linked to pro-Palestinian students. This looks like the old totalitarian tactic, not the defense of a beleaguered minority. Otherwise, why wouldn’t they also condemn Islamophobia on campus?

I asked a Maryland student about Islamophobia. She laughed. “If we tried to document every act of prejudice against us,” she said, “we wouldn’t have time to do anything else.”

Biden qualified his statement, but in a slippery way. “I also condemn those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians,” he said. But who does he mean? Where? When? He doesn’t say. Why can’t he simply condemn anti-Muslim hate and those who wish death for Palestinians?

As for “those who don’t understand what’s going on with the Palestinians”: what is going on with them, Mr. President? Just say it: after 75 years of occupation and oppression, they’re being slaughtered at a rate unprecedented in modern history.

University presidents are willing participants in the violation of their own country’s democratic norms, as well as the norms of their own institutions. There is a kind of poetic symmetry in this announcement of a cancelled event, which was meant to celebrate the inauguration of Minouche Shafik as president of Columbia:

Human rights have indeed been “postponed” on American campuses. Why? Politicians and school administrators assert that phrases like “intifada” and “from the river to the sea” are antisemitic because they might be interpreted as a call for genocide against Israelis. But when a Jewish student website features a photo of grinning students wearing “I Stand With Israel” t-shirts – supporting a nation that a court found to be “plausibly” engaging in actual genocide against Muslim Arabs – that’s perfectly acceptable.

As I write, UMD students are joining students from other area schools in support of the encampment at George Washington University, a couple of blocks from the State Department and across the street from the real seat of diplomatic power: the headquarters of the International Monetary Fund.

They’re gathering now: from Georgetown, Howard, Gallaudet, George Mason, and American. They’re gathering, and they’re putting themselves on the line. Less than one hour ago, at 2:16 pm Eastern time, GWU president Ellen Granberg and Provost Chris Bracey issued a statement calling the protest “an unauthorized use of university space” and announcing that they had “request(ed) MPD assistance.”

That’s a polite way of saying they had asked the police to forcibly remove and perhaps arrest the demonstrators.

We should be proud of these young people. Despite the 1960s slogan, they’re not the ones “bringing the war back home.” The politicians and university presidents are doing that. These students are bringing our consciences back home. They are our brothers and sisters, our children and our grandchildren. They are brave, they are the best of us, and we owe them our love and gratitude.

Please go here for the original article: https://eskow.substack.com/p/students-on-the-front-line?r=16yhv&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true

‘Not Like Other Passovers’: Hundreds of Jewish Demonstrators Arrested After New York Protest Seder

This is a genocide that is happening in real time, right now, this moment... and the next and the next. It needs to be illuminated again and again and again that the American government is actively arming Israel's genocide of the Palestinian people in Gaza. Without this funding from the United States, there could be no genocide.

Those Jewish demonstrators and others who are demanding "let Gaza live"  who are relentlessly and courageously standing in fierce opposition to the mass murder, war crimes, and crimes against humanity perpetrated by Israel and funded by the American government  are the real heroes. Everyone else who funds, enables, denies, minimizes, crushes dissent, silences truth, and distorts the reality of these horrors is complicit with genocide. 

Every single day I grieve deeply and am outraged. And my grief and rage continuously pushes and inspires me to act in every way humanly possible to expose the genocide and stop it. This madness must be stopped. It must. ― Molly

“Many of us like to ask ourselves, 
‘What would I do if I was 
alive during slavery? 
Or the Jim Crow south? 
Or apartheid? 
What would I do if my country 
was committing genocide?’ 
The answer is, you’re doing it. 
Right now.”

― Aaron Bushnell

'Let Gaza live': Jewish demonstrators arrested at New York protest seder
Police arrested hundreds of people as a pro-Palestinian Jewish group gathered to protest in Brooklyn, New York. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images
About 300 people were detained near Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer’s Brooklyn home

By 

Hundreds of Jewish anti-war demonstrators have been arrested during a Passover seder that doubled as a protest in New York, as they shut down a major thoroughfare to pray for a ceasefire and urge the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, to end US military aid to Israel.

The 300 or so arrests took place on Tuesday night at Grand Army Plaza, on the doorstep of Schumer’s Brooklyn residence, where thousands of mostly Jewish New Yorkers gathered for the seder, a ritual that marked the second night of the holiday celebrated as a festival of freedom by Jews worldwide.

The seder came just before the US Senate resoundingly passed a military package that includes $26bn for Israel.

The protesters called on Schumer – who is among a minority of Democrats to recently criticize the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu – to stop arming Israel’s military, which relies heavily on US weapons, jet fuel and other military equipment.

“We as American Jews will not be used, we will not be complicit and we will not be silent. Judaism is a beautiful, thousands-year-old tradition, and Israel is a 76-year-old colonial apartheid state,” Morgan Bassichis, an organizer with Jewish Voice for Peace, told the crowd.

“This is the Passover that we take our exodus from Zionism. Not in our name. Let Gaza live.”

The mass arrests came after the seder rituals. Speakers included journalist and author Naomi Klein, Palestinian activist Linda Sarsour, and several Jewish students suspended from Columbia University and Barnard College over the protests that have rocked US campuses in recent days.

Rabbi Miriam Grossman, from Brooklyn, led a prayer before the first cup of ritual wine. “We pray for everyone besieged, for everyone facing starvation and mass bombardment.”

“This Passover is not like other Passovers,” said Klein. “So many are not with their families but this movement is our family,” she added in reference to political disagreements that have divided Jewish families since the start of the war.

Klein spoke after eating the bitter herbs that represent the bitterness of slavery at the seder. “Our Judaism cannot be contained by an ethnostate, for our Judaism is internationalist by its very nature. Our Judaism cannot be protected by the rampaging military of that ethnostate, for all that military does is sow sorrow and reap hatred, including hatred against us as Jews.”

Jewish communities have often used Passover to protest about global injustice. Tuesday’s protest, organizers said, was inspired by the 1969 Freedom Seder, organized by Arthur Waskow on the anniversary of Dr Martin Luther King Jr’s death. The original Freedom Seder sought to connect the Jewish exodus story with the struggle for civil rights in the US and against the war in Vietnam.

One protester, a 31-year-old Jewish woman who asked not to be named for security reasons, said: “Passover is about liberation. In our family, Palestinians have always been part of our celebration and mourning. The call for liberation is more important now than ever … As Americans, the billions of our tax dollars in the Israeli military bill is outrageous and horrifying.”

Jewish groups have staged a number of high-profile antiwar actions in the US since 7 October, shutting down sites from the Capitol to the Statue of Liberty. Jewish activists held another seder on Monday, the first night of Passover, at Columbia’s protest encampment.

Israel’s offensive has killed at least 34,000 Palestinians in Gaza including 13,000 children. The 7 October 2023 attack by Hamas killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel. Tuesday marked 200 days since the war began.

Please go here for the original article: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/apr/24/not-like-other-passovers-hundreds-of-jewish-demonstrators-arrested-after-new-york-protest-seder

Friday, April 26, 2024

Daniel Berrigan: The Call to Live Nonviolently

Photo by Peter Freed

The Call To Live Nonviolently

One is called to live nonviolently, even if the 
change one works for seems impossible. 
It may or may not be possible to turn the US 
around through nonviolent revolution. 
But one thing favors such an attempt: 
the total inability of violence 
to change anything for the better.
 
 Daniel Berrigan