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Palestine group defies a Zionist effort to shut down April conference

by The Bridge—Sunday, March 16

A single complaint from a pro-Israel labor group last week led a Boston activist center to tear up its contract to provide space for a major conference organized by the New England Committee to Defend Palestine (NECDP).

Though the conference, “Struggle for the Land: Zionism and the Repression of Anti-Colonial Movements,” had to be relocated, it is still on for the weekend of April 12 and 13.

Around March 9, Jewish Labor Committee representatives told the director of Encuentro 5 and Encuentro’s landlord that NECDP is a "hate group" and warned it not to allow the conference in Encuentro's meeting space.

On Friday, March 14, Encuentro’s director informed conference organizers that he would have to accede to pressure from the Jewish Labor Committee and UNITE-HERE—the Union of Needle trades, Industrial and Textile Employees and Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union.

UNITE-HERE is linked to the trust that owns the multi-story former industrial building in Boston's Chinatown. Encuentro rents space on the fifth floor without a lease, making it vulnerable to landlord threats.

Ironically, says NECDP, “attacks like this are exactly the subject of the disputed conference.”

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NECDP statement

Monday, March 17— Zionists walked into a well-known center for left activists in Boston this week and managed, with a single complaint, to take away an already agreed-upon meeting space for an April conference on Palestine organized by the New England Committee to Defend Palestine. Around March 9, the local branch of a national group called the Jewish Labor Committee told the director of Encuentro 5 and the landlord of the building that houses Encuentro that the New England Committee to Defend Palestine is a "hate group" and demanded that it not be allowed to hold the conference in Encuentro's meeting space. On March 14, the director of Encuentro informed the conference organizers that he would have to accede to pressure from the Jewish Labor Committee and UNITE-HERE (the Union of Needle trades, Industrial and Textile Employees and Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union). UNITE-HERE is connected to a trust that owns the multi-story brick industrial building in Boston's Chinatown. Encuentro's space is on the 5th floor of this building and is held without a lease, making it vulnerable to landlord threats.

Beneath the facts of the case lie a number of ironies:

  • Attacks like this are exactly the subject of the disputed conference. The purpose of the conference, whose title is "Zionism and the Repression of Anti-Colonial Movements," is to expose attacks on activists as they have been carried out historically by zionist forces. Activists scheduled to speak have been involved in the Native American struggle against European genocide on the North American continent, the Black liberation struggle in the US from slavery onward, the struggle against US imperialism in Central America, the movement against apartheid in South Africa, the struggle against US imperialism and genocide in Iraq, and the struggle against US-Israeli genocide in Palestine.
  • Encuentro bills itself as "a space for progressive movement building" in Boston (http://www.encuentro5.org ). Massachusetts Global Action -- the organization that runs Encuentro--argued the need for a "tactical retreat" and offered us $400 and help finding another venue if we would consent to leave. We told them that this would undermine the meaning of our conference, their own work, and the movement as a whole. Our suggestion to Encuentro was to take this matter to the activist community -- to the people who use the space -- to tell them what was taking place and invite them to help organize a struggle to defend the integrity of our collective work.

Zionist organizations like the JLC have more material and political power than perhaps at any time in the past. But this power is increasingly hollow, since it must increasingly assert itself by shutting down a discussion about that power--a discussion that is growing and moving into the mainstream. The JLC did not succeed by persuading Encuentro 5, but by threatening them through the building's owners. These are clearly threats that they have the power to carry out--a fact that proves what critics of zionism are saying.

But this also demonstrates that while they have more material power than ever before, they have less ideological support than ever before. The legitimacy of the zionist project--the passive consent given to US support for "Israel"--is collapsing. That collapse must come before the serious fight over material power--a fight that is coming.

We are disappointed that Encuentro 5 and Mass Global Action decided that it was not strategic for them to challenge this abuse of power now. We know that the repercussions might well have been severe, and recognize that this would affect a great deal of effort and work that has gone into building their organization. We offer the following as a challenge--not so much to them, but to the movement as a whole, since finally the question is not about any of our specific, struggling organizations:

Can we build a movement against imperialism, or against social injustice in the United States, if the limits of our discussion can be set by organizations like the JLC--organizations that are committed to ensuring that billions of dollars in US military and economic support are given yearly to one of the most militarized colonial states in the world?

There is widespread discontent with zionist power. This discontent will not turn itself into a meaningful response until it becomes organized around specific battles. This can only take place if at some point people are willing say "it stops here."

  • "Progressives" are not progressive. The "progressives" are the Jewish Labor Committee, which calls itself "the Jewish voice in the labor movement." The JLC did not come in from the outside but actually has an office in Encuentro's own space. The Jewish Labor Committee's web site (http://www.jewishlabor.org ) shows its president, Stuart Applebaum, standing proudly with war criminal Shimon Peres in February in Jerusalem. The JLC has put out a statement condemning the Palestinian call for boycott, divestment, and sanctions against "Israel." The JLC statement asserts that Israelis, who have brutally occupied Palestine for 60 years, carrying out a program of genocide ever since, should not be seen as "victimizers."

The progressives are UNITE-HERE, the brave union for oppressed garment and hotel workers, which acted in this fiasco as a landlord bully threatening to kick out tenants for political speech.

The progressives are leftists who support resistance in Palestine, but not resistance that uses measures of a kind used by its enemy -- namely, armed struggle. The leadership of the resistance in Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanistan today is Islamic. Progressives in the US support secular political movements, so they don't support the people who are actually carrying out the resistance in these countries which the US and "Israel" are busy devastating. Support for resistance by oppressed people should be given without qualification.

  • The criminal has accused his victim of the crime. The real hate groups are those who support genocide in Palestine. The Boston Jewish Labor Committee's accusation that the conference organizers are a "hate group" comes right out of the manual of the Anti-Defamation League which has gone to great pains to define political speech and action as good or bad in terms favorable to the zionist project. The ADL is a "progressive" organization -- it seems to be for the right thing, except when it comes to criticism of "Israel." Criticism of "Israel" is anti-Semitism -- that's hate speech, that's against the law. The ADL was part of a recent attack on a mosque being built in Boston. It was exposed for lobbying Congress against a bill that condemns the Armenian genocide. During the late '70's and early '80's, it spied on organizations in the U.S. that supported the struggle against white supremacist apartheid in South Africa. This do-good "no place for hate" organization is actually a front group for a racist foreign power.

The limits of political speech on the left are now being defined by the very organizations who say they're working for the good. There is no open debate. The idea is to simply prevent political speech. Why is support for a nasty racist state in occupied Palestine driving so much of US and international politics? And the question goes beyond Palestine, since these same organizations have the power to set limits on the discussion of "social justice" and racism here inside the US. This includes a history of demonizing black nationalists like Malcolm X, Stokely Carmichael, and the Black Panthers as "anti-Semites." In many cases people's careers have been ruined and their reputations smeared by forces who never came out in the open. Joseph Massad, Tony Martin, Ward Churchill, and most recently Catherine Wilkerson, are examples. Ward Churchill will be among the speakers at the conference.

The New England Committee to Defend Palestine assures all those who have been invited to and registered for the April 12 and 13 conference that we have secured another venue and will be announcing it soon. We couldn't have provided a better example of zionist interference in anti-imperialist activism than the one that just happened here. We have great speakers coming from many different movements. We hope that supporters of the struggle in Palestine, and all those who recognize the need to build a truly independent opposition to oppression inside the US, will join us for this event.

New England Committee to Defend Palestine

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Suren Moodliar: Free Speech Denied!

Tuesday, March 18— Massachusetts Global Action organized encuentro 5 (e5) as a space for the free exchange of ideas; we believe that this is a precondition for movement building and social change. To this end, we have hosted organizations to discuss issues and matters on a wide range of topics. As an organization concerned about the welfare of working people, we believe that this open discussion is both a right and a necessity.

That right was denied to us on Friday, March 7, when our landlords at the request of the Jewish Labor Committee (JLC) closed the building to an April conference. It was alleged that the conference sponsors—the New England Committee to Defend Palestine (NECDP)—constituted a hate group. We countered that instead NECDP advocates for the rights of the Palestinian people, and that, like all other groups hosting events at e5, the conference organizers had read the following statements on our webpage, "Who can use e5?":

  • "e5 welcomes organizations and individuals from a wide range of progressive viewpoints that reject militarism and neoliberalism
  • "e5 welcomes organizations and individuals challenging domination and exploitation
  • "e5 does not welcome individuals and organizations that practice violence in any form"

NECDP's representative confirmed via e-mail that she had read our form and guidelines when she made the reservation in January.

To honor our commitment to host the conference, over the next week, we did two things (1) worked with community and labor activists in an attempt to reverse the decision of the building owners and the Jewish Labor Committee; (2) offered to help the organizers find an equivalent venue paid by encuentro 5 (up to $400) for the same dates and times to ensure the event could be held.

Both efforts failed: (1) the building owners and the JLC refused to re-open the space and (2) NECDP rejected our offer to find and fund another venue. After meeting with NECDP on Friday evening, March 14, 2008, we drafted a public statement outlining the facts and told NECDP that we would release it on Monday, March 17, 2008, after our last attempt to convince the building owners to open the space to the conference. On Sunday, March 16, 2008, we received NECDP's public statement via an e-mail list.

Needless to say, our commitment to host the April conference is but one of many obligations encuentro 5 has to progressive campaigns and projects. e5 is a space for organizing human rights, antiwar, migrant worker, solidarity, woman's, labor, youth, community, and cultural activities. Each of these have been compromised by the actions of those who reject free speech and now imply that all other e5 activities must pass a litmus test administered by others.

The promise and the dream that is e5 has been deferred!

An apology is due to both the e5 community and NECDP. We therefore call on all those who support the free exchange of ideas to stand with Mass Global Action and sign onto our forthcoming Open Letter.

Mass Global Action

Encuentro 5