Category Archives: Announcements

Announcements from the MN Break the Bonds Campaign.

Land Day Commemoration – Enduring Roots: Over a Century of Resistance to the Jewish National Fund

Minneapolis, MN, March 30, 2014, 5:00 pm at Mayday Books, 301 Cedar Avenue

In 1976, in response to a non-violent demonstration against announced Israeli appropriation of Palestinian land, Israel’s army shot dead six Palestinians, wounded hundreds and arrested hundreds more. The commemoration of this massacre has been called Land Day. This year the Stop the JNF Campaign and other organizations (see below) mark the anniversary with the showing of a documentary film by Alex Safron, called Enduring Roots: Over a Century of Resistance to the Jewish National Fund.

From the opening scenes showing a Jewish National Fund bulldozer destroying a Bedouin’s tent in the Naqab to interviews with the victims of on-going ethnic cleansing, the 39-minute film Enduring Roots gives a clear and honest picture of the devastating impact that the Jewish National Fund (JNF or JNF-KKL) has on the lives of Palestinians. For over a century the JNF has been instrumental in expelling Palestinians from their homes and land and creating towns, villages and parks for Israeli Jews out of the ruins. This film shows the expulsion, how Palestinian civilians are affected and the ways that Palestinians are resisting that expulsion.

The event is sponsored by Stop the JNF Campaign, Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC), and the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN). The film showing will be followed by a discussion. Join us on Sunday, March 30, 2014 at 5:00 pm at Mayday Books, 301 Cedar Ave., Minneapolis. $5.00 suggested donation (no one turned away).

Film Showing: Al Helm: Martin Luther King in Palestine

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This year African American History Month overlaps with Israeli Apartheid Week.

Join us at 7:00 pm on Friday, February 28 at 4200 Cedar Ave. S., Minneapolis for a film showing of Al Helm [The Dream]: Martin Luther King in Palestine. (Suggested donation $5.00; no one turned away).

“What would happen if African-American Christians – the same group who served as exemplars of the Civil Rights Movement – could witness first-hand the plight of Palestinians today?” asks the Vancouver International film festival.  The film is about an African-American gospel choir visiting Palestine to produce Clayborne Carson’s play about Martin Luther King Jr., called Passages of Martin Luther King. They witness life under occupation and the non-violent movement for social justice. You can watch the trailer here: http://www.clarityfilms.org/mlk/.

Jim Haber, in his review of the film on Mondoweiss writes, “Beyond its excellent production quality, Al Helm—Arabic for “the dream”— has great crossover potential because it shows several (largely) apolitical, Black Americans meeting a people still locked in the nightmare of oppression. Their experiences at first seem just confusing to them, then political, and ultimately political and very personal.”

This film showing is sponsored by Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC) and the University of Minnesota Students for Justice in Palestine (MN SJP).

2014 Precinct Caucuses February 4!

The 2014 Precinct Caucuses will be held all over the state on Tuesday evening February 4. We are encouraging all our members to attend the caucus in your district and bring forward one of the two following resolutions. The first resolution specifically mentions Israel, as in “the State of Minnesota shall immediately divest from any investments in government bonds of the State of Israel.” The second resolution says only that the State of Minnesota shall divest from and not invest in any country which commits serious human rights abuses and war crimes. These are similar to each other and similar to other resolutions some of you have already brought to your precinct caucus in past years, but there are reasons you might want to bring one over the other.

For example, if your caucus two years ago did not pass the resolution which specifically mentions Israel, people voting against it would have a hard time justifying a vote against human rights. On the other hand, some people might find a resolution not specifically mentioning Israel to be somewhat cagey and untruthful. You might think that it’s important to say out loud what you mean.

Note that there are no “whereas clauses” in these proposed resolutions. Resolutions that get passed in the DFL precinct caucuses move up to the Senate District caucuses stripped of the whereas clauses, so these resolutions include everything right in the text.

These resolutions are catering to stated Democratic and DFL principles. If you are going to a Republican caucus you can also bring a divestment resolution forward but you may want to rewrite it using different rationale (whereas clauses). That’s fine.

After your caucus is over, please send us the following:

  • your name, email address, and house district (or address)
  • which party caucus you attended
  • which resolution you brought (send us the entire text of the resolution if you made your own)
  • whether it passed or not and by how much
  • whether you signed up to be a delegate at the next convention

We will compile all the information and possibly ask for your help in meeting with your state senator and representative with the results.

Have fun! It should be a great time to meet your neighbors!

Here are the two resolutions:

Israel Bond Specific:

Be it resolved that the Minnesota State Board of Investment, the State agency responsible for the investment management of various public employee retirement funds, trust funds and cash accounts totaling approximately $69 billion, shall not invest in the government bonds of the State of Israel and shall immediately divest from any investments in the government bonds of the State of Israel, a portion of the proceeds of which are used to finance Israel’s continued occupation and construction of illegal settlements in the Palestinian occupied territories, until Israel is found to be in full compliance with its obligations under international law as determined by the cognizant agencies of the United Nations, including the International Court of Justice and the UN Human Rights Council.

Generic:

Be it resolved that the Minnesota State Board of Investment, the State agency responsible for the investment management of various public employee retirement funds, trust funds and cash accounts totaling approximately $69 billion, shall not invest in the government bonds of any country that is engaged in the violation of human rights as defined in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights or in the commission of war crimes in violation of international law.

 

Film Series – Inside Israel/Palestine – Scenes You Won’t Find in the Mainstream Media

TPBBCFilm Series 2014

All films are Mondays at 7:00 pm. Discussion afterwards. Admission is $6.

>January 27: Budrus

Budrus is about the non-violent demonstrations in 2000 conducted by residents of the Palestinian town of Budrus against the building of the Israeli separation wall inside the village causing the loss of 300 acres of land and 3,000 olive trees. Several turns of events including the active participation of Israeli peace activists bring about an unexpected outcome.

 

>February 3: The Gatekeepers

The Gatekeepers brings together six former heads of Israel’s internal security agency, the Shin Bet, who detail their methods against Palestinian militants and civilians in the Occupied Territories, including targeted killings, torture, recruiting informants, and the suppression of mass protests during two intifadas.

 

>February 10: Man From Plains

President Jimmy Carter ignites a firestorm of controversy when he tours the country to promote “Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid,” his book which theorizes a Middle East peace solution and asserts that Israel’s staunch stance has negatively affected the region.

 

> February 17: Five Broken Cameras

Fiver Broken Cameras, nominated for an Oscar in the category of Best Documentary Film, tells the story of non-violent resistance in the village of Bilin to the building of the Annexation Wall and expansion of nearby Jewish only settlements. It is told through the experience of Palestinian villager Emad Burnat, who filmed the majority of the documentary. The IDF, unhappy that their actions were being documented, broke five of his cameras and committed many other acts of violence against the demonstrators, at least two of whom died of their injuries.

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Sponsored by the Twin Ports chapter of the Break the Bonds Campaign: www.twinportsbbc.blogspot.com

 

Open Letter to U of MN President Eric Kaler

ASALogo

Update February 1, 2014: President Eric Kaler wrote a response to the open letter and mailed it to one of our members. His response is copied below the signatures.

 Update January 25, 2014: The letter is now closed for signatures. A hard copy was sent to Eric Kaler and it was posted in the Minnesota Daily (slightly edited from the version below). The signatures have been added to the letter. If you wanted to add your signature and didn’t get a chance, write a short note to Kaler with the reasons you support the ASA boycott.

University of Minnesota President Eric Kaler wrote a statement denouncing the American Studies Association’s vote to boycott Israeli academic institutions. The following letter to Kaler was written by members of the Minnesota Coalition for Palestinian Rights, of which Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign is an organizational member. The letter will be sent to Kaler during the week of January 7. If you would like to sign on to the letter, send an email to mn@breakthebonds.org with your name, affiliation, and any credentials to include in the signature.

 

 

Open Letter to Dr. Eric W. Kaler, President of the University of Minnesota

Dear Dr. Kaler,

The undersigned are individuals and organizations from Minnesota and beyond who are dismayed with your statement of December 27, 2013 opposing the American Studies Association resolution to boycott Israeli institutions.

Your statement quotes extensively from the statement put out by the Association of American Universities, making the unsubstantiated and inaccurate claim that such a boycott violates academic freedom. The AAU’s quote has no relevance to the ASA resolution or any of the written debate or conversations beginning in 2007 that led up to the overwhelming vote in favor of the boycott. These writings are available for anyone to study and we encourage you to read them in The Journal of Academic Freedom.

Contrary to your statement, the ASA resolution does not call for a boycott against any individual. The boycott is only against Israeli institutions.  The ASA’s resolution is a response to the call of the overwhelming majority of Palestinian civil society organizations, including trade unions, NGOs, and student groups.  It is carefully structured to focus on Israeli institutions that have been complicit and often active participants in Israel’s well-documented violations of international law and universal principles of human rights.

Colleges and universities have sought to be places where discussion and debate can freely take place. This is not the case in Israel, where institutions of higher education are complicit in the oppression of Palestinians, and the repression of their speech.  For example, Palestinian Israeli citizens who attend Israeli universities are not allowed to organize or demonstrate on campus, and the commemoration of the expulsion of 750,000 Palestinians from their homes in 1948 is illegal. Israeli universities are built on land that was expropriated from Palestinians and the research done in those institutions contributes to oppression of Palestinians.  Quoting from the ASA resolution: “…there is no effective or substantive academic freedom for Palestinian students and scholars under conditions of Israeli occupation, and Israeli institutions of higher learning are a party to Israeli state policies that violate human rights and negatively impact the working conditions of Palestinian scholars and students…”

Additionally, the ASA resolution does not single out any ethnic group for boycott. The resolution is not anti-Semitic or racist in any way; on the contrary, its statement says: “…American Studies Association is committed to the pursuit of social justice, to the struggle against all forms of racism, including anti-semitism, discrimination, and xenophobia…”

We believe that those who are genuinely concerned with academic freedom should deplore the lack of academic freedom that Palestinians experience due to Israeli institutional constraints on their movement. During the first Intifada, Palestinian schools in the West Bank and Gaza were closed, including kindergartens through colleges. Attending classes and even carrying textbooks were crimes punishable by prison sentences. Now Palestinian children and young adults face overwhelming difficulties in getting to classes because of the restrictions on their movements in the occupied territories. Two-hour waits at checkpoints to move from one part of the West Bank to another part of the West Bank (not even into Israeli territory) are common. Often Palestinians are not allowed to make the trip at all. The detrimental effect these checkpoints have on learning and advancing educationally, on academic freedom, cannot be overstated.

Because of Israel’s siege of Gaza, almost no students are allowed out of the territory to study, even those with scholarships to study at western schools and universities.  Palestinian students from Gaza are even routinely denied the right to study in the West Bank.  This affected one gifted student from Gaza who had been a high school exchange student in Wayzata during 2011-2012.  She received a Fulbright scholarship to study at Birzeit University in the West Bank, but the Israeli government has denied her a permit to travel. This is a clear violation of academic freedom.

The undersigned believe that your statement does not advance the cause of academic freedom, but will actually have the effect of repressing debate and discussion on campus. We support free speech and the freedom to act in constitutionally protected ways to express political beliefs. We support the American Studies Association’s resolution to boycott Israeli institutions until Israel complies with international law. We encourage you to allow a free debate at the University of Minnesota on academic and cultural boycotts and thus demonstrate that the University of Minnesota is an institution which supports open discussion and academic freedom.

 

Signatories of open letter to President Kaler

Individuals:

  1. Dorothy Diehl, Associate Professor, St. Mary’s University of MN
  2. Lisa Albrecht, Ph.D., Associate Professor, & Morse-MN Alumni Association, Distinguished Professor of Teaching, & Founder, Social Justice Undergraduate Minor, School of Social Work, College of Education & Human Development, University of Minnesota (& a Jew who supports the Break the Bonds Campaign)
  3. Dr. David N. Pellow, Professor, University of MN
  4. Roderick Ferguson, Ph. D., Departments of American Studies, Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies, and African American and African Studies, University of MN
  5. Lucia Wilkes Smith, BS, College of Education, University of MN, 1967, MA, Department of American Studies, University of MN, MFA, Writing, Hamline University, 2001, member of ASA
  6. Carol Brunholzl, Alumna, U of MN, 1952
  7. Jill Manskey, Graduate student, U of MN
  8. Ashraf Ashkar, Staff, University of MN, Morris
  9. Yusuf Abul-Hajj, Professor of Medicinal Chemistry, UM
  10. Matthew Boynton, Graduate Student, American Studies
  11. Vincent Stravino, M.D., Alumnus of U of MN, 1970, Grandparent of potential student in MN, class of 2019.
  12. Sylvia Schwarz, B.S. Chemical Engineering, University of MN, 1984, M.S. Civil Engineering, University of MN,  1991, member of Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC), member of the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network (IJAN)
  13. Anonymous, alumnus University of MN, 2013
  14. Amber Michel, current graduate student, Master of Liberal Studies, University of MN
  15. D.J. Sholtz, UM Alumna (Ph.D.), Professor Emerita, MN State University System
  16. Mary Beaudoin, U of MN, College of Liberal Arts, Class of 1971
  17. Dominique Najjar, U of MN alumnus, 1977
  18. Pamela Nice, Ph. D., U of MN, 1984, Steering Committee member of Jewish Voice for Peace, DC-Metro
  19. Raphi Rechitsky, Department of Sociology, U of MN
  20. Jigna Desai, Department of Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies, U of MN
  21. Jordan S. Kushner, Attorney, U of MN, School of Law, 1991.
  22. Mary Everson Engen, MA, Communication Disorders, U of MN, 1971.
  23. Emily Lindell, Past student of U of MN and current staff member
  24. Robert Kosuth, Ph. D U of MN, former Director of Office of International Programs, U of Wisconsin, Superior
  25. Juliana Hu Pegues, Postdoctoral Fellow, Macalester College, Ph.D. in American Studies, University of Minnesota, Member of American Studies Association, Association for Asian American Studies, Native American and Indigenous Studies Association.
  26. Sandy Clark, Graduate degree in English, University of MN
  27. SooJin Pate, UMN alumni (graduate class of 2010), Visiting Assistant Professor in American Studies, Macalester College
  28. Calvin Miner, U of M Duluth, student in the School of Engineering
  29. TINEKE RITMEESTER, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, University of Minnesota-Duluth
  30. Vern Simula, UMD Professor Emeritus
  31. Penny Cragun, Director at the University of MN, Duluth
  32. Karisa Butler-Wall, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of American Studies, University of Minnesota
  33. Yusuf Towns, IV, University of MN Alumna, English Lecturer, Al Iman University, Saudi Arabia
  34. Anya Achtenberg, University of MN Alumna, Educator and Writer
  35. Mariam El Khatib, student, University of MN, Minneapolis
  36. Esther Ouray, Minneapolis, MN
  37. Bill McGrath, Northfield, MN
  38. Jeanette Hartley, Northfield, MN
  39. Newland F. Smith, 3rd, Librarian Emeritus, Seabury-Western Theological Seminary, Evanston, IL
  40. Dr. Peter Rachleff, Professor of History, Macalester College
  41. Allison K. Smith, Northfield, MN
  42. Isra Salem
  43. David Nir, Israeli academic
  44. Ronnie Barkan, Boycott from Within, Tel Aviv
  45. Renen Raz, Boycott from Within, One Democratic State in Palestine
  46. Heidi Uppgaard, Minneapolis, MN
  47. Fadia Abulhajj, Bloomington, MN
  48. Darlene Coffman, Rochester, MN
  49. Elizabeth G. Burr, Ph. D., Community Faculty, Metropolitan University, member of American Academy of Religion (AAR), co-author of Understanding World Religions: A Road Map for Justice and Peace, Rowman & Littlefield, 2007, 2nd edition, 2014.
  50. Jonathan E. Hill, Professor Emeritus of English, St. Olaf College, Northfield, MN
  51. Stefanie Levi, Socialist Action
  52. Fr. David Whitten Smith, STD; SSL, Emeritus Professor of Theology; Justice and Peace Studies University of St. Thomas
  53. Phil Benson, Attorney, MN
  54. Melissa Favero, Elementary School Teacher, member of Temple Israel
  55. Dorothy Naor, Herzliah, Israel
  56. Josina Manu, Minneapolis, MN
  57. Cathy Sultan
  58. Laura Stone-Jeraj, Attorney-at-Law, St. Paul, MN
  59. Ray Tricomo
  60. Daniel Craig Jensen, Eden Prairie, MN
  61. Linda L. Houghton, Washington D.C., member of Jewish Voice for Peace and US Campaign to End the Occupation
  62. Coleen Rowley, Apple Valley
  63. Hussein S. Khatib, National American Muslims for Palestine (AMP) Board Member
  64. Cindy O’Neill-Kiley, Rochester, MN
  65. Barbara Powell, Rochester, MN
  66. Richard Van Dellen MD, Rochester, MN
  67. Augusta Braga, Rochester, MN
  68. Joe and Elaine Mayer, Rochester, MN
  69. Jean Chovan, Rochester, MN
  70. David A. Bakken, Rochester, MN
  71. Ruthann Yaeger, Rochester, MN
  72. Robert K. Johnson, Harmony, MN
  73. Joy Johnson, Harmony, MN
  74. Rev. Dale Stuepfert, President of the Board of Middle East Peace Now (MEPN), Minneapolis, MN
  75. Will Doolittle and Misa Joo, Eugene, OR
  76. Susanne Waldorf, Ph. D. student, Department of Humanities, Social Sciences and Social Justice Education, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE)/University of Toronto
  77. Melly Ailabouni
  78. Margaret Sarfehjooy, Minneapolis
  79. Lex Horan
  80. Sanna Nimtz Towns, Ph. D., Past Fulbright Scholar, Slovakia and Qatar
  81. Mackie Joseph Venet Blanton, Ph. D.
  82. Georgette Iuop, Ph. D., Professor of Linguistics, Emerita, University of New Orleans
  83. David Reisenweber, Retired Social Studies Teacher, Farmer, Duluth, MN
  84. Ellen Klemme, Teacher, St. Paul
  85. Shea Peeples, Minneapolis
  86. Karl Habeck, Library Clerk, Sherman & Ruth Weiss Community Library, Hayward, WI
  87. Elisabeth Geschiere, Minneapolis

Organizations:

  1. Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign
  2. Minnesota Coalition for Palestinian Rights
  3. Anti-War Committee
  4. Middle East Peace Now
  5. Women Against Military Madness (WAMM) – Middle East Committee
  6. Students for Justice in Palestine (SJP), University of Minnesota
  7. National Lawyers Guild – Minnesota Chapter
  8. Twin Ports Break the Bonds

 

Response from Eric Kaler:

January 30, 2014

To the signatories of the open letter regarding the American Studies Association’s (ASA) boycott:

Thank you for taking the time to share your concerns with me. I agree with you that the ASA’s action appears to limit only the association’s professional activities and not the scholarly activities of individual faculty members. However, it is the fact of the boycott itself that undermines academic freedom. As articulated in the statement issued by the AAU:

Efforts to address political issues, or to address restrictions on academic freedom, should not themselves infringe upon academic freedom. Restrictions imposed on the ability of scholars of any particular country to work with their fellow academics in other countries, participate in meetings and organizations, or otherwise carry out their scholarly activities violate academic freedom.

     We have just a few bedrock tenets at the University of Minnesota, and one of them is academic freedom. Civil debate is appropriate, necessary, and welcome. Your ability to express to me your disagreement with my stance on the ASA’s resolution is a testament to the reality that academic freedom is alive and well here, and I encourage you to continue to exercise your right to share and defend your ideas and opinions through respectful discussion.

Thank you for your dedication to the University of Minnesota.

Sincerely,

Eric W. Kaler

President

 

Boycott SodaStream


     The US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation and the Interfaith Coalition Campaign to Boycott SodaStream have collected over 10,000 signatures through an online petition asking retailers to stop selling SodaStream products.

     If you haven’t already signed the petition, here is the link.  http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/641/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=12341

On Tuesday, December 3, we will be delivering those 10,000 signatures to Target in person.

Meet at the Target Store at 900 Nicollet Mall at 4:30 pm. We will be going from there one block to Target’s Headquarters at 1000 Nicollet Mall.

RSVP on facebook

     And if you haven’t already seen it, check out this great video by Jewish Voice for Peace – DC

View the Petition Signatories!

If you have not yet signed the petition yourself, click here!

Name Location Organizational Affiliation
RubÃon Sacchi Argentina Casa del Trabajador Agustín Tosco
Brook Bernini Arizona
Julie Rist Arizona
Terrence Lewis Arizona
Benjamin Kendall Arizona
Paul Howes Australia
Martha Roth Australia Australian Workers Union
Robert Corra Australia Australians for Palestine
Stan Squires British Columbia, Canada Independent Jewish Voices-Canada
Raymond Sasso British Columbia, Canada
Ruth Schwarz California
Farah Rowaysati California Jewish Voices for Peace
Toni Zurzola California Youth Against Normalization
Donna Wallach California
David Faubion California Justice for Palestinians, Free Gaza Movement, U.S. Boat to Gaza
Perry Bellow-Handelman California Campaign to End Israeli Apartheid of Southern California
Alita Letwin California International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network
Leon Letwin California
Marilyn Cornwell California
Anonymous California
Anonymous California
Anonymous California Interested Citizen
Gus Gomez California
Massimo Mandolini Pesaresi California
Birgit Hermann California
Mary and Gene Perry California
Geoffrey Cook California End Israeli Occupation
Charles G Bates California Peace & Justice Commision, Episcopal Ciocese of California
Gil Medovoy California Attorney at Law
Jane Sun California
Anonymous California
Earl H. Staelin Colorado
Hector Lopez Colorado
Jean Thorsen Connecticut
Ed Rukab Connecticut
Rami Ali Egypt
Anonymous Florida
Anonymous Florida
Anonymous Florida
Norbert Mueller France Action des Chrétiens pour l’Abolition de la Torture
Frieder Schöbel Germany Terre Des Hommes Germany
Anonymous Germany Braunschweig Peace Centre
Anonymous Germany
Barbara Razowsky Illinois
Lee Gargagliano Illinois International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network
Brenna Thomas Illinois
Paul Thomas Illinois American Educational Trust; Council for the National Interest
Paul Bouwmeester Illinois
Mustafa Hassan Illinois Arab American Action Network
Layla Judah Illinois
Louis Hirsch Illinois
Yasiu Kruszynski Illinois
Jeff Hunziker Illinois
Anonymous Illinois
Paul Kane Illinois
Jamie Atari Indiana
Don Wiederanders Indiana
Tanis Diedrichs Iowa
Jim Schlautman Iowa
Tamar Yaron Iowa
Dianne Hofmann Israel Encounter-EMEM for International Israel-Palestine Peace Activities
Sean Clinton Kansas Jewish Voices for Peace
Sarah Howard Limerick, Ireland Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign
Alex Cachinero-Gorman Louisiana
Alex Van Leer Louisiana Western Mass Coalition for Palestine/Hampshire College SJP
Susan Barney Massachusetts
Linda Howe Massachusetts
Esther Nelson Massachusetts
Mark Messing Massachusetts
Anonymous Michigan MidEast/ JustPeace
Myra Ford Michigan
Elisabeth Geschiere Michigan MN Break the Bonds
Ross Rowley Michigan Burnsville Peace Vigil
Coleen Rowley Minnesota Burnsville Peace Vigil
Jean Chovan Minnesota
Manuel Barrera, PhD Minnesota
Corbin Minnesota
Lois H. Eckstein Minnesota
Mona Minnesota
Jerry Franck Minnesota
Sylvia Schwarz Minnesota MN BBC, International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network-TC
Margaret Esslinger Minnesota
Catherine Yamoor Minnesota
Ruth Fassett Minnesota
Yusuf-Rasheed Reed Minnesota
Dave Fitzgerald Minnesota
Helen Fitzgerald Minnesota
Van Lawrence Minnesota
Steven Olberg Minnesota
K. Flo Razowsky Minnesota International Jewish Anti-Zoinist Network, MN Break the Bonds
Mike Whalen Minnesota
Susanne Waldorf Minnesota Lutheran Volunteer Corps
Sriram Ananth Minnesota Minnesota Break the Bonds
Sue Halligan Minnesota
Beth A. Minnesota
Hadley Pope Minnesota
James Schmidt Minnesota
Ellen Minnesota
Sheila Lais Minnesota
Luce Guillen-Givins Minnesota
Beth Minnesota
Wanda S.Ballentine Minnesota
Lynn Rigg Minnesota Red Wing Alliance for Peace
Elizabeth Johnson Minnesota
Emily Lindell Minnesota
Jimmy Abernethy Minnesota
Kelly Brazil Minnesota
Jessica Belt Minnesota
Rukhsana Ghouse Minnesota
Michael Cavlan RN Minnesota Minnesota Open Progressives
James C. Fuller Minnesota
David Pellow Minnesota
Tim Nolan Minnesota Editor of GLOBAL PEACE
Victoria S. Downey Minnesota
Shivaun Watchorn Minnesota Opposition to War and Occupation
Sharon Fortunak Minnesota
Bill McGrath Minnesota Northfielders for Justice in Palestine/Israel
Dori Ullman Minnesota
Jerry Kahlert Minnesota
Nicholas Eustice Minnesota
Susan Offerdahl Minnesota
Sarah Minnesota
Susan Phillips Minnesota
Jordan Ash Minnesota
Xavier Schmitz Minnesota
Lauren Carlson Minnesota
Theodore Wallace Minnesota
Madeline Gardner Minnesota University of MN School of Nursing
Juli Montgomery-Riess Minnesota Minneapolis Public Schools
Courtney Butcher Minnesota
Nicholas Nerburn Minnesota TESC Divest, Olympia BDS
Joanne Kaye Minnesota PPG
Robert Heberle Minnesota Veterans For Peace
Dave Logsdon Minnesota Veteran’s for Peace
Michael A. Madden Minnesota Chisago County DFL
Mike Madden Minnesota Veterans For Peace
Ann Galloway Minnesota
Ayah Helmy Minnesota
R. J. Segers Minnesota
Solomon E. O’Lunigh Minnesota
Elizabeth Halsey Minnesota Teacher
Molly Johanna Culligan Minnesota Veterans for Peace Associate
Muhammad Al-Qaisi Minnesota
Rose Farrar Minnesota
Meredith Aby Minnesota Anti-War Committee
Hannah Campbell Gustafson Minnesota
Molly Smith Minnesota
Sarah Theisen Minnesota
Jen Theisen Minnesota
Molly Johanna Culligan Minnesota Veterans for Peace
Kate Wolfe Minnesota
Nova McGiffert Minnesota
Eliza Goodwin Minnesota
Andy Driscoll Minnesota The Driscoll Group
Gay Trachsel Minnesota
Anonymous Minnesota
Heidi Uppgaard Minnesota
Anonymous Minnesota
Susan Gad Minnesota
Heather McCrillis Minnesota
John Wilson Minnesota
Rik Svien Minnesota
Sharon D’Amico Minnesota
Mary Frenzel Minnesota End the Occupation
Anonymous Minnesota
David Boehnke Minnesota
Sue Ann Martinson Minnesota WAMM
Hoda Badawi Minnesota
Rev Audrey Benjamin Minnesota United Methodist Church
Andrew Benjamin Minnesota United Methodist Church
Anonymous Minnesota
Wanda S.Ballentine Minnesota
Brian Hirschman Minnesota
Steve Johnson Minnesota
Jane G. Killgore Minnesota
Lynne Rigg Minnesota Red Wing Alliance for Peace
Mary Davies Minnesota
Robert Kearney Minnesota
Peter Yackel Minnesota
Johnny Jones, Jr. Minnesota
Roselyn Schmitt Minnesota Pax Christi
Anonymous Minnesota
Paul B Couming Minnesota
Jo Elise Friedman Minnesota
Anonymous Minnesota
Pamela Nice Minnesota University of St. Thomas
Gary B. Walton Minnesota
Charles Kernler Minnesota
Sherry Berg Minnesota
Pauline Eichten Minnesota
Virginia Kearney Minnesota
Anonymous Minnesota
Marcy Beckman Minnesota
Jeff Nygaard Minnesota Nygaard Notes
Anna Baltzer Missouri US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation
Lewis Pinch, MD Nebraska
Ernie Nebraska Citizens for Palestinian Self-determination
Leslie Smith Nevada
Daniel Strum New York
Paul Stein New York
Michael Letwin New York Labor for Palestine
Thomas J Rowan New York St. Barnabas Hospital, Bronx, NY  10457
Anonymous New York
Richard Greve New York
Marc Beschler New York
Ellen Beschler New York
Thomas Cox New York Palestine Justice Network
Ashley Robinson New Zealand Retired U of MN Professor
Vivian Munene North Carolina
Anonymous North Carolina Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth
Arif Usmani Ohio
Don Bryant Ohio Free Gaza Coaltition
Catherine Podojil Ohio Greater Cleveland Immigrant Support Network
Abigail Hollister Ohio
Ruth Vandersall Ohio
Laken Pugsley Ohio
Rossen Vassilev Ohio
Aaron Beattie Ontario, Canada
Fred Bukowski Ontario, Canada Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation
Sabina MacIntyre Ontario, Canada
Aesha Lorenz Oregon
Mariah Leung Oregon Al-Nakba Awareness Project
Dylan Anderson Oregon Chestnut Tree House Collective
Angela Fazzari Oregon
Nigel Parry Pennsylvania nigelparry.net
Dan Berger Pennsylvania
Matthew Graber Pennsylvania
Bench Ansfield Pennsylvania Philly BDS, Philly Jews for a Just Peace
Dan Barnett Pennsylvania Neighborhood Mediation Project
Joy Rosenbloom Pennsylvania Philly Jews for a Just Peace
Mia Bromberg Pennsylvania
Kate Bates Pennsylvania
Bruce Gascoine Pennsylvania
M. Berti Quebec, Canada
Gene and Doris Peters South Dakota
Richard D. Warfield Texas J-Street
Mhara Costello United Kingdom
Debra Stoleroff Vermont Vermonters For A Just Peace in Palestine/Israel
Elizabeth M. Molchany, J.D. Virginia Attorney at Law
James Wilcox Virginia
Nina Cullers Virginia Bethlehem Association
Deborah Potter Virginia
Anonymous Virginia University of Michigan
Linda Jansen Washington
Anonymous Washington
David Schach Washington
Margaret Hashmi Washington
Jackie Wolf Washington
Tim Poe West Virginia
Janie Poe West Virginia
David Dicken West Virginia
Suzanne Kruger West Virginia
Chris Meyer Wisconsin
Cathy Sultan Wisconsin
Jocelyn Tilsen Wisconsin
Corey E. Olsen Wisconsin CEO Pipe Organs/Golden Ponds Farm
Anonymous Wisconsin