Fast Times in Palestine Author Pamela Olson Draws Large Crowd in Rochester

Fast Times in Palestine author Pamela Olson Draws Large Crowd in Rochester

By Darlene Coffman

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On October 29, 2013 in the Fireside Room of a church in downtown Rochester, the MNBBC Rochester Chapter and the SE MN Alliance of Peacemakers (SEMNAP) hosted author Pamela Olson in a presentation based on her memoir:  Fast Times in Palestine:  An Affair with a Homeless Homeland.   She had spoken earlier in the day to a receptive audience of 80 high school students and their instructors at a private high school.  For a city the size of Rochester (110,000) an audience of over 60 people attending the evening event may not sound impressive, but at past events on Palestine, half that number was considered a satisfactory turnout.

Why the larger turnout?  As one of the organizers said, “There seemed to be such positive vibes in the air–I could feel it even before the program started.”  Had people come because they had checked out the author’s website where they found excerpts from her memoir and saw the awards and reviews her book had received?  We included her website on all communications, including the ad in the newspaper that one of the committee paid for; otherwise, there had been no other media coverage even though both the newspaper and local TV stations had been notified.   Quite a few people arrived with other friends or family.  On their evaluations many indicated they came because they had been invited by a friend.   Had the friend seen one of the 60 flyers that one member had delivered to houses of worship and business establishments, or had the friend received one of the 100 flyers that another member distributed in his neighborhood?    A group of women from the local Mosque seemed pleased and grateful for the program; one woman wished it had been presented in the public high schools.  One couple had been to Palestine in recent years and another was leaving soon on a trip there.

Whatever their reason for coming, they received Pamela Olson’s best effort at providing  a “sophisticated understanding of the Israel/Palestine conflict in a way that [was] enjoyable and accessible to all.”  She related her experiences and observations gathered over a two and one-half year period in the West Bank where she shared in the everyday life of Palestinians living under the Occupation—but not defined by it.   Her pictures and descriptions of the Israeli government’s system of cruelty (especially in Gaza) should shock and enrage any audience, but Ms Olson wants us to know that such oppression has not squeezed the life force out of the Palestinians.   In spite of all the check points and fences, and the incidents of violence, terror, and murder, the rhythm of life in the West Bank somehow goes on with its hospitality, special foods, harvests, celebrations, and enjoyment of the moment.

From the point of view of the organizers, the event reinforced the importance of the BDS movement and the MNBBC focus of it.   We would like to think that the larger turnout is evidence of a growing consciousness of the “facts on the ground” in Palestine, and a growing intolerance of them.   On one point we can be certain:  we owe gratitude to the Palestinians (and the Israelis who companion them) whose nonviolent resistance and remarkable resilience model for us:  to exist is to resist.

Note:   Pamela Olson is currently working on a sequel to her memoir;   Palestine, D.C.

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Fast Times in Palestine Author Comes to Rochester

FAST TIMES IN PALESTINE

A Book Talk with Pamela J. Olson

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2013 at 7:00 pm

ZUMBRO LUTHERAN CHURCH – FIRESIDE ROOM

624 3rd Ave. SW

ROCHESTER, MN

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC

 Pamela Olson will discuss her book Fast Times in Palestine, a memoir set in the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  The book is an account of Olson’s experience stumbling into the West Bank on a post-college backpacking trip, becoming a journalist, and serving as the foreign press coordinator for a Palestinian presidential candidate.

Little by little, the book reveals the realities of life under occupation –social, political, geographical, and psychological—in a narrative full of beauty, suspense, cruelty, star-crossed love, and dark humor.

I have read much of the writing of this conflict, and no other book has conveyed such an authentic, penetrating, and enchanting sense of the Palestinian people and their long struggle for rights and security. — Richard Falk, UN special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories

Brimming with tension and tragedy, but also with the humor, warmth, everyday foibles, and irrepressible hopes of a people determined to live free. —Tony Karon, Time

Sponsored by SouthEast Minnesota Alliance of Peacemakers (SEMNAP) and Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC)

Questions?  Darlene Coffman at 507-250-0902.

Pamela Olson’s website: http://pamolson.org

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Show your support at the September SBI Meeting!

Help us increase the public pressure on the State Board of Investment!

Room 123, State Capitol (75 Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr Blvd, St Paul)

9:00 am – 10 am September 11 (But arrive early to get a seat & sign!)

Join us for the public meeting of the State Board of Investments (SBI) at the State Capital. Show your support of divestment from Israel Bonds by wearing your Minnesota Break the Bonds t-shirt, or grab a protest sign from us. We will be waiting outside the meeting room at 8:30 with signs for you. Please be on time to not disrupt this meeting.

In addition, we will be distributing our just-released White Paper to the SBI board members, entitled “Twenty Years of Failure- A Report on the MN State Board of Investment’s Neglect of Human Right.” Pick up your copy. We need you there. It is important we make a strong show of public support. Please share this important event with friends and allies.

For more information or to arrange carpool email: mn@breakthebonds.com

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MN BBC Featured in Front Page New York Times Article

I.R.S. Scrutiny Went Beyond the Political

By Published: July 4, 2013

WASHINGTON — In 2010, a tiny Palestinian-rights group called Minnesota Break the Bonds applied to the Internal Revenue Service for tax-exempt status. Two years and a lot of prodding later, the I.R.S. sent the group’s leaders a series of questions and requests almost identical to the ones it was sending to Tea Party groups at the time.

What are “the qualifications and experience” of Break the Bonds instructors? Does the group “present a sufficiently full and fair explanation of the relevant facts” about the West Bank and Gaza? Provide copies of pamphlets, brochures or other literature distributed at group events? Reveal all fees collected and “any voluntary contributions” made at group functions? Provide a template of petitions, postcards and any other material used to influence legislation, and a detailed accounting of the time and money spent to influence state legislators?

The controversy that erupted in May has focused on an ideological question: Were conservative groups singled out for special treatment based on their politics, or did the I.R.S. equally target liberal groups? But a closer look at the I.R.S. operation suggests that the problem was less about ideology and more about how a process instructing reviewers to “be on the lookout” for selected terms was applied to any group that mentioned certain words in its application.

Organizations approached by The New York Times based on specific “lookout list” warnings, like advocates for people in “occupied territories” and “open source software developers,” told similar stories of long waits, intrusive inquiries and bureaucratic hassles that pointed to no particular bias but rather to a process that became too rigid and too broad. The lists often did point to legitimate issues: partisan political campaign organizations seeking tax-exempt status, or commercial businesses hoping to cloak themselves as nonprofit groups. But even I.R.S. officials say lookout list warnings were often pursued in a ham-handed or overly rigid way.

Last month, the acting I.R.S. commissioner, Daniel I. Werfel, formally ordered an end to such lists after discovering that they were still in use after the controversy flared up.

Sylvia Schwarz, a co-director of the Break the Bonds group, shrugged at the treatment meted out by the I.R.S. She was used to rough scrutiny in a country that tilts against the Palestinians, she said. But the same questions, asked of conservative organizations, led to the dismissals of top I.R.S. officials, prompting criminal and Congressional investigations, scarring the reputation of the nation’s tax collection agency and eliciting charges that the White House had used the agency to pursue its political opponents.

Two months of investigation by Congress and the I.R.S. has produced new documents that have clouded much of the controversy’s narrative. In the more complicated picture now emerging, many organizations other than conservative groups were singled out: “progressive” organizations, medical marijuana purveyors, organizations formed to carry out President Obama’s health care law, and open source software developers who create software tools for computer code writers and distribute them free of charge.

“As soon as you say the words ‘open source,’ like other organizations that use ‘Tea Party’ or ‘Occupy,’ it gets you red-flagged,” said Luis Villa, a lawyer and a member of the board of directors of the Open Source Initiative. The I.R.S. feared that such groups were really moneymaking enterprises.

According to the Treasury inspector general for tax administration, the I.R.S. received 199,689 applications for tax-exempt status between 2010 and 2012. In 2012 alone, the agency received 73,319, of which about 22,000 were not approved in the initial review process. The inspector general looked at 296 applications flagged as potentially being from political groups. That means most of the applications pulled aside for further scrutiny in those years had nothing to do with politics, conservative or liberal, just as most of the red flags thrown up by the I.R.S.’s lookout lists were not overtly political.

Chi Eta Phi Sorority, a mainly African-American nurses’ society that advertises its mission as “social change,” applied for 501(c)(3) charitable status on June 24, 2011, days before the I.R.S. tightened its scrutiny of tax exemption applications. The organization fell under a “group rulings” flag in one of the lookout lists. Two years and 73 questions later, Chi Eta Phi is still waiting for the I.R.S.’s Cincinnati office, which handles the tax exemption applications, to respond.

Among the requests for more information: Describe in detail any legislative activities, with percentage of time and money devoted. Explain the following programs: sisterhood/brotherhood, networking, collaboration with other organizations, loving and caring, and commitment and service.

As for “occupied territory” advocacy groups like Ms. Schwarz’s, an I.R.S. “be on the lookout” list warned screeners that “applications may be inflammatory, advocate a one-sided point of view, and promotional materials may signify propaganda.”

Some Congressional Democrats say the new details show that the initial reaction to the I.R.S. findings was skewed.

“We replaced the leadership of the I.R.S. over this. We have subpoenas out. We are deposing employees. And we have damaged the president,” said Representative Gerald E. Connolly, Democrat of Virginia and a member of the House committee that initiated the I.R.S. inquiry. “It turns out this has been a gross distortion of reality.”

Even with the narrative muddied, most Republicans see no reason to back off. The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee last week voted along party lines that an I.R.S. official, Lois Lerner, had waived her Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination by offering a brief statement as she invoked the amendment when she appeared before the committee in May. The vote paves the way for the committee to bring Ms. Lerner back for more questioning.

Republican investigators say conservative groups singled out by the I.R.S. have received far rougher treatment than liberal groups.

Yet some Republicans have tempered their statements on the controversy.

“We haven’t proved political motivation,” said Representative Charles Boustany Jr., a Louisiana Republican who, as the chairman of the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Oversight, is leading one inquiry.

Senator Roy Blunt, Republican of Missouri, said that in retrospect, suggestions that Mr. Obama had orchestrated an I.R.S. attack on his political enemies were unwarranted.

“Presidents have always been very careful about maintaining the appearance of keeping hands off the I.R.S.,” he said. “I don’t have any reason to believe there wasn’t targeting of conservatives, but it might well have been a lot more than that as well.”

Groups that produce and disseminate open source software — which is distributed at no cost to anyone for further software development — may have had it the roughest. A recent I.R.S. “be on the lookout” list warned screeners that such software groups “are usually the for-profit business or for-profit support technicians of the software.”

“If you see a case, elevate it to your manager,” the list orders.

That entreaty has proved to be the kiss of death, said Mr. Villa, of the Open Source Initiative. One group seeking a tax exemption was making software as a tool for political dissent abroad — with the blessing of the United States government. Another was making software, free, for struggling musicians seeking to distribute their work on the Internet. They were both rejected, unlike most of the political groups, which have secured their tax exemptions.

“None of the groups have been able to find the magic words to get over the hurdle,” Mr. Villa said.

Jesse von Doom, whose group CASH Music seeks to help musicians on the Internet, applied for 501(c)(3) status in February 2009. Finally, in June 2012, his application was rejected in a 13-page letter signed by Ms. Lerner, the I.R.S.’s director of tax-exempt organizations, who has been put on administrative leave.

Democrats are now aiming their anger at J. Russell George, the Treasury inspector general for tax administration, whose audit in May helped make the controversy public. That audit focused on the targeting of groups that had “Tea Party,” “patriot” or “9/12” in their names.

Democrats say that they examined the 298 applications reviewed by the inspector general, and that some of them were from liberal groups. But Mr. George’s audit did not mention them.

Mr. George’s staff said he reviewed all the applications that the I.R.S. identified as potentially involving political groups, not just those from Tea Party groups. But the inspector concluded that only conservative groups got the extra scrutiny.

“When you serve in this capacity, you have to make determinations that, on occasions, upset people,” Mr. George said in a statement. “This obviously is one of those occasions.”

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MN BBC Third Annual Day on the Hill begins by renewing divestment demand to the SBI

MN BREAK THE BONDS CAMPAIGN HOLDS THIRD ANNUAL DAY ON THE HILL

[St. Paul] MN Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC) is a statewide campaign aimed at stopping the State of Minnesota’s investment of millions of dollars of state retirement funds in Israel’s human rights and international law violations. On March 6, MN BBC will hold its third annual Day on the Hill by first attending the State Board of Investment (SBI) quarterly meeting to express dissatisfaction with the Board’s extreme indifference to the injurious human rights consequences of its investment decisions. Following the SBI meeting, MN BBC members will then engage in constituent meetings with legislators.

The SBI is violating its own internal agency guidelines. Pursuant to SBI foreign investment guidelines, because of Israel’s dismal human rights record, as documented by official State Department reports, the SBI can only invest in Israeli securities if it finds that its fiduciary obligations would be breached by failing to do so. The SBI has failed to make any such findings. Yet, it has invested millions of dollars of taxpayer funds not only in Israel’s government bonds, knowing that Israel uses Israel Bond funds to pay for illegal settlement activities and other international law violations, but in Israeli corporations that profit from Israel’s illegal settlement activities and racial discrimination against the indigenous Palestinians as well. The SBI has been put on notice that these investments are aiding and abetting violations of international law which exposes the SBI and the state retirement funds it manages to potential liability.

Following the SBI meeting, MN BBC members will visit their legislators asking them to sponsor a bill to divest from Israel Bonds until Israel agrees to participate in the UN Human Rights Council Periodic Review Process and obtains an objectively favorable human rights review confirming that it is in compliance with its international law and human rights obligations. Israel recently became the first UN member nation ever to refuse to participate in the review process, despite efforts by the United States Government encouraging Israel to participate.

The State Board of Investment meets at 9:00 am on March 6 in room 118 of the Capitol. MN BBC members are encouraged to arrive early to get a seat in the room.

Click to read the MNBBC Letter to the SBI to Renew Divestment Demand.

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Photo: www.imemc.org

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MN BBC Stands in Solidarity with Idle No More

The Minnesota Break the Bonds Campaign (MN BBC) expresses solidarity in spirit and in action with the Idle No More movement and its calls for Indigenous sovereignty and rights, self-determination, and environmental protections, and against ongoing colonization, racism, genocide, and oppression.

 Though MN BBC focuses on on ending Minnesota’s complicity in Israeli settler colonialism, apartheid, and occupation in Palestine, we stand in support of Indigenous resistance to all forms of oppression and injustice worldwide. We recognize that Palestinians and the Indigenous people of the Americas have suffered ethnic cleansing and innumerable attempts to destroy their variety of cultures and identities at the hands of the very same forces of European colonization. We therefore join Idle No More in demanding the upholding of First Nations treaty rights by the Canadian government, and in demanding an end to the ongoing theft of indigenous lands and to resource exploitation and environmental devastation (including tar sands and pipelines) by corporations and governments. In addition, we are inspired and grateful for INM’s explicit call for the protection of women, land, and water and their vision for a world made up of just, equitable and sustainable communities.

As a Minnesota-based organization, MN BBC acknowledges our own state’s history of colonization of Dakota and Ojibwe lands and the profound impacts that genocide, racism, oppression, and injustice have had and continue to have on the Indigenous people of Minnesota. After over four hundred years of land theft and treaty violations, the Dakota and Ojibwe Nations have less than 4% of their historic lands and individuals and communities still have to fight for rights like fishing and hunting. We see huge disparities in health in our Native communities such as vastly disproportionate suicide rates, occurrences of mental illness, heart disease, diabetes, various forms of cancer, and increasing poverty. As a result of the historical trauma caused by the Indian Boarding School system, specifically in Morris and Pipestone locally, we see less than half of our Native students, only 42%, graduating from high school compared to an overall statewide graduation rate of 76 percent.

As an organization currently made up of mostly non-Indigenous members, MN BBC also acknowledges our role as settlers on this land. We cannot and should not work for decolonization of Palestinian lands, without being in solidarity in word and action with decolonization struggles at home. For Palestinian liberation is intrinsically tied to the liberation of Dakota and Ojibwe peoples, and to all Indigenous people worldwide. That is why we stand with Idle No More here today, and why you can count on our support in the days, weeks, months, and years to come.

 

Photo: montrealsimon.blogspot.com

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URGENT: TAKE ACTION FOR GAZA NOVEMBER 21-29

Photo: Jihad Misharawi, BBC Arabic Correspondent, carries his son’s body at a Gaza hospital. (AP)

TAKE ACTION FOR GAZA: Stop the bombs, stop the siege, stop the blank check

[November 20, 2012] Over120 Palestinians have already been killed and 920 injured in Israel’s relentless attack on Gaza. We urge each of you to mark your calendar for at least one of the following events to join folks from across the Twin Cities and Minnesota to SAY NO TO INJUSTICE. Individually we can be ignored, but together we can make our voices heard. For the latest news on what is taking place on the ground in Gaza, visit imeu.net. In addition, check out these helpful Talking Points from the US Campaign.

We also urge you to call call your Congresspeople and demand that our government insist that Israel stop its attacks on Gaza NOW:

Congressman Keith Ellison DC 202-225-4755 or Mpls 612-522-1212
Congresswoman Betty McCollum DC 202-225-6631 or St Paul 651-224-9191
Senator Franken DC 202-224-5641 or St. Paul 651-221-1016
Senator Klobuchar DC 202-224-3244 or Mpls 612-727-5220

1. Wednesday November 21 4:30-5:30 weekly vigil on Lake Street Bridge over Mississippi (Marshall Ave on St. Paul side.) Focus will be on Gaza. Park on either side. There is a gathering for comments and announcements at 5:30 on St. Paul side. (Initiated by Twin Cities Peace Campaign, WAMM and Antiwar Committee) → This event on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/436794309710852/

2. Friday November 23

A. 12:45 PM Rochester March from Islamic Center to Govt. Center

B. 4:15-5:30 PM Weekly Palestine Vigil Summit and Snelling St. Paul

3. Saturday November 24 2:00-3:00 pm Banner / Rally / March. Gather Loring Park (Hennepin Ave. side near bandshell and near footbridge over Hennepin) (Initiated by Coalition for Palestinian Rights)This event on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/133543070130757/

4. Wednesday November 28 12:15 PM Northrup Mall at U of M a “Die In.” (Initiated by Students for a Democratic Society and Student for Justice in Palestine)

5. Thursday November 29 4:00-5:30 PM Demonstration and Rally outside Senator Klobuchar’s office 1200 Washington Ave. (across 35W from West Bank) Following action caravan to 4200 Cedar Ave. for dinner and 6 PM forum “Who Are the Holy Land 5?” (Initiated by Committee to Stop FBI Repression)

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Divest for Justice in Palestine!