Gaza Freedom March set to bring 1300 from 42 countries to blockaded border

Medea Benjamin of Code Pink writes:
Over 1,300 delegates from 42 countries have signed up to participate in the December 31 Gaza Freedom March that will mark the one-year anniversary of the Israeli invasion and call for an end to the siege that has brought 1.5 million people to the edge of disaster.
Organizers cut off registration on November 30 to give the Egyptian officials enough time to clear the group for entry into Gaza, but also because the numbers were becoming unwieldy. “No one has ever taken a group this size into Gaza,” said coordinator Ann Wright, whose skills as a retired U.S. army colonel are coming in handy organizing the logistics for such a massive group.
Since the registration closed on November 30, organizers have been besieged every day with people begging to be added to the list. “I have to turn down 15-20 people every day,” said Emily Siegel. “It has been an insane few weeks, with emails pouring in from people all over the world who want to join. I feel terrible turning them away but we started out thinking we would take 300 people and now we have over 1,000.”
The international delegates hope to join some 50,000 Palestinians inside Gaza, including students, teachers, health workers, women’s groups, farmers and fishermen. The march will start in a neighborhood in northern Gaza in which nearly every building was devastated during Israel’s attack and continue for three miles to the Erez border with Israel. At the same time, Israeli and Palestinian activists will be marching toward the Erez crossing from the Israeli side. Upon reaching the border, participants on both sides will release balloons, fly kites and wave flags to demonstrate their solidarity with one another.
Marking the one-year anniversary of the December 2008 Israeli invasion that left over 1,400 dead, this initiative is designed to draw worldwide attention to the ongoing siege that continues to imprison the 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza. But with the borders still closed, there is no guarantee that the internationals will be allowed in.

Gaza is bordered by Israel and Egypt. Both governments have sealed their borders, but sometimes the Egyptians will make exceptions. That’s why Tighe Barry, a Hollywood prop man who has become the “fixer” for the international delegation, has traveled to the region six times in as many months to prepare for this march. “We’ve told the delegates that there are no guarantees we’ll get into Gaza, but we are certainly doing everything humanly possible to convince the Egyptians to let us in,” said Barry from Cairo, where he has been spending his days negotiating with officials in the Foreign Ministry, in addition to running around arranging hotels, food and buses for 1,000 people.
The diversity of the international delegation is impressive, with people coming from Austria to Yemen, from Belgium to Bangladesh to Brazil. Some 100 students have signed up, as have seniors in their seventies and eighties. The marchers include judges, doctors and physicists; businesspeople and union reps. Faith-based members include imams, rabbis and priests. Affinity groups have formed of artists, women, military veterans, diplomats, lawyers and health workers. A muralist from California, Kathleen Crocetti, will build a mosaic memorial to all who died during the invasion. Julia Hurley, a student from New York, has raised thousands of dollars for school supplies that Israel has banned.
Nora Hassanaien, a British student at the University of Warwick, has family in Gaza whom she has not been allowed to visit because of the closed borders. “Watching the atrocities on television last year and not being able to do anything was devastating,” she recalled. “It will mean a lot to me to be part of a peaceful march, with people all over the world uniting in solidarity.”
Hilary Minch is an Irish development worker. “This will be a remarkably poignant time to visit Gaza. It will be filled with sadness, given what the people of Gaza have endured and lost and continue to suffer. I want to stand beside them and show my solidarity. This is the least I can do.”
The organizers are encouraging people around the world to hold local solidarity events during the week of December 27-December 31. To find or organize an event in your area, make a donation, or endorse the march, visit gazafreedommarch.org.

About Medea Benjamin

Medea Benjamin is cofounder of www.codepink.org and www.globalexchange.org. She is one of the organizers of Occupy AIPAC, which will take place March 3-5 in Washington DC.
Posted in Gaza

{ 6 comments... read them below or add one }

  1. RE: ” the December 31 Gaza Freedom March that will mark the one-year anniversary of the Israeli invasion and call for an end to the siege that has brought 1.5 million people to the edge of disaster.” – Ms Benjamin

    SEE: “UN builds mud brick homes for homeless Gazans” | Antiwar Newswire, 12/12/09
    (excerpt) A Palestinian man made homeless by last winter’s Gaza war was the first to receive a U.N.-funded mud brick home Saturday, with U.N. aid officials saying they’re reverting to ancient building techniques because Israel won’t allow concrete and other construction materials into blockaded Gaza.
    The U.N. hopes to build around 120 mud brick homes for dozens of Gaza families in the next few months, said John Ging, head of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency in Gaza. Each house costs about $10,000 and takes three months to build….

    SOURCE – link to wire.antiwar.com

    • zamaaz says:

      I do not relish in contradiction, (but in sympathy with Egypt, and simply practical) suppressing agitation and protecting the stability of the state paused by these 1400 activists, on the other hand could benefit the Egyptian government without the exercise of inhuman community mass control practices; a) expansion bilateral agreements with the concerned nations, b) rehabilitation camp release processing fees, c) manual manufacture of tents for disaster management preparation, or plastic irrigation accessories and assembly for the Egyptian agricultural industry, and d) use of night soil and urine as practiced in Vietnam agriculture to expand greening of the desert (near that vast reed swamp in Alexandria) into grasslands. I think one would appreciate later the help they contributed to the fledging Egyptian economy and society at large.

  2. RE: “…and call for an end to the siege that has brought 1.5 million people to the edge of disaster.” – Ms Benjamin
    SEE: “US army installs Gaza monitoring system”, Ma’an, 12/13/09
    (excerpt)…But Cairo is hesitant about the second stage of the project, the installation of a steel wall underneath the borderline that Haaretz revealed earlier this week. This phase, which gained traction six months ago, is unpopular among Egyptian officials who feel pressured to go along with what they consider a purely American-Israeli initiative…
    SOURCE – link to maannews.net

    • ALSO SEE:”US Cutting Gaza Lifeline”, Ann Wright, Uruk.net, Dec 11 2009
      (excerpts) No doubt at the instigation of the Israeli government, the Obama administration has authorized the United States Army Corps of Engineers to design a vertical underground wall under the border between Egypt and Gaza. In Mar 2009 the US provided the government of Egypt with $32m for electronic surveillance and other security devices to prevent the movement of food, merchandise and weapons into Gaza. Now details are emerging about an underground steel wall that wil be 6-7 miles long and extend 55 feet straight down into the desert sand… The tunnels are the lifelines for Gaza since the international community agreed to a blockade of Gaza to collectively punish the citizens of Gaza for their having elected in Parliamentary elections in 2006 sufficient Hamas Parliamentarians that Hamas became the government of Gaza…
      SOURCE – link to niqnaq.wordpress.com

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