The Left Berlin News & Comment

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Letter from the Editors, 3 March 2023

International (Working) Women’s Day and much more…


06/03/2023


Hello everyone,

The latest Global Climate Strike demo is gathering in Invalidenpark as this Newsletter goes out. Fridays for Future invite you to join them to celebrate all that we have achieved together in recent years, but also to ask why the new German government is seriously planning to build new motorways. What the fuck? Throughout the world, people are taking to the streets to demand real ambition from our politicians and decision-makers.

This weekend workers from Collettivo di Fabbrica are visiting Berlin from Florence, where they’ve been occupying their factory for a year, demanding a conversion to more environmentally friendly products (more information plus a video here). They will be addressing a meeting in the Neues Deutschland building on Saturday evening, and there will be a joint lunch on Sunday at 1pm at MaHalle, Waldemarstraße 110.

On Sunday, Wald statt Asphalt is organising a bicycle demo and Abseil action against the building of the A100 motorway. The bicycle demo starts at 1pm – the exact starting point has not yet been announced. The Abseil action will take place at 2:30pm from the Hermann-Ganswindt bridge. These events are part of the Ausbaustopp jetzt! (Building stop now!) programme of actions.

Also on Sunday, the Berlin LINKE Internationals are getting together with Zemin Art Space as part of a month long solidarity market at Zemin Art & Event. Gather to eat and meet international political activists in Berlin. Everything is free, but there will be a collection for earthquake victims in Kurdistan and Turkey. Money collected will be sent to the Kurdish organisation Heyva sor and the Aman Project for queer refugees in Turkey. It all starts at 5pm at Zemim’s buildings at Urbanstraße 3.
NOTE: last week’s Newsletter incorrectly said that the Küfa would be on Saturday. Sorry for any confusion.

Tuesday will see another day of strikes and demonstrations in France, and French Leftists in Berlin have organised a solidarity rally outside the French embassy at 5:30pm. The protests are against Emmanuel Macron’s planned pension reforms, which are opposed by 80% of the French population. Members of NUPES, the new Popular Ecological and Social Union ask you to join their protest. Bring your banners.

On Wednesday, it’s International Women’s Day (or, as Clara Zetkin originally baptised it, International Working Women’s Day). It is a bank holiday in Berlin, and you can choose from a wide number of Events, including the following:

  • Purple Ride – a bicycle ride for women, lesbian, inter-, non-binary, and Trans* people, starting at Mariannenplatz at midday.
  • Demonstration organised by the ver.di and GEW unions, together with the Bündnis für sexuelle Selbstbestimmung. Starts at Invalidenpark at 1pm with a final rally at Bebelplatz at 3pm.
  • Our Revolution is Coming FLINTA*-only demo, organised by the Alliance of International Feminists, our Campaign of the Week. Starts at 2pm at Frankfurter Tor.
  • Global Scream organised by Dziewuchy Berlin throughout Berlin at 4pm.
  • Fight by Night demo starting at 6pm at Spreewaldplatz.
  • Watch three shot films for International Women’s Day at City Kino Wedding at 7pm.

These are not the only interesting events in Berlin this week. For more information, please check out our Events page.

In News from Berlin, 35,000 attend a rally for peace, Greenpeace continue their campaign against motorway building by occupying the SPD headquarters, die LINKE demands expropriation by 2024, and the SPD start talks with the CDU about forming a new government in Berlin.

In News from Germany, Olaf Scholz looks for IT workers from India, vegetable harvests are down 12%, the Society for Freedom Rights wins court cases for freedom of data, public sector workers in Brandenburg strike for more pay, and energy price brakes are implemented, while Corona measures recede.

Read all about this week’s News from Berlin and Germany here.

New on theleftberlin.com, we mark the anniversary of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine with different opinions about the state of the anti-war movement in Germany: Andrei Belibou argues that Sahra Wagenknecht and Alice Schwarzer’s Manifesto for Peace ignores the concerns of Ukrainian people, while Chistine Buchholz, Ulrike Eifler and Jan Richter say that Wagenknecht and Schwarzer’s rally filled a gap caused by the inability of the political Left to adequately oppose war. Meanwhile, Phil Butland argues that the demand for NATO weapons can only strengthen the imperialist forces responsible for war and neoliberalism.

In other news, we interview Colin Macpherson, one of the organisers of next week’s Berlin demonstration for Scottish independence.

Among other articles on theleftberlin.com next week, we will be publishing an exclusive interview with Israeli historian Ilan Pappe, Don’t miss it.

In This week’s Media, Corner Späti takes on Axel Springer.

Social Media Alert: theleftberlin had a meeting this week to discuss how we can improve our social media presence. We are looking for people who can help us in every aspect from making Sharepics to simply sharing our posts. If you think you can help, please contact us at  team@theleftberlin.com

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If you would like to contribute any articles or have any questions or criticisms about our work, please contact us at team@theleftberlin.com. And do encourage your friends to subscribe to this Newsletter.

Keep on fighting

The Left Berlin Editorial Board

Wind Turbines in Fosen clash with Indigenous Rights

Protests in Norway expose the paradox of Green colonialism

On October 11th 2021, the Norwegian Supreme Court unanimously declared the concessions for the wind turbines at Storheia and Roan are invalid; and violate South Sámi rights to practice traditional culture and livelihoods at the Fosen peninsula in central Norway. On paper, the International Labor Organization’s Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention number 169 (ILO 169) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (SP 27) in Norwegian law protected indigenous human rights.

But despite this, 151 wind turbines were erected in winter pastures used by the Fovsen Njaarke Sijte reindeer herding district. The district consists of two groups, with six families in total. They have already been struggling against the wind turbines for almost 20 years. The 2021 verdict was a historic recognition of how crucial the pasturelands at Fosen are for protecting the herders’ human rights.

In October 2022, supporters of the Fosen reindeer herders marked the one year anniversary of the verdict in front of the Norwegian parliament. Five hundred days after the verdict, young Sámi activists took action to show that they are tired of waiting for the government to stop the human rights violation at Fosen. Sixteen young activists walked calmly into the lobby of the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy, refusing to leave until the government listened to their demands. For more than 24 hours the activists were refused food into the building, and both journalists and supporters were banned from entering. After four days, the activists were woken up and carried out by police during the night, while supporters stood chanting outside the ministry building. Only a few hours later, activists successfully blocked the entries of several ministries.

Hundreds of activists from all over Norway, and abroad, have joined the demonstrations and civil disobedience actions in central Oslo. The Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has for several days been one of them. The activists’ goal is to shut down the Norwegian state, ministry by ministry. One week into the demonstrations, activists have blocked the entry to 10 out of 15 ministries.

The civil disobedience actions have led to a crisis for the government. Photos of Norwegian police officers detaining young Sámi activists have put pressure on the government. Many of the activists wear their gáktis – traditional dress – inside out. This is a traditional Sámi sign of protest.

It is a stark reminder of Norway’s colonial wrongs against the Sámi people. Sámi people were for decades subject to the assimilation politics of the Norwegianization period. In this many Sámi children were put in boarding schools, refused to be able to speak their language, and isolated from their families for long periods. The result is that many Sámi families stopped using their languages and hid their gáktis. Today, many young Sámi are reclaiming identity and language, to proudly show their Sámi heritage.

On behalf of the Norwegian government Terje Aasland, minister for Petroleum and Energy, apologized this Thursday to the Fosen reindeer herding districts. Minister Aasland admitted that the construction of wind turbines on reindeer pastures are a “human rights violation”. This formal apology, coming after 507 days of inaction, was given reluctantly. But Aasland still maintains that they will find a solution that allows wind power production in the area. Critics are asking why it took four days of occupying Aasland’s ministry, with crowds of hundreds of Sámi activists in the streets of Oslo and one week of daily civil disobedience actions – before the government apologized. Until the protests were scaled up, Aasland maintained that the concessions for the wind turbines were in fact still valid, despite the 2021 verdict.

The Fosen conflict and demonstrations are about much more than a Supreme court verdict. For the Sámi activists, this moment is a chance to bring public attention to the concept of green colonialism in Sápmi. Today, wind power, mining and other industries on Sámi land are legitimised as climate mitigation. Former Sámi Parliament president Aili Keskitalo characterizes these developments as “the paradox of green colonialism. When colonialism has dressed up in nice, green refinery, and we are told that we have to give up our territories and our livelihoods to save the world because of climate change” (The Arctic Circle 2020).

The struggle against green colonialism stretches from Fosen, Øyfjellet and Repparfjord on the Norwegian side of Sápmi – to the struggle against green colonialism in Kiruna and Gállok on the Swedish side. Activists are raising awareness to how indigenous human rights are put aside to make space for “green” industries. The Fosen reindeer herders, like reindeer herders all over Sápmi, are put in an impossible position. Namely struggling against “green” developments and industries in order to protect their livelihoods. Sámi reindeer herding has taken care of the natures and landscapes they depend on for centuries. Paradoxically, this sustainable way of life is pressured by developments in the green transition, taking piece by piece of indigenous land.

Whatever the final outcome, the Fosen conflict is a painful reminder of why there is a lack of trust between Sámi people and Norwegian authorities. If a Supreme court verdict is not enough to respect indigenous human rights and protest Sámi livelihoods, what will it take?

The demonstrations in and around the ministry for Petroleum and Energy have gathered support from a range of political parties, civil society organizations, supporters walking by with food and blankets, artists and a local church – all of whom raise spirits by making sure the activists are warm, hydrated and fed. The solidarity, both from all over Norway and abroad, is fueling the protests until their demands are met. Sámi human rights are not optional in the green transition.

Baaj Vaeride Årrodh – Let the mountains live!

“We should not give up on Germany”

Israeli historian Ilan Pappe on 75 years Nakba, the new Israeli protest movement, and discussing Palestine in Germany


04/03/2023

Questions: Phil Butland, Emily Baumgartner and Gregory Baumgartner

Hello, Ilan, thanks for speaking to us. Could you start by briefly introducing yourself?

My name is Ilan Pappe. I’m a professor at the University of Exeter in Britain, where I’m the director of the European Centre for Palestine studies. I’m also a historian, and a social and political activist.

The main reason we are talking today is that this year the 75th anniversary of the formation of the State of Israel. One of your books called the event, the Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine. Could you explain what you meant by this?

The ethnic cleansing of Palestine is actually the project of the settler colonial Zionist movement to take over the Palestinian homeland. At the right historical moment, from its perspective, it was able to take over much of the land and expel many of the native people from their land.

Before 1948, the Zionist movement did not have the power to implement such a massive expulsion of people. But once the British mandate was over, and they had built an adequate military capacity, they used the particular circumstances of the end of the British mandate to implement a huge operation of mass expulsion, or ethnic cleansing.

People were expelled in huge numbers because of who they were – Palestinians – not because of what they did. By the end of that operation, half of the Palestinian population became refugees. Half of their villages were demolished, and most of their towns were destroyed. In my understanding of the definition of ethnic cleansing, whether it’s a scholarly, legal, or moral definition, the planning, execution and ideology all justify describing the Israeli action in 1948 as ethnic cleansing.

In many ways, as I point out in the book, this has never ended, because the ethnic cleansing of 1948 was incomplete. And in many ways, it continues until this very day, if not on the same magnitude as the 1940s. But it still very much informs the Israeli actions against the Palestinians until today, wherever they are.

One of the tragedies for me about the Nakba is that the people who were doing the ethnic cleansing and creating refugees, were themselves refugees. People fleeing Nazi Germany, obviously didn’t want to stay in Germany, but they were also being largely denied access to the UK or the US. Did European Jews have any alternative to fleeing to Palestine?

The people who devised and oversaw the ethnic cleansing arrived in Palestine, much earlier – before the Holocaust. And when they arrived in Palestine in the 1920s, they still had options to go elsewhere.

It is absolutely true that since the rise of Nazism and fascism, Britain and the United States closed their doors, and quite a lot of the Jews who came from Central Europe and from areas that the Nazis occupied, had very few options. Palestine was one of the only places they could go to, but they were not the main force that decided on, and or perpetrated the ethnic cleansing. Most of the crimes committed in 1948 were committed by Zionists, many of whom, such as Yitzhak Rabin, Yigal Alon or Moshe Dayan, had been born in Palestine.

But definitely, one of the reasons that Jews came in large numbers in the 1930s to Palestine was that the West closed its gates for Jews who escaped from Europe. But I don’t think that most of the people who perpetrated this ethnic cleansing, were themselves victims of Nazi or fascist oppression.

Who were the people coming to Palestine? The Left was excited about communal Kibbutzim. After the Soviet Union was the first country to recognize Israel, many felt that there was something socialist about young Israel. How accurate was that belief?

The early Zionists were people came from Eastern Europe. And some of them were definitely inspired not only by the ideas of nationalism and colonialism, but also by the ideas of socialism and communism.

We know for example about the most important group that came to Palestine in the 1920s. This core group went on to grow the leadership of the Zionist community until the 1970s, and they were part of a more international socialist movement. Some of them even took part in the 1905 attempt to overthrow the Tsarist regime in Russia.

So yes, it was a fusion of three or four elements. One was socialism. The second was a nationalism which defined Judaism not as a religion but as a national identity. Thirdly, modernism. It was very important for them to build the idea of the modern Jew. No less important was colonialism – the idea that you are entitled to take any part of the world outside of Europe, regardless of who lives there.

But most of the Zionist settlers preferred not to live in socialist Kibbutzim, and therefore moved to the cities. By 1948, only a very small percentage of the Jewish settlers lived in those communes. But they were very powerful societies in terms of defining Zionist policies and strategy.

I think the most important thing was that they really believed–albeit wrongly–was that universal ideologies such as communism, and socialism, did not contradict settler colonialism. But of course, these two perspectives on life do not go together. One cannot be a socialist colonizer. Albert Memmi used to call it the Leftist Coloniser. And actually, you’re much worse in your criminal attitude because you are trying to use enlightened ideas to justify the actions on the ground.

How do you think they were able to square the circle? How could they justify to themselves this mixture of socialism and colonialism?

They still do it, it’s what we call the Zionist Left – which is not a force any more in Israeli politics, but used to be. This group squares not only socialism with colonialism, but also liberalism. The way you do it is by asking for exceptionalism. You say that in any other case, colonizing people, displacing them, and ethnically cleansing them is a crime. But in your case, there is a justification.

Whatever the justification is, you have to understand that there was no other way of doing it. At first, I am sure they found it difficult. But with inertia, and the educational system and indoctrination, they began to believe in it themselves.

No less important is the international reaction. Israelis might have felt differently, had the international socialist movement in Europe said to them: “wait a minute, that doesn’t work. In the age of decolonization, you cannot do what you’re doing”. Or if liberal Americans had said to them: “I’m sorry, but what you’re doing is against our moral values”.

However, they were lucky that the West decided that to accept this idea that you can have this exceptionalism when it comes to Israel and to Jews.

We are talking about a time when India and parts of Africa were being liberated. The Left stood firmly on the side of the anti-colonial movement. And yet–as you say–many of the same people turned a blind eye or even put Israel forward as a socialist paradigm. How did this happen?

In 1975, the United Nation finally had a huge membership of decolonized people. This was unlike the United Nations of 1947, which did not have one representative from the colonized world and legitimized the idea of a Jewish state in Palestine.

In 1975, the decolonized people were the majority in the United Nations. And one of the first things that they did was to pass a resolution which said, Zionism is racism. You cannot be a liberal or socialist Zionist. If you are a Zionist, then you’re not different from someone who supports apartheid in South Africa. That was the message of the United Nation resolution in 1975.

The big question was not what would African and Arab states do–instead focused on–how would the members of the United Nations coming from the West do vis-a-vis such an imposition? And, for whatever reason, Britain and France, and West Germany and later the EU, accepted the Israeli position. This position meant that you cannot treat Israel as a colonialist power, and therefore you cannot treat the Palestinian liberation movement as an anti-colonialist movement.

They accepted the Israeli framing of the Palestinian movement as a terrorist organization, and Israel as a democracy that defends itself. This changed the whole discourse about Israel and Palestine. And it extended the period in which the Left in Israel could think that it had found this amazing way of squaring the circle.

What is really interesting is what happened inside Israel. From 1977 onwards, the Israeli Jewish electorate says, “no, it doesn’t work. You really can’t be both democratic and Jewish”. And we see the result in the November 2022 election [which saw significant gains by the far right – editor’s note].

Israeli voters said: “no, you can either be a democratic state or the Jewish state. This whole idea that comes from Tel Aviv, or the Kibbutzim, that you can be both democratic and Jewish is nonsense.” Unfortunately for everyone concerned, their conclusion was “since we think that there are only two options, either you’re Jewish or democratic, we prefer to be Jewish one”.

That is, Jewish in the way that they understand Judaism, not the way I understand it. Their Jewish state is a theocratic, non-democratic, racist, apartheid state that needs all the power it has, because it still has a problem with the indigenous people of Palestine and those in the neighbourhood who support them.

This is something that leaders of the Left Zionist Movement never anticipated. They could not believe that their own electorate would say: “come on, it doesn’t work, stop, stop lying to yourself and to others. There’s nothing wrong in not being democratic. There’s nothing wrong with occupying someone else’s land and claiming it as yours. And there’s nothing wrong with using violent means in order to sustain your control.”

Do you think that the recent elections, and the new government, represent a qualitative shift in what’s happening in Israel?

It is a culmination of a qualitative shift that already started in 2000. There was a political force which was quite hegemonic in Israel until the late 1970s. They could come to the Social Democratic parties in Europe and say: “we are another social democratic country, no different from you”. And they were the hegemonic power in Israel until the 1970s.

But then the electorate said: “No, we don’t accept you”. Also, Arab Jews said that “because you are European Jews who are treating us in a very racist way, so we don’t want to be part of your version of a European country”. It seems that they are content with a more religious, traditional and racist state. This began in the late 1970s and took time to mature. Losing, or never winning, this Arab Jewish electorate (still 50% of the population) was the biggest failure of the Israeli Left.

From 2000 onwards, there was no social democratic power in Israel to talk about. There are parties who define themselves social democratic, but they don’t have any sizeable electorate behind them. And they have no influence in Israeli politics.

Since 2000, all the governments were either centre-right or right-right. If you look at the Knesset today, there are four members out 120, who define themselves as social democrats. There are more members who define themselves as Palestinian or anti-Zionist, but the vast majority define themselves as Zionists, and nationalist and religious. This is the face of Israel in 2022.

This is not an accident of history. It is an inevitable result of the whole idea of the settler colonial project.

One reaction to this lack of representation in parliament is the demonstrations in Israel which are barely precedented in terms of the size of mobilization against the government. At the same time, these demos clearly have nothing to say about the Palestinians. Do you think that they should be supported? And will they lead anywhere?

My Palestinian friends who are citizens of Israel discussed whether they should join the demonstrations. When consulted, my position was very clear. I said: “first of all, these demonstrators don’t want you there. They prefer not to see any Palestinian-Israeli citizen there. Secondly, the demonstrations are based on the idea that there is no connection between the occupation and the destruction of what is left of the Israeli democracy.”

This assumption of the demonstrators is totally wrong, of course. The two are connected and linked. The changes in the judicial system are meant to enable expansion of settlements and taking more severe actions against the Palestinian. This is the same package. It will take a bit longer for Israelis in Tel Aviv, and the high tech elite, who are worried about the way Israel is going, to see this. Hopefully they might see that there is a connection, but I’m not sure that they will. This is an internal Jewish debate that will have an impact on the Palestinians, but the Palestinians cannot impact that debate.

There is a misconception among some of the critics of Israel, that most of Israel’s money comes from the security services. That is not true. The most important income for Israel comes from high tech. Of course, some of that high tech is connected to security. But the high tech elite in Israel pays a sizeable percentage of the taxes and patriotically retains tens of billions of dollars in Israeli banks, as a statement of confidence in the Israeli economy. Since November 2022, they have begun to take the money out of Israel, and started to look for jobs outside of Israel.

This will undermine the Israeli economy very seriously, because it is a capitalist liberal economy which is based on such flow of money and human capital. It will be very interesting to see the impact on people who usually vote for the right wing, when their socio-economic conditions are affected.

The Israeli Central Bank has already increased interest rates eight times. This means that most Israelis who have mortgages are now paying three times more than they paid a few years ago. For many of them, three times more is half of their salary, and they have no chance of buying these houses.

So they will find it very difficult to pay their huge rent. And this government doesn’t have anyone there who has any capacity to deal with an economic crisis, which hasn’t happened yet, but will happen eventually.

How is the government justifying people having to pay these higher mortgages?

It is very difficult to answer this question logically. Today, the Knesset passed a law that allows Netanyahu to spend huge sums of money on renovating his house and his private aeroplane on the same day that people were told that their mortgage is being tripled. The people whose mortgages are being tripled, are generally people who vote for Netanyahu.

The people who don’t vote for Netanyahu are very well off. This change in the economy doesn’t bother them. But there is a certain psychology here which is not that easy to explain, and is not unique to Israel. Why do the electorate that suffer most from the economic and social policies of the government, continue to support the government?

So far one of the reasons that this occurs in Israel, is due to the government’s ability to tell its supporters that this is the necessary sacrifice for keeping the tribe and the nation together. This togetherness is necessary because we’re facing enemies from within and from without. That’s why they have to blow the Iranian danger out of proportion in order to cement support and divert attention from the socio-economic problems of the society.

So far, it has worked. Every time that they are overdoing these oppressive economic measures, we say to ourselves, okay, now it will burst out. We thought it burst out in 2011, with the social protest movement of half a million people demonstrating in Tel Aviv against the government’s policies on education and housing.

It was mesmerising to see how it petered out. A year later in 2012, Israel went to war in Gaza in order to make sure that the demonstrators will go to the army and go to the war and forget about the social protest. The government has no economic solution for the current crisis. It will try to find a way of diverting the attention–whether it’s a war or a crisis–it is hard to predict, but it is very worrying.

If you talk to the younger generation, they were educated in a particularly indoctrinated educational system. It is very difficult to change their perspective. And Israel de-Arabized many of the Arab Jews (the Mizrahim), giving them the sense that being not Arab is the ticket to be part of the new Israel, and something which will help to distinguish them from the “Arabs” of Israel, who were depicted as lesser persons or human beings, and therefore made them second-rate citizens. There is so much work to be done there, for anyone carving for a change from within Israel.

Some things are logical. We understand why some of the North African Jews moved to the settlements from the poor neighbourhoods of Jerusalem. That was understandable. They lived in a slum, and were offered a villa in the West Bank. So they went with the government’s support. The settlements for the Arab Jews in Jerusalem were built near Jerusalem, not inside the West Bank.

But nowadays, I’m not sure how far the Israeli government can go with this. They have no economic solution to the gap between those who have and those who haven’t. This is a situation that they themselves created. And frankly, they don’t even have the wizards of the liberal economy any more.

What you’re saying, indirectly at least, means that Israeli high tech workers and Palestinians have got a common enemy in Israeli capital. Does that mean that there’s a possibility of them coming together against the same enemy?

Not in the near future, because unfortunately, these high tech people are also indoctrinated by the racist Zionist view that the Palestinians are non-Europeans, and not equal partners. But it may shift. I don’t want to sound overly optimistic. but people who work in the Israeli medical system know that 50% of the physicians in Israel are Palestinians, and that many of the heads of the departments in hospitals are Palestinians. Maybe it will help to re-humanize the Palestinians in the eyes of the Ashkenazi elite of Israel. But we have to wait and see, as it has not happened yet.

The real hope for change lies elsewhere. There is a need, which now seems utopian, for an alliance between the Jews who came from Arab and Muslim countries and the Palestinians all over historical Palestine. I know this is not going to happen very soon, and I’m not sure if it’s going to happen at all. But I would invest most of my efforts there.

How can the Palestinians avoid taking the same path as South Africa? As a supporter of the Initiative for the One Democratic State, how would a single democratic state under capitalist conditions avoid just continuing the old power relationships in a different way?

The Initiative is trying to find bridges between the Left and some of the political forces that emerged in Palestine after the 1970s, including the political Islamic forces. We see that there is a lot of common ground, not only to liberate a place from colonization, but to build a new one, which is based on egalitarian social and economic policies.

What we don’t want, is the compromise that Mandela made in South Africa. In order to see the end of apartheid, Mandela was willing to allow the capitalist interests in South Africa to remain powerful in a way that did not solve the most fundamental problems of South African society and economy. It’s better than having apartheid, but it creates new issues.

The way to avoid this post-apartheid reality is to make sure that while you discuss the means for decolonization, you also develop a social and economic post-colonial vision. Applying the means used to decolonize, you might be able to build a more just society. Namely, just not only in terms of the of the relationship between Jews and Palestinians–which is the main aim–but also between classes, between the rural areas within the periphery and the centre, and so on.

It really behoves the Palestinian Left to redefine its identity and goals, and to openly and critically look at the mistakes it made in the 1970s. This is where this energy can come from. On the Left we believe in intellectual, organic intellectuals, and profoundly looking at the problems and finding solutions. But we also need to be in contact with movements and receive the support of the people themselves.

Who do you think has the agency to enforce change? I agree with you that the Palestinian Left needs a better vision. But Palestinians are largely excluded from the Israeli economy and merely going on demonstrations mean you run the risk of being shot by Israeli soldiers. What will it take to change the balance of power?

A lot of people know what needs to be done. But we all are very bad in knowing how to do this. We need to take into account that Palestinian society is the youngest in the world. 50% of the Palestinians are under 18. And this younger generation has some clear ideas of who they are and where they want to go.

Unlike the politics from above, whether inside Israel or in the Palestinian occupied territories where people are divided ideologically and politically, the younger generation is far more unified in its analysis of the reality and its vision for the future. These energies need to find their way into the structures of representation and leadership that can move all of us in the right direction.

We experienced this both in the West in 2008, and during the so called Arab Spring in 2011-2. People were very hesitant to put their energies into organizational issues. They felt that organization creates bureaucracies, and bureaucracies tame down the energy and become corrupt. This is what they see around them in the Arab world, and also in the West.

So there needs to be a fusion of the revolutionary energies that are there. I think the Left always realized that you need organization and representation. You may be influenced by anarchism, but it doesn’t always work as a transformative force on the ground. We can agree that knowing exactly how to transform things is not easy.

One of the most interesting initiatives, which I hope it will include the Palestinians in Israel, is either to re-organize the PLO, or to find a substitute. It is necessary for all of us to have a more accepted representative, democratic Palestinian leadership that will push us all in the right direction. This is easier said than done, of course.

How could a new State be forged, ideally with economic relations which are divorced from the last century of Zionist war-making? How would it function economically, if there’s no war to constantly generate profits?

That goes together with the whole decolonization process. First of all, you dismantle the racist colonialist institutions. These institutions are based in capitalism. The main problem is not so much the militarized high tech, but the question of decolonization.

The energy that would be needed would be in such a different direction to security, that I don’t think you have to worry about it too much. Because either people will go along with this, or they won’t. And if they do, the high tech community would also have to contribute its share for building a post-colonial state and prioritise for instance, projects of absorbing the Palestinian refugees (since the implementation of the right of return would be crucial for a just solution) and be part of the effort for redistributing land and property and working out a credible mechanism of compensation.

The entry point is really the dismantling of colonialist institutions. These institutions are now so closely connected to the capitalist system, that the very dismantling or weakening of them may also begin with changes to the economic nature of the state.

The 2011 protest movements in Israel showed both the potential and limitations. The movement was huge, but it fell apart as soon as anyone mentioned Palestine. It happened at roughly the same time as the Arab Spring, but there seemed to be zero connections made with what was happening in North Africa. Was this inevitable?

Let me put it this way. In order to change the reality on the ground, our greatest hopes are not for change from within the Israeli society. If someone wants to see a change in Palestine, it would not come from within the Jewish society, but from the ability of the Palestinians to be more unified, and for the Muslim and Arab world to stand behind them.

People or governments in the West standing behind the Palestinian Liberation cause can bring a change. But anyone that waits for change from within Israel as an important component in transforming the situation–will, unfortunately, be disappointed.

Having said this, things are more dialectical. If we see all these things that I talked about–a change in the Muslim world, and in the way that Western governments are acting–this can have an influence on the ability of Israelis to be more assertive and maybe contribute to the change.

I would be very surprised if the current movement will do this. It’s an impressive movement. 100,000 people surrounding the Israeli Knesset on Monday is a show of force. But these people will make sure that the Palestine issue is not connected to their agenda. They will make sure that Palestinian Israelis are not part of this protest movement. And that’s why they will fail.

Maybe one day they will realize that if you want to change the Israeli political system from within, it needs to be done through Arab-Jewish cooperation. You cannot do it without the Palestinians in Israel. But Israel has grown up to be such a racist society, that for the vast majority of Jews, this is an unthinkable scenario.

Who should socialists in Germany and elsewhere be making links with? You don’t see much hope in Israel, and Fatah and Hamas are falling apart with corruption. Who are our partners in the region?

There is a thriving civil society which needs the support from people from the outside. It is very well organized in the West Bank. Even under the Hamas in Gaza, it has enough freedom to act. The same is true about the Palestinian society inside Israel.

And there is a positive development. Jews are no longer creating their own civil societies. They understand the limitation of the power. So if you are an anti-Zionist Jew, you are now joining a Palestinian NGO instead of creating your own. Some of the Palestinian national movements inside Israel used to say: “let the Jews develop their own critical mass and we will develop ours.” Now there is an understanding that it has to go together.

You can see it in Balad, the most important national party inside Israel. Although it never prohibited Israeli Jewish citizens from joining now they’re actively recruiting Israeli Jews, both for the party and also through a network of civil society organizations that is connected with the party.

There is also a call from 150 Palestinian NGOs inside Israel and the occupied territories for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanction campaign, It is a very important call, and something that socialist and progressive forces in Europe are ready contribute towards. I know how difficult it is in Germany, because of the legislation and the declaration in the Bundestag. But nonetheless, that should not deter us.

There is also an interesting new initiative. The PLO has started international anti-Israel apartheid committees everywhere in the world. This can form a new energy for the BDS movement or enhance the BDS movement even further. I think these initiatives are very important. You cannot rest. They need to be maintained.

One last question. You will be speaking in Berlin again in May at the Marxismuss conference. The subject is 75 years Nakba, but it’s also an opportunity to addressing some of the problems that we have in Germany. Our problem is not just the Bundestag resolution, but a self-censorship and lack of self confidence amongst the German Left regarding Palestine. How important you think is it to talk raise the issue of Palestine with a German audience?

Very, very important. Germany plays a very important role in this whole question. Germany’s justified guilt is manipulated in order to immunise Israel. Germany is an extremely critical political force in Europe. But it does not dare to take any bold actions as a political system, that would benefit the Palestinians and alleviate their suffering under Israeli oppression.

It’s very important to find a way of convincing the German public that they should not be intimidated. I come from a German Jewish family. I know very well what happened in Germany. We should not be intimidated by that particular chapter in history. On the contrary, that chapter means the Germans should be even more sensitive to the suffering of the Palestinians.

Germany should not deny the past, but instead say that this past requires a moral position on Palestine, not just on Israel. The Palestinians are a link in the victimisation chain that began in 1933. People in Germany who produce knowledge about Palestine–academics, journalists pundits, and definitely politicians–cannot act like they are part of the Israeli propaganda.

I know they are intelligent scholars, journalists, and politicians. It really breaks my heart to see them saying things that they know are not correct. The only reason they’re saying it is because of political, academic, or journalistic utility. They don’t want to be condemned as antisemites. This is more important in Germany than in any other country.

We have a great assignment of convincing them that, supporting the Palestinians is being anti-racist and anti-colonialist, and therefore cannot be an antisemitic act based on the mistaken belief that antisemitism is racism. This is easier said than done. But I think that academics should play a very important role here–in being accurate, in being accurate professional, in not abusing what they do as academics.

Germany always respected its academics, journalists, writers, intellectuals–but when it comes to Palestine, they behave like people with no backbone avoiding the desire to seek out the truth. And this is something that I think they should contemplate. Hopefully we can help them in this process.

We’re nearly out of time. Is there anything you’d like to say before we finish?

We should not give up on Germany. I’m beginning to give up on on the chances of changing Israeli society, but I’m not giving up on the younger German generation. We should still look at Germany as a place where there are processes that have not yet matured. And Germany’s is building itself all the time.

Alliance of Internationalist Feminists

Intersectional groups, networks & people who define themselves as women* and/or trans*people


02/03/2023

We, Alliance of Internationalist Feminists, are women of color (BIWOC), migrant and refugee women from different groups, networks and individuals. Our feminism is intersectional and our fight is against racism, colonialism, capitalism, imperialism, and patriarchy.

Today All around the world oppressed people are rising up – intertwined in their struggles for liberation, justice and self-determination. Don’t look away anymore! Our resistance and us have been here all along. 

We are roaring; From Iran to Palestine, from Sudan to Kurdistan, from Peru to Afghanistan, from Chad to the Philippines, from South Africa to India.

We are in rage; in every corner and street, in the mountains and at the sea, at the borders and in the camps, in every occupied land and territory, in factories, in working places, in the schools, at home and inside prisons.

We are fighting together, hand in hand, shoulder to shoulder, with one strong Fist, we are building an internationalist front to abolish femicide, state violence, dictatorship, patriarchy, imperialism, colonialism and white supremacy. 

In the name of our Sisterhood we will create a world without war, sanctions, exploitation, occupation, border regimes, neoliberal policies, the plundering of peoples’ land and resources and any form of elitism. This is not anymore a dream. This is our existing resistance! 

We, Alliance of Internationalist Feminists, believe self-organization and self-defense is our strength. The fight of each sister is the fight of us all. We honor our sisters from the Global South, especially trans women*, working class women*, disabled women*, refugee women*, Black women*, Indigenous women* and women* of Colour who have always been in front leading the fight. 

We Invite all Women, Trans and Non binary People to take the street together on this 8th of March. Let us show our determination and autonomy beyond borders. Let us be Loud together in the name of “women*, life, freedom”, In the name of our rage and resistance: OUR REVOLUTION IS COMING!

+ * This asterisk is intended to make clear that there is a whole range of gender identities (not just “female” and “male”) who are experiencing gender violence and feminicide. Historically trans women were excluded from (cis) women spaces. This sign is here to show that we are aware of this topic and that we distance ourselves clearly from every TERF ideology.

++ Cis men are not invited, they are advised to take other actions to stop violence against women*

OUR REVOLUTION IS COMING

Revolutionary Internationalist 8th of March 2023 in Berlin

Where: 8th of March 2023, 2pm

Where: From Frankfurter Tor to Women* Prison in Lichtenberg

“Power devolved is always power retained”

Interview with Colin Macpherson, one of the organisers of next week’s march for Scottish independence in Berlin

Hello Colin. Thanks for talking to us. Could you start by introducing yourself. Who are you, and why are you interested in Scottish independence?

I am Colin Macpherson and have been living in Germany for 35 years, initially in Munich and now in Straubing. I first became interested in Scottish independence as a teenager. When the Iron Curtain fell, all of a sudden, new independent countries were being created, many smaller than Scotland. And my feeling was why can they do it and Scotland can’t? This was of course towards the end of the Thatcher years and all the devastation they had inflicted on Scotland. With technological advances over recent years it has become much easier to keep up with what is happening in Scotland and this has made it possible for me to become far more involved in the campaign.

On 11th March, Germans for Scottish Independence are organising an Independence demo in Berlin. Why are you demonstrating here?

Our group’s aims are to raise awareness of the independence campaign in Germany and show our colleagues in Scotland our support. Berlin is the obvious choice to maximize publicity.

Who are you expecting to take part on the demonstration? Who is involved in your campaign?

Our group started off in 2013 as a Facebook page and so it remains very loosely structured and a broad church – mainly Germans in Scotland, Germans in Germany, Scots in Germany and Scots elsewhere. Often, but not always, there are personal links, either having spent time in the other country or having friends and family there. We expect that the attendance will reflect that and look forward to welcoming both people who have travelled from other parts of Germany and from Scotland. Amongst others Kevin Gore will be providing music and Neale Hanvey MP will be speaking.

There have been a lot of demonstrations for independence in the last few years. Have they been effective?

One could argue no because Scotland is not independent yet. I prefer to see them as being part of the reason that despite the referendum result in 2014, independence is still firmly on the agenda. While unlikely to persuade people who are not yet convinced of independence, they serve to increase awareness and show that we are not getting back in our box.

Many progressive people look at the nationalism of the conservatives and neo-Nazis and say that they are against all nationalism. What is different about Scottish Nationalism?

I prefer to speak of the independence movement, and indeed some have suggested that the SNP ought to change its name to avoid such confusion. The former promote a sense of being better than others based on nationality or ethnicity. In Scotland things are far more inclusive and it is not about being inherently better than anyone else, merely that the people of Scotland are better placed to make decisions which affect the daily lives of people in Scotland.

Aren’t you better off uniting with the English workers currently striking against the Tory government?

The two are not mutually exclusive, but it is also not that simple. Current strikes in the NHS or education, for example, are devolved issues. So, while the Scottish Government has a finite budget with limited powers to raise further funds the strikes in Scotland are not directly strikes against the Tory government. In the future we would hope that the fairer society we would like to see in an independent Scotland would also prove beneficial to workers in England and elsewhere by showing how the current system can be changed.

How has the case for Scottish independence changed since Brexit?

Brexit was probably the best example to show the need for independence, both on Scotland being dragged out the EU against its will and the refusal of the UK government to even consider a bespoke solution reflecting the will of the Scottish electorate. It has certainly contributed to many in Europe being more sympathetic to the idea of independence. At the same time I think that we should guard against equating independence with EU membership – that should be a decision made by the people of Scotland after independence.

In 1999, Scotland was given its own parliament. Yet, the Westminster government recently refused to allow the Scottish parliament to pass the Gender Recognition Act. Just how much autonomy does Scotland currently have?

Along with the recent Supreme Court decision and the Internal Market Bill that is a whole new question which is yet to be answered. In theory many areas are devolved, but once the can of worms is opened, that laws can only be passed which the Westminster government agrees with, it becomes dangerous territory. While we can welcome many laws passed by the Scottish Government it remains to be seen what the future brings – we are already seeing threats to block the bottle return scheme. Ultimately power devolved is always power retained.

Has the recent resignation of Scottish National Party leader Nicola Sturgeon strengthened your campaign or weakened it?

Independence is never about one party, far less one person, although the glee with which Unionist politicians and media greeted the announcement suggests they see things differently. The arguments in favour of independence have not changed, however the campaign still needs the politicians as the vehicle to Scotland regaining independence. Much will depend on who wins the leadership election and how they engage with the wider movement.

Finally, how can people in Berlin practically support your cause?

Spread the word and come and join us on March 11th. We gather at the Brandenburg Gate to set off at 11 a.m. and move on to Alexanderplatz for the rally.