Tuesday, March 3, 2015

I Was Born in Israel Many Years before I Realized Israel Was Palestine

I was born in Israel and it was many years before I realized that Israel was Palestine. I was relatively patriotic. I was looking forward to serving in the army and then I grasped that there was little truth in the Jewish historical narrative. I then gathered that I was living on someone else's land. At the same time I discovered the saxophone. By the age of 30, I left Israel and never went back.
Q: There is some kind of rebellion in your music; how do you explain this?
A: My music can be very soft and reflective. Sometimes it is very funny and occasionally it is furious. There are too many reasons to be angry. I'm far from happy when I see Israel flattening Gaza. I'm furious when I find out 80 percent of British conservative MPs are 'friends of Israel.' I'm angry when I find out the Jewish lobby is pushing America into another World War and instead of becoming violent, sometimes I use music as a channel to express my anger.
Q: What type of music is close to your music in the world?
A: It's very simple. I'm a jazz artist, a Bebop player. But I'm inspired by near east music whether it is Arabic, Turkish or Greek. I find my own way to fuse the Arabic Mawwal with John Coltrane...
Q: What do you think of the social and political state of Turkey?
A: Listen, I'm really against any forms of interventionism, so I'm definitely not the right person to judge the situation here. I can only talk about my impression, and it's not an academic observation. I'm touring all over the world and I see a lot of sadness. I see impoverished countries, people with no work, with no prospect of production. I see youngsters who are third generation poor and in their deserted main street they don't eat their own food anymore, they instead eat McDonalds, Burger King, Coca Cola, Starbucks. And I'm here in Turkey and see a lot of people on the streets, and I see fish from your sea, and tomatoes from your fields, and I see a lot of people working in the restaurants that have Turkish names and don't even offer a menu in English, and it makes me happy for you. You have managed to maintain your authenticity and culture. This is a great victory. You are so lucky that Islamophobic Europeans didn't accept you in the EU. Your country is now a superpower.
Q: You were born in Israel but you are against Israeli occupation and its politics. You are living in the West, how do you cope?
A: Let me tell you something and it is crucial. In my entire career, I have never been subject to abuse by the British government, never been subject to abuse by the American government. Although the infamous Alan Dershowitz, who is now implicated in a huge sex scandal with minors, labelled me 'as the number one enemy of the Jewish people,' I've never been subject to direct abuse by the Israeli government. Even the NSA doesn't harass me. The only people who stalk me continuously are the Jewish left and the Guardian newspaper. I can say that it's not a problem but I came to the realization that the biggest enemy of our elementary freedoms are the progressives and I'll explain why.
In the West and maybe in Turkey as well, we have issues with political correctness. What is political correctness? Political correctness is politics that doesn't allow political opposition. But this is clearly the definition we associate with dictatorship. But political correctness is far worse than dictatorship. Why? Because in the case of dictatorship you experience an opposition to a regime that is distinct from you, but in the case of political correctness it is you who silence yourself. Political Correctness is a form of self-censorship. The Jewish left and the progressives made us into a collective of impotents. Our task is to move on and to erect our resistance against this cancerous ideology.
Q: Can we separate Judaism from Zionism
A: No. Israel isn't called the 'Zionist State,' it defines itself as the 'Jewish State.' The parties in the government are called "Israel Our Home" and the "Jewish Home" not the "Zionist Home"*. Now the Israeli cabinet has approved the National Bill that defines Israel as the Jewish state not the Zionist state. Zionism from an Israeli perspective died in 1948. Zionism was a promise to erect a Jewish state in Zion (Palestine). Once, Israel was established, Zionism was finished with its role. The only people who maintain the Zionist nonsense are the Jewish left because they want to differentiate between Jewishness and Zionism. This is why they call Israel colonialism. But Israel is not colonialism. Colonialism is a clear exchange between a mother state and a settler state. Israel is a settler state, yet there is no Jewish mother state. This is why they call it apartheid. Israel in not apartheid: Apartheid is a racist system of exploitation. But Israel doesn't want to exploit the Palestinians, it wants them gone. Israel is a Hitlerian ethnic cleansing model. The Left uses the terms 'Colonialism', 'Zionism', and 'Apartheid' in an attempt to divert attention from the 'J' word. For solidarity with Palestine to be meaningful, we have to de-Judify our terminology. Not to kick out the Jews, but to prevent Jewish interests from defining the boundaries of the discussion.
Q: Can we see Israel and Palestine as two states?
A: No.
Q: Will the Palestinians be able to return to their county?
A: This is what they are fighting for. And any person who doesn't accept the right of return is not a genuine supporter.
Q: What do you think about what Ahmadinejad said about the Holocaust?
A: I agree 100 percent with everything Ahmadinejad said about the Holocaust. Ahmadinejad basically said that Holocaust must be treated as a historical chapter. At the moment it is treated as a religion. And if it is a religion I want to maintain my right to be an atheist. In contemporary Judified reality it is OK not to believe in God but if you don't believe in Auschwitz you will be penalised and severely. I don't accept it.
Q: What does the US gain from supporting Israel?
A: We cannot think of America as an independent entity anymore. America's political system is a Jewish occupied zone. America, Britain, France, [and generally] the West woke up one morning to realize that there was a loop hole in their legal system that facilitated the ability of invasive foreign lobbies such as AIPAC, CFI, CRIF to interfere with their foreign affairs. America has sacrificed its foreign interests on the Jewish alter. It is a disaster. But history teaches us that this Jewish political impunity always comes to an end in a totally tragic circumstance.
Q: Do you agree that a Holocaust is happening in Gaza?
A: I don't know what the Holocaust is anymore. I'm like Ahmadinejad in that regard. When I was a kid they taught me that the Nazis made soap out of Jews. And then I grew up and realized it was all a fantasy. They taught me that the Arabs were going to throw us into the sea. And when I was mature enough to learn the history on my own I realized that it was actually the Jews who threw Palestinians into the sea. Then I realized that Jews (like everyone else) tend to project their cultural symptoms on others. The Jews are fearful of the Palestinians because the Jews witness their army engaged in murderous activity. They must believe the Palestinians are as murderous as the IDF happens to be.
I don't want to talk in terms of the Holocaust because it is too Jewish. I don't want to compare Israel with Nazism because Israel is bad enough. From some perspectives Israel is worse than Nazism (Israel is a Jewish democracy it implies a collective responsibility). When I compare Israel with Nazism I reaffirm the Holocaust religion and sustain the primacy of Jewish suffering. We have to establish a new discourse where Israelis are the worst enemy of humanity and the Palestinians are the ultimate sufferers. Auschwitz was indeed bad, but not as bad as Gaza.
Q: Iran is not after nuclear arms the whole world knows that. How do you explain the fuss around the Iranian nuclear project?
A: I have no problem with Iranian nuclear arms. I want Iran to have a bomb. Just One Iranian bomb will bring peace to the region. Because all this mess in the Middle Ease caused by Israel and America is because they know they can kill with impunity and endlessly. And my problem with the Shias is that they are too nice. They really don't want to bomb anyone. An atomic bomb is Haram they say.
Q: What is your opinion about Iran's role in the Middle East?
A: Iran is the most beautiful political power. It supports the Palestinians. It supports the resistance. Iran has developed very strong industry. This country that was a client state of America 34 years ago now produces submarines, airplanes, drones, very strong computers. It is beautiful.
Q: Obama is the first black president of America but statistics show scores of black people are shot dead every year. How do you analyze this contradiction?
A: We like to think in terms of racial division because this is the heritage of the left, but it is wrong. In the west and in the last 50 years there has been a collapse of manufacturing partially because of automation, machinery, and computerization but also because Milton Friedman taught us that is better to be a service economy. The meaning of it in America, Britain, France, etc. is that we don't need working people. The people who used to be working class are now workless class, 8and they are doomed to poverty with no hope, they are called under-class. As things stand, existing jobs demand very high cognitive ability (very high I.Q.) such as engineers, financiers, bankers, PRs. This group of privileged people is what I call the 'cognitive elite,' and they are few in number. We live in a society where we witness the under-class growing rapidly and a small cognitive elite maintaining its power. Obama is well within the cognitive elite and not because he is black, but because he is clever and he clearly found his way to the top. When it comes to the under-class we realize that there are a lot of immigrants including many Hispanics and Blacks. They are the primary sufferers of the new cruel, merciless division not between the rich and the poor but between the able and the less able. It is very devastating. This is why Turkey is so important. You manage your economy and currency in a manner that facilitates manufacturing.
(Reporting by Mehmet Gurhan/ The People's Voice).
 Gilad Atzmon is a British Jazz artist and author. He was born in "Israel" in 1963 and trained at the Rubin Academy of Music, Jerusalem (Composition and Jazz). A multi-instrumentalist he plays saxophones, clarinet and ethnic woodwind instruments. His album Exile was the BBC jazz album of the year in 2003. Gilad writes on political matters, social issues, Jewish identity and culture. His papers are published on very many press outlets around the world. Gilad is a popular political analyst and is often guesting on Television and Radio stations around the world such as RT, Press TV, BBC and many more.

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Beach in Gaza


Locals enjoy a day out on the beach in the Gaza Strip, a narrow stretch of land on the Mediterranean Sea.

International Campaign to Call for Release of 14-year-old Khalid Sheikh

Arab Organisation for Human Rights in the UK (AOHR UK) announced it was joining an international campaign calling for the immediate release of the Palestinian boy Khalid Husam Mahmoud Al-Sheikh, 14, from Beit Anan in Occupied Jerusalem.
Khalid was arrested by Israeli occupation forces on 25 December 2014 and charged with 'throwing stones'. He is currently being held at Ofer prison near Ramallah and suffers from severe Anemia, according to his family who revealed they had no information about him at present. Khalid has so far appeared five times before a military court with the next session scheduled for the 25th of February 2015.
AOHR UK said that their lawyer Ibtisam Al-Anati from Ahrar Centre had expressed her deep concern over the conditions under which he was being held. Al-Anati condemned prison officials for refusing to allow Khalid to receive medical treatment for his serious condition and added that he was increasingly looking jaundiced and tired.
AOHR UK pointed out it was not the first time Occupation forces had arrested minors. According to UNISEF, Israel arrested more than 7000 Palestinian children during the past ten years, 300 of whom are still languishing in Israeli prisons.
AOHR UK added that Arab children are not subject to the same laws as Israeli children. According to Israeli military law, a child is anyone under the age of 16 while the Israeli civil code defines a child as anyone under the age of 18. Israeli military forces sanction the arrest of Palestinian children of any age, with minors as young as nine being arrested in some cases.
Children are treated as adults during arrests and interrogations and are questioned without the presence of a lawyer or guardians. Many cases of torture and abuse, and even blackmail, have been documented.
AOHR UK asserts that Israeli measures against Palestinian children constitute a serious violation of the Geneva Conventions and all international conventions which guarantee the rights of children to a safe environment and the right to be tried as minors.

Writer’s hands


Sunday, February 22, 2015

Palestine's nature


Palestinian team football


Palestine

eclarPalestine (Arabic: فلسطين Filasṭīn, Falasṭīn, Filisṭīn; Greek: Παλαιστίνη, Palaistinē; Latin: Palaestina; Hebrew: פלשתינהPalestina) is a geographic region in Western Asia between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River. It is sometimes considered to include adjoining territories. The name was used by Ancient Greek writers, and was later used for the Roman province Syria Palaestina, the Byzantine Palaestina Prima and the Umayyad and Abbasid province of Jund Filastin. The region is also known as the Land of Israel (Hebrew: ארץ־ישראל Eretz-Yisra'el), the Holy Land or Promised Land, and historically has been known as the Southern portion of wider regional designations such as the Levant, Canaan, Syria and as-Sham.
Situated at a strategic location between EgyptSyria and Arabia, and the birthplace of Judaism and Christianity, the region has a long and tumultuous history as a crossroads for religion, culture, commerce, and politics. The region has been controlled by numerous peoples, including Ancient EgyptiansCanaanitesIsraelitesAssyriansBabyloniansPersians,Ancient GreeksRomansByzantines, the Sunni Arab Caliphates, the Shia Fatimid CaliphateCrusadersAyyubids,MameluksMongolsOttomans, the British and modern Israelis and Palestinians.
The boundaries of the region have changed throughout history. The modern definition of the region was fixed in the North and East by the 1920–23 Paulet–Newcombe Agreement and British Mandate for Palestine, and on the South by the 1906 Turco-Egyptian boundary agreement. Today, the region comprises the State of Israel and Palestinian territoriesin which the State of Palestine was declared.