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Alameda County Proclaims Palestinian Cultural Day Despite Opposition

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Alameda County became the second California county to recognize Palestinian residents as a people, having a rich culture, and contributing to the community. An earlier attempt by opponents to scuttle the proclamation in June was overcome by negotiations between residents and county supervisors. Supervisors Nate Miley and Wilma Chan presented the proclamation on behalf of the entire Board on July 24, 2012.

Alameda County Procl...
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The Alameda County Board of Supervisors proclaimed Palestinian Cultural Day at its regular meeting in the Alameda County Administration Building in Oakland on Tuesday, July 24, 2012. Board President Nate Miley and Supervisor Wilma Chan awarded the Proclamation to representatives of the Palestinian community: Fouad Atieh, Sandra Nasser, Nabil Wahbeh, and Loubna Qutami.

The proclamation is a victory for Palestinian residents who have long sought recognition as a community despite sometimes fierce opposition. It recognizes Palestinians as a people who “trace their roots back to this historic land of Palestine” and that “Palestinian residents of Alameda County now number approximately 20,000 and continue to make major contributions to the County.”[1]

Alameda County becomes the second in California to officially recognize Palestinian Cultural Day, following the lead of Santa Clara County which issued its first proclamation in 2002. But getting started ten years ago was very challenging because of fierce opposition from supporters of Israel who feared the proclamations would erode Israel’s image by raising public awareness of recent Palestinian history.

The Alameda County Proclamation of Palestinian Cultural Day was originally placed on the Board of Supervisors agenda for June 5, 2012. But it was abruptly pulled from the agenda the previous morning after Board President Nate Miley was besieged by protests from Zionists. One hate-filled blog called Palestinians “Jew-haters” and dismissed the Palestinian narrative as “mythical.”[2]

Myrna David of the Jewish Community Relations Council of the East Bay said, “There was no pressure from the organized Jewish community.”[3]

Palestinian community organizer, Kira Azzam of the Buena Vista United Methodist Church reminded the community, “This was and remains a statement to promote Palestinian cultural heritage.”

When it became clear that continuing to oppose the recognition of a local community of residents and their cultural heritage would be politically untenable, opponents of the proclamation finally settled for a minor change in wording of the proclamation. They insisted that a reference in the first clause be changed from Palestinians who “profess either a Christian, Jewish, or Muslim faith,” to “profess many faiths.”

The concern of Israel’s supporters is that Jews living in Israel and the Palestinian Territories must have a separate identity which is the very basis for a Jewish State and for a potential future Two State solution. To suggest that all residents of Israel-Palestine are one people of merely different faiths would subvert the rationale for a Jewish State that gives a “birthright” exclusively to Jews.

With agreement on modified wording in the Proclamation, Palestinian Cultural Day was placed back on the Alameda County Board of Supervisors agenda for its regular meeting of July 24. Though sponsored by Wilma Chan and Nate Miley, two other supervisors – Keith Carson and Richard Valle quickly signed on. Representing the more conservative District 1, Scott Haggerty was under continued Zionist pressure, then signed on to the Proclamation at the last minute.

In a victory party after the Board meeting, one proclamation supporter exclaimed, “Finally Palestinians are people [in Alameda County]!”

When Palestinian residents of Santa Clara County first sought recognition for Palestine Day, they were met with a firestorm of opposition from Zionists and the reluctance of most elected leaders to even touch the controversial subject. It took the courage of Supervisor Pete McHugh to lead the way. As a result of intense lobbying on both sides, a tacit agreement was worked out to focus the proclamation on recognizing Palestinian culture while avoiding the Palestinian historical narrative and any inevitable implication of oppression. The first Palestinian Cultural Day in Santa Clara County was born.

The annual ceremony at the Santa Clara County Government Center in San José begins with the raising of the American and Palestinian flags in James P. McEntee Plaza. This year’s program on May 15, 2012 featured two guest speakers.

Sam Jadallah, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, a former vice president of Microsoft, and co-founder of the Institute for Middle East Understanding, is the son of immigrants from al-Bireh, Palestine. Mr. Jadallah credited his success in Silicon Valley to the fact that “entrepreneurial culture is deeply rooted” among Palestinians. He cited other local examples, such as Phil Jabar, owner of Philz Coffee, who will soon have a dozen coffee shops around the Bay Area.

However, Mr. Jadallah went on to explain that the Palestinian experience cannot be understood without considering the “dark side of the Israeli military occupation” where, for example, Palestinian family members living 7 miles apart cannot see each other because of Israel’s apartheid wall.

The second guest speaker, Hala Gabriel, was in the process of completing a documentary film “Road to Tantura” that traces her family’s history from a fishing village south of Haifa to expulsion by the Alexandroni Brigade in May 1948 to her father’s incarceration for two years in an Israeli prison to exile in the Yarmouk Refugee Camp in Syria. To produce the film she interviewed villagers who once lived in Tantura and soldiers, most born in the U.S. or Europe, who had participated in the armed attack on the village. Ms. Gabriel also recounted her personal experiences of being humiliated by Israeli immigration officials, strip searched, and then initially denied entry into the land of her parents.

Both Sam Jadallah and Hala Gabriel exemplified why Palestinian heritage and culture cannot be divorced from the historical experience of the Palestinian people over the past century.

Talks like these that cannot be apolitical and “purely cultural” have raised concerns at the Jewish Community Relations Council. Palestinian Cultural Day should not be allowed to become “a forum to disparage Israel,” said Karen Stiller, director of JCRC of the Peninsula. “We’ve never said don’t hold Palestinian Cultural Day, we just want them to put the culture back in it.” [3]

Yet the same standard is never applied to other communities. Every year the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors observe Holocaust Remembrance Day (Yom HaShoah) in April or early May, depending on when the 27th of Nisan falls. The ceremony held in the Board of Supervisors chamber is explicitly political, that the Holocaust must never be forgotten and never be repeated, and rightfully so.

Every year the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors proclaim Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day in April in the Board of Supervisors chamber. This year’s ceremony on April 24, 2012, officially recognizing the victims in Armenia from 1915 to 1923, proclaimed that genocide must never be forgotten and never be repeated, and rightfully so.

Never has the Palestinian community complained that Yom HaShoah or Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day should be “only cultural” or that the events should not disparage the perpetrators.

As Professor George Bisharat of the Hastings College of Law at the University of California in San Francisco, who gave the keynote address on Palestinian Cultural Day in 2011, explained, “The experience of al-Nakbah is something that is at the very core of our identity as Palestinians, and that really marks and defines us as a people.”

Professor Bisharat continued, “There is a silver lining in all of these difficult experiences that we faced collectively. It has helped us forge that part of our identity that is represented in the word ‘sumud’ which means steadfastness. It is that characteristic that has permitted us to survive as a people, as a collectivity, and many of us as individuals to thrive as business people, as political leaders, as researchers, and various other capacities.”

For this reason Palestinian Cultural Day in Santa Clara County has always been observed on May 15th or the closest weekday before that. May 15th marks the anniversary of the Day of Catastrophe (Yom al-Nakbah), the culmination of months of attacks in which 750,000 Palestinians were forced from their homes by Zionist paramilitary organizations such as the Irgun Zvai Leumi, Lehi, Haganah, and the various terrorist brigades. This violent ethnic cleansing paved the way for the establishment of the State of Israel, which declared independence from Britain on May 14, 1948.

Why not proclaim it Yom al-Nakbah or Palestinian Catastrophe Day? Like the Shoah (Holocaust) and the Armenian genocide, al-Nakbah too must never be forgotten and never be repeated, and rightfully so.

1. Alameda County Board of Supervisors, “Palestinian Cultural Day [Proclamation],” 24 July 2012, http://www.acgov.org/board/bos_calendar/documents/DocsAgendaReg_07_24_12/PROCLAMATIONS_COMMENDATIONS/Miley_Chan_Palestinian_Cultural_Day.pdf

2. Pamela Geller, “Oppose Palestinian Proclamation Day in Alameda County, Calif. Tuesday,” 3 June 2012, http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/atlas_shrugs/2012/06/oppose-palestinian-proclamation-day-in-alameda-county-calif-tuesday.html

3. Sue Fishkoff, “No Palestinian cultural day for Alameda County,” J.Weekly, 7 June 2012, http://www.jweekly.com/article/full/65460/no-palestinian-cultural-day-for-alameda-county

Related articles:
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/05/21/18419279.php, http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2007/11/26/18463594.php, http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2008/05/22/18500806.php,
http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2009/05/25/18598218.php
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Palestinian Cultural Day in Santa Clara County

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Palestinian Cultural...
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Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors President Dave Cortese presenting the eleventh annual Palestinian Cultural Day Proclamation to Samir Laymoun on May 15, 2012.
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Samir Laymoun with Sam Jadallah

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Samir Laymoun with S...
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Samir Laymoun introducing Sam Jadallah to give the keynote address at Palestinian Cultural Day on May 15, 2012 in San José.
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Hala Gabriel

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Hala Gabriel...
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Hala Gabriel speaking on May 15, 2012 about retracing her roots in Palestine to produce the film “Road to Tantura”.
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Flag raising

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Flag raising...
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Palestinian community members participating in the raising of U.S. and Palestinian flags in James P. McEntee Plaza in San José on May 15, 2012.
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George Bisharat

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

George Bisharat...
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Professor George Bisharat addressing a packed Palestinian Cultural Day gathering in the Isaac Newton Senter Auditorium on May 13, 2011.
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Palestinian Cultural Day 2011

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Palestinian Cultural...
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Local musicians performing Palestinian music at Palestinian Cultural Day in Santa Clara County.
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Holocaust Remembrance Day 2011

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Holocaust Remembranc...
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Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors President Dave Cortese (center) with Supervisor Mike Wasserman giving proclamation to Holocaust survivor Helen Farkas on May 4, 2011.
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Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day 2011

by Sharat G. Lin Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 12:22 AM
San José

Armenian Genocide Re...
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Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors President Dave Cortese (left) presenting proclamation to Armenian residents on April 26, 2011.
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reaching out

by amazing Monday, Jul. 30, 2012 at 5:16 PM

While the standard narrative of the holocaust is played as most likely a bone thrown to the Zionist community
"avoiding the Palestinian historical narrative and any inevitable implication of oppression." seems to have been a point nailed to the bargaining table.
Talk about equality.
-Talks like these that cannot be apolitical and “purely cultural” have raised concerns at the Jewish Community Relations Council. Palestinian Cultural Day should not be allowed to become “a forum to disparage Israel,”
Oh we shouldn't do that because....oh, the crimes of this state are forbidden to be discussed.
But it was so nice of them to allow us to see Palestinian culture amid the wailing of genocide and holocaust "Yet the same standard is never applied to other communities", meaning the actual victims of this historical pogrom of ethnic cleansing.
But it's amazing that at least a glimmer of their culture was allowed to shine through the bloody fog of history while the voice of their plight was gagged.
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There was no objection

by There was no objection Tuesday, Jul. 31, 2012 at 8:19 PM

Once the palestinians agreed to removing language denying Jewish peoplehood, there was no objection.

In fact, members of the jewish community worked with the Board of Supervisors to get this passed. You'll need to find victimhood elsewhere.


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Palestinian Cultural Day

by Santa Clara Tuesday, Jul. 31, 2012 at 8:25 PM

Palestinian Cultural...
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Santa Clara County has a Palestinian Cultural Day- but it became mired in controversy a few years back when their "Palestinian Art fair" showed a child with a gun, captioned "I shoot with complete faith and pride. I pull the trigger and aim towards the enemy without any fear".

Apparently, youth gun violence is an important part of the palestinian cultural heritage.
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see what happens?

by Another Day Wednesday, Aug. 01, 2012 at 3:41 AM

This is what 60+ years of occupation, land confiscation, murder, pogroms of ethnic cleansing and a total disregard for UN resolutions to stop said actions by the israeli rat state, will produce.
Right of return, forget it.
Compensation or justice in a state that views the native population as vermin is a total myth. Like the shops in Gaza "overflowing with food" for the typical inmate of this occupation.
Blow smoke up some other person's ass, please.
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