We come here today to speak for peace, at a time when our government has embraced war. The tragedy now unfolding in Lebanon,
Gaza and Israel is the product of reckless, cruel and self-defeating
policies, set in Washington.
The pictures coming out of Lebanon are so wrenching and sad, you want to look away.
But they hold us in their grip.
I grew up in a Jewish
home, where my first knowledge of history was of the Holocaust. And I used to ask my parents, "How could Germans act this way?" And their answer was always the same -- when one group of people decides another group of people are less than human, all crimes are possible. For them and others in our community, the
lesson of the Holocaust was clear and simple: all people are equally valuable, all people are equally important.
But what has happened now? What kind of math are we doing in this country, when three thousand American deaths are redeemed by tens of thousands of dead Iraqis? What kind of math are we doing, when the kidnapping of three Israeli soldiers warrants the destruction of an entire
nation -- more than a thousand Lebanese now killed, many of them children, three quarters of million people rendered homeless. As we gather here this afternoon, there are babies in Tyre who will die tonight because supplies cannot reach them, because the Israeli Defense Forces have cut off the city, bombing
the roads which relief workers need to travel.
In the last two weeks, Condoleeza Rice has said onetrue thing: "We must go to the root."
So we should do that. Let us go the root ...
The root is an illegal occupation of Palestinian lands
that has gone on too long.
The root is a one-sided American policy that has
obstructed a diplomatic settlement that could have protected the security of
both Israel and Palestine.
The root is an aggressive Bush Administration, which
took the occasion of the attacks here in New York to launch an
utterly irrelevant, inept, ill-informed and illegal effort to remake the Middle
East, according to its predilections. And they have made a shambles.
The root is an American policy, which says to the
Israeli Government don’t hesitate to use force, go as far you wish and be
assured that we will keep sending you money and weapons and that we will
paralyze the Security Council while you advance.
The root is a militaristic White House, which would
welcome an Israeli attack on Iran.
But while we are speaking of roots, we must recognize
that the Bush White House does not bear exclusive responsibility for American
actions. It would be tempting to say that the US Congress has abdicated its
responsibility. But the problem runs deeper. The US Congress is responsible
for these policies-denouncing the crimes of Hezbollah, while approving those of Israel.
All of us share a belief that attacks against
civilians are abhorrent, whatever the reason or excuse. We deplore the decision
of Hezbollah to launch missiles against Israeli cities, but we deplore as well
the destruction of Lebanon.
Two of our Congressional
representative Major Owens and Nydia Velasquez have courageously called for an immediate and unconditional cease-fire. And we should thank them for their stand. But where are the others? Congressman Towns? Congressman Nadler?
Congressman Wiener? Senator Schumer? Senator Clinton?
When will they speak for a common humanity and not
just a narrow group?
We are gathered here
because we believe that the U.S. policy of endless war is bad for
the Lebanese, for the Palestinians, for the Israelis, for Americans, for all of
us. The violence and rage that are building in this world are a threat to
everyone.
We are calling today for an immediate cease-fire by
all sides, for a cessation of arms shipments by the United States
or by any other party to this embattled region. We are asking our elected
officials to speak for their constituents -- for the vast majority of Brooklyn
residents of all ethnicities and religions, who live harmoniously with
neighbors, who believe in peace and who want these wars to stop.
Remembering the suffering here in New
York, when our own city was attacked, we are determined to persevere. We will
keep marching, phoning, faxing, writing, organizing and doing whatever is
necessary to bring these ruinous policies to a halt. |