An Open Letter to the Pixies

March 1, 2010

Dear Pixies,

We are a group of Israeli human rights activists. We heard through the media that you are planning a concert in Israel in June. As much as some of us are huge fans and would love to hear your show, we won’t cross the international picket line that is growing in numbers steadily nowadays to come and see you.The picket line might not always be visible; yet it is there. Are you prepared to perform in Tel-Aviv while just under your nose millions of human beings are suffocating under a cruel Israeli military regime, denying them elementary human rights? Please take a few minutes to consider our appeal.

Surely you know about the military occupation the Palestinian people have been living under since 1967. By the time you come to perform in Israel, Palestinians will have been under brutal occupation for 43 years – nearly half a century under a military regime that has already imprisoned more than 600,000 of them and that controls every aspect of their lives, including their freedom of movement, freedom of speech, religion, and trade, access to education, access to their lands, and often their right to live!

You might also be aware that by continuing the military occupation over the territories taken in 1967, Israel violates numerous Security Council resolutions, the Fourth Geneva Convention, and most recently, the International Court of Justice ruled that the so-called “security fence”, built by Israel on Palestinian land, is illegal. Palestinian farm land has been stolen because of the Wall, and new settlements for Jews-only have been constructed on that land. This, in effect, destroys Palestinian livelihoods throughout the West Bank.

You surely also know that, about a year ago, Israel attacked the Gaza Strip, which has been under a crippling, life-costing siege for almost 4 years. Israel used extremely lethal weapons in this attack, killing about 1400 people, 1/3 of whom were children. Phosphorous bombs were used in densely populated areas, and thousands of houses were destroyed. Israel’s Foreign Minister, Tzipi Livni, one of the architects of this attack, boasted: “Israel demonstrated real hooliganism during the course of the recent operation, which I demanded”.1

The division of the Palestinians into smaller sections which Israel needs to “deal with” (i.e. oppress and control) has not started with the separation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip, or with the internal break down of the West Bank into smaller segregated areas. What Israel wants the world to overlook – via the way it has constructed its “peace processes” – is the fact that this occupation is part of a larger colonization and oppression project. This project, dated back to Israel”s formation days, is intended to deal with the state”s “demographic threat”, termed by many “the Israeli apartheid regime”. The Israeli regime targets all Palestinians systematically, including those living inside Israel’s 48 borders with Israeli citizenship and refugees who were expelled by Israel during the 1948 Nakba and the 1967 war.

Most Palestinian refugees are stateless, living in the diaspora, in countries adjacent to PalestineIsrael, awaiting their return home. Many of them are still living in refugee camps. In spite of UN resolution 194, which called for their return and compensation by Israel, Palestinian refugees are denied all that, and for the most part, are even denied entry to PalestineIsrael.

22 years ago, in 1988, following the first intifada outbreak, you mentioned Gaza in your new song “River Euphrates”: “Stuck here out of gas/Out here on the Gaza Strip/From driving in too fast”. Whether you meant to construct a metaphor or referred to previous gas shortages, we can’t help notice the resonance to what is taking place in Gaza today. After the years-long Israeli siege, the Gaza strip is deprived more than ever of fuel and energy – as well as food, medicines and many other necessities. Gaza is out of gas not just for movement by car within its sealed perimeter, driving fast or slow, but for electricity, health services, cooking and any sustainment of normal living conditions. Any normalization attitude towards Israel means also allowing this siege to go on. Whether you cared or didn’t care for Gaza then, how can you not care for it so blatantly NOW?

We thus urge you to follow the Palestinian call2 and postpone your performance in Israel in order not to cooperate with the lethal “business as usual” status quo. If you care about justice, if you care about justice to the Palestinian people, if you care about the Israeli people, please add your voice to those calling for a saner policy with justice for all – and refuse to perform in Israel until there is freedom here.

Sincerely,

Ofra Ben-Artzi
Lilach Ben- David
Ronnie Barkan
Ronnen Ben-Arie
Eitan Bronstein
David Nir
Prof. Rachel Giora
Neta Golan
Iris Hefets
Dr. Dorothy Naor
Tal Shapira
Sonya Soloviov
Ofer Neiman
Deb Reich
Emily Schaeffer (Boston -Tel-Aviv)
Ayala Shani
Yonatan Shapira
Kerstin Sodergren
Jonatan Stanczak

On behalf of
BOYCOTT! Supporting the Palestinian BDS Call from Within
http://www.boycottisrael.info/

1 (http://www.stoptorture.org.il/files/no%20second%20thoughts_ENG_WEB.pdf)

2 http://www.bdsmovement.net/?q=node/52

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