October 20: NYC Says: Drop the Charges Against Rasmea Odeh Now!

DROP THE CHARGES AGAINST RASMEA ODEH!  NYC Community Protest Monday, October 20 6:00 PM US Department of Homeland Security 26 Federal Plaza, NYC Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/1493576454249135/ We stand in solidarity […]
DROP THE CHARGES AGAINST RASMEA ODEH! 
NYC Community Protest
Monday, October 20
6:00 PM
US Department of Homeland Security
26 Federal Plaza, NYC
We stand in solidarity with Rasmea Odeh!
Our NY Communities will Rally in Solidarity with Rasmea the week of the 1 Year Anniversary of her arrest, & 1 day before her next hearing, to demand Justice!
Sponsored by
Al-Awda-New York (Palestine Right to Return Coalition)
USPCN (US-Palestine Community Network)
CSFR (Committee to Stop FBI Repression)
Endorsing Organizations:
CUNY Law Students for Justice in Palestine
Jews for Palestinian Right of Return
Labor for Palestine
New York City Labor Against the War
National Lawyers Guild, NYC Chapter
National Lawyers’s Guild, Palestine Committee
International Action Center
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

Endorse the protest: email

info@al-awdany.org!

On October 22, 2013 the Department of Homeland Security arrested Palestinian-American feminist, activist, educator and community leader, Rasmea Odeh in her home for alleged immigration fraud as part of an ongoing witch-hunt that targets Arabs and Muslims who criticize U.S. and Israeli policy and labels them “terrorists.”
On October 21 the Federal Court in Detroit will determine the Admissibility of “Israeli Evidence” — Evidence obtained Under Torture decades ago inside the prisons of the illegal, colonial, occupying Zionist power. …this is not the first time that U.S. Federal prosecutors have used such evidence against Palestinian Americans. (See the case of Muhammad Salah)
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Rasmea Odeh has served as the associate director of the Arab American Action Network (AAAN) in Chicago since 2004. For the past 10 years, Rasmea has built unprecedented community support for close to 600 Arab immigrant women on issues related to English literacy, gender violence, inter-generational cultural conflicts, racial profiling, immigrant rights, and access to social and economic resources. She has established community-wide education projects related to civil and human rights, social justice, and community economic development and workshops that allow Arab immigrant women to tell, write, and perform their immigration stories while improving their writing skills. In 2013, Rasmea received the “Outstanding Community Leader Award” from the Chicago Cultural Alliance, which described her as a woman who has “dedicated over 40 years of her life to the empowerment of Arab women, first in her homes of Palestine, Jordan, and Lebanon, where she was an activist, and then the past 10 years in Chicago.”
Rasmea has been demanding justice for Palestinians for most of her life. Like the experience of approximately 20% of the total Palestinian population of the West Bank and Gaza, she spent time as a political prisoner in Israeli jails in the 1970’s. There, she was violently tortured and humiliated– despite the international legal prohibition on torture and ill-treatment.
Like their Israeli ally, the U.S. federal government has a history of targeting individuals who express public support for Palestine and over and over, Palestinian and Arab American activists are disproportionately targeted in such cases. According to the Palestine Solidarity Legal Support, their organization, in partnership with the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), Palestine Solidarity Legal Support (PSLC) in collaboration with the National Lawyers Guild and other organizations, “has documented over 75 cases of intimidation and legal bullying in 2013 alone. These include perceived surveillance, FBI contacts, and discriminatory enforcement of laws against advocates for Palestinian rights.” Now decades in the making, this U.S. government strategy targets Palestinian immigrants, Palestinian Americans, and their supporters in order to quell any and all support for Palestinian rights in the U.S. and globally. According to CCR and PSLC, it is no coincidence that federal prosecutors are now targeting Rasmea, who is a pillar in the same community where 23 anti-war and Palestinian rights activists, many who’s homes were raided by the FBI, were subpoenaed to testify before a Grand Jury in 2010. There have been no indictments against the 23 activists subpoenaed presumably because of a lack of evidence.
The U.S. government’s portrayal of Palestinians as violent and inhuman fuels the case against Rasmea and as a result, the U.S. mainstream betrays Palestinians like Rasmea, leaving them with little support. The corporate media makes matters worse. By telling the story of Rasmea’s past as though she was a possible terrorist legitimately and legally arrested by the Israeli government, the media covers up the truth that Israel occupies Palestinian land and arrests and tortures Palestinians systematically and illegally. The sensationalized media portrayal of Rasmea’s “terrorist past” dehumanizes Rasmea and justifies the ongoing state violence committed against her and the larger Arab American and Arab immigrant communities.