cease the fighting
Pablo Picasso: Guernica 1937 (from artquotes.net)
I rarely write about politics and wars here yet I must say that I’ve been unable to put out of my mind the humanitarian disaster in Gaza. Mainstream and alternative media are full of varying opinions, understanding and sometimes truthfulness. I struggle to understand the complex history and struggles of the region with some compassion for all sides. I’m helped in the task by looking at artists who portrayed war, learning about artist activists and of course, reading many eloquent and well-informed bloggers. Through some of them I’ve learned of some petitions for peace that I have then signed, even as I wonder if it will help. One voice, many voices…what’s that quote I’m trying to recall?
As many know, some of the most famous art about the horrors of war are Picasso’s Guernica, Goya’s Disasters of War, and works by several German Expressionist artists such as Otto Dix and Max Beckmann…. even Käthe Kollwitz who lived through two world wars. There are of course many contemporary artists who speak up against war through their work and activism such as the Artists for Peace in Vancouver.
I could not begin to list all the many bloggers I’ve read who have written well on this subject, so I’ll limit my short list of articles that moved me the most to a few by those who are Canadian or live in Canada.
1. Beth Adams of Cassandra Pages, an American writer living in Montreal, wrote this most eloquent and heart-wrenching post Every One Precious.
2. Taina Maki Chahal of northshorewoman, a Finnish-Canadian PhD student and university lecturer living in Thunder Bay, writes on a variety of subjects such as Finnish culture and First Nations and Sami issues. Now she has been writing passionately and knowledgeably every day about the Gaza crisis. Do check out all her articles, for starters I recommend war is a friend of binarisms (an eye-opener for me) and Canadian government votes against human rights. This latter includes a plea to write an objection to Harper and the party leaders.
3. Naomi Klein, a well-known Canadian, award-winning journalist, syndicated columnist, author and speaker wrote this very powerful message: Israel: Boycott, Divest, Sanction.
4. Alison of Creekside, a Canadian political blogger living on Bowen Island near Vancouver, also writes a lot on the subject, such as Gaza: “an eye for an eyelash”, another thought-provoking article. She includes the Amnesty petition which I hope you will all sign.
Speaking of petitions, here’s another via care2
Last but not least and not Canadian is today’s article in Finland’s Helsingin Sanomat, Destroying ghettoes in Gaza by Olli Kivinen. For me, he seems to summarize clearly and briefly the major issues on both sides, concluding with this:
One dimension was offered by the Israeli Ambassador to Helsinki, who asked in a television news interview how Finns would feel if rockets were fired into our cities.
It is difficult to answer that question, because Finland does not occupy any foreign territory, and has not created a ghetto of a million and a half people next to it, where people live in extreme misery, and which is bombarded, and isolated from land, sea, and air, and where even now people are dying not only of bombs and bullets, but also as a result of a shortage of medicines, difficulties experienced by hospitals, and of weakness caused by cold and a shortage of food.
In the past, ghettoes were places where Jews were oppressed and annihilated.
Added later: the Gaza Call For Peace Petition organized by the Canadian Voice of Women for Peace (VOW)
Even later: I almost forgot the excellent Avaaz.org and their petition. Please sign and share with friends and family.
Added Jan.16th, 2006: Beth’s post today has more reading for us in the links to some excellent articles.
January 14, 2009 in Blogging, Current Events, History by Marja-Leena
Thank you very much for this, Marja-Leena. I blame the United States most of all for providing Israel with its weapons.
I share with Naomi Klein the feeling that poor people are being pushed out or killed to make way for global capitalist ventures.
Boycott Israel!
Hattie, thank you for reading. About weapons from US, I was horrified to read this article about even more and larger shipments!
I hope you’ll sign some of the petitions I’ve linked and share them with others.
When will the powerful people learn that those from cultural backgrounds intertwined and intermingled are not to be feared…not to be lumped into a large group, slapped with a simple label, and then dealt with? Look at the response to the downed plane in the Hudson River yesterday. Yes, we can rise to the occasion. We human beings can work together to keep folks alive, no matter what (multi)cultural background they may come from.
rouschswalwe, you bring up an excellent point! We are all, after all, related to each other with intermingling over the hundreds of generations through movements across this earth. The ‘powerful people’, that is the leaders, the armament manufacturers and many corporations crave power over lands and economies. The subtexts of religions and a a lack of education are tools for them to use in confusing and angering the people, imho, though I simplify the complexity of all these interrelationships.
I’ve been avidly reading Taina’s blog for the last few days. The situation in the Middle East fills me with despair. That the birthplace of our three monotheistic religions should be filled with such a hatred and bloodshed makes me shake my head and wonder where is their God?
Today I was held spellbound by a TV series about The Holocaust and seeing the images of the horror of all that happened has left me numb…
I think the world would be a better place if women were in control
Julie, I feel the same! Yes, I think women would do a much better job! I just read that there will a ceasefire but it does not sound like either side will ever stop. Martti Ahtisaari, the Finnish Nobel Peace Prize winner, should be called in but the job might be too tough even for him.
I have been following all of your links, and have lost at least an hour I think! But time well-spent. The Klein editorial was published in our Guardian as well; I have a feeling that many newspapers picked that one up. I wish that they would also print Cassandra’s thoughts and that beautiful poem and picture from Dave.
Thanks for the really worthwhile “sharing.” I hope that your son’s project might yield some good things for this troubled region of the world.
Bee, I’m glad you followed all the links and found them worthwhile. I agree the Klein article is almost everywhere, except our mainstream media here.