Americans for Peace Now welcomes the ceasefire agreement reached between Israel and Hamas and thanks the third parties who helped broker it. APN urges both sides to adhere to the ceasefire and – in the coming days and weeks – to do their utmost to stabilize the situation.
Produced by the Foundation for Middle East Peace in cooperation with Americans for Peace Now, where the Legislative Round-Up was conceived.
1. Bills,
Resolutions & Letters
2. Hearings
& Markups
3. On the
Record
Shameless plugs:
- FMEP Podcast 5/13: The Nakba & the Current Crisis w/ Lara Friedman & Dr. Carol Daniel Kasbari
- FMEP Webinar 5/12: Top of Mind: Palestinian Analysts On Unfolding Scenes of Protest & Devastation, ft. Zaha Hassan (Carnegie Endowment for Peace), Nadia Hijab (Al Shabaka), Inès Abdel Razek (Palestine Institute for Public Diplomacy), in conversation with Sarah Anne Minkin (FMEP)
- MEI/Project48 webinar (cosponsored by FMEP) 5/10: The Palestinian Nakba: What Happened in 1948 and Why It Still Matters, featuring Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Umar Al-Ghubari (Program director, Zochrot), Rashid Khalidi (Professor, Columbia University), Mohammed El-Kurd (Author and Poet), and Lubnah Shomali (Advocacy manager, BADIL), moderated by MEI’s Nooran Alhamdan & Khaled Elgindy
Produced by the Foundation for Middle East Peace in cooperation with Americans for Peace Now, where the Legislative Round-Up was conceived. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.
Yossi Alpher is an independent security analyst. He is the former director of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University, a former senior official with the Mossad, and a former IDF intelligence officer. Views and positions expressed here are those of the writer, and do not necessarily represent APN's views and policy positions.
After a week of deadly hostilities, with a horrific toll in Israel, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Americans for Peace Now (APN) reiterates its call for an immediate ceasefire.
APN and its many supporters and activists throughout the United States – as well as our friends at Israel's peace movement – are heartbroken as Israelis and Palestinians, Arabs and Jews, bury their loved ones. We send our condolences to the bereaved families on both sides, and wish recovery and health to the many hundreds who have been injured and displaced.
Clarity
By Ori Nir, APN's Vice President for Public Affairs
Responding to a somber Eid al-Fitr holiday greeting last week, a friend from East Jerusalem responded with a line from the Palestinian national poet Mahmoud Darwish. It says: “We have on this land what makes life worth living.” It’s a love song, a song of love for life as well as a song of love for Darwish’s homeland.
Hello my friends,
I’ve been staring at this page, blank, for a long time. How to write about this week? What to write about?
I should tell you about the briefing that APN held, bringing Israeli and Palestinian voices directly to Congressional staff. About the many one-on-one conversations and consultations with members of Congress, as they struggled to figure out what to say. About our efforts pushing the State Department and the Administration to do more and better. And about the fact that while others circulated petitions and sent thoughts and prayers, we supported a Congressional action that demands specific steps from our government in clear and unequivocal language.
This is what APN does. This is what we are here for.
But when I sit to write about that, I get a WhatsApp messages from my son, in Israel for his post high school gap year. And texts from my nieces and nephews, both in Israel and the US, trying to sift through the whirlwind of news and social media in order to understand what is really happening. I try my best to reassure them that it will be ok.
And then there are the messages and posts from friends and colleagues whose families are not in Israel, but in Gaza. How do they tell their children, their families, that it will be ok?
The calls with the State Department, webinars with our partners, Congressional briefings and actions, all of them are crucial, and we will continue to push for an immediate ceasefire and to address the underlying issues that led to the this most recent round of violence. But beyond that, we will continue to speak up for the humanity and inherent value of both Israelis and Palestinians.
We will not be silent as so many elected officials, commentators and “Jewish community leaders” fall back on the old tribalist approach and demand that people “take a side”. This is not a sporting event, and we are not interested in scoring points for our team or cheering on others as they do so. I will not celebrate the death of others and I will not cheer the destruction of their homes.
We have so much work to do. I am deeply grateful to be doing it with you.
B’Shalom,
Hadar
May 12, 2021
APN supported a letter sent by 25 members of the House of Representatives to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, urging him to take urgent action to prevent the displacement of Palestinians from their homes in the East Jerusalem neighborhoods of Silwan and Sheikh Jarrah.
READ THE LETTER
APN's daily news review from Israel - Wednesday May 12, 2021
Dear News Nosh subscriber,
All good things come to an end, and that includes News Nosh.
After almost a decade in which we brought to you the news from Israel through this publication, we have decided to
devise different, creative tools to communicate with you, which we intend to launch soon. Tomorrow’s edition of
News Nosh will be the last.
We thank you for your interest in Americans for Peace Now and our mission, and for your loyalty to News Nosh.
We also want to extend out gratitude to News Nosh editor Orly Halpern, who has gone above and beyond the call of
duty throughout the years, to craft for you a thorough, engaging review of the Israeli press, which we know served
you well.
Sincerely,
Hadar Susskind
President and CEO
Americans for Peace Now
Quote of the day:
"How you rejoiced over peace with the Emirates, how you internalized Netanyahu's status quo doctrine
vis-à-vis the Palestinians, and how you suppressed the word 'occupation.' You are the only ones who are surprised
by this escalation."
--Dr. Omer Einav writes in Yedioth Hebrew
that you can't ignore the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. It must be resolved.*
APN's daily news review from Israel - Tuesday May 11, 2021
Quote of the day:
"Jerusalem Day is a national day of mourning. It’s the day when Israeli society marks the conquest of East
Jerusalem. Not its liberation. Not its unification with the western part of the city. Not its freedom. The
Palestinians living in Silwan, Sheikh Jarrah and Shoafat did not go from slavery to freedom at the end of the
Six-Day War. They, along with all of East Jerusalem, were conquered and...have been living under a violent
occupation that deprives, excludes and humiliates them."
--Rogel Alpher writes in Haaretz about the meaning of Jerusalem Day, which right-wing religious Jews attempted to
celebrate yesterday, but for once, were thwarted.*
As violence in Jerusalem triggers hostilities across Israel’s border with the Gaza Strip, Americans for Peace Now (APN) urges all the parties and stakeholders to take action to prevent further bloodshed and to stop the escalation toward war.
The steep escalation of the past weeks requires responsible leadership in the short term, and underscores the need
for renewed US-led Israeli-Palestinian diplomatic engagement to end the occupation and advance peace efforts.
Recent developments again demonstrate that the current situation is not viable and requires immediate
attention.
The Biden Administration may not have wanted to prioritize Israel/Palestine. They may have hoped to maintain the
status quo. But the status quo is no more, and looking away does not make this crisis go away.