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Summer 2013 Internship for Human Rights and Just Peace in Palestine/Israel

Summer 2013 Internship for Human Rights and Just Peace in Palestine/Israel

Dates: June 2 - July 7, 2013

For college and university students worldwide.

Intensive, on the ground, eye opening learning experience about the conflict in Palestine/Israel and the struggle for Human Rights Justice, and Peace.

FFIPP/GCMHP Gaza Internship, 2013

Gaza Internship, 2013

FFIPP in cooperation with the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, GCMHP, are now accepting applications of students and faculty interested in doing Internship in Gaza.
The  minimum duration of an internship is two months, but longer terms are preferred. Priority will be for applicants who have experience/knowledge of Project Management, Fundraising, and Psychology.
All cost in Gaza during the internship, as well as pocket-money will be covered.

FFIPP-I Summer 2013 Academic Delegation to Gaza

FFIPP-I Summer 2013 Academic Delegation to Gaza

Co-sponsors: FFIPP-International and the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, GCMHP

Dates: June 3 - 12, 2013
For faculty and students from around the globe.

Jerusalem police arrest Palestinian activist in his Hebrew U dorm

Jerusalem police arrest Palestinian activist in his Hebrew U dorm

From +972, February 26, 2013

Winter Internship for Human Rights and Just Peace in Palestine/Israel

January 22 - February 28, 2013
22 students from Brazil participate in the program which is organized by FFIPP-Brazil

Winter 2013 interns with the Brazilian Ambassador  in Al Quds University in East Jerusalem


"Silence for Gaza" by Mahmoud Darwish

Gaza is far from its relatives and close to its enemies, because whenever Gaza explodes, it becomes an island and it never stops exploding. It scratched the enemy’s face, broke his dreams and stopped his satisfaction with time.
Because in Gaza time is something different.
Because in Gaza time is not a neutral element.
It does not compel people to cool contemplation, but rather to explosion and a collision with reality.
Time there does not take children from childhood to old age, but rather makes them men in their first confrontation with the enemy.
Time in Gaza is not relaxation, but storming the burning noon. Because in Gaza values are different, different, different.

A New FFIPP Chapter: FFIPP-Brazil

Welcome FFIPP-Brazil!

FFIPP-Brazil: University students winter internship for human rights and just peace in Palestine/Israel.


FFIPP 2nd Educational Delegation to Gaza Returns Home

The delegation, hosted by the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, GCMHP, was in Gaza from June 13 to June 22, 2012. The delegation included faculty and students from the University of Vermont, Harvard University, Ithaca College, University of California Berkeley and Cambridge University in the UK.


FFIPP Summer 2012 Internship for Human Rights and Just Peace in Palestine/Israel

Pre-departure weekend for European students was held in France on June 1-2, 2012. The purpose was to prepare the students for living in Palestine/Israel for five weeks and doing their internships.

More than 20 students participated in the program which was organized by FFIPP-France.

The students came from France, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland, Poland, and England. It was an outstanding success.

Pre departure meetings were also held in New York City and San Francisco for the North American students.
 


Recognizing Nakba, Reaching Peace

By Dr. Hanan Ashrawi, May 15, 2012
 
From Haaretz.

May is the cruelest month despite the promise of spring. It carries the bitter memories of ongoing loss and injustice for a nation, my nation. Every year, Palestinians mark Al-Nakba, or the Catastrophe, of 1948, to remember how our vibrant society was physically and politically crushed by violence and forced expulsion.
It was not a natural disaster. Indeed, we have no doubt that it was a detailed plan of systematic destruction carried out with chilling efficiency. It was the biggest assault and threat Palestinian heritage has ever endured and the beginning of a deliberate effort to suppress the Palestinian narrative.
For many Israelis, recognizing what happened back in 1948 is a painful process. The slogan “Your independence is our Nakba”, which is on display in many Palestinian cities is indeed correct. Many Israeli historians have researched and written about this dark era, demonstrating that Palestine was a land with a vibrant society and rich culture. These brave historians ended decades of denial about Palestinian society and suffering.
 By 1948, Palestine was one of the most developed Arab societies, boasting one of the healthiest economies under the British mandate and a high school enrolment rate, second only to Lebanon. Commerce, the arts, literature, music, and other cultural aspects of life were thriving in Palestine.
We remember that between 1911 and 1948, Palestine had no less than 161 newspapers, magazines and other regular publications, including the pioneer “Falastin” newspaper, published in Jaffa by Issa al-Issa.
Dozens of bookstores across the country selling hundreds of Palestinian and internationally-authored books could hardly keep up with the demand. Books like “The Arab Woman and the Palestine Problem” by Matiel Moghannam, a feminist leader, and George Antonious’ “The Arab Awakening”, were highly popular in Palestine, England, the US, and beyond.
Palestine had a strong women’s movement as early as the 1920’s. Women excelled in many fields, including education, journalism, and political activism. Women activists were among the first to lobby for Palestinian self-determination at the beginning of the British Mandate.
 Palestinian dedication to education is deeply rooted in our culture. By 1914, there were 379 private schools in Palestine, including the country’s first girls’ school, Al Moscobiye, in Beit Jala, founded in 1858 as the first school for girls in Palestine, and the Friends School, founded by the Quakers in 1869, which continues to be among the most advanced education institutions in Palestine.
In the area of arts, music, and drama, Palestinian creativity was boundless, inspiring artists around the region. Composers like Yehya Al-Lababidi collaborated with famous Arab singers of the time, like Farid Al-Atrach. Other singers like the legendary Um Kalthoum and Mohamad Abdel Wahab regularly performed to Palestinian audiences in Haifa, Jaffa, and Jerusalem. Our cinemas, from Gaza to Akka, were showing the latest films of the time.
Al-Nakba represents the abrupt and unnatural disruption of these accomplishments and signaled the beginning of a culture of exile and dispossession. In being forcibly expelled from their homes, Palestinians lost their properties, personal history, and cultural assets.
This included thousands of books. In West Jerusalem alone, 30,000 books were “collected” from Palestinian houses, as well as around 50,000 other books from homes in Jaffa, Haifa, Tiberias and Nazareth. Khalil Sakakini was one of those people who lost his entire library. A number of his books can be found today in the National Library of Israel, marked ‘AP’, meaning “Abandoned Property.”
Al-Nakba is therefore not merely a historical date to be commemorated.  It is the collective memory of Palestinians, which shapes their identity as a people. Al-Nakba is not a distant memory but a painful reality that continues to fester, as the rights of refugees continue to be denied and the inalienable rights of our nation remain unfulfilled.
It is time to recognize that Al-Nakba is as real for Palestinians as it should be for Israelis. It is an inescapable story of loss, dispossession and a great historic injustice that targeted the most precious characteristic of any people: its identity.
But Al-Nakba to Palestinians is not about defeat. Stripping the Palestinian people of their national and cultural symbols, as well as stunting the growth of Palestinian cultural life was a merciless crime, no doubt. But our people have persevered, rebuilding, time and again, their heritage of cultural and educational excellence.
There have been many new challenges and setbacks since Al-Nakba, especially the military occupation that began in 1967 and its oppressive policies targeting culture and education. But Palestinians kept marching forward, holding on to the proud memories of excellence and building new ones.
For peace to prevail, for two states to live side by side, for a future of security and prosperity to begin in the region, Israel should not be afraid to recognize Al-Nakba and learn the lessons of its history. Israel must come to recognize its historic accountability in creating Al-Nakba for neither denial nor distortion can serve the cause of peace.
Genuine recognition is a sine qua non for the process of historical redemption. Peace is a phase of healing that must be established on truth, justice, transparency, and equality. There is no other formula. By recognizing our historical narrative and suffering, Israel will be embarking on a true journey for a just and comprehensive peace.
 
Dr. Hanan Ashrawi is a member of the PLO Executive Committee and head of the PLO’s Department of Culture and Information
 



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