Last month, while South Africa was accusing Israel of genocide in the International Court of Justice and the court handed down it’s ruling, Germany announced it would file a Declaration of Intervention on behalf of Israel. In response, Namibia President Hage Geingobon released a statement against Germany. The presidency said, “Germany cannot morally express commitment to the United Nations Convention against genocide, including atonement for the genocide in Namibia, whilst supporting the equivalent of a holocaust and genocide in Gaza.”
On today’s two part show, host Esty Dinur spends the first 20 minutes with Herbert Jauch to understand the historical context in which the late Geingobon made these remarks.
Then, we talk with Wisconsin-based Palestinians Mohammad Hamad and Janan Najeeb about the continued loss of civilian life in Gaza. Mohammad tells Esty that he has a large family that lives in different areas in Gaza. “I lost over 20 right now from cousin, extended family, sister and so on,” he says. “And the situation in Gaza… it’s a dire situation. North area of Gaza, it’s starvation. I have been in touch with them with those who’ve stayed in northern Gaza because they don’t have the means to travel to the south, physically. They have disability, they need wheelchairs. And the fear of also it’s not going to be a safe area in the south, which is they are correct. There is no safe area in Gaza.”
Herbert Jauch is the chairperson of the Economic and Social Justice Trust in Namibia. He is co-editor of the book Towards Democratic Development States in Southern Africa.
Mohammad Hamad was born in Gaza to a family displaced twice, in 1948 then 1967 to the area called today Gaza Strip. He was born later but his parents and some of his siblings went through the Nakbah. He came to the USA to complete his graduate studies in engineering and he lives in Wisconsin with his family.
Janan Najeeb is a Palestinian American Muslim and the founder and current executive director of the Milwaukee Muslim Women’s Coalition. She runs the Islamic Resource Center, a cultural center and Islamic lending library, publishes the Wisconsin Muslim Journal, directs the Milwaukee Muslim Film Festival. On on October 8th, she convened the Wisconsin Coalition for Justice in Palestine, which now includes more than 60 organizations working toward a permanent ceasefire, the end to Israeli occupation in Palestine and Palestinian liberation.
Photo by WORT’s Chali Pittman from Saturday’s Stop the Hate rally
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