Cynthia McKinney - Message to Palestine Right to Return Conference in Damascus, Syria
Cynthia McKinney prevented from leaving US November 23rd, 2008
Today, November 23rd, I was slated to give remarks in Damascus,
Syria at a Conference being held to commemorate the 60th Anniversary of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and, sadly, the 60th year that the
Palestinian people have been denied their Right of Return enshrined in that
Universal Declaration. But a funny thing happened to me while at the Atlanta airport on my way to the Conference: I was not allowed to exit the country.
I do believe that it was just a misunderstanding. But the insecurity
experienced on a daily basis by innocent Palestinians is not. Innocent
Palestinians are trapped in a violent, stateless twilight zone imposed on them
by an international order that favors a country reported to have completed its
nuclear triad as many as eight years ago, although Israel has remained
ambiguous on the subject. President Jimmy Carter informed us that Israel had as many as 150 nuclear weapons, and Israel's allies are among the most militarily
sophisticated on the planet. Military engagement, then, is untenable. Therefore
the exigency of diplomacy and international law.
The Palestinians should at least be able to count on the protections
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. What is happening to Palestinians
in Gaza right now, subjected to an Israeli-imposed blockade, has drawn the attention
of the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, who noted that over half
of the civilians in Gaza are children. Even The Los Angeles Times criticized Israel's lockdown of Gaza that is keeping food, fuel, and medicine from civilians. Even so, Israel stood fast by its decision to seal Gaza's openings. But where are the voices of concern
coming from the corridors of power inside the United States? Is the subject of
Palestinian human rights taboo inside the United States Government and its government-to-be?
I hope not. Following is the speech I would have given today had I been able to
attend the Damascus Conference.
Cynthia McKinney Right of Return Congregation Damascus, Syria November 23, 2008
Thank you to our hosts for inviting me to participate in this
most important and timely First Arab-International Congregation for the Right
of Return. Words are an insufficient expression of my appreciation for being remembered
as one willing to stand for justice in Washington, D.C., even in the face of
tremendously difficult pressures.
Former Prime Minister Tun Mahathir, thank you for including
me in the Malaysian Peace Organisation's monumental effort to criminalize war,
to show the horrors of the treatment of innocent individuals during the war against
and occupation of Iraq by the militaries and their corporate contractors of
Britain, Israel, and the United States. Thank you for standing up to huge
international economic forces trying to dominate your country and showing an
impressionable woman like me that it is possible to stand up to "the big boys"
and win. And thank you for your efforts to bring war criminal, torturer, decimator
of the United States Constitution, the George W. Bush Administration, to
justice in international litigation.
Delegates and participants, I must declare that at a time when
scientists agree that the climate of the earth is changing in unpredictable and
possibly calamitous ways, such that the future of humankind hangs in the
balance, it is unconscionable that we have to dedicate this time to and focus
our energies on policies that represent a blatant and utter disregard for human
rights and self-determination and that represent in many respects, a denial of
human life, itself.
In the same year as Palestinians endured a series of massacres
and expulsions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights became international
law. And while the United Nations is proud that the Declaration was flown into
Outer Space just a few days ago on the Space Shuttle, if one were to read it
and then land in the Middle East, I think it would be clear that Palestine is
the place that the Universal Declaration forgot.
Sadly, both the spirit of the Universal Declaration for Human
Rights and the noblest ideals of the United Nations are broken. This has
occurred in large measure due to policies that emanate from Washington, D.C. If we want to change those policies, and I do believe that we can, then we have to
change the underlying values of those who become Washington's policy makers. In
other words, we must launch the necessary movement that puts people in office who
share our values.
We need to do this now more than ever because, sadly, Palestine is not Washington's only victim. Enshrined in the Universal Declaration is the
dignity of humankind and the responsibility of states to protect that dignity.
Yet, the underlying contradictions between its words and what has become
standard international practice lay exposed to the world this year when
then-United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour
proclaimed:
"In the course of this year, unprecedented efforts must be made
to ensure that every person in the world can rely on just laws for his or her
protection. In advancing all human rights for all, we will move towards the
greatest fulfillment of human potential, a promise which is at the heart of the
Universal Declaration."
How insulting it was to hear those words coming from her, for
those of us who know, because it was she who, as Chief Prosecutor of the
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, willfully participated in the
cover-up of an act of terror that resulted in the assassination of two democratically-elected
Presidents and that unleashed a torrent of murder and bloodletting in which one
million souls were vanquished. That sad episode in human history has become
known as the Rwanda Genocide. And shockingly, after the cover-up, Louise Arbour
was rewarded with the highest position on the planet, in charge of Human
Rights.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. once said that justice delayed is
justice denied. And 60 years is too long to wait for justice. The Palestinian
people deserve respected self-determination, protected human rights, justice,
and above all, peace.
On the night before his murder, Dr. King announced that he was
happy to be living at the end of the 20th Century where, all over the world,
men and women were struggling to be free.
Today, we can touch and feel the results of those cries, on
the African Continent where apartheid no longer exists as a fact of law. A
concerted, uncompromising domestic and international effort led to its demise.
And in Latin America, the shackles of U.S. domination have been broken. In a series of unprecedented peaceful, people-powered
revolutions, voters in Venezuela, Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Nicaragua, and most recently Paraguay used the power of the political process to
materially change their countries' leadership and policy orientation toward the
United States. Americans, accustomed to the Monroe Doctrine which proclaimed U.S. suzerainty over all politics in the Western Hemisphere, must now think the unthinkable given
what has occurred in the last decade.
Voters in Cote d'Ivoire, Haiti, Spain, and India also took matters clearly in their hands to make "a clean break" from policies that were an
affront to the interests of the majority of the people in those countries.
In country after country, against tremendous odds, people stood
up and took their fates in their hands. They did what Mario Savio, in the
1960s, asked people in the United States to do. These people-powered, peaceful
revolutions saw individuals put their bodies against the levers and the gears
and the wheels of the U.S. imperial machine and they said to the owners if you
don't stop it, we will. And I know that people of conscience inside my country
can do it, too: especially now that the engines of imperial oppression are
running out of gas.
Even though the Democratic Party, at the Convention that nominated
Barack Obama, denied its microphone to Former President Jimmy Carter because of
his views on Palestine, let me make it clear that Former President Carter is
not the only person inside the United States who believes that peace with
justice is possible in Palestine.
Inside the United States, millions who are not of Arab descent,
disagree vehemently with the policy of our government to provide the military
and civilian hardware that snuffs out innocent human life that is also Arab.
Millions of Americans do not pray to Allah, but recognize that
it is an inalienable right of those who do to live and pray in peace wherever
they areincluding inside the United States.
Even though their opportunities are severely limited, there
are millions of people inside the United States struggling to express themselves
on all of these issues, but whose efforts are stymied by a political process
that robs them of any opportunity to be heard.
And then there are the former elected officials who spoke out
for what was right, for universal application of the Universal Declaration, and
who were roundly condemned and put out of office as a result. My father is one
such politician, punished--kicked out of office--because of the views of his
daughter.
In my case, I dared to raise my voice in support of the World
Conference Against Racism and against the sieges of Ramallah, Jenin, and the
Church of the Nativity. I raised my voice against the religious profiling in my
country that targets innocent Muslims and Arabs for harassment, imprisonment,
financial ruin, or worse. Yes, I have felt the sting of the special interests
since my entry onto the national stage when, in my very first Congressional campaign,
I refused to sign a pledge committing that I would vote to maintain the
military superiority of Israel over its neighbors, and that Jerusalem should be
its capital city. Other commitments were on that pledge as well, like continued
financial assistance to Israel at agreed upon levels.
As a result of my refusal to make such a commitment, and just
like the old slave woman, Sojourner Truth, who bared her back and showed the
scars from the lashes meted out to her by her slave master, I too, bear scars
from the lashes of public humiliation meted out to me by the special interests
in Washington, D.C. because of my refusal to tow the line on Israel policy.
This "line" is the policy accepted by both the Democratic and Republican Party leadership
and why they could cooperate so well to coordinate my ouster from Congress. But
I have survived because I come from the strongest stock of Africans, stolen
then enslaved, and yet my people survived. I know how to never give up, give
in, or give out. And I also know how to learn a good political lesson. And one
lesson I've learned is that the treatment accorded to me pales in comparison to
what Palestinian victims still living in refugee camps face every day of their
lives.
The treatment accorded to me pales in comparison to the fact
that human life is at stake if the just-released International Atomic Energy
Agency report is true when it writes that "The only explanation for the
presence of these modified uranium particles is that they were contained in the
missiles dropped from the Israeli planes." What are the health effects of these
weapons, what role did the U.S. military play in providing them or the
technology that underlies them, why is there such silence on this, and most
fundamentally, what is going on in this part of the world that international law
has forgotten?
Clearly, not only the faces of U.S. politicians must change;
we must change their values, too. We, in the United States, must utilize our
votes to effect the same kind of people-powered change in the United States as has been done in all those other countries. And now, with more people than
ever inside the United States actually paying attention to politics, this is
our moment; we must seize this time. We must become the leaders we are looking
for and get people who share our values elected to Congress and the White
House.
Now, I hope you believe me when I say to you that this is not
rocket science. I have learned politics from its best players. And I say to you
that even with the failabilities of the U.S. system, it is possible for us to
do more than vote for a slogan of change, we can actually have it. But if we
fail to seize this moment, we will continue to get what we've always been
given: handpicked leaders who don't truly represent us.
With the kind of U.S. weapons that are being used in this part
of the world, from white phosphorus to depleted uranium, from cluster bombs to
bunker busting bombs, nothing less than the soul of my country is at stake. But
for the world, it is the fate of humankind that is at stake.
The people in my country just invested their hopes for a better
world and a better government in their votes for President-elect Obama.
However, during an unprecedented two year Presidential campaign, the exact kind
of change we are to get was never fully defined. Therefore, we the people of
the United States must act now with boldness and confidence. We can set the
stage for the kind of change that reflects our values.
Now is not the time for timidity. The U.S. economy is in shambles, unemployment and health insecurity are soaring, half of our
young people do not even graduate from high school; college is unaffordable.
The middle class that was invested in the stock market is seeing their life
savings stripped from them by the hour. What we are witnessing is the
pauperization of a country, in much the same way that Russia was pauperized after the fall of the Soviet Union. There are clear winners and the losers all
know who they are. The attentive public in the United States is growing because
of these conditions. Now is the time for our values to rise because people in
the United States are now willing to listen.
So the question really is, "Which way, America?"
Today we uplift the humanity of the Palestinian people. And
what I am recommending is the creation of a political movement inside my
country that will constitute a surgical strike for global justice. This
gathering is the equivalent of us stepping to the microphone to be heard.
We don't have to lose because we have commitment to the people.
And we don't have to lose because we refuse to compromise our
core values.
We don't have to lose because we seek peace with justice and
diplomacy over war.
We don't have to lose.
By committing to do some things we've never done before I'm
certain that we can also have some things we've never had before.
I return to the U.S. committed to do my part to make our dream
come true.
Thank you.
For more information on Cynthia McKinney please visit www.allthingscynthiamckinney.com