We, as Arabs, write in unity
with our Black allies who continue to struggle for justice, restitution,
and self-determination across the Gulf Coast and the US. As the
local and federal governments persist in a violent and criminal neglect
of the Gulf Coast and its displaced residents across the US, billions
of tax dollars continue to be invested in the illegal occupation and
genocide of Iraq and Palestine. We understand these attacks on
Black and Arab communities as parallel and interdependent, and understand
that our perpetrators and struggles are mutual.
In the past few years alone,
over 170 billion US dollars have been spent on the war on Iraq, the
Zionist project geared to the destruction of Palestinians, and the War
on Lebanon, while the people of New Orleans struggle to maintain basic
rights to schools for their children, jobs and housing for their families,
and the basic means to return back home since the government’s failure
in Hurricane Katrina. FEMA and the Red Cross continue to withhold
resources that could re-unite families and communities. Meanwhile authorities
enforce the closure on over 5000 functional public housing units amidst
a dire crisis in affordable housing in which the rent has quadrupled
throughout the city, and New Orleans has turned into a playground for
profit-seeking private developers and tourists at the expense of local
families who are still dispersed and struggling, with little support
to assist their basic needs and return. We understand this as a direct
attack on the return of Black and poor communities most impacted by
Katrina, and on the self-determined needs of the local community whose
rights are the obligation and responsibility of the US government.
We, as Arabs, know of the struggle
for self-determination, and we full-heartedly stand behind the demands
of Katrina Survivors, as articulated by the First Survivor’s Assembly
in Jackson, Mississippi on December 8th-9th 2005,
as well as the demands put forth by the People’s Hurricane Relief
Fund www.peopleshurricane.org. As Gulf Coast residents remain dispersed
throughout US cities, we remember and maintain our own struggles to
return back home. We uphold the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
insistence on the human right to return back home, and hold the US government
directly responsible for ensuring that this is made possible and accessible
to all Gulf Coast residents.
We will not shake the images
of Black New Orleanian’s being deprived of water and shelter by the
Red Cross and National Guard, separated from their families on buses
as they were forced to relocate to undisclosed cities after days left
starving and neglected, and forced out at gunpoint in a time of crisis
and urgency. These scenes are too similar to the scenes of starvation
and displacement in Palestine in Iraq. And not surprisingly so, as we
understand the US government to be directly responsible for the failure
of the levees and the subsequent displacement and destruction of Black
and poor communities across the Gulf Coast, just as they are responsible
for the deadly occupations of Palestine and Iraq, the division and dispersal
of our families, and the depletion of our land, livelihood, and resources.
We insist that resources invested in the destruction of Arab communities
abroad be redirected back to our homes in the US immediately, and that
the US government be held accountable to ALL damages done and ALL reparations
due, both here and abroad.
We, the Arab Resource and Organizing Center of the SF Bay Area, fully endorse the demands and actions to hold the US accountable to the Gulf Coast as determined by the International Tribunal on Katrina taking place from August 29th to September 2nd 2007 in New Orleans, Louisiana (Katrina Tribunal). We stand in solidarity to demand for a just community-based reconstruction and the right to return for all those still displaced.