Emma Goldman

"Can You Hear Me?" - An Autonomous Women's Film Event

17/01/2009 - 18:00
17/01/2009 - 21:30
Location: 

Jura Bookshop
440 Parramatta Road
Petersham

Description: 

A night for women (including women identifiers) to celebrate creativity. women's history and cultural endeavours.

FREE vegan dinner at 6pm!

Screening of the film "Can You Hear Me? Israeli and Palestinian Women Fight for Peace".

Review:

Lilly Rivlin’s Documentary “Can You Hear Me?” Focuses on Women as Peacemakers
By Robert Hirschfield

AT AN ISRAELI checkpoint on the West Bank, Yehudit Oppenheimer of Machson Watch (the group that mediates with Israeli soldiers to mitigate the abuses of Palestinians at checkpoints) imagines a day in the future when her grandchild will ask her what she did during the occupation.

“I will be able to say I did something,” Oppenheimer reflects.

Lilly Rivlin’s documentary, “Can You Hear Me?: Israeli and Palestinian Women Fight For Peace,” focuses on what the director believes is the untapped potential of women as peacemakers in the conflict—women like Maha Abu Dayyah-Shamas, a Palestinian who runs the Women’s Center For Legal Aid and Counseling in Beit Hanina, and Israeli peace activist Terry Greenblatt. Together they appeared before the Security Council to insist that U.N. Resolution 1325, passed in 2000 and calling for the inclusion of women in all official peace negotiations, be applied to Israeli and Palestinian women in the peace process affecting their two communities.

“Women don’t have a vested interest in maintaining military power and hegemony,” explains Abu Dayyah-Shamas. “And they don’t need guns for their egos.”

Her ill-fated dialogue partner, Leah Shakdiel, an Orthodox Jew and longtime opponent of Israel’s occupation, is alarmed at men’s propensity to resort to violence when talking fails because of rules that are broken. “I think women are different,” she says. “Women’s contribution to the peace process is that we never understand why you have to stop speaking when violence breaks out. That’s when you have to make yourself heard and get back on track.”

In the film’s most riveting and lacerating scene, Shakdiel goes to the home of Abu Dayyah-Shamas to arrange a future meeting about Resolution 1325. The subject of Zionism comes up. Zionism, the Palestinian woman remarks, is a fantasy. A fantasy, she concedes, that was perhaps needed at one time. Shakdiel is stunned.

“Not now?” she demands.

“No.”

Shakdiel feels outrage and betrayal.

“I am a Zionist!” she shouts, sobbing painfully. This is the same woman who considers herself a failure as a mother because her daughter is a settler.

By contrast, the relationship between Nadwa Sarandeh and Robi Damelin of the Parents Circle, an Israeli/Palestinian bereavement group, is an intimate one. The two travel together to Europe and the U.S., speaking of the need for the violence to end, for the occupation to end, for reconciliation to begin.

“When I go to bed at night,” says Damelin, whose son, an Israeli soldier, was killed by a Palestinian sniper in the West Bank, “and the mother of a suicide bomber goes to bed at night in Gaza, we share the same pain.”

Adding to Sarandeh’s pain over her murdered sister is the pain of seeing a photo of an Israeli soldier whose gun brandishes the words, “kill ‘em all.”

In her documentary, Rivlin, a Jewish American feminist affiliated with Meretz USA, walks a tightrope between her vision of the transformative power of Israeli and Palestinian women and the stark reality of Palestinian oppression that puts to shame any triumphalism. Mostly she succeeds, although the film’s tone sometimes is a bit too self-congratulatory. It is not without humor, however. At one point PLO diplomat Lily Habash wryly compares the Israeli/Palestinian relationship to a Catholic marriage. “We are not going to get divorced,” she observes.

(Robert Hirschfield is a free-lance writer based in New York City)

Contact Email: 
tree.kneee@gmail.com
Contact Name: 
Katrina

Gig: In Sepia, Thorax, Intentions and Zita Grim

10/12/2011 - 19:00
10/12/2011 - 23:00
Location: 

Jura Library

Contact Name: 
Ben

Art vs Music

21/08/2010 - 19:00
21/08/2010 - 23:00
Location: 

Jura Library

Description: 

Art vs Music

Artists create works as musicians weave live soundscapes. Stay tuned for more info on bands and artists!

Contact Email: 
artversemusic@gmail.com
Contact Name: 
trini

Library music fundraiser

06/08/2010 - 19:30
06/08/2010 - 22:00
Location: 

 

Jura Library

Description: 

Dead China Doll
Mere Women
Fag Panic!

From 7.30pm in the library ($8 suggested donation)

Come and enjoy some fun local music in the Jura library. All funds raised from the evening will go to purchasing books for the Fanya Baron Library! Additionally, there will be a 25% discount on all books / zines / dvds purchased for the library if you're feeling extra giving :o)

PLUS:

Sweet vegan treats available on the night!

Contact Name: 
trini

Rally for Abortion Rights

29/05/2010 - 11:00
29/05/2010 - 13:00
Location: 

Martin Place

Description: 

Time to get active!

It's been more than 10 years since we've had a rally for abortion rights in NSW, but now is the time as abortion rights are under attack both in Australia and overseas.

Why now? Drop the QLD charges

As many of you will know a young QLD couple have been charged under archaic abortion laws and have been committed to stand trial in relation to the use of RU486, an abortion drug, which they obtained from relatives overseas. RU486 is legal in Australia and safe, however distribution remains tightly controlled by the Therapeutic Goods Administration.

The QLD government has indicated that the case relates to the importation of the drug and safety concerns about the use of RU486 at home. Why then have the couple been charged under the abortion laws?

Abortion remains a crime in NSW and QLD, however common law rulings have established "lawful" grounds for abortion when a woman's physical or mental health is at risk. We are calling for all abortion laws to be repealed. This is very relevant for people in NSW as the Criminal Code 1899 QLD (ss 224-226) and the Crimes Act 1900 NSW (ss 82-84) are in almost
identical terms.

Why now? Right to Life conference

The rally has also been called in response to an International Federation of Right to Life Associations conference which is scheduled for that weekend.  Recent polls show that there is majority support for a woman's right to choose and it is important to remind the public and the media of this at a time when anti-abortionists will be active and vocal.

Why now? US Anti-abortion legislation

Recently US states such as Nebraska and Oklahoma have passed anti-abortion bills, for example, Oklahoma has passed legislation which prohibits a woman from getting an abortion unless she first has an ultrasound, is shown the ultrasound image and listens to a detailed description of the foetus. Other amendments also prevent women from suing doctors who
knowingly withhold information about the foetus, including whether there's a foetal abnormality.

Nebraska has signed a law that bans most abortions 20 weeks after conception or later on the theory that a foetus, by that stage in the pregnancy, has the capacity to feel pain.

These legislative changes are clear attacks on the rights of women to be in control of their bodies and their reproductive choices.

Tell your friends! See you on the 29th!

Reproductive rights are human rights!

For more info check out http://www.waac.org.au/

 

Scooter Zine Making Arvo

14/02/2010 - 13:00
14/02/2010 - 17:00
Location: 

jura library

Contact Name: 
trini

Anarchism in the 21st century

18/09/2009 - 18:00
18/09/2009 - 20:00
Location: 

Jura Books

Description: 

What form should anarchism take in the 21st century? What relevance does the last 150 years of anarchist history have? What's the difference between anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism? What do anarchist ideas have to offer in light of the current economic and climate crises? What about the tensions between employment, unemployment, and re-employment? Come and consider these questions with us (and raise more) at the first of a series of Jura Talks - Left Libertarian Discussions. Our first talk is on 'Anarchism in the 21st Century'. Sid Parissi will give a half hour presentation, and then there will be political discussion for an hour or so. Hope you can join the conversation.

Syndicate content