The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

A lesson on justice and its indivisibi­lity

- By Shelly Altman Shelly Altman is chairperso­n of Jewish Voice for Peace New Haven.

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapabl­e network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.” — Martin Luther King in Birmingham jail, 1963

Our right to advocate for justice via our constituti­onally guaranteed free speech is under attack by those who use false charges of anti-Semitism to mask their own unwillingn­ess to address the human rights emergency that has intensifie­d in Israel, the West Bank and Gaza for the past 70 years.

Angela Davis is a human rights scholar-activist and icon of the American civil rights movement. This month, the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute announced that it was canceling its intent to honor the Birmingham native with the Fred L. Shuttleswo­rth Human Rights Award. Davis is part of a growing lineup of African-Americans who are being censured for connecting the liberation struggle of African-Americans with that of Palestinia­ns.

Davis’ lifelong work is globally recognized. But her advocacy for human rights for Palestinia­ns apparently negated her qualificat­ions for receiving the award. The BCRI decision was driven by complaints by some Jewish organizati­ons in Birmingham.

Davis said the BCRI’s decision is “not primarily an attack against me but rather against the spirit of the indivisibi­lity of justice.”

Marc Lamont Hill is a tenured professor of media studies at Temple University and was a political commentato­r on CNN. In November remarks at a U.N. Internatio­nal Day of Solidarity with the Palestinia­n People meeting, Hill said, “We must advocate and promote non-violence,” and added, “We cannot endorse a narrow politics of respectabi­lity that shames Palestinia­ns for resisting, for refusing to do nothing in the face of state violence and ethnic cleansing.”

He called for a “free Palestine from the river to the sea,” words and concept used

Both the existing state laws and the proposed federal legislatio­n have a chilling effect on free speech and are unconstitu­tional.

by Zionists, without censure, since the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. CNN reacted to his remarks by firing him from his position at CNN.

Esther Koontz has been a Kansas public school math teacher for nine years and statewide teacher-trainer. Koontz was fired from her position when she refused to sign a formal declaratio­n certifying that she does not participat­e in a boycott of Israel, as dictated by Kansas law. Koontz said that she could not sign the form in good conscience. A U.S. District Court has now ruled that the Kansas law imposed “a plainly unconstitu­tional choice” on state contractor­s.

Bahia Amawi is a Texas speech pathologis­t who has worked with developmen­tally disabled, autistic and speechimpa­ired elementary school students in Austin, Texas, for the last nine years. Amawi was fired because she refused to sign a pledge that she will not engage in any action to limit commercial relations with any entity doing business in Israel or in an Israel-controlled territory. She and the ACLU have sued the state of Texas.

Twenty-five states now have laws which require individual­s and/or businesses in a relationsh­ip with the state to sign a pledge that they will not engage in any boycott related to Israel or its illegal settlement­s. The U.S. Congress is considerin­g similar legislatio­n. Both the existing state laws and the proposed federal legislatio­n have a chilling effect on free speech and are unconstitu­tional.

In working for the “indivisibi­lity of justice,” Angela Davis and Marc Lamont Hill and so many others give life to Dr. King’s eloquent words.

 ?? Associated Press ?? In this 2015 file photo, Angela Davis, author, educator and iconic civil rights activist, speaks during her visit to the University of Michigan-Flint, in Flint, Mich. The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Alabama announced this month that it has rescinded its decision to honor Davis.
Associated Press In this 2015 file photo, Angela Davis, author, educator and iconic civil rights activist, speaks during her visit to the University of Michigan-Flint, in Flint, Mich. The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute in Alabama announced this month that it has rescinded its decision to honor Davis.

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