Author: mopress

  • Reader says Thankyou for Riad Hamad Memorial Story

    Dear Editor,

    thankyou thankyou thankyou for letting me be there, through you. I learned of the service at the last minute and thought to jump on a plane but it was too high [priced] by that time. I am sorry I missed this, but I thank you for the lovely creative way you brought us from the bus to the conclusion.

    beautiful quote:

    From the flow of tears in this sanctuary and from the punctuations of laughter at funny memories, you can feel how the absence of Riad Hamad has been transformed into presence. “There has been some speculation about the circumstances of Riad’s death,” acknowledges Mr. Kelly. “But that’s not what we’re here for.” What we’re here for is a celebration of Riad Hamad’s life.

    be well, salamat

    ps Riad sent me a big box of bumper stickers!!

  • Take One: The Riad Hamad Memorial

    Rough cut from yellow pad.

    By Greg Moses

    CounterPunch / DissidentVoice

    On the way to the St. James Episcopal Church of Austin Texas, the bus is happy to drop you into knee-high grasses and wildflowers along East Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard, treating you to an unexpected nature walk. Yellow, white, purple, and brown blooms all smile up toward the sun which has not yet turned into the summer harshness that burns even the breeze into hiding.

    Then, across the overgrown sidewalk along Webberville Road scurry creatures so tiny and fast they leave only traces behind. A magic tangle of cedar and mesquite whispers invitations to bow your head and step inside. But the caw, caw, caw of something overhead brings your eyes up to a pair of crows nipping in mid-flight at a passing hawk.

    So it is a delightful revelation when you walk into the St. James sanctuary to see that two of its walls have been given over to glass, and you don’t have to leave behind the marvelous green thicket of this wild Texas oasis as you pick your seat upon a wooden pew.

    Separating the converging glass walls is an altar with three crosses coming down. The highest cross is imaged upon a red tapestry, broad enough to hold an image of the world projected upon a scallop shell. Next cross down is thin, brown, and wooden, suspended by cables. And then supported from the ground up by a brass post is the third cross, in brass. Heaven to earth, global to local. Trinity applied. Three, two, one.

    ***

    The hour is still a bit early for the program, so the women are testing the microphones. Rita Hamad and her mother Diana HajAli satisfy themselves that the sound will carry vibrantly through the modest sanctuary, and later the audience of 300 (way more than the “dozens” reported by the establishment press of Austin) will quickly demand that speakers use their microphone well, because nobody wants to miss a word.

    “Okay, I’ll use my teacher’s voice,” is what Mark Kelly will say to the audience after he has been demanded to speak up. “I was in class the other day helping a student when a small noise caused me to look up unexpectedly. And I found myself explaining to the student: ‘I thought that was Mr. Hamad.’ I had to look back. I expected to see him there.”

    From the flow of tears in this sanctuary and from the punctuations of laughter at funny memories, you can feel how the absence of Riad Hamad has been transformed into presence. “There has been some speculation about the circumstances of Riad’s death,” acknowledges Mr. Kelly. “But that’s not what we’re here for.” What we’re here for is a celebration of Riad Hamad’s life.

    Retired Episcopal Priest Edward M Hartwell, for instance, recalls that when he first met Riad Hamad at a rally opposed to the occupation of Palestine, “I knew I wanted to know him better.” The audience chuckles at that. Soon enough, Rev. Hartwell and Riad Hamad were planning another rally in support of the Palestinian cause.

    “Riad had a relentless commitment to the freedom of the Palestinian people, and his humanitarian work to help the children of Palestine was some of the most creative and effective work that I know of,” said Rev. Hartwell. “Day in and day out, there was always something going on.”

    Two bumper stickers that Riad gave to Rev. Hartwell seemed to sum up the spirit and humor of the man. The first one said, “God loves everyone, no exceptions.” And the second one said, “When Jesus said love your enemies, I think he meant don’t kill them.” The laughter grows a little louder this time.

    Riad loved gatherings like this, says Rev. Hartwell, and he would come often to places where Christian, Jewish, and Islamic peoples would join voices in prophetic support for protest against abuses of power, wherever and whenever they occur. “Wherever and whenever,” repeats Rev. Hartwell. “Wherever and whenever.”

    As he reflects upon Riad Hamad’s legendary generosity and hospitality, Rev. Hartwell draws connections to the “law of hospitality” that he experienced in travels across the Arab world, whether at an oasis in the Nubian Desert, a Bedouin Camp near the Gulf of Aucuba, a community of Egyptian Christians, or among Palestinians at Ramallah, in Palestine.

    “On his last visit to our home, Riad was in a hurry, as usual.” The audience chuckles. “He was practically out the door, when I called him back. I said I need hug. And I told him that we love you.”

    We stand up for Rev. Hartwell’s opening prayer, to the Creator of All that Is, witnessing to Riad Hamad’s obedience to the Prophet’s call to give assistance to the oppressed, and testifying to his character, and life, and inspiration. As we sit back down, we are joined by new arrivals.

    “Assalam Alaikum,” says Immam and Director of the Islamic Center of Greater Austin, Sheikh Mohammad-Umer Esmail. “Riad Hamad is here in my heart and I’m sure in the hearts of others.” Immam Mohammad thanks hosts and presents glad tidings to the audience, reminding them what the Prophet said upon news of the death of his granddaughter. “Only to God belongs what he has taken.”

    For recollection of Riad Hamad’s life, Immam Mohammad turns to a testimonial posted at the website of the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund (pcwf.org), the charity that Riad founded:

    “As beautiful a human being as I have ever met . . . His charisma, energy, and positive outlook were contagious. He loved the children of Palestine and worked tirelessly on their behalf. . . . He would rather sleep in his car than pay for a hotel room so that he could save the money and send it to the children of Palestine . . . It was never about him, only the children of Palestine.”

    ***

    Tears are falling all around me as even grown men daub their eyes and sniff back the heartbreak that is wanting to cry out loud. Mercifully, the Immam lightens the mood.

    “This one section here about sleeping in the car, never about him, only about the children of Palestine,” the Immam shuffles his papers at the lectern, looks down, looks up. “Me, I’d sleep in a hotel.” The audience seizes the chance to laugh out loud. “I can’t sleep in a car.” More laughs. “I’d be too afraid, and I’d be awake all night.” The Immam’s deadpan hits the right spot.

    “The best things that a man leaves behind after his death are three,” says the Immam, paraphrasing the Prophet. “First, he leaves behind virtuous children who pray for him; second, he leaves behind the charity he gave, the reward of which reaches him; and finally, he leaves behind a knowledge which people benefited from.”

    “You all know my Dad,” says Rita Hamad, the first child to speak today. “Some of you know him as RYE-ad,” she declaims in playful Texan drawl, getting everyone to laughing again. Rita called him Daddy, or Baba, occasionally Babu to remind him of the way she would baby talk, or the Bestest Daddy in the Whole Wide World, especially when she was working on asking for something special.

    Nor is Rita Hamad here to apologize for manipulating her father all those years, because after all, he could be a difficult person to live with. Like the time he ended up as a substitute teacher for her class and spent the whole hour pretending that he, her father, was illiterate! Since he couldn’t read the attendance chart himself, he got a student to do that for him. And since he couldn’t write his name on the board he got another student to do that, too. Then, since he couldn’t read the lesson plan, he had to get another student to read the whole thing out loud. Ohmagod daddy, when is enough enough? Finally, he took some time to explain how he and his daughter Rita rode to school on a camel and how he was looking forward to Rita marrying her cousin, just as soon as she turned 13.
    Little snickers in the sanctuary had turned into full blown howls of laughter by this time, sending little creatures scurrying for ground cover all around our sun-lit oasis.

    After a few more of these delightful daddy tales, Rita Hamad says that she learned from her Babu “what it truly means to be proud of being different and to reach out and help others.” And since this Harvard and Berkeley grad knows only one large and outlandish side of her father, she is requesting that memories be emailed to her for the bestest compilation in the whole wide world.

    ***

    “It’s good for people to know a one-of-a-kind person in life,” said Nina Glasgow. “And Riad Hamad was larger than life.” Right from the start, Riad struck you as a character who sure talked a lot (twinkles of laughter at that), who made the best baba ghanoush in Austin, and who deployed food as a political tool. His car was plastered with end-the-occupation bumper stickers. He wore pink shirts because he said he was getting in touch with his feminine side. And he was a terrific belly dancer, the best in Austin.

    Glasgow watched him with children, putting himself on an equal footing with them, encouraging them to set the pace of play, and urging them over the challenges they encountered. Then there was his commitment to the children of Palestine. “He was not a small star,” declared Glasgow. “He was a big star.”

    Riad’s brother, Omar Farouk Hamad, has also dedicated his life to teaching, matching his brother’s enthusiasm for lifelong learning by also earning three Master’s degrees. After Riad’s burial, Omar visited the school where Riad used to teach. There he found students who, thanks to Riad’s influence, were dedicating their weekends to volunteer service.

    Omar has been a revered family name since 1916 when the occupying Ottoman Turks hanged a Lebanese patriot by that name. Martyr’s Day is still a national holiday in Lebanon on May 6 to celebrate the courage shown by great uncle Omar and others, who were rounded up, brutally tortured and hung, because they dared to argue against occupation.

    Growing up, Riad’s brother idolized Mohammad Ali as a role model. “He had a big mouth, but I loved him,” says Omar. The heavyweight fighter was an icon for freedom of speech. And since his brother was always joking about four-letter words, Omar has two of them to share with the audience today: h-e-r-o and R-i-a-d.

    ***

    Fellow teacher Mark Kelly recalls entering Riad’s classroom, the one with the sign outside that reads Marhaba (the Arabic word for welcome): come on in. All Mr. Kelly heard in that classroom was the sound of students typing away at their keyboards. Well, there was another sound. The voice of Mr. Hamad: “Sit up straight. Keep typing. Young woman I told you to not to talk.” After classes changed, Mr. Hamad would bark out: “Get out of my hallway. Go to class!” Occasionally he would hand a student a dollar bill and tell him to get a haircut. Because he was a total character, the students loved the man.

    “Was Riad Hamad an activist?” asked Mr. Kelly. “He got up and acted. He did something. He took action. And because he did these things he was labeled and suffered from the defamation of being called a terrorist.”

    “What have I done?” Mr. Hamad would ask Mr. Kelly. “I don’t do drugs, I don’t drink, I don’t smoke. What have I done?”

    “What Riad did was organize a foundation to send technology and educational support to the children of Palestine. He worked with people who were sitting at home in Palestine making crafts from olive wood or mother of pearl and offered them a fair price. He would buy their crafts cheap, sell them over here, and send most of the profits back.

    One summer, Riad Hamad sent Mark Kelly to Palestine to teach. At the University of Bethlehem and at a nearby French Catholic School, Mr. Kelly made himself useful teaching whatever the students needed to learn, whether it was how to use Photoshop or how to write news reports that were less biased, more objective. At the home where he stayed, Mr. Kelly met a doctor that Riad Hamad had sent to provide medical care to the children.

    “Why did Riad Hamad really send me?,” asked Mark Kelly. “I believe he just wanted a witness to come back and tell you what I saw. I don’t know how many people just said to me, tell them what you saw. What I saw was people laughing. I saw people loving one another. I saw people rejoicing. Ideas of what Arabs are like have been so skewed by the media. I saw people who sang late into the night and who danced.”

    Five months ago, Riad Hamad posted a nine-minute video at You Tube featuring a Palestinian artisan making Holy Land figurines of olive wood. After cutting the rough figures, the carver sets them aside for two years to “cure” before finishing. If he tries to finish them early, he explains, they will crack. He learned his craft by watching his father carve mother-of-pearl, just as his son is learning today, standing behind his father. Another video displays the wares of embroidery stitchers. Here, too, the children get into the act.

    “The reason why Riad passed out the little craft works from Palestine is that he wanted to draw attention to this cause that he was so passionate about,” explains Mr. Kelly. “And I can understand why he became so frustrated and pessimistic. He wanted to relieve the suffering that was caused by a brutal system. Weeks before his death he was agitated. I can only hope he is at peace now.” Applause follows Mr. Kelly back to his seat.

    ***

    Jack Prince coordinates the Interfaith Community for Palestinian Rights (icpr-austin.org). Before speaking, he pauses. The audience comes to a complete hush. Then the applause begins. He has just unfolded a Palestinian scarf. As he drapes the scarf over his shoulders, the applause grows. Then, with the house still murmuring in approval, he makes a little joke about how Presbyterians have cushions on their pews, which draws some good-natured laughter and causes people to wiggle just a little bit.

    “Justice, Peace, and Prosperity” is what the ICPR wants for the Palestinian people. “In our view,” explains Jack Prince, “our fellow Americans are not well informed on the issue. Yet only with right knowledge can come right policies and right actions.” As a contribution to this path of enlightenment, a Saturday evening program has been scheduled on the topic of al Nakba, “the catastrophe that began sixty years ago this month, on May 15, 1948, with efforts by Israel to drive out Palestinians from territories allocated to Israel by the United Nations.” The evening program would include a silent auction, and the proceeds would be donated to the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund, so that the work of Riad Hamad might continue.

    Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh, who would be the featured speaker at the evening’s Nakba presentation is up next to speak. He is the only Palestinian on the program today and he gratefully places around his neck the scarf handed to him by Jack Prince.

    By now, the experience of getting acquainted with Riad Hamad has become a thrice told tale, but it’s still interesting to hear. First there is the funny part about meeting the man and how he talks too much, he seems too good to be true, but you’d like to get to know him better. Then there is the part where you are living in Riad’s world, talking to him in the kitchen or taking his phone calls. He wants to know did you get the new batch of bumper stickers? Yes, you got them. But at last there is the sad part. You talked to him too briefly. You wish you had said more.

    Dr. Qumsiyeh remembered Riad’s impatience, how he was always going and wanting to do things. He was passionate about the Palestinian cause, and since 60 percent of Palestinians are younger than 18, he dedicated his efforts to the children. In 2002, the year before Riad Hamad founded the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund, 200 Palestinian children were killed, hundreds more injured.

    “He

    was kind of a practical in many ways. He said, ‘let’s do something, here’s something to do,’ then he’d go do it. When my father died he sent me a photo with a note that said ‘we have planted a tree in Palestine for your father.’ “

    “There is a passage from a famous sermon by Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.: ‘On some positions, cowardice asks the question, is it expedient? And then expedience comes along and asks the question, is it politic? Vanity asks the question, is it popular? Conscience asks the question, is it right? There comes a time when one must take the position that is neither safe nor politic nor popular, but he must do it because conscience tells him it is right.’

    “This quote epitomizes Riad. The things he did were not safe, or popular, or politic. He did them because they were right. He followed his conscience.” As Dr. Qumsiyeh thanks the Hamad family, his voice breaks momentarily. “Riad would have wanted us to intensify our efforts. Humanity is better when we expect it to be. Riad knew that. We tend to undervalue the good in most people.” Expect more. Do more. That’s the way to respond to Riad’s death.

    ***

    Abdullah Hamad, Rita’s little brother “who is getting his first degree” speaks mostly through a slide show set to the music of fourteen audio tracks. The audience especially laughs to slides from the 70s with Riad and his puffed out 70s hair, popping up here and there to the tune of “Hard Day’s Night.” Grins abound also when Riad is presented acting up with his beloved babies to the tune of Randy Newman’s “Short People.” When Stevie Wonder sings “I Just Called to Say I Love You” it looks like Riad Hamad’s family life is defined by tables full of food, surrounded by smiling people. All of Riad’s emails to Abdullah ended with a line that said, “always remember Daddy loves you.”

    Before presenting the slide show from his laptop, Abdullah remembered his father’s advice to “Survive against all odds.”

    At this point, Lourdes Perez rises from her seat in the audience and carries her guitar to the front, where she takes a seat facing the family. In a quivering voice she jokes a little bit about how Riad Hamad complained playfully about her rendering of Arabic. And the audience laughs at that. Then without further adieu she fills the sanctuary with her ever magnificent rendering of Unadikum / Te Llamo, the 2002 single in Arabic and Spanish that she dedicated to the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund. (Note: to experience the Arabic original, search for Onadikom at You Tube.) While she sings, there is time to gaze at the green oasis outside, the three crosses inside, the banner with the world on a scallop, and the puffy red rings around a man’s eyes as he daubs another tear from his face. Then Lourdes Perez carries her guitar back into the audience and sits down.

    ***

    The last scheduled speaker of the day will be Diana HajAli, “Soulmate” and mother of Riad’s children who will also recall the boundless energy that Riad Hamad took everywhere he went, and who was in April handed a small packet of Riad’s things that contained a damp wallet that she opened to find a Blue Cross insurance card and a one-dollar bill.

    When Diana mentions the yellow camel tie that Riad loved so much, the audience laughs in a way that says, yes, we’ve all seen that tie. She is here today to celebrate the man of Liberality, Intellect, and Kindness who tricked her into moving to Austin two decades ago, a trick that had come to make sense in time. In Austin, Riad could until very recently exercise his rights out in the open, not like the Cadillac rights, as Riad called them, that many Americans kept parked in their garages, never taking them out to enjoy.

    Like Riad, Diana was a child of Beirut, Lebanon, not Palestine. And in Beirut the young Riad was ever on the move. He once purchased a batch of cheap lipstick which he marked up a little and sold on the street. At the age of 17 he enrolled at the University of Texas at Austin and put himself through school, first as a dishwasher, then eventually as manager of a 7-11. Then he took work in Bahrain, but got bored. So one day he approached the Japanese embassy and made a deal with the consul. If the consul would teach him Japanese on Friday nights, Riad would cook the dinner.

    At the age of 45, Riad was certified as a teacher and found a calling teaching computer technology in a middle school, challenging everyone he met, his students included, to think outside the box. Riad had an amazing hunger for knowledge. When the FBI took all his computers in that February raid, Riad was upset because the computers contained work that would cause him to miss his professors’ deadlines.

    Diana HajAli first met Riad Hamad on the campus of the American University in Beirut where she offered him a serving of tabouli on a lettuce boat. She recalls the situation exactly, including the precise posture of her serving hand, which she models for us all to see. You can see in her eyes how the memory delights her still, especially when she recalls Riad’s response: “What do you think I am a rabbit serving me food on lettuce rather than on a proper plate?”

    Months later, when she next saw Riad, he was bandaged up. He had thrown himself from a car. When he got into the car, he thought it was a Taxi, but it turned out to be kidnappers who wanted to take his money, so he threw himself out of the moving car.

    They soon started dating, and when they went out to eat Riad loved to hand Diana the check, only to deliberately offend the male chauvinist waiter. Riad was often like that, always shattering stereotypes. On Feb. 21, 1981 they got married by a Beirut family court judge and Riad set to work at two jobs to pay back the money he owed for the six months rent that was required of newlyweds in advance.

    Riad will never enjoy bouncing his grandchild on his knees or chirping like a bird to make the child smile. He will not email me at work every day to ask what I want him to cook for dinner. “In the house of the Lord I feel that my heart has been ripped out of my chest.” All the plans he made will be left undone. The cats will all miss his cat lap and the feeling of his big clumsy fingers.

    “But most of all, no arbitrary or stupid rules will inhibit him from doing whatever he wants to do whenever he wants to do it, and all at the same time.”

    We rise to give Diana HajAli a standing ovation.

    ***

    During the open mike session we get to hear that the Palestine Solidarity Committee exceeded their fundraising goal and are able to present a check for $1,300 to be donated to the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund. The presenter today has known Riad Hamad since the day he made a presentation to her fifth grade class. She was, of course, overwhelmed. In 2002 when the PSC was organized, Riad became “kind of like a father, because whenever you need something you can always turn to your Dad.”

    She recalls going to Riad’s home to make a quick trip to pick up 20 t-shirts but as soon as she walks in the door it’s like you’re hungry, here drink some tea. Then an hour later you’re walking out with the t-shirts and a box of flags and some bumper stickers and you’re thinking, “Oh my God, what did I just commit to?”

    ***

    The final testimonial is from a friend and customer who made the mistake of going through boxes of merchandise with Riad in search of the one unique item that she had in mind. By the time she was finished with that exercise, she had bought everything she could afford. “Now it will be harder to give them away. He was an example for me. I hope to live as much as possible in his inspiration.”

    After a closing prayer, we exit to the tune of James Blunt’s “Goodbye.”

    ***

    After shaking a few hands in the lobby, I turn towards the door and collide with Immam Mohammed who has his hand on the shoulder of a little girl. “Excuse me,” he says. “I am just trying to gather the children.”

    ***

    Back out on
    Webberville road the six-lined racerunners are enjoying the sidewalk, taking turns running in front of me, apparently for their sheer amusement. One or two is missing a tail, having survived to run for at least one more sunny day.

  • A too Convenient Crisis? Neo-Con Logic at the Border

    By Greg Moses

    CounterPunch / Dissident Voice /
    Global Resistance Network

    At first, I wasn’t sure whether Gov. Schwarzenegger was caught winging it when he praised border vigilantes as good citizens patching up bad government. But as he repeated the account in Sunday’s interview with Chris Wallace, I began to suspect that all these signs are beginning to take the appearance of a coherent political strategy.

    Between all the lines of nonsense posted by xenophobic dupes of the neo-con regime, there are two suggestions that crop up in internet discussion which hint at broad policy objectives: send the national guard to the border and get a work permit system going.

    Since the national guard suggestion is often accompanied by anti-terrorist rhetoric, the logical model feels like neo-cons coming home to roost. Militarize the borderland in the name of national security (with infrastructure projects outsourced to buddy contractors?). And capture the cheap labor coming North in a regime of temp workers who will be thoroughly fingerprinted and photographed. Just as prisoners are often the ones made to build prisons, I have visions of Mexican workers building their own Northern wall.

    Maybe I’m just being paranoid, but this whipped up border crisis when viewed in light of “spontaneous” suggestions coming from “concerned citizens” is beginning to look like a PR pincer, easing us all in the direction of a militarized and “secure” (get the word right Arnold!) interface between USA and global South. Not only do we have Bracero on steroids for Mexicans, but we also get new reasons to draft Yankees into military defense.

    A November review of immigration politics written by David Bacon connects dots of a steady political drive toward the “guest worker” idea. It is the policy most favored by corporate players, and they have worked for five years at getting the program ready for Congress to approve.

    Paradoxically, says Bacon, the experience of immigrants suggests that a Bracero program of guest permits would actually disempower migrants by making them more exploitable than even today’s undocumented workers. Yet critics who argue that illegal immigration serves corporate interests don’t go on to say that legalizing this immigration through a system of guest permits would be even better for the corporate interests involved.

    Under a work-permit program, immigrants would be attached to designated corporate sponsors and not be allowed to place their labor into competition with other employers. A troublesome worker under Bracero supervision is not only fired, but deported. And with corporate power unified over work permits, the rogue companies who try to freelance with undocumented workers will be more likely to face eager immigration raids.

    Yet the logic of the anti-terrorism rhetoric that we find growing up around the border issue in the aftermath of the Minuteman Project finds its satisfaction in a completely permitted and identified workforce. “At least we will know who they are and where they are going,” is the typical line.

    Note how the anti-terror justification for vigilante action is more recently highlighted in key quotes concerning Minuteman plans to patrol the Canadian border. Up North, the scattershot racism of the anti-Mexican rhetoric will not interfere so much with the needed anti-terrorist justification. Minutemen standing at the Northern border of the USA can catch nationalities with which the Canadians play a little too freely. Here we have the pinpoint racism of the War on Terrorism Regime.

    In a word, if we just look at the public logics that are playing out, it appears that national opinion in the USA is being corralled toward a work permit scheme with accompanying militarization of the border.

    WALLACE: But there are thousands of miles.

    SCHWARZENEGGER: So what? That’s what you do when you have a huge country. If you have thousands of miles and thousands of cities in America and they all have to be patrolled.

    We have the money to do it. It’s not a lack of money. When we can afford the war in Iraq, we can afford to control our own borders.

    If there is still time to hit a switch on this juggernaut, the first thing to do is speak of the paradoxical intensification of corporate power over labor that will result from a work permit program. Yes, corporations benefit from illegal immigration, but why do they still prefer Braceros?

    After that, Bacon’s November analysis points to developments in international law that should address the rights of an increasingly mobile workforce around the world. If the relationship between labor and employers is to be centered for rational strategy, then human rights of Mexican labor in the USA must be a vanguard struggle. Therefore Bacon’s address to developing nations in the following paragraph should be taken to heart by progressive activists in the USA:

    Developing countries do, however, have an alternative framework for protecting the rights and status of this migrant population. The UN’s International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families proposes an alternative framework for dealing with migration. It supports the right of family reunification, establishes equality of treatment with citizens of the host country, and prohibits collective deportation. Both sending and receiving countries are responsible for protecting migrants, and retain the right to determine who is admitted to their territories, and who has the right to work. The Convention recognizes the global scale and permanence of migration, and starts by protecting the rights of migrants themselves.

    In the end, the lesson is old as dirt. If we do not insist on treating migrating workers as free companions who deserve human rights, then soon enough the corporations will have made Braceros of us all. Deportee or draftee? Never say you didn’t have a choice.

  • Rebirthing Brown

    Full Story at

    Alternet

    By Greg

    Moses

    In Brown V. Board of Education, its 1954 ruling against school segregation, the US

    Supreme Court made it the Constitutional business of the nation to care about the motivations of

    African American children. Segregation, the court argued, was unfair to African American children,

    because the practice of separating blacks by law conveyed a sense that they were inferior to whites.

    And the sense of inferiority tended to damage a black child’s motivation to learn. On the basis of

    these particular considerations, the Court found that segregation was inherently

    unequal.