[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 88 (Thursday, May 20, 2021)]
[House]
[Pages H2635-H2639]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SENATE MUST STOP INHUMANITY OF POLICE BRUTALITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 4, 2021, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Green) is recognized for
60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. GREEN of Texas. Mr. Speaker, and still I rise, in the spirit of
Shirley Chisholm. I rise unbought and unbossed, a liberated Democrat.
And I rise today, Mr. Speaker, with a great deal of pain in my heart.
I am saddened. And I am, quite frankly, very, very disgusted and
disappointed.
I saw a news story this morning that brought me to tears. I could not
believe what I saw and I heard. I would like to share now some passages
from a story in The New York Times that relate to what I saw this
morning, what I heard this morning. I would ask that persons who are
very sensitive to things involving pain and suffering be mindful of
what I am about to do and might govern themselves appropriately because
this is very painful to hear and very sad to understand that it
actually occurred.
This story is styled ``Footage Shows Louisiana Troopers Punching and
Dragging Man Who Died.''
I was born in Louisiana, in New Orleans. I have friends there. I have
some sense of what the State is like, but even this exceeds some of
what I know can happen in Louisiana.
This article goes on to read: ``Relatives of Ronald Greene,'' no
relationship as far as I know, ``were initially told that he had died
from injuries he sustained in a crash after he failed to stop for a
traffic violation outside Monroe, Louisiana, in May 2019, according to
a lawyer for the family.''
May 2019. You can do the math. That was some time ago. Some of us
would say it was a long time ago.
``Body-camera footage obtained and published by the Associated Press
on Wednesday showed Mr. Greene, 49, screaming, `I'm sorry,' and `I'm
scared,' after troopers opened the door to his car and jolted him with
a stun gun after a high-speed chase.''
I recall instructions from my mother. Her instructions when I was a
young child were to never run from the police. Never run from the
police. She was emphatic about it, and she explained why. Never run
from the police, she explained to me, her young son, because the police
will catch you and when they do, they are going to whip you. She
explained to me that the police are of the opinion that if you run, a
part of your punishment is a good whipping. This is what my mother
explained to me as a child. So, we find today Mr. Greene saying, ``I'm
sorry,'' and, ``I'm scared.''
`` `I'm scared,' Mr. Greene screamed, according to the video.'' He
went on to say, `` `I'm your brother. I'm scared,' '' pleading, if you
will. The ``pleading'' is what I am adding. That is not in the story,
but pleading.
``According to the AP, which said it had obtained 46 minutes of video
footage from the encounter, one trooper wrestled Mr. Greene to the
ground, put him in a choke hold,'' some things bear repeating, ``put
him in a choke hold and punched him in the face. Another trooper
briefly dragged him by his ankle shackles as he lay on the ground,
according to the footage.''
We know about choke holds. We know about knees on necks. We know that
people are not always treated with respect.
Mind you, Mr. Greene, so far, has not exhibited a weapon. Yes, he was
running, in the sense that he was driving away from the police. Yes, he
should have stopped by standards that we like to employ. But does
running from the police, driving your car away from the police, does
this entitle the police to kick, tase multiple times, and drag a
person?
``Mr. Greene was jolted again with the stun gun while he was on the
ground and handcuffed.'' On the ground, handcuffed, and jolted again
with a stun gun. This is what the footage shows, according to this news
article.
``The AP reported that the troopers, who were White,'' again, some
things bear repeating, ``AP reported that the troopers, who were White,
left Mr. Greene, who was Black, facedown and moaning for more than 9
minutes, as they wiped blood from their hands and face.''
Mr. Greene is facedown, pleading, 9 minutes. The officers are wiping
blood from their hands and face.
`` `I hope this guy ain't got AIDS,' one of the troopers said on the
video, adding an expletive.''
He was concerned for himself at a time when a man is bleeding and in
need of attention, medical attention, I might add. Officers have a duty
to provide medical attention. When we are in combat with enemies,
enemies who would destroy us, destroy our country, if we catch an enemy
and that enemy is hurt, in need of medical attention, we provide aid
and comfort.
Mr. Greene was not an enemy to the United States of America. He
wasn't an enemy of this country. Mr. Greene wasn't trying to kill these
officers.
{time} 1245
Yes, he resisted. But does resistance afford or grant the officers
the legal right to abuse him to the extent that he finds himself on the
ground bleeding; they find themselves wiping blood from their hands and
their face, and then concluding, ``I hope this guy ain't got AIDS''?
There are people who don't want to hear the things that I have to say
about invidious discrimination. They don't want to hear it because they
don't want to acknowledge that it exists. Not only does it exist, it
exists more than we know.
But for the body cameras, this wouldn't be in The New York Times. It
is in The New York Times because there is now evidence, clear and
convincing evidence, that it actually occurred. But there are people
who don't want to hear a Member come to the floor of the House of
Representatives and call these things to the attention of the world.
We call them to the attention of the world, because the world needs
to know we have been right for years upon years, decades on decades, in
making known these issues that have been ignored.
Now the truth is being revealed. George Floyd, the truth was
revealed. Ronald Greene, the truth has been revealed.
Let's go on. This story indicates that: ``The Louisiana State Police
said on Wednesday''--mind you, this is Wednesday in May of 2019--``The
Louisiana State Police said on Wednesday that the investigation into
Mr. Greene's death `remains under review by Federal and State
authorities.'''
My dear friends, my dear brothers, and my dear sisters, if an
animal--let's say a dog--if they had treated a dog the way they treated
Mr. Greene, a human being, the investigation would be over, the
punishment would have been assessed, and I would dare say that they
would have received punishment much more severe than what I am about to
read to you.
The article states: ``One of the troopers, who was involved in the
encounter . . . was temporarily suspended and is back on the force.''
Some things bear repeating.
``One of the troopers who was involved in the encounter . . . was
temporarily suspended and is back on the force.'' This is what the
State police said.
I am not sure that the humane society would have allowed this to go
without some additional repercussions, lawful repercussions, I might
add, if an animal, a dog, were treated the way Mr. Greene was treated.
Remember, Mr. Greene was pleading: ``I'm your brother. I'm scared.''
Begging, ``I'm sorry,'' he said.
Dear friends, Mr. Greene's death was ruled accidental and was
attributed to cardiac arrest. How can we allow this to stand?
The family commissioned an independent autopsy that found severe
injuries to Mr. Greene's head and skull and several wounds to his face.
But the
[[Page H2636]]
officers concluded his death was accidental. This is my commentary now.
His death was accidental and was attributed to cardiac arrest.
In the world that I live in, this is called a coverup. In the world
that I live in, this video is the evidence needed, coupled with the
time that has elapsed, to substantiate the coverup.
There may be more evidence. There may be more evidence that would be
of benefit. But my dear friends, for a human being to be treated as Mr.
Greene was treated and then have one person temporarily suspended--
there may be other things that have occurred. This is a news story. All
of the facts may not be in. One person suspended, and it reported that
his death was ruled accidental, attributed to cardiac arrest.
We must pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act. What more do
we need? We have George Floyd, his death. We have now Mr. Greene. These
incidents--as they are called by people who live in polite society--
these incidents continue to occur. What more do we need to pass
legislation in the Senate of the United States of America, where we
have people who have taken an oath to protect? What do we need to pass
the legislation that will ban chokeholds? This man was choked.
What do we need to pass legislation so that lawsuits can continue, so
that they won't be dismissed on grounds that are archaic? It may not be
insane, but it is an inanity. What do we need to end this inanity? What
is going on in the Senate, the Senate of the United States of America,
land of ``liberty and justice''--I say the Pledge of Allegiance--``for
all.'' I say the Pledge of Allegiance. I love my country, but I don't
love what is happening in the United States Senate.
It is time for this piece of legislation to receive its day. It ought
to be voted on, immediately, if not sooner. What is going on in the
United States Senate? How can we tolerate this level of inhumanity?
What is going on in the United States Senate?
At some point, on the infinite continuum that we call time, we are
all going to have to account for our time. And on that day of judgment,
it won't be based upon how many millionaires did you try to help
because you were a Member of Congress and you had the opportunity to
pass laws to benefit millionaires and billionaires. That won't be what
your judgment is based on. It won't be based on how many full bellies
did you try to feed. At some point, we are going to have to account for
our actions. At some point, judgment is going to be how did you treat
the least, the last, and the lost among us.
Judgment is not going to be how did you treat the well-off, the well-
heeled, and the well-to-do. They always fare well. The judgment is
going to be how did you treat the Greene's of the world, how did you
treat the Floyds of the world.
Senators, I beg you, do not allow rules that benefit the lawlessness
that is taking place to prevent you from doing the righteous thing. You
have an opportunity to move on this legislation. I beg that you would
do so.
I am but one person. I am sure that there are others who would agree
with some of what I have said. But I come to the floor to say this,
because I want my record to show that when I had a chance to stand
up against injustice, I did so.
I am saddened by what happened to Mr. Greene, to Mr. Floyd, to Ms.
Breonna Taylor, and to many others whose names that you don't know: Joe
Campos Torres, thrown in a bayou in Houston, Texas, handcuffed; Billy
Keith Joyvies; Randall Alan Webster, chased down the Freeway, shot; Ida
Lee Delaney, shot out on the freeway in Houston. There are many names
that you don't know. But if you do the research, you will find that in
each one of those cases, there were concerns related to the way the
police handled them.
So I have done what I can do today. But if God gives me the strength,
I will be back again and again and again and again. I want my record to
show I gave it my best, I tried, and I will continue to try.
At this time, I have a colleague who desires time. I am going to
yield to him as much time as he may consume of the time that I have
left.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Maryland (Mr. Raskin).
Mr. RASKIN. Mr. Speaker, Mr. Green is not just a passionate
representative of the people of the Ninth District of Texas, he speaks
for millions and millions of people across the country. It has been
very moving to hear him talk about the problem of police brutality and
violence, which threatens our social contract.
The whole purpose of the social contract is that we will be safer
inside of it than we will be outside of it. And, yet, the social
contract is not working for a lot of people in a lot of different parts
of the country.
So I thank him for his passionate leadership on behalf of the George
Floyd Justice in Policing Act and for having us address this central
problem.
{time} 1300
I appreciate your yielding to me. I wanted to spend a few minutes
talking about what is going on in the Middle East. It has been a brutal
week for Israeli and Palestinian civilians, as hundreds have been
killed in the savage violence that is engulfing the Middle East now.
This week I had the opportunity to meet on Zoom with young
Palestinians and Israelis who are part of a group called New Story
Leadership, which is a peace-building group that, since 2009, has
brought Israeli and Palestinian interns to come work on Capitol Hill.
I have had these interns work for me for, I think, 5 or 6 years,
really ever since I arrived in the House of Representatives. They come
to work, and they come to interact with each other. They come to learn
about democracy and human rights from America, a country that was
conceived with the dream of human rights and equality for everybody.
Although that was not remotely the reality for a lot of people, but it
has been the struggle for human rights and for equality that has
defined the American ethos and the American spirit.
So I asked these young Israeli and Palestinian former interns for me
and for other Members of Congress, as part of the New Story Leadership
program, to write to me about what is going on in their lives. Because
too often, of course, our sense of what is happening in a foreign land
is filtered through media, and it is filtered through different kinds
of party propaganda. I wanted to hear directly from them. I thought I
would share with you some of the responses I got. I want to enter them
into the Congressional Record.
Here is one from a Jewish Israeli citizen named Meshi: My name is
Meshi. I am an Israeli American, currently living in Tel Aviv. I was
born and raised in northern Israel, where my early childhood was spent
under rocket fire from Hezbollah. Today, in my late 20s, I am under
rocket fire from Hamas. In the last week or so, I have taken shelter in
my building's old stairway. I have run for cover in the street. I saw
the lynching of an Arab citizen by a Jewish mob on live TV. And I
worried for my brother-in-law, who had to leave my sister and their
newborn son at home after he was called into reserve duty.
Here's one from a Jewish Israeli citizen named Eran: My name is Eran
Nissan. I was an intern in Congressman Raskin's office in 2019. I
became a peace activist because of my military service, where I served
as a combat soldier in the Israeli Special Forces. For 4 years, I was
sent to countless missions to all of Israel's borders: Lebanon, Syria,
but mainly the West Bank and Gaza Strip. I experienced combat. I lost
friends and I lost classmates. These past 2 weeks have been the
scariest and most depressing time of my entire life. I spent the last
week monitoring rightwing groups on social media, where terrorist
organizations planned and organized lynchings and riots throughout
Israel. I did this as part of my digital activism, working with former
intelligence officers turned progressive political activists. My
neighborhood in Jaffa used to be a beacon of coexistence and
cooperation between Jews and Arabs. Now it is a war zone. The sounds of
exploding stun grenades from the nearby riots are only disturbed by the
sirens sending everyone into the shelters and stairways.
This is from Marwa, who is a Palestinian on the West Bank: My name is
Marwa Odeh. I am a Palestinian American from Hewara in Area C of the
West Bank. I was an intern in Congressman
[[Page H2637]]
Raskin's office in 2018. This year, a Muslim high holy day became a day
of chaos and despair for my family. On the day of Eid, May 13, my
cousin Yehya, who I used to play soccer with in my grandparents'
backyard, was shot in the eye with a rubber bullet fired by an Israeli
soldier. The rubber bullet tore open his left eyeball, leaving Yehya
blind in one eye. After that military action, my mother and my baby
sister Jena traveled to the hospital and were caught in a barrage of
tear gas and rubber bullets. Jena, who is just 5 years old, explained
to me the horror and fear that she went through: ``I was choking and my
eyes were burning. We were just going to see Yehya. We did nothing,''
she told me in a FaceTime call that night.
Here's one from Lujayn, a Palestinian who lives in East Jerusalem: My
name is Lujayn. I am a Palestinian living in East Jerusalem, in a small
village called Beit Hanina, which is surrounded by settlements. One of
the most basic human rights is to feel safe and secure, but my family
and I cannot feel safe in East Jerusalem. We can't feel safe because
settlers under the protection of Israeli soldiers are chanting ``Death
to Arabs'' and attacking Palestinians in my neighborhood. I can't feel
safe because an Israeli soldier threw a stun grenade at my father as we
walked out of Al-Aqsa Mosque during Ramadan. I can't feel safe walking
to the market and even sitting in my own house. During the past few
days, I have been telling my sisters and parents to turn off the lights
at home so that no one will think we are there. When I traveled to my
university a few days ago to get my diploma, I felt like a walking
target because I was constantly afraid I would be attacked just because
I am a Palestinian.
Here's one from Danni, a Jewish Israeli: My name is Danni, and I am a
Jewish Israeli. I am engaged to an Israeli combat soldier, and we live
in Haifa, which is known as the city of coexistence. In Haifa, I study
and work with Arabs and Jews alike. Last week, our city was hit by a
wave of violence by citizens against citizens. Violent extremists have
roamed the streets, terrorizing people and vandalizing people. Dear
American people, I know that you understand how dangerous it is to stay
silent when you see discrimination, oppression, and violence. It is
simply unsustainable. We need to move past the status quo so that I can
marry my fiance instead of him going to war, only to return to a broken
city.
Here's one from Tasnim, who lives in the Gaza: My name is Tasnim, and
I am a Palestinian from Gaza. My family and I left Gaza during the 2008
war. Unfortunately, when we moved, my sister was separated from her
children and they stayed in Gaza. Today, my two nieces, Iama and Heba,
who are young and dream of traveling the world, still live there in
Gaza. Since the airstrikes have started, we have been calling them
every single day to check to see if they are still alive. We hear of
constant attacks where kids are being buried under the rubble of their
own houses, along with their dreams. We are constantly afraid that the
next time we call them, we will not be able to reach them. The fear and
stress that come with trying to connect with my family in Gaza is
unimaginable.
Mr. Speaker, forgive me, how much time do I have remaining?
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman has 28 minutes remaining.
Mr. RASKIN. This is from Baha, a Palestinian from the West Bank: My
name is Baja Ebdeir, and I am from the occupied village of Beit
Nattiff. Now I live in Beit Jala. This past Ramadan, Israel refused to
issue permits for Palestinians to observe prayers at Al-Aqsa Mosque.
However, my father was one of the few luckiest to be issued a permit
for a medical appointment he had at the hospital in East Jerusalem. It
was not the medical appointment itself that got my father all excited
and happy, but the fact that he could use it to observe the holiest
night of Ramadan, Laylit Al-Qadr, the night of decree, at Al-Aqsa
Mosque, where our destiny is determined by God for the whole year.
Before he left, my father told us, ``After all, I have a permit, what
could happen?''
Actually, a lot happened in the two days my father spent at Al-Aqsa.
As the evening went by, an army of Israeli soldiers began to increase
in number. As soon as the Imam uttered ``Allah Akbar,'' God is the
greatest, to start off the holiest night prayer, Israeli soldiers threw
gas canisters at worshipers. As a result of the excessive amount of gas
my father inhaled, his severe coughing continues until today and his
eyes are as red as blood.
Usually my father never shares his fears with me, but this time he
opened up and I listened with awe. With every cough, my father vividly
remembers Al-Aqsa Mosque as a war zone where Israeli soldiers shot
rubber bullets and threw gas canisters at Palestinians. Hundreds were
injured and many of the elderly lost their lives on the holiest night.
Here is one from Doron, a Jewish Israeli citizen: My name is Doron,
and I am an Israeli who has lived in Jerusalem for the last decade.
Since 2009, I have participated in peaceful protests in the
neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah every week. I was touched to see how
during the recent few months, these protests have gained support and
momentum in Israel, Palestine, and internationally. Suddenly, activists
in the region and around the world demanded justice for the residents
of Sheikh Jarrah, who have been evicted from their homes.
Unfortunately, everything was disrupted by the recent escalation, which
was orchestrated to undermine the local movement in Jerusalem before it
was able to achieve any gains. Jerusalem is the home of Israelis and
Palestinians, and it should be equal, free, and safe for all its
inhabitants. Residents of Sheikh Jarrah should not be afraid to be
evicted from their homes at any moment.
Here is one from Diala, a Palestinian citizen of Israel: My name is
Diala, and I am a Palestinian citizen of Israel from Nazareth. During
the past few weeks, I have protested alongside many Palestinian women
against evictions in the neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah in Jerusalem. I
am a feminist and I strongly believe that the struggle for gender
equality is deeply connected to this struggle. As the police cracked
down on us, a group of peaceful protestors consisting primarily of
women, an Israeli police officer kicked me and pushed me to the ground.
As I lay on the ground, he continued to kick me, aiming at my legs and
ribs. Throughout my life, I have been told repeatedly that I have full
and equal rights as a citizen of Israel. However, this week, I have
witnessed the oppressive brutality at play against me and my people.
Mr. Speaker, we owe these young people a different future. In Israel
and in the West Bank and in Gaza, we owe them a future of peace and
justice and prosperity, where rockets are not raining down on the
people of Israel or the people in the West Bank or the people in Gaza.
We owe them a future where every young person can cultivate his or her
own creative talents and dreams for the future. We owe them a future of
mutual security for all sides and human rights for all people.
Everyone knows that the first casualty of war is the truth. We want
to make sure that the stories that people are living on the ground are
not consumed in any kind of party propaganda.
I urge my colleagues to listen to the voices of young Israelis and
young Palestinians suffering through this brutal cycle of violence and
ethnic conflict and systemic injustice. We owe it to them to call
openly and loudly on Prime Minister Netanyahu and on Hamas to accept an
immediate cease-fire and an end to all violence against civilians. This
is the precondition for moving forward to real peace and respect for
the human rights of all.
I applaud President Biden and his administration's commitment to
ending this violence. I hope that America will, again, with the new
administration, be able to resume a forward-looking and constructive
role in addressing all of the problems that beset the people in Israel
and the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
Mr. Speaker, I thank my friend from Texas for yielding.
Mr. Speaker, this week I met on Zoom with young Israelis and
Palestinians who are part of New Story Leadership, a peacebuilding
group that, since 2009, has brought dozens of Palestinian and Israeli
youth to work as summer interns on Capitol Hill and to share their
stories with Members of Congress. Here are a few of the stories my
former interns and other participants sent me about the horrific events
of the last few weeks:
[[Page H2638]]
Meshi--Jewish Israeli
My name is Meshi, I'm an Israeli American, currently living in Tel-
Aviv. I was born and raised in northern Israel where my early childhood
was spent under rocket fire from Hezbollah, and today, in my late
twenties, I'm under rocket fire from Hamas. In the last week or so I've
taken shelter in my building's old stairway, run for cover in the
street, saw the lynching of an Arab citizen by a Jewish mob on live TV,
and worried for my brother-in-law that had to leave my sister and their
newborn son at home after he was called into reserve duty.
Eran--Jewish Israeli
My name is Eran Nissan. I was an intern in Congressman Jamie Raskin's
office in 2019. I became a peace activist because of my military
service, where I served as a combat soldier in the Israeli special
forces. For four years I was sent to countless missions to all of
Israel's borders--Lebanon, Syria, but mainly the West Bank and the Gaza
strip. I experienced combat, I lost friends and classmates.
These past two weeks have been the scariest and most depressing time
of my life. I spent the last week monitoring Right Wing groups on
social media, where Jewish terrorist organizations planned and
organized lynching and riots throughout Israel. I did this as part of
my digital activism, working with ex-intelligence officers turned
progressive political activists. My neighborhood in Jaffa used to be a
beacon of coexistence and cooperation between Jews and Arabs. Now it is
a war zone. The sounds of exploding stun grenades from the nearby riots
are only disturbed by the sirens, sending everyone to the shelters and
stairways.
Marwa--West Bank Palestinian
My name is Marwa Odeh, I am a Palestinian American from Hewara in
Area C of the West Bank. I was an intern in Congressman Jamie Raskin's
office in 2018.
This year, a Muslim high holy day became a day of chaos and despair
for my family. On the day of Eid, May 13th, my cousin, Yehya, who I
used to play soccer with in my grandparents' backyard, was shot in the
eye with a rubber bullet fired by an Israeli soldier. The rubber bullet
tore open his left eyeball, leaving Yehya blind in one eye. After that
military action, my mother and my baby sister, Jena, traveled to the
hospital and were caught in a barrage of tear gas and rubber bullets.
Jena, who is just 5 years old, explained to me the horror and fear she
went through. ``I was choking and my eyes were burning. We were just
going to see Yehya, we did nothing,'' she told me in a FaceTime call
that night.
Lujayn--Palestinian East-Jerusalemite
My name is Lujayn and I am a Palestinian living in East Jerusalem in
a small village called Beit Hanina, which is surrounded by settlements.
One of the most basic human rights is to feel safe and secure, but my
family and I cannot feel safe in East Jerusalem. We can't feel safe
because settlers under the protection of Israeli soldiers are chanting
``Death to Arabs'' and attacking Palestinians in my neighborhood. I
can't feel safe because an Israeli soldier threw a stun grenade at my
father as we walked out of AI-Aqsa Mosque during Ramadan. I can't feel
safe walking to the market, and even sitting in my own house. During
the past few days, I have been telling my sisters and parents to turn
off the lights at home so that no on will think we are there. When I
traveled to my university a few days ago to get my diploma, I felt like
a walking target because I was constantly afraid that I would be
attacked, just because I am a Palestinian.
Danni--Jewish Israeli
My name is Danni, and I am a Jewish Israeli. I am engaged to an
Israeli combat soldier, and we live in Haifa, which is known as the
city of coexistence. In Haifa, I study and work with Arabs and Jews
alike. Last week our city was hit by a wave of violence by citizens
against citizens. Violent extremists have roamed the streets
terrorizing people and vandalizing property. Dear American people, I
know that you understand how dangerous it is to stay silent when you
see discrimination, oppression, and violence. It is simply
unsustainable. We need to move past the status quo, so that I can marry
my fiance instead of him going to war, only to return to a broken city.
Tasnim--Gazan
My name is Tasnim, and I am a Palestinian from Gaza. My family and I
left Gaza during the 2008 war. Unfortunately, when we moved, my sister
was separated from her children, and they stayed in Gaza. Today, my two
nieces, lama and Heba, who are young and dream of traveling the world,
still live in Gaza. Since the air strikes have started, we have been
calling them every single day to check if they are still alive. We hear
of constant attacks where kids are being buried under the rubble of
their own houses along with their dreams. We are constantly afraid that
the next time we call them, we will not be able to reach them. The fear
and stress that come with trying to connect with my family in Gaza is
unimaginable.
Baha--Palestinian from the West Bank
My name is Baha Ebdeir and I am from the occupied village of Beit
Nattiff, but now I live now in Beit Jala.
This past Ramadan, Israel refused to issue permits for Palestinians
to observe prayers at AI-Aqsa mosque. However, my father was one of the
few luckiest to be issued a permit for a medical appointment he had at
the Hospital in East Jerusalem. It was not the medical appointment
itself that got my father all excited and happy, but the fact that he
could use it to observe the holiest night of Ramadan, Laylit AI-Qadr
(The Night of Decree), at AI-Aqsa mosque, where our destiny is
determined by God for the whole year.
Before he left, my father told us: ``After all, I have a permit, what
could happen?''
Actually, a lot happened in the two days my father spent at AI-Aqsa.
As the evening went by, an army of Israeli soldiers began to increase
in number. As soon as the Imam uttered Allah Akbar (God is the
Greatest) to start off the holiest night prayer, Israeli soldiers
started throwing gas canisters at worshipers. As a result of the
excessive amount of gas my father inhaled, his severe coughing
continues until today and his eyes are as red as blood.
Usually, my father never shares his fears with me, but this time he
opened up and I listened with awe. With every cough, my father vividly
remembers AI-Aqsa mosque as a war zone where Israeli soldiers
unapologetically shot rubber bullets and threw gas canisters at
Palestinians for merely being Palestinians. Hundreds were injured and
many of the elderly lost their lives on the holiest night.
Doron--Jewish Israeli
My name is Doron and I am an Israeli, who has lived in Jerusalem for
the last decade. Since 2009, I have participated in peaceful protests
in the neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah every week. I was touched to see
how during the recent few months, these protests have gained support
and momentum in Israel, Palestine and internationally. Suddenly,
activists in the region and around the world demanded justice for the
Palestinian residents of Sheikh Jarrah, who have been evicted from
their homes by Jewish Settlers. Unfortunately, everything was disrupted
by the recent escalation, which was orchestrated to undermine the local
movement in Jerusalem, before it was able to achieve any gains.
Jerusalem is the home of Israelis and Palestinians and it should be
equal, free and safe for all its inhabitants. Residents of Sheikh
Jarrah should not be afraid to be evicted of their homes at any moment.
Moe--Palestinian from the West Bank
My name is Moe and I am a Palestinian from the West Bank, I interned
with Congressman Jamie Raskin in 2019.
Seven months ago I got married. This year, my wife and I celebrated
our first Ramadan together. We were so excited to celebrate it together
with both our families, but her family was unable to travel to see us,
because all the roads had been closed and settlers have been patrolling
the streets between the cities ready to attack Palestinian travelers.
We can't see our family and we can't travel anywhere.
I have heard about the danger that awaits us if we travel outside of
our village and I am terrified. I am worried for the safety of my three
brothers and father, who have jobs that require them to travel to
Israel. Now, they are stuck at home, unable to travel because they have
been warned that if they try to cross the border between the West Bank
and Israel, their lives would be in danger.
DIALA--PALESTINIAN CITIZEN OF ISRAEL
My name is Diala, and I am a Palestinian citizen of Israel from
Nazareth.
During the past few weeks, I have protested alongside many
Palestinian women against evictions in the neighbourhood of Sheikh
Jarrah in Jeruslaem. I am a feminist and I strongly believe that the
struggle for gender equality is deeply connected to this struggle.
As the police cracked down on us, a group of peaceful protestors
consisting primarily of women, lsraeli supremacy translated into direct
violence against Palestinian women. An Israeli Police officer kicked me
and pushed me to the ground. As I lay on the ground, he continued to
kick me aiming at my legs and ribs.
Throughout my life, I have been told repeatedly that I have full and
equal rights as a citizen of Israel. However, this week I've witnessed
the oppressive sexist and racist police brutality at play against me
and my people.
Mr. Speaker, everyone knows that the first casualty of war is the
truth. The facts of people's lives are consumed in propaganda. I urge
my colleagues to listen to the voices of young Israelis and
Palestinians suffering through this brutal violence, ethnic conflict
and systemic injustice. We owe it to them to call openly and loudly on
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and on Hamas to accept an immediate
ceasefire and an end to all violence. This
[[Page H2639]]
is the precondition for moving forward to real peace and respect for
the human rights of all.
Mr. GREEN of Texas. I thank the gentleman for his sage recitation. I
did listen, and I am grateful that the gentleman has seen the need to
be a friend to persons who are clearly in harm's way.
Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
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