Monday 29 April 2013

Who we are

As intellectuals, academics, activists, artists, concerned citizens, and social movements we stand in solidarity with the Syrian revolution and people's struggle against dictatorship. 

Join us on Facebook.

Solidarity With the Syrian Struggle for Dignity and Freedom

We, the undersigned, stand in solidarity with the millions of Syrians who have been struggling for dignity and freedom since March 2011. We call on people of the world to pressure the Syrian regime to end its oppression of and war on the Syrian people. We demand that Bashar al-Assad leave immediately without excuses so that Syria can begin a speedy recovery towards a democratic future.

Since March 2011, Assad’s regime has steadily escalated its violence against the Syrian people, launching Scud missiles, using weapons banned by the Geneva Convention such as cluster bombs and incendiary munitions, and using aerial bombardment. The regime has detained and tortured tens of thousands of people and committed untold massacres.

It has refused political settlements that do not include Assad in power, and it has polarized the society through strategic acts of violence and by sowing seeds of division.  The regime has also, since the early days of the uprising, sought to internationalize the crisis in order to place it within geopolitical battles that would only strengthen the regime.

Staying true to the logics of an authoritarian regime, Assad could never accept the legitimate demands of the Syrian people for freedom and dignity. Thus, there is no hope for a free, unified, and independent Syria so long as his regime remains in power.

This is a revolt that was sparked by the children of Deraa and the sit-ins and demonstrations of the youth in the cities, the peasants of the rural areas, and the dispossessed and marginalized of Syria. It is they who rallied non-violently through protests and songs and chants, before the regime’s brutal crackdown.

Since then, the regime has pushed for the militarization of the Syrian nonviolent movement. As a result, young men took up arms, first out of self-defense. Lately, this has resulted in attempts by some groups fighting the regime to force a climate of polarization, and negation of the Other politically, socially and culturally. These acts that are in themselves against the revolution for freedom and dignity.

Yet, the revolution for freedom and dignity remains steadfast.  It is for this reason that we, the undersigned, appeal to those of you in the global civil society, not to ineffective and manipulative governments, to defend the gains of the Syrian revolutionaries, and to spread our vision: freedom from authoritarianism and support of Syrians’ revolution as an integral part of the struggles for freedom and dignity in the region and around the world.

The fight in Syria is an extension of the fight for freedom regionally and worldwide.  It cannot be divorced from the struggles of the Bahrainis, Egyptians, Tunisians, Libyans, Yemenis, and other peoples who have revolted against oppression and authoritarianism as well as against those seeking to usurp or destroy the uprisings and divert them for their own agendas. It is connected to the Palestinians’ struggle for freedom, dignity and equality.

The revolution in Syria is a fundamental part of the North African revolutions, yet, it is also an extension of the Zapatista revolt in Mexico, the landless movement in Brazil, the European and North American revolts against neoliberal exploitation, and an echo of Iranian, Russian, and Chinese movements for freedom.

The Syrian revolution has confronted a world upside down, one where states that were allegedly friends of the Arabs such as Russia, China, and Iran have stood in support of the slaughter of people, while states that never supported democracy or independence, especially the US and their Gulf allies, have intervened in support of the revolutionaries. They have done so with clear cynical self interest. In fact, their intervention tried to crush and subvert the uprising, while selling illusions and deceptive lies.

Given that regional and world powers have left the Syrian people alone, we ask you to lend your support to those Syrians still fighting for justice, dignity, and freedom, and who have withstood the deafening sounds of the battle, as well as rejected the illusions sold by the enemies of freedom.

As intellectuals, academics, activists, artists, concerned citizens, and social movements we stand in solidarity with the Syrian people to emphasize the revolutionary dimension of their struggle and to prevent the geopolitical battles and proxy wars taking place in their country. We ask you to lend your support to all Syrians from all backgrounds asking for a peaceful transition of power, one where all Syrians can have a voice and decide their own fate.

We also reject all attempts of any group to monopolize power, and to impose its own agenda, or to impose unitary or homogenous identities on the Syrian people. We ask you to support those people and organizations on the ground that still uphold the ideals for a free and democratic Syria.

Sign our petition here

Our Facebook page

The global day of solidarity

Signatories
Aaron Winslow, (Columbia University, United States)
Abdellatif Zeroual, (Left activist, Morocco)
Abdeslam Cherkouk, (Journalist, Morocco)
Abir Saksook, (Architect and activist, Lebanon)
Adam Hanieh (SOAS University of London, United Kingdom)
Adam Shapiro (Activist, United States)
Aida Seif Ell Dawla, (Human Rights Activist, Egypt)
Akram Zaatari, (Artist, Lebanon)
Alex Todorova (University of Columbia, United States/Bulgaria)
Ali Amin Suwaid, (Writer, Syria)
Ali Atassi, (Journalist, Syria)
Alice Walker, (Writer, United States)
Amahl Bishara, (Tufts University, United States)
Amr Al-Azm, (Shawnee State University, Activist and board member of The Day After NGO, Syria)
Amr Saeddeine, (Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium/ Palestine)
Amy Ansell, (Emerson College, United States)
Ania Loomba, (University of Pennsylvania, United States)
Ann Ferguson (University of Massachusetts, United States)
Anne Meneley, (Trent University, Canada)
Anthony Arnove, (Author, Iraq: The Logic of Withdrawal, United States)
Arturo Escobar, (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, United States/Colombia)
Asef Bayat (University of Illinois, United States)
Ashok Chowdhury, (India)
Aziza Chaouni, (University of Toronto, Canada/Morocco)
Bassem Chit, (Socialist Forum, Lebanon)
Bernadette Daou, (leftist militant, Lebanon)
Bernardine Dohrn (Northwestern University, United States)
Bill Ayers (University of Illinois at Chicago, United States)
Bill Weinberg, (Journalist and author, United States)
Brian Slocock, (University of Paisley, Scotland)
Budour Hassan, (Author, Palestine)
Cara Moyer, (Emerson College, United States)
Caitlin Ella Wind, (Writer, United States)
Chandan Redd, (University of Washington, United States)
Chandler Davis, (University of Toronto, Canada)
Chandra Talpade Mohanty, (Feminist Scholar-Activist, India/United States)
Charles Hirschkind, (UC Berkeley, United States)
Chela Sandoval (University of California, Santa Barbara)
Claudia Castañeda, (Emerson College, United States)
David Byrne, McDonald III, (Photographer and activist, United States)
David McNally (York University, Canada)
Dean Spade, (Seattle University Law, United States)
Deepa Kumar (Rutgers University, United States)
Diana Coryat,  (University of Massachusetts, United States)
Dyala Hamzah, (Université de Montréal, Canada)
Elena Yehia, (University of North Carolina, United States/ Lebanon)
Elias Khoury, (Writer, Lebanon)
Elliott Colla, (Georgetown University, United States)
Elsa Wiehe, (University of Massachusetts, United States/ Mauritius)
Erika Marquez, (Bryn Mawr College, United States/Colombia)
Etienne Balibar (Columbia University, United States/ France)
Faraj Bayrakdar (Poet, Syria)
Farouk Mardam Bey (Intellectual, Syria)
Fawaz Traboulsi, (Writer, Lebanon)
Felicia Pratto, (University of Connecticut, United States)
Francois Burgat (CNRS, France)
Fredric Jameson (Duke University, United States)
Gail Daneker, (Director of Peace Education and Advocacy, Friends for a NonViolent World –St. Paul, United States)
Gerry Emmett, (Resident Editorial Board, News and Letters Committees, Chicago, United States)
Ghassan Hage  (University of Melbourne, Australia/ Lebanon)
Ghassan Makarem, (Socialist Forum, Lebanon)
Ghayath Naisse, (Surgeon, Left Revolutionary Current, Syria)
Gilbert Achcar (SOAS, University of London, Lebanon/ United Kingdom)
Golbarg Bashi, (Rutgers University, United States/Iran)
Gustavo Esteva, (Universidad de la Tierra-Oaxaca, Mexico)
Hamid Dabashi, (Columbia University, United States/ Iran)
Hani al-Sayed (American University in Cairo, Syria/ Egypt)
Haroldo Dilla Alfonso, (Sociologist, Cuba/Dominican Republic)
Hazem al-Azmeh (Intellectual, Syria)
Ibrahim Al-Assil, (Syrian Non-Violent Movement, Syria)
Ibrahim Jalal, (Artist, Syria)
Ilan Pappe (University of Exeter, United Kingdom)
Isabelle Momméja, (Activist, France)
James Cohen, (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle Paris 3, France/ United States)
James L. Gelvin, (UCLA, United States)
Jamie Allinson, (University of Westminster. UCU member, United Kingdom)
Jean-Philippe Schreiber, (Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium)
Jean-Pierre Filiu (Institut d'études politiques de Paris, France)
Jed Murr, (University of Washington, United States)
Jeff Napolitano, (Activist, United States)
Jens Hanssen ( University of Tornoto, Canada/ Germany)
Jihad Yazigi (Journalist, Syria)
Jihane Sfeir (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Lebanon/ Belgium)
Jillian Schwedler, (University of Massachusetts Amherst, United States)
Joanne Landy, (Co-Director, Campaign for Peace and Democracy, United States)
Joe Vasicek, (Science Fiction & Fantasy Writer, United States)
John Chalcraft, (London School of Economics, United Kingdom)
John Holloway (Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, United States/ Mexico)
John O’Brien, (Los Angeles California, Stonewall Rebellion Participant, United States)
Joseph Daher, (University of Lausanne, Syria/ Switzerland)
Karmen Abou Jaoudeh, (Legal activist, Lebanon)
Khaled Khalifa, (Novelist, Syria)
Khaled saghieh, (Journalist, Lebanon)
Khawla Dunia, (Activist, Syria)
Kirsten scheid, (American University of Beirut, Lebanon)
Kmar Bandana (Université de La Manouba, Tunisia)
Konstantin Kilibarda (York University, Mississauga territories)
Laleh Khalili, (SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom)
Lawrence Grossberg, (University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, United States)
Leyla Dakhli, (Researcher, CNRS, France)
Lieven de Cuater (Katholic Univerity of Leuven/RIT, Belgium)
Lilia Marsali, (Teacher, United Kingdom)
Linda Quiquivix, (Brown University, United States / Guatemala)
Lindsey Collen, (left activist and novelist, Mauritius)
Loulouwa Al Rachid, (Journalist, Saudi Arabia)
Manijeh Nasrabadi, (New York University, United States/ Iran)
Manuel Barrera, (Metropolitan State University, United States)
Manuel Castells, (University Professor of Communication, University of Southern California)
Marc Saint-Upéry, (Journalist and translator, France/Ecuador)
Maria Koundoura (Emerson College, United States/ Greece)
Marisol de la Cadena, (UC Davis, United States/ Peru)
Marnia Lazreg, sociologist, USA/Algeria
Mary Nyquist, University of Toronto, Canada
Max D. Weiss, (Princeton University, United States)
Mayssun Succarie, (American University in Cairo, Egypt/ Lebanon)
Mehdi Meftah, (Militant, France)
Mélanie Cambrezy, (Université de Montréal, Canada)
Mercedes Olivera B., (Antropóloga Feminista, UNICACH, México.)
Michael Cisco, (writer and teacher, United States)
Michael Lowy,  (Social scientist, France)
Mirta Tocci, (Emerson College, United States)
Mohamad Ali Attassi, (Writer, Syria/ Lebanon)
Mohamad Al Bardan, (Syrian Non Violent Movement, United States/ Syria)
Mohammad Moeini, (University of Massachusetts, United States/ Iran)
Mohammed Bamyeh, (University of Pittsburgh, United States)
Mona Abaza, (American University in Cairo, Egypt)
Muhammad Ali Khalidi, (York University, Canada)
Nadia Fadil, (KU Leuven, Belgium)
Nadine Bekdache, (Designer/ Activist, Lebanon)
Nadje Al-Ali, (SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom)
Nasser Rabbat, (MIT, United States/Syria)
Natalie Zemon Davis, (University of Toronto, Canada)
Nidal Al-Azraq, (United States/ Palestine)
Nigel Gibson (Emerson college, United States/ Britain)
Nimer Sultany, (SUNY Buffalo Law School, United States/Palestine)
Noa Shaindlinger, (University of Toronto, Canada/Palestine)
Norman Finkelstein (American researcher and writer, United Sates)
Olivier Le Cour Grandmaison (Scholar, France)
Omar Dahi, (Hampshire College, Syria/ United States)
Omar Dewachi, (American University of Beirut, Iraq/Canada)
Omnia El Shakry, (UC Davis, United States)
Oussama Mohamad (Film maker, Syria/ France)
Ozlem Goner, (CUNY, Turkey/ United States)
Pablo Stefanoni, (Chief editor, Nueva Sociedad, Argentina)
Paul Kingston, (University of Toronto, Canada)
Pierre Tevanian, (Writer, activist, France)
R. Radhakrishnan (UC Irvine, United States/ India)
Rabha Attaf, (Reporter, France)
Raed Firas, (Activist, Syria)
Raed Khartabil, (Activist, Syria)
Rashid Khalidi (Columbia University, United States/Palestine)
Razan Ghazzawi, (Activist, Syria)
Richard Seymour, (Writer, London School of Economics, International Socialists Network, United Kingdom)
Rime Allaf, (Writer and adviser, Syria)
Robert Young, (New York University, United States)
Robin Yassin-Kassab, (novelist and commentator, Syria/ United Kingdom)
Rola Rukbi, (Syria)
Ruba Alkhouli, (Activist, Spain)
Saad Hajo (Cartoonist, Syria)
Saba Mahmood (UC Berkeley, United States)
Sabah Hallak, (Lebanon)
Sadiq Jalal Azem, (Writer, Syria)
Sadri Khiari (Writer, Tunisia)
Salah Mosbah, (University of Tunis, Tunisia)
Salam Kawakibi, (Arab Reform Initiative, Syria)
Salam Said (Economist/Germany)
Salameh Kaileh (Intellectual, Syria/Palestine)
Salim Vally, (University of Johannesburg, South Africa)
Sami Hermez, (University of Pittsburg, United States/ Lebanon)
Samir Aita (Le Monde Diplomatique editions arabes, Cercle des Economistes Arabes)
Samuel Binkley, (Emerson College, United States)
Santiago de Rico Alba (Philosopher, Spain)
Sarah Bracke, (KU Leuven, Belgium)
Sarah Eltantawi, (Scholar of religion and writer, United States)
Sari Hanafi, (American University of Beirut, Lebanon/ Palestine)
Seda Altug, (Bogazici University, Turkey)
Sherifa Zuhur, (historian, Director, Institute of Middle Eastern, Islamic and Strategic Studies, United Kingdom)
Sherry Wolf, (Author of Sexuality and Socialism, United States)
Simon Assaf, (Activist, United Kingdom/ Lebanon)
Sinan Antoon, (New York University, Iraq/ United States)
Sirisha Naidu, (Wright State University, India/ United States)
Sonja Mejcher-Atassi, (America University of Beirut, Lebanon)
Srinivas Lankala, (University of Massachusetts, India/United States)
Stephen R. Shalom, (William Paterson University, United States)
Steve Graham, (Newcastle University, United Kingdom)
Steven Friedman, (University of Johannesburg, South Africa)
Suad Joseph, (University of California, Davis, United States/ Lebanon)
Swati Birla, (University of Massachusetts, India/ United States)
Sylvie Tissot (University of Paris-8, France)
Talal Asad (CUNY, United States)
Tamera Marko, (Emerson College, United States)
Tariq Ali (Writer, journalist, and filmmaker, United Kingdom/ Pakistan)
Tewfik Allal, (Activist, Manifeste des libertés, France)
Thaer Alsahli (Activist, Syria/Palestine)
Thierry Boissière (Institut français du Proche-Orient, France)
Thomas Harrison, (Co-Director, Campaign for Peace and Democracy, United States)
Thomas Markus Kvilhaug, (International Socialist branch, Norway)
Tiffany Kreierhoff, (writer, United States)
Toufic Haddad, (author, SOAS, United Kingdom)
Vijay Prashad (Trinity College, United States/ India)
Walid Daaw, (Teacher, The left forum)
Walter Mignolo, (Duke University, United States/ Argentina)
Wendy Brown (UC Berkeley, United States)
William E. Connolly, (Johns Hopkins University, United States)
Yahya Madra, (Bogaziçi University, Turkey)
Yasmine Farouk, (Faculty of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University)
Yasser Munif, (Emerson College, Syria/ United States)
Yassin el-Haj Saleh (Intellectual, Syria)
Yazan Louai Al-Saadi, (Journalist, Al-Akhbar English, Lebanon)
Youssef Fakhr el-Din, (Journalist, Syria/ Palestine)
Yusef Khalil, (Activist, United States/Lebanon)
Yveline, Delacroix, (Activist, France)
Zaïneb Ben Lagha, (Université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle, France)
Zeinab Abul-Magd (Oberlin College, United States/ Egypt)
Zena Hallak, (Tunisia)
Zeynep Inanc, (United States)
Ziad Majed (American University of Paris, Lebanon/ France)


To add your name please email: syriasolidarity2013@gmail.com

5 comments:

  1. my email to Ilan Pappe, Norman Ftnkelstein and John Holliway on 08.05.2013

    to this publication:
    Solidarity With the Syrian Struggle for Dignity and Freedom
    www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article28370

    dear friends,

    Solidarity With the Syrian Struggle for Dignity and Freedom. yes. absolutly. but how? together with the criminals in Israel? or USA? or Europe? or arabic dictatorships?

    you think, this can be the way to freedom, selforganizing of her life in her own life environment? together with criminals, morders, killers from outside of Syria? fighting for money like any other mercenaries in the history.

    the independence is always the first prerequisite for free choice.

    why you signed this text?

    many greetings, willi uebelherr, germany
    today mérida/venezuela


    the very intelligent answer from Norman Finkelstein on 08.05.2013

    What is wrong with the text?


    my answer to Norman Finkelstein and the others on 10.05.2013

    dear Norman,
    dear Ilan and John and all readers,

    you ask? and why you don't answer to my questions before?

    everything is explained in the first paragraph.

    "We, the undersigned, stand in solidarity with the millions of Syrians who have been struggling for dignity and freedom since March 2011. We call on people of the world to pressure the Syrian regime to end its oppression of and war on the Syrian people. We demand that Bashar al-Asad leave immediately without excuses so that Syria can begin a speedy recovery towards a democratic future."

    and you and your friends think, that Syria have a future without Bashar al-Asad? are you really that naive?

    we know, in all of the world we have to fight against the imperialism, against the international plunder of countries by a few players. you know, that this war is against Iran, is for the security of Israel, is to destroy the local selforganisation. Israel as a frontstation for the capitalist and imperialist conquerors in south-west asia. for that, the zionists works.

    if you believe, what you write, if Ilan Pappe believe, what he write, if John Holloway believe, what he write, then never you can support the criminal regimes in Israel, USA, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Germany, France, England and all his slaves. this regimes are the enemy of the Syrian Liberation Movement. for real Liberation and not just a masquerade.

    this regimes want to create a propaganda for a freedom that is not and will not to be. you can take a look in their countries, then you know, what goals they have. the complete subordination of the world under their capital interests.

    many greetings, willi uebelherr
    mérida/venezuela

    and now? nothing!

    but i think, its time, to speak about sectarianism, what you create and organize. Gilad Atzmon give his comment the title:
    "In the Bed with Bibi".

    yes, i think, this is the correct term for your action. the base of the conflicts in south-west asia is the frontstation of the zionists in palestine to destroy the selforganization of the people, destroy her liveenvironment as actors for the european and north-american capitalist groups as colonizers. and this is independent, that the zionists now are more and more independently.

    the zionists come for landgrab. this have nothing to do with jewish culture.

    and now we see the main connection Europe, Northamerica, Saudi-Arabia, Quatar and Turkey. like in Lybia. to destroy and occupate this lands more and more like paletine.

    and what you do in this situation? you support this action, because you destroy the unity in Syria with the people in Iran and Russia against this imperialistic actions. this is the reason, why i declare you and you all as sectarians in the service of Israel.

    willi uebelherr, willi.uebelherr@gmail.com
    Mérida/Venezuela

    ReplyDelete
  2. At this stage, I do not see how anyone can deny that any indigenous Syrian "revolution" has been hijacked by the overwhelming power of American, Saudi, and Israeli reaction. The jihadis are tools of this, as they have been since Afghanistan. The object to destroy the independent Syrian state, not to create some kind of new democratic republic. It is to leave the remnant o Syria open to at-will Israeli attacks, and remove it from any resistance to Israeli aggression against Palestinians or Iran. The jihadis are tools of this, because NATO/GCC/Israel really think the chaos they cause works in their interest, and is controllable by them. This Israelis have set up field hospitals to patch them up, and send them back into battle!

    I've made this argument in a number of posts on my blog. beginning last August, with Too Many Cooks: The Syrian Demise, and continuing with As Syria Devolves, Israel Rampages, God Is On Their Side, and The Road to Syria.

    ReplyDelete
  3. dear thepolemicist,
    excuse my bad english. you say here the truth. the jihadis are only tools, instruments, and their working rest on the capitalistic centers.
    in all phase of our history we can see the same. all in the world. legioms of mercenaries destroyed the world. and the center of this was europe and the christian war ideology. and also the zionism is a european ideology for landgrabbing in palestine, is a colonisation project.
    and the only real stable pol in this part of asia against this work of destroying is Iran.
    many greetings, willi
    mérida/venezuela

    ReplyDelete
  4. dear friends,

    if we want to working for the freedom for the people in and outside of Syria we have to disolve Israel.
    this only give us the spaece for free liveorganisation in south-west asia and all of the world..

    willi uebelherr, Mérida/Venezuela
    wube@gmx.net
    willi.uebelherr@gmail.com

    REDES Comunales Merida
    www.redescomunalesmerida.wordpress.com
    redescomunalesmerida@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  5. This is an organization that is part of US, EU, (OTAN) Turquey, Israel, Saudi Arabia and few others who want to destroy Sirian in the same way they did with Irak, Libia; this is a plan to write a new map in the medle east, where everything is controled for the countries I mention early. You all people, are part of the destruction that is taking place in Siria, you all people support the killings of the Sirian People. Please go deep in History because you are in the wrong side, you all people are against the Sirian people, not in favour; they want to control Siria, then Libano and then Iran. Please, not more wars. You people, do not want democracy for Siria, the kind of democracy you want is the kind of Irak, Libia, where the destruction and killins of thousands of civillians took place. How you people get this wrong, the Us and his allies don't care about the sirian people, they care about the control of the country in favour of Israel and their geopolitical game in this part of the world.

    ReplyDelete