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Gaza Children’s Images of War Censored Under Pressure from US Israel Lobby
Pro-Israel organizations pressured an Oakland children’s museum to cancel an upcoming exhibition of drawings made by Palestinian children in the Gaza Strip. Community leaders say the shutting down of the exhibition is the result of a disturbing — and well-funded — campaign to silence Palestinian voices across the US.
A Bay Area children’s museum shut down a planned exhibition of Gaza children’s drawings. ( Middle East Children’s Alliance )
On 8 September, just two weeks before the exhibition was set to open to the public, the board of directors of the Museum of Children’s Art (MOCHA) announced that they had canceled “A Child’s View of Gaza.” The board shut down the show due to pressure from “constituents,” according to a statement made by Randolph Bell, the board’s chairman, in the San Francisco Chronicle (“Oakland museum cancels Palestinian kids’ war art,” 9 September 2011).
The show was curated in partnership with the Berkeley-based non-profit group Middle East Children’s Alliance (MECA), which has been working for 23 years to advocate for Palestinian, Iraqi and Lebanese children’s rights. Barbara Lubin, MECA’s executive director, told The Electronic Intifada that it was “upsetting and infuriating” that the show was canceled, but she wasn’t surprised.
“Anybody who knows this issue knows that the Jewish Federations of North America and the Jewish Council for Public Affairs have launched a multi-million dollar project to combat what they call the ‘delegitmization’ of Israel,” Lubin said. “They try and suffocate the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement and censor Palestinian cultural initiatives. What they’re doing is financing the work of silencing and shutting down anyone who wants to talk about what’s really happening to Palestinians.”
The Chronicle also reported that the board of directors at MOCHA vaguely cited the “inappropriate nature” of the content of the children’s drawings in their decision to shut down the exhibit. Some of the Palestinian children’s illustrations show tanks, guns and explosions, but the board’s assertion that these images are “inappropriate” enough to censor is clearly selective.
In years past, MOCHA had successfully exhibited strikingly similar artwork by children in Iraq who drew from their personal experiences of war following the 2003 US-led invasion and subsequent occupation. Another exhibition several years ago showed artwork by children made during the Second World War that “featured images of Hitler, burning airplanes, sinking battleships, empty houses and a sad girl next to a Star of David,” the Chronicle added.
Lubin said that the difference in this context is simple: “The pro-Israel groups are afraid that people will start understanding what’s really going on with Israeli policy through seeing exhibits like the one we put together. They don’t want people to know that Palestinian children are suffering. They’re afraid of us hearing that other side. For 63 years we’ve heard one side in this country and around the world, and it’s time for the other side to be heard.”
Stretching Israel’s siege from Gaza to Oakland
The censored drawings were created through local children’s mental health initiatives in Gaza immediately following Israel’s attacks in the winter of 2008-09, during which approximately 1,400 Palestinians, including more than 300 children, were killed.
Ziad Abbas, associate director of MECA, told The Electronic Intifada that several art-based organizations in the Gaza Strip began working with traumatized children in an effort to help them channel their fears, anger and trauma through artistic expression. Those drawings resulted in the collection of artwork that was to be showcased at the children’s museum.
“The art projects were born out of a necessity to try to reduce the impact and effects of the attacks which killed hundreds of children in Gaza. These drawings came from that kind of therapy to express their feelings,” he said.
Abbas added that the child artists were thrilled that their work had “broken Israel’s siege on Gaza” when the drawings made their way to a museum halfway across the world.
“It was important for these children to know that their voices were going to be heard in Oakland. However, they didn’t expect the siege to stretch all the way from Gaza to California, which is essentially what happened when MOCHA canceled the exhibit due to pressure from these groups,” Abbas said.
Major donors: “Funding was not jeopardized”
Upon investigation, it emerged that those “constituents” who got the ear of MOCHA’s board chair included pro-Israel public relations institutions with extraordinarily large budgets and organized community outreach programs. In the Bay Area, these organizations include the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC), a subsidiary branch of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA); and the local chapter of the Jewish Community Federation (JCF), which operates under the umbrella of the Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA).
The JCRC and the JCF both receive substantial funding from the Walter & Elise Haas Fund, which has also funded MOCHA.
The fund, based in San Francisco, is a major donor to arts, science, social justice and Jewish organizations around the Bay Area across the political and cultural spectrum. MOCHA received $30,000 in grants from the Haas fund in 2011 (Recent grantmaking: The Arts,” Walter & Elise Haas Fund website, accessed 9 September 2011).
However, a program coordinator with the Walter & Elise Haas Fund told The Electronic Intifada that their staff had talked to the museum about possible public concern with the exhibit, but that the art show “was their decision and their funding was not in any way jeopardized with their doing it.”
Pam David, the executive director of the Haas Fund, declined to comment for this article.
John Patchner, communications director for the East Bay Community Foundation — which has awarded tens of thousands of dollars in grants to MOCHA over the years — told The Electronic Intifada that they had “not been contacted by anyone in connection with the cancellation of the exhibit and we’re currently seeking additional information from the Museum of Children’s Art.”
But there are many other foundations that support MOCHA. And in August at least one pro-Israel online campaign encouraged the general public to directly contact MOCHA funders, and published a list of various foundations, in a bid to cancel the children’s art exhibition.
“No fight is too small” for pro-Israel groups
Whether or not MOCHA’s funders were directly intimidated by pro-Israel groups in the Bay Area, it’s certain that top leadership from groups such as the JCRC had a hand in shutting the exhibit down. The JCRC has repeatedly thwarted art and cultural initiatives in the Bay Area which highlight the Palestinian struggle, and has used the guise of “fighting anti-Semitism” to censor alternative voices.
At San Francisco State University in 2006, a proposed mural in honor of the late Palestinian-American intellectual Edward Said was attacked by the JCRC, which helped convince the university administration that the mural sent a “chilling” and threatening message to Jewish students and therefore should be blocked (“SFSU president keeping Jews safe with mural censure,” Jewish Weekly, 6 October 2006).
In 2007, the JCRC also worked hand-in-hand with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), one of the largest and most influential Israel lobby organizations in the US, to force the San Francisco Arts Commission to exert pressure on a local grantee of theirs, an organization for at-risk youth in San Francisco. A mural, planned and painted by Homies Organizing the Mission to Empower Youth (HOMEY), depicted symbols of Palestinian struggle and resistance, including a Palestinian woman with a kuffiyeh (the traditional checkered headscarf) and a crack in the wall that resembled historic Palestine.
The JCRC and the ADL put pressure on the Arts Commission to make the artists omit or modify some of the images after claiming that the symbols were anti-Semitic and “out of touch with the overwhelming majority of Jews,” as reported in the San Francisco Examiner (“Controversial mural to be altered in S.F.,” 20 September 2007).
The two organizations also worked together to stifle free speech on college campuses in the Bay Area, censoring academic lectures by attempting to conflate criticism of Israeli policy with anti-Semitism. Other pro-Israel groups, backed by the ADL, have pressured faculty boards to deny tenure to university professors who openly criticize Israeli policies.
Following MOCHA’s cancellation of the exhibit, Rabbi Doug Kahn, executive director of the JCRC, admitted to the online blog Muzzlewatch (a project of Jewish Voice for Peace) that he was “working closely with the Jewish Federation of the East Bay [which is part of the JFNA]” and “shared with the leadership of MOCHA our concerns about the inappropriateness of this exhibit given the fact that MOCHA — an important and valued community institution — serves very young children” (“Oakland children’s museum cancels Palestinian children’s art exhibit under pressure from local Jewish groups,” 10 September 2011).
Rabbi Kahn refused to respond directly to The Electronic Intifada’s questions via phone, but emailed a statement from the JCRC on 12 September. Entitled “Jewish Community Applauds Children’s Art Museum’s Decision on Exhibit,” it alleges that the art show “contains violent images that dehumanize an entire ethnic and religious population.”
The JCRC adds that MOCHA’s leadership “recognized the negative effect that this inflammatory exhibit would have on young children, Jewish and non-Jewish alike,” adding that the drawings could “potentially create an unsafe atmosphere for Jewish children.”
However, nowhere in the children’s drawings are there anti-Semitic images or phrases. The only Stars of David that are drawn are the ones that Israel itself has put on its flags, F16 bomber jets, tanks and soldiers’ uniforms — ubiquitous Israeli national symbols that any Palestinian child living under Israeli military occupation would see on a daily basis, especially during times of wanton attacks.
The cancelation of the children’s exhibition was celebrated as a victory by pro-Israel groups. On 7 September, the day before MECA was informed by the museum’s board of directors that the exhibit had been canceled, the Jewish Federation of the East Bay (JFEB) had already received information that the show was shut down — and boasted about the cancellation of the exhibit on its official twitter account.
JFEB (@JFEDeastbay) tweeted: “Great news! The ‘Child’s view from Gaza’ exhibit at MOCHA has been canceled thanks to some great East Bay Jewish community organizing.”
Pro-Israel groups to “pressure civic leaders” in new $6M initiative
The timing of Kahn’s determination to pressure the MOCHA board is significant. Just eleven months ago, the JFNA pledged to invest $6 million in a new, three-year initiative they call the “Israel Action Network.”
Working alongside the JCPA — of which the JCRC, Kahn’s organization, is a subsidiary — the Israel Action Network “is expected to serve as a rapid-response team charged with countering the growing campaign to isolate Israel as a rogue state akin to apartheid-era South Africa — a campaign that the Israeli government and Jewish groups see as an existential threat to the Jewish state … The network will monitor the delegitimization movement worldwide and create a strategic plan to counter it wherever it crops up” (“Federations, JCPA teaming to fight delegitimization of Israel,” Jewish Telegraphic Agency, 25 October 2010).
The JFNA stated that this new campaign would seek to influence “civic leaders,” and said that it would be fully staffed and “up and running” by 1 January 2011.
According to their recent tax forms, the JFNA’s investment of $6 million in this new campaign should not be a financial burden — they listed more than $197 million in total assets between June 2009 and June 2010 (Return of organization exempt from income tax, 2009, 2009-2010 [PDF]).
The fact that these enormous, well-funded Israeli advocacy organizations have turned their attention to a singular, modest children’s art exhibition in Oakland highlights the Israeli lobbies’ tireless efforts to silence Palestinian expression. Deborah Agre of MECA agreed, saying that “no fight is too small” for these groups.
MECA’s Barbara Lubin added that the attack on this children’s art show is just one in a long line of such campaigns.
“But this is particularly saddening to me because these are voices of children,” Lubin said. “And as I said to the head of the board of directors at the museum, MECA loses, MOCHA loses, but more importantly, the children from Gaza lose the most. They’ve always been the ones to lose the most. Not only do they have to live through these bombings and the siege, but then when they try to express their experiences through art, they’re shut down.”
The child artists in Gaza are upset that their work has been censored, according to MECA staff. (Middle East Children’s Alliance)
“There’s only one winner in all of this,” Lubin added, “And that is the Zionist lobby who intimidate, harass and do everything they can to make it impossible for people to have these kinds of exhibits.”
MOCHA’s board of directors: supporting all children, or just some?
According to its tax documents, accessed from public records, it is clear that MOCHA is a grassroots organization highly dependent on funding from outside grants and foundations. MOCHA listed just over $700,000 in contributions and grants in 2009 — whereas salaries and employee benefits accounted for approximately double that amount. Their fee-based children’s art programs bring in additional revenue of just under $1 million for that year.
If pro-Israel lobbyists indeed placed threatening calls to foundations that support MOCHA, it is understandable that they could feel frightened by the potential loss of money for the next fiscal year and would therefore bend to pressure by these outside groups. But MOCHA may have violated its own mission statement in doing so. On its tax forms, MOCHA states its mission is “to ensure that the arts are a fundamental part of the lives of all children.”
Ziad Abbas said that it’s wrong for the board of directors to put conditions on that support. “Do they really support all children, or just certain ones? Certainly, in this situation, the Palestinian children who made this artwork are not being supported at all,” he remarked.
The Electronic Intifada asked whether the children in Gaza had been informed that their exhibition was shut down, and what their reaction was to the news. Abbas explained that he had just received a call from one of the young artists in Gaza who saw MECA’s press release on the Internet that explained that the show was canceled.
“He was extremely disappointed, and the other children were obviously shocked and sad as well,” Abbas replied. “It’s upsetting to them to hear that a children’s art museum across the world decided that their personal [narratives] are offensive, and then silenced their voices and artwork. When you hear about an art museum that has violated its own mission to censor children’s artwork and children’s artistic expression, it’s extremely disappointing.”
Community support is out in force
Following Thursday’s announcement by the MOCHA board of directors, MECA has been flooded with phone calls and emails from supporters not only just across the Bay Area but worldwide who are appalled at the shutting down of the children’s art show. And Lubin said that while outrage at the museum is understandable, the institution is not the enemy.
“MOCHA is very dear to our hearts,” Lubin emphasized. “We love this organization and respect the work they do. It’s an essential institution in the Bay Area. Our anger is not at the people who work at MOCHA; rather, our anger is at the board who do not have the courage to stand up to this kind of intimidation from the pro-Israel groups. We’re asking people to direct their anger at the board and at the Zionist organizations who do this kind of muzzling. But certainly not at the organization itself.”
MECA has started an email action campaign in an effort to counter-pressure the board of directors with support and gratitude for hosting the Palestinian children’s artwork. They are also asking people to come to the gallery on 24 September, on the planned opening day of the exhibition, in a show of support for the show even if it remains canceled.
Meanwhile, Lubin and the MECA staff are busy figuring out alternative venues for the exhibition.
“We’re not sure where the show will be yet, but we’ll continue to work on seeing that these voices are heard and that these pictures are shown. People want to do something, and have been offering space in their homes, shops and even in schools,” Abbas said. “They won’t shut down these children’s voices.”

27 Comments so far
Show AllBefore the Zionist apologists jump in here, isn't it precious how threatening the images of children under siege are to them when, apparently, blowing them to pieces is ok?
Note to fascist Zionist groups...intimidation of civic groups the free expression of art, imagines, and Gazan childrens' drawings of war won't make the reality of the Israeli Government's human rights abuses and apartheid policies go away...such intimidation makes the issue grow.
Agreed. Just when you think you've seen it all vis-a-vis Israel. Zionists to world: "Our shit doesn't stink, so help yourselves to a big steaming pile of it. Mmmm!"
I sent this note to the museum (hello@mocha.org):
Children's art reflects the joy of a joyful childhood or
the pain of a painful one. That the museum would
censor art of the latter sort is cause for shame. That it
would do this to accommodate those responsible for
the children's misery is a mark of venality.
Very well said, Steve. The reasons for the horrors that inspired these kids to express themselves so disarmingly (wow!) now flinch from their own image and don't want anyone else to see the truth either.
excellent comment steve,when you look at the millions of children that have died from our gov's actions,from bush#1 to now,and add in israels 50 yr slaughter of men,wemon&children,than you have nasty picture of the worlds most evil powers,the u s&isreal,that needs to stopped right now!!!
What occurred to me while reading this latest evidence of fascism at work could be a solution. When Hitler and Goebbels decided what the parameters were for Nazi art, they put up an exhibit at one of the most prestigious galleries in Berlin.
They also put up an exhibition of "degenerate art" in a small rundown gallery in the slums. Nobody went to the Nazi art show except party functionaries.
The line to see the "degenerate art" stretched for a mile or more through the rundown streets.
Perhaps now that fascism has again spoken in the United States, some gallery in SF or Oakland would put the show in their gallery. Perhaps the line there would stretch for miles.
It is a pity that even therapeutic pictures by traumatized children cannot be shown in the United States (and probably Europe) due to the efforts of AIPAC and its many minions.
I'm sure that many Israelis would be appalled if they knew what was being done in their name, but the Israeli government per se, is nothing but a cancer, an open sore infecting the entire Middle East and the United States at least.
I am sorry kids, sorry for your trauma, sorry for your being ignored, sorry for still more, endless attacks upon you and your parents.
Gaza is like the Warsaw ghetto, but instead of the Nazis persecuting and killing the Jews, it is the Jews persecuting and killing the Palestinians. Apparently the Jews learned the wrong lesson from the ghetto.
Oppressed peoples always fight back, as did the young Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto. Apparently all Israel has learned from the ghetto is that if you can amass enough troops and firepower, you can kill them all. Sort of a "final solution" as Hitler used to say.
Thank you Minitrue for your excellent suggestion that the exhibit find an alternate place to display the art. That would do much more than an email campaign, because we all know how to hit the delete button.
I also agree with your metaphor:
Gaza is like the Warsaw ghetto, but instead of the Nazis persecuting and killing the Jews, it is the Jews persecuting and killing the Palestinians. Apparently the Jews learned the wrong lesson from the ghetto.
My mother and many members of her family suffered under the Nazis, my mom as a slave laborer (luckily for her, because she never went to a concentration camp and because some relatively decent Germans ran her group of slave laborer women) and many other family members who went to concentration camps. Of those who went to concentration camps, only my aunt Hanka survived. As you say, Jews have become what they despise. What in human nature makes victims strive to become oppressors?
Those in the Bay Area should come to MOCHA on Sat, Sept. 24 to give the Palestinian children a wonderful artists' reception, either inside the museum or outside. MECA has put out this call--let's be sure to make it beautiful!
Saturday, September 24, 1:00pm: "A Child's View From Gaza" Exhibit
SAVE THE DATE! MECA will exhibit "A Child's View From Gaza" either inside or outside of the Museum of Children's Art in Oakland.
Good for you, Bay Area!
I don't know whether an attempt has been made to show these pictures in Europe, specifically in France but anticipate we may have a wider margin to allow such an exhibit. A few years ago we had a Palestinian children's troop touring Europe to perform their musical comedy, a high quality performance by other traumatized children where the young actors showed their views of the endless conflict. The lead male role, 12 years old, had an Israeli bullet lodged in his abdomen so close to his spinal cord that surgery had been ruled out. The lead little girl, 10 years old, only ever utters a word on stage. She has never spoken to anyone since her mother was killed by Israeli soldiers who broke into their home in the middle of the night, shot dead her father, and then shot her mother who agonized for hours in her little daughter's presence before she died too. The soldiers had moved on right away with no thought for the toddler left behind.
It's yet another gruesome story among so many but I think, at least I hope, that CRIC which is AIPEC's French subsidiary, has less power to control free speech than in the US partly because so many French Jewish intellectuals and artists are more moderate. I know there are moderate groups in the US too, Jewish Voices for Peace, the admirable BT'selem Jewish human rights organization that keeps tabs rigorously on violations on both sides, Jewish and Palestinian. Finally, the president of France is not going to veto the Palestinian bid for statehood. I still cannot figure out why Obama will, what force binds him to this odious and shameful position that is a disgrace to all of us?
"what force binds him to this odious and shameful position that is a disgrace to all of us?"
The Israel lobby is all powerful in Congress and pro-Israel Jews will brook no opposition. Just yesterday the election for Congressman Weiner's seat was won by a Republican in this normally Democratic district. The Dem candidate was even a Jew, but many Jews in the district said they voted Republican to send Obama a message on Israel. This even though Obama has backed off on his tepid moves to get Israel to stop the settlements and has been sending signals that he will veto the Palestinian initiative toward recognition in the UN.
It's an outrage that pro-Israel Jews are able to censor free speech in this country. I have a feeling, though, that with this move they've gone a step too far. They should be careful, too, about the anti-Semitism this could arouse. The fact that children are involved touches a nerve.
Host the exhibition in Houston at the Station Museum of Contemporary Art. They had a Palestinian art exhibit a while ago (http://www.stationmuseum.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=22&Itemid=31 ), as well as an Iraqi one (http://www.stationmuseum.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=103&Itemid=31 ). The director of the museum is a genuinely wonderful man, too.
The Israel Lobby likes killing Palestinean children but doesn't want it known.
Great comments, all but one. I don't agree with you, Ocean. The Israel Lobby, like the US and many people in it, is reacting out of fear. There are people who relish torture and killing; we just had one for President for 8 years, but most people who support it see it as a necessary evil because they are afraid. A cultivated fear, but it works.
I can't say what motivates our current President to choose torture and murder, I suspect his political fortunes are more important to him than other people's lives. I don't see any evidence of relish such as Shrub exhibited. But Shrub enjoyed it so much he just couldn't keep it to himself.
Who knows what is in another's heart? We can only look at their actions. In the case of our leaders, falling short.
"The Israel Lobby, like the US and many people in it, is reacting out of fear."
The Israel lobby is reacting out of racism. What do they have to fear from art by children? The heartless and ruthless cruelty that Israeli troops and the settlers routinely use against Palestinians shows clearly that they don't feel common humanity with them. It may be too much to say the Lobby likes to kill Palestinian children, but it doesn't bother them too much. Their blind support of a state that showers white phosphorous on a civilian population says that loud and clear.
The behavior of some Israelis seems to show something has cracked within them, some moral compass spinning awry. The five Israelis arrested by the FBI on 9/11 who were filming the burning towers and uttering cries of "joy and mockery" as they watched the huge skyscrapers in the process of being destroyed. They must have known thousands of people were in grave danger yet they rejoiced. The generations long experience of living in a small country surrounded by hostile neighbors (hostile, be it remembered, because of the actions of Israel itself), the continual war, can lead to moral degradation. Martin Luther King said a country for whom war was the primary activity was a country moving toward "spiritual death." Can we doubt Israel is such a country? But of course, so is the US.
The link to the "email action campaign" (URL below) works, but when I tried to use it, I got the error message shown below. Note that the web site is in the UK.
I had sent a personal email to the museum when I first read about this.
http://www.coordin8.org.uk/MOCHAtakeaction.html
Error message:
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access /DEX_Form2MailPHP/Form2Mail1.php on this server.
Additionally, a 404 Not Found error was encountered while trying to use an ErrorDocument to handle the request.
The Israeli/Palistinian relationship of the 2000's is just like the Jewish/German relationship of the 1930's, only in slow motion
Thought CD readers would appreciate seeing what sort of strange things are happening to MECA. The following quote is from a recent email I received from them: "9/13/11 6:00 PM PST: About six hours ago, MECA experienced technical difficulties that we have never experienced before. Three separate systems, email, donation pages, and the electronic letter to the Children's Museum, all ceased working."
My guess is that the Zionists really don't want anyone supporting MECA and this childrens' art exhibit. At the end of the email it was made pretty darn clear that this exhibit will be opening on September 24 either inside MOCHA, or perhaps just outside on the sidewalk. Stop the Zionist intimidation.
That probably explains the problems I mentioned in my post of Sep 13 2011 - 10:17pm. When I first read of the museum's decision to cancel this exhibit, I sent an email directly to the museum expressing my disappointment. I suggest that others do the same. I used the email address on the museum's web site, hello@mocha.org.
I love that error message: "Forbidden"! Forbidden by the Israel lobby.
The United States is the enemy of peace especially in the middle east because the zionists have so much power in American politics.and they will not allow any debate about Israel's barbarism. I hope the Palestinians go ahead and seek recognition at the United Nations and stop waiting for the Americans to suddenly become honest brokers which will never happen.
I got my first taste of pro-Zionist intimidation more than ten years ago in own community when a Palestinian citizens group hosted an information open house at the university. Until then I had no idea of their utterly rancorous attitude, as well as the lengths to which a small group of people would organize themselves to respond to each and every occasion when 'the other side' attempted to present itself. I was convinced then that anyone so zealous must themselves have been deeply conditioned by their faith community.
I am sickened by this recent manifestation of hate, which also took place when the same exhibition attempted to open in my community. Thanks to such actions, I now entirely disrespect the state of Israel.
I don't understand why the Israel lobby seems unconcerned by the blowback effect of their despicable efforts to censor free speech in this country. Your change of heart toward Israel is an example - many others must feel that way. Many years ago I had an almost hero-worshipping attitude toward Israel, but my attitude now is one of utter condemnation. No "good works" Israel may be doing makes up for their treatment of the Palestinians, their bombing campaigns against Lebanon, etc. etc. Also why don't they worry about a rise of anti-Semitism in the US in response to this intimidation?
Hmmm
What would the Jewish lobby's reaction be to a US University censoring and/or banning virtually anything related to the support and or dipiction of Jewish suffering anywhere in the world? The total hypocracy and audacity of the Jewish lobby in America is beyond comprehension. And sadly it those Americans committing tryanny in the name of "anti-semitism" that are truly traitors. It is Unconstitutional for one group to deny anybody the right to free speech. To bad if the Jewish lobby doesn't like something. This is American and the Constitution gives all of us an inalienable right to free speech. The Bill of Rights does not read: "speech is free for all except if the Jewish lobby doesn't like what you are saying". The Jewish lobby in American today epitomizes everything that is wrong with our country today. And they are directly responsible for many of the problems we as a nation now face.
MECA had to change their link because something happened with all of their online communications yesterday, but CD update the new link.
You can also get it here:
http://www.mecaforpeace.org/meca-news/tell-mocha-show-childs-view-gaza
Zionism is the curse of the planet. It has hijacked Judaism. And now it is hijacking the US.