NEW YORK, November 12, 2014
(WAFA) - Adalah-NY and other human rights activists will hold
a protest on Wednesday evening in front of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) against
the U.S. premiere of Israeli Batsheva Dance Company's 'Sadeh21”, for its complicity
in Israel’s violations of international law and refusal to take a stand against
Israel’s measures against Palestinians.
They will protest with ‘Dabke dance’ and music in front of the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), Wednesday said a press release issued by Adalah-NY, the New York Campaign for the Boycott of Israel.
This performance, part of BAM's
2014 Next Wave Festival, is also part of the “Brand Israel” initiative designed to distract from the facts of
Israel’s ongoing occupation and colonization of Palestinian land, and its
denial of rights to Palestinians the world over.
Israel's Ministry of Foreign
Affairs touts Batsheva as 'perhaps the best known global
ambassador of Israeli culture.' Batsheva is funded in part by that
government office as well as by the Ministry of Culture and Sports. While
Batsheva artistic director Ohad Naharin has criticized Israeli abuses of Palestinians,
Batsheva Dance Company continues in its role as a prominent cultural ambassador
of the Israeli state.
Wednesday night's protest is
part of the global movement of boycott, divestment, and sanctions (BDS) against
Israel until it complies with international law and ends abuses against the
Palestinian people.
The Palestinian civil society call for BDS includes boycotting Israeli
academic and cultural institutions, such as the Batsheva Dance Company, that
are complicit in Israel’s violation of international law and denial of
Palestinian rights, and that refuse to take a stand against Israel’s systematic
discrimination against the Palestinians living in the Occupied Territories,
within Israel, and as refugees in the Diaspora.
In 2012, during Batsheva's last
engagement in New York City, also at BAM, Adalah-NY wrote to BAM administrators
asking them to cancel the performance (first letter, second letter) before
organizing a demonstration.
That same year, thirty human rights
organizations from around North America sent a letter to Batsheva demanding that they take a stand
against the violations of human rights being perpetrated by their government
that impact all segments of Palestinian society, including cultural workers.
Batsheva made no response.
Adalah-NY is also organizing a protest next Tuesday, November 18,
at the concert of the Touré-Raichel Collective, which features another premiere
Israeli 'cultural ambassador,' musician Idan Raichel.
T.R.