'We will not be silenced': Rep. Tlaib headlines DC Nakba event despite McCarthy meddling

An event featuring U.S. Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib commemorating the Nakba—the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homeland during Israel's War of Independence 75 years ago—went ahead as scheduled Wednesday evening, despite an attempt by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to derail it.
Tlaib (D-Mich.)—the only Palestinian-American in the House of Representatives—is the featured speaker at the event, "Nakba 75 & the Palestinian People," which as of press time was underway in the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Hearing Room in a Senate office building in Washington, D.C. Sen. Bernie Sanders(I-Vt.) chairs the panel.
\u201cStanding room only:\u201d— Marc Rod (@Marc Rod) 1683754822
"May 15th marks 75 years since the beginning of the Nakba, which means 'catastrophe,'" the event's organizers said in an Eventbrite invitation. "Seventy-five years ago, Zionist militias and the new Israeli military violently expelled approximately three-quarters of all Palestinians from their homes and homeland in what became the state of Israel."
"The Nakba is not an antisemitic trope, it's a historical fact."
On Tuesday, McCarthy (R-Calif.) said that "the event in the U.S. Capitol has been canceled" and replaced with "a bipartisan discussion to honor the 75th anniversary of the U.S.-Israel relationship."
"It's wrong for members of Congress to traffic in antisemitic tropes about Israel," the congressman toldTheWashingtonFree Beacon. "As long as I'm speaker, we are going to support Israel's right to self-determination and self-defense, unequivocally and in a bipartisan fashion."
\u201cFind me a more perfect example of anti-Palestinian racism. Kevin McCarthy cancels Rashida Tlaib's planned event on the nakba. He says Tlaib traffics in "antisemitic tropes" about Israel. The nakba is not an antisemitic trope, it's a historical fact. https://t.co/9KdwuNsFq9\u201d— Alex Kane (@Alex Kane) 1683729077
However, Tlaib issued a statement Wednesday clarifying that the event was still on.
"We fully plan on moving forward with this event and we will continue to ensure that Palestinian voices are heard," the congresswoman asserted. "We will not be silenced."
"Speaker McCarthy wants to rewrite history and erase the existence and truth of the Palestinian people, but he has failed to do so," Tlaib continued. "This event is planned to bring awareness about the Nakba and create space for Palestinian-Americans who experienced the Nakba firsthand to tell their stories of trauma and survival."
\u201cFear looks awful on you, Mr Speaker.\n\nWe\u2019ll teach the Nakba still while you throw a love fest for militarism, racial supremacy, & ethnic cleansing. \n\n#OngoingNakba\u201d— Noura Erakat (@Noura Erakat) 1683736409
"The Nakba is a well-documented historical event that is recognized by the United Nations," Tlaib added. "We cannot allow the same people who want to ban books and erase history simply because they're uncomfortable with the truth to silence Palestinian voices."
More than 750,000 Arabs from hundreds of cities, towns, and villages fled or were expelled from Palestine—sometimes by massacre, "death march," and other violence—during the formation of the modern state of Israel in 1947-49. Hundreds of Palestinian villages were destroyed to make way for newcomers whose only prerequisite for Israeli citizenship is being Jewish.
\u201cImportant to remember that the founding of Zionism in the late 19th century is what sparked the Nakba, since the ideology called for the creation of a Jewish state in Palestine. At the time, Jews only made up around 5% of the Indigenous Palestinian population. 2/\u201d— Ghada Sasa, PhD Candidate \ud83c\uddf5\ud83c\uddf8 (@Ghada Sasa, PhD Candidate \ud83c\uddf5\ud83c\uddf8) 1683665679
The militarized segregation of Israelis and Palestinians in the illegally occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem and elsewhere is considered a crime of apartheid by numerous Palestinian, Israeli, and internationalhuman rights groups, as well as by prominent international figures including United Nations officials, former U.S. President Jimmy Carterand other Nobel laureates, and South African leaders who lived under apartheid during the 20th century.
Meanwhile, more than 7 million Palestinian refugees have been denied the right of return guaranteed under United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194.
Co-hosts of Wednesday's event include: the Institute for Middle East Understanding, Americans for Justice in Palestine Action, Project48, Democracy for the Arab World Now, U.S. Campaign for Palestinian Rights, American Friends Service Committee, Virginia Coalition for Human Rights, Emgage Action, and Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) Action.
"This month, Palestinians will mark 75 years since the Nakba. Understanding the truth of the Nakba is not only about acknowledging historical facts, but also vital to understanding the ongoing violence of Israeli apartheid," JVP Action executive director Stefanie Fox said in a statement Wednesday. "We are proud to be part of the massive and growing number of Jews facing painful truths as part of working toward a shared future of justice, equality, and freedom."
\u201c\ud83c\udfa5In our third #Nakba75 video, hear Leanne Mohamad (@LeanneMohamad), on her grandparents experience of the Nakba and her own commitment to struggle to #FreePalestine\n\nJoin us on May 13 when we march to commemorate and protest the ongoing Nakba.\n\nMore info: https://t.co/SlwVJCjKH5\u201d— PSC (@PSC) 1683720642
For the second straight year, Tlaib on Wednesday reintroduced a resolution recognizing the Nakba and calling on Congress to "condemn all manifestations of Israel's ongoing Nakba against the Palestinian people," particularly the "illegal theft of Palestinian land in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem; Israel's displacement of Palestinians by destroying their homes and forcing them from their land; and the daily brutality and violence inflicted by the Israeli military and Israeli settlers against Palestinian civilians."
Reps. Betty McCollum (D-Minn.), Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.), Jamaal Bowman (D-N.Y.), and Cori Bush (D-Mo.)—all of whom endorsed Tlaib's 2022 resolution—co-sponsored this year's version.
Tlaib's resolution was published as Israeli military forces continued to bombard Gaza in retaliation for earlier rocket fire by Palestinian resistance fighters responding to the death of Khader Adnan, a Palestinian activist imprisoned in Israel without charge or trial, during an 87-day hunger strike in an Israeli prison.
\u201cAn Israeli missile strike around 3:45 p.m. today in Gaza City killed 10-year-old Layan Bilal Mohammad Abdullah Mdoukh and 16-year-old Yazan Jawdat Fathi Elayyan. \n\nIsraeli forces have killed 6 Palestinian children during Operation Shield and Arrow. #GazaUnderAttack\u201d— Defense for Children (@Defense for Children) 1683746880
At least 21 Palestinians, no less than a dozen of whom were civilians—including at least six women and six children—have been killed in the latest Israeli airstrikes.
On Wednesday, South African Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor urged the International Criminal Court to issue arrest warrants for the "leaders of apartheid Israel" who are "supporting the massacre of the people of Palestine."
\u201c\ud83d\udea8BREAKING: South Africa's Minister of International Relations & Cooperation, @DIRCO_ZA, Naledi Pandor calls on the @IntlCrimCourt to issue arrest warrants for the "leaders of apartheid Israel" who are responsible for "the massacre of the people of Palestine."\n\n#ICC4Israel\u201d— BDS movement (@BDS movement) 1683742371
"South Africa is a longstanding partner in solidarity with the people of Palestine given that they supported our own struggle for freedom," Pandor said. "We call on the world to be as concerned about the deaths of Palestinians as they are concerned about deaths of [people in] any other nation of the world."