Rachel Corrie lawsuit set for Wednesday in Israel

Thanks to ROFTO Radio – Palestine, I recently received a letter from the parents of Rachel Corrie, describing the lawsuit scheduled to begin on Wednesday in Haifa District Court in Israel. Rofto.net describes itself as a “Palestinian guy-owned independent network that promotes constructive dialogue and understanding within the Middle East and All the world.”

Here’s the letter:
rachel-corrie
Friends,
As many of you know, a civil lawsuit in the case of our daughter Rachel Corrie is scheduled for trial in the Haifa District Court beginning March 10, 2010. A human rights observer and activist,Rachel, 23, tried nonviolently to offer protection for a Palestinian family whose home was threatened with demolition by the Israeli military. On March 16, 2003, she was crushed to death by an Israel Defense Force (IDF) Caterpillar D9R bulldozer in Rafah, Gaza.

The lawsuit is one piece of our family’s seven-year effort to pursue justice for our daughter and sister. We hope this trial will illustrate the need for accountability for thousands of lives lost, or indelibly injured, by occupation—in a besieged and beleaguered Gaza and throughout Palestine/Israel; bring attention to the assault on nonviolent human rights activists (Palestinian,Israeli, and international); and underscore the fact that so many Palestinian families, harmed as deeply as ours, cannot access Israeli courts.

In order to deliver these interconnected messages as effectively as possible, we are asking for large-scale participation in the trial itself as well as in the events surrounding it. We hope you will join us for all or some of the events listed below and help us to put the call out to others.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10
9:00-16:00—Trial Begins in the Haifa District Court (12 Palyam St. Haifa)
A strong presence of human rights observers, legal observers, and others on the first day of the trial will send the message that this case is being closely monitored and that truth, accountability and justice matter to us all. Other trial dates are: March 14, 15, 17, 21, 22 and 24. Supportive presence at all court sessions is both welcome and needed!

FRIDAY, MARCH 12
13:00-15:00—Film Screening at the Tel Aviv Cinematheque (2 Shprinzak St. Tel Aviv)
Screening of the documentary film RACHEL followed by a Q&A with filmmaker Simone Bitton
and the Corrie family. RACHEL is a cinematic inquiry into Rachel’s killing. It raises many of
the questions that should be asked and addressed during the trial.

TUESDAY, MARCH 16
20:00-22:00—Memorial; Location TBA
March 16th marks the seven-year anniversary of Rachel’s killing. We hope to mark this day as a “Day of Conscience” with a large gathering that calls for truth, accountability and justice, in Rachel’s case and beyond.

There will also be events in Gaza (at the Rachel Corrie Children and Youth Cultural Center in
Rafah), possibly in the West Bank (TBA), and around the world.

If you are not with us in Palestine/Israel, please think about how you and your group/community can be visible/audible on March 16.

We expect this to be a challenging time, but we know the friendship we have felt from so many of you over the years will help us navigate the weeks ahead. Though the course and outcome of the trial are unknown, we welcome the opportunity to raise and highlight many of the critical issues to which Rachel’s case is linked.

Thank you for your continuing support.
In solidarity and with much appreciation,
Cindy and Craig Corrie

More information on Rachel Corrie and other social justice issues can be found at the Rachel Corrie Foundation website.

3 Comments to “Rachel Corrie lawsuit set for Wednesday in Israel”

  1. By judith shattuck, March 8, 2010 @ 12:56 pm

    Dear Cindy and Craig,

    My thoughts and prayers are with you as embark on this chapter of the journey. Please know your courage and stamina are a source of inspiration and more than a bit of glue that keeps many wonderful people engaged in the work of peace and justice.

    Blessings and Love,

    Judith

  2. By Franklin Sone Bayen, March 8, 2010 @ 2:10 pm

    Rachel shouldn’t have died. I still remember those BBC reports with sound effects of the caterpillar that crushed her.

    She was crushed as she stood a human shield against the destruction of the lives of a people she considered innocent.

    She was noble in doing that. She gave her life in a conflict where understanding of the other’s plight continues to be elusive. She was run over by a caterpillar driver who thought the one thing noble he could do for his people was tear down that pharmasist’s building which could well be a laboratory for bombs to be used against his people.

    Rachel died defending a people who themselves suspected her of being a spy. That must have been tricky. If the people she was having dinner with and striving to defend doubted her, how many times the bulldozer driver, under military orders to execute and seeing her in his way, when he believed that at that very moment, a bomb could be under fabrication and could subsequently be hauled at his caterpillar?

    Who knows, if Rachel wasn’t run over by that caterpillar, her suspicious hosts would have been her assialants.

    Rachel died a martyred all the same and this commemoration of her death, even more than the trial, should challenge us all against prejudices, hate, refusal to dialogue and the feeling of superiority that holds us from stretching a hand at “people lesser than us”.

    Rachel, the people we strive to serve don’t always understand even us, how many times each other for the peace process to advance?

    We remember you, Rachel.

  3. By Anggia Putri Nilasari, March 23, 2010 @ 11:28 am

    This is press release from the Haifa District Court on March 15, 2010.
    http://rachelcorriefoundation.org/2010/03/954
    Download this press release: March 15: Eye Witness Testifies: Israeli Military Investigator Tried to Influence My Statement (pdf, 166.24 KB)

    We are all Rachel Corrie!

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