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12:31 pm, September 16th, 2025 - 11 comments
Categories: defence, Diplomacy, genocide, International, israel, nuclear war, Palestine, Peace, Zionism -
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Priests chain themselves to NZ National Party Deputy’s office.
The second I heard today that my friend Father Gerard Burns was part of a direct action protest outside the electorate office of the deputy leader of the governing National Party I rushed over there to say, ‘Well done.’ Some of the priests chained themselves to the door of Nicola Willis’ office in Wellington, others prayed, spoke to passersby or quietly made their presence felt with cardboard placards, “Sanctions Speak Louder Than Words”, “Sanction Israel Now”, “Love demands action”.
A couple of days earlier I had seen the amazing Medea Benjamin, a leader of the US antiwar group Code Pink, arrested (yet again) in the US congress buildings, this time for peacefully challenging congressman Darrell Issa about his silence over the Israeli attack on Qatar. In themselves, these are small stories but they are knitting together with many others in a global struggle that will define our generation.
Citizen direct action is having an impact. In Spain this week La Vuelta, one of cycling’s three prestigious Grand Tours (the Tour de France and Giro d’Italia being the other two) was abandoned in its final stage because people would not tolerate the shameful presence of an Israeli cycling team and brought it to a magnificent, shambolic close. Watch this space for Eurovision and other cultural and sporting organisations that have for too long cuddled genocidal Israel.
Last week Elbit Systems, the Israeli arms manufacturer repeatedly targeted by Palestine Action, shuttered its Bristol UK drone factory; a small victory in a long war against the Israeli war machine.
All over the world more and more people are taking direct action, stepping in because of the criminal failure of governments to fulfil their legal obligations under the Genocide Convention to “prevent and punish the crime of genocide”.
As Francesca Albanese, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Palestinian Territories, said this week, in farewelling the humanitarian flotilla departing Tunisia for Gaza: “Today you are either for or against the genocide.” You can tell which side people were on by whether or not they had personally taken action “and we need many more, many more people to stand against the genocide,” Albanese said. The Global Sumud Flotilla has activists from over 40 countries on board, bringing aid to Gaza in an attempt to break the starvation siege.
It was a pleasure talking to the priests in Wellington who are acting as great examples of what we all need to do: apply greater pressure on our governments. They set an example for us all to follow. Tell your politicians: Sanctions Speak Louder Than Words! Save the people of Palestine. Here are a few comments I picked up today – the messages apply both locally and internationally.
Mel McKenzie, an Archdeacon in the Anglican Church
“There is a public desire to see New Zealand act and introduce sanctions against Israel. Last week the chief of the World Health Organisation said the time to act is now! Sanctions speak louder than words: international calls for ceasefire and for aid to enter aren’t working. Israel has its ears covered. Even last week, it attacked the negotiation process in Qatar. So they're not listening. Our view is we need to shift their behavior, shift their mindset by global sanctions from states.”
Father Gerard Burns
“I’m here with my brothers and sisters of other churches to speak up and ask – to really demand – sanctions and other practical actions, including economic, military, social, cultural and sporting.”
Rev Paul Fletcher
“I’m based in Newtown, part of the Anglican Church there. We’re committed to staying here to push with a moral voice as Christian leaders for sanctions against Israel. I would love for the government to engage with us on that. We’ll stay here until either we see sanctions put in place or we’re arrested and taken off.
“We want to use our moral positions as priests to up the ante on the government. I think it’s really important for the government, for people, even for our churches, to realize Jesus cares about the poor and the oppressed. At this moment the poor and the oppressed are being massacred in Gaza. God’s heart is biased toward those families, those children, those people that are suffering right now in that land.”
Rev. Andy Hickman
“The word ‘intercession’ means ‘intrusion into the courts of power on behalf of another.’ It also refers to prayerfully reciting the ancient texts of Scripture, such as the psalms of lament. Today, I join with my Christian colleagues to engage in both forms of intercession, in the call for justice and on behalf of Gaza. It is the reasonable thing for me to do.”
Rev Chris Kirby
“I’m here to support Gaza and to call for sanctions. This has been going on for two years, all this death and destruction. I’m from Whanganui, which has a population of 40,000 people. There are over 65,000 people who have died in Gaza – much more than Whanganui’s population. It’s mental. It’s crazy. They’re trapped in a prison. I want to use my freedom to call on the government to change their actions.”
Rev Martin Robinson
“I’m an Anglican Archdeacon based in the Hutt Valley. What brought us together was a shared commitment to exert pressure on the government, to bring about sanctions, and increase the urgency. We’ve been going to rallies, etc, and we asked ourselves: what’s another step that we can take to put ourselves on the line. In the scheme of things, it’s minimal – but we’re trying to be another bit of snow on that rolling snowball, or another couple of drops in that bucket that might tip over into a stream of justice and righteousness.”
Eugene Doyle.
Wow, Anglican priests upholding morality…. I could tell you a story
possibly you could but today i,m with the priests
Yeah true, however this is just performative, looks good, achieved nothing. Maybe they should consider the commandment about not taking the lord’s name in vain.
If the priests’ action is “just performative”, in your opinion, then I wonder what label to stick on your comments under this Post, perhaps ‘performative trolling’.
Imagine if stories about people invalidated whole institutions…like say party presidents who got timely name suppression…
Or say the endeavours of any party that had had John Banks as an MP, minister or even as a party leader! That was a boyo who lived.
Imagine if saying something like priests, hahaha, somehow invalidated their whole cause. Imagine if just issuing a parking ticket was the way to avoid considering eradication and slaughter.
Here’s a Wikipedia page just for journalists who have been killed:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_journalists_killed_in_the_Gaza_war
One could almost (but not quite) feel sorry for Winston and Christopher – both of whom would, I'm sure, be willing to recognise a Palestinian state – but ACT is saying no!
The long and insidious influence of Israeli/Atlas money?
Just what I was thinking.
Luxon/National having radical, far right politicians in their coaliton.
A great example for Hipkins to cite when Luxon tries to frighten whitey with TPM.
Google Rabbi Blau and the signed letter. Numerous articles
A New York Orthodox rabbi at Yeshiva Univerity decided to retire to Israel.
Then organised a signed letter in August.
On both Gaza and settler violence on the West Bank
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/podcasts/2025-09-02/ty-article-podcast/astonishing-backlash-hear-the-orthodox-rabbi-who-spoke-out-against-gazas-famine/00000199-09a5-d21e-a9db-1bef4d550000
By Jan 2026, when Israel presents its (security first case, a war in which Hamas had to be defeated) case to the ICJ, it will have been established that the ICJ Israeli judge was right to warn the Israeli government to end incitement and ensure that aid got to civilians and that these warnings were not heeded.
Incitement is not part of war and nor is denial of aid to civilians.
Only 10% of the million people have left Gaza City. Despite the destruction to come in Gaza City people remain. Some are too weak to move on foot and are unable to afford transportation. There is no effort to help them leave. Others unwisely remain, either because they have no where else to go, or because they have no means to take possessions with them as they cannot afford transportation.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/israel-hamas-war-un-investigators-accuse-israel-of-committing-genocide-in-gaza/6K2ALK4CWFDIJGJPOONPOSEDUA/
No God here! crowed Simeon Brown as he evicted the priests with trespass threats.
According to his Twitter bio one of his career aspirations is a 3way with Trump senior and Satan, lovingly captured in head bob animation by a leading American studio.
Nicola Willis, who by some divine miracle had not been fired for pressuring the independent central bank and firing the banker, bleated like a goat and said no one had been able to drop into her electorate requesting civil servants be fired for days. Willis, who has helped create a stagflation economy, said that was the risk when electing a bald top National Prime Minister, but reiterated that the current PM wasn’t half the goer Old Piggy was, despite both being famously opposed by Marilyn Waring.
Muldoon was notorious for his faults ,of which there were many. But compared to the collective sacks of shit governing our country now, he was both a Saint and a Genius.