Speakers (in alphabetical order)
Amani Alkhatahtbeh is the founding
editor-in-chief of MuslimGirl.net, a blog aimed at eliminating
stereotypes surrounding Islam and promoting the place of Muslim
women in Western societies.
Alkhatahtbeh’s dedication to building bridges across different
religious and cultural communities has been recognized in a New
Jersey state resolution honoring the top community service
pioneers in the state. She was a Lloyd Gardner Fellow and a
Women’s Leadership Scholar at Rutgers University, where she
conducted multiple independent studies on the Arab Spring and
Middle Eastern politics.
She ran into trouble with
The Daily Targum,
Rutgers University’s daily newspaper,
and trustees, which decided that criticism of Israel is
anti-Semitic.
Alkhatahtbeh is a blogger for the Atlantic Council, a foreign policy
think tank in Washington, DC.
In June 2014, the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
named her its media relations specialist.
She is a regular speaker at events on political and social
issues. |
Huwaida Arraf ![]() |
Jeffrey Blankfort
Since the 1960s his photographs have
appeared in major publications in the U.S. and around the world.
During this past Black History Month, an exhibit of his photos
of the Black Panthers from 1968 and Palestinians taken from 1970
to 2004 was on display at the African American Art and Cultural
Complex in San Francisco. It was his first trip to Lebanon and
Jordan in 1970 to take photos for a book on the Palestinian
struggle (Palestine: the
Arab-Israeli Conflict, Ramparts Press, 1972) that led to his
involvement in their cause.
Blankfort became a founding member of
the November 29th Committee on Palestine and a co-founder of the
Labor Committee on the Middle East, and was editor of its
publication, The Middle East Labor Bulletin (1988-1995). He currently hosts a twice-monthly
program on international affairs for KZYX, the public radio
station for Mendocino County in Northern California where he now
lives.
|
Richard
Falk
In 2001 Falk served on a United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Inquiry Commission for the Palestinian territories with John Dugard, a South African professor of international law based in Leiden University in the Netherlands, and Kamal Hussein, former foreign minister of Bangladesh. In 2008, the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) appointed Falk to a six-year term as a United Nations Special Rapporteur on “the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967.” Falk has written for The Nation, The
Huffington Post, Al Jazeera, CounterPunch and the
Palestine Chronicle. He is a member of the editorial boards
of The Nation and The Progressive. |
Paul Findley served the 20th District of
Illinois during 11 terms in Congress, from 1961 to 1983. Findley wrote the very first book to
analyze the pervasive influence of the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC) on U.S. politics, policy, and
institutions from the perspective of Congress. Carefully
documented with specific case histories, They Dare To Speak
Out: People and Institutions Confront Israel’s Lobby reveals
how the Israel Lobby helps to shape important aspects of U.S.
foreign policy and influences congressional, senatorial, and
presidential elections. First published in 1985 and reprinted
several times since, the book criticizes the undue influence
AIPAC exerts in the Senate and the House, and the pressure AIPAC
brings to bear on university professors and journalists who seem
too sympathetic to Arab and Islamic states, or too critical of
Israel and its policies. Findley is co-founder of the Council
for the National Interest.
Dima
Khalidi |
Khalidi has a JD from DePaul University
College of Law with a concentration in International Law, an MA
in Comparative Legal Studies from the University of London –
School of Oriental and African Studies, and a BA in History and
Near Eastern Studies from the University of Michigan. Prior to
founding PSLS, Khalidi worked with the Center for Constitutional
Rights (CCR) as a cooperating attorney on the Mamilla Cemetery
Campaign, drafting a petition to United Nations officials to act
against the desecration of an ancient Muslim cemetery in
Jerusalem. As a volunteer and an intern at CCR, she
also worked on numerous cases that sought to hold Israeli
officials and corporations accountable for Israeli violations of
international law, including
Belhas v. Ya’alon; Matar
et al. v. Dichter; and
Corrie v. Caterpillar;
as well as on CCR’s Guantanamo Bay docket. As a law student, she
interned with the People’s Law Office in Chicago, helping win
the acquittal of a Palestinian-American on major federal
criminal charges.
Prior to studying law, Khalidi worked at
Birzeit University, heading a research project on the role of
informal justice mechanisms in the Palestinian legal system. She
has advocated on Palestinian rights issues in media forums such
as the New York Times, the Jewish Press, The Real News
Network, Mondoweiss, Huffington Post, Law and Disorder
Radio, and Radio Tahrir. She is fluent in Arabic and French. |
Gideon Levy is a columnist for the
Israeli daily Haaretz and a member of its editorial
board. Levy joined Haaretz in 1982, and spent four years as the newspaper’s deputy editor. He is the
author of the weekly Twilight Zone feature, which covers the
Israeli occupation in the West Bank and Gaza over the last 25
years, as well as the writer of political editorials for the
newspaper. Levy was the recipient of the Euro-Med
Journalist Prize for 2008; the Leipzig Freedom Prize in 2001;
the Israeli Journalists’ Union Prize in 1997; and The
Association of Human Rights in Israel Award for 1996. His book, The Punishment of Gaza,
was published in 2010 by Verso Publishing House in London and
New York. |
Reza Marashi
Prior to his tenure
at the State Department, he was an analyst at the Institute
for National Strategic Studies (INSS) covering China-Middle
East issues, and a Tehran-based private strategic consultant
on Iranian political and economic risk. Marashi is frequently consulted by Western governments on Iran-related matters. His articles have appeared in The New York Times, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, and The Atlantic, among other publications.
He has been a guest contributor to
CNN, NPR, the BBC,
TIME Magazine,
The Washington Post, the
Financial Times,
and other broadcast outlets. |
|
Seth
Morrison
In 2011, Morrison resigned from the Washington, DC Board of the Jewish National Fund in protest over Israel’s repeated evictions of Palestinians from their homes in East Jerusalem. He chaired the Washington, DC Metro Chapter of J
Street in 2013 before becoming active in the BDS movement. His
op-eds supporting Palestinian and Bedouin rights have been
published in The Forward, The Jerusalem Post
and +972 Magazine. Professionally, Morrison is a consultant
specializing in marketing and strategic planning for both for-
and non-profit organizations. Previously he was the SVP &
General Manager of CTAM, a trade association serving the cable
television industry. As a marketer, Morrison has been
responsible for major local and national marketing, PR and
social media campaigns for the cable television industry and
non-profit organizations. |
Miko
Peled
Peled’s maternal grandfather was a
signer of the Israeli Declaration of Independence; his father
was a general in the Israeli army; in the 1970s his father
pioneered the Israeli-Palestinian dialogue and eventually met
with Yasser Arafat. In 1997 his sister lost her daughter in a
suicide bombing in Jerusalem. Peled is a contributor to several online
publications that deal with the Middle East and authors a blog,
mikopeled.com, dedicated to tearing down the separation wall,
and advocating the creation of one democratic state with equal
rights for Israelis and Palestinians. He travels regularly to
Palestine/Israel, where he speaks and works with the popular
resistance. Peled has been arrested several times by the Israeli
authorities for his activities. Educated in Israel, the UK, Japan and
the United States, Peled holds a sixth-degree black belt in
karate. For 23 years, he ran a martial arts school that was
dedicated to teaching leadership skills and non-violent conflict
resolution through martial arts. He also taught classes to
Palestinian children in the West Bank. |
Dr. Paul Pillar is a Nonresident Senior
Fellow of the Center for Security Studies in the Edmund A. Walsh
School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. He also is a
Nonresident Senior Fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brookings
Institution and an Associate Fellow of the Geneva Center for
Security Policy. He retired in 2005 from a 28-year career in the
U.S. intelligence community, in which his last position was
National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia.
Earlier he served in a variety of analytical and managerial
positions, including chief of CIA analytic units, covering
portions of the Near East, the Persian Gulf, and South Asia. Dr. Pillar also served in the National
Intelligence Council as one of the original members of its
Analytic Group. He has been Executive Assistant to the CIA’s
Deputy Director for Intelligence, and Executive Assistant to
Director of Central Intelligence William Webster. He has also
headed the Assessments and Information Group of the DCI
Counterterrorist Center, and was deputy chief of the center from
1997 to 1999. He was a Federal Executive Fellow at the Brookings
Institution in 1999-2000. Dr. Pillar was a visiting professor in
the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University from 2005
to 2012.
Dr. Pillar received an A.B.
summa cum laude from
Dartmouth College, a B.Phil. from Oxford University, and an M.A.
and Ph.D. from Princeton University. He is a retired officer in
the U.S. Army Reserve and served on active duty in 1971-1973,
including a tour of duty in Vietnam. He is the author of
Negotiating Peace: War Termination as a Bargaining Process
(Princeton University Press, 1983); Terrorism and U.S.
Foreign Policy (Brookings Institution Press, 2001; second
edition 2003); and Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy:
Iraq, 9/11, and Misguided Reform (Columbia University Press,
2011). He writes a blog at
The National Interest. |
Gareth Porter is an investigative
journalist and historian who specializes in U.S. foreign and
military policy. He has written five books, including Perils
of Dominance, Imbalance of Power and The Road to
War in Vietnam.
His most recent book is Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare. The book
highlights the impact that the United States’ alliance with
Israel had on Washington’s turning the International Atomic
Energy Agency into a tool of its anti-Iran policy. He writes
regularly for Inter
Press Service and has also published investigative
articles on Salon.com, the Nation, the American Prospect,
Truthout and The Raw Story. His blogs have been published on
Huffington Post, Firedoglake, CounterPunch and many other
websites. Porter was Saigon bureau chief of Dispatch News
Service International in 1971 and later reported on trips to
Southeast Asia for The Guardian, Asian Wall Street Journal
and Pacific News Service. In 2012 he was awarded the Martha
Gelhorn Prize for Investigative Journalism by the UK-based
Gelhorn Trust.
Nick
Rahall |
Rahall
was one of only 8 House members to vote
against the
Authorization for Use of Military Force
against Iraq in
2002 that preceded the
Iraq War.
Rahall has repeatedly expressed concern about America’s
relationship with Israel, stating, “Israel can’t continue to
occupy, humiliate and destroy the dreams and spirits of the
Palestinian people and continue to call itself a democratic
state.” He has affirmed that America’s interests would be served
by getting the peace process back on track, and regretted the
U.S. vetoes of U.N. resolutions against Israeli settlement
building. The Congressman pressed the State
Department to end a ban on travel to Lebanon until the ban was
finally lifted in 1997. Rahall also expressed concern over a
bipartisan resolution supporting Israel in the 2006
Israel-Lebanon conflict without adding language urging restraint
against civilian targets. Rahall helped draft a resolution that
urged “all parties to protect innocent life and civilian
infrastructure.” |
M.J. Rosenberg is a writer, primarily on matters relating to
Israel. He is a regular contributor to
The Nation and
Huffington Post, with
his writing widely reprinted throughout the world. He has
special expertise on the Israel Lobby, having been employed by
several pro-Israel organizations between 1973 and 1975 and 1982
and 1986. His last post was as editor of AIPAC’s
Near East Report and
as senior adviser to then-Executive Director Thomas Dine.
He also worked on Capitol Hill for a total of 15 years as
legislative assistant to Rep. Jonathan Bingham (D-NY) and as
Appropriations Committee staffer for Rep. Nita Lowey (D-NY),
specifically handling her work on the Foreign Operations
Subcommittee, where she was a leading advocate of the Israel aid
package. He also served as chief-of-staff for Edward Feighan
(D-OH) and as speechwriter for Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI). Rosenberg
also spent three years as a Clinton political appointee at
USAID.
Following Rosenberg’s years of government service, he went to
work as Washington director of the Israel Policy Forum for 9
years, then as a Middle East writer at
Media Matters For
America.
Rosenberg’s opposition to AIPAC, which followed a successful
tenure there, stems from his strong support for the “two-state
solution” and his belief that it is the Lobby and the government
of Israel that is responsible for its failure to be adopted. He
is also, in his words, “appalled” by Israel’s treatment of the
Palestinians, as most recently evidenced by the “indefensible
and horrific” Israel war on Gaza in the summer of 2014. |
Alice Rothchild is a Boston-based
physician, author and filmmaker who since 1997 has focused on
human rights and social justice in the Israel/Palestine
conflict. She graduated from Bryn Mawr College with a degree in
psychology and studied medicine at Boston University, followed
by a medical internship at Lincoln Hospital in the South Bronx,
and an obstetrics and gynecology residency at Beth Israel
Hospital in Boston. Her early political interests involved
opposing the Vietnam War, and working for women’s reproductive
rights and health care reform. She was involved in the first
edition of Our Bodies Ourselves and practiced ob-gyn for
over 30 years in the Boston area. Until her recent retirement
she served as a Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and
Reproductive Biology at Harvard University’s Faculty of
Medicine. In 2003 Dr. Rothchild began
co-organizing health and human rights delegations to Israel, the
West Bank, and Gaza. She writes and lectures widely and is the
author of Broken Promises, Broken Dreams: Stories of Jewish
and Palestinian Trauma and Resilience (Pluto Press, 2007,
second edition 2010, translated into German and Hebrew), and
On the Brink: Israel and
Palestine on the Eve of the 2014 Gaza Invasion (Just World
Books, 2014). She directed a powerful documentary film, “Voices
Across the Divide,” which premiered at the 2013 Boston
Palestine Film Festival. Dr. Rothchild was named one of ten
“Jewish Women to Watch” by Jewish Women International, and has
won numerous awards. She is an active member of Jewish Voice for
Peace, American Jews for a Just Peace, Workmen’s Circle Mideast
Working Group, and the Gaza Mental Health Program. |
Ahmad Saadaldin is a filmmaker/producer,
creative writer, actor, and grassroots organizer. He is dedicated to sharing untold
stories in order to raise awareness and create positive change.
Through grassroots organizing and filmmaking, he does his best
to bring attention to deserving topics. Using Kickstarter, Saadaldin raised
$84,000 to produce the historic epic television show
“Salahadin.” He produced and directed the short
documentary “Refugees of Kurdistan” for Aljazeera’s English
website with filmmaker Nick Armero.
As a public relations major at the University of South Florida,
Saadaldin organized the largest grassroots campaign in the
university’s history and collected more than 10,000 signatures
calling on the school to divest endowment funds from
corporations complicit in human rights violations
(#USF4HumanRights). |
Internationally acclaimed author and
media critic Dr. Jack G. Shaheen is a committed internationalist
and a devoted humanist. His lectures and writings illustrate
that damaging racial and ethnic stereotypes of Arabs, blacks,
and others injure innocent people. He defines crude caricatures,
explains why they persist, and provides workable solutions to
help shatter misconceptions. Dr. Shaheen, a distinguished visiting
scholar at New York University (NYU), served as a CBS News
Consultant on Middle East Affairs from 1993-98. As a
professional film consultant, he has consulted with writers and
producers such as writer-director Stephen Gaghan on Syriana
(2005), and producer Chuck Roven on Three Kings (1999),
as well as with Coca-Cola’s creative team. He is a 2013
recipient of the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, which pays homage
to those individuals who have distinguished themselves in the
cultural mosaic of America. Shaheen has given more than 1,000
lectures in nearly all 50 states and on three continents. In
cooperation with the U.S. government, Dr. Shaheen has conducted
seminars throughout the Middle East. He also consulted with the
United Nations, the Los Angeles Commission on Human Relations,
the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, and New York
City’s Commission on Civil Rights. Shaheen’s new book, A is for Arab:
Archiving Stereotypes in U.S. Popular Culture, features
telling photographs of materials from the Jack G. Shaheen
Archive at NYU. His book and a special traveling exhibit
documents U.S. popular culture representations of Arabs and
Muslims from the early 20th century to the present. NYU’s
Shaheen Archive contains more than 4,000 images, including
motion pictures, cartoons,and TV programs, as well as toys and
games featuring anti-Arab and anti-Muslim depictions. His other books are: Nuclear War
Films, The TV Arab, Arab and Muslim Stereotyping in American
Popular Culture, the award-winning book [and DVD] Reel
Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People,
and GUILTY: Hollywood’s
Verdict on Arabs after 9/11. His writings include 300-plus
essays in publications such as Newsweek, The Wall Street
Journal, The Washington Post and the
Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs, as well as dozens of chapters on
stereotypes in numerous college textbooks. Dr. Shaheen, an Oxford Research Scholar,
is the recipient of two Fulbright teaching awards; he holds
degrees from the Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pennsylvania
State University, and the University of Missouri. He has
appeared on national network programs such as
CNN, MSNBC, National
Public Radio, Nightline, Good Morning America, 48 Hours,
and The Today Show. |
Grant
F. Smith
Jeff Stein of The Washington Post designated Smith “a
Washington, DC author who has made a career out of writing
critical books on Israeli spying and lobbying.” Nathan Guttman
of The Jewish Daily Forward recognizes Smith as leading a
public effort to “call attention of the authorities to AIPAC’s
activity and [demand] public scrutiny of the group’s legal
status.” Smith has initiated lawsuits against the
Department of Defense and Central Intelligence Agency under the
Freedom of Information Act for public release of files
officially acknowledging Israel’s clandestine nuclear weapons
program and unprosecuted weapons-grade uranium diversions from
the United States. |
Helena Cobban has covered the Middle East as a reporter, author,
researcher and blogger, including as a columnist for The
Christian Science Monitor. She has a long history of
advocating for the equal rights for all peoples of the Middle
East to be honored and respected on the basis of international
law. Cobban believes there must be a cessation of war and all
forms of violence, including military occupations and other
forms of institutional violence. In 2010, she founded Just World
Books (www.justworldbooks.com)
with the goal of expanding the discourse in the United States
and globally on issues of vital international concern. Its
published authors include Richard Falk, Miko Peled, Gareth
Porter and Alice Rothchild.
Janet McMahon
Janet McMahon is the managing editor at
the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs. She earned her B.A. in
English at Reed College and has a graduate diploma in Middle
East Studies from the American University in Cairo. She is an
expert on the Israel Lobby and pro-Israel political action
committees (PACs).
McMahon co-edited Seeing the Light:
Personal Encounters With the Middle East and Islam, and
Donald Neff’s 50 Years of Israel, both compilations of
feature articles from
the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. She
also edited Stealth Pacs:
Lobbying Congress for Control of U.S. Middle East Policy by
Richard H. Curtiss. In addition to her editorial duties, she has
written special reports on Israel and Palestine, and has
contributed articles to special issues of the Washington
Report on Iran, Tunisia, Cyprus and Libya.
Delinda C. Hanley
Delinda Hanley is the executive director
and news editor at the
Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. Before
joining the magazine in 1996, Hanley spent decades in the Middle
East, studying in Lebanon, volunteering with the Peace Corps and
later working in Oman and Saudi Arabia.
From 1990 to 1996 Hanley worked as a
researcher, editor and writer for Empire Press (now Weider
History Group) and Sovereign Media.
Hanley writes for the Washington
Report on an array of topics, including Muslim- and
Arab-American politics and civil rights issues. Her articles
have also been published in the Arab News, the Minaret,
Islamic Horizons, Jewish Spectator and other publications.
She is the winner of the NAAJA 2011
Excellence in Journalism award for her dedication to accuracy
and professionalism.
Askia Muhammad
Askia Muhammad is the news director
of Pacifica Radio’s WPFW, the DC area’s station for “Jazz &
Justice.” Muhammad is also a poet and photojournalist. He has
been a regular commentator for National Public Radio and for
Christian Science Monitor Radio.
Muhammad served as editor of
Muhammad Speaks
and as head of the Washington office of
The Final Call,
the official newspapers of the
Nation of Islam.
He is a columnist for
The Washington Informer,
a Washington weekly newspaper that seeks to “educate, empower
and inform” its readers, and author of the book
Behind Enemy Lines.
His articles have appeared in
The Washington Post, USA Today, The Nation, The Baltimore Sun,
and
The Chicago Tribune.
Muhammad has devoted four decades of his life to covering the stories and issues largely missed or misreported in the corporate-owned media. In the 1960s he worked to overcome racism in America and in 2003 began advocating against the war in Iraq. Today he supports talks—not attacks—on Iran. His objective and insightful coverage of war, racism, poverty and inequality from a global perspective has made him a legend. His quiet mentorship of young journalists working to join his profession has made an impact on the media for generations to come.
He has received multiple awards from the National Association of Black Journalists for his work as a commentator on Pacifica Radio and National Public Radio
.
Dale Sprusansky is the assistant editor
of the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs. He
reports on the U.S.-Israel relationship and it's impact on the
Palestinian people and the broader Middle East. Sprusansky
received his B.A. in Political Science from Stetson University
in DeLand, FL. He has lived in Egypt and traveled extensively
throughout the region.