From:
Dr. Mohammad Said,
Democratic State Delegate and Platform Member,
13th District, and Vice Chairman, Democratic Central Committee,
Grant County, Washington State,
USA Arab Americans, Palestinian Americans and Muslim Americans. Dear Brothers and Sisters,
Assalamu-AIIaikum I am writing this letter as a political activist, President and Founder
of newly formed political organization called the Palestinian-American Action Committee to
convey to you my personal experience in the mainstream of American politics. I am like
many of you, of Arab decent, and Palestinian background, with Islamic faith.
Some of my friends and Arab American organizations asked
me to make a brief history of my political involvement since they could not believe that a
Palestinian American in a little town no more than eight thousand people in a rural area
in Washington State can single-handedly accomplish so much, and be able to pass very
important resolutions at the Washington Democratic Convention, held on June 9, 1990 in
Spokane, Washington State, the only state in the nation to pass such important
resolutions. In the presence of more than 1500 delegates, who are considered the core of
the Democratic party in the state, unprecedented victory was achieved when one resolution
after another was adopted while my wife Nadia, who happened also be a delegate, was
manning our table with signs and literature dealing with the Palestinian issues, and while
my children Yasser, 13, Noor-Philastine, 12, and Hashem, 8, were distributing my letter to
the delegates, with other literatures, in spite of the opposition of the mighty
Pro-Israeli camp, including the AIPAC and ADL with their biggest gun of all, a letter
signed by Congressmen, U.S. Senator, the Governor of the State, many state senators and
elected officials of the state, 83 of them advocating a pro-Israeli stand, calling for a
vote against self determination and statehood for the Palestinian people and bashing the
Palestine Liberation Organization and 21 Arab States. However, the convention
overwhelmingly approved resolutions calling for a Palestinian statehood,
self-determination, Visa to Chairman Arafat, FAO resolution, hold Foreign aid to Israel,
and Resolutions on Chemical and Nuclear weapons in the Middle East. The resolution on
Jerusalem was not put on the floor because of the time which passed almost 7 PM and
therefore, with 12 others, were referred to the Democratic Central Committee when they
meet in September of 1990, and I have no doubt that resolution would have passed
overwhelmingly if it had come to the floor, and I am still hoping it will be pass by the
Democratic Central Committee in September, and I am working on it.
How did it happen? Simple, a commitment in time and
money. In other words, I had to do my homework, and I found that if you are committed to a
cause and you are articulate, and well prepared, and if you are at the level of every
state of the political process, and if you present your case in a way easy to understand
but with force, without any fear or any inferiority complex, the American people will
respond favorably and overwhelmingly. I found the Americans are just average people like
anybody else, fair minded, are willing to support a just cause in spite of the opposition
from their elected officials. Some of you may ask how I got involved, very simple, if you
are in a State where there is a caucus, just go to your Caucus and get involved. It does
not matter if it is Democratic or Republican. So in February of this year, when I called
for a meeting of the Caucus in my office as precinct a Committeeman, I had no illusions
that many people would show up. Indeed, I persuaded my wife, who used to be a Republican,
to change and register as a Democrat this time and to join me in my Caucus. I persuaded
her to join me because 2 years ago, when I held my Caucus only 4 people showed up, they
signed the official paper and left, and I was left alone to write all the planks and the
resolutions, some of them went all the way to be adopted at the State Convention in
Olympia, which dealt with the Palestinian self-determination and Statehood, and I went
from a delegate elected in my Caucus by myself, to be on the Platform, and be elected by
the State convention in Olympia to represent the whole state of Washington on the
Democratic National Platform Committee and to be one of those 186 platform members who
represented all of the United States, who drafted the Democratic Platform for Presidential
aspirant at that time.
This year, I was very happy that my wife was the only
other person in my Caucus, though in retrospect, I regret that, since had she stayed as a
Republican, we would have introduced some important and similar resolutions at the
Republican convention through her, since the Washington State Republican Party passed
resolution reaffirming the unconditional support of Israel. We could not find anybody to
carry some of our resolutions to the Convention. With my wife's support at our caucus we
drafted and passed those important resolutions by ourselves, and both of us were elected
by ourselves to be delegates to the County Convention and from there as delegates to the
State, and myself as Platform member later on. Some of the resolutions we drafted such as
in Health care, and Injured workers, were adopted at the State Convention and probably
will go into the Legislature and be adopted in the State, and we are proud of this
contribution.
It is not that difficult. Everyone can register and
attend any of these Caucuses, and remember if you want to be something, if you want your
voice to be heard in this country, there is only two ways, to vote, or to contribute in
terms of time or money. If you don't do any of those, you are nothing, and you are counted
on us as a number only, as Arab-American, Palestinian-American or Muslim-American. It is
very important to go every step on the way, otherwise your resolutions and planks will die
out completely, especially on the Palestinian-Israeli issue. You will find many people who
are sympathetic to our cause, but they are not going to do the job for us, they simply are
not brave enough, or maybe intimidated, not to present any of our resolutions.
We have to be physically present at every stage of the
political process. Caucus, County Convention, Legislative District Meeting, Platform
Sub-Committee meeting, Platform State Convention, etc. The presence of the Pro-Israeli,
particularly from the Jewish community made a difference in their tremendous influence
throughout the nation over the years, because nobody was there to challenge them or to
present our views. Letters to delegates are a very important source of information, it is
important that the letters be truthful, not a letter of numbers, or abstracts, with a
personal experience and I have no doubt that many Palestinians had many experiences
including personal tragedy and emotional upheaval just like I had. Don't be defensive, be
frank and courageous, mention everything by name, don't be shy in mentioning Israel and
its brutal suppression and its terrorist tactics.
I am getting sick and tired everywhere I go, to any
Arab, Palestinian, or Muslim convention to hear again and again that nothing else could be
done, that the Pro-Israeli in this country, particularly the Jewish Community are so
powerful that they control the news media, etc., and I remind those people that this is
true because they have been in the field alone, and nobody was there to present our ideas
and our concern. I say this to the Arab-Americans, 3 million of them in this country, what
kind of a commitment do they have? How many Palestinian-Americans are in this country?
Probably over 100,000, and I am sure lots of them are in every state and city, if we have
only one in every city, and several in a state, if they are committed, and many of them
are educated and articulate, they will make a difference. I say to Muslim-Americans who
are more than 5 millions, who run tens, maybe hundreds of Mosques all over the nation, to
get involved taking as examples the churches and the synagogues political activities. I
have been to many Mosques and Islamic centers and unfortunately they are in their own
shells, at the margin of American politics, their concern sometimes seem to be is more
about Halal meqt than about Jerusalem. Many of them claim to be fundamentalists, and their
political activity is centered on prayers for victory and the curse of their enemies. But
I tell them, my description of fundamentalism is to get out into the community and be
active at every level. To carry out our message in this time of communications, satellites
and faxes, this is a true Jehad.
I say this because I myself have been involved in the
Islamic organization all my life. I was the founder or the co-founder of the Islamic
Student Organization in Europe, Spain, the Muslim Communities in Canada, the Islamic
Medical Association in Europe and the USA, etc.. I never found any conflict of being
involved in Arabic, Palestinian or US political organizations at the same time, such as
Common Cause, ACLU, Peoples for the American Way, the Rainbow Coalition, MADD, Physicians
for Social Responsibility, Nuclear Freeze, etc.. It is true, there is lots of negatives in
this country, family disintegration, drugs, alcoholism, pornography, etc., and I am aware
of those because I see those on a daily basis through treatment of my patients, however, I
see lots of positives, a great country, which I consider the heart of the political and
economic activity of this planet. So if we want to change things in Africa, Asia or
Europe, we change them through the United States, through their communications, their
movies, their books, their satellites. I have been to many Islamic conventions and some of
them about Palestine, and it is tragic that the people who attend those conventions from
overseas and the USA are practically the same people who talk among themselves in Arabic
yet they fail to carry this message to the most important sector, to the American people.
They emphasize only on the negative, that nothing can be done here. They fail to
understand that only in this country are they able to meet and discuss many issues which
they cannot do in any Arab country. Their publications are only published through here and
cannot be allowed freely, to be published in any Arab Country.
How do you start? First of all, you have to register as
a voter, to any party of your choice, and attend rallies in your area, there is nothing
special about it, there is little or no money involved, simply your time. My first
involvement in the main stream of American politics, though I was active in politics all
my life, was in 1984, when I volunteered for one week for Jesse Jackson, when he ran for
President. I went to Iowa and I campaigned for him. I met with many people. He was very
grateful for our contribution and effort at that time, when he was just starting to be
known. When I came back from Iowa, I attended a Caucus in my area for the first time. We
were only 4 people, the guest, his wife, myself and somebody else. When you are
campaigning in an area you need to be wide open, not just concentrate on Mid-East
issues, but a broad spectrum of issues such as the environment, child care, drug and
alcohol abuse. All of these are very popular and very important issues, they will get you
right into the core of the political scene. Join groups with these objectives and work
with them and our issues and concerns will be part of there agenda.
When Carter became President lots of us had great hopes
that he would do something, but after he engineered the Camp David Accord, and after he
mentioned in a little town in New England about the Suffering of the Palestinian people,
he faded away. We were disappointed with his performance and we thought the Republicans
would be forth coming, so when President Reagan came, we had great hope, but after his
first term, with his strong support for Israel, we thought that in the second term, he
would not be under pressure for re-election, so he would be more evenhanded, but our
thinking and expectation was not correct. When President Bush came to office with John
Sununu, the Chief of Staff, and George Mitchell the Majority leader of the Senate, both of
Arabic decent, we thought things would change, but nothing will change.
The obstacle we are facing is not the White House, or
Secretary of State, it is Congress with their subcommittees who decide the direction of
foreign policy and the appropriation bills, and unless those are changed, nothing will
change. The only way to change those congressmen and senators is through the grass roots
from their states, like we did in Washington State. One state will not do very much unless
other states join in so that many Senators and Congressmen, under pressure from their
constituents start to introduce bills and legislation favorable to Self- Determination and
Human Rights for the Palestinians which is a just cause in light of the US Constitution,
traditional values and the national interest.
It is difficult to put all my ideas and plans in this
letter, but I am available for advise, so write or call me. Finally, I am enclosing some
important literature, including my letters and the resolutions which we passed. Also if
you feel any of the enclosed materials are of interest please feel free to make copies and
pass them along.
Sincerely yours,
Mohammad H. Said, M.D., Ph.D.
Ephrata, Washington State, 98823
Phone: (509) 7544689 FAX: (509) 7~3241 |