Status Audio Magazine

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ISSUE 5.1

The Rise and Fall of the New Orleans BDS Resolution

Tabitha Mustafa , Max Geller

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Interviewed by Noura Erakat
{{langos=='en'?('25/02/2018' | todate):('25/02/2018' | artodate)}}
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In early January – the New Orleans City Council passed a resolution imposing a human rights screen to prevent municipal investments in initiatives that make the city complicit in human rights abuses. That resolution included projects that enhance Israel’s apartheid regime.

Max Geller and Tabitha Mustafa, of the New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee, discuss the campaign that culminated in the resolution, as well as the fall-out that followed it.

Learn more about the resolution and NOPC:

Five of the seven city council members co-sponsored the resolution. Right before the vote, Jason Williams, the Council’s President, explained, “This resolution specifically recognizes the city’s social and ethical obligations to take steps to avoid contracting with or investing in certain corporations, namely those that consistently violate human rights, civil rights, or labor rights." The resolution passed unanimously making New Orleans the first city in the South to endorse the Palestinian Call for Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions or BDS.

Within less than a week, the Council was subject to a severe local and national backlash led by the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans and the New Orleans chapter of the Anti-Defamation League. Within two weeks, the Council re-convened and rescinded the resolution.

For more information on the New Orlean's Palestinian Solidarity Committee, visit their official website.

Guests

Tabitha Mustafa
Tabitha Mustafa

Tabitha Mustafa is a Black Palestinian-American residing in New Orleans, LA. 

Tabitha is the founder and core organizer of New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee, which co-authored the resolution, and a program associate at American Friends Service Committee, which signed onto it. Her work has been featured in media outlets including Refinery 29, The Real News Network, and The Advocate. 

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Max Geller
Max Geller

Max Geller is an organizer with the New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee, specializing in Palestine solidarity opposition research.

Max has studied the tax returns of over 90 active Zionist groups in America. In New Orleans, Max is building radical community based at the intersection of resistance to Zionism and antiblack racism. Much to his chagrin, Max is most famous for being the catalyst of the Renoir Sucks at Painting Movement.


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