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Three Cities Against the Wall is an
exhibition protesting the Separation Wall under
construction by Israel in the Occupied Territories of
Palestine. This project involves groups of artists in
Ramallah, Palestine; Tel Aviv, Israel; and New York
City. The show will be held simultaneously in all three
cities in November 2005.
Through this collaborative exhibition, the organizers
and participating artists will draw attention to the
reality of the Wall and its disastrous impact on the
daily lives of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians by
the separation of Palestinian communities from each
other and from their fertile lands, water resources,
schools, hospitals and work places, thereby
“contributing to the departure of Palestinian
populations,” as the International Court of Justice has
warned.
The wall also destroys the human spirit. Spiritual
and cultural life cannot survive under these conditions,
and we, as artists, find it necessary to fight this
crime with the means we possess.
This illegal Wall prevents the possibility of a just
solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict based on
the universal principles of equality and
self-determination. It prolongs the conflict and the
suffering that results from it. Therefore we Israeli,
Palestinian, and American artists call attention to the
urgency of dismantling the Wall, which threatens any
peaceful future in Israel and Palestine.
In an advisory opinion issued at the Hague in July
2004, the International Court of Justice found the
Separation Wall to be illegal. The court stated this
unequivocally: “The construction of the wall being built
by Israel, the occupying power, in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including in and around East
Jerusalem, and its associated regime, [is] contrary to
international law.”

Curatorial and organizing committees for Three Cities
Against the Wall, comprised of local artists and
activists, have been established in each of the three
participating cities. These committees have each invited
numerous artists to participate, each of whom was asked
to provide three works, one for each of the three
locations.
In Palestine, Tayseer Barakat, founder of the League
of Palestinian Artists and curator of Gallery Barakat,
and the artist and organizer Sliman Mansour organized
the exhibition. The organizations involved are the
League of Palestinian Artists and the Palestinian
Association of Contemporary Art.
In Israel the project was organized by a group of
artists and activists that came together to resist the
Wall through art and culture. Members of the group are
associated with the Israeli Coalition Against the Wall,
Ta’ayush, and Anarchists Against the Wall. These groups
are active in protests and projects, both in Israel and
Palestine, against the occupation and the construction
of the Wall; many have participated in demonstrations
where protesters have been seriously injured - Palestinian,
Israeli, and international.
In New York, Three Cities Against the Wall was
organized through the arts center ABC No Rio by a
committee of artists and activists, a number of them
associated with the radical comic magazine World War 3
Illustrated. ABC No Rio is a community center for the
arts that grew out of housing struggles on New York’s
Lower East Side. World War 3 Illustrated was founded in
1979 to oppose the right-wing policies of Ronald Reagan.
It has been publishing art and articles in support of
the rights of the Palestinian people since 1988, when it
published an interview with the Palestinian political
cartoonist Naji Al-Ali. Many of the organizers in New
York participate in the International Solidarity
Movement, Women in Black, SUSTAIN (Stop U.S. Tax-funded
Aid to Israel Now), the International Women’s Peace
Service, Jews Against the Occupation, and other groups
opposed to Israel’s unjust occupation.

In the process of creating Three Cities Against the
Wall, the organizers and participating artists built
networks and forged relationships between their
respective communities to oppose Israel’s oppression of
the Palestinian people and the Wall as a symbol of that
oppression.
Yet while American, Palestinian, and Israeli artists
are showing their work together in this exhibition, we
understand that their relationship is not one of
equality. The relationship between Palestinians and
Israelis is like that between prisoners and guards, with
U.S. citizens as the prison’s patrons. Americans finance
Israel through their tax dollars; some also finance
Israel through contributions to Zionist organizations.
The Wall is horrifying because it casts these
relationships in concrete, making Palestinian
imprisonment more thorough and more permanent.
Ironically, there is also an opportunity created by
the Wall: this physical barrier makes the oppression of
Palestinians more visible. Artists can use the Wall as a
metaphor to educate the public. We are working together
because we understand that by uniting our voices we are
more likely to be heard and will therefore be better
able to inform people about the true nature of this
catastrophic situation. We also want to demonstrate that
within the Israeli and the American public there is
opposition to the Wall.
With this exhibit, we are laying the foundation for
building a community of artists across borders. And we
are demonstrating our joint opposition to injustice and
oppression, both on moral and ethical grounds and
because injustice and oppression engender a separation
between peoples, preventing normal human communication
between them.
We believe that the world of the future is a world
without borders. We support the right of a Turk to work
in Germany, of a Haitian to seek refuge in the United
States, of a Croat to live peacefully in Serbia. Thus we
also support the right of a Palestinian, a Jew, or
anyone else to live in the city of his or her choice, to
enjoy all the privileges of citizenship there, and to
travel freely to and from this home. This is not a
radical demand but a natural human expectation. The
attempts of twentieth century governments to control
their nations’ demographics through genocide, forced
transfer, and other coercive means have been a disaster
and such policies must be discarded. It is outrageous
that at a time when governments in Europe are discussing
the possibility of open borders, Israel is building a
new border of cement and steel. We oppose the Wall
because it is a wall against the future. |