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Draft Letter Calling for a Ceasefire
I am writing to you today as someone who has spent my career working in [international development | global humanitarian assistance | global public health | international education]. I am writing today to share a petition signed by over 4,500 of my colleagues urging you to call for a ceasefire now, to stop US military assistance to Israel and to ask the US government to call on the state of Israel to adhere to the International Court of Justice's mandates, including increasing access to humanitarian assistance. I am including the full text of the signed petition below.
In my work, I have [add information about how your work leads you to support an end to the siege in Gaza.]
Again, I urge you to call for a ceasefire now,
[name]
Calling all Global Development Professionals to Collectively and Unapologetically Raise Our Voices For Ceasefire
As global development and humanitarian assistance professionals, we jointly call for a permanent and enduring ceasefire, condemn the unfolding genocide, and call for an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
We are choosing to speak up as individuals because many of our political and organizational leaders have remained silent in the face of genocide. Because our shared humanity and actions extend beyond the organizations we work for. And most importantly, because we are not alone - we are in the global majority. We are in solidarity with all individuals, communities, and movements around the world who are calling for a permanent ceasefire and end to the occupation.
As international development and humanitarian assistance professionals, we see the global and local impact of violence and war firsthand. We know that a building that is destroyed in a second by a bomb will take years to rebuild. We know that preventing violence at its root creates a safer world for children, families, and communities. We know that many of the psychosocial support, empowerment, and ‘resilience’ programs we work on are merely a bandage after the type of violence has been unleashed - bomb after bomb - in Gaza. We know that the amount of money our governments spend on military aid to bomb innocent people far surpasses the amount of money they spend on emergency aid and reconstruction, and programming. For example, the 2021 U.S. government military budget was 10 times greater than the entire USAID budget, at $408 billion to $41 billion.
We have witnessed Western governments - primarily the United States, UK, EU, Canada and Australia - expand their support and funding for the Israeli military machine, helping to increase the profits reaped by defense companies. We bear witness to the killing of Palestinians with the death tolling rising every single hour, nearly half of them children, and over 100 humanitarian aid workers- these are our friends and colleagues and co-workers; the starvation and dehydration of 2.3 million Palestinians; the forced displacement of 1.8 million people (and counting); homes, schools, hospitals and the health system flattened; and communities shattered – that no amount of “aid” will ever be able to put back together.
And while we watch in horror the genocide in Gaza unfold, the violence and terror of the Israeli occupation in the West Bank, including Jerusalem, has also heightened, including increasing numbers of people who are being arrested and administratively detained without charge or trial.
We have also witnessed willful and/or forced silence from most sector leaders. This is especially disappointing in the case of organizations and leaders who have jumped on the "decolonizing" trend in the global development discourse, but have been blatantly silent in the face of actual colonization and often siding with the occupiers.
This is the moment in which all of our talk - all of our discussions, all the workshops we’ve attended, all the pithy tweets - meets action. Today, we are saying that we will not just speak about belonging, creating safe spaces, listening to local leaders, localization, and supporting decolonization. Words alone are not enough. We commit ourselves to action against colonization and colonial violence that is happening live before our very eyes.
The truth is, we all have been silent for too long. And, therefore, complicit.
We recognize that we - especially those of us who are from Western/Global North organizations and those of us who are “expats” - explicitly benefit from war, violence, occupation, and apartheid. As calls grow for international aid to be brought to Gaza, it is our Western-based organizations that will win lucrative contracts to promote “aid” and “response” in Gaza - after a war that our [Western] political leaders allowed to happen. And we also know that the majority of the funding in those grants and contracts will go to Western organizations rather than Palestinian organizations and movements. We are the ones who will see new job postings open up. Already, we are hearing international development leadership speak about a “good budget year” for 2024 and exploring ways to staff up “the Middle East” or “stabilization” teams to make sure our organizations are “positioned” for success. Yet again, we are watching as we create a war, and then reward ourselves with work to fix the problem.
We recognize that the silence of development organizations about Palestine is reflective of the development industry’s fundamental contradiction, in which the political and economic agendas of “Western/Global North” governments and corporations supersede the rights and self-determination of individuals and communities in the places where development programs are being funded.
We acknowledge the problematic nature of the concept of an ‘international development’ led by Western organizations and nations, and point to the current reality in Palestine as an illustration of the hypocrisy of Western leadership: we will bomb your lands, extract its resources, then pay our own people to step in and provide “aid” in support of “development.” This pattern of structural violence and extraction has occurred in Iraq, Cambodia, Afghanistan, Guatemala, Pakistan, and numerous other countries and now unfolds in real time in Gaza.
We also acknowledge that the violence in Palestine is interconnected with broader, transnational struggles for justice and liberation. The partnerships between police forces in the United States and the Israeli military connect the struggle for Black liberation in “donor” countries with the Palestinian struggle in “donor-funded” countries. We recognize that the ongoing extractive strategies of imperialism, colonization, and capitalism that have fueled slavery, caused genocides of Indigenous people worldwide, and accelerated the climate crisis and depletion of natural resources from countries in the Global South are also fueling today’s genocides and violence in not just Palestine, but also multiple other places, including Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Syria, Yemen, and Haiti.
Further, we acknowledge that our sector’s silence enables dangerous new precedents for future contexts. The international community’s silence in the face of the forced displacement of ethnic Armenians from the Karabakh/Artsakh region has set a precedent for the genocide of Palestinians in Gaza. We recognize that nearly endless drone bombings of Pakistan by the U.S. normalized the use of drones in war making at scale. As such, any impunity afforded to the state of Israel as it bombs hospitals, schools, churches, mosques, and refugee camps will set a precedent for future violence and humanitarian crises that our sector will then be tasked with ‘aiding,’ ‘developing’ and ‘empowering’ thereafter.
We are signing this letter in recognition of the impact of structural violence and colonialism, in support of liberation for Palestine, and in support of a broader systemic analysis of our entire sector. We are signing as individuals because we are not waiting for our organizations, funders, and other ‘sectoral leaders’ to “lead.” At a minimum, we cannot sit by and silently witness yet another cycle of bandaging over a war with promises of post-war development. As international development professionals, we have a responsibility to stand up and speak out on human rights and address the root causes of human suffering and injustices.
And we know that together, we can create a movement where we can collectively build a liberated world in which all people are safe from violence - for Palestinians and all of us.
Draft Letter Thanking Member for Calling for a Ceasefire
I am writing to you today as someone who has spent my career working in [international development | global humanitarian assistance | global public health | international education]. I am writing today to thank you for your support in calling for a ceasefire to stop the siege in Gaza.
In my work, I have [add information about how your work leads you to support an end to the siege in Gaza.]
It is because of my experience that I know how critical your voice is support of peace is,
[Name]
Contact Congress Members on Senate Foreign Relations Committee and House Foreign Affairs Committee
These two committees in the United States Congress oversea foreign relations, including providing Congressional oversight for USAID and advising State Department on foreign policy.
Use the list below to either send an email or write them a postcard or a letter and mail it to their office location.
Note: It's most effective if US citizens or US residents contact US congress. We are working on toolkits to reach out to policy makers around the globe as well.
Members of Senate Foreign Relations include:
Ben Cardin (chairman) - Democrat, Maryland - Contact today.
Robert Menendez - Democrat, New Jersey - Contact today.
Jeanne Shaheeen - Democrat, New Hampshire - Contact today.
Christopher Coons - Democrat, Delaware - Contact today.
Christopher Murphy - Democrat, Connecticut - Contact today.
Tim Kaine - Democrat, Virginia - Contact today.
Jeff Merkley - Democrat, Oregon - Contact today.
Cory Booker - Democrat, New Jersey - Contact today.
Brian Schatz - Democrat, Hawaii - Contact today.
Chris Van Hollen - Democrat, Maryland - Contact today.
Tammy Duckworth - Democrat, Illinois - Contact today.
Rames Risch (ranking member) - Republican, Idaho - Contact today.
Marco Rubio - Republican, Florida (do not contact)
Mitt Romney - Republican, Utah - Contact today.
Pete Ricketts - Republican, Nebraska - Contact today.
Rand Paul - Republican, Kentucky - Contact today.
Todd Young - Republican, Indiana - Contact today.
John Barrasso - Republican, Wyoming - Contact today.
Ted Cruz - Republican, Texas (do not contact)
Bill Hagerty - Republican, Tennessee - Contact today.
Tim Scott - Republican, South Carolina - Contact today.
Michael McCaul (chair) - Republican, Texas -10 - Contact today.
Gregory Meeks (randking member) - Democrat, NY-5 - Contact today.
Brad Sherman - Democrat, CA - 30 - Contact today.
Gerald Connolly - Democrat, VA -11 - Contact today.
William Keating - Democrat, MA-9 - Contact today.
Ami Bera - Democrat, CA-6 - Contact today.
*Joaquin Castro - Democrat, TX-20 (Issued Ceasefire Statement) - Thank them today.
Dina Titus - Democrat, NV-1 - Contact today.
Ted Lieu - Democrat, CA-36 - Contact today.
Susan Wild - Democrat, PA-7 - Contact today.
*Dean Phillips - Democrat, MN-3 (Issued Ceasefire Statement) - Thank them today.
Colin Allred - Democrat, TX-32 - Contact today.
Andy Kim - Democrat, NJ-3 - Contact today.
*Sara Jacobs - Democrat, CA-51 (Issued Ceasefire Statement) - Thank them today.
Kathy Manning - Democrat, NC-6 - Contact today.
Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick - Democrat, FL-20 - Contact today.
Greg Stanton - Democrat, AZ-4 - Contact today.
Madeline Dean - Democrat, PA-4 - Contact today.
Jared Moskowitz - Democrat, FL-23 - Contact today.
*Jonathan Jackson - Democrat, IL-1 (Co-sponsor of H.Res. 786 for Ceasefire) - Thank them today.
Sydney Kamlager-Dove - Democrat, CA-37 - Contact today.
Jim Costa - Democrat, CA-21 - Contact today.
Jason Crow - Democrat, CO-6 - Contact today.
Gabe Amo - Democrat, RI-7 - Contact today.
Brad Schneider - Democrat, IL-10 - Contact today.
Christopher Smith - Republican, NJ-4 - Contact today.
Joe Wilson - Republican, SC-2 - Contact today.
Scott Perry - Republican, PA-10 - Contact today.
Darrell Issa - Republican, CA-48 - Contact today.
Ann Wager - Republican, MO-2 - Contact today.
Brian Mast - Republican, FL-21 - Contact today.
Ken Buck - Republican, CO-4 - Contact today.
Tim Burchett - Republican, TN-2 - Contact today.
Mark Green - Republican, TN-07 - Contact today.
Andy Barr - Republican, KY-06 - Contact today.
Ronny Jackson - Republican,TX-13 - Contact today.
Young Kim - Republican, CA-40 - Contact today.
Maria Elvira Salazar - Republican, FL-27 - Contact today.
Bill Huzienga - Republican, MI-4 - Contact today.
Amata Radewagen - Republican, AS-AL - Contact today.
French Hill - Republican, AR-2 - Contact today.
Warren Davidson - Republican, OH-8 - Contact today.
Jim Baird - Republican, IN-4 - Contact today.
Mike Waltz - Republican, FL-6 - Contact today.
Thomas Kean Jr - Republican, NJ-7 - Contact today.
Michael Lawler - - Republican, NY-17 - Contact today.
Cory Mills - Republican, FL-7 - Contact today.
Rich McCormick - Republican, GA-6 - Contact today.
Nathanial Moran - Republican, TX-1 - Contact today.
John James - Republican, MI-10 - Contact today.
Keith Self - Republican, TX-3 - Contact today.