
We did it!!!
Image: Freepik
Today Wellington City Council voted to initiate a Friendly City link with Ramallah, Palestine with the longer term aim of becoming sister cities.
In a rather lively session, Alternative Jewish Voices had this to say:
Mayor Whanau, councillors and neighbours, Tēnā koutou. Kō Marilyn Garson taku ingoa. Ngā mihi nui for the opportunity to speak for Alternative Jewish Voices of which I am a co-founder.
In 1982, the Wellington City Council declared Wellington a nuclear-free city. A few years later, the country agreed. Cities act in the interests of their citizens. Wellington has 13 sister city relationships and they have not brought the sky down. Taipei is our sister city, as are several Chinese cities – so which government do the no-voters believe we’re endorsing?
Or perhaps you have been told that Palestinians are a special case, that the people who live in the West Bank are essentially political beings, existing only in opposition to Jewish people like me.
Those comments are essentially political, but the West Bankers are not. No person’s identity is limited to politics. It is deeply wrong to think that Palestinians exist only through the issue of occupation. It is equally wrong to refuse to interact with them until Israel ends its occupation. The effect of reducing people that way is to further punish them for being an occupied people.
Our Palestinian neighbours are too often reduced to politics rather than being acknowledged as one more ethnic community which fully participates as of right in every venue, every aspect of Wellington’s life.
Friendly cities are the antithesis and maybe an antidote to all those politics. Sister city relations are cultural, profitable—curious. I worked four years in Gaza and I worked occasionally in Ramallah because it is the technology hub of Palestine. Ramallah hosted regular Start-up Weekends to feed its entrepreneurial incubators. We did much of our work in the cafes, of which Ramallah has many. Does that sound familiar? Those are the ways in which we hope to enjoy our Palestinian sister city – visiting, exchanging ideas, investing, maybe the odd joint venture.
This initiative should also foster positive encounters between the ethnic groups of Wellington, and AJV thanks you for promoting that.
It is misguided and misleading to hesitate to connect with Palestinian people out of fear of my Jewish community’s response. It’s misguided because the rights of my neighbours to expression, connection with their whanau and whenua, the peaceful enjoyment of our shared public space, robust political participation and the full realisation of their rights – in short, their wholeness is not at my expense. Palestinian identity and rights do not diminish me. They enrich the tapestry of the city we share.
No one, including my people, has the right to define our identity so expansively that they ask you to erase others.
It is misleading to imagine Jews and Palestinians in a zero-sum relationship. Alternative Jewish Voices was formed partly to say that we Jews are diverse in the ways that we love and express our Jewishness. We are here today to say in our Jewish voices that we welcome Ramallah to the Wellington whanau. Let’s break down the barriers that estrange us.
Friendly city, sister city, whatever – we welcome this opportunity to get to know Ramallah and make Ramallah better known to Wellingtonians.
Alternative Jewish Voices wishes to thank Mayor Whanau and this council for leading in the interests of Wellingtonians.

June 29, 2023
Alternative Jewish Voices of Aotearoa – New Zealand




