Home » NH Angle

July 14. 2012 12:05AM

Goffstown Woman Defends Palestine

GOFFSTOWN – She calls it the side of the story that Americans need to hear, and Carolyn Cicciu of Goffstown has made it her mission to educate Americans about the mistreatment of Palestine by Israel.

Cicciu, along with a group of about thirty, including a woman from Laconia, traveled to the Middle East in May to see living conditions in Palestine firsthand. It was her second trip there; the first was in 2009.

“We find often that the media doesn't give an accurate – or any – coverage of the situation,” Cicciu said. “People have no idea of how much suffering is going on over there.”

According to Cicciu, Israel's occupation of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip since 1967 has left Palestinians “poorer and poorer,” and is urging the United States to limit its military aid to Israel.

"The US gives Israel three billion dollars a year in military aid,” Cicciu said. “It gives Palestinians nothing.”

The Palestine Cicciu described is bleak. Many villages have no water or electricity, Cicciu said, because Israel is attempting to limit utilities in order to drive Palestinians away.

During her visit, her group did not shower because they were told that Palestinians had such a limited water supply.

“People there only had access to water, maybe if they were lucky, three days a week,” she said. “The demand for water is bigger than ever.”

Interfaith Peace-Builders and other groups like it are making an attempt to help Palestinians rise above their circumstances.

Cicciu said there are Israelis who are helping the cause, who are unhappy with their own government.

On her May trip, Cicciu said the group met an Israeli physicist who is showing Palestinians how to make use of solar panels to generate electricity. Currently, Cicciu said much of the electrical grid is owned and controlled by Israel, and won't give Palestine access to it.

“They think if they make life difficult enough, it will force them (Palestinians) to leave the land,” she said.

Still, Ciccu said it's important to teach Palestinians how to survive on their own.

“You can't just give them a handout, you have to empower them,” she said.

Despite their poverty, Cicciu said she found the Palestinians she visited with to be warm and friendly.

“They gave us the best that they had,” she said. “They're portrayed as terrorists, but they aren't at all.”

Cicciu said she is hoping that the United States will reconsider how much military aid it provides to Israel, and feels that US dollars could be better used to address issues here at home, such as healthcare, education and infrastructure.

“Why should we be sending money to a country that is enslaving a people?” she said. “We make it too easy for Israel to follow a military solution when they don't get their way.”

Cicciu writes to Senator Kelly Ayotte each day to express her concerns about Palestine, and said she is disappointed with Ayotte's position.

“I think she's lost her humanity because she's so fixed on this military budget,” Cicciu said.

According to Ayotte's office, the Senator has responded to Cicciu's letters on eight occasions.

“Senator Ayotte respects Ms. Cicciu's genuine dedication to this issue and has welcomed hearing her views,” said Ayotte's Press Secretary Liz Johnson. “The Senator depends on hearing from Granite Staters about the issues they care about – and she considers that dialogue a top priority.”

But Ayotte's position on the issue differs greatly from Cicciu's.

“Israel is our closest and most reliable ally in the Middle East, and Senator Ayotte believes that U.S. assistance to Israel is vital to our national security interests – particularly given ongoing instability and conflict in the region,” Johnson said.

Cicciu plans to continue her efforts.

“I don't even look at this as a religion issue, I look at it as a human rights issue,” she said. “I've always been an advocate for human rights.”

kremillard@newstote.com
CLICK TO VIEW THE SOURCE MATERIAL

LATEST NEW HAMPSHIRE ANGLE

An aggregation of NH information by the staff and audience of the New Hampshire Union Leader, The Goffstown News, The Bedford Bulletin, The Hooksett Banner and The Salem Observer. Share a news link or start a discussion.

Business

0Jeff McLynch: Tax exemption for tips eats away at fiscal stability

0Jim Rubens: N.H. would lose a casino border war with Massachusetts

0Winklevoss twins on Bitcoin: Time to work with the Feds

0Bitcoin ATM Robocoin makes money laundering easy

0NHBR: N.H. manufacturers learn to live with, and reap benefits from, deregulated electricity market

0NH company introduces alternative way for golfers to hold private golf club membership

0Manchester airport sees another 2.9% decline in passengers in March

0The Page indicted on felonies following bar patron's death

0Community Services sells record $956,250 in tax credits to help pay for $2.4M renovation of Laconia building

0NH company seeking $200,000 for saving Maine lobster boat

0NH truck driver involved in fatal Vt. accident

0GT Advanced acquires Thermal Technology to make tough sapphire screens

0NHBR: NH already has slot machines - and lots of them

0Greg Moore: NH must end war on energy consumers

Politics

0Atlas Society CEO Aaron Day scheduled to speak at Porcfest X

0Right-to-know suit filed against Carroll County commissioners

Courts and Public Oversight

0New Hampshire diocese settles case about priest's questions to boy in confessional

0Criminal checks sought for jurors in Bulger case

0NH man asks Maine's high court for new trial for murder of nursing student

0Standex settles ice machine lawsuit for $6M

0NHPUC denies PNE petition for rehearing on new PSNH default rate

0NHSUPCO: NH v. David McLeod - Reversed in part, vacated in part, remanded

0NHSUPCO: NH v. Brendan Bisbee - Police officer's perjury conviction affirmed

0NHSUPCO: NH v. Allen R. Mercier - Conviction for disobeying a police officer and habitual offender reversed and remanded.

0NH Supreme Court seeks amicus briefs in case involving an inmate forced to pursue small claims case by video after being refused transport

0NH Supreme Court seeks amicus briefs in case involving DMV rejection of COPSLIE license plate

0 Obama appeals court decision allowing abortion pill to be sold to kids of all ages

0U.S. Supreme Court sides with state in towing case

General News

0Box truck full of firefighting gear headed to El Salvador thanks to rule

0Fired Fitzwilliam chief on track to become officer in Hinsdale

0Police: Intoxicated driver struck pedestrian, took him to hospital

0N.H. man gets more than 15 years for two Maine bank robberies

0Baby's ashes rescued from burning home in Pelham

0Manchester man who met with bomber was aid to Chechen rebel leader

1Fourth suit filed vs. Ashland, former police chief

0Former Daniel Webster College student killed in Afghanistan

0Family says convenience store fight resulted from man chasing down acquaintance who attempted burglary

0Successful Technology executive named president of FIRST

0Dartmouth students protest concert over misogynistic, violent lyrics

Features & Entertainment

0Photographer defies convention - and gravity - to get the shot

0Guides blown away by gifts after thieves' raid camp taking tents, cookers, gazebos and other gear

0The Atlantic: Dan Brown Is the Anne Hathaway of authors

0Canada.com: Dan Brown parody account is tweeting out a better story than him

0Maine, New Hampshire soldiers named best warriors at Camp Smith competition

0Data finds NH residents curse much, but are very polite

0CSM: Dan Brown at Lincoln Center: More about his childhood than 'Inferno'

0India Association of New Hampshire to hold annual festival Saturday

0NH WILD Center helps Dolly the lion find a new home

0Video: Adam Sandler tells Jay Leno he should move over to Fox

Opinion

0Danielle Curtis: In education, money counts: NH’s top schools often have the lowest amounts of poverty

Sports & Outdoors

029th Crank the Kanc cycling time trial hill climb Saturday

0Video: Salmon Theory: A glimpse of the New Hampshire winter surfing experience

0ESPN: Sprint Cup schedule needs overhaul

0Gen-6 Sprint Cup car tests fast at New Hampshire Motor Speedway

0City of Berlin named 'Landowner of the Year' by state Trails Bureau

0Classmates recall 'North Pond Hermit' as nice, quiet and smart

0Gun shop owners: 'No... I don't have any damn .22 ammo'

0Former Wildcat signs with Arizona Cardinals

0ATVs to use 8 miles on Pittsburg tract to link 1,000-mile system

0Milford's last sawmill struggles against global competition, even as it donates land to conservation

0Car and Driver: 24 Hours of LeMons New England: Winners!

0High-elevation snowmobile trail proposed for Mount Jasper in Berlin

0World record set off NH in 1969 for largest cod may be about to fall

0Fishermen try to stay afloat in face of drastic quotas

0Border to Boston Trail will connect NH to 9 North Shore cities and towns

`

 New Hampshire Events Calendar
    

   » SHARE EVENTS FOR PUBLICATION, IT'S FREE!

Arts and Entertainment
Family, Community and Culture
Outdoors, Sports and Recreation

 New Hampshire Business Directory

  

   » ADD YOUR BUSINESS TODAY!

Press Releases

Sally Nutt and C.R. Marchi

Actors Sally Nutt and C.R. Marchi rehearse for ACT ONE's June production of MAKE SURE IT'S ME

READER COMMENTS: 0

Tickets are now on sale for ACT ONE's world premiere production of Kate Wenner's MAKE SURE IT'S ME, a powerful drama about Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) in the military, coming this June to the West...

Learn to Operate a Steam Locomotive This Summer at New Hampshire's Loon Mountain Resort

READER COMMENTS: 0

Lincoln, NH (May 14) - Loon Mountain Resort is excited to announce its summer Guest Engineer Program, a workshop that teaches train lovers how to operate a working steam engine.

0 The Best Hiking and Biking In NH's Lakes Region

0 Prescott Park Arts Festival Announces 2013 Season Line-Up