Dozens Participate in Pedal for Palestine Bike Tour – from the Mill River to the Sound of the Sea

by Shelly Altman, Jewish Voice for Peace New Haven

On Sept. 21, dozens of New Haveners cycled and spoke to draw public attention to the catastrophic destruction of life and civilian infrastructure in Gaza and the West Bank regions of Palestine. The cyclists navigated a 7-mile route through the streets of New Haven. Speakers at six stops along the way highlighted the effects on Palestinian civil society in the areas of education, water sovereignty, press freedom and safety, health care, food sovereignty, and access to the sea. At each of the stops, professionals spoke on the effects of apartheid and genocide in their areas of expertise.

The cycling event was organized by Jewish Voice for Peace New Haven.

In her remarks, Jewish Voice for Peace member Ellen Rubin said:

Gaza is now the global epicenter of child/family suffering. It has the highest number of orphans, amputees and trauma victims on Earth. Over 700 attacks on health facilities have left more than 96% of Gaza’s hospitals destroyed or damaged. Healthcare and aid workers have been targeted, killed, detained without charge, tortured and even murdered while in prisons.

Tagan Engel and Jamilah Rasheed are two longtime New Haven food and land justice activists who work every day to protect the fundamental rights of every single human being to have food, clean water, and self-determination. They together asked: Can you imagine if four times the population of New Haven were literally dying from starvation right now, and all the people in bordering towns had nothing to eat or drink for days on end — all while food and water could easily be brought in from Milford, Cheshire and Branford if the occupying government would allow it?

The Narrative Project founder and CEO Mercy Quaye spoke to the need for activists to continue speaking truth to counter the silence and misinformation that is so prevalent in American mainstream media in reporting about Palestine.

We call on our members of Congress to sign on to H.R.3565, known as the Stop Arming Israel bill. To date, the legislation has 49 co-sponsors, but none in Connecticut. All of our members must support this critical legislation.

For more information: newhaven@jewishvoiceforpeace.org.

Jewish Voice for Peace is a national grassroots organization inspired by Jewish tradition to work for a just and lasting peace according to principles of human rights, equality, and international law for all the people of Israel and Palestine. 

Famed Professor to Speak on Biodiversity and Sustainability in War-Wracked Palestine

by Yann van Heurck, First Unitarian Universalist Society

Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh will speak via Zoom at First Unitarian Universalist Society of New Haven during the 10:30 a.m. church service on Sunday, Oct. 19.

Dr. Qumsiyeh, former professor of biology and genetics at Yale and author of many academic papers and books, including Sharing the Land of Canaan, is currently director of the Palestine Institute for Biodiversity and Sustainability, and of the Palestine Museum of Natural History, at Bethlehem University in Occupied Palestine. A Christian Palestinian, Dr. Qumsiyeh will share the groundbreaking work of the Institute to preserve the flora, fauna and human populations of the region amid devastating attacks on the environment.

Unitarian Universalism is a multiethnic, multireligious faith that encourages social activism in a context of spiritual awareness. Everyone is welcome to join our service at the meeting house (608 Whitney Ave., New Haven) or by Zoom link. Email Yann for the link at janinawoelfin@gmail.com. We urge all friends of nature and justice to join us!

New DataHaven Estimates Show Risks to Healthcare Coverage in Connecticut Communities

On Sept. 3, DataHaven released a new report titled Coverage at Risk: Projected Losses in Medicaid and Access Health CT by Town and Community, analyzing the projected reductions in health insurance coverage tied to recent federal policy changes.

The report (ctdatahaven.org/coverageatrisk) includes links to interactive data visualizations and colorful maps, showing both the absolute number and share of the population impacted in each town and district.

These projected losses stem from federal legislation (the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”), which introduces administrative verification hurdles, work requirements, and stricter eligibility restrictions. Without intervention, coverage losses could raise healthcare costs for all Connecticut residents, strain safety-net institutions, and widen health disparities.

Disaggregations by income, race/ethnicity, household type, and place of birth are included in the report.

A media advisory with quotes is also available on its website https://www.ctdatahaven.org.

6th Annual Kulturally LIT Fest, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Oct. 4

Oct. 4, 2025, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

ConnCAT, 4 Science Park, New Haven

Join us for the 6th Annual Kulturally LIT Fest — formerly Elm City LIT Fest — a dynamic celebration of Black literature, art, and cultural power. This year’s theme, “The Year of X,” honors the legacies of Malcolm X and Medgar Evers, two revolutionary leaders whose vision, sacrifice, and radical love continue to shape our struggles for justice and liberation.

The 2025 festival will center Black storytelling through powerful panels, workshops, music, vendors, and interactive art. We’ll explore the enduring impact of Malcolm and Medgar across generations. Expect bold conversations, creative expression, and space for both reflection and resistance.

Whether you’re a book lover, a budding writer, an artist, or a freedom dreamer, this festival is for you. Come experience the power of Black literature, legacy, and community.

For more information, please go to bit.ly/42IMJBY.

CT Green Energy News, Sept. 19, 2025

by People’s Action for Clean Energy

CT battling Trump EPA proposal to end greenhouse gas regulation

CT Mirror. “The ‘endangerment finding’ is a seemingly nondescript term for what is arguably the most critical regulation in the US’s climate change-fighting arsenal. It allows the federal government, under the authority of the Clean Air Act, to regulate the greenhouse gas emissions that are warming the planet and in turn causing climate change… President Donald Trump wants to get rid of it… ‘We will not let Trump and Zeldin [head of EPA] do this without a fight,’ said Connecticut Attorney General William Tong…”

Claire Coleman: What end of Revolution Wind project means to New England electricity consumers

New Haven Register, opinion piece. “As Connecticut’s consumer counsel, charged with representing the interests of all Connecticut electric utility consumers before regulators and our regional grid operator, I am deeply concerned by the federal government’s recent stop work order on the Revolution Wind offshore wind project…New England’s independent regional grid operator, ISO New England, has been banking on Revolution Wind to help ensure our state and region have enough electricity to meet demand, particularly during winter cold spells and high heat days when our grid is most challenged…There is no doubt that canceling the power from this wind farm – enough to power 350,000 homes in the region — will compromise our winter reliability and elevate the risk of future blackouts. Electricity consumers will also suffer because the price of the wind energy under the Revolution Wind contract is highly competitive at a 20-year fixed price of under 10 cents per kilowatt hour.”

Rev. Dr. Davida Foy Crabtree: Third Act CT to Stephen Miller: We’re not ‘going home’

CT Mirror, opinion piece. “Presidential advisor Stephen Miller thinks all the ‘elderly hippies’ out protesting should go home and take a nap. We have news for him…We in Third Act CT are a movement of Connecticut elders standing up for democracy and for effective and strategic engagement with climate issues…The sun, after all, shines on all of us. It offers its energy, its light and its power to everyone regardless of status. From its power comes wind and other thermal gradient sources – and we are already harnessing it without depleting it! Over 102,000 solar installations grace Connecticut now. Imagine a future in which giant utilities don’t control your access to electricity and heat! If there were ever a non-oligarchic source of energy, it’s the sun.”

[The above excerpts are from the current CT Green Energy News. To subscribe to this free online newsletter, please go to pacecleanenergy.org.]

Connecticut Rally: Rise Up for Gaza – International Day of Action

Saturday, Oct. 4, 1:30 p.m.
New Haven Green

This October marks two years of Israeli-led US- manufactured genocide on Gaza and its people. Despite the bombs, the starvation campaign, and the devastation of nearly 90% of the Strip, Palestinians have not abandoned their homes or their land and we must not abandon them now. Raise your voice and keep the pressure on our state officials! Follow on Instagram @ampalestinect for updates.

Excerpts from State Sen. Gadkar-Wilcox Statement on Supreme Court Deportation Decision

Today [June 24, 2025], State Sen. Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox, a professor of constitutional law, released a statement in response to the Supreme Court decision that allows the deportation of undocumented immigrants to third-party countries. Sen. Gadkar-Wilcox argues that sending individuals to countries outside of the country of their origin, where they don’t speak the language, understand the culture, or share the same religion, and where they may face harm and violence, violates our most fundamental constitutional right to due process.

“The Supreme Court’s recent ruling allows the Trump administration to deport individuals to countries that are not their country of origin, including conflict zones and countries where they could face persecution – all without due process. Not only is this unconscionable, but it goes well beyond the pale of settled law.”

“We have already seen this administration send individuals to a prison in El Salvador known for human rights violations without so much as a charge. We have seen masked officers abduct a student off the street for exercising free speech. We have seen Donald Trump defy court orders that he does not agree with. We are witnessing an attack on our Constitution unfold before our eyes.”

“In 1944, the Korematsu v. US case legitimized the sending of more than 120,000 Americans of Japanese origin to internment camps. When we reflect on that case today, history shows us that Supreme Court cases that blatantly violate basic human rights will ultimately be remembered as a stain on the constitutional order of the United States. This administration and the Supreme Court would do well to look towards history and learn from our most shameful moments, not repeat them.”

One of the central purposes of due process is to ensure that people are not detained without a meaningful opportunity to be heard or deported to places where they would face violence and persecution. The due process right that the court undermines with this decision is so fundamental to our system of laws that it goes all the way back to the Magna Carta (1215): “No man of what state or condition he be, shall be put out of his lands or tenements nor taken, nor disinherited, nor put to death, without he be brought to answer by due process of law.”

The court has held the line on due process in Boumediene v. Bush (2007) and JGG v. Trump (2025). In the former, which applied to detentions of non-US citizens after 9/11, and in the latter, in which the Supreme Court prohibited the Trump Administration from implementing the Alien Enemies Act to send deportees to El Salvador before providing due process to the accused, the court upheld due process. It should have provided that same due process here. This is the minimal constitutional requirement and a fundamental moral obligation.

News from the Hamden Public Library Seed Library 

The third garlic giveaway is in the works. If interested, email us at hplseedlibrary@gmail.com. Distribution will be in early November.

A seed saving workshop featuring native plants is being considered for sometime in the fall.

Winter sowing workshops at the following branch libraries:

Brundage, 91 Circular Ave., Wednesday, Dec. 3, 6-7:45 p.m.

Whitneyville, 125 Carleton St., Thursday, Dec. 4, 6-7:45 p.m.

Miller, 2901 Dixwell Ave., Saturday, Dec. 6, 2-4 p.m.

Registration will begin in November for these sessions.

Questions? Email the Hamden Public Library Seed Library at hplseedlibrary@gmail.com.

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