11 episodes

The Radio Reversal Collective use audio production and storytelling to platform and amplify grassroots community organising, critical theorising, & political art, music, and activism. We're committed to public, radical pedagogies & learning out loud!

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Radio Reversal Podcast Radio Reversal Collective

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The Radio Reversal Collective use audio production and storytelling to platform and amplify grassroots community organising, critical theorising, & political art, music, and activism. We're committed to public, radical pedagogies & learning out loud!

radioreversal.substack.com

    Justice for Palestine Magan-djin Podcast (Ep 1.8)

    Justice for Palestine Magan-djin Podcast (Ep 1.8)

    Dear friends & comrades,
    We’re back with a special DOUBLE EPISODE of the Justice for Palestine Magan-djin podcast. If you’ve been following the Justice for Palestine movement, you’ll know that there’s been a lot happening here in so-called brisbane over the past few weeks, mirroring a massive upsurge in Palestinian justice organising globally. From the extraordinary encampments being established by students on university campuses across the globe (including the University of Queensland, here in so-called brisbane); to growing union solidarity movements pushing for work stoppages at export ports, construction sites and factories; to the freedom flotilla desperately working to find ways to provide direct aid to the people of Gaza; and the many countless discussions, meetings, pickets, teach-ins, rallies, and blockades happening across the world: work is happening on every horizon, and there’s more still to come.
    Thank you for reading Radio Reversal: The Podcast's Substack. This post is public so feel free to share it.

    If you’ve been listening to the podcast so far, you’ll know we focus our attention on the ways that organisers are agitating for freedom here in so-called australia. We try to draw out the links and connections between this movement and the longer histories of anti-colonial, anti-racist, Indigenous and abolitionist struggle on this continent and across the world. And one of the most consistent themes in this podcast - and in this movement - is the recognition that all oppression is connected; that practices of dispossession, incarceration, exploitation, occupation, and subjugation must be challenged everywhere if the current “colonial-racial-capitalist-heteropatriarchy” is to be truly abolished.
    This kind of revolutionary, transformative work is difficult, messy, and imperfect. And one of the main reasons that we started recording and building this Justice for Palestine podcast was to carve out space to think more deeply about key sites and strategies in the struggle for a world in which every Palestinian - and therefore, everyone - might be free. In the last episode, we set out the foundational commitment to Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions as a primary part of the Justice for Palestine strategy, especially here in so-called australia. This week, in this special DOUBLE episode, we look at another key site in the global movement for freedom and justice: the military industrial complex and the global weapons trade.
    In this episode, Roshan draws together speeches from protests and blockades, pre-recorded discussions and older interviews and recordings that focus on weapons manufacturing, development and trade. Through these speeches and interviews, we learn about some of the ways that australian companies are directly supporting the continuing genocide in Gaza (and West Papua, as well as the continuing targeting of First Nations people on this continent), and the role that the australian government is playing in exporting weapons and components to support Israel’s invasion of Gaza.
    We also hear a lot in this episode from activists and organisers who are working to directly challenge companies implicated in the genocide in Gaza, including Ferra Engineering in Tingalpa, who are responsible for manufacturing the component of the F-35 bomber jets that enables them to drop bombs. Ferra Engineering is one of the key targets at the moment, given their role in providing essential components to some of the world’s largest military aerospace companies including Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Raytheon.  
    But Ferra Engineering are not the only company implicated in the military industrial complex in so-called Brisbane. Companies like Heat Treatment Australia, or HTA, in Coopers Plains; L3 Micreo in Eight Mile Plains; G&O Kert in Acacia Ridge; and TAE Aerospace in Bundamba, Ipswich, are all deeply implicated in the ongoing genocide in Gaza. You can read further details about these companies and others aro

    • 1 hr 25 min
    Justice for Palestine Magan-djin Podcast (Ep 1.7)

    Justice for Palestine Magan-djin Podcast (Ep 1.7)

    Dear friends & comrades,
    Welcome back to the Radio Reversal podcast! Happy Sunday, and Eid Mubarak to those of you celebrating this week.
    We are very excited to be releasing Episode 7 of our current podcast series, following the Justice for Palestine movement here in so-called brisbane, and working to understand the political and moral imperatives of this moment. This series is a small labour of love and solidarity dedicated to everyone who is contending with the relentless violence of colonial racial states: from the Palestinians in Gaza and worldwide who are grieving for their loved ones and for their lands, to West Papuans struggling against Indonesian occupation, to First Nations peoples across the world fighting against ever-changing forms of settler colonial violence and dispossession.
    In this series, we are working to honour the commitment of everyday people struggling here on the ground, as well as learning from the long-standing and sustained struggle of Palestinian people across the world in their ongoing fight for their homelands. One of the things that comes up consistently across this series is the recognition that struggles against oppression and colonisation must be fought everywhere at once. If you’ve been listening to the past few episodes of this podcast, you’ll know that this is what we’ve been tracing for the past few episodes. We’ve been following both long-standing and emergent solidarities: between people struggling against colonialism and racism globally, between people fighting systems of incarceration and surveillance, between people experiencing the brutality of oppression and subjugation in diverse forms.
    In this episode, we begin to turn to the everyday work of liberation, and the ongoing struggle to build modes of resistance that can disrupt systems of oppression wherever they take root. We begin in this episode with the Palestinian-led movement that uses strategies of Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions to build global support for Palestine. In broad terms:
    Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) is a Palestinian-led movement for freedom, justice and equality. BDS upholds the simple principle that Palestinians are entitled to the same rights as the rest of humanity.Israel is occupying and colonising Palestinian land, discriminating against Palestinian citizens of Israel and denying Palestinian refugees the right to return to their homes. Inspired by the South African anti-apartheid movement, the BDS call urges action to pressure Israel to comply with international law.BDS is now a vibrant global movement made up of unions, academic associations, churches and grassroots movements across the world. Since its launch in 2005, BDS is having a major impact and is effectively challenging international support for Israeli apartheid and settler-colonialism.
    This episode is timed to coincide with a major upsurge in global BDS organising. As many of you likely already know, April 15th has been called as a date for a global economic blockade of Israel, including a call for workers across the world to strike from their jobs and participate in direct action to disrupt business as usual for companies complicit in and benefiting from the genocide in Palestine. Here in so-called brisbane, organisers from Shut Down Ferra have called for a half-day blockade of Ferra Engineering in Tingalpa, kicking off bright and early at 5am. You can find more details of that event here and here.
    In this episode, Roshan digs into the archive to pull out some older conversations about using strategies of Boycott, Divestment & Sanctions here in so-called brisbane, as well as field recordings from Justice for Palestine events over the past decade. You’ll hear a lot in this episode from Justice for Palestine organiser Phil Monsour, who has been one of the architects of the BDS movement here in so-called brisbane. You’ll also hear some older interviews from the Radio Reversal crew, including the Anna’s (Cerreto & Carlson

    • 57 min
    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.6)

    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.6)

    In Episode 1.6 Until All of Us are Free, None of Us are Free we focus on the fundamental connections between the struggle for an end to the genocide in Gaza and the liberation of Palestine and Palestinian people with oppressed peoples everywhere. In particular in this episode we recognise interconnections and entanglements across the movements for prison abolition, queer and trans liberation, and for disability justice.
    You’ll hear recorded speeches from Turtle Island (US)-based Black lesbian abolitionist Prof Andrea Ritchie at last November’s Sisters Inside conference, and from trans woman and abolition organiser Necho Brocchi at Magandjin’s Trans Day of Resistance gathering that took place on November 25, 2023. Both of these speakers trace the importance of recognising the co-constitution of struggles for an end to incarceration and to oppression and violence against trans people with the struggles for Indigenous sovereignty and to end the genocidal settler-colonial occupation of Palestine.
    Also in this episode, you’ll hear Han in deep discussions with queer Palestinian academic and community organiser Fahad Ali, and with Wiradjuri, Irish and Flemish disability justice organiser and writer Vanamali (Mali) Hermans. And we have extracts from an interview conducted by Anna in collaboration with Belle from 4ZZZ’s Only Human with deaf Palestinian Mazen Al-Khaldi, who went viral for his video sharing how to sign “Free Free Palestine” in Auslan, the sign language of the majority of the australian deaf community.
    If you’ve just found your way to our podcast, our aim is to archive the ongoing movement for Palestinian liberation as it unfolds on the unceded lands of the Yuggera, Yugarapul, Jagera, Turrbal and Yugumbeh peoples, across so-called brisbane and the surrounding cities of south east queensland. You can start here with Episode 1.6, but you might want to scroll back a bit further to begin with Episode 1.1 Settler Colonialism and the Current Crisis.
    This podcast is produced and recorded on unceded Jagera & Turrbal country. Our deepest respects to the rightful owners of these lands, and to all First Nations peoples listening. Musicking on these episodes is by cyberBanshee (aka Han), and our series artwork is by Anna.
    If you’re interested in accessing or supporting the audio archive from which this podcast draws, please get in touch with us via substack.
    For some additional reading and listening on this topic, check out:
    Why Palestinian Liberation is Disability Justice | Alice Wong
    Palestine is Disabled | Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha
    Disability Justice Network of australia Palestine Solidarity Statement (this one is from 2021 – the disability community has long recognised israel’s tactics of violently disabling Palestinians en masse)
    Stronger Than Words – Deaf in Gaza | Al Jazeera Remix
    Statements from Queers in Palestine
    Pinkwashing | BDS Movement
    Why Queer Solidarity With Palestine is Not "Chickens for KFC" | Saed Atshan
    Black Queer & Trans Justice | Triple A Let's Talk Social Justice (Kevin Yow Yeh)
    The central purpose of this podcast is to honour the power of Palestinian resistance in this moment, and to learn from the struggle as it unfolds here in Magandjin. If you’re listening in and you’re not yet involved in the Justice for Palestine Magandjin movement, please consider signing up to our mailing list so that you can get up to date details about upcoming events, calls-to-action, and ways to support the movement for Palestine. You can also follow us on facebook, instagram and twitter to stay up to date. You can also follow the amazing work of Queensland Muslim Incorporated, and campaigns directly targeting the expansion of the weapons industry here in so-called queensland, including Shut Down Ferra and Wage Peace.
    If you’re listening in from further afield, we suggest following the incredible work of the Australian Palestine Advocacy Network (APAN) to keep up to date with organising happ

    • 1 hr 9 min
    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.5)

    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.5)

    In Episode 1.5 Palestine to the Pacific: Land Back & Climate Justice we focus on understanding the connections between the unfolding genocide in Gaza and the crisis conditions of climate change that are destroying Indigenous knowledges, communities, kinship networks and lifeworlds, all across the world.
    Settler-colonialism violence works to steal the land from the people and remove Indigenous Peoples from their land. Climate change is an outcome of this alienated and exploitative theft of land – and so often, the people on the frontlines in the struggle against climate change are Indigenous Land and Water Defenders and First Nations Peoples. These struggles are interconnected. In this episode, we explore these interconnections, and the ways that climate justice demands, and indeed cannot exist without, justice for First Nations Peoples. We look at entanglements between fossil fuel extraction and settler-colonial regimes from Palestine to the Pacific, land degradation and contamination as a technique of dispossession and genocide, and the failures and complicities of mainstream/whitestream environmental movements. And we turn and turn again to land, learning to hear ‘land back’ as a rallying cry for climate justice, and learning to understand how climate justice is predicated on the return of land to Indigenous Peoples. We also look at the ways that movements for climate justice and Palestinian liberation are working together to contest the destructive forces of colonialism, capitalism, racism, heteropatriarchy and white supremacy that are the root causes of the crisis conditions of the present. You’ll hear recordings and excerpts from a speech  by Aunty Linda Fairbanks at a march for Palestine held on the so-called gold coast in January of 2024, an interview with Aunty Tracey Hanshaw at the Rising Tide Blockade, an interview with Guy Rithani from the Pacific Climate Warriors, reflections from Dr Jamal Nabulsi at Weaving our Stories, hosted by 350.org, Our Islands Our Home, Gudanji for Country & Conscious Mic. And throughout the episode, you’ll hear Anna and Malaak Seleem from Justice for Palestine - Magan-djin in conversation on 4zzz (102.1fm) in November last year, drawing some of these threads together to help us interrogate the relationship between climate change and racial colonial capitalism, to connect the struggle for a Free Palestine with the struggle for climate justice, and to help us better understand why land back is climate justice, and why there is no climate justice without justice for the dispossessed. If you’ve just found your way to our podcast, our aim is to archive the ongoing movement for Palestinian liberation as it unfolds on the unceded lands of the Yuggera, Yugarapul, Jagera, Turrbal and Yugumbeh peoples, across so-called brisbane and the surrounding cities of south east queensland. You can start here with Episode 1.5, but you might want to scroll back a bit further to begin with Episode 1.1 Settler Colonialism and the Current Crisis.
    This podcast is produced and recorded on unceded Jagera & Turrbal country. Our deepest respects to the rightful owners of these lands, and to all First Nations peoples listening.
    If you’re interested in accessing or supporting the audio archive from which this podcast draws, please get in touch with us via substack.
    For some additional reading and listening on this topic, check out:
    https://overland.org.au/2023/12/where-is-the-australian-climate-movements-solidarity-with-palestine/
    https://triplea.org.au/category/listen/programs/lets-talk/lets-talk-social-justice/climate-justice-land-back/
    https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2023/10/5/interwoven-struggles-the-green-paradox-meets-the-palestine-paradox
    https://www.versobooks.com/en-gb/products/600-our-history-is-the-future



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit radioreversal.substack.com

    • 41 min
    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.4)

    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.4)

    If you’ve just found your way to our podcast and you’re jumping in fresh, welcome to Episode 1.4 of the Justice for Palestine Magandjin podcast. This podcast aims to archive the ongoing movement for Palestinian liberation as it unfolds on the unceded lands of the Yuggera, Yugarapul, Jagera, Turrbal and Yugumbeh peoples, across so-called brisbane and the surrounding cities of south east queensland.
    In this episode, Globalise the Intifada, we pick up where we left off in Episode 1.3, by paying attention to the power and practice of Indigenous solidarity as it connects the struggle for Palestinian liberation with other movements against colonial occupation and exploitation in all its forms. As we listen back to speeches from rallies and public meetings, to interviews and discussions, we hear activists and organisers drawing clear connections between the intersecting genocidal systems of colonialism, capitalism, racism, heteropatriarchy, transphobia, and ableism that are operating with such destructive consequences in this moment. 
    We open this episode with reflections from First Nations organisers on this continent, who find clear material and ideological connections between the experiences and struggles on this continent, and those unfolding through unthinkable violence in Gaza. We then trace the connections being drawn through the Justice for Palestine movement as they criss-cross the globe, creating the conditions of possibility for a mass solidarity movement grounded in the deep understanding that colonialism cannot be ended anywhere until it is uprooted everywhere.
    In order of voices in this episode, you’ll hear Muslim solidarity activist and Queensland Muslim Inc. organiser Binil Mohideen, followed by President of the Australian Palestine Advocacy Network, Nasser Mashni, and then Justice for Palestine Magandjin organisers Malaak and Remah. Then you’ll hear excerpts from Darumbal and South Sea Islander academic, journalist and writer Dr. Amy McQuire, First Nations poet and writer Cheryl Leavy, Noonuccal Ngugi writer and rapper Ethan Enoch, Mununjahli and South Sea Islander Professor Chelsea Watego, Palestinian writer, academic and organiser Dr. Jamal Nabulsi, Gamillaroi Kooma podcaster and activist Boe Spearim, and Yuin community organiser and current President of the Black People’s Union, Kieren Stewert-Assheton. Next up, you’ll hear Birri Gubba & Wanjiriburra activist and socialist organiser Sam Woripa Watson, Nasser Mashni again, then diaspora Tamil organiser, poet, musician and Greens candidate for Mayor of Brisbane, Jonathan Sriranganathan, followed by academic, writer and Afghan community organiser, Dr. Mujib Abid, (Jonathan Sriranganathan again), then diaspora Arab poet, writer and youth worker Lamisse Hamouda. Rounding out the episode, you’ll hear Dr. Jamal Nabulsi again, followed by Greens Senator Mehreen Faruqi, Black feminist abolitionist academic and organiser Prof. Andrea Ritchie, Palestinian student and organiser Malaak Seleem, Binil from QMI, and finally, a short reminder from Palestinian poet and high school student Dania.
    As always, this podcast is produced and recorded on unceded Jagera & Turrbal country. Our deepest respects to the rightful owners of these lands, and to all First Nations peoples listening.
    If you’re interested in accessing or supporting the audio archive from which this podcast draws, please get in touch with us via substack.
    If you want to follow any of these threads further, we recommend the folowing:
    https://stevesalaita.com/an-honest-living/
    https://triplea.org.au/listen/programs/lets-talk/lets-talk-black-politics/lets-talk-black-politics-with-dr-jamal-nabulsi/
    “to stop the earthquake”: Palestine & the Settler Colonial Logic of Fragmentation by Dr. Jamal Nabulsi (via https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/anti.12980)
    “Enduring Indigeneity & Solidarity in response to Australia’s carceral colonialism” by Dr. Crystal McKinnon
    “The Shape of D

    • 57 min
    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.3)

    Justice for Palestine Magandjin Podcast (Ep 1.3)

    In this episode, we amplify the rich and powerful tradition of Blackfulla Palestinian solidarity in this place. We contextualise the understandings of settler colonialism, racial violence and genocide that are shaping the struggle for Palestinian liberation in relation to the history of this country, drawing clear connections between the struggle against colonisation on this continent and the fight for Palestinian liberation and land.
    To start this episode, you’ll hear Dr. Jamal Nabulsi reflecting on the power of movements that understand Indigenous sovereignty as the primary frame of reference for struggle, and the political possibilities that have emerged from Blackfulla Palestinian solidarity in this present moment. Then, we dig back into the Justice for Palestine Magandjin archive to share a recording of the Blackfulla Palestinian Solidarity dinner hosted by Justice for Palestine Magandjin & the Institute for Collaborate Race Research in March 2023.
    Like other episodes, this podcast includes descriptions of state-sanctioned colonial violence, racism, settler colonisation, discrimination, and dispossession. If anything you hear in this episode triggers feelings that you need help processing, we encourage you to reach out to friends and family, or contact Lifeline on 13 11 14 for confidential, free, 24/7 counselling support.
    We also encourage everyone who is getting involved in the struggle for justice for Palestine to also recognise the intimate connections between settler colonialism and racial violence in Palestine and the continuing violence of occupation on this continent. The rich and powerful tradition of Blackfulla Palestinian solidarity that you hear described in this episode can also be followed here and here. Later in this podcast series you’ll also hear recordings from the Blackfulla Palestinian Solidarity Symposium, hosted in Magandjin in late 2024.
    We also encourage listeners to get involved with and support campaigns against settler colonial violence on this continent, including the work of the Black People’s Union, Warriors of the Aboriginal Resistance, Stop Blak Deaths in Custody, Treaty Before Voice, the Brisbane Aboriginal Sovereign Embassy, and independent Black media sites like Amy McQuire’s incredible substack, Black Justice Journalism.Our solidarity is with all Indigenous peoples’ globally struggling against injustice, extraction, occupation, and oppression.
    If you have any questions, or want to follow up on anything you heard in this episode, please get in touch with us via our substack.


    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit radioreversal.substack.com

    • 1 hr 11 min

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