Frustrated with the negative response to ceasefire resolutions by the majority of Sonoma County cities, pro-Palestine activists July 23 declared a “People’s Resolution.”
Cotati is the only city in the county to approve a resolution calling for an end to Israel’s ten-and-a-half-month assault on Gaza, which has left an estimated 40,000 Gazans dead and many more injured or buried under rubble. Activists failed in their attempts to pass similar resolutions in Sonoma, Santa Rosa, Petaluma and Sebastopol,
So activists, under the banner of Sonoma County for Palestine, took it upon themselves to put forward their own resolution. To mark the occasion, they held rallies in Sebastopol and in Santa Rosa, where they read the resolution in the courtyard of Santa Rosa City Hall.
The declaration states at its beginning, “We, the people of Sonoma County, living on the stolen land of the Coast Miwok, Southern Pomo, Kashaya and Wappo people — the people who stewarded this land for millennia before being subjected to displacement and genocide by European settler-colonizers — believe that all life is precious and that all suffering and loss of life is tragic.”
Some 50 resolution supporters gathered at the Sebastopol Living Peace Wall in the early afternoon of July 23, where they held signs promoting ceasefire and listened to speakers, including Sebastopol Vice Mayor Stephen Zollman and former Sebastopol Mayor Una Glass. The former mayor said she would have voted for the resolution if she had still been on the council.
Zollman remarked, “We stand here in solidarity with everyone who continues to be marginalized. He then added a quote from Australian Indigenous activist Lilla Watson, also included in the People’s Resolution.
“If you come here to help, you are wasting your time. but if you have come here because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.”
Vice Mayor Stephen Zollman had put a ceasefire resolution on Sebastopol’s agenda in April for a second time and withdrew it when it was clear it did not have enough support among council members.
Tarik Kanaana, a Palestinian American who helped craft the resolution, said, “I never imagined we would be standing here 10 months later.”
Israel began its assault on Gaza on Oct. 7 after Hamas militants breached the fence that separates Israel from Gaza and attacked both soldiers and civilians, leaving some 1,200 Israelis dead and taking 250 hostages. Since mid-October, Sonoma County for Palestine has been holding Gaza support rallies in Santa Rosa’s Court House Square.
“We can only do this (end the siege of Gaza) if we stand together,” Kanaana added, looking out at the crowd of Jews, Palestinians, Latinos, and others gathered at the Peace Wall.
Following the Sebastopol rally, attendees motored to Santa Rosa in a car caravan to bring the People’s Resolution to that city council during its regular Tuesday afternoon meeting. Arriving in the downtown area about a half hour later, the rally crowd waved Palestinian flags and honked their horns before regrouping in the city hall courtyard.
Choosing to present the resolution in the courtyard, rather than disrupting the council’s meeting and risking arrest, they began the rally with a peace ritual featuring the Aztec Dancers. The dancers then joined the circle of activists, listened to a reading of the resolution, and invited everyone present to speak. While the 30 or so remaining participants were speaking, the city council turned on its outside speakers, piping the meeting into the courtyard. But the speaking circle continued until everyone was finished.
Commenting on the small numbers gathered for the presentation, one of the Aztec Dancers said, “It doesn’t matter that there are only a few of us. Each one of us represents 100 people who would like to be here but can’t.”
Asked to explain why their councils did not pass ceasefire resolutions, none of the Santa Rosa council members responded, and only Zollman from the Sebastopol city council was willing to comment.
But, according to news reports, cities rejecting ceasefire resolutions have said they were divisive or not the business of local governments. Still, dozens of cities and municipalities nationwide have approved these measures, including Oakland, San Francisco, Fort Bragg, Albany, Richmond, Sacramento, and Davis in northern California. Locally, the Sonoma County Commission on Human Rights approved a ceasefire resolution.











