Report 2: Multiple and Shifting Realities in the West Bank

Report 2: Multiple and Shifting Realities in the West Bank

Wednesday, July 19: Bethlehem


Visiting Israel and Palestine is like a dream: you have to keep asking
yourself, "is this real?" You hear the news "bomb goes off in Tel Aviv and
the West Bank has been closed", but then we go to the Church of the Nativity
in Bethlehem and you wonder if you are living in the same world. The
pilgrimage scene is overwhelmingly spiritual. It brings a sense of peace,
quiet, and holiness to the place and even within. In fact, you forget the
tension, the stress-related smoking, and the angry intonations seen and
heard on the streets of Jerusalem. Then you step outside the Church of the
Nativity and see the empty plaza, devoid of tourists. This is by no means
because there is a lack of spirituality, but because the Israeli government
has told tour guides not to take people to the West Bank. This
discouragement has caused a once-bustling tourist destination to be just shy
of dead. Not all the shops are open and many businesses like hotels are shut
down for indefinite periods of time.



Following our Church of the Nativity visit, we met with Sami Awad at Holy
Land Trust. This is an organization dedicated to teaching nonviolence from
an organic Palestinian perspective. While the organization uses the example
of Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, they also build on a
long-standing Palestinian tradition of nonviolence which includes the
nonviolent strategies used in the first Intifada. Holy Land Trust does
incredible work and has run countless nonviolence trainings throughout the
West Bank for villages that have requested them. What really gave me hope
was Sami's recent encounter with Hamas. Hamas asked Holy Land Trust to do a
training session in nonviolence for their people in Salfit, the smallest of
the 10 districts in the West Bank. This will be a pilot program. If it
works, Hamas is likely to initiate similar programs in the other districts,
showing their willingness to explore becoming involved in the nonviolent
movement. This news gives me hope. If these "terrorists" (as they are
usually called in the U.S.) are able to respect the modes of nonviolent
struggle, then who can't?



Today the most jarring and indescribable experience I had was not visiting
the Church of the Nativity, the Holy Land Trust, Wi'am (the Palestinian
Conflict Resolution Center) or Dheisheh Refugee Camp, but my homestay with
Samer, his wife, and four daughters. Samer is an alternative tour guide. He
takes Israelis and foreigners on tours of the West Bank, using only the
transportation Palestinians use. He challenges them to see and begin to
comprehend the realities of what it means to be a Palestinian living under
occupation.



The first thing I noticed after sitting down at the dinner table was the
anger with which my Palestinian hosts spoke to one another. I was surprised
because I hadn't remembered the Arabic language being so harsh, but rather
beautiful-an art form all of its own. The anger comes from the tension,
anxiety, and fear that they live in every minute of the day. Samer said "in
37 years I have not had one good day". At 37 years old, Samer has lived his
whole life under Israeli occupation.



While we were watching the news, Samer's 6-year-old daughter came up to me
and starting saying "pow, pow" while making guns out of her two little
hands. I thought she was referring to the news, but what I found out later
was that she was reacting to guns she had seen and heard in her own daily
life. What kind of a world do they live in when a young child can be so calm
about such terrible things?



Thursday, July 20: Qalandia 'Terminal'



So many times one hears of the 'timeless' conflict in the Middle East.how
the conflict here between the Israelis and Palestinians has been going on
'forever.' Yet in just our few days here, we have heard how this conflict
has not gone on forever, but that it is a more recent phenomenon. In
addition, we have seen and heard how relationships between Israelis and
Palestinians have changed significantly at key points like 1948, 1967, 1987,
1993, and 2000. For example, we have heard how before 1948, Jews, Muslims,
and Christians lived together in this land all as Palestinians, as
neighbors. We also have heard how before the Oslo Accords, Israelis used to
travel and shop in the West Bank more often and Palestinians could travel to
Jerusalem.



I was reminded this morning of how quickly things change in this ancient
land as we drove north from Jerusalem to Ramallah via the Qalandia terminal,
or 'border crossing'. When I first lived in Ramallah from 1998-2000 there
was no Qalandia checkpoint, and certainly no terminal or border crossing.
There was one checkpoint further south in a-Ram that soldiers stood at that
was simply a small shed by the road where Israeli soldiers would selectively
stop vehicles to check for IDs. But most of the time traffic went right on
through. During the course of the Intifada that broke out in late 2000, a
checkpoint was constructed at Qalandia. In the visits I made between 2003
and 2005 the checkpoint gradually became more permanent, more of a
structure, always changing its form and shape and process so as to keep
people always unsure of what the crossing would be like.



Last year, as the construction of the wall rapidly neared completion in the
Jerusalem to Ramallah area, the Qalandia checkpoint underwent additional
change. An entire hill was cleared to make space for a new 'terminal'-an
'international border crossing' even though there are two neighborhoods of
Jerusalem (according to Israel's post-1967 municipal boundaries) north of,
and cut off by, the checkpoint. Furthermore-this 'international border
crossing' separates Palestinians north of the wall from Palestinians south
of the wall-not Israelis from Palestinians.



The dump trucks, drills and cranes worked around the clock. I was not
prepared to see the new, finished terminal and its new roads today, however.
Rather than continuing straight on the road between Jerusalem, a-Ram, and
Ramallah, you suddenly veer off to the right as the wall blocks your way,
forcing you on to the road that used to lead to Jericho to the East, and to
Atarot and a new Israeli highway to the West. Now there is no junction, just
an eastward curve and a new road that circles back around to the West to a
fancy new traffic circle, and on to Ramallah. I could barely recognize the
place; the landscape has been changed, dramatically altered by the wall and
its surrounding infrastructure of roads and outbuildings.



We were not stopped, we were not checked, as we were in a big fancy tour
bus. To our right we saw the neat, shiny white terminal, all walled off
around from the outside so as to hide what was happening inside. The
pedestrians, the buses, the vendors that all used to populate the space of
the checkpoint were all missing. The stores on the road that leads up to the
checkpoint were deserted or closed up. There were few people to be seen. I
wondered if fewer are visible because of the traffic flow that has been
designed to 'sterilize' the whole process? Have people decided simply not to
try to cross as they cannot get permits and it is not worth the hassle to go
and try? Is the new system simply more efficient?



Talking over lunch with a Birzeit University student who travels each day
from East Jerusalem to Birzeit (a village outside of Ramallah) and crosses
through Qalandia, I learned that the new system is not more efficient.but
not less efficient. Although it looks new and different, she said, the
process was the same: one never knows what to expect. Every day there are
changes, and every day might bring a road closure or a different policy for
where buses can or cannot stop to let people off.



Another speaker at Birzeit shared how under Oslo and with the Fateh-led
Palestinian Authority there was an "abnormal stability" that normalized the
occupation. The checkpoint regime-made up of both 'permanent' and roaming
'flying' checkpoints--are a 'normal' instability that works in tandem with
other policies to create an environment in which planning and human security
are virtually impossible.



--Maia Carter
 
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