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Report 6: Steadfastness-In Many Forms?

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Interfaith Peace-Builders
Delegation to Israel/Palestine
July 2006

Report 6: Steadfastness-In Many Forms?

See pictures at: http://www.forusa.org/programs/ipb/photos/del19-7.htm

Tuesday, July 25

Journey to Bil'in: Condoleeza Rice Intercepts IFPB Delegation near
Ramallah

"Thank you for your courage and steadfastness," said Secretary of State
Condoleeza Rice to Lebanese Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora, as she
concluded a surprise visit to Lebanon and headed to Israel.

Reading these words in the July 25 edition of the International Herald
Tribune, I pondered which aggressor Secretary Rice had in
mind-Hezbollah, Israel, or her own government. Little did I realize that
her visit would require courage and steadfastness of our delegation!

Our destination on Tuesday, July 25, was Bil'in, a Palestinian village
north and east of Jerusalem, which has lost more than 50% of its
farmland to the wall. Our plan had been to visit Bil'in first and then
proceed to the village of Biddu to spend the night with Palestinian
families. We were to connect with our Palestinian guide for these visits
in the city of Ramallah.

Not until we arrived in Ramallah did we discover that Palestinians in
Ramallah were on strike and were demonstrating against the visit of
Secretary Rice, due in Ramallah that very day. All checkpoints in the
area were shut down in order to constrict the movement of traffic. Thus
the usual 40 minute drive from Jerusalem to Bil'in became a 3-hour
marathon as our bus driver was forced to circle Ramallah trying
checkpoint after checkpoint in an attempt to find one where Israeli
soldiers would permit us to pass through. At one point we met a speeding
convoy of about 30 SUVs, which we assumed to be the entourage of
Secretary Rice.

At about 5:00 pm we finally entered the shuttered city of Ramallah, only
to learn that the Palestinian who was going to accompany us to Bil'in
had been injured in the demonstration and would not be able to come with
us. We also discovered that the Israeli military had placed roadblocks
around Biddu making it impossible to enter the village for our overnight
stays with Palestinian families.

From the newspapers we don't know exactly what transpired in Secretary
Rice's meetings in Beirut, Jerusalem and Ramallah, but the Palestinians
with whom I have spoken are confused and angry with the Secretary's
message that talk of a ceasefire in the war in Lebanon is 'premature.'

--Don Christensen

Steadfastness

One of the classic Palestinian forms of nonviolent resistance is
"sumud," often translated as 'steadfastness,' sticking to the land
regardless of the hardships one faces. I was struck by this principle in
action as we were shown around Bil'in by Rateb, an organizer with the
Popular Committee against the Wall. Despite the fact that we were 2
hours late and the fact that he was unexpectedly our guide since Mansour
had been injured, Rateb was full of enthusiasm as he gave us an animated
account of Bil'in's ongoing nonviolent struggle against the wall that
has been completed in the area of their village.

Every Friday for over a year and a half, the residents of Bil'in, joined
by Israelis and international citizens, have protested the wall which
divides the village from its land. Rateb shared with us some of the
creative means of resistance: the holding of a wedding party right
outside the edge of the military zone that is declared each Friday; the
creation of coffins with various human rights painted on their lids,
etc. As he walked us up the hill toward a gate in the fence, Rateb told
us of the village's history of struggle, and of their victory in a court
case that led to the freezing of construction of the Mattiayahu East
settlement on their village lands.

We approached the gate in the fence, guarded by at least 6 Israeli
soldiers, and Rateb held his head high, sure of his right to pass
through the gate. He interacted with the soldiers with dignity,
introducing himself to them as they were 'new' soldiers, the regular
ones having been sent north due to the war with Lebanon. After brief
conversation we went through and walked down to the 'outpost' that
Palestinian, Israeli, and international activists had erected on a rainy
night in December after their original caravan outpost was removed by
the Israelis. Despite the pouring rains that fell that night, the group
worked to build a small shelter that seemed like a mushroom that
appeared out of thin air when the soldiers came back to inspect the area
the next morning.

We visited the outpost, a small concrete building and a covered shelter
area, complete with mini-generator, satellite dish, and movie screen
where they showed "Gandhi" a few weeks ago. Rateb stated proudly that
this outpost would only come down once Mattiayahu East came down. They
will remain rooted, steadfastly in the land, today, tomorrow, and as
long as it takes, protesting creatively each Friday to show that they
were here to stay and that they were not willing to lose their land to
the wall.

--Maia Hallward

Wednesday, July 26

Reactions to Yad Vashem

On Wednesday, we spent the morning at the Holocaust museum, Yad Vashem,
in West Jerusalem.

The main triangular-shaped building lies like straw buried just under
the ground's surface, so its top is not really seen from an aerial
vantage point. This is significant, because the message to me is that
the building itself is an intractable part of the land.

Upon entering one end of the building, the first thing that visitors see
embedded in the wall is a video of Jews who lived in Poland. It depicts
their tranquil lives before they were completely denigrated and
slaughtered by the Nazis. The video takes up the entire wall. I could
have stayed right there to watch it for some time, not only because it
was informative, but also because of its high-quality production values.

As we zigzagged through the triangular tube we were led in and out of
exhibits that depicted the entire history of the events that led up to,
and beyond, the Holocaust. Each exhibit was accompanied by posters that
offered explanations of corresponding historical events. A few quotes
from the posters along the way were particularly interesting to me.
They were as follows:

"Despoiling the Jews was an integral part of Nazi policy. When war
began, the Nazis applied these policies of dispossession and theft to
the occupied territories. They confiscated all types of property-homes,
real estate, factories, businesses, and artistic and cultural
treasures.the plundering continued in the Ghettos.."

"There are in this part of the world [east and central Europe] 6,000,000
Jews.for whom the world is divided into places they cannot enter."
Source: Chaim Weizman, Press of the World Zionist Organization, 1936

"Although Nazi ideology decreed one fate for all Jews in Europe, the
occupied countries differed in the way the Nazis implemented their
Jewish policies. In Eastern Europe, the Germans incarcerated the Jews
in severely overcrowded Ghettos, behind fences and walls. They cut the
Jews off from their surroundings and their sources of livelihood, and
condemned them to a life of humiliation, poverty, degeneration and
death. In Western Europe, the Nazis did not establish Ghettos for the
Jews, but rather enforced racist legislation and a policy of
Aryanization and discrimination. The anti-Jewish policy was applied
gradually, taking into account the attitude of the local population.
Despite the differences in the implementation of anti-Jewish policies in
occupied countries, the German's overall goal regarding the Jews was the
same throughout Europe." [No source.]

These quotes are telling, aren't they?. They are to me the starkest
example that I have seen here of how people who have been oppressed can
fall into the tragic pattern of oppressing others. It was very clear to
me that if a few words in these quotes were changed, they would describe
the relationship that exists currently between the Israeli government
and the Palestinians who live under its occupation.

The museum experience reached a crescendo as the crowds came to the end
of the triangular tube-like structure. At its end was a large balcony
that led to an opening which exposed the vast landscape of Israel. On
the horizon Israeli communities could be seen. All of the emotion which
was stimulated in its viewers could easily be transposed to the land.
Again, it was clear to me that manipulating visitors into solidifying
their commitment to the State of Israel-at all costs-was an objective of
those who designed the museum. And if the post-traumatic expression on
the faces of those who exited the building was any indication, the
designers succeeded in getting the reaction they sought. A clear
connection was made between the threat of non-existence and the
possession of a "place" they where Jews could dwell in peace.

I found that the museum was not merely for remembrance, but also was
used as propaganda to justify Israel's oppression of the Palestinian
people and its sustained war against "Arab terrorists" in the Middle
East. That connection too, I imagine, was made subliminally in the minds
of more than a few of those who have visited the museum.

--Diane Ford Jones

Ma'ale Adumin: Living in a Settlement as a Peace Activist

In the afternoon, we went to visit Leah, an Israeli peace activist, who
lives in a beautiful East Jerusalem settlement that was built in 1977.

Leah is a former orthodox Jew who was born in New York and has lived in
Canada. She admits that she was extremely right wing when she moved
with her husband to Israel to care for her father. She wasn't
interested in knowing "any but her own kind" until the second Intifada.
It was then that she felt that neither Palestinians nor the Israeli
government were doing anything that would move things forward toward
peace.

At that time she met the Interfaith Encounter Association, people who
were promoting peace between Palestinians and Israelis by listening to
each other's stories about centuries-old attachment "to what is really
God's land." Now Leah is trying to initiate Arabic studies from
kindergarten up to promote mutual understanding, volunteers with Rabbis
for Human Rights, and demonstrates with Palestinians who are harassed
while trying to harvest their olive crops.

She was born into a family of Holocaust survivors but rebelled at the
social restrictions that placed upon her. She became "a gung-ho
Zionist," but later began to rethink the Sara and Hagar story and to
reconsider the relationship between their descendants. She believes in
God but a forgiving God, not a punitive God, who is the God of all
people. "Revenge leads us all nowhere; Jerusalem means the city of
peace and wholeness," she said.

She favors mixed communities of Palestinians and Jews where socializing
together would be natural. There is a village where she says this
currently happens. There is no place of worship there except an
inter-religious spiritual center which is open to all. And there are
some mixed families in residence.

Leah said that that the existence of Yad Vashem affirms that the
Holocaust actually happened, but also feels "the lack of memorials for
Arab villages that have been demolished. Before the 1880's there were
always Arab/Jewish communities here. After that there was a large scale
Jewish influx that resulted in second class citizenship for Arabs."
Nevertheless, her group feels that the wall is needed for now, but they
don't like it.

Ma'ale Adumim, the settlement that Leah lives in, has a population of
40,000, a community college, three medical clinics and banks, a mayor,
and government ministries. Leah seems pleased that "Bedouin Arab
service people maintain it as a well kept city set apart from the poorer
municipally of greater Jerusalem."

Her group tries to meet in public places in West Jerusalem so that
others can actually see a mixed group and she regrets that "once the
children of Palestinians leave here and go to the US for a while, they
cannot come back." Her organization emphasizes "finding commonalities
in the Muslim, Jewish and Christian faiths," and they try to stick to
that. She says Palestinians don't tell their families about their
interfaith participation for fear of being labeled collaborators and
subjected to death threats.

Between 5pm - 8 pm tomorrow, she said, there would be a "Sulha," the
Arabic word for reconciliation, a gathering of bereaved parents who are
Palestinian and Israeli who would stand together in front of the Knesset
with banners emphasizing the need for forgiveness. A much larger Sulha
is planned for later but she wondered if Palestinians would be able to
participate saying, "Why won't they let them out?"


--Diane Ford Jones


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