Friday, September 01, 2006

My Father Died Today

I knew he was dying ... which is why I went to see him last month in the West Bank. Basically, I went to say my 'goodbye' to him. With heat so unbearable, I knew that the August heat would be what ultimately kills him. I will write more tomorrow but it's important for me to acknowledge that my father died today.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

MIFTAH--Open Letter to Actress Sharon Stone

MIFTAH--Open Letter to Actress Sharon Stone

Open Letter to Actress Sharon Stone Date posted: March 24, 2006 By Palestinian Civil Society Members
Dear Ms. Stone,

In an interview with the Israeli paper Ha'aretz you stated that your visit to Israel did not imply taking sides. "I am not for or against one side," you insisted, adding: "When my children fight, I don't choose any side, either. I love them equally." Your comments reveal a surprising level of naivete and a basic lack of understanding of the context. In a situation of undisputed colonial oppression, when you are not "for or against" either side, you are essentially on the side of the oppressor and a supporter, perhaps an unwitting one, of the status quo of colonial domination and oppression. Israel and the Palestinians are not exactly two equal parties engaged in some silly quarrel where it is hard, if not pointless, to place the blame. Even if you decided to ignore all that and deal "fairly" with both sides, how can you explain the exclusion of one "side" from your itinerary?

Israel is recognized by the United Nations and the absolute majority of nations across the world as a repressive occupying power that maintains illegal colonies in the occupied Palestinian territory (OPT), violates international law, UN resolutions and basic human rights of the Palestinian people. These are not abstract notions, at least not to us. Israel denies millions of Palestinian refugees their internationally recognized right to return to their lands; it is building settlements and a monstrous Wall, both of which were declared illegal by the International Court of Justice; it is destroying Palestinian homes; it is killing Palestinian children with impunity; it is uprooting hundreds of thousands of Palestinian trees; and its ubiquitous roadblocks are imprisoning Palestinian civilians, denying them access to health care, schools and jobs. Moreover, Israel maintains a system of racial discrimination against its own Palestinian citizens reminiscent of South African apartheid. These injustices, among others, have been well documented by leading human rights organizations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Physicians for Human Rights and B'Tselem.

Your leisurely visit to Israel at a time when it is escalating its violent oppression of the Palestinians to unprecedented levels is most unwelcome. It ignores the Palestinian civil society's Call for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS), a non-violent and morally sound call intended to bring about Israel's compliance with international law and its respect for Palestinian rights. No matter what "peace" project you claim to be supporting, your celebration of your birthday in a country whose name has become synonymous with injustice is a stone's throw away from collusion in perpetuating this injustice.

Ms. Stone, peace without justice, as our universal basic instincts tell us, is not peace at all. It is submission to injustice. The best way you could sincerely promote peace here is by having the moral courage to speak out against Israel's occupation, Wall and denial of our basic rights. Wouldn't you have done that in any similar situation elsewhere?

This letter was written by the Acting Steering Committee of the Palestinian Civil Society's Campagin for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions

Monday, April 10, 2006

No Hunger In Gaza (Palestine)

There is no hunger in Gaza
By Gideon Levy
Ha'aretz -- Sunday - April 9, 2006

For the information of all the anxious: There is no hunger in the territories. No baby has died of malnutrition; no child is walking around with a swollen belly. There is no lack of flour, and from Rafah to Jenin rice is available. Let the tongue-cluckers relax: The talk about a "humanitarian disaster" is exaggerated. The international relief and aid organizations are trying in despair to cry "wolf," to alert the Israelis and the world and enlist them in the cause to save the Palestinian people, knowing that only exaggerated talk might move anyone. They might be right, but their calls are coming too soon, and also much too late. The use of the term "humanitarian disaster" is actually proof of the dehumanization of the Palestinians. There's no flour? "Humanitarian disaster." There is flour? Then there's no disaster. There's an assumption that all the Palestinians need is a daily serving of food so they won't be considered disaster victims. It's enough that they have water and food in their troughs to conclude that their situation is fine. But human beings, including the Palestinians, have a few other basic needs as well. The real humanitarian disaster in the territories began a long time ago, and it is not hunger. Those who regard the neighboring people as human beings know this very well. It is true that the dimensions of the disaster are worsening, but that's been taking place over years, and the food index is not the only measure. The cessation of the flow of funding since the rise of Hamas might threaten to depress the economic situation even further, but the thought that if they only have enough food, their needs will be satisfied and our conscience can be clear, is outrageous. There's no need to waste words on the scope of poverty in the territories. Sixty-five percent of Gazans and 48 percent of the West Bankers now live under the poverty line, according to a UN report from last December, issued before the decision was made to freeze the transfer of their tax money to them. There is no need to be an expert in economics to understand that if 37 percent of Gazans with jobs - more than 73,000 people - were employed by the Palestinian Authority and now their livelihoods are threatened due to a lack of money to pay their wages, the situation will only get worse. Palestinian society, which has a very high level of solidarity, will know how to deal with that disaster. Because of the food handed out by UNRWA and the other organizations, there won't be hunger any time soon in Gaza, even if the number of those suffering from malnutrition does increase. But even if they have bags of flour and rice, the living conditions of the Palestinians are chilling. They live in prison. Their daily routine includes humiliation that is no less terrible than malnutrition. Anyone who has to beg for permission to leave his village, to spend hours crowded in line at a checkpoint just to reach his destination, anyone whose bedroom is brutally invaded in the middle of the night by the occupation army, whose time and life is considered valueless, and whose basic human dignity has been trampled into dust, cannot find any consolation in the fact that flour and rice is available. Those who think that all it takes is providing a quota of flour to be free of any responsibility for the fate of the people they occupy, are suffering from a serious case of moral blindness. Does the fact that a Palestinian youth is not hungry in any way blunt the fact that he cannot dream, cannot aspire to a career, an orderly education, a vacation or simple pleasures of life? Does the fact that his belly is not completely empty cover up for the miserable present and the hopeless future? The departure of Israel from Gaza does not remove a speck of the responsibility it has for the fate of Gaza's imprisoned residents. Israel, which forbids Gazans from going to the West Bank - a violation of signed agreements - and prevents the provision of supplies from both Israel and Egypt, has never left Gaza, not even for a moment. The world and people of conscience in Israel do not need to wait for the first Palestinian child to die of hunger to raise the hue and cry. Enough Palestinian children have been killed because of too easy trigger fingers or disgraceful health services. The responsibility is not with the international relief agencies, but on Israel's shoulders. But Israel's conscience in recent years operates only according to one index, the index of protest from Washington. If Washington remains quiet, everything can be covered up. Those who have been silent until now can remain enveloped in their silence. Those whose conscience doesn't torture them and whose sleep is uninterrupted by Israel's behavior in the territories can continue resting in peace. There is no "humanitarian disaster." Israel will find a solution to the food crisis, and the stores in Gaza won't lack for flour. But those who regard the Palestinians as only requiring basic food should remember that even in the zoos, where the animals presumably don't lack for a thing, people are often shocked by the conditions of their imprisonment.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/703804.html

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Telegraph | News | West Bank tours reveal the grim reality of Israeli occupation

Telegraph News West Bank tours reveal the grim reality of Israeli occupation

The truth of what is happening in the occupied territories needs to be told..and who better than soldiers who terrorized it in the interest of Israel.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Saree Makdisi: Speaking Truth to Power

Saree Makdisi: Speaking Truth to Power

Friday, February 10, 2006

Independent Online Edition > Middle East

Independent Online Edition > Middle East

Architects threaten to boycott Israel over 'apartheid' barrier

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Amira Haas....writes for Haaretz

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/680113.html

REVENGE IS THE WORD IN THE BACKGROUNDBy Amira Hass Haaretz, Opinion (Israel) February 8, 2006The young woman who came into the corner grocery in the Jeninrefugee camp did not hide her hostility when told there was anIsraeli guest. It seemed that it was even difficult for her to sitin the same room as the guest, whom the grocer honored with sweetsand jokes while commented on the various political parties runningin the elections. Without any prelude, the young woman asked theguest, "So, what do you think about 'sacrifice operations?' " Itwas clear she was not interested in an answer, but only wanted todeliver a lecture on why she thinks it is the proper response."So a dead Palestinian girl is okay? And to bomb us in our homes isokay?"What really angered her, more than anything else, was the answerthat revenge is not a liberation struggle. The grocer hushed theyoung woman, saying "That's not how to speak to guests."When the young woman left, the grocer said that the young woman'sbrother, a member of Fateh, committed an attack in Israel and waskilled. Another brother was killed when the IDF invaded the refugeecamp in April 2002.In similar arguments from Rafah to Jenin, the terms used forsuicide attacks are "response," or "answer." Sometimes, for examplein the context of Qassam fire, the sentence, "we also have theright to defend ourselves," comes up as an explanation. The moreforthright and sincere, meaning those who don't deceive themselvesand others about the capacity for "defense," say, "we also have theright to frighten you, like you always frighten us with yourshelling and bombings and sonic booms. Your citizens should alsofeel threatened."

There's no need for the explicit term "vengeance" to show up in theconversations, but it is in the background, and it is clear thatpeople are very understanding of the atavistic and tribal urge.Those who avenge through suicide bombings, with Qassams or with aknife represent them, because they found a way to express the senseof rage and impotence that everyone feels, both as individuals andcollectively.Presumably, vengeance made Ahmed Kfina murder the easiest victim hefound on his way on Sunday: Kinneret Ben Shalom Hajbi, a58-year-old woman from Petah Tikva.

There's no need for"assessments" by intelligence experts and orientalists of varioussorts, to know that he did not act at the behest of others.The attempt to explain to Israelis that such acts of vengeance arepuny compared to the intensity of the Israeli assault on everyindividual, and against the entire Palestinian community, is doomedto failure. On a daily basis, Israel attacks every Palestinian withsystematic variety.

The aggregation is lethal, even if the killingof a nine-year-old girl or setting a dog on an elderly woman are not daily occurrences. It's that aggregation that undermines anyattempt to conduct a normal life. It's being locked up in the WestBank's enclaves, so that simple routines like going to school,work, or visiting family are impossible. There's the unceasingexpropriation of land for roads and security fences forsettlements; the trees uprooted by the army, livelihoods that arecut off daily, and the insult of that; the army's prohibition, onsecurity grounds, against accessing farm and grazing lands; thebreak-ins to houses in the middle of the night, which the Israelipublic rarely if ever hears about; the hours of waiting atcheckpoints; the frightened children; the aimed rifles.

The personal urge for vengeance and the understanding that people havefor the avengers intensifies the more it becomes clear that thereis no unified Palestinian plan against the occupation, and the more it becomes apparent that the Palestinian organizations and theleadership have failed to lead their people out of Israeli control.Unlike the political organizations, the personal avenger does notneed to take into account the influence of his actions on thefailed Palestinian ambitions for independence. The avenger "solved"his own personal crisis.

Therefore, there should be no expectationfrom the personal avenger that he be interested in knowing that hisact of vengeance does not teach Israelis a thing about the motivesthey provide for vengeance. On the contrary, it only strengthensamong Israelis the sense of victimhood, and their natural tendencyto prefer ignorance of the occupation.