Israeli
and Palestinian Women Working for Peace: Realities, Struggles, and
Visions for the Future
Report Two: Memory, Hope, and Responsibility
Wednesday, August 1: Jerusalem
and Tel Aviv
Building Mutual Respect
Today we met Bassam Aramin, who is
with ?Combatants for Peace,? an organization composed
of Palestinians who were former political prisoners and Israelis
who refuse to fight. The first thing I noticed about Bassam was
the fact his face and sad eyes conveyed the impression he was carrying
the weight of the world on his shoulders. We sat and listened to
Bassam?s story. He shared with us the fact that when he was
l6 years old, the Israelis came into his neighborhood and surrounded
the streets. He and his young friends would go outside their homes
and raise the Palestinian flag. On one occasion he and his friends
threw stones at the Israeli soldiers, and Bassam was arrested. He
was 17 years old at the time, and he spent 7 years in an Israeli
jail. While in jail, Bassam began having some dialogue with one
of the Israeli guards (who was a settler). The dialogues went on
for months, and at some point the guard became supportive of Palestinians
and their rights. Bassam learned from this experience that dialogue
and mutual respect are essential to a peaceful and just resolution
to the Palestinian/Israeli conflict.
Just this past January, Bassam?s
10-year-old daughter was shot and killed by Israeli soldiers. His
daughter had gone with some of her girl friends to the store to
buy candy. As she and her friends were coming out of the store,
she was shot. Apparently, the shooting was totally unprovoked and,
thus, was a shock to Bassam and his entire family. The investigation
initiated regarding the death of his daughter doesn?t seem
to be going anywhere.
One would think Bassam would be seeking
revenge. Instead, he is committed to non-violence and knows that
further violence or seeking revenge will only make the situation
worse.
One would think that after all Bassam
has gone through that he would be full of self pity. Instead, he
feels sad for his friends who are still (after 17 years) in Israeli
jails, and they were thrown in jail ?just for dreaming to
end the occupation.?
Bassam spends much of his time working
with young people and encouraging them to continue their education
and to be accepting of others. Additionally, Bassam speaks to Israeli
citizens, as he believes many of them are unaware of the extent
to which Palestinians are oppressed and the degree of violence inflicted
upon them.
All of us were deeply moved by Bassam?s
story and believe that Bassam?s dedication to a just and peaceful
resolution to the conflict inspires us and makes us more committed
to doing our part.
--Laila Liddy
Snapshots of Hope
This was a full somewhat tiring day. It was also one which gave
me some hope for this land. Meeting Bassam Aramin, a former Palestinian
resistance fighter who had been imprisoned and tortured by the Israelis,
yet had renounced violence was uplifting. The fact that he still
stands by that decision despite the fact that his 10 year old daughter
was killed by the IDF is amazing. That he now joins Israeli refuseniks
to try to persuade others to renounce violence is miraculous.
At Sabeel we met Omar, a young Palestinian
Christian. A friend of his was tortured and murdered when in fifth
grade. When he was in school, missionaries would come and tell them
they should peacefully accept that God had given their land to the
Jews. However after meeting Israelis working to end the occupation,
he adopted nonviolent resistance tactics and now organizes Young
Adult Conferences for Sabeel to educate people from around the world
about the situation in the occupied territories.
Next we met with a young Israeli woman
(an IDF veteran) why Palestinians refer to the war in 1948 as the
?Nakba,? (the great disaster). The war is usually referred
to as the War of Independence by Israelis. She had discovered why
Palestinians use a different term by researching old buildings and
ruins that she learned were homes and towns that belonged to Palestinians
who were driven off (sometimes massacred) by Zionists. She helped
form an organization called Zochrot (remembering) to educate others
about this. They post signs at the sites of villages describing
there history. This of course does not make her popular with many
Israelis, who, like Americans, would rather not hear the truth about
their government?s actions. Her courage and that of the others
in Zochrot give me hope.
Finally we met New Profile. This group
of Israelis is working to demilitarize Israeli society by helping
young people who do not want to participate in the occupation by
serving in the IDF as required. And by helping soldiers who decide
not to take part in the oppression. I felt some kinship with them
having been a draft resister during our Viet Nam era.
--Ken Hayes
Friday, August 3: Jerusalem
The Holocaust: Reminders for Today
This morning our IFPB delegation spent
two hours in Yad VaShem, the Holocaust museum in West Jerusalem.
I have had the opportunity to visit the Holocaust museum in Washington,
DC, and similar museums elsewhere in the US and abroad. During the
five years I served in Munich, I made a habit of devoting the last
day of a visitor?s stay to Dachau, the first concentration
camp, established in 1933.
At the very end of the tour through
the still standing barracks now used as a museum at Dachau stands
the famous quote for Santayana, ?Those who do not remember
history are condemned to relive it.? That dictum kept racing
through my mind as history passed by on the Yad Yashem museum walls.
Things leapt off the walls, mocking the ubiquitous ?Never
Again.? Particularly poignant was the fresh history evident
in the city of Hebron which we visited yesterday, the destroyed
Palestinian farms and houses we drove past, and the illegal Israeli
settlements sitting sprightly on the highest hills dominating the
environs. And, just as poignant, were the parallels that stood stark
naked for any thinking American to see: parallels between Hitler?s
success in grabbing dictatorial power in Germany?largely because
of a supine Parliament, an acquiescent Church, a leaderless Army,
and a fear-full populace?and the situation we Americans face
at home today.
I Pledge Allegiance
There they were; it was only 1934,
and the German Army generals were in the limelight swearing allegiance
to Hitler?not the German Constitution (what was left of it);
the German Supreme Court swearing allegiance to Hitler?not
to the law and Constitution; and, not least, the Reich?s Bishops
swearing allegiance to Hitler?not to God and the people they
were supposed to serve. (I noticed that one of the English-speaking
guides, pointing out the generals and jurists, neglected to mention
the bishops, and I could not resist encouraging him to make full
disclosure.) And right there on an adjacent wall was the Hamlet-like
Pope Pius XII, trying to make up his mind on whether he should put
the Catholic church at risk, while Jews were being murdered by the
thousands.
It was the military brass swearing
a personal oath to Hitler that disturbed me most. For the US senior
officer corps, like so many senior civil servants, has been politicized
to such extent that I fear the Army?s current generals would
act as though the oath they took were to the president, and not
to the Constitution. Lecturing last fall at the Naval Academy, I
encountered hesitance on the part of the ?mids,? when
I asked them to whom or what they had sworn an oath. When reminded,
they agreed, sort of, that it was to the Constitution. The implications,
I noted, could be immense. Let?s say they were ordered to
violate US and UN legal restrictions and attack, say, Iran. What
would they do? Is the Constitution which they swore to protect and
defend, just a ?piece of paper?? as the president has
been quoted as saying.
The Giant Radio
It was an incredible poster. In the
midst of thousands of people stood a huge radio, 50 times the size
of a person. The explanation beneath: ?Radios received one
channel only?the official Nazi party station. Radios were
distributed to the German population as a means of disseminating
Nazi ideology.?
The radios were very effective?and
this before the arrival of FOX and Clear Channel, not to mention
the ?mainstream media? and 24-hour corporate-owned cable
channels like?.well like all the others.
But we have a free media in the US.
They say it couldn?t happen here. Right! It has already happened!
Kristallnacht and Pretexts
I had forgotten that the German storm
troopers led the country-wide smashing of Jewish glass-enclosed
and other shops, synagogues, etc., on a pretext. A German diplomat
in Paris had been murdered by a victim of Hitler?s repression.
I was reminded that rogue governments, like the Nazi, like other
governments, often select a pretext to launch major operations?whether
it be Kristallnacht, the burning of the Reichstag in early 1933,
or attacking Fallujah after those Blackwater mercenaries were slain.
Autobahnen: Through Germany; Through
Palestine
There was a giant poster of the uniformed
Hitler and his uniformed retinue digging with spades to inaugurate
the building of the first Autobahn in Germany. Then copious praise
for having completed 1,000 kilometers in just three years (1933-36).
The Israeli government has built a
similar network of Autobahnen in the occupied territories, with
almost as many Volkswagens as there were in Germany when the first
Autobahn was completed. But the Autobahnen in the occupied territories
have entrances and exits not for das Volk, but only for Israelis?most
of them settlers on land taken from Palestinians.
This reality, and the other indignities
we had already observed, gave a special poignancy to the quote that
greeted us at the entrance to the museum. It was by Kurt Tucholsky,
a German essayist of German origin:
?A country is not just what it
does?it is also what it tolerates.?
In Conclusion
The most compelling quotation came
from Imre Bathory, a Hungarian who, like many others, put their
own lives at grave risk by trying to save persecuted Jews:
?I know that when I stand before
God on Judgment Day, I shall not be asked the question posed to
Cain; ?Where were you when your brother?s blood was
crying out to God???
Our challenge: Will we, like Bathory,
have no fear before that question?whether our brother/sister
is Palestinian, Jewish, Iraqi, Iranian?
--Ray McGovern
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