JPost: When will it end?

When will it all end?
by Gershon Baskin, 24 April 2007

When the siren sounds I cry. The world stops and despite the whining scream of the siren – silence is what I hear. The pain of loss, the weeping of mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters – never to touch again, never to kiss, hug or just look at. Killed in the line of duty. A hero. Serving the homeland. He fell so that others could live. Cemeteries, unending graves, each year new stones engraved with new names, new battles, new mourning families. News songs to be song next year in the Square.

We wake with news each morning of more death, more killings, more victims, and more bereaved families. Sometimes ours, more of the time, theirs. Our tears, their tears, our pain, their pain. We fight for our homeland, they fight for theirs. Our cause is just, we say. They say that theirs is just. We have the most moral army in the world. They are bloody murderers, we say. They say we kill innocent women and children much more than they have ever killed. We cry for our children. They cry for their children too.

Death pains a Jewish heart as much as it pains a Palestinian heart. We all carry our traumas with us and each and everyone one of us, Jew or Arab is a victim of this conflict carrying the trauma of war with them deep inside. This conflict has left no one without pain. For 100 years we have been killing each other for a piece of this land, for a piece of peace and quiet. We have been blinded by our pain and they have been blinded by theirs.

We don’t believe that they long for peace like we do. We don’t believe that they want peace, like we do. They don’t want their children to play in the parks on sunny weekends. They yearn to kill us, to push us into the sea, to wipe us off the map. That is what we see when we look at them. They are different from us.

WHEN THEY see us, they see in us exactly what we see in them. Enemies. Brutal enemies who kill without remorse. The dead have no names for the other side. They have no families, there are no tears, there are no bereaved ones who remain behind longing, waiting, crying, remembering. Our newspapers, their newspapers – two dead, killed by the enemy. A 15 year old killed by accident. A Kassam kills two children. No names, no matter.

An eye for an eye only makes a lot of blind people, Gandhi told us. Our pain and their pain make lot of wounded souls. Our cause is just, no doubt; but so is theirs. Our yearning to be a free people in our land is not different than theirs. We have no other state; this is the only home for us. They too have no other; they too are not welcome in other lands, only in their own.

We will never be a free people in our land until they too will be a free people in their land. We are linked to each other tied to this land which has taken too much of our blood and too much of theirs.
It is time to make the desert bloom, not with blood, not with tears, but with the love that we both share for this land. Our love for Israel is no stronger than their love for Palestine. Our songs for Zion play in our minds and hearts just as their songs for Biladi play in theirs.

We dwell in our histories. We tell and retell the stories of heroism. We have our ceremonies, we light ours candles, we sing our songs. We cry and we remember. We are glued to the TV screens on our memorial days. So many memorial days. So many ceremonies. So much history. So much to remember.

My children don’t want to go to school – “it’s just going to be a day of ceremonies” – they say. I explain: “There is no choice – you will go to school, the ceremonies are important and there is nothing to argue about.”

After the evening siren, standing on the side of our stopped car on the way back to home, back to Jerusalem, my son says: “I’ll go to school, I understand.”

We have our state. We wake up from our mourning to the celebration of liberation, victory, Israel. For as long as I remember myself I still feel the chills in my spine when I sing Hatikva. It’s a feeling that I can’t explain. It is the feeling I have when I see the coast line from the window of the plane after a long trip home. I see the flag, the blue stripes and the star and I am at home.

Flying home for years with Palestinian colleagues, I always wonder what goes through their minds when they see the same coastline. They too are coming home, home to Palestine. But before they reach there, before they get home, they have to face the policeman, the security guard, the checks and the questions, the checkpoint, the soldiers, all of the obstacles before they can feel that they have reached the end of their journey.

We don’t want them here and they don’t want us, yet we are here to stay, and so are they. No one is leaving this land and no one will succeed in forcing the other to leave. We all know it. The entire world knows it. We have accepted to divide the land. They too have accepted it. Once demanding 100%, both of us are willing to take less. They demand 22% of the land and accept our keeping 78%. We want more, they want more, but we can all live with that 78-22 split. That is the formula for peace that is the formula for putting history behind us. No, we won’t forget, and no, they won’t forget. Our pain, our sorrow, our struggle our fight, will live on forever. So will theirs.

How do we convince them that we really want peace, how do they convince us? How do we both put an end to all of the sorrow and pain? How do we each acknowledge the pain and sorrow of the other side?

Perhaps only when we will celebrate each others freedom.

Gershon Baskin is the Co-CEO of Israel/Palestine Center for Research and Information.
www.ipcri.org

IPA and Democracy Now: Israeli Military Shoots Nobel Peace Laureate

Israeli Military Shoots Nobel Peace Laureate
from the Institute for Public Accuracy, 24 April 2007

Irish Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire Shot With Rubber Bullet by Israeli Military at Nonviolent Protest Listen to segment on Democracy Now by clicking HERE

Nobel Peace Prize recipient Maguire said today: “I was invited with my friend to attend a nonviolent conference in Bilin, a village outside Ramallah [in the West Bank], and to give a talk there, which I did. At the end of the conference, we were invited to participate in a nonviolent demonstration with some of the Palestinian members of parliament and Israeli peace activists and local villagers and international visitors.

“We walked along to try to walk up toward the separation wall, and it was a totally nonviolent protest. And we were viciously attacked by the Israeli military. They threw gas canisters into the peace walkers, and they also fired rubber-covered steel bullets.

“As I tried to move back and help a French lady, I was shot in the leg with a rubber-covered steel bullet, and the young Israeli soldier who shot me was only 20 meters from me. I was stunned by it, and then later on, after having some treatment by the ambulance medics, I went back down to the front line with the peace activists, and we were again showered with gas. I was overcome and had a severe nosebleed and had to be taken by stretcher to the ambulance and treated.

“And I witnessed there … an old Palestinian man with blood on his face. These were over 25 unarmed peace people who had been viciously attacked by the Israeli military. And it was a completely peaceful protest. It was absolutely unbelievable. I never in all my years of activism witnessed anything so vicious as from the Israeli military.”

The shooting of Maguire took place on Friday, April 20; she is now back in Ireland and available for interviews.

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

PACBI: UK Physicians call for Boycott of Israeli Medical Assoc.

130 UK Physicians Call for a Boycott of the Israeli Medical Association and its expulsion from the World Medical Association
from the Palestinian Campaign for the Academic Boycott of Israel, 21 April 2007

In a letter appearing in the Guardian on April 21, 2007, prominent UK physicians have called for a boycott of the IMA and its expulsion from the WMA. The letter follows:

“…..Persistent violations of medical ethics have accompanied Israel’s occupation. The Israeli Defence Force has systematically flouted the fourth Geneva convention guaranteeing a civilian population unfettered access to medical services and immunity for medical staff. Ambulances are fired on (hundreds of cases) and their personnel killed. Desperately ill people, and newborn babies, die at checkpoints because soldiers bar the way to hospital. The public-health infrastructure, including water and electricity supplies, is wilfully bombed, and the passage of essential medicines like anti-cancer drugs and kidney dialysis fluids blocked. In the West Bank, the apartheid wall has destroyed any coherence in the primary health system. UN rapporteurs have described Gaza as a humanitarian catastrophe, with 25% of children clinically malnourished.

The Israeli Medical Association has a duty to protest about war crimes of this kind, but has refused to do so. Appeals to the World Medical Association and the British Medical Association have also been rebuffed. Eighteen leading Palestinian health organizations have appealed to fellow professionals abroad to recognize how the IMA has forfeited its right to membership of the international medical community. We are calling for a boycott of the Israeli Medical Association and its expulsion from the WMA. There is a precedent for this: the expulsion of the Medical Association of South Africa during the apartheid era. A boycott is an ethical and moral imperative when conventional channels do not function, for otherwise we are merely turning away.”

Dr Derek Summerfield, Professor Colin Green, Dr Ghada Karmi, Dr David Halpin, Dr Pauline Cutting And 125 other doctors are calling for the boycott.

Ynet: La premiada con el Premio Nobel de la Paz Mairead Corrigan recibio atencion medica por una herida en la pierna

Ynet: La premiada con el Premio Nobel de la Paz Mairead Corrigan recibio atencion medica por una herida en la pierna, producida por una bala de goma.
Ali Waked, 21 Abril 2007


Photo: Martinez

La Premio Nobel por la Paz Mairead Corrigan ha sido herida durante confrontaciones entre las fuerzas de seguridad y activistas de izquierdas que protestaban contra el muro cerca de Bilin, segun manifestaron los activistas.

Corrigan, que gano el premio en 1976 por su trabajo en pro de una solucion pacifica al problema de Irlanda del Norte, fue disparada en la pierna por una bala de goma y fue trasladadada a un hospital para ser atendida. Tambien se dijo que habia inhalado grandes cantidades de gases lacrimogenos.

Los policias y los soldados usaron granadas de gases lacrimogenos y balas de goma para dispersar la protesta de todos los Viernes contra la valla de seguridad cerca del pueblo Palestino de Bilin y se les contraataco con multitud de piedras.

Dos Policias de Fronteras fueron levemente heridos por piedras.

Las fuerzas de seguridad dicen que donde los activistas realizan su protesta es una zona militar cerrada que tienen que evacuar de manifestantes Palestinos e Israelies cada Viernes.

Los activistas dicen que el trazado de la valla cerca de Bilin fue disenada para expropiar tierras de cultivo Palestinas que seran utilizadas para expandir un asentamiento Judio en la zona.
El Ministro de Informacion Palestino Mustafa Barghouti y el Diputado del Primer Ministro Assam al-Ahmad tambien tomaron parte en la protesta.

“Saludo a los habitantes de Bilin por su lucha pacifica en una region tan violenta y hago un llamamiento al pueblo Israeli que se que estan a favor de la justicia y la paz, para apoyar la lucha de los habitantes de Bilin”, manifesto Corrigan a Ynet.

“Quiero decir que este muro de separacion, contrariamente a lo que dicen los Israelies, no evitara ataques y violencia. Lo que evitara ataques y violencia es un acuerdo de paz entre los dos pueblos, y estoy segura que el pueblo Israeli, como el pueblo Palestino, quieren la paz”, anadio Corrigan.

Tito Kayak tambien estaba alli.

El activista de paz Portorriqueno Tito Kayak escalo una torre en que el ejercito habia puesto camaras de seguridad e izo una bandera Palestina.

“Todo lo que hice fue expresar mi identificacion con la gente del pueblo contra el Muro, que el mundo entero saben que es danoso e ilegal, como tambien lo creen muchos lideres como Nelson Mandela, Jimmy Carter y las Naciones Unidas,” dijo Kayak.

Kayak, que fue arrestado en el 2000 por trepar a la cubierta superior de la Estatua de la Libertad en New York, fue detenido junto con otros seis activistas por la policia.

Kayak fue una figura clave en las protestas de la Armada-Vieques en 1999 en Puerto Rico contra el uso por la Armada de los EEUU de la Isla Vieques para realizar practicas de bombardeo. Las protestas obligaron a los EEUU a acabar sus actividades en la Isla.

My Name is Rachel on Al Jazeera

My name is Rachel on Al Jazeera
by Martinez, 20 April 2007


Rachel Corrie’s parent

Rachel Corrie’s parents and Braden Abraham, the director of My Name is Rachel Corrie, were interviewed last night on Al Jazeera. Several cities, including one of the most recent in Florida, have censored the play.

Director Abraham said that Rachel was not only a humanitarian, but that she was also an artist, two things that make the play a wonderful experience.

When a man called in to the station during question and answer from Israel, he stated that “Rachel Corrie was a member of the International Solidarity Movement.” The caller claimed that the ISM supports suicide bombers because he said that on the website, the ISM says that Palestinians have the right to use “any means to resist Israel.”

Cindy Corrie answered this. She said she met ISMers all over the world, including the seven that were present when Rachel was murdered. Mrs. Corrie said that none of them condoned violence, let alone suicide bombers. She said that the ISM believes in rights granted by international law and that ISM works with non-violent resistance. Corrie said that she stood side by side with Palestinians, Israelis, and internationals, resisting non-violently in villages such as Bil’in, where 60% of the land is being confiscated by the Apartheid Wall.

“They come together to do non-violent resistance– these are their principles,” said Mrs. Corrie.

Mrs. Corrie mentioned that international law recognizes the right of Palestinians to resists– and that it is not limited to non-violent resistance.