Jerusalem - Israel’s reoccupation, the
lack of movement and being locked up inside of your own home without the
knowledge of knowing how long has become normal. This is the sad thing.
For those who live on just the "other side" of a check point in an area
that is not under curfew are the lucky in ones since they are not being
treated like caged animals. At the Biet Hannana checkpoint on the road
from Jerusalem to Ramallah, most of the residents have to wait up to 3.5
hours to cross over either to get to work or back to their homes.
It is a paradox standing in line at the
que at the checkpoint. People are joking and talking with each other
attempting to pass the time and make the best of the situation. I, on the
other hand start to fume after 45 minutes with the lack of movement in the
line. The sun is beating down on my head, I am getting thirsty but do not
want to drink anything for fear of having to go to the bathroom. I get
restless and irritable. Normally, I do not have to go through a
checkpoint; I live on the Jerusalem side of the checkpoints. I am very
lucky.
Everyone has to approach the soldiers
one by one and waits for him to ask questions and check the ID’s. It is my
turn; I approach the soldier that is holding his gun with his finger on
the trigger. I wonder, if he sneezes, will he blow his toe off? What if he
turns around real quick and accidentally moves his finger, I observe the
possible situation and imagine where the gun barrel will be pointing. The
soldier smiles at me as I approach while yelling something in Hebrew to
one of his colleagues waving his hand for me to approach. He asks me the
typical checkpoint questions of, "Where are you from?" then, "Where are
you going?" while he looks at my passport. He tells me that I can go ahead
with a flick of his wrist and says, "Have a nice day!" as I walk away. I
respond with a grumble that is barely audible under my breath.
Now the West Bank is once again under
incursion, Peres said that it may last for a few months this time. We fall
back to our usual stance of calling those who are "inside" to see how they
are doing and to offer support in any way that we know how. We stand at
the water cooler in the office and discuss the probable starvation that
may occur for the inhabitants inside and what can we do to assist. Our
conversations are not "normal" conversations of who has the best sale or
how good the lasted movie is. It spins around, lack of movement, body
parts, arrests, bombings and other typical occupational topics.
This has become the norm. For 22
months, Sharon has slowly desensitized the local and International
population with his actions.
President Bush once told Sharon to
withdraw its forces "immediately". With the reply from Sharon, "We will
not take orders." Mr. Bush now calls for "new leaders before the United
States will support a Palestinian State." Arafat was elected by the
Palestinian people, who is Mr. Bush to say who should be their leader?
Bush further says, "The United States, along with the European Union and
Arab states, will work with Palestinian leaders to create a new
constitutional framework and a working democracy for the Palestinian
people." Mr. Bush encourages the Palestine people to "embrace democracy,
confront corruption and firmly reject terror" and they can "count on the
American support for the creation of a provisional state of Palestine."
The long awaited speech from the President of the United States, gave
distant hope to the Palestinian people, he did not address a solution for
the refugee problem or the removal of the Israeli settlements.
Meanwhile, Nablus is under massive
military attack for the fourth time in three months. The soldiers have
invaded the city and the suburbs. It is under a 24 hour curfew, holding
150,000 residents inside of their homes. The streets are once again
vandalized and the infrastructure damaged. Medical teams are prevented to
move freely and the personnel are harassed. Ramallah is undergoing the
same situation with Arafat’s compound once again under siege. A helicopter
fired missiles killing 6 people in Gaza and today fired on the crowd
during the funeral wounding three boys and two adults. The usual,
instances are occurring in Bethlehem while Israel calls up an estimated
2,000 more reservists to help with the West Bank incursions.
NGO’s and other agencies are fighting
for a way to assist with the needs during the incursions while 30 more
Internationals were deported from Israel yesterday. They were all Italian
peace activists. This action fuels the concern regarding the disasters
planned against the Palestinians during this incursion. Yet, we watch
those we know and care about walk towards the checkpoint and wonder if
they will be able to come back tomorrow for work as we attempt to continue
with our daily routine striving to bring a since of normalcy into our
lives.