Holy scriptures have it that two women appeared
before Prophet Solomon claiming that both of them were the mother
of a baby. The prophet was faced with a dilemma. How would he be
able to decide who the real mother was?
However, he was famous far and wide for his wisdom
so he ordered that the child be cut in half and that a half be
given to the women who claimed to be the mother. The older lady
said, "yes, it’s ok. Divide the child in half and give me
my share."
But the younger of the two cried, "No, please
don’t harm the baby. I give up all claims to the child. Please
give the infant to the other lady."
In an instant, the prophet knew who the real
mother was. Of course, he did not cut the child in half. He told
the younger of the two to take her baby home. He knew that because
she was the real mother, she would rather give up her child than
see it harmed. He admonished the older one because she laid false
claims to a child not her own.
My father-in-law had been a rich landowner before
he became an impoverished refugee in 1948. He had groves upon
groves of orange and lemon trees and also grew an array of apple,
mulberry, pomegranate, and quince trees. He had some cows that
supplied milk for his children. His wife, my mother-in-law, also
raised sheep, goats and chickens for milk and meat.
I know how my father-in-law loved his trees. I
know how he looked after them with love and care. I know that he
could not stand to see a branch broken or the fruit of any tree
carelessly discarded. I know all this because I watched him
cultivate his mini-orchard in Jordan.
From others, I heard stories of the courage of my
father-in-law and I witnessed it during the Civil War here in
Jordan. He was a man who did not know fear and had it not been for
his wife and children, he would have remained in Palestine and
would have died there fighting to defend what was his. His oranges
were famous throughout Europe for the fine texture of their skins
and pleasant taste. He led a good life and spent his free time at
the local coffee shop with his friends and relatives.
But the massacres of Deir Yassin where 254 were
killed, Ein az Zeitun-70, Lydda between 250-400, Safsaf-94,
Duwayma-80-100, Kufr Kasem-50, and others, caused a panic among
the unarmed Palestinian civilians. No one wanted to see their
families brutally cut down by a people who had proved that killing
Palestinians was enjoyable.
For years, my father-in-law lived in a refugee
camp. It must have been unbearably painful to know that the few
days he thought he and his family would be away from home turned
into an eternity. He never saw his beloved orange orchards again.
He was never again to ride his white steed on his nightly
excursions to the borders of his land making sure no one
approached who meant to harm him or his family. He was never again
to sit in the quaint coffee shops where evenings smelled like
jasmine, roses, the sea and hope and dreams.
He lost all that forever. People like Ben Gurion
Shimon Peres, Golda Meir, Moshe Dyan, Yithak Rabin and Ariel
Sharon came and confiscated Palestinian land and murdered
Palestinian women and children along the way. Some of my husband’s
family recently returned to his village for a visit. There was
nothing left standing. Nothing but an old stone schoolhouse for
boys and a gas station.
All the trees my father-in-law had loved and cared
for, had been cut down. Cut down just like the people who remained
in the village. All the houses had been destroyed. A whole way of
life had been wiped out forever. The invading Jews did not love
the trees, did not value the orange orchards, and did not care for
the fertile land that they had stolen. The fields lie empty now.
Wild grass has cropped up in bunches where some tree stumps still
stand.
The house where my husband spent his early years
is gone. The garden where my mother-in-law planted every kind of
vegetable has turned to weed. The village itself is a ghost town
and there are no visible signs of life but for a small café on a
corner crossroads owned and run by Israeli Jews. There are
hundreds of similar Palestinian ghost towns throughout Israel. An
eerie silence hangs over the amputated trees, over the sea, and in
the still standing helter skelter houses that were not demolished.
There are no longer village women to fill their urns from the
natural wells that abounded. There is no village oven to bake
fresh bread for hungry village people. There is no irrigating
sprinkler that my husband used to run through in the wild
wonderful summer days of his long ago.
The invading Jews have taken it all. They have
taken the land, demolished most of the homes, the cafes, the
ovens, the coffee houses. They have uprooted the trees and
destroyed the gardens. They have robbed a people of their way of
life and their right to live on their own land in their own
country.
But it did not all stop in 1948. It didn’t end
in 1967. Today, it is as brutal as ever before. Palestinian
refugees cluster in what is left of their country, trying to raise
whatever they can to eke out a living. And everywhere, the Jewish
invaders invade. They build settlements on the remnants of
Palestinian land. They shoot from Palestinian hilltops, down into
Palestinian villages and kill Palestinian women and children. They
go on rampant killing sprees and laugh and joke about the
Palestinians they killed or injured for the day. They continue to
uproot trees and destroy crops. And as if this is not enough, the
Israeli army digs moats around Palestinian cities, bombs
Palestinian civilians, shoots at mourners in Palestinian funeral
processions and by air, land and sea, assassinates Palestinian
sons, brothers and fathers.
Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon mentioned
recently that he envied the way Arabs love their land dunam for
duman. His plan is to confiscate more land of "dunam after
dunam" and dispossess more Palestinians. He wants to either
drive them out or kill them off. Human life, as long as it is not
Israeli, means nothing to him. His has forged his way to becoming
prime minister over the dead bodies of Palestinians and Lebanese.
He covets what is left of Palestine.
But he will never love every tree, every forest,
every animal, and every bird that inhabits Palestine. He will
never listen…really listen to what the birds are singing or hear
the stones outcry in protest to his brutality. He will never
understand the land, for it has a soul of its own and that soul is
Palestinian. Palestine is the baby that both mothers claim as
their own. Israelis don’t care how much of the land they
desecrate or destroy, how many Palestinian bodies are buried, how
many trees they tear down, or how many farms they overturn. For
they are not the real mother of the baby. They don’t care if
this baby is cut in half…they just want the baby even if it
dies. Only Palestinians are the real and rightful mother of
Solomon’s baby. They cannot bear to see the destruction of their
country and their people that is taking place before their very
eyes. And as Israelis exterminate the Palestinians and tear out
the soul of the land and the hearts of the indigenous inhabitants,
in so doing, they destroy themselves.