Since March 1997, when
negotiations were suspended following Israel’s decision to proceed with
the construction of the Jews-only Har Homa settlement on Jabal Abu Ghneim,
the peace process has been described as “stalled.” That adjective,
however, belies Israel’s continuing—and, indeed,
accelerated—activity designed to consolidate and expand its control over
the land of Palestine.
Most striking to this writer
on a recent visit to Palestine and Israel was the degree to which armed
Israeli soldiers control access to everything, arbitrarily
determining who can enter and leave the cities of Bethlehem and Beit
Sahour, Jericho, Ramallah, Hebron and, of course, Jerusalem and the entire
Gaza Strip, as well as the Haram al-Sharif in Jerusalem’s Old City and
Hebron’s Ibrahimi mosque.
In conjunction with its
control over their freedom of movement, Israel’s destruction of
Palestinians’ homes and concurrent expansion of Jewish settlements and
bypass roads is succeeding in choking off the cities and neighborhoods
where Palestinians live, separating families and friends and destroying
community and national life—all under the guise of “security
reasons.”
One’s overwhelming reaction
is that the entire situation is surreal—except that, for Palestinians,
it is all too real. A visit to Hebron confirmed just how pervasive
and devastating this reality is to their lives.
Hebron
The Christian Peacemaker Teams
(CPT) has maintained a presence in Hebron since June 1995, with some
half-dozen permanent and short-term volunteers there at any one time.
Through their courageous and nonviolent presence, they hope to defuse
tense situations and prevent the destruction of the homes of Palestinians
and the theft of their properties and livelihoods. Walking down Old
Shallala Street, the site of frequent clashes between Israeli soldiers and
young Hebronites, two CPTers—23-year-old Pierre Shantz of Ontario,
Canada and 44-year-old Kathleen Kamphoefner, an assistant professor of
interpersonal/intercultural communication at Indiana’s Manchester
College who is spending her third summer in Hebron—matter-of-factly
describe the frequent confrontations and shootings that occur. This street
leads into Hebron’s main market where, on Jan. 1, 1997, an
“off-duty” Israeli soldier, spraying the market with his automatic
weapon, wounded seven Hebronites. Today it is quiet, although Israeli
soldiers stationed in and around the market play “war games,”
sprinting from their posts and aiming their machine guns into the market
at imaginary targets.
The CPTers point out the
various barricades—from rolls of barbed wire to a two-story-high iron
gate that can be closed at a moment’s notice—that block off Hebron
streets from the city’s 120,000 Palestinian residents for the benefit of
its 400 Jewish settlers. These barricades, however, do not constrain the
settlers from expanding their illegal presence: scaffolding extending over
the roof of the marketplace is evidence of continued settlement
construction in Hebron—a tactic also being used in Jerusalem’s Old
City.
Nor, Robert Frost
notwithstanding, do “good fences make good neighbors”: the settlers’
active and continual harassment of Palestinian Hebronites—including
lobbing rocks and debrisinto the marketplace below, another tactic shared
with their Jerusalem co-religionists—has driven shoppers from businesses
located near the settlement, causing many unfortunate merchants to close
their shops, and thus by default ceding more of Hebron to the settlers.
At CPT headquarters over
Hebron’s chicken market—chosen for its proximity to the main market
and the Jewish yeshiva and settlements, thereby making it easier to
respond quickly to trouble—staff member Pierre Shantz discussed
Israel’s continuing fragmentation of the greater Hebron area. The map he
referred to depicted the roads that encircle the city on three sides,
making expansion impossible, with the settlements that complete the task
guarding the larger periphery. Shantz apologized for the fact that the map
was somewhat out of date and did not show the newest Israeli settlements
constructed in the past few months.
Distressing as this
cartographic representation was, it was possible to maintain some
emotional distance. This distance vanished completely, however, during our
visit to the family of Yussef and Zuhoor Al-Atrash. Along with their 10
children—five boys and five girls ranging in age from 18 to 2—they are
living in a tent on the outskirts of Hebron after Israeli soldiers
demolished their home for the third time.
The family’s tragedy is that
their home is located just inside Area C (under sole Israeli control) near
a Jewish settlement, and overlooks a bypass road serving settlements. Not
only is the family unique (so far) in the number of times their home has
been destroyed, but the usual Israeli excuse that they did not have a
legal building permit did not apply to them either, since their
application for a permit was still under consideration when their home was
demolished the last time.
After the Israelis destroyed
their six-room home in 1988, the Al-Atrashes rebuilt. At 8 a.m. on March
3, 1993, Israeli soldiers arrived at their home with a bulldozer. Zuhoor,
who was home caring for her youngest children, refused to come out of the
house. To force her out, the soldiers put a gun to the head of her
three-year-old son. When Zuhoor ran out to rescue him, they shoved her
into a ditch, threw the family’s possessions in the dirt outside, and
proceeded to demolish the family’s home again.
Undeterred, on March 8 the
family began to rebuild again. Within hours, some 100 Jewish settlers
accompanied by Israeli soldiers arrived and threatened the Al-Atrashes
with physical harm if they continued to rebuild. The family contacted CPT,
who moved in with the family to provide 24-hour-a-day protection.
Then, on March 22, in the
presence of Israeli journalist Gideon Levy and human rights activist
Bassem Eid, Israeli soldiers arrived yet again and arrested Yussef, Zuhoor
and their two oldest children, 18-year-old Hussam and 17-year-old Manal.
The videotape of the soldiers beating mother and daughter and dragging
Zuhoor on the ground caused an uproar when it was broadcast on Israeli TV
and worldwide on CNN. (Israeli soldiers now bring their own cameramen when
they demolish a Palestinian home.)
Despite the eyewitness
evidence, Yussef and his son Hussam were charged at a pretrial hearing
following their arrest with assaulting the soldiers. Rather than spend
three months in prison awaiting trial, they pled guilty and were fined
1,500 shekels ($500) each.
In early June the family
completed construction of their new three-room home. The following
morning, June 11, Israeli soldiers arrived and bulldozed that home as
well, along with the concrete foundation the family had constructed to
cover the ground under their tent.
After surveying the bleak
scene, we joined the entire Al-Atrash family in their tent, which provided
some respite from the relentless sun and contained the family’s bedding,
a television set and a fan broken in the demolition. “We can work and we
can eat, and that’s it,” said Zuhoor Al-Atrash, a passionate and
determined woman. “We just want to live like any human beings. Right now
we don’t live, we only exist—without clothes or food, sitting on the
ground.
“[Israeli Prime Minister]
Netanyahu brings the settlers here and they can’t let one poor family
stay in their home. What have these kids done to the Israeli people?
They’re not terrorists—they haven’t even seen the sea!”
Then, having finally gotten
the TV to work, Yussef Al-Atrash played the video of the March 22
confrontation with Israeli soldiers. With the exception of Manal, who went
outside because that day’s events are too traumatic for her to relive,
the entire family watched their parents and older siblings being beaten
and arrested by Israeli soldiers. All of us who were watching for the
first time, including the Palestinian taxi driver who brought us, were in
tears. Manal, outside, was weeping.
The video then jumped to
scenes of the family completing the rebuilding of their home, with Yussef
finishing the tile floor and Zuhoor planting vegetables. It ended with
Israeli soldiers again destroying all that the family had built.
“Let Clinton come and see
this. Ask him if he could live like this for a year,” Zuhoor demanded.
“I’m not talking to Netanyahu, I’m talking to Clinton, because
he’s the one giving Israel all the money. I hope to God that Clinton
will listen to these words.”
As we left the Al-Atrashes
standing amid the ruins of their family home, Yussef said he would
continue trying to obtain a building permit. “Every time I have hope,”
he explained.
For our return to Jerusalem,
we caught a service taxi whose other passengers were several young
Palestinian mothers with their children. Outside Jerusalem, we had to stop
at one of the Israeli checkpoints set up following the 1996 suicide
bombings and never taken down. Israeli soldiers carrying their machine
guns in the casual manner to which I was becoming accustomed demanded our
IDs. One of the young mothers evidently did not have papers allowing her
to enter Jerusalem, and the soldier ordered the taxi to turn back.
Normally this would mean
taking the circuitous and dangerous Wadi al-Nar road which circles
Jerusalem and finding a way to enter the city which did not entail going
through an Israeli checkpoint. Our driver, however, had another scenario
in mind. Taking the first turn-off on the road back, he drove up into the
hills and dropped off the young woman, who left her son in the taxi. The
driver then returned back through the same checkpoint. After the taxi was
passed through and had gone a short distance, he pulled over to the side
of the road and waited for his passenger, who had walked around the
checkpoint, to meet up with the taxi. As we saw her coming down the ramp
to the highway, the driver raised the hood of his vehicle as though he
were having engine trouble, to deflect attention from the woman in hijab
hurrying toward the highway. When she reached the vehicle she quickly got
in, and we proceeded into Jerusalem without further incident.
A fellow passenger explained
to me that this was a potentially dangerous maneuver for all: had the same
Israeli soldier been at the checkpoint when we passed through a second
time (in fact, he was just further down the road), he might well have
questioned the whereabouts of the missing passenger; or, if the young
mother had been questioned as she traversed the neighborhood where she had
been dropped off, she would have been found to lack the necessary papers
and possibly been jailed. Lesser incidents then this, I was told, had
resulted in Israeli soldiers opening fire on vehicles carrying
Palestinians.
Jerusalem
Jerusalem is “ground zero”
for Palestinians and Israelis alike. A beautiful and evocative city, the
old stone houses in both East and West Jerusalem testify to the fact that
virtually the entire city had been Arab a mere half-century ago. Despite
its physical beauty, I was told more than once that Jerusalem is no longer
a pleasant place to live.
All of the Israelis I met in
Jerusalem—who were secular and (at least) “liberal”—thought their
country had no future. Rarely, however, was this because of the inherent
injustice of its founding or the current injustice of its treatment of
Palestinians. Rather, these liberal Jews, who could barely bring
themselves to utter the name of their prime minister, based their
assessment on purely domestic concerns.
An editor for Israeli
television, who had moved after her former neighbors slashed the tires on
her parked car, was thinking of leaving the city altogether because of the
increasing power and presence of the ultra-Orthodox right wing. (At no
point did I hear expressed any recognition of the similarity between this
not-uncommon situation and that of Palestinians who must contend with an
even more hostile presence.)
An Israeli intellectual and
art-lover, who took us to a Palestinian gallery he had discovered in East
Jerusalem and who knew nearly every nook and cranny of the Old City,
stated categorically that Israel was no longer a democracy—because of
the new law allowing direct election of the prime minister.
As we were having mezze in
the gallery’s elegant garden restaurant, I asked these two well-educated
Israelis if they thought the day would ever come when Palestinians as well
as Jews could live anywhere in Israel. “No—it’s impossible!” they
exclaimed in unison,
“It’s like the blacks in
America,” the editor stunned me by saying. The art-lover infuriated my
Dutch friend by comparing the situation between Israelis and Palestinians
with that of the Walloons and the Flemish in Belgium. Neither my friend
nor I could comprehend this level of ignorance on the part of two such
sophisticated individuals, who had worked with Palestinians and admired
their culture, and who wanted Palestinians to like them in turn. Nor could
we decide whether their ignorance was willful or pathological—or both.
“I will not bet on the
stability of Israel, despite its military and economic strength,” stated
Michael Warshawsky, director of the Alternative Information Center, a
non-profit Palestinian-Israeli organization founded in 1984. “High
conflict has been the unifying factor within Israel” since its
establishment in 1948, he continued. “With that gone, conflicts between
religious and secular Israelis, and between the old elite and the
marginalized majority” have come to define public life in the Jewish
state. In fact “Mikado,” as he is known to his friends, did not
discount the possibility that there might be an “Israeli fundamentalist
state, on the model of Iran, 10 years or so in the future.”
In the meantime, under the
Likud government of Binyamin Netanyahu, “the process will continue, but
peace is not on the agenda at all,” Mikado contended. “This is why the
Palestinians need a long-term vision.”
In addition to publishing the
monthly News From Within and numerous books and reports in Arabic,
Hebrew and English, the AIC offers study tours to Israelis as well as to
international journalists and other visitors. I accompanied a group of
social workers attending a conference in Jerusalem and a three-person
Dutch television crew on a tour of “Greater Jerusalem Settlements.”
The minibus tour illustrated only too clearly the Israeli strategy of
“maximum [Israeli-controlled] territory, minimum [Palestinian]
population.”
We drove out of Jerusalem on
Road 1, built some 10 years ago to bypass East Jerusalem for Israelis
traveling to Jewish settlements in the northern West Bank. The road’s
other original function—as a border between East and West Jerusalem- has
become superfluous, however, since the estimated 170,000 Jewish settlers
in “Arab” East Jerusalem now outnumber the Palestinians there. Indeed,
Mikado noted, Ramot, one of the first Jewish settlements to be built, is
now considered by Israelis to be a neighborhood of Jerusalem. “Many
people who live there don’t even know they’re living in a
settlement,” he said.
Turning west, we soon began to
see “facts on the ground,” the Israeli settlements which have been
established in a belt at the edge of Jerusalem, physically separating and
isolating Jerusalem Palestinians from their West Bank neighbors. Spreading
out across hilltops with their densely packed red-tile roofs (“They
think they’re living in Swiss chalets,” Mikado remarked), these
“settlements” are a far cry from the isolated outposts of America’s
Old West. Instead they come complete with sidewalks, paved roads, speed
bumps and bus shelters, not to mention synagogues, schools, and swimming
pools—all subsidized by the Israeli taxpayer.
But these collections of
buildings, massive as they may seem, are only the tip of the iceberg. Each
settlement consists not only of the houses and infrastructure visible to
the naked eye, but of an often much larger surrounding area on which there
are as yet no buildings. (Calculating on the basis of territory, Mikado
said, Ma’ale Adumim, the largest Jewish settlement in the West Bank, is
larger than West Jerusalem, three times as large as Tel Aviv, and the
second largest city in the Middle East, after Cairo.)
Thus, when the late Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin sent a letter to then-Secretary of State
James Baker guaranteeing to build no new settlements beyond the “natural
growth” of existing ones, he was leaving Israel plenty of room to
maneuver. New settlements, by this definition, are really only extensions
of already-existing ones, on land already claimed by Israel. A standard
tactic of settlement expansion, in fact, is to build “neighborhoods”
at either end of the land area in question and slowly but steadily fill in
the gap.
By-pass roads and accessories
such as gas stations require additional Palestinian land. We stopped at a
gas station (on the top of a hill, naturally) which doubles as a pick-up
point for Jewish hitchhikers. Inside a shelter where the prospective
passenger waits is a device whereby the hitchhiker can press a button for
the settlement to which he is headed. The button activates a corresponding
light at the settlement in question, where a dispatcher then issues a call
to drivers in the area notifying them of the hitchhiker’s location and
destination. If no car is in the vicinity, someone from the settlement
will drive to the gas station and pick up the hitchhiker. This
well-orchestrated system successfully minimizes any contact with
Palestinian towns, villages or individuals among whom the settlers live.
The bypass roads connecting
Jewish settlements in the West Bank with each other and with Jerusalem not
only separate Palestinian towns and villages from one another, but often
separate Palestinian farmers from their land. Since these roads frequently
define the limits of “greater Jerusalem,” a family’s home may be on
one side of the road and its land on the other; the family may be
Jerusalem residents but its land outside the city’s border, or vice
versa. The definition since 1993 of a Palestinian resident of Jerusalem as
one whose “center of life” is in the city has resulted in the denial
or withdrawal of residency permits from between 65,000 and 85,000
Palestinians, many of whom were forced literally to move across the street
in order to farm their land or otherwise make a living.
The bypass road for
Palestinians is another matter entirely. Wadi al-Nar—which means
“valley of hell”—is a tortuous and treacherous two-lane road
connecting Ramallah, Jericho and Bethlehem not by way of Jerusalem.
It is the only route available for one and a half million Palestinians,
and the effect on their lives has been catastrophic. Because it is so
dangerous, many refuse to travel on it unless absolutely necessary.
Families that used to visit each other regularly now do so rarely. The
extra hours added to each trip—especially during rush hour, which can
find scores of cars creeping up a steep incline behind a slow-moving
truck—make it next to impossible to do much more than commute to and
from work. (I tried to imagine Washingtonians, who can barely manage to
stop for a red light, living under such conditions—and the Beltway is no
Wadi al-Nar! )
This fragmentation of
Palestinian life—in both space and time—has economic, social and
national implications, according to Mikado. “It is as though there are
four Palestines—Gaza, Jericho, the northern West Bank and the southern
West Bank,” he said. For NGOs such as his, coordinating activities has
become virtually impossible because of the difficulty in traveling between
West Bank cities. The AIC board, for example, which consists of
Palestinians and Israelis, has not been able to hold a meeting which
everyone could attend in months.
“Jerusalem is dying,” the
Israeli activist stated. “It is like a heart without a body.” Through
the closure of the city and the closing of Palestinian
institutions—“especially after Oslo”—“Israel is taking the
Palestinian character out of the city.”
The city’s function of
providing services to surrounding Palestinian cities and towns, he said,
has been severely debilitated. “The closure cuts off services from the
people who use them,” he explained, citing as an example Makassad
Hospital, which has functioned for decades as a “national hospital”
for Palestine. Today its doctors and nurses may have permits to come to
work in Jerusalem, but its patients do not, and the institution is
currently operating at only 65 to 75 percent of capacity. Building another
hospital in Ramallah poses a cruel dilemma as well, a choice between
serving the people of the area or contributing to the Israeli plan of
separating Palestine from itself.
Perhaps the most poignant
moment of our tour was when we stopped by the Greek Orthodox monastery in
Oubediah and, crossing a field, stood looking across Wadi al-Nar at the
Old City, with the Dome of the Rock gleaming in the sunlight. For many
Palestinians, this is as close as they now can get to Jerusalem.
That afternoon I was in the
Old City—as a foreigner, I don’t require Israeli permission to be
there—to meet Ali M. Jiddah, a trilingual “Afro-Palestinian
alternative tour guide,” known as the “mayor of East Jerusalem.” I
almost walked right by him, convinced by his stance and demeanor that he
was an American.
Ali Jiddah, however, is a
native Jerusalemite. His father, a Muslim from Chad, decided to settle in
Jerusalem while visiting the city as part of a tour of Islamic holy sites.
He settled in the African quarter of the Old City, where Ali Jiddah now
lives with his own family in the house where he was born in 1950.
He vividly remembers the 1967
Israeli conquest of East Jerusalem and the change it wrought virtually
overnight—particularly the arrogance and disrespect with which the
victorious Israeli soldiers treated the Palestinian residents. Ali and
several of his friends got together to fight the occupation. Twice they
set off bombs in Jerusalem, following Israeli attacks on Lebanon. When one
of the young men was caught and confessed under torture, Ali was arrested
and sentenced in 1968 to 25 years in prison. In 1985 he was released as
part of a prisoner exchange—1,125 Palestinians for 8 Israelis—and,
when the International Red Cross asked him where in the world he wanted to
be sent to live, Ali replied that he wanted to return to his home,
Jerusalem. “I can’t imagine living anywhere else,” he told me.
Today Ali Jiddah has renounced
violence—but not the struggle for his homeland. Ironically, he is now
frequently interviewed by Israeli media as a spokesman for Jerusalem’s
Palestinians. A serious and dignified man who seems to know everyone in
the Old City—bestowing monikers such as “George Habash” and “Omar
Sharif” on some of his young Jerusalem friends we encountered—he does
not back down from the Israeli soldiers and settlers in his midst, nor
does he hide his disgust.
Walking through the narrow
streets of the Old City, he pointed out the latest Jewish settlement, at
the entrance to the Christian Quarter, as an example of the Israeli
strategy to take over—or at least fragment—Arab Jerusalem. Many of
these settlers are members of Ateret Cohanim, a clandestine group that
works in concert with Jerusalem authorities, it is believed, to identify
and confiscate Palestinian homes and property in Jerusalem. Most prominent
among the American Jews who contribute financial support to Ateret Cohanim
is Dr. Irving I. Moskowitz, the Florida millionaire who also helped fund
the opening of the controversial “tourist” tunnel adjacent to the
Haram al-Sharif.
As we walked through the souq,
I noticed that virtually all the Palestinian tourist shops now sold, along
with their traditional merchandise, menorahs and yarmulkes as well as
T-shirts saying “Don’t Worry America—Israel Is Behind You” and,
bearing Nike’s trademark swoosh, “Israel—Just Do It.” The Jewish
shop whose Israeli flag announced its presence in the midst of Palestinian
merchants was only the most aggressive sign of the relentless Israeli
attack on the Old City.
Ali Jiddah introduced some of
the Old City’s merchants: one whose son had been sitting outside the
walls of the city when he was shot dead by a Jewish settler who jumped out
of his car and started firing randomly; others who had been injured by
hand grenades thrown down into the market by Jews living in rooftop
settlements. Climbing up to the roof, Ali pointed out a small playground
where the children of the Old City used to play. Now, however, it has been
taken over as part of a Jewish settlement, and the Arab children can only
sit and watch the children of Jewish settlers playing on the swings and
slide.
Leaving Ali Jiddah inside the
Jaffa Gate, I felt a mixture of admiration for his strength and
determination and concern for his future and safety. I wish I could say I
felt hope as well.
Gaza
Arriving at the Erez crossing
into Gaza, we passed the lines of Palestinians waiting for Israeli
permission to enter Palestine, following into the VIP checkpoint the same
Dutch TV crew which had been on the AIC settlement tour. Waiting there
impatiently was Dr. Hanan Ashrawi, then Palestinian minister of higher
education, who was en route—and now late—to a conference in Gaza.
“I’ve never been on time for a meeting yet,” she fumed, “no matter
how early I leave.”
This time the Israeli soldiers
were saying that her two assistants, who had always accompanied her in the
past, could not enter Gaza. Clearly fed up with this “racist”
harassment—“and you can imagine what ‘non-VIPs’ have to go
through,” she pointed out—Ashrawi nevertheless was powerless to do
anything. Finally the Israelis decreed that one of the minister’s
assistants could proceed on with her—but “for the last time.” As
Ashrawi and the anointed aide finally drove off, the other sat down to
begin the indefinite wait that stretched before him. Once again I was
struck by the time Palestinians must waste on a daily basis because
of the Israeli checkpoints, roadblocks, detours, permissions, ID checks
and numerous other regulations around which Palestinians must try to
arrange their lives.
With the non-Palestinian
“VIPs,” however, the Israeli guards on duty that day were almost
jovial. Despite (or perhaps because of) the machine guns nonchalantly
lying across their laps, they couldn’t have been more friendly. One of
the guards, learning I was from Washington, said he had lived with his
uncle for five years in nearby Rockville, Maryland, and could I tell him
how the Orioles were doing? I told him I thought they were in the cellar.
Our Gaza hosts took us first
to a seaside hotel, where we sat in a beautiful garden drinking mint tea
and watching children frolic in the waves. Lunch was at what must be one
of the world’s best fish restaurants, where the diner selects freshly
caught fish for the chef to prepare and gratefully relishes the result.
Having experienced the
beautiful Gaza, we then drove through the refugee Gaza, along gutted
roads—if they were paved at all—amid shacks and sand and shoeless
children.
“Many of these people used
to be farmers and merchants leading normal, dignified lives,” an UNRWA
worker explained. “And they’ve been living like this for the
past 50 years.”
As my eyes took in the misery
before me, my mind recalled the beautiful countryside we had driven
through on the way to Gaza where many of these people must have lived. I
thought, too, of my trip last year to Vietnam and Cambodia, where being
there did not really enable me to understand the past: I couldn’t
picture American soldiers landing on the pristine beach north of Danang,
for example, or trampling through rice paddies; nor could the Killing
Fields outside Phnom Penh or my friend’s stories of her life under the
Pol Pot regime explain the insanity of the Khmer Rouge. But here I was in
Gaza—as in Hebron, and in Jerusalem—and it was hard to comprehend the present,
even though it was happening before my eyes .
That evening, walking along
the beach at twilight, a young Gazan who studies at Bethlehem University
described the mood of her generation. During the intifada, she told me,
students would respond en masse to such events as the assassination of
Yahya Ayash, known as “the Engineer.” When his successor, Mohiadin el-Sharif,
was recently killed, however, her fellow students reacted with
indifference, and when demonstrations to commemorate al-Nakba were
announced, their frustration was complete: “What were we supposed to be
demonstrating against,” she asked, “al-Nakba? The Israelis? The
Palestinian Authority and Yasser Arafat? The peace process? There are so
many things wrong, there’s no point in demonstrating anymore. That’s
the worst of what’s happened since Oslo—they’ve killed our feelings
!”
The following day we toured
southern Gaza. Just a short way beyond where I had walked on the beach the
previous night, a checkpoint marked the point at which Israeli control of
the coastal road began—and continued to the border with Egypt. “This
is autonomy?” I thought, reverting to the Long Island vernacular of my
youth.
We drove past strategically
placed Jewish settlements, which followed the same pattern I had seen in
Jerusalem and the West Bank, breaking up any continuity of Palestinian
territory. One of the settlements, I was told, located near the center of
the Gaza Strip, served as a distribution point for supplies—including
weapons—to the other settlements there. The largest settlement, Gosh
Qativ consisted of 11 large and 13 small “neighborhoods,” along with
its own schools, university and airport.
Israelis, moreover, control
the only source of “sweet water” in Gaza and, since Oslo, have seized
by force additional Palestinian land, including an archeological site, the
artifacts from which were removed from Gaza to Israel, and the highest
hilltop in Rafah, taken just months ago after an armed battle. It now is
designated an Israeli military outpost.
Outside the first settlement
we passed, the Jewish residents had thrown their trash in a smoldering
heap on “Palestinian-controlled” land. Another settlement, I was told,
had decided that—“for security reasons”—no Palestinian car
carrying just the driver could travel on the road passing that settlement.
In response, resourceful Palestinian children now position themselves on
either side of the settlement for hire as “passengers,” exiting on the
other side and thus allowing the driver to continue his journey
uninterrupted.
We stopped in Rafah, at the
southern tip of Gaza, where Governor Abdullah Abu-Samhadaneh was
addressing a gathering of summer school students in a large tent on the
beach. Following his speech, the Gaza native described the isolation of
his district, which many Gazans no longer visit because they never know
whether they will be detained at an Israeli checkpoint and thus delayed
indefinitely from returning home on schedule.
Although the Oslo accords gave
full responsibility over Rafah to the civil authority, “for Israelis,
‘security’ comes first,” the governor said, and under that pretext
they have prevented construction equipment and materials, medical supplies
and even electricity from reaching Rafah. One of his constituents told him
he wanted “just one bottle of milk” for his son. “They’d like to
prevent oxygen from getting here if they could,” Abu-Samhadaneh
commented.
“We are in a big jail
now,” the governor observed, noting that Israeli border guards
frequently prevent him from leaving Gaza to attend meetings in Hebron of
the Council of Governors. “And they’ve known me for over 30 years.”
Before 1967, he recalled, Gaza
was a free zone, where residents could buy Egyptian products “cheaper
than in Egypt,” farmers could export their produce, imported goods were
available, and students were able to study in Egypt tuition-free. The
Israeli occupation following the Six-Day War brought, in addition to the
ubiquitous presence of the occupying Israeli army, the death of domestic
industry, as “the occupation changed [Gaza] laborers to workers in
Israel,” the Rafah official said.
Since Oslo, however, the
Israelis have increased restrictions on the people of Gaza “to make them
feel that the Palestinian Authority has brought them nothing.” Fishermen
are limited to a six-mile zone off the Gaza coast, and everyone must ask
Israeli permission to enter or leave Gaza, whether for a government
meeting, to attend school in the West Bank, or receive emergency medical
treatment. Many people do not even bother to ask anymore. Moreover,
Governor Abu-Samhadaneh observed, “before Oslo, the Israelis rarely
closed the border. Now,” he said, “they do it at the least excuse.”
Tarek Abdel-Ghany, a Jordanian
representative of the Near East Foundation, was also visiting Rafah that
day. “We thought as Arabs that the real core of the Middle East problem
would be solved,” he observed. Since Oslo, however, business confidence
is down and the peace process is “losing momentum,” he said with
obvious concern and disappointment.
With our host’s prediction
that “if this area explodes, no one will be safe” echoing in our
minds, we left the balcony where we had been sitting as close to the wall
as possible, because the Israeli authorities—“for security
reasons”—refuse to allow the governor of Rafah to build an awning on
his roof to provide shade from the sun.
Continuing on our tour of
Gaza, we saw several impressive projects awaiting completion—i.e.,
waiting for Israel to release construction materials, technical equipment
and other necessities being held up for a variety of “security
reasons.” These projects included the Gaza International Airport, with
its lovely interior and already-completed runway, and a new regional
hospital built with European Union assistance.
Passing one of the most
desolate refugee camps in Gaza, which was forbidden to receive electricity
through the lines that were connected to it, a little further on we drove
by an Israeli utility crew repairing an electric line which served a
nearby settlement.
The Gazans I met spared
nothing in the warmth and generosity of their hospitality. They opened
their homes and lives with a grace, humor and dignity I have come to
associate with the Arab world, and I admired anew the strong ties that
bind their families together.
It was all the more upsetting,
therefore, to sense the effects of their virtual imprisonment on the
people of Gaza: an underlying boredom and restlessness, where “our only
entertainment is the sea” and visits with family and friends, all of
whom are similarly confined. One young Gazan, unable to go to her Birzeit
University graduation party in Ramallah, was simultaneously unhappy and
resigned; another told me of a classmate who had been unable to get
Israeli permission to return home to Gaza for three years. And these were
the fortunate Gazans who were not living as refugees.
As we watched the World Cup
final on television—everyone was rooting for France—I recalled how a
major complaint of former East Berliners was their inability to travel
abroad, while they could see on their TV sets the evidence of a wider
world. (Nor was it the first occasion I had to compare Gaza and East
Berlin: when told of the refugee Palestinians living in “Canada Camp”
in Egypt who, when they tried to sneak back into Gaza, were shot and
killed by Israeli border guards, I had a fleeting recollection of war
crimes trials being demanded for those Israeli soldiers’ East German
counterparts.)
But it was only when we had
left Palestine and Israel that I realized how mentally oppressive a place
it had become—and after only two weeks! To suddenly realize, in Jordan,
that there were no checkpoints ahead, and that the houses under
construction were not settlements built on stolen land, gave one a
conscious sense of freedom.
At the same time, the
surrealism I experienced has stayed with me back home in Washington. On
the afternoon of my return, standing in line at my neighborhood Safeway, I
was behind two young people who were talking about a shooting incident. I
soon learned that they had been talking about the killing of two police
officers which had taken place only hours earlier on Capitol Hill, where
they worked. I remembered the “deranged” Israeli who had shot and
wounded shoppers in Hebron’s market, and a young Israeli’s immediate
response upon hearing that I was going to Gaza: “Be careful!”
A few days later, leaving the
office for lunch, I recoiled at the sight of a bulldozer clearing rubble
for a new restaurant across the street. I knew that I would no longer see
bulldozers as neutral machines, but rather in the same way I have reacted
to helicopters since the Vietnam War: as malevolent instruments of
destruction and death.
Finally, shortly after my
return, I saw in the grocery story someone who reminded me of Ali Jiddah.
I wondered with sadness if Ali ever would be able to do something as
automatic and mundane as shop in peace for food in the city he lived in
and loved.
Janet
McMahon is the managing editor of the Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs.
Source:
by courtesy & © 2001 Janet MacMahon & WRMEA