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This Land is My Land, Your Land is My Land
If it's Sunday night chances are Susan Laurenco is having a hard time getting to sleep. She's a volunteer for Machsom Watch who has been monitoring checkpoints in the West Bank nearly every weekend for 5 years. Members of Machsom (Hebrew for "barrier") sign up for shifts to witness and document the struggles Palestinians face every day. The work has an emotional weight that can induce insomnia.
Susan tells us that Qalqilya, a city in the area we monitored this week, was once called the "City of Peace" by its inhabitants. Since the Second Intifada its people dropped the nickname as it became completely surrounded by the wall and bottle-necked into a single checkpoint restricting movement, impeding everything from daily life to emergencies that might involve an ambulance or fire truck.
Contrary to what most people think the checkpoints that cause the most strife are not on Israeli-Palestinian borders, but within the occupied territories. Qalqilya has had to go through an economic overhaul since checkpoints were erected. These barriers separate people from work, children from school, and families from each other. Like most cities in the area, Qalqilya created an agricultural-based economy using the beautiful and fertile land. Today these places suffer because the barricades have also divided the land in ways that interfere with developing the soil for farming and animal movement for grazing.
One reason people probably believe the cross-border checkpoints are more disruptive than those within the West Bank is the visual contrast. Unlike the prominent walls designed to physically and mentally imprison Palestinians on the border, the barriers within the West Bank are wire-link fences which are comparatively invisible especially from the settler colonies in the distance that are designed to "protect". Israel is one giant military base and the occupied territories are its brigs.
In 2003, when I spent time in the brig for being the first public conscientious objector to the occupation of Iraq, I went from being imprisoned by wire fences to being held behind large concrete walls. Traveling around Israel and Palestine during the Dialogues Against Militarism (DAM) delegation, it has felt like I've transferred back and forth from military base to prison several times. In both the brig and in the West Bank the walls were more ominous but in many ways I felt more free than when I was stationed on a base or while in Israel. My liberty was restricted severely but I did have the liberty to follow my conscience; I was free not to kill or die for an immoral and unjust war. While in Israel I felt burdened with the knowledge that by spending sheckels I was somewhat contributing to an oppressive occupation.
When I talk about being imprisoned I usually say that it really wasn't that bad. In the end it was much better to serve six months in the brig than spend six months+seven months+ nine months... on multiple tours in Iraq. Some Marines have spent over 36 months total on their third or fourth tour due to extensions, and war is a hell that imprisons far longer than after a tour of duty ends.
Palestinians suffer more from the occupation, but Israelis suffer as well. To cope with the guilt of being governed by a nation that occupies their neighbors, some Israelis choose to remain ignorant about what's happening in their own backyards, others are compelled to develop religious excuses for setting up apartheid systems. All the while generations are growing up under unjust treatment breeding anger and resentment and ironically making Israel less safe. Much like in the U.S. other Israelis choose instead to take responsibility and work against the crimes being committed by their government.
Susan and other volunteers at Machsom Watch may not be able to sleep at night, but their important work along other activists we have met during the DAM delegation are vital pieces to solving the puzzle of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

22 Comments so far
Show AllI was chuckling at the title.
It stopped when I started reading.
this is fascist nwo strategy
you drive the population to madness through frustration
it was a pillar of the supreme soviet
the zion state has thrown its lot in with the fascist americans and the nwo - in doing so they have done more to put their future at risk than anything hamas could ever think up
they have embraced the state of madness and in doing so have become mad themselves
Anyone on this planet is either insane or unaware of what is going on.
Ah! That's it! Wrong planet!
(*whew*)
For more info than you want to know on life in the West Bank, there is a long but informative, I think, video at
http://www.newamerica.net/events/2009/settlements_and_occupation
A Jewish lawyer who defends the Palestinians relates the reality of life in the West Bank.
The difficulty rendering that which belongs to Caesar unto Caesar is that Caesar thinks it all belongs to him.
This is a wonderful column. First, I like it when veterans write. Their opinions carry a weight non-veterans can't duplicate. If we're ever to get off this blood-thirsty trip, it'll be a person of conscience in the military who leads us away, like an Adam Kokesh.
The comparison of brig to the Occupied Territories is a great one. I like the mention of a hell that keeps going long after the tour of deployment ends. Who wouldn't trade a brief period of incarceration over PTSD and a lifetime of mental torture?
Some veterans will deal better with their experiences than others and move on, so we can't generalize. We can however look at what Israel does on a daily basis in its efforts to repress Palestinians. Comparing the OT to Iraq is a fascinating link. We know Israel contractors were used in Abu Ghraib. Interrogation and torture techniques were imported from Israeli prisons, notably the use of feminization and homosexualization to erode Arab men's dignity.
From a policy perspective, it's worth revisiting Clean Break as the reason why we're in Iraq and Afghanistan for the long haul. The goal is open-ended: destabilization among Israel's enemies.
I would like to invite you to "enjoy" watching the "humanity" of those who are just "a little bit fascists"
BTW, those filmed are not the leaders, nor the politicians, nor the army, just the "normal" beings
===============================================================
Gaza war tourism - Keren Levy: I'm a little bit fascist
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tjw8U0AcH4Q&feature=related
===============================================================
Israel-Gaza border turns into picnic site for israeli gods!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ZDlEcquWSY&feature=related
===============================================================
Sick tourist attraction in Israel (w/ English subtitles)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CdNzBHuLUts&feature=related
===============================================================
Welcome To Israel !!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFLbXAmoxOo&feature=related
===============================================================
Gaza's War Crimes
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLZgNy46aTQ
===============================================================
Zionist Extremism
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cz_uEGQIsGU&feature=related
===============================================================
History of Crimes Against Palestine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yhvd7vk9K2k&feature=related
===============================================================
Gaza 2009: We Will Never Forget
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9mkRiGbgZg
===============================================================
Palestine - 60 years of Bloody Oppression
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxAxgokbOrE&feature=related
===============================================================
The Age of Terror_The first Terrorists
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yo4pRCuElfw&feature=related
===============================================================
Democracy or apartheid? 2009 dignity for Palestine
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OgVFPjaCZ0g&feature=related
===============================================================
People who call for equal rights for those savages, robbers, supremacists and murderers, I would say, you are welcome to take them as YOUR neighbours, you are welcome to even share your home with them, but please, do not force them upon us
As far as am concerned, they have crossed every red line, they have gone beyond the point of return, those who think that they can help them find their humanity......... good luck to you
No room in my heart for such evil
Nahida,
Don't close your heart or you become like them.
They are brainwashed just like so many here in the u.s.
It was like Bull Run at the start of the War Between the States.
The "little bit fascist" woman, clearly didn't have clue.
She is an Israeli valley girl.
Those thoughts were put in her head.
Your heart is in the right place,
don't let other's ignorance stifle its growth.
peace for all
someday
"Israel is one giant military base and the occupied territories are its brigs."
Or one might call them "Warsaw ghettoes".
"others are compelled to develop religious excuses for setting up apartheid systems" --
-- which is the central task of religion.
Ray Berthiaume
G-d bless you for your life and work!
You are welcome
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to hear
The weeping olive tree
When pulled down
With the sharp, yellow teeth
Of your ugly bulldozer
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to feel
The agonizing pain
Of my hills and mountains
Torn apart when hit
By your merciless missile
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to see
The blood of my poppies
When fallen to the ground
Crushed under the
Cold metallic chains
Of your vile tank
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to taste
The salty bitter flavour of slavery
Felt by my villages and towns
When under curfew
For days on end
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to smell
The burning yearning
In my orchid's wounded heart
To be united again
With her much missed children
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to hear
The cries of the wind
Mourning her little ones
Who used to play
Flying away their black and white
Red and green kites
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to feel
The tight and shallow breathing
Of my home and garden
When suffocating
By your nasty
Nerve and tear gas
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to see
The tears of my clouds
Trickling down their cheeks
When punched by the fist
Of your apache helicopter
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to taste
The sweetness of dignity
Felt by a stone
When picked up
By a little hand of a brave boy
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to smell
The perfume of my earth
When taking a shower
Getting ready
To embrace the body
Of her beloved child
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to touch
And to heal
The deep bleeding wounds
Of my sky
Stabbed by your f16
Yes, you can have my land
When
You are able to teach
Your heart how to love
Every drop of water
Gushing from below
Or falling from above
Yes, you can have my land
When
You can gently hold
Every grain of sand
And tell her how sorry
You are
For causing all the pain
She has to go through
Yes, you are welcome to have my land
When
You are able to hear
The whispering prayer
Of its prophets and angels
Chanting words of love
Peace and justice
For every human soul
Then...... and only then....
You are welcome to have my land
.
Sioux Rose
NAHIDA: This is a beautiful, powerful, inspired poem. Have you placed it anywhere besides this site? It deserves to be read by thousands. You say it all... in a way that comes from your heart and enters the reader's heart like a direct infusion. I wish you had no need to write it. Things being what they are, I wonder if a peace group would be interested in making your poem into a poster? Just one stanza alone can touch the spirit.
Thank you Sioux Rose, for your kind words, the poem has been published in my book "I Believe in Miracles", and it's also published on my blog :
http://poetryforpalestine.spaces.live.com/
.
Sioux Rose
NAHIDA: I apologize on behalf of all humanity for what is being done to your people, and ALL people EVERYWHERE who suffer so. I will share your poem and mention your book to my friends. For all the pain that results from the empathy you feel for others' sorrows, your beauty shines through. Sometimes when I think about the terrible and terrifying things taking place I reach for allusions taken direct from the natural world. One, that if the ground didn't break open--allowing water to seep in carrying minerals--the veins of precious gems would never have formed. That it is often the flawed coin that is considered most valuable. That the child lacking in one sense, like Stevie Wonder, is frequently enormously gifted or compensated through another. All things living are endowed with precious assets... sometimes I think humanity is like that ground that must burst open to make space for glowing gems to form. And one of these is compassion, the beauty of spirit that sings through your words. And needs to become the living song in others' apparently closed hearts. Blessings, sister.
PS I will look up your book, too.
Nahida:
Great to see your postings here. You are a powerful and eloquent voice for Palestine.
Ahlan! (I hope I've spelled it correctly).
Thank you very much Lingum, for the kind welcome
and Ahlan wasahlan bika aydhan
take care
This is a slow-motion genocide, not entirely unlike what happened to the Miami Indians in of all places, Indiana, leading up to and after the Treaty of Greenville (OH)(1795). The Miami (Myaamia) would agree (grudgingly) to a land treaty and then the whites would make incursions in violation of the treaty and then claim ownership (why do you think half our "Founding Fathers" including Washington were SURVEYORS!) and then there would be a new treaty and then more incursions. This went on for decades, into the 1800s, when the Miami were finally loaded onto conveyances and carted off to Kansas and then Oklahoma. Similar to the Cherokee under Andrew Jackson (Trail of Tears).
Obamabot has already caved to Netandyahoo [sic] over the Israeli "settlements" in Palestinian territory and the argument that they should be allowed "natural growth" (lots of children to expand the settlements) in total violation of international law. Same tactic, different century, different peoples.
So much for Obamabot's more than merely implicit campaign claims to want to help the underdog.
But, never mind. Just "go out and shop."
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It seems the apartheid policies of the Zionist theocrazy in Israel is branding every Jew on the planet as a bigot and a racist.
Have ewe people learned nothing? And I am 'espeaking' here to ewe Jew! THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN KEEP A PALESTINIAN IN THE GUTTER... IS TO STAY THERE YOURSELF!
Get out of the gutter! Abandon your arrogant and outdated tribe-all-eeego belief for a larger identity called HUMAN. This hard, no nonsense advice applies not only to Jews and Arabs (and others), but to all people thinking like EWEs in lieu of YOUs.
Wake up! Time runs short! Old Coyote Knose... WHERE THERE IS NO INSIGHT, THE PEOPLE PERISH! See it! See it!
LOOK AT ME
I would love to write poetry about love,
Paint rainbows and butterflies,
Smell the scent of pink rose buds,
And dance;
Dance with the melody of jubilant bluebirds
I would love to close my eyes and see children smiling
No guns pointing at their heads
Tell them stories of lily-like fairies in far-away lands
Not of bullets shrieking.... of missiles exploding
But
How can I?
There is a dagger in my heart
I am hurting
Hurting
I bleed,
I cringe
I cry
HUMANITY, WHERE ARE YOU?
I am being slaughtered
Under your watchful eyes
I am cold… cold…. cold
I cringe
I cry
Humanity, where are you?
Why do you turn your face away?
Why do you keep looking the other way?
I am here
Languishing
In Gaza's alleyways
Humanity, where are you?
Look at me
See me
I am here
Sighing
In Gaza's alleyways
I cringe
I cry
Humanity,
Enough turning the other way !
Turning a deaf ear
Turning a blind eye
While I,
and oh ! My poor children
Die
.
great poem Nahida. I really believe this says it all as well as it can be said. thank you.
I wish we could find out where humanity has gone, what it is looking at, what it hears. And wake it iup and make it see.
To nahida...
Your poetry is brilliant.
You have made me cry in anger
at the huge injustice and pain
caused you by
people who surround me
every day, threatening,
but I am not one of them.
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