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“Don’t Look Away—The Siege of Gaza Must End”
In late June 2011, I’m going to be a passenger on “The Audacity of Hope,” the USA boat in this summer’s international flotilla to break the illegal and deadly Israeli siege of Gaza. Organizers, supporters and passengers aim to nonviolently end the brutal collective punishment imposed on Gazan residents since 2006 when the Israeli government began a stringent air, naval and land blockade of the Gaza Strip explicitly to punish Gaza’s residents for choosing the Hamas government in a democratic election. Both the Hamas and the Israeli governments have indiscriminately killed civilians in repeated attacks, but the vast preponderance of these outrages over the length of the conflict have been inflicted by Israeli soldiers and settlers on unarmed Palestinians. I was witness to one such attack when last in Gaza two years ago, under heavy Israeli bombardment in a civilian neighborhood in Rafah.
In January 2009, I lived with a family in Rafah during the final days of the "Operation Cast Lead" bombing. We were a few streets down from an area where there was heavy bombing. Employing its ever-replenished stockpile of U.S. weapons, the Israeli government sought to destroy tunnels beneath the Egyptian border through which food, medicine, badly-needed building supplies, and possibly a few weapons as well were evading the internationally condemned blockade and entering Gaza.
Throughout that terrible assault, Israel pounded civilians in Gaza, turning villages, homes, refugee camps, schools, mosques and infrastructure into rubble. According to Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem, the attack killed 1,385 Palestinians, nearly a quarter of them minors, with an uncountable number more to succumb, in the months and years following, to malnutrition, disease, and suicidal despair, the consequences of forced impoverishment under a still continuing siege that salts Gaza’s dreadful wounds by preventing it from even starting to rebuild.
All I could feel at the time was that the people in the Gaza Strip were horribly trapped, almost paralyzed.
The day of the cease-fire, when the sounds of bombing stopped, my young friends insisted that we must move quickly to visit the Al Shifaa hospital in Gaza City. Doctors there were shaken and stunned, after days of trying to save lives in a hopelessly overcrowded emergency room, with blood pooling at their feet. Dr. Nafez Abu Shabham, head of Al Shifaa’s burn unit, put his head in his hands and spoke incredulously to us. "For 22 days, the world watched,” he lamented, “and no country tried to stop the killing."
He may well be putting his head in his hands again, today as too many of us have stopped even watching. “Human rights groups in Gaza are urgently requesting international aid groups and donor groups to intervene and deliver urgent medical aid to Palestinian hospitals in Gaza,” according to a June 14 Al Jazeera report. “Palestinian officials say that Gaza's medicinal stock is nearly empty and is in crisis. This affects first aid care, in addition to all other levels of medical procedures.”
After the attack, I visited the Gaza City dormitory of a young university student with two of his friends. It was a shambles. We sifted through broken glass and debris, trying to salvage some notebooks and texts. Their lives have been like that. They’ve since graduated but there is no work. “The Gaza Strip enters its fifth year of a full Israeli blockade by land, air and sea with unemployment at 45.2%, one of the highest rates in the world,” according to a UN aid agency report. (June 14, 2011). Harvard scholar Sara Roy, in a June 2, 2009 report for Harvard's Crimson Review, noted that :
"Gaza is an example of a society that has been deliberately reduced to a state of abject destitution, its once productive population transformed into one of aid-dependent paupers....After Israel's December (2008) assault, Gaza's already-compromised conditions have become virtually unlivable. Livelihoods, homes, and public infrastructure have been damaged or destroyed on a scale that even the Israel Defense Forces admitted was indefensible. In Gaza today there is no private sector to speak of and no industry,"
When the bombing had stopped, we visited homes and villages where the unarmed had been killed. Sabrina Tavernise of the New York Times would later verify that, in the village of Al Atatra, IDF soldiers had fired white phosphorous missiles into the home of a woman named Sabah Abu Halemi, leaving her badly burned and burning to death her husband and three of her children. I visited her in the hospital, watching a kindly Palestinian doctor spend his greatly needed time off sitting at her bedside, offering only wordless comfort as she gripped his hand.
We must not turn away from suffering in Gaza.
We must continue trying to connect with Gazans living under siege.
There is some risk involved in this flotilla. The Israeli government threatens to board each ship in the flotilla with snipers and attack dogs. A year ago the Israeli Navy fired on the Turkish ship, the Mavi Marmara, from the air, then documented its passengers’ panicked response as their justification for executing nine activists, including one young U.S. citizen, Furkhan Dogan, shot several times in the back and head at close range. It then refused to cooperate with an international investigation.
The Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, amounting to what is internationally recognized as an apartheid system, could end in peace, with Israel abandoning paranoia and racial violence to allow peace. Apartheid ended in South Africa without the wave of bloodshed and reprisals that its supporters claimed to fear as their excuse for holding on to the wealth and power which their system afforded them. They achieved greater peace and safety for themselves and their children by finding the courage to finally allow peace, safety, and freedom to their neighbors. It’s a lesson the U.S. government has all too often missed. This June, the governments of Israel and, (above all), the United States must finally embrace the audacity of hope.
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35 Comments so far
Show AllIt baffels my soul that we have allowed the Israelis to destroy all things Palestinian - life for these people is a living, then dying daily horror. How could the aspiration of the 2-year old son of a Palestinian educator be to become a suicide bomber -- see Chris Hedges account in his latest book "The World As It Is." Reading the first hand stories by Hedges makes me sick to my stomach. And our Nobel Prize winning Uncle Tom president remains silent in his support of this genocide as do many ignorant Americans.
It set the stage for a new era of unabashed liberal complicity in genocide, here in the USA. The complicity was not new, but the lack of shame surged to new heights.
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It's the same the world around, always. Palestine, 1956 in Hungary, 1968 in Chechoslovakia, Irian Jaya, Idi Amin, Pinochet, Kissinger, all of them everywhere. With damned few exceptions, the elites protect one another against us.
We must get together and stop it.
I think there's an answer in the Tora. Seeing that Israel and Palestine have the same amount of population, we should do as King Solomon did and cut the babying half.
Claudia, you apparently didn't even notice that you made this same inane comment on June 17th. Have you nothing of substance to offer? Please do some reading about what Israel has been doing for decades to the Palestinian people. There is nothing at all which puts the parties on an equal footing here.
" It’s a lesson the U.S. government has all too often missed. This June, the governments of Israel and, (above all), the United States must finally embrace the audacity of hope."
I agree. And when we hear the word "audacity" we should not think of Obama (he cheaply co-opted the usage in attempt to be identified with MLK, while never espousing his views and hopes), rather we should think of MLK and what he said in Peace Prize speech:
"I accept this award today with an abiding faith in America and an audacious faith in the future of mankind. I refuse to accept despair as the final response to the ambiguities of history. I refuse to accept the idea that the "isness" of man's present nature makes him morally incapable of reaching up for the eternal "oughtness" that forever confronts him. I refuse to accept the idea that man is mere flotsom and jetsom in the river of life, unable to influence the unfolding events which surround him. I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality.
I refuse to accept the cynical notion that nation after nation must spiral down a militaristic stairway into the hell of thermonuclear destruction. I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final word in reality. This is why right temporarily defeated is stronger than evil triumphant. I believe that even amid today's mortar bursts and whining bullets, there is still hope for a brighter tomorrow. I believe that wounded justice, lying prostrate on the blood-flowing streets of our nations, can be lifted from this dust of shame to reign supreme among the children of men. I have the audacity to believe that peoples everywhere can have three meals a day for their bodies, education and culture for their minds, and dignity, equality and freedom for their spirits. I believe that what self-centered men have torn down men other-centered can build up. I still believe that one day mankind will bow before the altars of God and be crowned triumphant over war and bloodshed, and nonviolent redemptive good will proclaim the rule of the land. "And the lion and the lamb shall lie down together and every man shall sit under his own vine and fig tree and none shall be afraid." I still believe that We Shall overcome!"
Hate to say this, but the only thing that will end the siege of Gaza is the military defeat of Israel. The victory of Israel won't achieve anything -- because it didn't. Israel refuses to accept the responsibilities of a conquering power in Gaza, after all.
And who will defeat Israel militarily?
I think we all know the answer to that.
I don't. Seriously who? Do you think that the Arabs will? Will the US do it? Europe? I don't see anyone that can or will. Interested to know what you think.
from my archive...doesn't look good...Published on Tuesday, May 31, 2011 by Haaretz (Israel)
Israel Prepping to Block Next Gaza Flotilla
by Amos Harel
...Former Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi testified before the Turkel committee investigating the flotilla and said that if necessary, sniper fire would be used to take down violent protesters. This would prevent face-to-face clashes that hold a greater risk to soldiers' lives...
Hats off to Kathy Kelly. Thank you for "staying human." A brave & wise soul indeed.
Hey Kathy, I guess u think the IRA are heroes as well right? Blowing up civilians is their thing to. Hamas , the IRA a real pact of love those two.
You must have loved South Africa during its apartheid days.
See? That same logic can be applied to you too!
Hello Kathy.
I respect your opinion, but you should also consider we (Israelis) are also victims of terror radical groups. Confronting our decisions in defense of land and sea borders of the Gaza region is going against our defense and right to sovereignty. Gazans receive all that is needed to sustain the progress (and more than Us$ 1.2 billion annual donations from the international community). Compare the population of Gaza and other cities in the world and will see that there is not that bad ...
Perhaps the organizations of defense human rights (which look much the Palestinians of Gaza) could look also how is the hell for who live in Israeli border towns... are thousands palestinians rockets fall on israeli homes, schools, streets, hospitals... We are not innocents too?
Here is the link - http://www.mfa.gov.il/mfa/humanitarianaid/palestinians/ - where we show the monthly delivery of products at border crossing between Israel and Gaza (do the math between the quantities and total population and find the average per capita).
I wish You Peace.
Adelle
The land of Palestine belonged and belongs to the Palestinians who lived there since time out of mind.
The right to political self-determination is embodied in the 1946 UN Charter. The UN never had, nor does it even now have, the right to hand over land belonging to one group to members of another group -- none of the powerful nations would have agreed to any such idea.
The internationally accepted right to take land by violence expired in 1946 at the latest, and such land theft became the number one international crime, worse than all others.
It's vile of you, Adelle, to try to defend such atrocities.
Adelle's whining is reminiscent of the observation that Israeli historian Ilan Pappe once made when he noted that the Israelis are the only nation on earth who will have claimed or will presently claim that they are victims instead of oppressors.
Sometimes peace means accepting something that is really horrible in order to stop the killing. In this case if it has to be one people or the other, then there is no definition of peace that doesn't involve one side or the other losing.
If a gang invades your home and turfs you out, abetted by crooked cops, for whom would it be "really horrible" that the gang be thrown out and your home restored to you?
My point is that both sides here think they are right and are ready (and quite willing) to kill to prove their point. If both sides are going to kill, then there is no possibility for peace and without peace you cannot have any justice.
And if one side is willing to kill while the other isn't?
Solitudinem fecerunt, pacem appelunt.
The thing you miss, I think, is that the Palestinian people have right on their side and the Zionists do not. So the world should support the one and help depose the other--if we want a true peace and not a desert.
Your wasting your time with Kathy and her ilk. They're experts in clothing their contempt and their murderous intentions in smooth sounding Bullshit. The Germans did the same.
Shove it, you racist thug. You have no problems with Israel establishing an ethnically "pure" state. That sounds very Nazi like. It's equally despicable of you to call anti-Zionists "anti-Semetic".
Zionism is no different than white supremecism.
You know Israel is 20% Arab. FWIW I have a close friend that is an Arab Israeli and she supports Israel as does her family. It is not that simple really.
Your first sentence omits the word "still," which is necessary when one considers how popular the notion of "transfering" the Israeli Arab population out of Israel has become.
Again I wish "bon voyage" and Godspeed to Kathy Kelly and her fellow travelers.
The prospect remains that there will be either another monstrous, brutal attack by IDF stormtroopers, with attendant violence, death, mayhem, looting, and theft of the flotilla passengers' possessions, or a "peaceful" interdiction and capture of the flotilla that will be hailed as a symbolic victory by the protestors.
Alas! it's another one of those approaching moments where all sympathetic observers can do is offer support, hold our breath, cross our fingers, and hope for the best.
Thank you CommonDreams for always honoring Kathy Kelly by publishing her essays.
When did "the world community" as it is called decide that Palestinians are not humans, not deserving of human rights, not evoking sympathy and empathy when they are killed or dispossessed. Was there a Congressional vote on that? A UN resolution? An EU directive? By what process, in what legislative body, by judicial decision, did we all decide that Palestinians are not humans?
God bless you Kathy.
The population of Israel is about the same size as the Palestinians'. Have you seen the way the land is divided? I think they should do as King Solomon did , right out of the Tora, when those two women came before him wanting the same child. CUT IT IN HALF.
Claudia, you should look at the history of Palestine from the late 1800s onward.
In 1946, Jews owned only 6% of the land, and represented (if I recall correctly) 33% of the people, most of those having fled Europe since 1933.
Despite that, and despite a last-ditch proposal by the Arab states to create a federated country in Palestine, in 1948 the UN (driven by the US) _illegally_ gave the Jews (I can't say Zionists since most of them weren't there for ideological reasons, but as refugees from the Nazis and Jew-haters) the better 51% of the land, leaving the Arabs, to whom 100% of the land belonged by the UN's own rules, 49%.
The Zionists promptly attacked the Palestinians, killed or drove them off most of their remaining land, and created a state loosely modeled on South Africa's "Apartheid".
This map shows the result, over time, of Zionist criminal activity in Palestine:
http://fasttimesinpalestine.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/four-panel-map.jpg
The legality of the UN establishing Israel comes up a lot. The fact is that the UN doesn't deal with nations, it deals with states. The land where Israel is now was not a state. It wasn't even really a nation in as much as the local residents were not "Palestinians" as a unique cultural entity. The cultural entity that we think of as a Palestinian Nation derives its nationhood by having been dispossessed of the land where they came from.
At the time Palestine was legally captured territory that was being administered by the UN and they had the legal right to dispose of it any way they voted to do so.
Not that I agree or am on the Israeli side, but the issue is only black and white when people don't really weigh the facts.
The fact is that the UN doesn't deal with nations, it deals with states.
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Not so. UN Charter, Art. 1, Para. 2: " To develop friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of EQUAL RIGHTS AND SELF-DETERMINATION OF PEOPLES, and to take other appropriate measures to strengthen universal peace;" (emph. added).
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It wasn't even really a nation in as much as the local residents were not "Palestinians" as a unique cultural entity.
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Again, not so. The territory we know as "Palestine" has been so known for at least 1000 years (the Crusaders and later the Turks called the territory by the name of the capital, Jerusalem, but the territory was Palestine and everyone continued to call it that for everyday purposes. When under Syrian control it was officially known as 'Syria Palestina'.). The people have been known as "Palestinians" (Philistines in the Jewish/Xian scriptures, from Filistin, Palestine in Arabic) for more than 2000 years.
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At the time Palestine was legally captured territory that was being administered by the UN and they had the legal right to dispose of it any way they voted to do so.
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Yet again, not so. You can't point to any provision in the Charter that gives the UN the power to dispose of territory by fiat.
Zionism is a racist ideology. No group of people should have a land exclusively for them. People of all backgrounds should be able to live and travel where they want. There should never be "undesirable people". I extend this criticism to other nations that have ideologies and practices similar to Zionism.
We're all human first. We share this Earth together. Therefore it is absolutely wrong to assume that only Jewish people should have exclusive claim to that small chunk of Earth.
ZIONISM IS RACIST...
So was the extermination of Native Americans beginning in the early 17th
century.(See Richard Drinnon, FACING WEST....)
So was "Manifest Destiny" (See William Earl Weeks' BUILDING THE
CONTINENTAL EMPIRE)
So was the development of American Zionism, (See Lawrence Davidson,
AMERICA'S PALESTINE and FOREIGN POLICY INC.)
And more.
Anti-Zionist of "Jewish" heritage, never a "practicing" "Jew".
email: peterloeb@yahoo.com
Is the real thing that happened to the jews and what Hitler did...they still whine and complain about it today.
Yet they do the same thing to the Palestinians.
So basically the jews are hitler in reverse,