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Staying Human: Preparing to Sail to Gaza
Last week, newly-arrived in Athens as part of the US Boat to Gaza project, our team of activists gathered for nonviolence training. We are here to sail to Gaza, in defiance of an Israeli naval blockade, in our ship, "The Audacity of Hope." Our team, and nine other ships' crews from countries around the world, want Israel to end its lethal blockade of Gaza by letting our crews through to shore to meet with Gazans. The US ship will bring over 3,000 letters of support to a population suffering its fifth continuous decade of de facto occupation, now in the form of a military blockade controlling Gaza's sea and sky, punctuated by frequent deadly military incursions, that has starved Gaza's economy and people to the exact level of cruelty considered acceptable to the domestic population of our own United States, Israel's staunchest ally.
The international flotilla last year was brutally attacked and the Turkish ship fired on from the air, with a cherrypicked video clip of the resulting panic presented to the world to justify nine deaths, one of a United States citizen, most of them execution-style killings. So it’s essential, albeit a bit bizarre, to plan for how we will respond to military assaults. Israeli news reports say that their naval commandos are preparing to use attack dogs and snipers to board the boats. In the past, they have used water cannons, taser guns, stink bombs, sound bombs, stun guns, tear gas, and pepper spray against flotilla passengers. I’ve tried to make a mental list of plausible responses: remove glasses, don life jacket, affix clip line which might prevent sliding off the deck, carry a half onion to offset effect of tear gas, remember to breathe.
Israel Defense Forces are reportedly training for a fierce assault intended to “secure” each boat in the flotilla, the "Freedom Flotilla 2". As passengers specifically on the U.S. boat, we may be spared the most violent responses, although Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has not ruled out such violent responses and has preemptively certified any response we may "provoke" (in sailing from international waters to a coastline that is not part of Israel) is an expression of Israel's "right to defend themselves" (http://electronicintifada.net/blog/ali-abunimah/hillary-clinton-gives-green-light-israeli-attack-gaza-flotilla). Israel says it is prepared for a number of scenarios, ranging "from no violence" (which it knows full well to expect) to "extreme violence" (http://www.jpost.com/LandedPages/PrintArticle.aspx?id=226655). We are preparing ourselves not to panic, and to practice disciplined nonviolence whatever scenario Israel decides to enact.
If they overcome our boat swiftly, they will presumably handcuff us and possibly hood us, before commandeering our ship toward an Israeli port, removing us from the ship, jailing us and (judging from their past actions) deporting us. I don't know what country I would be deported to, but I would eventually return to the U.S. and to my home city of Chicago, and to a safety I cannot share with the desperate people of Gaza, or friends from throughout this region so troubled by war, much of it instigated by my own country.
The slogan of our flotilla is "Stay Human." It's advice that exposure to violence, real or imagined, always tempts us to forget. Young friends I have met in Afghanistan, faced with pervasive everyday precarity I cannot easily imagine, have expressed this idea in a YouTube video which utterly takes my breath away: They ask Gazan youth to hold on to hope and to the capacity for childlike joy: "To friends in Gaza: don't stay angry for too long, Stay together, and love from us in Afghanistan!"
My fellow passenger John Barber recently visited Gaza, and this morning he told me a harrowing story of a Gazan family, that of a farmer named Nasr, living near the Gazan-Israeli buffer zone. The first attack took place in June of 2010. To quote John's website: “…the Israeli army attacked the family home while the children were playing outside…Nasr’s wife, Naama, was in the front yard when a tank 500 meters from the home fired shells packed with nails at the home. Nasr's wife, torn to ribbons, bled to death in the yard when ambulances were not permitted down the narrow dirt road to his home.” Ambulance stoppages are a frequent punitive measure used against Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza."
“After the second attack,” which occurred in April 2011, “Nasr’s family moved to a house in the village, near to the cemetery where his wife was buried. One night, around midnight, Nasr woke to find his children gone. He went outside and found them at their mother’s grave." The next day he took them away from that village and back to their land, to try and put the past behind them, and await a future they can barely hope will be kind.
I hope that our ship will make it to Gaza. I hope Johnny Barber can again visit Nasr, and that I can visit the family and the trapped young men who sheltered me during the final days of the crushing December 2008 "Operation Cast Lead" bombardment. I hope that our ship will make it out of dock - acting on an "anonymous complaint," the government here has demanded an inspection of several days before they will allow our (entirely seaworthy) ship to sail. With its world-headline-producing economic troubles, Greece seems incredibly vulnerable to the intense pressure that the Israeli and U.S. governments seem openly prepared to exert: we hope that neither economic nor political blackmail will succeed at stopping our ship from leaving the spot near Athens where it is waiting to receive us.
“Please don’t lose the human capacity for happiness.” My Afghan friends in the video urge us to stay human. Ali, who speaks in the video, has been harassed by Afghan security forces since becoming active with the Afghan Youth Peace Volunteers. So has his family. Others of his companions have faced death threats, interrogation, arson and theft. Their persistence encourages and guides me, and I struggle to let their persistence urge me on, because staying human is also about doing what is right.
I think of Nasr's children watching their mother die, and I think that if they're going to stay human then I and my countrymen and women ought to help. We have to become more human than we've so far managed to be: We have to make sacrifices to stop the crimes that are ultimately being committed in our names. In different ways, we have to risk the consequences of being where we need to be when we need to be there. We have to stand up to injustice and with the victims of injustice, and rely on our opponents to find their humanity in time, given enough examples of what it can look like. When we find ourselves, against all odds, staying human, that example surprises us and helps sustain us in hope for the power of humanity. We hope we will be allowed through to Gaza, we hope that the siege will be lifted, and that in this time when humankind can so little afford the nightmares of greed and ignorance that rend the Middle East and that render our leaders incapable of uniting to address ever-more desperate, ever-more-frightening global crises, we as a species, one with no assurance of its perpetual survival, will somehow find some way to stay human.


20 Comments so far
Show AllStay human. Can't be said better than that. Nonviolent demonstration is the only way. Peace and good luck!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lleV3-sf6Ys
No worry about that. She has more humanity in her little finger than the all the IDF thugs who will be assaulting the flotilla put together.
I'd just like to say that's a beautiful video. Keep those kites flying kids, don't ever be told you can't touch the sky. The only ones that can't are those that are weighed down so much with money, that they've lost sight of the great "truths" in the human condition. That love can lift us all. It's not the expensive toys and power that your net worth has purchased that makes life worth living. It's those little happy moments that cost nothing that the rich no longer think they can afford to waste time on.
"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."
Martin Luther King's Acceptance Speech, on the occasion of the award of the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo, December 10, 1964
This wonderful article is startling in its selfless good will, compassion for others, and empathy with the oppressed people of Gaza. This is a beautiful commentary, Kathy, it is enlightening and inspiring in leading us to be better humans.
It is understandable that US and Israeli government authorities oppose it; it's that far beyond their comprehension. It's Obama scoffing at the advice of Gandhi and Dr. King when he addressed the Oslo audience when he grabbed his Nobel Peace (sic) Prize. He and Hillary should "get" all of this, but they don't. They appear to be clueless.
Your commentary also deserves a compliment, gardenernorcal. Yours, too, are beautiful thoughts to share.
This article is the main reason I visit Common Dreams each day. Vivid commentary on any number of issues that inspire our humanity, and mostly outstanding responses during the discussion from contributors, who I like to compliment now and again. Also the humor of it all in our helpless plight!
Godspeed, Kathy, and you other members of Audacity of Hope and this Gaza flotilla!
Best wishes, Bill in Dubuque
Can anyone decently speak of these people as being human ? Even the fiercest wild animals are civilized compared to them.
"If you're blocked, you can get through via google."
Huh? How does that work?
Their site is not blocked for me.
Let us not forget.
In memory of the beloved Palestinians who died in the Israel assault on Gaza in 2008.
-A Bedouin friend recently called to tell us about his relatives in Gaza. One cousin allowed her five-year-old daughter to walk to the adjacent house to see whether the neighbors had something left to eat. The girl had been crying from hunger. The moment she began crossing the street a missile exploded nearby and the flying shrapnel killed her. The mother has since been bedridden, weeping and screaming, "I have let my girl die hungry".
--Neve Gordon &
Yigal Bronner, The Guardian
-I met a mother who was at home with her ten children when Israeli soldiers entered the house. The soldiers told her she had to choose five of her children to "give as a gift to Israel." As she screamed in horror they repeated the demand and told her she could choose or they would choose for her. Then these soldiers murdered five of her children in front of her.
--Barbara Lubin
-I also spoke with Amira Qirm, a 14-year-old girl, whose father, brother and sister were killed by exposure to white phosphorous bombs. She was also wounded and crawled on her knees for half a kilometer, and then she managed to get into an empty house. She laid on a mattress on the floor from Wednesday to Saturday, surviving on water alone. I visited her because she was found in my cousin's house.
--Haidar Eid
-She described how the soldier talked on his radio, and then announced that the 13 remaining family members could walk to safety together. They left the soldiers and headed up a dirt road, seven women, four children and two adult males, Ammar Helw, 29, and his brother Abdullah, 18. As the group walked, Sherine said, they were taunted in vulgar Arabic by an Israeli soldier hiding in a nearby house. Then, farther down the road, shots began to rain upon them from a home across the road to the east, family members said. Farah Helw, Sherine and Ammar's 1-year-old daughter, was struck in the abdomen, family members said, and Abdullah was shot in the hand. The family believes the shooters were Israeli soldiers.
--Ashraf Khalil, L.A. Times
It's not easy to remain human when facing murderous armed devils employed by ethno/racist Zionist psychopaths, insane and evil hearted dogs... controlling the criminal $yndicate in Tel Aviv, the commercial capital of Israeli APARTHEID.
There is another way to stop the embargo. And it doesn't require deadly games, confrontation, or PR stunts. The embargo was started to force Hamas to release a kidnapped dual citizenship French/Israeli Staff Sgt. Gilad Shalit (http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/06/25/gaza-allow-access-gilad-shalit -- note this is Human Rights Watch) Israel has stated that the embargo will be lifted when Shalit is released so why doesn't Hamas release Shalit and call Israel's bluff? If Israel is not bluffing the embargo is lifted and the Palestinian people are a little better off; if Israel is bluffing and does not lift the embargo than Israel should be embargoed just as Gaza. Perhaps if as much energy were put into freeing Shalit as it is into "ending the embargo" the embargo would have ended years ago?
Or is it just that keeping the fighting between Palestinians and Israelis serves the purposes of all their leaderships and those for whom they are proxies?
I have to agree with you on this one. Release Shalit and see if it doesn't help. In any event, he is not important enough to keep.
Shalit was an armed combatant in the middle of a conflict - fair game in anyone's book. The civilians of Gaza are not fair game. Your post is incredibly stupid. There are plenty of prisoners in Israeli jails - civilians at the time of capture - that could be traded for Shalit, and many such swaps have occurred in the past, but Israel is not interested in this case, because it's not about Shalit - it's about ethnic cleansing, and the boasting of a state that enjoys complete impunity and immunity from the laws of their putative god.
Israel has made all sorts of promises in the past and broken nearly every one of them. Why should the Shalit charade be any different?
Non-violence never has worked. King and Ghandi knew that and insured that protests and resistance was held where it would provoke a violent response from the "enemy". Only when "important" people are dying does change to important things happen. Kent State for Vietnam, the King killing, etc. are catalysts for change. Remember, Israel came about through terrorism. The Zionists bombed churches in England and sank their own ships with Jewish refugees dying! Deaths equal changed. The "Arab Spring" began with the death of a young man. Don't kid yourself, it will take more deaths to bring peace to the Israeli nation. Lots of death.
I have a gut feeling that the Israelis will not be able to get away with murdering more Americans on the high seas. I could be wrong, but I hope not.
Amen Kathy! Godspeed.
Your HUMANITY ENLIGHTENS ALL WHO ARE HUMAN, and the Peace in your hearts shines BRILLIANTLY, WARMING those willing to accept their humanity!!!
My prayers and thoughts are with YOU ALL!
Peter Hawxhurst
Bless you Kathy, all our love to all the crews,
and especially the people of Gaza.
Peace.
Here is Wishing you all the Best on your journey for peace and freedom .