August
4, 2007, press picks from different sources - posted by
TOI-staff on Occupation
Magazine
Culture as `the art to
breathe`
Rev. Dr. Mitri Raheb - ICB - There was a time when people
thought that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is like a 100-meter run.
Participants behaved accordingly; they gathered their strength in a concentrated
effort and within such a short time. When they reached the goal, they were out
of breath, but they could afford it for this short time period. However,
increasingly people are realizing that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one of
the longest ongoing in modern history, is more like a 36-kilometer marathon. In
a marathon, people need to breathe differently, to train in another way and to
run in a well-trained yet more relaxed speed. One has simply to have a long
breath. Culture for Palestinians living in this ongoing and seemingly unending
conflict is the art to keep a long breath.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21539
Dry twigs
Smadar Lavie - Electronic Intifada - No
one has ever forced the kibbutzniks or the residents of the spiffy neighborhoods
erected on the ruins of Palestine`s Nakba villages to keep on living in the
precarious indeterminacy typical of Kfar Shalem. Mizrahim were forced to make
Kfar Shalem their home from 1948 on, so that the Palestinians would have no
place to return to, and for 60 years. Now the Mizrahim too are forced to vacate
this land, their homes, in favor of the Ashkenazi real estate barons.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21538
The Nakba in Israeli textbooks and official
discourse
Ben White - Electronic Intifada - [The] Israeli government
was at pains to stress how the offending book would only be used in "Israeli
Arab" schools. (...) The argument that this was merely an exercise in cultural
accommodation is supported by Education Minister Yuli Tamir herself, who even
went so far in her efforts to placate the Zionist right that she claimed
including the term "Nakba" was a mere quibble of translation. But is it right to
say that the decision to limit the textbook to the Palestinian community within
Israel is because the Zionist discourse denies the "original sin?" Not quite.
Strategic Affairs Minister Avigdor Lieberman, a standard-bearer of the modern
Zionist right, lambasted the textbook, bemoaning "the masochism and defeatism of
the Israeli left, which constantly seeks to apologize, while we did what we had
to."
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21535
The Gypsies of Jerusalem: the Forgotten
People
Amoun Sleem - This Week In Palestine - Originally settling in
an area outside the Old City called Wadi Al-Joz, the Dom (Gypsies) later moved
to a small neighbourhood called Burj Al-Laqlaq within the walls of the Old City.
An ethnic minority, the Dom community has suffered in silence throughout the
decades of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Their numbers dwindled significantly
during the battles surrounding the foundation of the State of Israel. The
greatest exodus occurred during the war of 1967, which caused nearly half of the
Dom population to seek refuge in Syria, Lebanon, and even India. Despite a
deep-seated identification with Middle Eastern culture, the remaining two
hundred families endure severe discrimination at the hands of Israelis and their
Palestinian neighbours. Once lauded in Persian poetry as unparalleled
entertainers, a series of cultural, political, and economic shifts have led the
Dom to be regarded as despicable beggars.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21533
Palestinian detainees suffering harsh living conditions,
ill-treatment
IMEMC Staff - Akram Abu Siba’, secretary of the
Detainees Office in Jenin district, stated on Friday that (...) dozens of
detainees are sick and need medical treatment but the Israeli prison
administration is neglecting their rights and depriving them of the needed
medical attention. (...) Abu Siba’ added that several detainees spent more than
five years in solitary confinement [and] are deprived of their visitation
rights; not allowed to communicate with other detainees; and repeatedly attacked
and violated by the soldiers. [More than 10 000 Palestinians are at the moment
imprisoned by the IDF. Ed.]
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21532
The struggle between boycott and
counter-boycott
Palestine Monitor - The so-called "Scholars for
Peace in the Middle East" (SPME) have launched a worldwide petition against the
British boycott of Israeli universities, and claim that 10,000 academics have
signed their petition. The strength of their reaction shows how much of a nerve
this issue has touched.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21531
Residents of Ertas and al-Walajah hold non-violent
demonstrations
John Smith - IMEMC - About 400 villagers,
internationals and Israelis held on Friday morning a sit-in protest near the
construction site of the illegal wall and on land which is going to be
confiscated for the purpose of building a sewage system [SIC!] for the nearby
Israeli settlement.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21530
Jenin by night
Gideon Levi - Haaretz - The whole
camp awakens like this, every night. But no one dares peek out the window or
turn on a light. No one talks, no one moves. They sit bent over on the stairs,
eyes red from lack of sleep. I almost faint from fright. The ringing of a phone
suddenly cuts through the stillness: Zakariya Zbeidi is calling from the Muqata
to ask how we are. A bit later Jamal whispers that the convoy has moved away and
we can go back to sleep. I try to relax. Finally I drift off. Soon it will be
3:30 A.M. Forty minutes of restless sleep and they are back. (...) "I told you
that tonight you would have to be a poet, not a journalist," my host Jamal
reminds me when day breaks later and we are on the roof again.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21528
Ben-Eliezer to present nuke plant plan
Sharon
Wrobel & staff - Jerusalem Post - Israel has in the past been reluctant to
set up such a power plant since it requires international inspectors.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21526
Deja vu
By Meron Benvenisti - Haaretz - "There is
a partnerner," the Israeli foreign minister will crow and allow her
representatives to conduct talks with Palestinian representatives ; Israeli and
Palestinian officers will exchange slaps on the back; the ruddiness will return
to the cheeks of the peace camp veterans; the radical left will warn that it`s
all an illusion and that under the guise of "the process," the occupation is
even more firmly becoming entrenched. This feeling of Deja vu, however
understandable it may be, ignores experience accumulated during the intifada
years and ignores the burden of the blood, the hatred and the desire for revenge
that have changed the relationships between the two communities in fundamental
ways.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21525
High Court backs route of West Bank fence near Efrat
Jonathan Lis - Haaretz - The petitioners demanded the court reject
the route, on the basis that the fence would be built in part on 272 dunam of
grapevines, fig and almond trees. (...) Chief Justice Dorit Beinisch accepted
the Defense Ministry`s position, whereby there is no acceptable alternative way
to defend the settlement, located in Gush Etzion. "The question of the legality
of the Efrat residents` presence in the area is not under discussion today," she
wrote.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21512
Width Matters - Displacement and Israel`s
Wall
Susan Miller - Counterpunch - Winding its way down from the
northern most point of the West Bank [the Fence/Wall] leaves in its wake a 65 to
87 yard wide swath of bulldozed land on which trenches, barbed wire, footprint
tracer paths, a two-lane patrol road and watch towers have been placed. From
edge to edge, the structure exceeds the width of six lane segments of Interstate
95 or half the length of a football field.
http://www.kibush.co.il/show_file.asp?num=21517