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December16, 2006 - [TOI-Billboard] Amid raised tensions >> |
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It will not end until we talk TOI-Billboard, November 20, 2006The Other Israel's email updates --Find attached our selection of the past week's articles on http://www.kibush.co.il/ --Here follows Adam Keller's report on two actions taking place on the same day and nearly same place - both in the framework of the Stop Gaza Siege campaign. More at http://gazasiege.net Peace Now Sderot-Gaza convoy meets Anarchists on a tank Adam Keller, Nov. 19, 2006
Saturday, November 18, Morning. "Army forces have withdrawn
from Qalqilia, having completed their mission there" says the commentator on the
open radio. "While the soldiers were besieging a house where a local Hamas
leader barricaded himself, a large Palestinian crowd gathered on the spot,
throwing stones at the soldiers. Palestinian sources claim that three Qalqilia
inhabitants were killed from the soldiers' fire and thirty
wounded."
One by one, cars driven by activists arrive at the Cinema City
parking lot north of Tel-Aviv, rendezvous of the Sderot-Gaza Cavalcade.
Activists pick up the Peace Now signs reading "Gaza: There is No Military
Solution" and "It Will Not End Until We Talk" , and attach them with sticky
tapes to their cars. A woman with a T-shirt reading "If they can talk to us,
surely we can talk to them" finds place for no less than five signs on the
front, sides and back of a diminutive car. The joint hard work of several
activists is needed to successfully cover the sides of an especially-chartered
truck with enormous banners reading "Only Negotiations Can Stop the Qassam
Missiles".
Finally, the preparations are completed and some forty cars
set out in a long and imposing line, the narrow blue ribbons tied to radio
aerials fluttering in the wind. Not far on the way, the banners on the truck get
loose in the strong wind, and activists need to tie them tightly all over again
under the cover of a pedestrian bridge, like sailors on an ancient windjammer
struggling against billowing sails.
The next hour's radio news repeats the Qalqilia item, but then
goes on to say: "A Peace Now Convoy is at this hour on its way from Tel-Aviv to
Sderot and the Erez Checkpoint, to protest army activities in the Strip. The
Gush Shalom Movement wrote Spanish Foreign Minister Moratinos to express support
for the new European initiative to place an international force to the Gaza
Strip". "Hey, two left wing items on one news broadcast? And on The Army Radio
at that! Was their government controller sleeping?" says Tzachi, student at
Be'er Sheva University and Peace Now organizer.
Sderot - the town which is the main target of Palestinian
hand-made rockets in the past five years and whose name is the main argument
used by the government for the bloody Israeli attacks on the Gaza Strip. The
convoy goes into the main street. A small hand-made sign on a fence reads "We
have been thrown to the dogs. Give the army a free hand to smash them!". As if
in intentional answer, the lead car has a big sign "People of Sderot, don't let
yourselves be fooled. There is NO military solution!".
The militant signs are, however, outnumbered by forlorn "for
sale" signs on many houses, and the streets are nearly empty. Some four thousand
inhabitants, a large percentage of the townspeople, had yesterday accepted the
offer of populist billionaire Arkady Gaidamak to have a week of "holiday from
the Qassam" at the resorts of Eilat on the Red Sea.
The few people on the street don't seem so well disposed towards the convoy passing through their city. Suddenly, the phone rings in the lead car: "hello, I am Shirley; I am from Kibbutz Bror Chail here in the Qassam range; I have been working with Sderot youths for three years. Can I come to your rally." "Sure you are most welcome!" A big official sign says in Hebrew, English and Arabic:"
Welcome to the Erez Crossing Point". Rather a mockery; very few have crossed
through this modern facility in the past year, either into or out of Gaza.
People get off their cars on the large, empty parking lot and take up the signs,
activists of the Gaza Coalition brought some hand-painted signs, used last week
in the joint Israeli-Palestinian convoy to the same place: "Stop the Siege! Stop
the War!"
Chanting starts "In Beit Hanoun and Sderot children want to
live" (in Hebrew it rhymes). From the other side of the Gaza border we hear a
burst of machine-gun fire. It might have been the one in which one of today's
Palestinian casualties lost his life.
At the center of the demonstration Haim Oron - kibbutznik and
former Meretz Minister - takes the floor: "A unique opportunity is now opening,
and if Olmert does not take it he will have on his hands the blood of the
children in Sderot and Beit Hanun whose lives can still be saved. A new
Palestinian government is going to be formed. Talk to them! First, of an
immediate cease-fire, to stop all this killing. Then, of the solution - the
solution which everybody knows will take place sooner or later, call it the
Geneva Agreement of the Clinton Outline or whatever. It will come, everybody
knows it. Why do thousands have still to die before it comes?"
"We asked for a permit to let Sufian Abu Zeida, the former
Palestinian minister, to cross the border and join us here. The army denied it,
because it is not 'an urgent humanitarian case'. We will here him over the
phone." "Hello, my friends. I am sorry I can't address you face to face. I want
to thank you for caring for the suffering of the people here in Gaza, for
seeking to make real peace. I want to say something to the other kind of
Israelis, those who want a giant new military operation in Gaza, those who want
to fight and conquer and kill us: you don't learn from your own failures, if you
try this you will have another bloody failure.There is no military solution,
nothing but two states and and a fair solution for the refugees. This is the
only way: sit together, make our two states live together!" (Chanting: "Israel
and Palestine, two states for two peoples!")
Journalist Gideon Levy: "I, unlike most of you, was able to
cross to the other side here. I saw Beit Hanoun destroyed and ruined, destroyed
streets with every house showing signs of damage, many completely ruined. I saw
wounded people dying slowly because they are dependant on respirators and
electricity is erratic since our air force bombed their only electric generator.
Five minutes' drive from here, across this crossing point, a terrible
humanitarian crisis is developing. Everyone who stands complacently aside, which
means most people in Israel, shares in the guilt. And I want to say: everybody
is talking about the terrible suffering of the Sderot people. They suffer, true,
but you can't compare it to Beit Hanoun. Sderot is mourning one victim this
week, in Beit Hanoun they mourn more than eighty!" As if on cue, at the exact
end of Levy's speech there was again a prolonged machine-gun burst, and we could
see a helicopter flying very fast over the fields of the North Gaza Strip."
"I am Shirley, and I come here from Sderot. I identify with
the aims of this rally, but I don't agree with the end of what Gideon Levy said.
You can't measure the suffering of Sderot only by the number of the dead. I am
working with children and youths and I see how this tension affects them. I saw
how they were taken to a safe place, to a nice quiet beach, and when the
lifeguard announced something trivial on the loudspeaker they were shaking with
fear and instinctively looking for an air raid shelter. There is a whole
traumatized generation growing there, in fear and hatred."
Yariv Oppenheimer of Peace Now calmed a starting debate,
announcing: "We have not come here to set a competition of who is the worst
sufferer. We have come to try and stop the suffering of everybody, on both sides
of the border."
Just as participants were dispersing, a startling piece of news came over the phone: "The Anarchists are making their own action, some kilometres south of here. They have climbed on tanks and wave signs from them!". Several cars head fast in that direction, across a muddy
track. Ahead, a row of armoured vehicles, and in front of them a clump of
blue-uniformed police. "ID's please. This is as far as you go, not a step
further!" "Oh Yeh? And by what authority do you stop Israeli citizens from
proceeding in the territory of their own country?"
A few minutes' interaction, and we are able to proceed. In
fact, what are in front of us are not tanks but armoured personnel carriers, of
the type which the IDF quite appropriately designates as "Achzarit" ("Cruella").
The nearest one bears graffiti apparently made by the soldiers themselves: "Sweet revenge". "Gil'ad, we are coming!" (referring to captured Israeli soldier Gil'ad Shalit). "Khaled Mash'al, we are coming!" (referring to the Damascus-based Hamas leader). On the ground are strewn several empty cartons with the inscription: "Israeli Defence Forces - Improved Machine-gun Ammunition." In the second row are the two machines on which the Anarchists chose to make their stand. There they stand on top of the machines, three spreading out a
giant banner: "Stop the murder machines!", while others hold out colour photos
of the wounded Palestinians from Beit Hanoun. Some cover their face with
life-size photos of a bandaged child's face. They have made red stains on their
faces and clothing, and the ground is strewn with dummies simulating body parts.
One of these, with arms upraised as if to block the brutal threads, is marked
"Rachel Corrie".
There are several press photographers and TV cameras present. Yonathan Polak, central organizer of Anarchists Against the Wall, gives non-stop press interviews on his mobile phone: (...) Since we are Israeli citizens, this murder is perpetrated also in our name. Protesting as strongly as we can is not an option, it is an absolute duty. This is not the first time that we were arrested. That is a very low price to pay, and we are completely willing to pay it." One of the girls on top of the vehicle tries to sing a parody
of a song from the 1967 war: "we have fought like lions..." But her companions
retort: "Sorry, we don't know this song. We did not have the advantage of your
militarist education". They settle for singing raucously "Avanti Popolo", the
song of the Italian left-wing.
The police start approaching closer, and the metallic glint
from their belts indicates handcuffs ready for use. The group on top of the
vehicles get ready, as do the photographers. But the police stop, and in the
sudden silence we can hear one of them asking on his phone: "But precisely what
should we charge them with, sir?" A few minutes later, the police turn back,
pile into their patrol cars and disappear. There is left the strange tableau of
demonstrators apparently left in possession of the army vehicles, with only two
conscript guards standing bewildered on one side.
From across the border, the shooting sound starts again.
On same events: Bloody tanks report by anarchist Smamit
http://www.tel-aviv-lizard.blogspot.com/
Photos by Active Stills http://www.flickr.com/photos/activestills
...and mainstream media
Leftists: We have 1 casualty, they have 80 by
Tovah Dadon
http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3329548,00.html Activists seize IDF tanks in Gaza in protest at army
'war machine' by Mijal Grinberg http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/789472.html *** Occupation Magazine http://www.kibush.co.il/ (articles and action news, look at it daily - includes a useful archive) ISM website http://www.palsolidarity.org/main/ (informing especially about joint Palestinian-Israeli-international anti-Wall struggle in the villages) http://electronicintifada.net/new.shtml (Palestinian press agency, including own research) http://www.maannews.net/en/index.php (Palestinian on-line News agency that publishes news and articles in English from it's own as well as other sources, including from the Hebrew press) ----------------------------------------------- TOI-Billboard is the 'ezine' of the independent THE OTHER ISRAEL bi-monthly peace newsletter, existing since 1983, and published by its editors Adam Keller & Beate Zilversmidt. N.B. The Other
Israel September/October issue is out. Read the lead article
online: For a one time hard-copy (free sample),
send your address to: otherisr@actcom.co.il, Visit also the archive under construction
of issues since 1994 ----------------------------------------------- |
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