Friends,
Sharon seems to be our worst nightmare come true, but he's not nearly
finished. Since this Intifada erupted, over 1,700 Palestinians
and over
400 Israelis have been killed, with some 35,000 Palestinians and 4,000
Israelis wounded. So far. The terrorist attacks in Israel
are horrible,
but they have been used by Sharon to carry out deeds far in excess
of
"destroying the terrorist infrastructure". The Israeli army deliberately
trashed the inside of every Palestinian institution that it did not
entirely destroy -- schools, charities, health organizations, banks,
radio
and TV stations, even a puppet theater...in addition to all the records
of
every government ministry. In a few locations, Israeli tanks
even rolled
over mosques and cemeteries. How many new terrorists did the
army create
as it "destroyed their infrastructure"?
The damage to Israeli society is another part of the nightmare: the
unapologetic racism (expelling Palestinians -- the avowed plan of several
cabinet members), the heightened militarization of our children
(encouraged by schools to write thank-you letters and send packages
to our
soldiers), the deliberate lies in the media (humanitarian aid given
to the
refugees, when it wasn't), the clampdown on criticism (an evening in
honor
of a famous, older singer cancelled because she supported the refuseniks),
and the ongoing portrayal of foreign protest against Israel as
anti-Semitic. And these are but single examples when many more
could be
given.
While all wars are violent and brutal, this war -- compared with the
others through which I have lived in Israel (Six Day, Yom Kippur, Lebanon)
and the 'first' Intifada -- has seen more brutal attacks on civilian
targets, more flouting of international law, more looting by soldiers,
more destruction of non-military property and goods, more humiliation
of
the other, and more deliberate cover-up -- denial of access to
journalists, human rights workers, and relief organizations; and
opposition to the UN investigative commission -- than any other.
It worries me terribly. And Sharon has not said 'no' to the question
of
whether or not Gaza is next on his hit list.
And now, the quarter glass that is full:
The peace march was called for 7 p.m. last night, and only a few hundred
people had shown up by that hour. It didn't surprise me:
In the morning,
a large peace demonstration had been held in Nazareth, and in the
afternoon refuseniks had held a vigil opposite Prison #6 to support
those
brave men who were inside for having refused to serve in the army of
occupation. Who would have the energy for yet another big march
and rally
in the evening?
10,000 people, apparently, had the energy. The slow march
through
Tel-Aviv streets was impressive, led by big banners proclaiming "The
Occupation is Killing us All". Many loud contingents marched,
and the
presence of many Palestinian citizens of Israel could be heard in the
mix
of Hebrew and Arabic slogans. The prize for most dramatic went
to "Kveesa
Shchora [black laundry]: Lesbians and Gay Men for Peace", who wore
pink
scarves over black clothes and walked chained to each other and with
their
eyes blindfolded, carrying placards "The media are keeping us in the
dark".
The crowd filled the Museum Plaza, and speaker after speaker -- Jewish,
Palestinian, women, men -- gave impassioned pleas for ending the
occupation and negotiating a just peace. A particularly dramatic
moment
came to hear the voice of Dr. Moustafa Barghouti, president of the
Union
of Palestinian Medical Relief Committees (UPMRC), who spoke from Ramallah
by cell-phone pressed up against the mike. He received an ovation
when he
said emotionally, "Sharon has destroyed our homes, our schools, our
shops,
our hospitals, but he has not succeeded in destroying our unrelenting
hope
for a just peace, the state of Palestine side by side with the state
of
Israel." Rela Mazali struck a chord by declaring that women also
refuse
-- to raise our children to fight in war, to live in a military-state,
to
support our partners or children who serve in the army. In a
country
where the army is sacred, these blasphemous thoughts are a breath of
fresh
air. Refusenik Idan Landau reported that 45 men are sitting in
prison
right now -- an unparalleled number in this country -- for refusing
to
serve in the occupation, with hundreds waiting to fill up more jails
if
necessary. Idan said that the Israeli media do not tell the full
story,
and that if we ever saw the reality of what the army has done, "we
would
not have one moment of serenity".
It was a moment of respite from the endless chainsaw of anti-Arab,
anti-Palestinian, anti-European propaganda that grinds out at us all
day
long, not just from politicians, but from hairdressers, teachers,
talk-show hosts and callers, taxi-drivers (I'm off buses for the
duration), neighbors, and ... well, even some of my best friends.
So, it's back to our separate peace actions tomorrow: vigils, aid convoys,
checkpoint monitoring, guarding homes about to be demolished (until
they
are demolished), relief work, leafletting, petitions, newspaper ads,
and
our many individual acts of refusal -- refusal to serve in the army,
refusal to support violence as a way to solve problems, refusal to
be
enemies. And if all we accomplished tonight was to remind each
other that
we are not alone, that too was important.
And a word of deep gratitude for all the hard work for peace that you
do
from outside the region. We know that it comes from a place of
caring.
Together, we shall overcome.
Shalom, Salaam from Jerusalem,
Gila Svirsky
Organizations that co-sponsored last night's march and rally:
Another Voice in the Galilee; Association of Arab Students; Balad;
Coalition of Women for Peace (Bat-Shalom, The Fifth Mother, Machsom
Watch,
Neled, New Profile, Noga, Tandi, WILPF, Women in Black); Committee
for
International Intervention; DuSiach; Forum Smol; Gush Shalom; HaCampus
Lo
Shotek; Hadash; Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions; Kol Ezraheha;
Kvisa Sh'hora: Lesbians and Gay Men Against the Occupation; Neve
Shalom/Wahat al-Salam; Ta'al; Ta'ayush: Arab-Jewish Partnership; Yesh
Gvul; and others.