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Breaking Them Down: Walls that Block People and Walls that Block Words
an article by David Adams
Around the world people have admired the courage of the
Palestinian people who broke down the wall at Rafah to get food and
supplies and break the Israeli blockade of Gaza.
One of the most moving descriptions on the Internet came from
Gush-Shalom (Peace Now), an Israeli peace organization that works in
solidarity with Palestinian peace activists. It was written by Uri
Avery and is available on the Internet site of Gush-Shalom.
Avery's description is especially moving because it is written from the
perspective of the peace movement inside Israel. He says, "It looked
like the fall of the Berlin wall. And not only did it look like it. For
a moment, the Rafah crossing was the Brandenburg Gate. It is impossible
not to feel exhilaration when masses of oppressed and hungry people
break down the wall that is shutting them in, their eyes radiant,
embracing everybody they meet - to feel so even when it is your own
government that erected the wall in the first place. The Gaza Strip is
the largest prison on earth. The breaking of the Rafah wall was an act
of liberation. It proves that an inhuman policy is always a stupid
policy: no power can stand up against a mass of people that has crossed
the border of despair. That is the lesson of Gaza, January, 2008."
There is another wall that has been broken, the wall that has
blocked words in the past. For in the past the news services of the
West might well have ignored the event. Now they cannot, because, as
Avery says, "Again and again, Aljazeera broadcast the pictures into
millions of homes in the Arab world. TV stations all over the world
showed them, too. From Casablanca to Amman angry mass protest broke out
and frightened the authoritarian Arab regimes. Hosny Mubarak called
Ehud Barak in panic. That evening Barak was compelled to cancel, at
least temporarily, the fuel-blockade he had imposed in the morning."
Elsewhere on the Gush-Shalom website, one can read about the
relief convoys being organized by peace organizations in Israeli that
they are trying to send into Palestine. Click here
for the story as of January 26. At that point in time, the Israeli army
was blocking delivery of the convoys: "Since the Israeli army has not
allowed the relief supplies into the Gaza strip, they were stored in a
neighboring kibbutz. If the military will not permit their transfer to
Gaza in the next two days, we shall apply to the High Court of Justice
and start a legal fight until we succeed."
Stay tune to the Gush-Shalom website for further developments.
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DISCUSSION
Question(s) related to this article:
How can a culture of peace be established in the Middle East?
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MIDEAST PEACE
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The
following commentary was first published in Newsday magazine on July 1,
2007. The original is available on the Internet at Newsday.
---------------------------------------------- Israelis, Palestinians must promote peace culture ----------------------------------------------
BY MOHAMMED ABU-NIMER
With
shame, hopelessness and helplessness, many Palestinians see their dream
for an independent state being dismantled by their own so-called
national leaders.
This evolving reality is hard to comprehend,
and it has caused the majority of Palestinians, according to a recent
survey from the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research, to blame both Hamas and Fatah leaders for what has happened
to them under the Israeli occupation.
Hamas claims to have
"liberated Gaza," and in response Fatah leaders declared they are
"managers" of the West Bank. As a result, there is no discussion of
two-state solution of Israel and Palestine. Instead, Hamas and Fatah
seem to support a two-mini-cantons solution in which each leadership
can continue to protect its narrow self-interest in cooperation with
its patrons (Israel, the United States, Syria, Iran).
Again, the
Palestinian leadership has failed its people. The competition between
Hamas and Fatah, with each taking control of a portion of the bread
crumbs that the Israeli government left when it pulled out of Gaza and
agreed to elections in the West Bank, entails disastrous results for
anyone interested in securing a free and democratic Middle East.
The Palestinians have been set back several decades, to the time when they were fighting over who should represent them.. . ...more.
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This report was posted on January 29, 2008. The moderator is CPNN Administrator.
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