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I wish I had not just
gotten the phone call I just did, and this story
would have had a better ending.
As you probably know, the
Israeli army has laid siege to many cities, towns,
and villages in the occupied territories. One way
they do this is by digging trenches across the
roads leading in or out, making them unpassable by
cars. Where, once, soldiers merely patrolled these
exits and granted permission to enter or leave,
today the trenches prevent all access by vehicle.
This serves no security function whatsoever -- it
prevents Palestinians from having access to each
other, not to Israel -- but is a cruel and
arbitrary way to assert power and
control.
For some time, the
Coalition of Women for a Just Peace has been
demonstrating to lift this siege (referred to
benignly as 'closure' by Israel). Six weeks ago, we
ourselves 'lay siege' to the Defense Ministry of
Tel-Aviv (blocking the entrance with our bodies),
and three weeks ago we marched on the military
blockade of Bethlehem.
Today's action was the next
level of resistance, and the Coalition of Women
worked hand in hand with three other organizations:
Rabbis for Human Rights, Gush Shalom, and the
Committee Against House Demolitions. The idea was
to come to a village under siege and physically
fill in the trench, thereby making the road
passable. The army was clearly intent on preventing
that from happening.
We chose to lift the siege
on Rantis, a peaceful town of 3,000. Rantis has no
doctor and no employment opportunities; under
siege, there is no access to medical care and
almost total unemployment. One woman already gave
birth at the trench when she was unable to get out
for medical attention, and seven students have lost
a semester of university studies.
Together we were about 300
activists who set out on buses this morning. Most
of us were Israelis, but there was a significant
presence of internationals, too, including the
undauntable CPT-ers (Christian Peacemakers Team)
who work in Hebron. On each bus, one person led a
discussion about the strategy of nonviolent direct
action, the importance of not provoking soldiers,
and the commitment to breaking the law openly and
nonviolently. We talked about rights under arrest
and interrogation, and our responsibility for the
safety and well-being of each other. On our bus, I
shared the words of Gandhi, "Non-cooperation with
evil is a sacred duty."
When we reached the
perimeter of the village, we began to march with
our shovels and hoes toward the trench, now being
blocked by a line of soldiers. But we were many
more activists than soldiers, they didn't open
fire, and we easily passed through. As soon as we
reached the trench, we swarmed all over, shoveling
rocks and dirt into it, trying to fill it up. It
seemed an impossible task, as we had so few tools
and the trench gouged out the road quite deeply
from one side to the other. What's worse, the
ground was very hard, studded with rocks, and it
was very difficult to loosen earth for use as
fill.
Soon after we began work,
someone found a second trench about 50 meters
(roughly 160 feet) further along. Half the group
broke away to work on filling up that trench, and
we realized it would be twice the work to break the
siege on Rantis. But then, suddenly, soldiers
swooped down on those of us holding tools, and
grabbed them out of our hands. We began to chant
"Dai LaKibbush", which means "End the Occupation".
Some struggled not to release their shovels, others
less. Soon, the soldiers had confiscated every
single tool we had brought, and arrested 4 of
us.
In my recollection, there
was no pause at that point and no discussion about
what to do. We just all got down and with our bare
hands began to scratch out handfuls of dirt and
rocks, and throw them into the trenches. Some of us
used rocks to loosen the ground, others tried
sticks. Some held posters (that read 'Dismantle the
Settlements') on the ground like big dustpans, and
others pushed pebbles and dirt onto them, for
transfer into the trench. Some of the children from
Rantis came out and joined us, and we worked
together like that in the hot sun for over 2 hours.
And when it was over, everyone was amazed to see
that we had actually filled in both trenches, and
made the road passable.
We did a little
speechmaking on top of what had once been a trench,
and vowed to continue to subvert the mechanisms of
occupation. We admired our persistence and
cooperative spirit. We laughed at how covered with
dirt and mud we were. And we started to plan the
release of our partners sitting in the army van
nearby, just as the army actually let them go,
seeing we were finished with our work and on our
way out. They even returned our tools when we
boarded the buses.
And now at home, freshly
showered and sitting down to tell you about this
small victory, I get a call from Dina, who made
friends with one of the villagers. The army
returned, the Palestinian had told her, and used
their heavy machinery to dig out fresh trenches. We
expected that. And now, he said, they also placed
large concrete slabs in front of the trenches,
which could never be moved by bare hands and grit
alone. And the truck that had brought these slabs
had driven off the road, deliberately destroying
crops in the fields. And one villager had been
beaten and his car window smashed.
These are more than just
reprisals against the Palestinians. They are a
message from the army to us: This will happen
everytime you do something like this.
Tomorrow, five of us will
go to Rantis to document the new damage and talk to
the villagers. We'll also be thinking about how to
continue to subvert the oppression without
jeopardizing the Palestinians themselves. It won't
be easy or simple, but, as Israelis, we've got to
figure out a way to stop cooperating with
evil.
Gila Svirsky
Coalition of Women for a
Just Peace
Member organizations of the
Coalition of Women for a Just Peace Bat Shalom;
Mothers and Women for Peace (formerly Four
Mothers); New Profile: Movement for the
Civil-ization of Society in Israel; Neled, TANDI,
Women Engendering Peace; Women in Black; and WILPF
- Israel chapter.
Our principles:
- An end to the
occupation.
- The full involvement of
women in negotiations for peace.
- Establishment of the
state of Palestine side by side with the state
of Israel based on the 1967 borders.
- Recognition of
Jerusalem as the shared capital of two
states.
- Israel must recognize
its responsibility for the results of the 1948
war, and find a just solution to the Palestinian
refugee problem.
- Equality, inclusion and
justice for Palestinian citizens of
Israel.
- Opposition to the
militarism that permeates Israeli
society.
- Equal rights for women
and for all residents of Israel.
- Social and economic
justice for Israel's citizens, and integration
in the region.
If you want to
help:
Write to President Bush
(president@whitehouse.gov), Vice-president Cheney
(vice.president@whitehouse.gov), and Colin Powell
(secretary@state.gov). Just say "Tell Israel to end
its siege of the Palestinian towns and villages."
Remember&emdash;a simple message gets counted and
reported the same as an eloquent one.
If you'd like to
contribute:
We'd appreciate a donation
for the Coalition for future actions&emdash;in any
of 3 ways:
(1) In the US, you can make
a tax-deductible contribution by writing a check to
the New Israel Fund, with a memo "For the Coalition
of Women for a Just Peace", and sending to: New
Israel Fund, Department WS, PO Box 91588,
Washington DC 20090-1588.
(2) Send a check addressed
to US/Israel Women-to-Women marked "For the
Coalition of Women for a Just Peace", and mail to
US/Israel Women-to-Women, 275 7th Avenue - 8th
floor, NY, NY 10001.
(3) Send a check to Bat
Shalom "for the Coalition of Women" at Bat Shalom,
POB 8083, Jerusalem 91080, Israel.
Please let me know if
you're doing this, so I can follow up on
it.
Thank you!
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