Hell's Grannies 

Women in Black put us to shame, facing down ethnic cleansing and 
nuclear criminality

As Gandhi recognised, the brutal treatment of non-violent campaigners 
can destroy the  moral authority of the oppressor, generating 
inexorable pressure for change. 

Special report: Israel and the Middle East:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/0,2759,377264,00.html

George Monbiot 
Tuesday August 14, 2001
The Guardian

Ariel Sharon's decision not to blast the Palestinians out of 
existence after last week's suicide bombings is, at first sight, 
mystifying. While jets blew up the Palestinians' police station in 
Ramallah and Israeli soldiers occupied their East Jerusalem 
headquarters, these reprisals were far less bloody than most people 
had predicted. 

Several hypotheses have been advanced to explain this 
uncharacteristic restraint. Sharon is seeking to keep faith with his 
more conciliatory foreign minister, Shimon Peres. He is hoping to 
collect some moral credit, which he will use to defend much fiercer 
intervention at a later date. The seizure of Palestinian offices does 
more to hurt their cause than the murder of prominent figures. All 
these explanations are plausible, but there is another possible 
interpretation, overlooked by almost everyone. In killing 
Palestinians, Ariel Sharon can no longer be sure that he is killing 
only Palestinians. 

For the past few weeks, foreign peace activists belonging to the 
international solidarity movement have been arriving in Jerusalem and 
the West Bank, joining demonstrations, staying in the homes of 
threatened Palestinians, turning themselves into human shields 
between the Israeli army and its targets. A few days ago they were 
joined by one of the most remarkable forces in British politics, a 
group of mostly middle-aged or elderly campaigners called Women in 
Black UK. These Hell's Grannies have moved straight into the front 
line, ensuring that the brutality with which the Palestinians are 
routinely treated now has international repercussions: Israel can't 
hurt local people without hurting them too. 

For the past few nights, members of the solidarity movement have been 
sleeping in the homes of Palestinians in the Bethlehem suburb of Beit 
Jala. Eight hundred and fifty homes here have been shelled by 
soldiers stationed in the neighbouring Jewish settlement of Gilo, as 
the army seeks to expel the Palestinians in order to expand Israel's 
illegal plantation. 

The foreigners have been standing at army checkpoints, photographing 
soldiers when they stop people trying to leave or enter their 
communities and recording the names of those they arrest. The 
soldiers hate this scrutiny, but whenever the monitors arrive at a 
checkpoint, there's a marked reduction in the violence there. 

The Women in Black also helped to organise the demonstrations outside 
Orient House, the Palestinian headquarters seized by Israel on 
Friday. They established the physical and political space in which 
Palestinians could protest non-violently. Arrested and beaten up with 
the local people, the women witnessed the torture of Palestinian 
prisoners in the police station, which would otherwise have gone 
unrecorded. 

In short, these volunteer peacekeepers are seeking to do precisely 
what foreign governments have promised but failed to do: to monitor 
and contest abuses of human rights, to defuse violence, and to 
challenge Israel's ethnic cleansing programme. Their actions put us 
all to shame. 

As well as seeking to enforce peace, they are trying, hard as it is 
in the current atmosphere, to broker it. They have been suggesting to 
their Palestinian hosts some of the novel means by which injustice 
can be confronted without the use of violence. They have plenty of 
experience to draw on. 

Some of these activists have been involved in the Trident 
Ploughshares campaign which, over the past fortnight, has been 
running rings round the marines guarding the nuclear submarines in 
Scotland. To the astonishment of the guards, the protesters there 
have managed to evade the tightest security in the UK, swimming into 
the docks in which the submarines are moored and spray-painting the 
words "useless" and "illegal" on their sides. They have launched 
canoes and home-made rafts into the paths of submarines trying to 
leave their berths. They have cut through the razor wire and roamed 
around the base, hoping to arrest its commander for crimes against 
humanity. A few days ago, they blocked the main gates of the nuclear 
warhead depot, their arms embedded in barrels of concrete, bringing 
work to a halt as the police tried to figure out how to extract them. 

Two years ago, three of these women climbed into the Trident 
programme's floating research laboratory on Loch Goil and, as a 
delightful new video commissioned by the Quakers shows, threw all its 
computers into the sea. In Greenock court, they were acquitted of 
criminal damage, after the sherriff accepted their defence that the 
Trident programme infringes international law: rather than committing 
a crime, they were preventing one. Soon afterwards, the 
women "borrowed" a police boat from the Trident base in Coulport and 
drove it into the submarine docks at Faslane. Among them was one of 
the women who were also found not guilty in 1996 after smashing up a 
Hawk aircraft bound for East Timor. The subsequent publicity forced 
the government to stop exporting Hawks to Indonesia. 

T hough they're acquitted as often as they're convicted, Hell's 
Grannies have spent much of the past few years in jail. They take 
full responsibility for their actions. If the police fail to spot 
them, they ring them up and ask to be arrested. Their candour, 
clarity and humour have played well in court, but the risks of this 
accountable campaigning are enormous. The prosecution began yesterday 
of 17 British and American Greenpeace activists, who are being tried 
on terrorism charges after peacefully occupying the Californian 
launch pad being used for George Bush's missile defence tests. In the 
Middle East such tactics are likely to be still more dangerous, as 
Israeli soldiers have shown no hesitation in killing protesters in 
cold blood. But, as Gandhi recognised, the brutal treatment of non-
violent campaigners can destroy the moral authority of the oppressor, 
generating inexorable pressure for change. 

The Women in Black are clearly prepared not only to die for their 
cause, but also to make what Dostoevsky correctly identified as a far 
greater sacrifice: to live for their cause. They are ready to lose 
their homes, their comforts, their liberty, to be vilified, beaten up 
and imprisoned. Their accountable actions require a far greater 
courage than throwing bricks at the police. 

Most importantly perhaps, these campaigners never cease to 
acknowledge the humanity of their opponents. They seek not to 
threaten but to persuade. The results can be astonishing. The MoD 
police who pulled the Trident swimmers out of the water ferried them 
back to their camp, rather than arresting them, while massaging their 
legs to stop cramp. When Angie Zelter, one of the coordinators of 
Women in Black, was on remand for her attempts to demolish the 
British military machine, she was visited in prison by a timber 
merchant whose business she had once tried to shut down. He had, as a 
result of her campaign, stopped importing mahogany stolen from 
indigenous reserves in Brazil, and started refashioning his business 
along ethical lines, and now he needed her advice. 

All this is a long-winded way of saying something which, in the 21st 
century, sounds rather embarrassing: these people are my heroes. They 
confront us with our own cowardice, our failure to match our 
convictions with action.. We talk about it, they do it. Hell's 
Grannies are walking through fire. If they can, why can't we all? 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/comment/0,10551,536499,00.html

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