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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Monica Tarazi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: egroup <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 04, 2001 3:39 PM
Subject: [Letters_from_Palestine] Palestine/Israel: Do you know your ABCs?


A Letter to the Editor of The Pulse:

Palestine/Israel: Do you know your ABCs?
<http://www.pulsetc.com/V5I13/news.html#letters>
By Tzaporah Ryter

I just finished reading letters to the editor in response to Jennifer
Gulbrandsons cover story Just Another Day Under Israeli Occupation.
Like some letter writers, I am so upset I do not know where to start.
But I will try to be calm. Rather than escalate the debate, I mean to open
it. I challenge and support the editor to keep this discussion ongoing,
despite the backlash he is receiving.

I am a Jewish woman with family who lived in Haifa from 10 generations
ago, prior to the Zionist project. I just returned from living in
Ramallah, the West Bank, Occupied Palestine for eight months. I was
involved there in nonviolent demonstrations and acts of grassroots
international intervention and solidarity. In the nonviolent
demonstrations in which I participatedsuch as dismantling with our bare
hands the roadblocks that prevent thousands of people from accessing
vocation, trade, basic services and even emergency medical treatmentI
cannot tell you how many people I saw shot, wounded and killed. I lost
count. 

After the first murder I witnessed of the man standing in front of me, I
grew numb. Then it was just a stream of bodiesthe guy with his head blown
off, the little boys so small you dont even need a stretcher for them,
and old womencarried off into ambulances which every single time were
shot at by the Israelis directly on the drivers side of the windshield.
Ambulances turned back at checkpoints.

Throughout this Intifada/Israeli Siege, what I witnessed was an
overwhelmingly nonviolent struggle within civil society for justice. Every
one of the endless demonstrations I attended began as marches with signs,
banners and chants. The Israelis shot first every single time before any
rocks were thrown. Rocksthrown at armored jeepsseldom hit fendersstones
that are a symbolic way of saying, We will resist our oppression, even if
you have a tank and I have a rock. In fact, the Israeli soldiers even
shot at some of our demonstrations when we were singing we shall
overcome and no stones were thrown even after the Israeli soldiers began
and continued to shoot us! Every night I went to sleep to the sound of
shells falling on the nearby school for blind children. I walked to do my
shopping past 10-year-old boys with patches over their eyes. How come all
of them in the eye? Accident? Thats quite a sharp-shooting accident.

The death toll for the Israelis is about 100, the death toll for the
Palestinians about 600. Numbers cannot reflect the losses. The
Palestinians also have about 20,000 wounded civilians, some in critical
condition and many permanently disabled while hospitals are being attacked
and medical clinics destroyed. I had to walk through streets of crippled
people, through the human traffic of funerals, which become
demonstrations, which become more funerals, just to get a can of soda.
And thats just Area A.

Area A is like a vacation. Dont know what that is? Learn your ABCs. Ill
be happy to help you. Then maybe we can have a conversation. In Areas B
and Cwhere the majority of people live in villages completely surrounded
by clusters of Israeli settlements such as Ariel, which even within
Baraks generous offer were set to remain permanently, in order to
maintain permanent military baseslife is much worse. The children cannot
breathe. The tear gas day and night being thrown at their windows has
damaged their respiratory systems, maybe irrevocably at this point. I have
even tried to scream at the soldiers pleading, the children are being
taken to the hospital. But then they shot at me so I ran back inside the
house I was visiting.

Night and day there are settlers attacking, backed up by soldiers,
shooting into the villages and screaming Death to the Arabs, burning
down property, even marching into schools in broad daylight and shooting
the kids. The soldiers shot my friend in the middle of the day while he
was standing outside his house bringing the kids inside as the troops
stomped through the village. They threw a stun grenade into his brothers
face and then pointed an M-16 at his head and threatened to shoot anyone
who would try to bring my friend to an emergency medical vehicle. It took
30 minutes before he was permitted to be taken to a hospital. Now 
he is paralyzed.

This is only a partial list of what I have witnessed in the past eight
months. What is happening is called ethnic cleansing. The death toll in
baseball terms may be 100 to 600, but this isnt baseball. The figures do
not describe the conditions of life the Palestinians are living under,
which is a fabric torn from the seams of hell that you cannot imagine
without knowing it firsthand. One side goes out dancing in nightclubs when
it gets dark (a nightclub right next to the Russian compound where
Palestinian detainees are being interrogated and tortured while listening
to people laughing and drinking and dancing). The other side sits in fear
inside their homes or is under forced curfew. I have lived on both sides
and I am not sure the realities are in the same universe.

This is an army - one of the most powerful in the world - against a
civilian population. This Israeli army has an intact infrastructure and
state and a government capable to give orders to killor not to kill. The
Palestinians do not have an intact infrastructure, state or government
capable of telling anyone anything in particular. I will let you in on a
little secret. Not even Chairman Arafat can stop suicide bombers. Only
justice can. And no, Mr. Baehr, of course it is not the collaborators that
are killing the Israelis. (Although, as far as shots at night go toward
the settlements and collaborators/Israelis doing it, I can tell you only
one inside scoop: The Israeli settlers chartered several buses and brought
children to recently stand on the roof of Gilo settlement to watch the
shelling. The point is, they had to schedule the occurrence and charter
the buses, get it? And if it was so dangerous to the Israelis, why were
they standing on the roof at the time eating treats?) People who have come
to understand that violence is the only language the Israelis reward are
killing the Israelis. Thus far they are absolutely correct. Prime Minister
Ariel Sharon called the ceasefire after the suicide bomber at the mall.

The Israelis are rewarding violence. Otherwise, why do they renew
negotiations only after their own death toll is on the rise and why do
they shoot nonviolent protestors?

Violence is less of a threat to Israels existence in its present racist
and fascist form than nonviolent public demonstrations and freedom of
expression and the struggle for the exposure of truth, liberation and
democracy and the end to Zionist apartheid. Violence should not be
rewarded. But unfortunately it is - and it will be that way indefinitely
until the international community takes a stand and insists upon
international protection for the Palestinian people. Then, with the
protection of the innocent, with freedom of expression, with the complete
and total withdrawal from the Occupied Territories, can a discussion
toward justice, toward what justice even means, begin.

I will let you in on another secret: the occupation is violence. There can
be no negotiations under violence. When and if we finally reach it, it
will be a long discussioneven prior to any successful or worthwhile
negotiationssince currently even Israeli researchers are censored and
taken to court for daring to publish their findings concerning what really
did occur in the Palestinian massacres of 1947 and 1948. There is a lot to
talk about before signing any deals or even bringing them to the table.
I hope that those who become defensive of Israel and upset can take a deep
breath and consider, have they ever visited or lived in the West Bank or
Gaza? Jennifer Gulbrandson has. I have. Rather than condemning
Gulbrandson, we should all thank her for bringing back the truth and
taking the effort to inform us and encourage us to think about it. I am
sorry if this hurts some of those who feel for the Jewish people and for
their difficult history. They are my people, too. My journey to the truth
was very painful. But my people have no right to kill the Palestinians,
steal their land, destroy their communities and culture and leave them
refugees from their homeland. My people have no right to disregard
international law and U.N. resolutions. Our history is not the fault of
the Palestinians.

But the Palestinian history of recent generations is the fault of my
people. After nearly 6,000 years of experience and survival, I think that
my people can find more creative and ultimately sustainable ways to
survive than by becoming murderers and war criminals or by choosing to be
those who defend or support them.

Tzaporah Ryter
Minneapolis

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