http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1073846.html

            Last update - 22:19 25/03/2009     
     
     
      Palestinian children sing for Holocaust survivors  
     
      By The Associated Press  
     
      Tags: West Bank, Holocaust   

           
           
           



      The Palestinian youths from a tough West Bank refugee camp stood facing 
the elderly Holocaust survivors on Wednesday, appearing somewhat defiant in a 
teenage sort of way. Then they began to sing. 

      The choir burst into songs for peace, bringing surprised smiles from the 
audience. But the event had another twist: Most of the Holocaust survivors did 
not know the youths were Palestinians from the West Bank, a rare sight in 
Israel these days. And the youths had no idea they were performing for people 
who lived through Nazi genocide - or even what the Holocaust was. 

      "I feel sympathy for them," said Ali Zeid, an 18-year-old keyboard 
player, who added that he was shocked by what he learned about the Holocaust, 
in which the Nazis killed 6 million Jews in their campaign to wipe out European 
Jewry. 

            
           
      "Only people who have been through suffering understand each other," said 
Zeid, who said his grandparents were Palestinian refugees forced to flee the 
northern city of Haifa during the war that followed Israel's creation in 1948. 

      The 13 musicians, aged 11 to 18, belong to Strings of Freedom, a modest 
orchestra from the Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank, the scene of a 
deadly 2002 battle between Palestinian militants and Israeli soldiers. 

      The event, held at the Holocaust Survivors Center in this tree-lined 
central Israeli town, was part of Good Deeds Day, an annual event run by an 
organization connected to billionaire Shari Arison, Israel's richest woman. 

      The two-hour meeting starkly highlighted how distant Palestinians and 
Israelis have become after more than eight years of bloody Palestinian militant 
attacks and deadly Israeli military reprisals. 

      Most of the Palestinian youths had not seen an Israeli civilian before - 
only gun-toting soldiers in military uniforms manning checkpoints, conducting 
arrest raids of wanted Palestinians or during army operations. 

      "They don't look like us," said Ahed Salameh, 12, who wore a black head 
scarf woven with silver. 

      Most of the elderly Israelis wore pants and T-shirts, with women sporting 
a smear of lipstick. 

      "Old people look different where we come from," Salameh said. 

      She said she was shocked to hear about the Nazi genocide against Jews. 
Ignorance and even denial of the Holocaust is widespread in Palestinian 
society. 

      Amnon Beeri of the Abraham Fund, which supports coexistence between Jews 
and Arabs, said most of the region's residents have no real idea about the 
other. 

      The youths said their feisty conductor, Wafa Younis, 50, tried to explain 
to them who the elderly people were, but chaos on the bus prevented them from 
listening. 

      The elderly audience said they assumed Arab children were from a nearby 
village - not from the refugee camp where 23 Israeli soldiers were killed, 
alongside 53 Palestinian militants and civilians, in several days of battle in 
April 2002. 

      Some 30 elderly survivors gathered in the center's hall as teenage boys 
and girls filed in 30 minutes late - delayed at an Israeli military checkpoint 
outside their town, they later explained. 

      Some of the young women wore Muslim head scarves - but also sunglasses 
and school ties. 

      As a host announced in Hebrew that the youths were from the Jenin refugee 
camp, there were gasps and muttering from the crowd. "Jenin?" one woman asked 
in jaw-dropped surprise. 

      Younis, from the Arab village of Ara in Israel, then explained in fluent 
Hebrew that the youths would sing for peace, prompting the audience to burst 
into applause. 

      "Inshallah," said Sarah Glickman, 68, using the Arabic term for God 
willing. 

      The encounter began with an Arabic song, "We sing for peace," and was 
followed by two musical pieces with violins and Arabic drums, as well as an 
impromptu song in Hebrew by two in the audience. 

      Glickman, whose family moved to the newly created Jewish state in 1949 
after fleeing to Siberia to escape the Nazis, said she had no illusions the 
encounter would make the children understand the Holocaust. But she said it 
might make a small difference. 

      "They think we are strangers, because we came from abroad," Glickman 
said. "I agree: It's their land, also. But there was no other option for us 
after the Holocaust." 

      Later, she tapped her feet in tune as the teenagers played a catchy 
Mideast drum beat. After the event, some of the elderly Israelis chatted with 
students and took pictures together. 

      The encounter was not absent of politics. Younis dedicated a song to an 
Israeli soldier held captive by Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip - and 
also criticized Israel's occupation of the West Bank. 

      But she said the main mission of the orchestra, formed seven years ago to 
help Palestinian children overcome war trauma, was to bring people together. 

      "I'm here to raise spirits," Younis said. "These are poor, old people."  


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