MIFTAH
Thursday, 25 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

I arrived in Tel Aviv at 4:30 P.M. this afternoon. Took a shared taxi to East Jerusalem, where I spent the night. I contacted Rabbi Arik Ascherman of Rabbis for Human Rights (RHR) and made plans to go olive picking with his group tomorrow.

October 24

We headed for Yanoun, but instead, we stopped in Jammain (SW of Nablus), since there were other group members working in Yanoun.

We went to the olive grove where the Palestinians had been moved back, because of settlers stealing their olives. Arik went up to the settlers and told them they were stealing. They told him that they had a right, because they were Jews, and it was their land. They acknowledged that this wasn't about olives, but that it was about the land. They said, "How could non-Jews live in the 'Land of Israel'?" Arik pointed out that Palestinians had been living there for centuries, and that this was not Israeli land. They continued to argue.

All the while, I was videotaping the settlers, and the settlers were videotaping us. One person in the group had a skirmish with one of the settlers. The soldiers came over, but the settlers blocked them from getting to us. Then the police came. The settlers went back to their settlement, and then returned in a truck, with reinforcements. They started throwing stones at us. I videotaped all of this, and later went to the police station with the video. The police recognized the settlers, and said that the farmers could come and file a complaint.

ABC News was at the olive grove. They interviewed Arik. He spoke about human rights, how God ordained equality, and that the first law of faith is to respect all human beings, and as an Orthodox Rabbi he could not stand silent when God's law was being broken.

I will be staying with a Palestinian family tonight. I will return to the olive grove in the morning. The RHR group will return to Jerusalem tomorrow. I am planning to spend tomorrow night in Jerusalem and then head to Beit Sahour for the ISM training, Sunday and Monday.

October 25

I went to the olive fields with a large group of Palestinians and one other international. They were able to harvest most of the day, until the Palestinians in the field next to them called to them that settlers had come and shot at them, and that they (the settlers) were heading in our direction. The Palestinians then left the field, with their olives. There have been times when settlers have arrived, shooting, at the end of the day, causing everyone to run away. And then the settlers steal the sacks full of olives.

I spent the night at the village, socializing with my host family and other people in the village. Empowered by our good harvest today, we planned to have a larger group of about 60 Palestinians participate in tomorrow's harvest.

October 26

An affinity group affiliated with both ISM and the IWPS (International Women's Peace Service) joined the group. The whole day went smoothly. There were no attacks by the settlers. I decided to stay in the village and continue to help with the harvest. There are only about 10 days left to harvest the olives in that area.

October 27

We were out in the fields proceeding with the harvest when we heard about the bombing at the Ariel settlement, in close proximity. The Palestinians thought they should leave, and they did. Curfew was imposed across the whole region. The curfew is likely to be in effect here for a while, even though the bomber had come from Nablus.

Back at the village, we learned about the attacks on Palestinians and internationals in Yanoun. Settlers and soldiers had attacked the internationals, who had been standing in front of the Palestinians, trying to protect them. The internationals were injured and sent to a hospital/clinic. I will be calling Arik Ascherman to see if he is planning to go to Yanoun to help defend the village, and I may go with him.

October 28

I went with the uncle of the person I am staying with, to harvest his olives. His olive trees are right next to the Ariel settlement. He was afraid that if I didn't go, the settlers would destroy his trees--as collective punishment retaliation for the bombing at the Ariel settlement, the day before. Settlers often destroy trees with acid, or by burning them, or uprooting them.

My ISM affinity group in Jammain was not prepared to go, because of possible repercussions from the bombing. I called the police to see if I could get some protection during the harvest. (Police protection usually involves driving up and down the settler roads.) They agreed. I also called Arik to ask him if he would go, in these circumstances. He said he would, and I decided to go.

Midmorning, two settlers came down. One of them was filming me. I went up to him and shook his hand and said, "Shalom." He told me that this was Jewish land and that I had to leave. He was filming me and talking to me at the same time. I argued with him. The argument was similar to the one this same settler had with Rabbi Ascherman last week--a lot of talk about God giving this land to the Jews. I picked up some dirt and said, "But the land was not given to one people over another; you have to respect that the Palestinians have lived here for thousands of years." He started speaking very aggressively, and I reached for my camera. Then he got really angry, and pushed me hard, reaching for the camera. I said, "O.K., no camera," and I put it away. He pursued me, pushed me again, and then kicked me hard in the stomach, with a karate-style kick. I continued talking to him for 20 minutes, afterwards. He said, "This is what you did to the Native Americans," and I said, "Yes." I said, "These are good people. God has love for all people," He said, "Yes," and then said, "This is the land of the Jews. You have to leave and not come back."

I went to the police and asked them to arrest him, and later went to the station to file a complaint. I had built a good rapport with the officer in charge at the Ariel police station. But he didn't think that they would necessarily hold him. When the settler arrived at the police station, he cried out: "Why do you hate me. Why do you beat me?"

When I returned from the police station, I was interviewed by the Jerusalem Post, Channel 10, and Israeli radio. Joel Greenberg from the NY Times called--he had heard the interview on the radio. He gave me his mobile phone number, in case something else might happen. I was told that the Israeli peace group B'Tselem had tried to contact me, and also the British Consulate, which was on a fact- finding mission in the area. I will try to contact B'Tselem when I go to Jerusalem.

October 29

Early today we went down toward the olive groves. The soldiers stopped us and told us that we couldn't go. We argued that the head of the command had told us that we could go." A soldier told us, "No." We asked him for his name. He would not give it to us. Then we asked, "Who is in the chain of command?" He wouldn't respond. I phoned Rabbi Ascherman and told him what was going on. Arik called the soldier. Two minutes later the soldier said we could go.

We picked olives all day. Three settlers came, carrying plastic sheeting that they lay on the ground when they come to steal the olives. Of course they also had their guns, which are always around their necks. But they soon retreated. And we had a successful day.

I expect to continue with the harvest for the next few days. Tomorrow I will be meeting with the combined affinity group of ISM and the International Women's Peace Service (IWPS) to plan our activities.

From Salfit

October 30, 2002

My coworker Mariam and I, with a group of French volunteers, left the house 5:45 a.m. to take a taxi to Salfit. When we got to the roadblock, someone told us that the taxi we had arranged would not come because the road was blocked again. We went to wait for the bus. It didn't come on time either, and someone said it had been stopped by the police. We waited and waited, and finally a full bus went by. We still did not see any Palestinian cars on the road, only ones with yellow Israeli plates. (Some Palestinian drivers are able to get Israeli plates, but on days when the roads are blocked, drivers with green and white Palestinian plates cannot go on the settler roads.) Maryam kept calling taxi drivers she knows, and they would promise to be here in a few minutes, but they never showed up, or they would show up with a fare already, call, "two minutes," and never be seen again.

About 6:30, soldiers showed up at the roadblock and started asking the young guys for their IDs. This is something they do a few days a week, generally from about 6:30 until 8:00 or 9:00, just long enough to make everyone late to work or school. Women and older people can usually go through without being stopped, but young men are often turned back, even though the soldiers know exactly who they are and where they are going. Many of them don't even try. The soldiers were the same ones I have seen twice before there now, the ones I talked to at Rivava. One of them is the American who always wants to chat and prove what a good guy he is. Next time, I'm going to ask him why, if he remembered me, whom he talked to once from a distance of 100 meters, he needs to ask the same guys for their ID every other day. One young man, in well-pressed pants and starched shirt, who was also waiting for the bus, made it to the bus stop. He spoke good English and was going to work at the Barquan Industrial Area. We asked him what time he was supposed to be there, and he shrugged. "When I get there."

Since it seemed unlikely that a bus or service was going to show up suddenly, I went across the street to watch the checkpoint, which is part of our job when we are in Haris. I had been standing there for a few minutes when a car pulled up. The man in it rolled down his window and said softly, "Boker Tov" (good morning). I answered with the same greeting. He said something softly in Hebrew which I didn't understand, so I said my usual Hebrew spiel, "I'm sorry, I don't speak Hebrew well." He said in English, "Oh, you don't speak Hebrew, no problem." Then he started yelling at me in Hebrew. I was shocked, but I didn't respond. He jumped out of his car at me, and I jumped back a few feet. Mariam and the French group ran across the street and started telling me to come. "Don't antagonize him," Mariam said. I answered that I was not, but that he can't run me off the road or I'm no good here. He went even crazier when he saw Mariam in her hijab. He was practically foaming at the mouth. The soldiers came to talk to him, and I went with the others across the street. Mariam said, "Good thing the soldiers were there." I disagreed. These particular soldiers are soft-spoken and friendly to us, but their job here is to protect the settlers. I don't feel it's okay for us to rely on them for help.

We finally made it to Salfit at 9:30, three hours after we were supposed to be there. Khalil, from the Agricultural Committee, picked us up in his van and took us to his sewing factory, where we had breakfast and coffee and got a little intro to the situation. Then we went to pick with a man who is called "Dr. Deeb" by his sisters, as well as everyone else, because he is a professor of accounting at Al-Quds University.

As soon as we got there, the French group started complaining that we were not needed, that the people said there was no danger because they have the Palestinian military there, that the ground and the trees were very well tended and people obviously go there all the time. I felt that they could at least pick for an hour before they started talking about leaving to find more adventure somewhere else, but they insisted I call Khalil right away to complain.

About 3:30, suddenly we heard shots. We ran to the fence and saw soldiers, with a settler security guard, pointing rifles at a car in the next field. Serge went to see whom it belonged to, and I argued with the soldiers that the Palestinians have a right to pick their olives, they should go away. They kept saying, "You are picking with the people who killed my friends," "Salfit is full of terrorists." "You are very boring," one of them shouted at us. "I'm crushed," I wanted to say, but I didn't say anything. They threw tear gas into the next field. After that, the French didn't complain any more.

We had been told we would all stay at the Doctor's house, but after our meeting that night, Khalil said they had two empty apartments that we would have instead. It was great to have our own place. It even has a television, though I couldn't figure out how to get any channels.

October 31, 2002

Mariam and I picked with Abu Madi's family. When Abu Madi dropped us off, we expressed surprise that he wasn't coming. His wife said, "He doesn't like to work." Her niece was there with her husband, and their baby slept in a hammock from 6:30 until nearly noon. We suspected she doesn't sleep all night. The point of our being here is for people to be able to pick on land which borders Ariel, but we were nowhere near the fence. When Mariam asked them about their land, they said they have land by Ariel, and they would pick there in a few days. They seemed to believe we would pick with them for the next few days, and work our way toward there. I called Khalil to say there seemed to have been miscommunication. He suggested we move up to the fence, where there were other families picking with no support. I said we could, but he would need to explain it to the family. He of course did not want to do that, and said, "Maybe you should stay where you are."

After lunch, a young woman joined us. I thought at first she was an international, because she did not look or dress like a Palestinian girl. All the other girls come to the fields from school in hijab and long-sleeved shirts, and when they take off their hijab, they have long hair. Hanan's hair is short and wavy - a typical baby-dyke haircut in the States, and she wore a striped baseball cap and a black t-shirt with her bra strap showing. She is 14 years old.

We ate and went to a meeting with the farmers, which was chaotic but more interesting than the previous night's diplomatic nonsense. I signed up to pick on Friday in the most dangerous area with a group of Israelis that Arik Asherman of Rabbis for Human Rights was supposed to bring.

November 1, 2002

Arik's group did not come. He said it was too dangerous for them because Salfit is Area A, where Israelis are not allowed to go. I had called him the night before to let him know that we would support them in any way they wished if they came, and Khalil offered to pick them up at Yasouf, which is Area B, and take them to the fields, which are Area C, but apparently that was not good enough. I felt incredibly let down. Dan, Lysander and I picked with a family whose orchards face an Ariel military outpost.

The family was very afraid. When we sat on their porch having tea, one of the women, whose English is pretty good, told us that twice last week they had been told by soldiers to go home. Yesterday, gas was thrown into their field. She asked Dan to talk to the soldiers and tell them they want to pick there for three days. I said I would go with Dan, since he would be leaving at noon and I was staying all day,. As we walked into the grove, we heard shooting. I looked up to see soldiers at the checkpoint.

I wanted to head up right away, but the family wanted us to go to their fields first. As soon as we got there, we smelled the gas and saw the spent canister on the ground. I called Angie at our house, told her about the gas and asked her to call the DCO, or District Commander's Office about it. Dan, Lysander and I got our things ready and headed up toward the checkpoint. After about 100 meters, halfway between the fields and the checkpoint, the soldiers started yelling. One came out with his gun pointed at us. I yelled in Hebrew, "We want to speak with you. Is there anyone who speaks English?" They answered in English, "Who are you? What are you doing here?" I gave my standard rap, we're internationals, we're here with the family who owns this land, we only want to pick the olives for four days. "You can't pick here, this is a closed military area. Go back." I produced my standard lie, that I had talked to the DCO, and they said we had the right to pick there. They yelled, "You have permission from the DCO?" "Yes." "Let me see it." "I don't have it here, it was a phone call." "What's the license number?" I felt surprisingly calm, considering that I was being caught lying to men with guns pointed at me.

Dan jumped in. "We don't have to give you a number. If this is a closed military area, let us see the order." The conversation turned ugly in a hurry. "You have two minutes to get the fuck out of here, or you will have tear gas on your heads." I hesitated. "I don't want to draw gas into the field," I said to Dan. "We can't back down," he answered. I felt that was true. The family was counting on us. They needed to see us make a stand, not just be told no and go away. I continued to argue with the soldiers, one of whom soon said to me, "One minute, or I shoot you." I called Angie back to see if she'd made any progress with the DCO. She said she'd left a message. She'd also talked to Arik, who said we should have coordinated with the Army ahead of time, because supposedly there had been a shooting at Ariel recently which they thought was carried out by Palestinians sneaking through a hole in the fence. I was annoyed by this advice, but maybe that's because I'm annoyed with Arik. Angie said that Arik felt that by not coming, he had given the Army the "all clear" to target the family. The family said that the incident he was talking about what not last week but last year, and that no one can go near the fence now without being shot. In fact, the soldiers mentioned last Sunday's bombing but nothing about a shooting.

While I was on the phone Dan continued to argue with the soldiers. I didn't hear all of what they said, but at one point, just as Angie was saying, "The Army has the last word," one of them said, "I'm just like the police in New York. I can do whatever I want." This was interspersed with one of them saying, "We don't want to make any problems," and Dan and me chorusing, "Neither do we." I noticed their pretense at not speaking much English had vanished, though the one who kept threatening to shoot us ended one of his threats with, "Sorry I don't speak English so well. Speak Hebrew perfectly." "Your English is fine," I couldn't help saying. I realized we had overstayed this confrontation. Dan quickly agreed, we were not accomplishing anything, we had made our point, we would go back and talk to the family.

They were already picking, and we started picking too as we told them what had happened. They said if there was any more gas, they were going to leave. I fervently prayed that wouldn't happen. A few minutes later, we saw a cloud of gas. The family said they were going to finish the tree we were on and move, but the gas didn't come into their field, so they changed their minds. Claire called and said the DCO was apparently out of town, but she had talked to his secretary who said we did have permission to pick. I couldn't believe it. I asked if there were a number or anything I could give to the soldiers. She said she didn't get that, and gave me the phone number so I could call. I called the number three times before it was answered. When I told the secretary what I wanted, she said, "Where are you exactly?" I tried to explain. She kept saying, "I need to know your exact position, or I can't help you." I tried getting one of the family members to tell her, but she didn't understand, or pretended she didn't. "I can't help you," she said and hung up. I felt I was starting to know what Palestinians feel like, but then I reminded myself that the Palestinians can't even make those calls. On Tuesday night, I mentioned to some of the men we were meeting with, who are all educated community leaders, that the DCO's staff and the police at Ariel have started pretending they don't speak English when we call. "They do speak English," one of them assured me. "We speak Hebrew, and they won't talk to us," another said.

Ultimately, I think it was a Palestinian who resolved the situation. Ma'an Barakat of the Palestinian Police called and asked me to help him figure out where we were. I gave the phone to one of the family members, who explained it to him. He called back a little later and said he had talked to the DCO and was trying to work it out. He even called again about two hours later to see if things had quieted down, which they had. He definitely goes on my list of highly effective bureaucrats in Palestine. Sorry, Ma'an, I'm giving your number to everyone I know who might have trouble with the Israeli Army.

It's 2:00 a.m. now and I have to be up at 5:15. I haven't packed for the next few days, I have laundry in the washer that I cannot get myself to go hang on the roof now. I am only in the house for one night, so I am catching up on all my computer tasks. (I could take my laptop with me, but I don't feel like hauling it around.) In reading over the last sections, I thought it sounds like I enjoy these confrontations with soldiers. In fact, it is not so much that I enjoy them, but they are quite interesting. I'm still getting used to the different ways they react, trying to figure out exactly how they get orders about things like when and where people can pick, or if they are really following any orders at all. Someone said the other day, "Oh, you're a good negotiator," but in fact, I haven't done any negotiating. I just say what I want to do, they say whether it's okay with them or not, and if the answer's no, the Palestinians decide whether to do it anyway. I feel lucky to have been with some brave people, one because it makes me crazy to give in, and two because if we didn't continue when they said no, I would always wonder what might have happened. Now I know that usually, they will do nothing. Of course, it's the unusual times that we have to worry about.

One final thing: Angie, who is leaving tomorrow night for a month or two, went down to say goodbye to our landlord/host, Abu Rabia (Nawaf), and he told her he is afraid that during the coming war against Iraq, the Israelis will try to carry out a mass "transfer" of Palestinians by terrorizing them from the settlements. Apparently there is some talk (I'm not sure by whom - Palestinians speculating or Israelis planning) of transferring Palestinians to some portion of Iraq.

This report is from the Boston-area delegation to the International Solidarity Movement's Olive Harvest Campaign. One hundred Internationals are in the rural West Bank, accompanying Palestinians defying settlers and military curfews to harvest olives, the lifeblood of Palestine's rural economy and symbol of traditional Palestinian life. The presence of Internationals reduces the threat of violence from settlers and the military, and assists the Palestinians in their resistance to Israeli land-theft and occupation.

 
 
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