MIFTAH
Sunday, 19 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Tonight at 9:00 p.m. in Biet Sahour, Palestine, an > Israeli soldier aimed and shook his M-16 rifle at me and my Palestinian friends. What did we violate to receive such deviant treatment? We were standing outside, talking to each other in front of our hotel, otherwise known as "breaking curfew." "Get back inside! Get back inside!" the Israeli soldier yelled as he walked towards us with his American funded gun aimed at my body.

For an American who walks the streets of Boston with my friends and loved ones, the experience with the Israeli soldier was confusing and scary. For Palestinians who live in the cities where the Israeli military occupy their land with tanks and F-16s, patrol the streets 24 hours a day, kill Palestinian civilians on a daily basis, and terrorize Palestinian families while sleeping in their homes, this abnormal situation is common.

I follow the soldier's orders and go inside the empty hotel that caters to the non-existing tourists. Hussein, an eleven year old boy who lives next door to the hotel, looks at me and says, "I speak French, English, and Arabic. What do you speak?" I respond in the singular, "English." Hussein smiles and says, "We cannot be Palestinians in our land. We cannot exist if the Israeli military continues to patrol our streets and enforce curfew."elevenished by his elevent year old intellect, I inquire with a seemingly naive question, "What is curfew?" Hussein ponders for a few seconds and carefully explains curfew to me as if I am an eleven year old. "It is house arrest. It means I can't go to school, I can't go outside to play. I can't go see my friends, buy food with my family, or go for a walk." I continue, "What will happen if you go outside?" Hussein chuckles at my question. In an adult-like manner he shrugs his shoulders, raises his hands in frustration, and says, "If the soldiers catch me, they will arrest me."

Two Israeli military jeeps slowly driving through the Palestinian streets immediately interrupt my lesson from eleven year-old Hussein. The men inside the jeep are holding M-16s and repeatedly announce, "It is forbidden to be outside! It is forbidden to move!" Epiphany: I am a prisoner inside this hotel. I cannot leave. I cannot talk with the neighbors, buy a fresh pineapple, or go for a walk with Hussein. For a brief moment, I am Palestinian. Hussein looks at me, projects a frustrated smile, shrugs his shoulders and expresses his frustration, "See what I mean? Do you understand our situation?" Epiphany: I am an American, imprisoned by pro-Israeli propaganda everywhere in the U.S.A. What can I do but respond to him with honest, sincere ignorance? "No, but I'm beginning to understand. I'm trying to understand."

In 10 days I will return to the privilege, expensive rent, and gross inequalities in Boston. I will hold the hand of the woman I love as we walk the streets together, passing the homeless who use Starbucks coffee cups to request spare change. During this walk I will wonder, "Do the hundreds of other people in the streets around us understand the situations in Palestine?" If not, I hope they are beginning to understand; I hope they are trying to understand. It's too bad Hussein will not be there to explain it to us like an eleven year old.

 
 
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