We
are the stones - Nazareth 6/19/13 #8
Jonathan
Cook is not yet done with our unconventional tour of Nazareth and we soon find
ourselves listening to Abu Arab, a dignified 78 year old man who is part of the
Saffuriya Center for Cultural Heritage. Standing in a large room in an
otherwise nondescript apartment building, we see rows of relics, clay pots of
all sizes, cooking and farming implements, faded dresses. Hind is
translating and we are soon transfixed by his intense story.
In 1948
Saffuriya was a thriving village of 7,000 people, two schools, three mosques,
one church, olive presses, around 120,000 dunams of agricultural land, generous
amounts of water and a vigorous community of people with prolific
crops and animals. On the sixteenth night of Ramadan, the Zionist forces
attacked and 80% of the village fled in a haze of terror and bullets. The next
day the surrounding villages were occupied. Abu Arab’s family fled and
kept walking until they reached Lebanon, (picture the frightened children, the
hunger, the thirst, the blistered feet, the total loss and fear).
The 800
people who remained were counted after two weeks and received Israeli ID cards.
They were told to collect all the remaining furniture and possessions and load
them into trucks. After eight months they were told to gather and given
24 hours to leave or be killed. Those who refused to leave were forcibly
evacuated. (The most moral army in the world?) The group took their case
to the Israeli Supreme Court claiming citizenship type rights related to their
possession of Israeli ID cards. The court cancelled the hearing, relied only on
the testimony of the Israeli military, and the town was declared a closed
military zone for the next 18 years.
Hind is
having increasing difficulties translating; the tears are starting to flow and
as I look into the faces of our delegates, those who come from Palestine are
quietly weeping as well. We are all feeling a tremendous sadness as Abu Arab’s
words sink in. He keeps placing his hands over his heart and I wonder if
that is where he stores his all too painful memories.
His family
stayed in a Lebanese village and after three months, his sister Hazal became
ill and died . The whole family was traumatized and his mother stopped
functioning and spent her days at her daughter’s grave. I wonder, how much loss
can a mother tolerate in one lifetime? After ten months, his father talked with
his three sons and said they had to leave for Beirut or Palestine or the mother
will go crazy. They chose Palestine.
They walked
towards the border for one day and two nights, reached an Israeli village where
they stayed for six months until they could get Israeli ID cards. I can hear
the outrage in Abu Arab’s voice when he comments on Herzl’s famous quote, “A land without a people….” We are
here bearing somber witness to that lie. He never finished fifth grade,
“Every day we prayed the school would fall down, but when it did, we cried.”
Like many
Saffuriyans, his family moved to Nazareth. In 1978 there was an Israeli
assault on one of the five cemeteries in Saffuriya and many dunams were
destroyed. After a long battle and negotiation, the town’s members and
descendants have obtained the right to fence in and maintain their historic cemetery.
After Oslo, like many former inhabitants of destroyed villages, Saffuriyans
joined an Organization for Displaced Villages. They demand their right to
return to their village and live in their homes as citizens of the country.
Abu Arab’s
face is brown and wrinkled with a thick head of graying hair, a pack of
cigarettes sits in his neatly pressed white shirt. In a calm determined voice
he explains that real peace depends on the Zionist recognition of their crimes
against Palestinians. The victims need to be compensated and refugees inside
and outside the country need to have their right of return. Because these
issues have been eliminated from the international conversation, “The Zionist
mentality has the seeds of its termination…” Peace will come, “If not for us,
then our children or our grandchildren.” He explains that he is against
Zionists, not Jews, and that he remembers a time when Jews and Palestinians
lived together peacefully. He admits 30 Jewish families now live in the
village. “They do not have to leave; we want to live with them.”
For 45
years, Abu Arab has had a small shop in old Nazareth and 30 years ago he
noticed that people were throwing away things that he felt ought to be
saved. He started gathering artifacts and helped start this museum so
that his people will remember the villages they came from. He reminds us of
Golda Meir (or was it David Ben Gurion’s?) famous quote, “The old will die and the young will forget.” He assures us that they were very wrong and reminds us that if Jews can remember something for 2000 years, surely Palestinians can remember 65. “We are against war and the shedding of any blood.” He warns that the Israeli dependence on power and war is not sustainable. “Many regimes have fallen… Nothing remains in a valley except the stones. We are the stones.”
Golda Meir (or was it David Ben Gurion’s?) famous quote, “The old will die and the young will forget.” He assures us that they were very wrong and reminds us that if Jews can remember something for 2000 years, surely Palestinians can remember 65. “We are against war and the shedding of any blood.” He warns that the Israeli dependence on power and war is not sustainable. “Many regimes have fallen… Nothing remains in a valley except the stones. We are the stones.”
1 comment:
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Lumigan
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