Blog # 9 June 18, 2014 Yaffa,
The world according to Sami
Last night when we left Elbeit Alnisa’i for dinner, the nine
of us wandered off into the dark streets of Beit Sahour, past churches and
statues of the Virgin Mary, tempting pastry shops, and a clear starry sky,
challenged by sidewalks begging for unsteady ankles. A small elderly woman with
a twinkle in her eye who hosts us at the hostel with a steady stream of mint tea
and Turkish coffee, took Hana by the elbow and led us determinedly up and down
the hills and winding streets to a lovely restaurant complete with sappy music
and the World Cup on a large screen.
Later, overstuffed once again by tasty rice, cauliflower, eggplant,
watermelon, and more, we set off on our uncertain course home and immediately
found ourselves in the midst of ten or so teenage boys on bikes doing various
testosterone driven things that boys do.
In any other city I would have felt afraid but we soon found ourselves
surrounded by these young men who carefully herded us back to our guest house,
leaving us with the customary, “You’re welcome!”
Tonight I am writing from the bosom of a family living in a
refugee camp in Bethlehem and once again the extraordinary decency and
generosity is overwhelming. The
house is multistory with various adjoining apartments, kitchens, bathrooms, a
large room filled with rubble which is under construction, and a spiral
staircase in the kitchen that seems to lead to another apartment where the four
girls sleep. There is definitely a
baseline level of calm organized chaos. The parents have two more sons, one who
is busy studying for final exams; the other who is severely disabled with
cerebral palsy, partly related to a premature birth and then another episode of
severe oxygen loss while hospitalized, maybe from infection. Mostly he sits curled in a swing in the hall that
seems made from a seat in a car, and rocks back and forth, making various cries
and calling “Ma.” His mother
tenderly explains that she understands him as do his siblings. At night, he sleeps curled up with her. He attended a special school for a
while, but the family wanted him home because the teacher did not understand
him and he cried all the time. He
is also 14 years old and tall for his age, increasingly difficult to carry and
facing an educational system with inadequate resources or understanding for
children with multiple severe problems.
There are 50 children now at home in the three Bethlehem camps with
disabilities and enormous needs, mostly met by their unbelievably supportive
families.
I meet the paternal grandmother who like me was born in 1948,
but unlike me, looks like a fragile 80 year old who has lived through an
inordinately large amount of stress.
She smiles, enjoys holding hands, and prays quietly with her beads. She asks me why I am traveling without
my husband and lets me know that if I was her daughter, I would be killed. I give her a quick rendition of a
modern American marriage and assure her that my husband and I love and respect
each other very much. Everyone seems impressed that I am a doctor. This seems to put the issue to rest
Various nieces and nephews drift in and out and I think the
family is also caring for the son and daughter of the father’s brother who was
killed ten years ago. Pictures of
the martyred uncle adorn the living room where we drink tea and then chop a
mountain of tomatoes, baked eggplant, and onion. Caution: large wonderful meal
ahead. The puzzles, finger puppets, origami, and magic markers emerge from our
bags and suddenly the children are very preoccupied. There is a lot of touching
and cooperation, laughter, playful shoving and hugging, and a sweetness to the
interactions. At dinner, the
disabled son is carried into the dining room and is hugged, kissed, and fed by
a variety of family members , (much like a baby bird with a broken wing in a
nest with foragers bringing back delicacies). They all clearly
love and accept him and are not at
all distracted by his movements and behavior. Somehow, this kind of full acceptance and support makes me
want to cry.
I have been trying to keep track of the events that are
heating up all around us. Three
Israeli settler boys from Hebron (read right wing ultra-Orthodox) were
apparently kidnapped and while this is to be utterly condemned in general,
their disappearance is being used to whip the county into a wild xenophobic,
Hamas hating, unity government hating mood. Everywhere we see large signs on busses, “Bring our boys
home!” and there are special hashtags and quite a media frenzy. Prime Minister Netanyahu seems
convinced this is the work of Hamas despite what seems to be a lack of
carefully collected evidence, the IDF are making massive arrests, people have
been injured and shot by the soldiers, a friend of mine was hit by a tear gas
canister while protesting the force feeding of the hunger strikers in Israeli
jails, and we keep hearing that the city of Hebron is under closure, with a
massive military presence throughout the West Bank.
While I understand the terror and horror of kidnapping
teenage boys, Palestinian children and teenagers have been detained and
arrested, (isn’t it kidnapping if it is done by an arm of the state acting in
an utterly egregious manner????) often in the middle of the night in front of
terrified mothers and fathers, no lawyers, often no charges). Big surprise,
there has been no public outrage for these Arab children, and obviously no
collective punishment of Israeli families whose sons have been beating and
cuffing and interrogating frightened kids, ignoring international law, and
common decency. It all feels
different when the victim and perpetrator are flipped, doesn’t it?
So we are back in what is often called ’48 Israel, ie the
Israel contained within the increasingly
phantasmagorical Green Line, and we are meeting with one of my favorite
academics/ activist/former city councilor, Sami Abu Shehadeh. The focus is
Yaffa and the subtitle is mixed cities and racism. Sami notes that the poet Darwish
once said that most wars end with “we are here and they are there,” but in this
war, no such separation occurred. More than 90% of the historical Palestinian
population lives in total separation from the Jewish population, but the
boundaries are very messy. Until
recently, he explains with his ironic mix of deprecating humor and truth
telling, there was no need to legalize the process of separation, but in the
past decade, Arabs (Israelis deny that there are Palestinians in Israel, so they
are called Arabs), have tried to move into Jewish areas, (better housing,
better schools, better services) and because there were no racial laws in
Israel, a new criteria was invented.
People can be excluded from communities because of “unsuitable
compatibility.” Who are we fooling
here? At Tel Aviv University, a professor noted that Tel Aviv is the only
Western city without an Arab community and also the Western city with the
closet Arab adjoining community in the world, ie Jaffa.
As we wander the streets of Jaffa, through shabby
neighborhoods and gentrified streets and glorious views of the Mediterranean
and elegant, expensive old Arab houses now developed or bought for foreign
embassies, wealthy Jews, etc, Sami explains there are two main narratives around
a particular point in the run up to the’48 war and they are in total disagreement, as is much of the
discourse in Israel. The Zionist
narrative states that in January 1948, two months after partition but before
the war, this central market area where we are standing had buildings housing
Arab terrorists, threatening Tel Aviv, and two heroic Stern gang soldiers
brought a truck loaded with explosives into the central market and blew the
place up. A major Zionist victory.
The Palestinian narrative states that while there was a lot
of violence resisting British occupation and Zionist expansion, there was no
Palestinian army, and Arab armies could not reach Jaffa. The Saray House in the market place was
used by ordinary people and in fact held an orphanage which was blown up by
Zionists terrorists, murdering innocent children. A major Zionist massacre. Framing
is everything.
As we find refuge in the shade, Sami reflects on the
historical importance of Jaffa which was even mentioned in the Old Testament
when King Solomon brought cedar from Lebanon through Jaffa to build the temple,
and then the prophet Jonah had that unfortunate incident with the whale and got
spit up on some lonely Jaffa Beach.
Not that any of this matters for the present, right?
He notes that there are two types of Palestinian
historians. Those who believe
Palestinians are Europeans who immigrated from Crete and settled in the Levant
and those who are pan-Arabic. Palestinians arrived from the Arab peninsula, and
oh by the way, that was around 12,000 years ago. Everyone else then arrived to
occupy this spot, the perfect seaport, the center of commerce, the gateway to
Palestine. Jaffa was occupied some 30 times and obviously had its times of
success and times of neglect. But Palestinians were clearly here first: not
that any of this matters for the present, right?
The big deal happened in modern history with the famous
Jaffe orange export business. Apparently some stroke of genius or luck, led to
the production of a thick skinned orange that could be shipped anywhere, the
Shamuti orange, carefully wrapped in special paper; so an enormous industry was
created: the growers, the pickers, the wrappers, the guys who built the special
boxes, the transport to the port, the boats, you get the picture. In the 1930s,
five million boxes of oranges containing 400 million oranges, passed through
the port of Jaffa. (So much for the Arab’s inability to make the desert bloom
or their backward agricultural processes!) Tel Aviv was founded in the late 19th
century as a neighborhood of Jaffa with some 100 Jewish families. As Sami notes, “Before 1948, people
came to work in Jaffa from all over the Arab world and now we Palestinians
leave to work all over the Arab world.” The ebb and flow of history, and it is
clearly not done with the ebbing and flowing part.
This all ended with the 1948 war when Jaffa was largely
depopulated of its Arab population. After the war, Israelis passed an
aggressive program of Judaization, changing Arabic signage, destroying the Old
City, and disappearing the history and culture of the Palestinian majority that
had existed for centuries, (I think this part is important for today, right?).
With British support Tel Aviv became a city in 1909, by 1919 there were 2,000
Jewish inhabitants and by 1948, the number had reached 200,000.
In the unforgiving sun, we admire the famous Clock Tower
built in 1901 by the Ottomans, across the street was the Ottoman prison which
became the British and then the Israeli police station. (must be a trend?) It
is slated to become a fancy boutique hotel with its northern wall adjacent to
the mosque of Jaffa. The history
of this city is embedded in its architecture and sometimes I feel the walls are
weeping when they are not outright screaming for our attention. We wander through the old covered
market, now mostly cheap Chinese imports, a herd of Birthright kids, there are
signs for a Lady Gaga concert, and tattooed bikers and rainbow hair. We are
standing in front of 300 new apartments, this is gentrification on steroids,
upscale bars and cafes now appear like mushrooms after a spring rain. Sami teases, there are now hair
dressers for dogs and in Tel Aviv more couples have dogs and cats than
children. Welcome to the twenty first
century where pet adoption and doggy day care are the norm, but no one has the
money or motivation to support a severely disabled Palestinian boy.
We wander by the Scottish Church, the Old French Hospital,
Saint Joseph’s School for Boys, (soon to be a boutique hotel) the colonists and
religious institutions were busy for a long time; there are a long list of
stories about Jesus and his disciples, miracles, visions, angels, etc that
relate to Jaffa. The impact of that is now mostly a very strong tourism
industry, focused on visiting all the cities of the New Testament. Religion in
the service of capitalism.
Sami notes sarcastically, “Then there was the most important
real estate invention: The View.”
We pass by the upscale Andromeda Hills project, the most expensive
housing project in Jaffa, gated illegally, tied up in court battles, and now
for the past ten years gated “for the public safety.” Really? He notes
ironically, in the past at the sea, poor people used to smoke hashish and now
rich people spoke Hashish. Rents are often $20,000 per month and houses sell
for millions
We look up at a large poster of Handala done by the
cartoonist and political activist, Naji Al Ali. In the poster, an American in
Lebanon is asking for the religious identity of an Arab, (I think there are 16
types of religious identities in Lebanon), and the guy replies, “I am an Arab
and you are a donkey.” Subtle? The Handala character stands nearby with his
back to us and spikey cactus hair. Naji, a Palestinian living in Lebanon, left
for his own personal safety to Kuwait and then to London where he was
assassinated in 1987. There are so
many theories about who pulled the trigger. He pretty much offended everyone by
speaking the truth to power. Sami explains that Handala came to Naji in a
dream, a small child who will help him tell the truth. Naji said he left
Palestine when he was ten and Handala will only grow up when Naji returns. He
turns his back to the viewer because the world has turned its back on
Palestine. His hair is spikey because reality is bitter. He is now the most
famous Arab symbol of perseverance and resistance in the world.
This brings us back to the Palestinians of 1948 and the
neighborhood of Ajami, (see the film of the same name and my previous blog
posts). In 1948, the remaining Palestinian inhabitants were rounded up and put
into the neighborhood of Ajami; their houses were declared neglected, and they
were declared present absentees (see previous blogs), or they kept their houses
and had to share with incoming Jewish immigrants. Sami’s great grandfather was
a soldier in the Ottoman Army; he was not willing be a refugee so he stayed,
was sent to Ajami, and lived surrounded by fences, soldiers, and dogs. Even the European Jews called it the
ghetto. They should know.
These refugees (3,900 left out of a population of 120,000)
experienced the dispossession of the Nakba and the loss of all friends, family
possessions, libraries, teachers, doctors, hospitals, language, (“the biggest
armed robbery in the twentieth century”).
They experienced the fact that if the Israelis wanted cheap labor,
Palestinians were present, but if Palestinians wanted their homes back they
were absent. This was a humiliating personal and economic loss that led to
decades of depression, drug abuse, alcoholism, and criminality. In 1950 Jaffa
was annexed to Tel Aviv and was now run by Jews and planned for Jews “in this
liberal democracy of Israel.” Until 1993, they were not even statistically
counted as a separate group. Haeen Zubi, the Palestinian Knesset member who recently
criticized the hyper response to the kidnappings of the Yeshiva students, is
now facing death threats and being called a traitor.
So how does this segregation and racism look up close and
personal. In the mixed cities,
there are three kinds of schools: secular Jewish, religious Jewish, and Arab.
Some 20-25% or Arabs go to secular Jewish schools where the education is
better, though completely Zionist. Jewish parents complained when the Arabs
reached 50% of the student body, so the school divided itself into two schools,
Arab and Jew. Then the parents demanded a wall down the middle of the
playground. The municipality refused
and used words like multi-culturalism, so the Jewish parents took their kids
out and sent them to schools in Tel Aviv, or to the right wing national
religious schools. The Israelis do not even seem to have the inclination or
institutional or legal building blocks to build a multicultural society, let
alone face the glaring endemic racism.
It is late and I am too tired to
continue. Let me just say that I
knew I was in Israel ’48 when I ordered a Turkish coffee and a lovely cappucino
arrived. I didn’t want to
complain, so I grabbed the cinnamon, sprinkled the steamed foam liberally, only
to discover that it was actually pepper.
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