Blog # 14 June 20, 2014 Hebron part two
And for extra credit: Hebron
We leave for the tortured city of Hebron later than expected
(tear gas, food, and embroidery) and H. tries to explain to me the intricacies
of her permitting process. She has
a West Bank ID. She can only apply for a new permit to enter Israel if her old
one has already expired (it generally lasts three months). Fortunately she does
not own a car or a donkey; that would also require a permit. And she cannot apply until it actually
physically runs out. Are you
following this? So, her permit ran out Thursday evening, the earliest she could
apply is Friday, but Friday and Saturday are holidays and you cannot get any
permit unless it is an emergency. If you have paid 140 shekels a year for a
magnetic strip card that indicates you do not have any security issues, it will
take one day to get the permit, otherwise it takes two, but of course the
permit is never guaranteed. So the earliest she can apply is Monday, but she
needs a permit to come with us into Israel to Nazareth on Saturday which in
this crazy world is now impossible.
Now let me remind you that she has just graduated from a prestigious US
university, has no criminal record, has a great sense of humor, comes from a
respectable family and poses no security risks except perhaps the risk of
speaking her mind which the last time I checked was still legal in most modern
democratic societies. If she
decides to take her chances and sneaks in (happens a lot) and the driver gets
caught, he is fined, which is really not fair to him. Under these circumstances, she would not carry any IDs, so
the Israelis would not be able to punish her since they cannot prove she is who
she is and you can bet I am not going to help them either on that one. So does this sound sensible? Related to
security? Keeping the folks in Netanya secure in their beach chairs sipping
their pomegranate mojitos ? Valium anyone?
At Kalandia we spot two soldiers crouching in a rotary
hiding behind an olive tree, their weapons are loaded, hands on the trigger,
not sure if it is tear gas or bullets.
I learn that a 13 year old Palestinian child was killed yesterday.
Ma’ale Dumim sprawls across distant hilltops like a giant snake slithering
across the territories, there is an IDF jeep on the road, we come to a
checkpoint with three IDF soldiers.
On the radio the woman reports a loud explosion in a town near Hebron.
The IDF stole 15,000 shekels during one home invasion and the Palestinian Authority
is completely invisible except for traffic cops who are not doing much. When
the Israelis are planning a major incursion, they send their colleagues (that
is too nice a word) home. The city feel eerie and tense, young men cluster on
sidewalks, looking thin, hungry and ready for trouble; large dumpsters have
been placed across the roads, some already brooding smoke. Despite this, people
are out on the streets, shopping, biking, driving, smoking.
I have never seen our guide, Hisham Sharabati, so tense; yes
we are late, and yes he has a flat tire, but the city feels like it is about to
explode and he has a lot to teach us and wants us all to leave in one piece. (good
plan) He reviews the outrageous history of the ancient city of Hebron and its
colonization and militarization by a small number of fanatical Jews from Kiryat
Arba who then decided to take over the center of the Old City and destroy the
lives of the Palestinian families living there. (see my previous blogs for
details). Nonetheless, everything
is worse since my last descent into this living hell: with the kidnapping of the
three Yeshiva students, no one with an ID less than 50 years old can leave the
country (like the lovely man who sat next to me in the service and has been accepted to a US AID program on leadership
development in DC and has a formal letter from the Consulate; he is now on his
fourth try to get by the ever so conscientious Israeli security at the border with
Jordan).
The Palestinian markets are not only covered with sheets and
chicken wire to protect them from the garbage thrown down on them by Jewish
settlers living above, but they have started putting up a metal roof over the
market. The shuttered shops, doors welded shut, racist graffiti, trashed
jewelry district, blocked streets and passages, windows covered with metal mesh
to protect against stones in the Old City all persist. The lower levels of the
market flood in the winter with up to four feet of water and garbage. A soldier
was videotaped throwing rocks at Palestinians and received a minor
punishment. The Yeshiva is expanding
and invading into the lives and lands of its Palestinian neighbors, guard towers
and cameras are everywhere, and I really mean everywhere. But life goes on. We
pass a Palestinian man busily washing his car. There is loud honking and a wedding party, car decorated
with flowers, passes by. A computer store is filled with young men glued to
their screens.
Hisham takes us through turn styles and checkpoints to the
Tomb of the Patriarchs and the Ibrahimi Mosque and reminds us that Abraham is
reported in the Old Testament to have bought the spot for his burial site and
the family burial site, but he must have bought it from somebody! This glorious and tortured site has been claimed,
rebuilt, invaded, and divided up by all the folks who passed through over the
many centuries from Herod, the Romans, the Ottomans, the Crusaders, Saladin,
and most recently the Jews. (I am
sure I have left somebody out, but you get the point). And then of course in
1994 Baruch Goldstein massacred some 25 Muslims and injured 100, the place got
divided up between two of the three Abrahamic religions, and the fight
continues. We see many more IDF soldiers and a long parade of ultra-orthodox
Jews (of the fanatic, fascistic, brown shirt variety) with large families of
lovely innocent looking children, climbing up the long stairs for Shabbat
services. This is when I realize that a committed pacifist like me can harbor
outrageously murderous thoughts, but since I have had a lot of therapy, I am
clear about the difference between thought and action.
Hisham shows us the checkpoint and metal detector where
hundreds of school children have to hustle through every day to get to their
classes, the square where three Palestinians were shot to death at different
times for the crime of being there.
We stare at a man on a donkey loaded with large bundles of straw,
yelling and herding a flock of sheep up the winding road to get to his side of
the street (there are Jewish only streets and sidewalks around here, I am
assuming the sheep are of the Arab persuasion given the sneer I see pass across
the IDF soldier’s face). We hear of the 15 Palestinian families that are so
isolated by the maze of walls and barriers that they cannot have visitors and
of the incredible challenges families face with the concrete barriers, the
front doors they cannot use, the ladders and roof-to-roof alternatives that
people take to leave their homes. (did you get that, roof-to-roof?) But what if you are disabled? Or
elderly? Or just bought a bed for your new wife? People die from this kind of
life.
It is getting dark and dangerous. I can see the tension in the faces of the young men hanging
on the sidewalks, the tone in Hisham’s voice; the streets are littered with
rocks, the night raids will soon begin, the burning tires, the children dragged
out of their beds, the self-righteous cheers and prayers of fanatical Jews with
Brooklyn accents and delusions that fill me with shame.
How can I explain this reality to the nice liberal Jews in
Brookline or Long Island or Los Angeles who have never really grappled with the
long term implications of Zionism, the privileging of Jews over everyone else
whatever the cost and the belief in our perpetual
victimhood. This is it, taken to
its most extreme, disturbed, and destructive form, and it is heart breaking,
immoral, and outrageous. If we do not speak up, if we do not say, not in my
name and really mean it, I fear it make take us all, Jew and Palestinian, down
together.
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