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Let The Global Boycott of Israel Begin
1. IOF: 0, Goth Girl:1
2. Three Consecutive Days of Attacks In Tel Rumeida; Baruch Marzel
Beats Palestinian Woman
3. An Invitation for Barak Obama
4. Let The Global Boycott of Israel Begin
5. Why an Economic Boycott of Israel is Justified
6. Scottish ISM-activist Forcefully Deported From Israel After 7 Weeks
in Prison
7. Round Up Of Recent Events In Tel Rumeida, Hebron; Settler Violence
and IDF Abuse
1. IOF: 0, Goth Girl:1
January 15th, 2006
by Katie
One of the activities of ISM is to create a physical presence of
support for Palestinians resisting the occupation. The presence of
international volunteers with cameras in the West Bank has a deterring
effect on brutality and excess violence by the Israeli military who
want to avoid the bad publicity of an international incident. It is
abhorrent that the lives of international volunteers are given more
value than that of Palestinians, but this unfortunately is the reality
in Palestine. This is a symptom of the new anti-Semitism. Like Jews
were scapegoated by the 3rd Reich, Arabs and Muslims have become the
new scapegoats of the governments of the West who are incapable of
doing any introspection beyond "Why do they hate us so much?".
Bil'in is a village of about 1000 people just north east of Ramallah.
For the past year, the village has been resisting the seizure of their
land by the Israeli government who have developed a large settlement
nearby on the villager's land. A wall is being built up around the
settlement, cutting the Palestinians off from their former farm land.
In response to this illegal seizure of the land (building settlements
on occupied land is illegal under international law) the village has
built their own "settlement" on the Israeli side of the wall. This
is a one room shack built in protest.
The shack has been threatened with demolition because the Israeli
government calls it "illegal" which is, of course, quite ironic.
For the past few days we have been supporting the Palestinians of
Bil'in by being present at their "settlement," hoping to protect
it from demolition. This is just one of the creative, non-violent
methods the Palestinian resistance is using to draw attention to their
cause.
It was very heart-warming sitting around a campfire at the shack with
Palestinian, Israeli and international activists singing songs, goofing
off and having fun together. It could have been the opening line to
some sarcastic joke, but it was real, honest and genuine and that made
me very happy.
The IDF showed up a few times, we thought maybe they would try to bust
up our party but they came and left rather quickly.
People have questioned what is the point of doing this ? What is it
accomplishing ? Last night I saw for the first time what our presence
accomplishes.
Abdullah is the owner of the apartment we are staying in in Bil'in
and one of the ISM leaders in Bil'in. He woke us up last night at
around 2am saying there were Israeli soldiers in the village and that
we needed to come out and demonstrate to them that there were people
here who would hold them accountable for anything they did, that they
would not be able to go around terrorizing the village and get away
with it.
We walked down the street to the mosque where they had passed by
earlier and littered the ground a bunch of leaflets. The leaflets said:
"To the people of Bil'in
The Israeli Defense Force who are protecting the Israeli civilians from
terrorist acts are determined to prevent any act that creates obstacles
to the work on the security fence.
The construction of the security fence aims to prevent terrorists from
getting into Israel.
Do not participate in any acts that create obstacles for the building
of the security fence.
Do not let those people (demonstrators) effect your daily life. These
acts are against your interests.
The IDF will respond strongly to any act that might effect the security
fence.
-IDF leadership"
Someone called Abdullah on his phone and said they were heading our
way. A few seconds later two humvees with approximately 6 or 7 soldiers
in full riot gear pulled up. I walked straight towards them, not really
having any plan of what to do or say, just knowing that I needed to
confront them and show them that there were people here who were not
going to let them get away with bad behavior. My heart was pounding in
my chest. I was thinking "ok, this is it, this is how it ends, you
are going to get shot right here and this is how you are going to
die." But you know, I would rather take 100 of their bullets right
now, than die of old age later because I was afraid to stand up for
what I believed in, and so I kept on walking. And of course I didn't
get shot, of course I had nothing to be afraid of because I am not
Palestinian. We stood in front of them and Marcy told them in Hebrew
they they should go home and that they were not welcome here. They told
her to go home. It was tense for a few minutes as six unarmed women and
two unarmed men stood in front of the seven or eight fully armed
soldier waving their guns around. Then they left. Our first victory !
2. Three Consecutive Days of Attacks In Tel Rumeida; Baruch Marzel
Beats Palestinian Woman
January 15th, 2006-01-15
After three consecutive days of numerous acts of settler violence in
Tel Rumeida, Hebron, the IDF and Police are doing very little to stop
or arrest settlers who violently oppose the removal of settlers from
the illegally occupied Palestinian wholesale market in Hebron's Old
City. Some soldiers do nothing while the settlers attack Palestinians
or the Human Rights Workers (HRWs) who live in Tel Rumeida to support
them, whereas other soldiers do intervene at different levels. This
disparity shows that the IDF has not issued clear orders to protect the
Palestinian or international population of Tel Rumeida. During an
attack a police car drove by, and HRWs asked for help, the police said
"we will not defend you. It is not our job. You choose to be on the
street, so this is your own responsibility." HRWs explained that
Palestinian families were constantly threatened, insulted, hit and had
their homes and shops attacked and that this is why they must remain on
the street to intervene in settler attacks.
On the 14th of January, settlers, some in black masks, hit a
Palestinian man walking home on the back of the head with a rock thrown
from the roof of their building as Human Rights Workers (HRWs)
accompanied him. Shortly thereafter a mob of approximately 40 settlers,
averaging 15 years of age, attacked a small group of Human Rights
Workers (HRWs) kicking, punching and hitting them with sticks. Soldiers
did not effectively stop them. Then settlers began to try to kick the
door to a Palestinian home. The owner opened the door and the settlers
began kicking him and trying to enter his home. One HRW got past the
settlers and blocked the door to prevent the settlers from entering the
home. Settlers then kicked him violently. Soldiers then removed the HRW
instead of removing the settlers. Settlers, not wanting their violence
captured on video tape attempted repeatedly to steal and break the HRWs
video cameras. Settlers kicked an HRW in the face, cutting his chin,
because he would not let go of his camera. HRWs called police for
assistance three separate times during this attack but police did not
arrive till 45 minutes after they were originally called. Police cars
have been hit by settlers throwing purple paint bombs, and others have
been throwing light bulbs filled with paint.
On the 12th of January, a Palestinian resident of Tel Rumeida ,
reported that a group of young settlers attacked a relative. Led by
Baruch Marzel, a notorious settler, they were punching and kicking her
until she fled to the nearby checkpoint. During this attack, he called
out to soldiers near the Beit Hadassah soldier's post who did not
respond. No HRWs were present for the beginning of the attack, but one
HRW did witness the woman running, screaming towards the checkpoint in
fear.
PRESS ARE INVITED TO JOIN HUMAN RIGHTS WORKERS IN TEL RUMEIDA TO
WITNESS THE SETTLER VIOLENCE FIRST HAND. VIDEO AND STILLS OF SOME
INCIDENTS ARE AVAILABLE.
Contact:
Luna, Tel Rumeida Project - 054 557 3154 http://www.telrumeidaproject.org
David, International Solidarity Movement - 054 651 7234
http://www.palsolidarity.org
3. An Invitation for Barak Obama
January 15th, 2006
by Katie
The morning of Thursday, January 12, myself, and other Palestinian and
international activists were invited to the branch of Jerusalem
University in Ramallah for a conference that Barak Obama, the US
senator from Illinois, was holding with students. The others were
skeptical about him, but I assured them that he is a very progressive
politician and he would be supportive of the Palestinian cause.
Barak Obama began the conference by saying how surprised he was that it
was cold and raining in Ramallah, that it went against his preconceived
notions about the climate in the Middle East. He spoke about his
background and how he was the underdog in his race for the Senate. He
explained to us that even though the US has made many foreign policy
mistakes, that he believed in our system of checks and balances. He
then offered to start a dialog with the audience.
One student asked how Arab governments can create a paradigm shift and
improve relations with the US. When he answered the question, I tried
not to give in to frustrated laughter because, I shit you not, this is
what he said (I am paraphrasing and my comments are in parenthesis):
The Arab governments need to embrace democracy, not theocracy. When you
allow the will of God to influence the laws of your country, you will
not win the support of the US. (what about Israel claiming they have
the God given right to rule this land ?) The Arab governments need to
renounce violence against civilians. (What about 100,000 dead Iraqis,
were all of those people terrorists, Baathists, foreign fighters or
were some of them civilians ?) The US is opposed to theocracy and
terrorism and if the Arab governments want to create a paradigm shift,
they need to address these concerns of ours.
So then I asked him, "You say the US is opposed to theocracy and
terrorism, how can you explain to the Palestinian people how the US can
be opposed to these things but still supports a state that has racist,
oppressive, unjust and apartheid policies. And do you see how this
paints an inconsistent picture to the people of the Middle East?"
He began his answer by saying he would not accept the assumptions I
made and therefor was not going to address that part of my question. He
said he could understand the Palestinian view that the policies of the
US were one sided but he said the relationship with Israel was not
going to change. My high hopes for Barak Obama's foreign policy ideas
were shot down !
Obama said this was his first trip to the Middle East, that he had just
come from Qatar and Jordan. I imagine he stayed in some pretty fancy
hotels. I'm not sure that if you are a powerful American politician
on your first ever trip to the middle east that you can really get a
good idea of what things are like here.
So Barak Obama, I would like to send you an invitation. I invite you to
consider that maybe your preconceived notions about the weather in the
Middle East are not the only notions that were incorrect. Barak Obama,
I would like to invite you to stand in line at Qalandia checkpoint, I
would like you to witness the humiliation Palestinians face there,
I'd like to invite you to take part in a peaceful demonstration like
Mohammad Mansour was doing when his friend was shot and killed, or
Roni, who was shot in the neck and who is now paralysed from the waist
down. I'd like to invite you to acknowledge that there are families
on the Palestinian side of the wall who cannot travel 5 minutes away to
the next village to see their familes on the Israeli side of the wall.
I would invite you to meet Ahmad, a five year old boy I met on the way
back from Jenin whose father was killed by Israeli soldiers. I would
like you to consider that if a Palestinian wants to leave the country
by plane , he or she cannot leave via Ben Gurion airport in Tel Aviv,
he or she must travel by land to Jordan and leave via the airport in
Amman. This is the Middle East's only democracy, Mr. Obama ! I would
invite you to consider how the unconditional support for Israel with US
tax dollars affects 4 million Palestinian people who just want to live
their lives and be free from oppression.
4. Let The Global Boycott of Israel Begin
January 15th, 2006
With the occupation of Palestine in its 39th year, the continuing
construction of the Apartheid Wall and Israel refusing any
accountability for its crimes against the Palestinian people, it falls
on the global community to pressure the State of Israel to comply with
International law.
Lend your support for the county of Sor-Trondelag's Boycott Israel
motion, and read the following oped by Norman Finkelstein, which
appears on his website and in the January 14 issue of the Norwegian
newspaper Aftenposten, "Why an Economic Boycott of Israel is
Justified."
Dear friends
The Norwegian region of Sor-Trondelag has passed a motion to boycott
Israeli goods as a way of pressuring Israel to end the occupation and
the oppression of the Palestinian people. You can read the motion in
English on stopthewall.org/worldwideactivism/1061.shtml. The
representatives of Sor-Trondelag have experienced massive Zionist
pressure after the passing of the motion and some fear that they will
vote against the boycott in a new voting. For example has the Simon
Wiesenthal Centre and other Zionist organizations called the elected
representatives of Sor-Trondelag "nazis" and "racists".
We hope you will send a letter of support for the motion to:
Mayor Tore Sandvik
Sør-Trøndelag county municipality
tore.sandvik [at] stfk.no (please send a BLIND COPY to fup [at] palestina.no)
Pleases add a copy for:
Arne Braut (faction leader of the Center Party)
arne.braut [at] stfk.no
Ola Huke (faction leader of Socialist Left Party)
ola.huke [at] stfk.no
Sor-Trondelag Labor Party
sor-trondelag [at] dna.no
Yngve Brox (faction leader of the Conservative Party)
yngve.brox [at] stfk.no
Left Party
fredrik [at] liberal.no
Heidi Klokkervold (Red Electoral Alliance)
heidi.klokkervold [at] stfk.no
in solidarity
Lars Klottrup Berge
Youth For the Freedom of Palestine
Norway
5. Why an Economic Boycott of Israel is Justified
January 14, 2006 (originally published in the Norwegian newspaper
Aftenposten)
(http://www.normanfinkelstein.com/article.php?pg=11&ar=130)
by Norman G. Finkelstein
The recent proposal that Norway boycott Israeli goods has provoked
passionate debate. In my view, a rational examination of this issue
would pose two questions: 1) Do Israeli human rights violations warrant
an economic boycott? and 2) Can such a boycott make a meaningful
contribution toward ending these violations? I would argue that both
these questions should be answered in the affirmative.
Although the subject of many reports by human rights organizations,
Israel's real human rights record in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory is generally not well known abroad. This is primarily due to
the formidable public relations industry of Israel's defenders as
well as the effectiveness of their tactics of intimidation, such as
labeling critics of Israeli policy anti-Semitic.
Yet, it is an incontestable fact that Israel has committed a broad
range of human rights violations, many rising to the level of war
crimes and crimes against humanity. These include:
Illegal Killings. Whereas Palestinian suicide attacks targeting Israeli
civilians have garnered much media attention, Israel's quantitatively
worse record of killing non-combatants is less well known. According to
the most recent figures of the Israeli Information Center for Human
Rights in the Occupied Territories (B'Tselem), 3,386 Palestinians
have been killed since September 2000, of whom 1,008 were identified as
combatants, as opposed to 992 Israelis killed, of whom 309 were
combatants. This means that three times more Palestinians than Israelis
have been killed and up to three times more Palestinian civilians than
Israeli civilians. Israel's defenders maintain that there's a
difference between targeting civilians and inadvertently killing them.
B'Tselem disputes this: "[W]hen so many civilians have been killed
and wounded, the lack of intent makes no difference. Israel remains
responsible." Furthermore, Amnesty International reports that
"many" Palestinians have not been accidentally killed but
"deliberately targeted," while the award-winning New York Times
journalist Chris Hedges reports that Israeli soldiers "entice
children like mice into a trap and murder them for sport."
Torture. "From 1967," Amnesty reports, "the Israeli security
services have routinely tortured Palestinian political suspects in the
Occupied Territories." B'Tselem found that eighty-five percent of
Palestinians interrogated by Israeli security services were subjected
to "methods constituting torture," while already a decade ago Human
Rights Watch estimated that "the number of Palestinians tortured or
severely ill-treated" was "in the tens of thousands - a number that
becomes especially significant when it is remembered that the universe
of adult and adolescent male Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza is
under three-quarters of one million." In 1987 Israel became "the
only country in the world to have effectively legalized torture"
(Amnesty). Although the Israeli Supreme Court seemed to ban torture in
a 1999 decision, the Public Committee Against Torture in Israel
reported in 2003 that Israeli security forces continued to apply
torture in a "methodical and routine" fashion. A 2001 B'Tselem
study documented that Israeli security forces often applied "severe
torture" to "Palestinian minors."
House demolitions. "Israel has implemented a policy of mass
demolition of Palestinian houses in the Occupied Territories,"
B'Tselem reports, and since September 2000 "has destroyed some
4,170 Palestinian homes." Until just recently Israel routinely
resorted to house demolitions as a form of collective punishment.
According to Middle East Watch, apart from Israel, the only other
country in the world that used such a draconian punishment was Iraq
under Saddam Hussein. In addition, Israel has demolished thousands of
"illegal" homes that Palestinians built because of Israel's
refusal to provide building permits. The motive behind destroying these
homes, according to Amnesty, has been to maximize the area available
for Jewish settlers: "Palestinians are targeted for no other reason
than they are Palestinians." Finally, Israel has destroyed hundred of
homes on security pretexts, yet a Human Rights Watch report on Gaza
found that "the pattern of destruction...strongly suggests that
Israeli forces demolished homes wholesale, regardless of whether they
posed a specific threat." Amnesty likewise found that "Israel's
extensive destruction of homes and properties throughout the West Bank
and Gaza...is not justified by military necessity," and that "Some
of these acts of destruction amount to grave breaches of the Fourth
Geneva Convention and are war crimes."
Apart from the sheer magnitude of its human rights violations, the
uniqueness of Israeli policies merits notice. "Israel has created in
the Occupied Territories a regime of separation based on
discrimination, applying two separate systems of law in the same area
and basing the rights of individuals on their nationality,"
B'Tselem has concluded. "This regime is the only one of its kind in
the world, and is reminiscent of distasteful regimes from the past,
such as the apartheid regime in South Africa." If singling out South
Africa for an international economic boycott was defensible, it would
seem equally defensible to single out Israel's occupation, which
uniquely resembles the apartheid regime.
Although an economic boycott can be justified on moral grounds, the
question remains whether diplomacy might be more effectively employed
instead. The documentary record in this regard, however, is not
encouraging. The basic terms for resolving the Israel-Palestine
conflict are embodied in U.N. resolution 242 and subsequent U.N.
resolutions, which call for a full Israeli withdrawal from the West
Bank and Gaza and the establishment of a Palestinian state in these
areas in exchange for recognition of Israel's right to live in peace
and security with its neighbors. Each year the overwhelming majority of
member States of the United Nations vote in favor of this two-state
settlement, and each year Israel and the United States (and a few South
Pacific islands) oppose it. Similarly, in March 2002 all twenty-two
member States of the Arab League proposed this two-state settlement as
well as "normal relations with Israel." Israel ignored the
proposal.
Not only has Israel stubbornly rejected this two-state settlement, but
the policies it is currently pursuing will abort any possibility of a
viable Palestinian state. While world attention has been riveted by
Israel's redeployment from Gaza, Sara Roy of Harvard University
observes that the "Gaza Disengagement Plan is, at heart, an
instrument for Israel's continued annexation of West Bank land and
the physical integration of that land into Israel." In particular
Israel has been constructing a wall deep inside the West Bank that will
annex the most productive land and water resources as well as East
Jerusalem, the center of Palestinian life. It will also effectively
sever the West Bank in two. Although Israel initially claimed that it
was building the wall to fight terrorism, the consensus among human
rights organizations is that it is really a land grab to annex illegal
Jewish settlements into Israel. Recently Israel's Justice Minister
frankly acknowledged that the wall will serve as "the future border
of the state of Israel."
The current policies of the Israeli government will lead either to
endless bloodshed or the dismemberment of Palestine. "It remains
virtually impossible to conceive of a Palestinian state without its
capital in Jerusalem," the respected Crisis Group recently concluded,
and accordingly Israeli policies in the West Bank "are at war with
any viable two-state solution and will not bolster Israel's security;
in fact, they will undermine it, weakening Palestinian
pragmatists...and sowing the seeds of growing radicalization."
Recalling the U.N. Charter principle that it is inadmissible to acquire
territory by war, the International Court of Justice declared in a
landmark 2004 opinion that Israel's settlements in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory and the wall being built to annex them to Israel
were illegal under international law. It called on Israel to cease
construction of the wall, dismantle those parts already completed and
compensate Palestinians for damages. Crucially, it also stressed the
legal responsibilities of the international community:
all States are under an obligation not to recognize the illegal
situation resulting from the construction of the wall in the Occupied
Palestinian Territory, including in and around East Jerusalem. They are
also under an obligation not to render aid or assistance in maintaining
the situation created by such construction. It is also for all States,
while respecting the United Nations Charter and international law, to
see to it that any impediment, resulting from the construction of the
wall, to the exercise by the Palestinian people of its right to
self-determination is brought to an end.
A subsequent U.N. General Assembly resolution supporting the World
Court opinion passed overwhelmingly. However, the Israeli government
ignored the Court's opinion, continuing construction at a rapid pace,
while Israel's Supreme Court ruled that the wall was legal.
Due to the obstructionist tactics of the United States, the United
Nations has not been able to effectively confront Israel's illegal
practices. Indeed, although it is true that the U.N. keeps Israel to a
double standard, it's exactly the reverse of the one Israel's
defenders allege: Israel is held not to a higher but lower standard
than other member States. A study by Marc Weller of Cambridge
University comparing Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territory with
comparable situations in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, East Timor,
occupied Kuwait and Iraq, and Rwanda found that Israel has enjoyed
"virtual immunity" from enforcement measures such as an arms
embargo and economic sanctions typically adopted by the U.N. against
member States condemned for identical violations of international law.
Due in part to an aggressive campaign accusing Europe of a "new
anti-Semitism," the European Union has also failed in its legal
obligation to enforce international law in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory. Although the claim of a "new anti-Semitism" has no basis
in fact (all the evidence points to a lessening of anti-Semitism in
Europe), the EU has reacted by appeasing Israel. It has even suppressed
publication of one of its own reports, because the authors - like the
Crisis Group and many others - concluded that due to Israeli policies
the "prospects for a two-state solution with east Jerusalem as the
capital of Palestine are receding."
The moral burden to avert the impending catastrophe must now be borne
by individual states that are prepared to respect their obligations
under international law and by individual men and women of conscience.
In a courageous initiative American-based Human Rights Watch recently
called on the U.S. government to reduce significantly its financial aid
to Israel until Israel terminates its illegal policies in the West
Bank. An economic boycott would seem to be an equally judicious
undertaking. A nonviolent tactic the purpose of which is to achieve a
just and lasting settlement of the Israel-Palestine conflict cannot
legitimately be called anti-Semitic. Indeed, the real enemies of Jews
are those who cheapen the memory of Jewish suffering by equating
principled opposition to Israel's illegal and immoral policies with
anti-Semitism.
6. Scottish ISM-activist Forcefully Deported From Israel After 7 Weeks
in Prison
January 15th, 2006
At 3:00 in the morning to Friday, ISM-activist Andrew Macdonald was
forcefully deported from Israel, 7 weeks after being abducted from
Palestine by the Israeli Border Police. Still refusing to comply with
the State of Israel's policy of deporting Human Rights Workers from
Palestine, he was carried on to the plane and accompanied by two Police
Officers on the plane from Tel Aviv to London.
Before his arrest, Andrew worked in Tel Rumeida, Hebron, where ISM and
the Tel Rumeida Project provides an international presence to support
the daily Palestinian non-violent struggle against attacks from
Hebron's violent settlers. Before and after his arrest, the IDF and
the Police in the area have repeatedly been trying to get as many Human
Rights Workers (HRW's) as possible out of Tel Rumeida, by arresting
them on false accusations, trying to "negotiate" with Israel's
Ministry of Interior in order to get them deported, confiscating their
cameras and deleting video evidence of settler and military criminal
acts, issuing false Closed Military Zone Orders, and on two occasions
trying to enter their apartment without a warrant.
There is evident fear from the Israeli authorities that people around
the world will find out about their inability and unwillingness to
protect the Palestinian population of Tel Rumeida. Palestinians in Tel
Rumeida face daily acts of violence such as stone throwing, physical
abuse, spitting and insulting from the violent settlers. Out of 120
documented settler attacks in the last few months, no measures
whatsoever has been taken by the Kiryat Arba Police force, not a single
arrest has been made, even when video evidence of the attacks has been
handed over to the police by HRW's in the area. Settlers are granted
virtual unaccountability for their violent acts in this neighbourhood.
Andrew has been imprisoned for 7 weeks, one week of which in isolation,
after refusing initial deportation. He has been held in the detention
centres of Ramla and Tzohar. Throughout his imprisonment he has
received various threats from his prison commander. Threats have varied
from transferring him to a mental institution, drugging him, and to
"play games with him". He has also been subject to light torture;
whilst in isolation he was deprived of his sleep when guards refused to
turn off the lights at night. Furthermore, prison guards have
repeatedly interfered with his visiting hours, sometimes cutting them
short ahead of time, sometimes themselves sitting and wanting to take
part in the conversations between Andrew and his visitors.
For more information and to get in touch with Andrew:
ISM Media Office +972 2 297 1824 http://www.palsolidarity.org
Tel Rumeida Project +972 54 557 3154 http://www.telrumeidaproject.org
For more information:
http://www.palsolidarity.org
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1.The Fruits of Non-Violence; Building of the Illegal Settlement
Metityahu Mizrah is Frozen
2.The Price of Non Violence
3.By Any Means Necessary; IOF Suppress Non-Violent Protest in Bil'in
4.Hebron Disengagement And Violence Begins; Settlers Attempt to Occupy
Palestinian Home
5.IOF Soldier: "You are disgusting Arabs and you should be beaten
like animals and stay in jail."
6.Mohammed Mansour Refuses the Demands of the Occupation; Court Case
Postponed Once Again
7.Three Checkpoints, One Day
8.Flap over young Jews' visits to Holy Land
1. The Fruits of Non-Violence; Building of the Illegal Settlement
Metityahu Mizrah is Frozen
January 13th, 2006
Following today's hearing in the Supreme Court (HCJ 143/06) Judge
Ayala Prokachya issued a new temporary injunction forbidding all
building whatsoever in the Matityahu East compound in the settlement
Modi'in Illit. The judge further ordered "to examine all permits
already issued and to determine their position regarding their legality
by 20 January."
The appeal was made by Attorney Michael Sfard on behalf of Peace Now.
Matityahu East is built on land stolen by the State of Israel from the
West Bank village of Bil'in, a theft facilitated by the apartheid
wall that is currently under construction.
Right next to Metityahu East, on their own land and with the permission
of the Village Counsel, the residents of Bil'in set up an outpost of
their own, dubbed "The Center For Joint Struggle", which is subject
to the same treatment: all further building is prohibited until the
Israeli Supreme Court decides whether to demolish it or not.
Today at 11:00 am, the DCO, the IDF, Police and Border Police raided
the Palestinian outpost and confiscated one level tool, a sack of
cement and a map of the West Bank, in order to prevent further
construction. However, the bulldozers, cement sacks, and tools on the
construction site of Matityahu East have not been confiscated, which
illustrates the difference in treatment for Palestinians and settlers
in the face of Israeli "justice".
This last Monday, in violation of the Supreme Court order, construction
continued in Matityahu East, until Human Rights Workers and
Palestinians helped to enforce the building halt by blocking the path
of the construction vehicles.
For further information:
Michael Sfard (Attorney) - 054 471 39 30
Dror Etkes (Settlement Watch, Peace Now) - 054 489 93 51, 02 566 06 48
2. The Price of Non Violence
January 10th, 2006
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
The Israeli Military has been distributing leaflets in Bil'in
threatening the residents not to demonstrate against the annexation
barrier. When despite these threats the villagers continue with their
non-violent protests the military raids the village during the night
taking villagers from their homes. Seventeen villagers who have been
taken this way are being held in Israeli detention.
Last night, another two were taken. 32 year-old 'Issam Ibrahim 'Ali
Matar, father of a 3-day old baby, and 28 year-old Hosam Mohammad
Hassan Hammad, were abducted by the Israeli Occupation Forces last
night in Bil'in, a small village on the West Bank. No information has
yet been given as to what they are accused of, or where they are being
held at the moment.
At 2 o'clock in the morning, 10 military jeeps entered the village,
looking for the two men. With their lights turned off they surrounded
the house of Hosam, and banged on his door with their weapons. One
Palestinian man who was watching this asked the soldiers to calm down
to not scare the children, but his request was ignored. Instead the
soldier threatened to shoot him if he did not go home. They took Hosam
and his two brothers outside, checked their ID's, and then released
the two brothers.
The soldiers then forced the families of five other houses to go
outside. They intimidated and harassed the people and checked
everyone's ID. After a while, the soldiers took away 'Issam, and at
three o'clock in the morning they finally left the village.
Leaflets, which were left in the village by the military during the
night of January called on people not to demonstrate and warn
residents: "Don't follow the inciters, Security forces won't let
anyone hurt the wall, Don't do things that will hurt your daily
routine"
Meanwhile, fifteen nonviolent activists from the village of Bil'in
are currently in jail in an attempt from the Israeli authorities to
deter the villagers from protesting against the theft of more than half
of their land by the wall.
For more information:
Abdullah (Bil'in): 054 725 82 10
ISM Media Office: 02 297 18 24
3.By Any Means Necessary; IOF Suppress Non-Violent Protest in Bil'in
see photos at
http://www.palsolidarity.org/main/2006/01/14/by-any-means-necessary-iof-suppress-
non-violent-protest-in-bil'in/
January 14th, 2006
The weekly non-violent protests against the Israelis Apartheid wall
continued yesterday, when Palestinians from the village of Bil'in
displayed their resistence to the ongoing theft of their village's
land. Accompanied by international and Israeli activists, the crowd of
approximately 100 people marched to the construction site where the
Apartheid Wall is gradually cutting off the village from much of its
land. At least 50 IOF and Israeli Border Police were on hand to prevent
the demonstrators from crossing the barrier and reching the recently
established "Centre for Joint Struggle" adjacent to the illegal
settlement outpost of Metityahu Mizrah.
Early into the demonstration, the IOF began shooting tear gas canisters
from their rifles directly at the Palestinian, Israeli and
International activists, hitting one international in the leg. Later
on, and without any provocation, the soldiers and Israeli Border Police
attacked the crowd and detained one Palestinian man with an umbrella in
his hand. The soldiers then used the Palestinian man as a bargaining
chip, saying that he would be released if the demonstration ended. A
Palestinian detainee can be kept in custody for up to six months
without charges, so this vulgar display of arbitrary force from the IOF
soldiers eventually caused the demonstration to recede.
Approximately half of Bil'in's lands are being isolated from the
village by the Wall. The Israeli government argues that the route of
the wall in Bil'in was determined purely for security reasons.
However, a brief visit to the village shows this to be false.
The olive groves were in a cloud of teargas, and soldiers fired
rubber-coated metal bullets at will while the demonstrators started to
walk back towards the village. It seems that when faced with
non-violent protest, the IOF has no interest in any response other than
indiscrimminate violence.
4. Hebron Disengagement And Violence Begins; Settlers Attempt to Occupy
Palestinian Home
January 13th, 2006
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
A mob of 30 female settler teenagers rampaged through Tel Rumeida on
Thursday, January 12. Ten of them wore black ski masks to hide their
identities, and attacked everyone they encountered, including IDF
soldiers and Israeli police, with spit, paint bombs and insults, and
surrounded an HRW, violently stealing the battery of his camera.
Six male settlers have begun attempts to illegally occupy an empty
Palestinian home located on the path near a Palestinian girls school.
Settlers entered the home on Tuesday, the 10th of January, cleaned out
two rooms and broke a hole in a wall to access other rooms. Police were
called and made the settlers leave but they have returned periodically
to continue their preparations to occupy the house. Palestinian girls
are already routinely stoned and harassed on their way to the school
located near this home. But the attacks would only increase if they had
to pass directly in front of a settler-occupied home.
HRWs who live in Tel Rumeida witnessed the arrival of approximately 60
settlers on Wednesday, the 11th of January. They are the first to
respond to a call by Hebron's settlers for Israelis "to flock to
Hebron" to resist the planned disengagement of the illegally occupied
Palestinian wholesale market in Hebron's Old City. Settlers arrived
with belongings meant for a long stay in response to the settler call
sent out by email to "bring sleeping bags, warm clothing for an
extended stay and a strong spirit."
Brian, a Human Rights Worker (HRW) living in Tel Rumeida, said "It is
a very dangerous situation. Many of the settlers who live here are
members of Kahane, an organization which Israel has declared racist and
illegal. We see their violent hatred on a daily basis. We call on the
international and Israeli community to pressure the police and IDF to
enforce the law against violent settlers immediately; stop them, arrest
them and prosecute them."
Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz stated that the removal of the
settlers from the wholesale market will be completed by the 15th of
February. Settlers were ordered to leave the Palestinian-owned shops by
January 15, or face forcible eviction. Settlers have already clashed
violently with police and the IDF when eviction orders were issued on
January 3rd, injuring 4 police officers, including a policeman who was
hurt by a liquid that burned his eyes. Violent resistance from the
settlers between these dates is expected and could be worse than the
Gaza pullout due to Hebron's religious significance to settlers. This
is a threat to both Palestinian residents and IDF soldiers in the area.
Press are invited to join human rights workers in Tel Rumeida to
witness the settler violence first hand during this period.
For more information:
David, International Solidarity Movement - 054 651 7234
Luna, Tel Rumeida Project - 054 557 3154 http://www.telrumeidaproject.org
5. IOF Soldier: "You are disgusting Arabs and you should be beaten
like animals and stay in jail."
January 12th, 2006
By Raad
After a successful non violent demonstration against the illegal
Israeli apartheid wall in the West Bank village of Bil'in, we came
back to the ISM apartment to hold our regular evaluation meeting to
discuss what had succeeded in the demonstration and what we could
improve. During the meeting we received updates regarding a small
village called Bardala in the Jenin region which is closed by a
checkpoint controlled by the IOF.
The people of Bardala and some local organizations were holding a
nonviolent demonstration against the checkpoint which not only prevents
freedom of movement for the people, but also their ability to trade in
farm products. We decided that some ISM activists would go there and
stand in solidarity with the Bardalla farmers in their struggle against
the illegal checkpoint. A Palestinian was needed to go with the
international activists so I offered to accompany them and we traveled
back to Ramallah to take a taxi to go to Jenin. After changing and
packing our bags, we left Ramallah at noon in a taxi and started our
journey in my beautiful Palestine. We traveled for more than two hours
and arrived in a small village called Al Zababda close to the place of
the demonstration. We stayed at the Na'eem Khader Center where we
were given a gracious welcome. We hung out for a bit and I told my
friends that we should go to sleep early because we have to be ready at
9 AM to start travel towards the demonstration at Bardala.
In the morning we took a car prepared by PARC, Palestinian Agricultural
relief committees, the organization who asked us to come to the
demonstration.
On the way we realized that we had to pass the Tayaseer checkpoint.
Unfortunately, when the driver saw one of the soldiers at the
checkpoint he said this soldier is the worst of all of them. When I saw
how the soldier was treating the people in front of us I realized he
was right.
When it was our turn in line the solider collected our IDs and the
passports from us and suddenly he asked us to get out of the car and
stand in one row. He was speaking in Hebrew, I told him "we don't
understand you, what are you saying ?" and then he started screaming
at me saying "Shut up, at this checkpoint we only speak Hebrew!"
Suddenly we realized there was a soldier speaking in English at the
checkpoint, it was an American guy who was serving in the Israeli
military and after approximately 40 minutes, the really aggressive
solider called the American soldier over to give the international
volunteers their passports. They decided to hold me and my friend until
they got an answer from the secret service and they told us to stand
with our backs to the checkpoint and that we could not use our phones.
They also asked the driver to drive the international volunteers away
from the checkpoint. The aggressive soldier kept screaming at us saying
"You are disgusting Arabs and you should be beaten like animals and
stay in jail, you shouldn't be going around with pretty American and
European girls."
Our friends tried to call us but he wouldn't let me answer the phone
and told me to turn it off. Instead I made the phone silent and kept in
touch with the rest of the group, who were approximately 100 meters
away, via text messages.
The aggressive soldier told me I was a Hizballah terrorist and that he
would break my bones. I told him "ok" and he responded by saying
"Shut up!"
After another 40 minutes the officer received and order from his
command to take our phone numbers so we gave them to him and I found an
opportunity to talk because he told us to keep our phones on because
the Shabak might call us to check. After just three minutes I got a
phone call from a friend who was working with ISM asking if we passed
the checkpoint or were we still detained. When I started talking to him
the aggressive soldier started screaming at me to shut off my phone but
I told him the Shabak called me back and I'm talking to them. I
don't know why, but the soldier believed me. After just 15 minutes
they received and order to release us but the officer refused and sent
back a message saying he needs the commander of the area to tell me to
release them.
The officer received the order to release us three times and he was
just looking for a reason to keep us and beat us. When they received
the order for the first time, an officer of the checkpoint told the
aggressive soldier "go eat so you can be strong and ready to beat
them."
But after another 15 minutes two international girls who came with us
decided to walk toward the checkpoint to see why the soldiers were
still detaining us. Suddenly the crazy soldier who has no regard for
the language problem just ran toward the roadblock and hid himself
behind it so both of the girls could not see him. He started screaming
in Hebrew, the girls could neither hear him nor understand him, so he
cocked his gun and pointed it at them and when I saw that I got kind of
crazy because I was afraid he was going to shoot them. His commander
was screaming at him asking him not to shoot and suddenly the American
soldier appeared again and screamed "stop! stop!" and told the
girls to walk away from the checkpoint. The crazy soldier put his gun
down and walked away and the American soldier just followed the two
girls to see what was going on and why they wanted to talk to him. They
spoke to him and asked when we would be released and if there was some
kind of problem.
Then the crazy soldier came back to the checkpoint and his commander
asked him to clean his gun and said "it is a very terrible thing for
this to happen at my checkpoint, and before you talk to me clean your
gun." After that he asked him why he got crazy and tired to shoot the
internationals because they are not dangerous like the Palestinians.
The soldier answered saying "you know the orders that we have" (if
someone comes toward the checkpoint and you ask them in Hebrew to stop
and they continue, you should shoot them with no regards as to whether
the person in front of you doesn't know Hebrew or even is deaf or
crazy, just shoot!). After that the commander called the American
soldier and gave him our IDs and told him to tell the internationals
that it is because the Israelis respect them that they will release us.
Israel's policies of apartheid and racism will never succeed or help
in solving the conflict, and they have nothing to do with
'security.' They will just increase the hate and the bloody
situation we are in will continue. This is against the interests of us
all, and international law and the Geneva conventions are clear; UN
Resolution 242, 338 call for Israel to end the occupation of Palestine
and 194 asks Israel to solve the refugee problem. The Geneva convention
and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man say that people
under occupation have the right to resist, and that occupying forces
should respect the rights of civilians.
The international community should guarantee human rights for all, yet
they have failed the Palestinian people miserably. The individual
activists who are coming from all over the world to support us in our
non-violent struggle against the illegal Israeli occupation show real
support for human rights. We see these activists risking their lives
along with us, and they come because they believe that we all have the
same dreams, even if we live in what's called the Third World.
I call on people from all over the world to just visit Palestine,
Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Nablus, Ramallah, Hebron all of these places and
just to observe the situation here. I wish you all everywhere a happy
new year full of love and peace and hope to see you in Palestine.
6. Mohammed Mansour Refuses the Demands of the Occupation; Court Case
Postponed Once Again
January 10th, 2006
Mohammad Mansour, a non violent organizer against the illegal Apartheid
Wall from Biddu, who works with the International Solidarity Movement,
had his trial today at 8:30 in the "Peace Court" in Jerusalem. He
was initially arrested in June 2004 at a non-violent demonstration
against the illegal apartheid wall in Al Ram. A father of five, he was
falsely charged with assaulting a police officer, throwing stones and
presiding illegally in an "Israeli area."
The prosecution had offered earlier to close the case if Mohammed would
agree to stop participating in demonstrations for the next two years
and pay a 3,500 shekel fine. "I would rather go to jail than pay one
shekel to the Occupation. It is not I, but those that build the wall
that are the criminals" said Mohammed.
Judge Alexander declared his intention to "close the case" today
and offered to let Mohammad go without conditions if he paid the sum of
his bail. Mohammad reiterated his refusal to the judge. Mohammad's
stance of not giving any legitimacy to the Occupation, in the face of a
possible prison sentence, is setting an example for all non-violent
resisters in Palestine.
During the hearing, the judge did not look once straight into
Mohammad's eyes and seemed uncomfortable in his presence. He again
set a date, February 16, for another "final hearing" and asked
Mohammad's lawyers and the prosecution to try to reach an agreement
in the meanwhile.
The International Solidarity Movement once again condemns the Israeli
legal system's defence of war crimes committed by Israeli soldiers
and settlers and its criminalization of non violent protest against the
Occupation and the Apartheid wall.
7. Three Checkpoints, One Day
see photos at
http://www.palsolidarity.org/main/2006/01/10/three-checkpoints-one-day/
January 10th, 2006
By Suneela
It is overwhelming to be awakened to the reality of a military
occupation all of a sudden.
Qalandia terminal, is supposed to be the clean and efficient face of
the occupation, like an airport terminal with electronically operated
metal gates with stop and go signals and X-ray machines, or ultramodern
sanitized humiliation.
As soon as I got there, I could see dozens of people crammed up against
the metal gates, pushing, yelling, begging the teenage brat Israeli
soldiers to let them through.
The only way I was able to get through was by flashing my American
passport all over the place and arguing with the soldiers myself to let
me through. It was one of the most personally and collectively
humiliating experiences I have been through, and confirmed that what is
going on here is not just similar to apartheid, but in fact is
apartheid. I know it's massaging my guilt about my own personal
privilege, but it really made me feel complicit in the system to be let
through while dozens of desperate people who had been waiting much
longer than me were pushed back forcibly, just because of the passport
I have, which effectively makes me "white". I know that rationally
speaking, I was there alone and could not have done anything to show my
solidarity effectively even if I had stayed back and waited, and that
in this case I was not an ISM activist but simply an individual
"tourist", but I still felt like a participant in the apartheid
system, and I was sweating all over and weak by the time I got out.
Especially after seeing one Palestinian man almost get shot in front of
my eyes. This poor man had apparently lost it and was trying to climb
above the metal gates and yell at the soldiers, and this oversized high
school jock got pissed off (as he is properly trained to do) and had
his gun pointed and loaded, ready to fire. On the other side (my side)
the other people around this man were frantically trying to pull him
down before the soldier boy lost his patience and pulled the trigger.
Thankfully, that did not happen, and I was happy that as the man was
pulled down by the people around him, he managed to twist up a sign
above the gates that said something like "One by one. Please be
patient."
That wasn't the end of it. The taxi I had to take from the checkpoint
to the Damascus Gate in Jerusalem was stopped by soldiers at
another("normal") checkpoint, and another Incredible Hulk got on
the bus to "inspect" everyone's IDs. By bad luck, my suitcase was
the one that didn't fit in the back, so I had it on me and had to
open it all up.
And all this was after having gone through two other checkpoints in the
same day, the first of which was in the Jenin region, where we were
refused to be let through and the two Palestinian ISMers with us made
to stand for an hour and a half apart from us. When the two girls in
our group tried to go to talk to the soldiers to say what is going on,
why are you holding them if their security has been cleared, one
soldier who communicated only by yelling pointed his gun at them. I
don't know if this was all an act to make himself feel better, as if
it makes him feel more well endowed to aim it, or whether he actually
wanted to shoot. All Palestinians going through checkpoints have to be
"cleared" to make sure they aren't "wanted" for heinous
crimes such as resisting illegal military occupation. I have seen guys
with big guns plenty of times, but to see one pointed and loaded in
front of me several times in a day is something else. They had this
whole good cop bad cop routine going on, with this obviously American
guy who identified himself as a "volunteer" in the army being the
good cop and speaking in English, and the bad cop being the above
soldier who understood perfectly well what we were saying but wanted to
scare us by only barking in Hebrew. And by the way, before it was our
turn for special treatment, we had to watch these two guys in a
furniture truck be made to unload every piece of furniture and tear
open all the wrapping just to "check". This is ridiculous. I
don't understand any justification for "security" for this. If
someone wants to sneak a bomb past a checkpoint, would they really hide
it in a piece of
furniture, in 2006? Hello? The only object of this was humiliation,
racist humiliation that is state sanctioned.
To get back to Ramallah as well we had to go through the Nablus region
and through the Huwarra checkpoint, which is another "terminal"
style cattle cage, notorious because it is close to an Israeli military
base as well as settlements (which always makes it harder for
Palestinians to move). This was the second checkpoint of the day,
before Qalandia but after Tayaseer (the above). It was raining and of
course me and my fellow internationals cut the line with our wonderful
blue passports, but we waited right at the other side in solidarity
with our Palestinian friends, even though several different soldiers
yelled at us to move here and move there, stand here and stand there,
why are you standing here, go away, etc etc, and one soldier with a
vaguely American accent came up to us and started asking us why we are
in this region, and what "tourism" is there to do here. He seemed
to be talking as if there are no people in this area, only some kind of
subhuman species that happen to be called Palestinians or "Arabs".
I noticed from here and the Bil'in demo that the "minorities"
within the military, women and Israeli Palestinians who volunteer
(mostly Druze) are often way meaner than the Jewish men. The women seem
to need to prove they're more manly than the men, so often they'll
enjoy treating Palestinian men worse, and the Druze need to prove
they're just as loyal to Israel as Jews, so they will treat their
Arab brothers and sisters like shit as well.
I'm sorry if this post has been a little chronologically scattered,
but it's been really hard for me to write this out. My mind keeps
drifting somewhere else because it doesn't want to relive this again,
but I know I need to write it so that you can read it. I'll try to
write more later when I can deal with all this stuff better.
Also, so that you get a better visual sense of what I had to go through
in terms of the cantonization of the West Bank by checkpoints and the
wall, here is a link to a really useful map:
electronicintifada.net /bytopic/maps/372.shtml
.
8. Flap over young Jews' visits to Holy Land
January 12th, 2006
By Matt Bradley
Originally published in The Christian Science Monitor
After free trips to Israel, some activists stay on in the Middle East -
to work for the Palestinian cause.
About 10,000 young Jews from 29 countries will enjoy a generous gift
this winter: a vacation to Israel - with the Israeli government and
Jewish philanthropies picking up the tab for transportation, food, and
lodging.
Those who fund the trips say the opportunity to experience Israel is
the birthright of every Jew. But to donors' chagrin, handfuls of
young activists have used the trips in recent years to volunteer for
pro-Palestinian organizations in the West Bank - some of which directly
oppose the Israeli government and Zionist ideology.
The small movement has some in the Jewish community wondering whether
the Taglit-birthright Israel program is being hijacked. But as the
Holocaust shifts from memory to history, it also points to efforts of
young diasporal Jews to define their own ideologies, symbols, and
institutions within a religious tradition that has long been at the
forefront of social change.
"They have the right to explore" all sides of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, but not using the money given "to
explore certain values," says Allyson Taylor, with the American
Jewish Congress's Western Region. "You have the right to buy a
movie ticket, but do you sneak into another theater to see a different
movie?"
While some American Jews say the issue is much ado about nothing,
others see a premeditated attempt to defraud the Israeli government and
Zionist advocacy groups. Some young Jewish leftists, meanwhile, say
volunteering in the occupied territories is in keeping with the goals
of Taglit-birthright Israel: It is an essential part of their Israel
experience.
"For me, being a Jewish person means supporting social justice. For
me, being Jewish doesn't mean supporting Israel," says Jessica, who
traveled to Israel with Shorashim, a Birthright travel organizer,
during the summer of 2004. "The lessons of the Holocaust and the
lessons of Jewish history mean we need to stand up for people's
rights. Otherwise, who's going to stand up for us?" Jessica asked
that her last name not be used so as not to jeopardize her work on
behalf of Palestinians.
Since Taglit-birthright Israel's inception in 1999, it has provided
10-day trips for some 88,000 young people - any Jew aged 18 to 26 who
has never been to Israel with a guided group. The goal, say organizers,
is to strengthen the commitment of a new generation of Jews to the
world's only Jewish state. As for the number who volunteer for
pro-Palestinian activist organizations while abroad, some say only half
a dozen while others cite growing ranks of activists trained to exploit
the program's generosity.
Taglit-birthright Israel declined to comment for this article.
Among pro-Palestinian organizations aided by non-Israeli Jewish
activists - including an unknown number of former Taglit-birthright
volunteers - is the International Solidarity Movement (ISM). The
organization, according to its website, is "committed to resisting
the Israeli occupation of Palestinian land using nonviolent,
direct-action methods and principles." The Israeli government,
though, accuses it of supporting terrorism. Since the group's
founding in 2001, several activists have been killed or injured while
participating in ISM protests and nonviolent resistance efforts.
"If you go to an organization like ISM, which clearly advocates
suicide bombers and things like that, I would say it's not a very
honest way of using this program," says Meir Shlomo, Israel's
consul general to New England.
ISM advocates an end to Israel's occupation of Palestinian
territories, says cofounder Huwaida Arraf. But members deny that ISM
endorses violence or supports political terror. Beyond that, says Ms.
Arraf, ISM does not specifically encourage its Jewish volunteers, which
she estimates make up about 25 percent of the group's staff, to
travel for free via Taglit-birthright.
"Birthright Israel does nothing to expose these students to the
occupation that the Palestinians are living through," says Arraf.
"To ... take the initiative to see more than what the Birthright
organizers want them to see - we guarantee their lives will be
changed."
Last summer, this reaction to the Taglit-birthright program became more
institutionalized. Birthright Unplugged, a group that gives guided
tours of the West Bank, offers "an educational project that primarily
seeks to expose young Jewish people to the realities of Palestinian
life under occupation," its website states. By design, the six-day
Unplugged tours coincide with Taglit-birthright Israel's programs.
Geographically, chronologically, and ideologically, Birthright
Unplugged picks up where Taglit-birthright leaves off.
Last year Taglit-birthright Israel filed a "cease and desist"
complaint for trademark infringement against Birthright Unplugged and
charged it with "unfair competition." A lawsuit is pending.
For the many Taglit-birthright participants who don't volunteer in
the West Bank, their peers' actions can elicit feelings of betrayal.
Catherine Heffernan, a Birthright participant who attended Shorashim
with Jessica in 2004, felt outraged. "Whatever respect I ever had for
you and your beliefs is gone," she fired off in an e-mail last summer
after learning how Jessica had spent her remaining time in Israel.
But even Ms. Heffernan, who considers herself a "peaceful Zionist,"
says Judaism is what has informed Jessica's misguided struggle for
social justice. "Jessica ... [has] a desire to see justice done in
the region, and that is something [she has] learned through [her]
Judaism," says Heffernan. "It seems that it is very politically
savvy to be anti-Israel, and Israel has a lot of problems. I don't
think that should mean joining an organization that hurts Israel."
For a boycott to work- it needs to be all-encompassing.
The software that runs this site is Israeli. Grandma's heart medication? Probably Israeli. The only effective medication for Multiple Sclerosis? Also Israeli.
The most advanced diagnositic techniques for gastro-intestinal disorders and heart disease- Israeli. Solar energy and drip irrigation and most forms of sustanable agriculture are Israeli innovations. Your Internet firewall and Instant messaging programs are also Israeli.
If you are going to have a boycott, you have to do it right. You are going to have to give up a lot of tech, and a lot of green. But hey, its worth it.
The software that runs this site is Israeli. Grandma's heart medication? Probably Israeli. The only effective medication for Multiple Sclerosis? Also Israeli.
The most advanced diagnositic techniques for gastro-intestinal disorders and heart disease- Israeli. Solar energy and drip irrigation and most forms of sustanable agriculture are Israeli innovations. Your Internet firewall and Instant messaging programs are also Israeli.
If you are going to have a boycott, you have to do it right. You are going to have to give up a lot of tech, and a lot of green. But hey, its worth it.
Typical empty boasting about Israeli achievements. Multiple sclerosis medications run the gamut from antivert to zoloft. Copaxone, made in Israel, is just one of them and may not even be available in the US.
Drip irrigation? Please. That technology has been around forever and modern versions of it were developed in the UK and the US.
Firewalls - try Digital Equipment Corp and Bell Labs as forerunners.
And treatment for heart ailments - one word - Sharon. you can keep it.
The fact of the matter is that Israel doesn't produce anything that can't be gotten elsewhere just as good or better, except perhaps for shameless CHUTZPAH. In that department, Israelis are tops.
Drip irrigation? Please. That technology has been around forever and modern versions of it were developed in the UK and the US.
Firewalls - try Digital Equipment Corp and Bell Labs as forerunners.
And treatment for heart ailments - one word - Sharon. you can keep it.
The fact of the matter is that Israel doesn't produce anything that can't be gotten elsewhere just as good or better, except perhaps for shameless CHUTZPAH. In that department, Israelis are tops.
The cell phone was developed in Israel by Israelis working in the Israeli branch of Motorola, which has its largest development center in Israel.
Most of the Windows NT and XP operating systems were developed by Microsoft-Israel.
The Pentium MMX Chip technology was designed in Israel at Intel.
Both the Pentium-4 microprocessor and the Centrino processor were entirely designed, developed and produced in Israel.
The Pentium microprocessor in your computer was most likely made in Israel.
Voice mail technology was developed in Israel.
Both Microsoft and Cisco built their only R&D facilities outside the US in Israel.
The technology for the AOL Instant Messenger ICQ was developed in 1996 by four young Israelis.
According to industry officials, Israel designed the airline industry's most impenetrable flight security. US officials now look (finally) to Israel for advice on how to handle airborne security threats.
Israel produces more scientific papers per capita than any other nation by a large margin - 109 per 10,000 people -- as well as one of the highest per capita rates of patents filed.
In proportion to its population, Israel has the largest number of startup companies in the world. In absolute terms, Israel has the largest number of startup companies than any other country in the world, except the U.S. (3,500 companies mostly in hi-tech).
With more than 3,000 high-tech companies and startups, Israel has the highest concentration of hi-tech companies in the world -- apart from the Silicon Valley, U. S.
On a per capita basis, Israel has the largest number of biotech startups.
And there is the fair trade vegan chocolate......
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