Recent
talks between the Israelis and the Palestinians point to
a seemingly dysfunctional and hopelessly intractable process.
The
construction of Israeli settlements in the West Bank has
not abated, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected
calls by defense minister Ehud Barak to share Jerusalem with the Palestinians.
Meanwhile,
recent news reports demonstrate that the occupation is both
unsustainable and incompatible with democratic principles.
For example, Israeli police are arresting Palestinian children
as young as five for stone throwing. This, as Al Jazeera
and The
Guardian just started to release over 1,600 documents
on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. And recent Wikileaks
cables revealed that Israeli officials took bribes to allow
U.S. goods into Gaza, requiring American companies to pay up to 75 times more than
the usual cost. Wikileaks also learned that Israel
has intended to keep Gaza near collapse,
just as the Israeli government plans to wage a full-scale
war on the territory and Lebanon.
This
year, the Palestinians hope to build upon the wave of nations
recognizing a Palestinian state based on 1967 borders. There
is a strong and ever-growing peace movement that is joined
from within Israeli society and the international community.
Ultimately, the leaders of this movement want to bring about
positive change in the Mideast, and they hope to succeed where the politicians and diplomats
have fallen short. And in many ways, they are a nonviolent
movement on the lines of the U.S.
civil rights and South African anti-apartheid movements.
They seek dignity and a respect for human rights for both
sides of the conflict, and seek to liberate Israelis and
Palestinians from a system that has hopelessly oppressed
each.
Two
human rights leaders from two different conflicts in different
parts of the world found themselves participating in the
recent flotillas to break the blockade of Gaza: Mairead
Corrigan Maguire, a Nobel Peace Prize winner who lost family
members to sectarian violence and fought for nonviolent
reconciliation in Northern Ireland, and Yonatan Shapira,
a former elite Israeli pilot who decided he could no longer
participate in the occupation of the Palestinian people.
This unlikely pair of shipmates had a conversation recently,
which was hosted and facilitated by Jewish Fast For Gaza, a
group founded by Rabbis Brant Rosen and Brian Walt.
Maguire
was transformed by a world of violence in Northern
Ireland when her niece and two nephews
were killed - all little children - and her sister injured
on a Belfast street
in 1976. “When that happened, myself and two others…we came
out for peace, our message was that violence isn’t going
to solve our problems, and there’s got to be another way
to use nonviolence,” said Maguire.
At
that point she cofounded the Community of the Peace People
in 1976, and organized weekly marches and demonstrations
that attracted over half a million people from across Northern
Ireland, Ireland and the UK. “I think we recognized that we had a deep
ethnic conflict, but it wasn’t going to be solved through
militarism and paramilitarism, and we had to begin to sit
down with each other and dialogue and to find a way through
our problems.” Along with a colleague, Maguire received
the 1977 Nobel Peace Prize for their peace efforts, and
she would later broaden her work from Northern Ireland to other places.
Ten
years ago, Maguire went with a delegation to Israel. She was invited by a group of rabbis who
were fighting for human rights in the territories and against
the demolition of Palestinian homes. Relating to her own
experiences back at home, she was moved by the suffering
on both sides, and inspired to see Israelis and Palestinians
finding a way to working together and seek justice.
More
recently, Maguire has decided to focus her efforts on Gaza, and has sailed on three humanitarian boats to the territory.
Two of the boats were intercepted by the Israeli Navy, and
one of them was a part of the Freedom Flotilla that was
attacked by Israelis, claiming nine lives on the MV Mavi
Mamara. “1.5 million people are living in a prison, cut
off from the world, literally,” she said of the conditions
in Gaza, of the
tremendous suffering she witnessed. “The Palestinian people
are really living in a prison and the Israelis are holding
all the keys. This is not happening in any other part of
the world, and yet we see Israel and the international
community remaining silent on it.”
With
its ports closed for 40 years, and bombed-out infrastructure,
the Gazan population, half of which is under the age of
18, is the victim of a collective punishment, according
to Maguire. Her words were echoed by Judge Richard Goldstone,
the South African jurist who issued a UN report on Israeli
human rights violations during Operation Cast Lead, the
military campaign in Gaza that claimed 1,400 Palestinian lives. According
to the Goldstone report, “houses, factories, wells, schools,
hospitals, police stations and other public buildings were
destroyed.” Around 240 of the Gazan deaths were police officers.
And the Palestinian Legislative Council and a prison were
bombed as well. The report called on Israel to do an independent investigation into
Operation Cast Lead, and punish those elements of the IDF
who were responsible.
The
severity of the Gaza blockade - imposed by Israel following the Hamas victory and takeover
- was brought home for Maguire when she appeared in court
following her arrest. “When I was at the Supreme Court for
the hearing, there was a case up just before me, and the
case was a mother and father who had been visiting on the
West Bank when the border was closed to Gaza
and their young child was in Gaza.
They were appearing at the court to ask if after four years
they would be allowed to travel from the West Bank to Gaza
to see their little boy who hadn’t seen them since the border
had closed.”
And
while Maguire condemns what she views as violation of international
law against the Palestinians, the pacifist condemns all
violence, including Palestinian acts of violence on Israeli
cities. And yet, the Nobel laureate was hopeful at what
she saw in the people in Gaza.
“There
is a passion among the people of Gaza
for peace. They just want to have peace because they suffered
so much. So we were hopeful because it reminded me of Northern Ireland when the Peace People started.”
When Israel
began bombing Gaza in Operation Cast
Lead, however, there was a setback in the hopes of peace
between Fattah and Hamas, and hopes the Palestinians would
have a united voice that could reach out and dialogue with
Israel.
Meanwhile,
Yonatan Shapira’s introduction to the Mideast
conflict came as a member of the Israeli Air Force, an elite
Blackhawk helicopter pilot who had flown hundreds of missions
over the occupied territories. Upon first glance, this seasoned,
eleven-year veteran would appear to be the least likely
candidate for a peace activist. But then again, no one knows
how he or will she will react after becoming a firsthand
witness to suffering and the effects of violence, on the
Israeli side in Shapira’s case. “During this time I volunteered
with victims of suicide attacks, mostly new immigrants,
people who are poor and with less family support in the
country. And I got to know Israeli suffering through my
military service as a rescue pilot bringing children and
soldiers and people to hospital after they were injured
and killed, and as a volunteer meeting with the children
and families of survivors, and trying to bring them back
to society to try to overcome their trauma,” Shapira said.
Then
there was a targeted bomb assassination attempt on Hamas
leaders that left fourteen civilians dead in Gaza.
“And
at some point along this process, I started to realize I
am, there is a cycle of violence and I am just a part of
this cycle, even if I am not killing anyone directly myself,
I am part of a system that is causing huge suffering for
people,” he added. Speaking of the Palestinians, he said
“For many years I didn’t know their story, their narrative,
the way I’ve been brought here up in Israeli society, to
just know half side of the history. The first time I knew
the word Nakba, the disaster for the Palestinians of what
happened in ‘48 was when I was 30-something. And when you
realize that you were blind to such a huge part of the history
and the present, and there is a circle of violence and you
are part of it, it’s a very strong emotional step to overcome,
and I think at that point you can decide whether to ignore
it, suppress it and continue to fight anyone that brings
these issues up, or try to learn more and take responsibility
and try to change the situation. And that’s what happened
to me and to many of my friends.”
When
Shapira found his moment of truth and chose to deal with
the “dark side” of his existence, he decided to write a
petition of air force pilots who declared they were no longer
willing to fly missions over the territories. They would
no longer be a part of “illegal and immoral attacks” on
the Palestinians. In 2003 - on the eve of Rosh Hashanah,
the Jewish New Year - the pilots placed the declaration
on the desk of the commander of the air force. “I think
that was the beginning of a new life for me in many, many
ways,” Shapira noted.
Shapira
founded Combatants for Peace on the assertion that it is
not merely enough to say what you are not willing to be
a part of. “It’s important to reach out to the other side
you’re fighting against, and find people and work together
- Palestinians who are rejecting violence and are refusing
to be a part of this cycle of violence,” he said.
This
IDF pilot made a transition from leader among soldiers to
a solidarity leader with the Palestinians. He and other
Israelis participate in the call by nonviolent Palestinian
civil society for boycott, divestment and sanctions, or
BDS. Shapira sees this as a struggle for Palestinian liberation,
a process that will also liberate Israelis from being oppressors
of a horrible, decades-long occupation. “We don’t wait anymore
for Lieberman and Bibi and Barak and other people to bring
the solution today. We are calling on the international
community, we call on Jews…, and we call on governments
all around the world to understand the situation is disastrous,
and there is no time to wait for a peace process that is
being used just to delay and build more settlements.”
Shapira
- who is disheartened by Mairead Maguire’s arrest in Israel - noted that it was his own squadron that
dropped commandos on the Mavi Mamara. “It was a double shock
because I know the organizers of the flotilla…and to see
what the navy and the Israeli army did on the boats and
especially this whole ordeal of not showing the whole video,
just showing a few seconds of that and manipulating the
whole world media. …And the same Blackhawk helicopter that
Israel
gets for free in billions of aid from the United States, that’s the same helicopter I flew
on years back. So it was also very personal for me to decide
I need to be on the side of the people trying to symbolically
break the siege.”
And
so this veteran pilot decided to participate in a flotilla
to Gaza, alongside Israeli activists and a holocaust survivor. Shapira
said it was sad to see 8 or 10 warships approaching them
and violently attacking them, when the only weapons they
were carrying to Gaza
were harmonicas, musical instruments for the children. “I
guess that was too dangerous for the Israeli army to let
into Gaza,” he said.
Shapira,
who had once been involved in logistics for the Navy, was
arrested by the Navy. When the soldiers boarded the ship,
they shot him with a stun gun, an electrical shock close
to his heart. “My whole body convulsed. Now I also have
accusations of attacking the soldiers because my legs were
jumping form the shock in my heart, so they also accuse
me of attacking the soldiers,” he said. “It is important
to understand that if we were Palestinian fisherman, they’d
just kill us from a far distance, and maybe Turkish activists
we would be shot to death, so it is important to put this
in proportion.”
Activists
such as Shapira are touching a nerve in Israeli society
regarding the occupation, and they are a thorn in the side
of Israeli authorities. He sees hope in the Israeli resistance
movement, noting that he sees more people attending demonstrations
these days, types of people he hadn’t seen in the past.
“Maybe with this tendency of this country becoming more
and more fascist, and the laws are coming one after another,
it may be able to penetrate this thick skin that many people
have developed over here. There is a little bit of optimism
that when things become so bad and brutal, maybe it helps
people to wake up.” Shapira speaks of the ultra-right-Orthodox
coalition that currently controls the Israeli government,
and the oppressive and racist laws that have come down the
pike. Examples include a law requiring non-Jewish Israeli
citizens to proclaim allegiance to a Jewish state, a rabbinic
ruling forbidding leasing property to non-Jews, attempts
to bar Jewish women from the wailing wall, gender segregation
in public areas, determining who is not a Jew, and laws
forbidding a Jew to marry a non-Jew in Israel.
At
the same time, Shapira realizes that his movement is a minority
of a minority, albeit with an important role in helping
to wake up world Jewry. “It is important not to exaggerate
how effective we are here. We are very much hated within
the Israeli mainstream, especially when we mention things
like international pressure and BDS, it is almost like cursing
God in a synagogue or something like that.” Shapira believes
the change will come from international pressure, as was
the case with South African apartheid. “It is important
to remember that no struggle for liberation for equality
and for freedom around the world nonviolently succeeded
without the mass participation of people around the world.
Gandhi, Martin Luther King, all of these heroes would never
succeed without huge international pressure.”
Ultimately,
Israel must find security
through some other means outside of militarism, say these
two human rights fighters. “Israel
has a right to self-defense, and therefore the first thing
for defending ourselves is to stop torturing and killing
Palestinians,” said Shapira, who compares Israel to the participant in a gang rape who complains
that the victim is fighting back. “When you imprison a million
and a half people in a huge ghetto like Gaza, bombing them, what do you expect to happen?” he said. “Since
we are committed to nonviolent principles we believe more
killing of the other side will just cause you more suffering.”
“We
have to move from culturally sanctioned violence wherever
we live into building communities based on respect for each
other and nonviolence,” said Maguire. She believes the best
security the Jewish people can have is to make plans with
the Palestinians and its Arab neighbors, make friends, and
begin to build policies based on human rights and justice.
“We’ve got to move away from the idea - and really all of
us not just Israelis - this idea that militarism provides
our security. We have to move to human based and ecological
based security. That’s a huge challenge for the whole human
family, and particularly a challenge now in Israel
and Palestine to move on to a different kind of security.”
BlackCommentator.com Executive Editor, David
A. Love, JD is a journalist and human rights advocate based
in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Pennsylvania Law School. and a contributor to The Huffington
Post, theGrio,
The Progressive
Media Project, McClatchy-Tribune News Service, In These Times
and Philadelphia Independent
Media Center. He
also blogs at davidalove.com, NewsOne, Daily Kos, and Open Salon. Click here
to contact Mr. Love.
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