Interfaith Peace-Builders  
Delegation to Israel/Palestine 
July 19, 2006

Report One

Beyond the Headlines: Everyday Realities and the Struggle for Reconciliation



Interfaith Peace-Builders
July 2006
Delegation to Israel/Palestine

Report One


Beyond the Headlines: Everyday Realities and the Struggle for
Reconciliation


Despite ongoing attacks in Gaza, northern Israel, and all of Lebanon,
the Interfaith Peace-Builders delegation entered Israel without incident
on Monday morning. Since that time IFPB staff have talked with members
of the delegation on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday. They are doing
well, continuing with a full itinerary, and looking forward to
continuing with a productive experience.

Even while the headlines and the tragic events draw our attention to the
current violence, attacks, and destruction, the delegation report below
reminds us of some of the everyday realities of Israelis and
Palestinians even when the cameras aren't rolling.

Monday, July 17

Entering Israel: First Impressions of the Airport and Jerusalem

Customs turned out to be a breeze. maybe too much of a breeze. The
airport was so quiet it almost felt eerie. One of our leaders said it
usually takes at least one and a half hours in line to arrive at the
customs desk. But now the maze of ropes was empty. A few members of
our group were questioned by a stern Israeli woman. One woman, young
and blonde, was questioned by three Israeli security agents, all
increasingly intimidating. I walked up, said "Hello, how are you?" to a
silent and stoic passport agent, who, after looking at my passport for
about two minutes slammed her stamp and handed me my documents. I was
almost disappointed of the uneventfulness of it all.

We boarded a bus and headed to Jerusalem, en route to St. George's
Cathedral Guesthouse. St. George is the seat of the Anglican Diocese in
East Jerusalem, which is the Palestinian side of Jerusalem. It is a
beautiful walled complex with a cathedral, two guest houses and lovely
garden. Our accommodations are quaint and comfortable.

Please forgive the coming pun and the potty talk, but a clue as to the
double standard applied between Israeli and Palestinian areas, that no
toilets in Palestinian areas can accept toilet paper. The
infrastructure is severely neglected even though East Jerusalem is
within the municipality of Jerusalem which Israel claims. The pipes
can't handle much water as they are very old, that is, if there was even
enough water to be had-Israelis consume eight times more water than
Palestinians and accordingly, water is rationed to the Palestinians. We
are being very conscious not to abuse these resources.

We then took a tour of the Mt. of Olives and a Palestinian neighborhood
of Jerusalem called A-Tur. We also looked over Jerusalem from Mount
Scopus, the site of Hebrew University. I saw the Haram al-Sharif/Dome
of the Rock/Temple Mount for the first time and I couldn't believe I was
seeing it with my own eyes.

During the tour we learned of the segregation practiced in designing
rules for the road. Only cars with yellow license plates can drive in
Jerusalem and the rest of Israel. To get yellow plates you need to be
Israeli, or be a Palestinian who lives in Jerusalem. A Palestinian who
lives in Jerusalem is someone who holds a title to a home within the
borders of Jerusalem as of 1967. Several subsequent Israeli government
expansions of Jerusalem have enlarged the municipal boundaries of
Jerusalem, but if Palestinian homes lie in this expanded area, residents
don't qualify for the status as Jerusalem residents, and thus don't get
yellow license plates. Home titles are only respected by Israel if they
had been transferred from Jordan or Britain when the territory was ruled
by the respective countries. Many Palestinians can't prove to the
satisfaction of Israel that they own their home, which also makes them
vulnerable to home demolitions or seizure, which will be discussed
later. There are many roads on which Palestinians are not allowed to
drive.

--Malinda Gilbert

Tuesday, July 18

Understanding East and West: A Political Tour of Jerusalem

Our first morning in Jerusalem was an experience that is difficult to
put into words. We met with Jimmy, a guide for the Israeli Committee
Against Home Demolitions (ICAHD). While most of us were familiar with
the general injustice of the partition and occupation, none of us were
prepared for what we saw.

Our tour had five stops: the first involved visiting West Jerusalem to
compare the infrastructure between West and East Jerusalem. West
Jerusalem is a modern Israeli city; although East Jerusalem is the
center of the Palestinian economy, it does not have the same
infrastructure. Palestinians are a minority within Jerusalem and we
learned that they pay 33% of the taxes (proportional to their
demographic percentage), yet 67% live under the poverty line. Their
taxes help support the infrastructure of Jerusalem, but East Jerusalem
residents receive minimal services for that money: sporadic trash
pick-up and a separate, and more fragile, sewage system. Ultimately,
Palestinians receive no more than 11% of the services provided by any
Jerusalem municipal department.

Our second stop was in Ras al-Amud, a Palestinian neighborhood half way
up the Mount of Olives. There we saw an Israeli Jewish settlement called
Ma'ale Zeitim that was built on land that had been owned by Jews prior
to 1948. Jimmy pointed out how the building was six stories
high---higher than Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem are allowed to
be. He also pointed out that several organizations are trying to create
a ring of connected Jewish settlements on the eastern side of Jerusalem
so that there is no space for Palestinian expansion. Ma'ale Zeitim is
part of this ring.

Our third stop was the Wall/security barrier/fence* that divides and
economically crushes Palestinian villages. The original justification
for the building of the wall was 'security', but several Israeli
officials now publicly talk about the wall as a new border. 10% of the
West Bank will be confiscated by Israel under this plan.

Our fourth stop on the tour was a demolished house. Israeli demolition
of Palestinian homes is a relatively common practice. Although a small
number of home demolitions are carried out to punish Palestinian
militants by destroying their families' houses, the majority of home
demolitions result from Palestinians lacking a building permit. These
permits, however, are nearly impossible to obtain due to the lack of
zoning in many Palestinian areas of Jerusalem. Even if all of the
stringent conditions are met, the cost of $22,000 is prohibitive for
many Palestinians.

Our fifth and final stop was an Israeli Jewish settlement in the West
Bank-Ma'ale Adumim. We accessed this settlement via a 'bypass road' on
which all can drive except for Palestinians. The settlement may have
been the biggest shock of all. After seeing the crumbling infrastructure
and poverty of some East Jerusalem neighborhoods, the starkness of the
'security wall' and the demolished Palestinian home (all in areas
populated by Palestinians who are citizens of Jerusalem and pay full
taxes), we came upon a large, sprawling 'suburb'/'bedroom community',
chock full of Mediterranean style houses, green grass (in the desert),
parks and shopping malls-all subsidized by the Israeli government. All
illegal according to international law. All nearly impossible to
evacuate. The Wall blended in with the scenery on the Israeli side so as
not to confront Israelis driving by with the reality of the situation.

Jimmy said we had seen all the elements of the Israeli occupation in our
tour: the wall, settlements, a bypass road, home demolitions and
checkpoints (we weren't stopped at the one we went through because we
were clearly not Palestinian).

Many of us came away from this tour with the conclusion that with these
settlements, walls, and checkpoints a Palestinian state will not be
viable since the economic base-East Jerusalem-does not have room to
develop. A two state solution is thus improbable, or even impossible. It
was a sobering morning.

--Nicole Pelletier

*There are a variety of terms, all partially accurate and all
politically significant, used to describe the wall/fence/barrier that
Israel is constructing in the West Bank. Interfaith Peace-Builders uses
the term "the wall," following the example of the International Court of
Justice.

Speaking to the Heart: Sabeel

Sometimes-rare and precious times-you encounter someone who speaks to
your heart: directly, without pretense or holding back, without the
condition or caution of: "I must not come on too strong or risk
offending or preaching." Someone who touches you, gives you strength
and hope, and sometimes that touch sooths like balm, and sometimes that
touch burns like fire, and sometimes it is both. Nora Carmi of Sabeel is
such a person, and our delegation was privileged to spend an inspiring,
and, for some of us, shattering hour and a half with her on our first
full day in Jerusalem.

Sabeel is an organization of Christian Palestinians committed to
"Liberation Theology." Nora is a Jerusalemite, a refugee in her own
land. The shifting, tearing, and wrenching of borders has robbed her
and her family of their childhood home in West Jerusalem. A mother and
a grandmother, the wars and troubles of this land have brought Nora
pain, loss, and fear. Yet she does not lose her faith and her
commitment to the true meaning of Jesus' life and message. "Jesus was a
Palestinian Jew who lived under Roman occupation," Nora explained us.
As we all know, faced with this situation, Jesus did not turn to hatred
of his oppressors, nor to fomenting violent rebellion-in contrast, he
taught love, acceptance, and nonviolence. The people of Sabeel-the
Arabic word means "the way," and also "source of life-giving
water"-confront the severe challenges of life in Palestine today by
emulating the mission and life of Jesus. Sabeel does this by embracing
nonviolence, including supporting and collaborating with nonviolent
activist groups of all three Abrahamic faiths in Israel and Palestine,
creating and disseminating educational materials, organizing local and
international conferences, and working with youth.

Nora said to us: "We do not have the right to destroy this land." She
challenged us with the question: "How do we bring justice to this
country of Muslims, Jews and Christians?" I (the grandson of a 5th
generation Palestinian Jew) asked Nora if she thought that the reality
of a Jewish State had led to injustice. She paused and answered simply,
"Yes." She said that for this reason, Sabeel supports the ideal of a
one-state solution, even though she is not optimistic about this coming
to pass. Despite this pessimism, Nora has faith and is philosophical:
empires do not last, she pointed out. It was important for me to ask my
question. It is a question I have been asking myself for a long time.
I believe that we all, especially internationals of all faiths, have to
have the courage to ask.

I did not feel that Nora's answer was anti-Israel, and certainly not
anti-Semitic. It came from love of the peoples of the land, just as my
question came from my own concern and sorrow for my people and for all
the peoples of this land. Nora said, "I feel sorrow and compassion for
the Jews of Israel, as I do for all of us suffering through this
particular period of history in this land." Her statement presaged, for
me, what we would hear several hours later from Rami Elhanan of Bereaved
Parents Circle, a man devoted to nonviolence and to mutual understanding
between the warring peoples, who asked: what is Jewish about
systematically humiliating and dominating a people over a period of 35
years? There is nothing Jewish about this, he said.

We told Nora we would take her message, bring it back to our government,
our loved ones, and our lives. After our visit, I turned to Yolande, my
fellow delegate, and said: "I would stand with this woman." Yolande
looked at me and we both knew what I meant. Nora had shown us, reminded
us, of how to Stand Firm-how to know yourself and your faith, so surely
and with such conviction, clarity, commitment and love, that nothing can
knock you down-nothing from outside yourself, and nothing from inside
yourself. We walked out into the searing brightness of Jerusalem, the
stone buildings glowing in the afternoon sun. We were strengthened, we
were weeping, we carried within us, will always carry within us, the
love and the strength we had found in that room today.

--Mark Braverman


Transforming Loss: Bereaved Parents Circle

His eyes were deep. His gaze was focused. His voice was strong and
clear. As he sat at the head of our small circle, he shared the kind of
loss that few of us can imagine. About eight years ago, Rami lost his
14-year old daughter to a suicide bomb on the urban streets of
Jerusalem. Like all such attacks, it caused a sudden and unannounced
departure from an otherwise "normal" life led in Israel.

Rami is no stranger to violence. He served in the Israeli army and had
lost friends to war. But the loss of his daughter, by his account, was
different. While war had hardened him and left him feeling
disillusioned, the loss of his daughter left him "wondering how to get
out of the bed in the morning" to go on living.

After some time had passed, Rami ran across a man-Yitzhak
Frankenthal-who changed his prospective about war, violence, and life.
He engaged in conversation with another person who had also suffered the
loss of a child, as so many people in this region of the world have.
Yitzhak spoke to Rami about looking forward and about reconciling old
enemies. At first, Rami was astonished and appalled at the mere
suggestion. But as time passed, he found himself engaged in
conversations with others about peace.

The Bereaved Families Circle regularly joins Palestinians and Israelis
who share the bond of tragic loss together. Their dialogue allows each
person to feel the other's pain. And out of their mutual empathy they
have begun to take extraordinary steps toward getting others to see the
futility of war.

Our group sat mesmerized as Rami spoke about meeting the relative of a
suicide bomber who introduced himself at a meeting in the Palestinian
village of al-Khader. After the speech, Rami was shaking the hands of
people who had attended the meeting. Someone approached and told Rami
"you wouldn't want to shake my hand if you knew what I did." Rami
replied, "What could you have done that I wouldn't shake your hand?"
When the man replied that his brother had been a suicide bomber, Rami
continued, saying "you came to my talk, you listened with an open
heart," and the two men shook hands. While the meeting was awkward at
first, they two men quickly agreed that their mutual desire for peace
was one which transformed not only themselves, but their relationship
also offered an opportunity for others to be transformed as well.

For example, their children attended summer camp together. And the two
men regularly engage Jewish and Palestinian high school students in
conversations about peace and the prospect of living together
harmoniously.

This transformation will not occur overnight. But such apparent strides
towards ending violence between old rivals is more than promising-it
exemplifies much needed love and hope for all humankind.

-- Diane Ford Jones.
 
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