Remove the blinkers and see the truth
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- Written by Seth Freedman Seth Freedman
- Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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For two years on Cif, I've detailed the miscarriages of justice I've witnessed. But many are still convinced Israel can do no wrong
I find people over here who keep harping on about 'human rights' violations by Israel conveniently forget or ignore that if Seth were to live in any, yes, ANY Arab or Iranian country in the neighbourhood, he would have been jailed, abused and then deported, if not accused of being a 'zionist' spy and then condemned to capital punishment.
Two years after penning my first piece for Cif, there is still no getting away from the kind of criticism seen in the comment above. No matter that the thrust of georgeindia's rant had nothing to do with the subject of my article, anyone perusing the thread is encouraged to believe that the fact that the Israeli regime has not beheaded me for my dissent is ample proof that all is well in our little corner of the Middle East. Which, of course, it isn't, despite the best efforts of Israel's squadron of cheerleaders to convince the world otherwise.
Although I am a relative newcomer to Israel's Mediterranean shores, the amount of exposure I have had during my four-year sojourn in the Holy Land to the daily humiliation and oppression being meted out to the Palestinians is more than most armchair critics will see in a lifetime. I should know – I was one of them myself for my first 24 years on the planet, and am all too aware how easy it is to be duped by second- or third-hand reporting from the front lines, whether through the media or via friends and family giving their skewed take from inside Israel's borders.
If you believe the official hype, it's a dolce vita in the Occupied Territories, one for which all right-minded Palestinians should be eternally grateful to their benevolent Israeli masters. If you believe the official hype, Palestinians have never had it so good, thanks to the milk of Israeli kindness which flows in rivulets alongside the honey in the Eretz Halav u'Dvash. And, if you believe the official hype, if only the Palestinians would finally give up their struggle for basic human rights, they too could eat from the tree of life in Israel's very own Garden of Eden.
Those are the lines so eagerly swallowed by the blinkered masses for whom Israel can do no wrong, for whom the mere existence of a Jewish state trumps all other, harsher truths, and which deafen them to the cries of those trampled beneath the wheels of the Zionist bandwagon. "We're here to stay," they cry triumphantly, as though the conflict really is as binary as that: 1 = Jews exert unilateral control over every last inch of Biblical Israel; 0 = Jews are instead driven into the sea by the monster that continually lurks under Israel's bed.
The reason behind the creation of the state in 1948 is the very reason the state (in its current form) is doomed to fail. Giving a severely traumatised people a land on which to go through the throes of rebirth and recovery, with no therapeutic or palliative care alongside, meant the experiment was always going to turn out for the worst. Those given the keys to the new state would always see, and fear, the worst in those around them. They were left to come to terms with their pain and fear in the midst of another battleground.
Thanks to the cyclical nature of the tit-for-tat conflict, for every punitive measure taken by the IDF in the name of Israel's so-called search for peace, reprisal attacks by Palestinians and their agents endanger thousands of Jewish lives in return, prompting ever-stronger countermeasures by the Israelis. And so it goes on. Until the fear-fuelled monkey can be got off Israel's collective back, it doesn't matter how much evidence is put in front of them about the state's crimes, since they will always turn a blind eye in favour of believing that there is no other way ensure their security.
The Palestinians are stuck between a rock and a hard place. Rise up and try to smash the chains that bind them, and what was previously a tonne of bricks will be multiplied by 10 in terms of the Israeli response. Lie back and do nothing and the authorities will walk all over them, since there is no reason for the Israelis to apply the brakes themselves.
For two years I have detailed the abuses and miscarriages of justice I witness on every foray I make into the West Bank, and for two years I've been buried under an avalanche of hate in response. It was, is, and will continue to be water off a duck's back, regardless of the outraged responses on the threads, since I'm convinced that the only way to effect change is for the truth to be brought to light. And if I can play a small part in helping that to occur, then nothing and no one is strong enough to act as a deterrent.
Bil'in: Israeli Army Attacks the Weekly Protest Injuring at Least 10 People, including Journalists
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- Written by IMEMC Staff IMEMC Staff
- Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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The demonstration included internationals and Israeli activist. Membrs of the Peoples' Struggle Front also joined the protest today and carried banners. Today’s theme was the Iraqi journalist and the shoes he threw at outgoing US President George W Bush. Demonstrators carried shoes along with damning pictures and words of Bush and his allies Olmert, Barak and Sharon.
Beginning in the village of Bil’in, the march moved through the streets, and the demonstrators rang out chants rejecting US foreign policy and life under Israeli occupation. When the group of demonstrators and Palestinians turned toward the apratheid wall, in an attempt to cross into Palestinian land, Israeli soldiers waited behind concrete blocks.
From there the soldiers began firing tear gas canisters and rubber-coated steel bullets. Demonstrators responded to these attacks by throwing their shoes at the army. Dozens of people suffered injuries from the gas while eight were shot. Two journalists were hit, including WAFA photographer Issam Arrimawi. Also, among the wounded from the bullets was a 15-year-old Palestinian child who is currently receiving treatment in Ramallah’s Sheikh Zaid Hospital.
Ten Wounded at Ni’lin’s Anti-Wall Protest
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- Written by Justin Theriault - 1 of International Middle East Media Center - IMEMC Justin Theriault - 1 of International Middle East Media Center - IMEMC
- Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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At least ten civilians were wounded as hundreds of villagers from Ni’lin, located near the West Bank city of Ramallah, took to the streets Friday afternoon to protest the construction of the Israeli apartheid wall on their land.
The protest was organized by the Ni’lin Committee Against the Wall. They have been organizing nonviolent protests and demonstrations in the village on a regular basis for over six months.
Dozens of Israeli soldiers lined up to prevent the protest, which was to be a prayer at the lands slated for confiscation by the Israeli government.
Troops, however, fired dozens of tear gas canisters at the worshippers, preventing them from praying on the land. The demonstrators where forced to pray in another place, away from the planned protest area.
Following the prayer, demonstrators carried their shoes in solidarity with the Iraqi journalist, Muntathar Al-Zaidi, who threw his shoes at U.S. President George W. Bush in a Baghdad press conference earlier this week.
Troops blocked the road leading to the confiscated land, and fired rubber-coated steel bullets that wounded three journalists, including cameraman of Palestinian Media & Communication Company (PMCC), Mustaf Khabeisa, in his leg, and two other international journalists, including a journalist from Sweden. Sources at the Ni’lin committee said that seven others suffered injuries from gas inhalation, and were treated by field medics.
After the demonstration, some youth from the village clashed with Israeli troops by throwing rocks at them, wounding four soldiers. At least a hundred soldiers proceeded to invade the village, carrying out house-to-house searches, firing tear gas at the residents’ houses in the process.
Three Wounded in Nonviolent Demonstration in Bethlehem
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- Written by Justin Theriault - 1 of International Middle East Media Center - IMEMC Justin Theriault - 1 of International Middle East Media Center - IMEMC
- Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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Three Palestinian civilians were wounded in a nonviolent demonstration in Bethlehem, organized by the Popular Campaign Against the Wall and Settlements.
Dozens of protestors marched after Friday’s prayers from the village of Um Salamouna, near Bethlehem, to the construction site of the wall Israel is building on the village land.
A Palestinian man dressed as Santa Clause led the demonstration, as Bethlehem is preparing to start their Christmas Celebrations. This was a deliberate sign to show Christian-Muslim solidarity and coexistence, in Palestine.
Israeli troops pushed the protestors, causing three protestors to endure mild injuries, including Dr. Mohammad Odeh, head of the Palestinian Medical Relief Services, in addition to two children, Ahmad and Hareth Breijeiyeh.
The protestors called for ending the internal Palestinian divide, and demanded both parties, Fatah and Hamas, to resume talks and reach a national unity agreement.
Christmas under Occupation
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- Written by Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh – Bethlehem Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh – Bethlehem
- Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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After living 29 years in the US, it is not easy to be living in Bethlehem area especially this Christmas season. Life can be at times hard, exhilarating, depressing, fun, and hopeful. Israel occupied this area in 1967, but the landscape had begun to change well before that. In 1948, Bethlehem became home to thousands of Palestinian refugees after more than 750,000 people were driven from their homes in what became Israel. Palestinians were forbidden to return, and three cramped refugee camps (Dheisheh, Azza, and Aida) add to the local migrants from villages whose lands were taken over.