![]() |
|
| THE HANDSTAND | SEPTEMBER 2006 |
![]() Photos of a recent incident, see letter end page. Diary Yitzhak LaorOn Saturday morning, 31 August, after a painful summer 'vacation', children went back to school all over the West Bank under the authority of the still-existing Palestinian Ministry of Education. They went back despite the curfew imposed on Palestinian towns, despite the two years of cordons around most of the villages, despite the growing death toll. In the week preceding that Saturday, 13 Palestinian civilians were shot dead by the Israel Defence Forces; none of the 13 was implicated in terrorist activity, even in the official IDF version of events, but the Army has already concluded that in all cases the soldiers acted properly. In short, Israel is waging a war, not only against militant Palestinian organisations, but against the Palestinian people. On that weekend at the end of August, the new Israeli Chief of Staff, Lieutenant General Moshe ('Boogey') Ya'alon, said in an interview for Ha'aretz: 'I see myself as a Jew, an Israeli, a humanist, a liberal, a democrat and a seeker of peace and security. But I know that I am facing a cruel reality and that I have to defend myself.' Ya'alon has been the mastermind behind the war against the Palestinians - some sources say that he has been working on his plans since 1996. His appointment does not, therefore, mark a new phase in the war, but it does mean that the war now enjoys much better PR: once again, after years on the sidelines, the Israeli 'socialist' elite has a representative at the top of the military apparatus. A kibbutznik is once again in a position to describe himself publicly as most Israelis have always liked to describe themselves: I am an Israeli, therefore I am a humanist, like you, the Europeans, and unlike them, the Arabs. But exactly what part do everyday Palestinian tribulations - how to get one's child to school, how to fetch him back home, how to see a doctor or visit a grandparent or good friends across what used to be a road - play in our Chief Boogey's humanism and his self-defence? Ya'alon's interviewer writes about the new Chief of Staff in language that now sounds like a parody of the sort of thing journalists wrote in 1967:
Anyone who remembers the way the 'typical sabra' used to speak will be familiar with this discourse. The interviewer also quotes the Speaker of the Knesset, Avraham Burg, himself a former platoon commander: 'In my eyes Ya'alon is an iconic Israeli, a person of purity without an iota of arrogance. Like a precious metal. A nature reserve of Israeliness.' It's as if nothing had happened during the last two years. The more Palestine comes under threat of disappearance, the harder Israelis try to reinvent their 'essence': in literature, in songs, in newspaper columns, on TV shows and in documentaries. When politics is in crisis, ideology works overtime. Meanwhile, as loudspeakers announce the rules of the curfew in crude Arabic, 'Whoever steps out, will die; whoever steps out, will die,' Palestinian children and parents are trying to reach their schools, sometimes by skipping over ditches Israeli bulldozers have dug around their villages, sometimes by climbing over piles of rubble - the remains of what used to be homes and factories. And let our General Boogey, the humanist kibbutznik, explain why he was right, some days before, to have described the Palestinians as a 'cancer':
Do not mistake him: he is not saying that acts of terrorism pose a strategic threat to Israel. His is more of a prognosis than a diagnosis: the Palestinian people are a strategic threat. They are the cancer, and they must be removed. The day before schools in the West Bank opened, before I read the interview with 'Boogey', my wife and I called a family we have been helping over the years. They live in a refugee camp near Tulkarem. We were trying to cheer A* up on the day before she had been due to start high school - she is 14 years old - in a nearby town still under curfew. She had been looking forward to her first day; her entire family was excited for her. When she finished elementary school we managed to 'smuggle' her a present: a calculator. At the time, I encouraged her father to let her study, to avoid the temptation to give up in the face of the awful dangers of passing the checkpoints and the snipers and the nervous soldiers between their camp and the besieged town. 'Don't let Israel turn her into another low-paid cleaning woman,' I said. 'Let her go to school as long as she is able to.' And he said in a very quiet voice: 'Let her not be like me, breaking my back as a construction worker.' It is, perhaps, too easy to give such paternalistic advice from the safe side of the fence, but without education what prospects does she have? She might give up too soon, get married, and become mother to a fourth generation of refugees. (Her family was expelled in 1948 from a village near the one where I was born a month later.) Do they want to return to that lost land? S, A's aunt, laughs. 'Return there? Just let me have my cleaning job back, and I'll be satisfied.' I asked S how A would
manage to get to her new high school. 'God is great,' she
replied. As it turned out, there was little for A to be
excited about. Soon it was the Jewish New Year and an
even harsher curfew was imposed. Schools were closed;
children were not allowed to leave their homes. (A's four
sisters attend an elementary school inside the camp,
which most of the teachers can't get to since they are
not residents there.) The reason for writing about schools and children is that this is one of the areas where there is a pretence that life is 'normal', where 'civil society' and 'political society' are resilient enough to defy the Boogey and his junta. This is one of those everyday truths in Israel that becomes a 'slander' if one says it abroad: it is the military, not the 'elected leadership', that has been setting the range and scope of this war - which the military itself was quick to define as a war. A report published on 6 September in the (right-wing) daily Ma'ariv revealed that during the first three weeks of the Intifada - before the wave of terror attacks against Israelis even began - the IDF, according to Army records, fired one million bullets. At present, most of the big towns in the West Bank are under curfew. Usually there is no way of finding out how long the curfew will last. Ramallah, for example, a town that enjoyed a night-time curfew, was suddenly put under a round-the-clock curfew. Nobody knew why. One rumour had it that a Hamas cell had been uncovered in East Jerusalem. (So, why Ramallah? But then again, why not?) Another that the military governor of Nablus, under curfew for three months now, had been transferred to Ramallah and that he had downgraded the 'luxury' town of Ramallah to the level of Nablus. This is, of course, black humour, Palestinian humour. Apart from the Palestinian vernacular, only Yiddish can render it more or less accurately. Despite its richness and long colonial tradition, English cannot keep up with the massive production of IDF Hebrew as it infiltrates our media along with the semi-official jargon emerging from military briefings. The assassination policy has several names, including 'focused interception', but unofficial military jargon prefers something more direct: 'liquidation'. The new language teaches us to distinguish between all sorts of curfews, closures, 'encirclements', and other (illegal) actions and prohibitions on movement. The latest example is the euphemism used by the state in response to an appeal by two Palestinians against expulsion from Nablus to Gaza. Each time their attorney used the word 'expulsion', the state attorney jumped to his feet to demand the 'proper usage', something that can be translated, carefully, as 're-zone-ification'. In Hebrew it might sound better, but no less grotesque. Israel's Supreme Court, famous at Columbia Law School for its progressiveness, accepted the state's position. The expulsions were allowed, and sooner or later the word 're-zone-ification' will become a familiar part of our vocabulary and legal life. Another veil will fall over what happens beyond the hills, ten minutes from my relatively safe home, while there, under the non-reported non-event of a curfew, a nation is incarcerated and preparing for the worst. The Israeli agenda is way ahead of what critics of Israel abroad manage to grasp in their sometimes too careful language. I have just seen Edward Said on the BBC's Hard Talk trying to explain to Tim Sebastian that Israel is destroying Palestinian civil society. That is true, of course, yet it is already an understatement. What is being destroyed, every day, every night, by guns, by undercover units, by raids and manhunts, by arbitrary orders, by rapid military trials, by kidnappings and numberless arrests without trial is something greater than 'civil society'. We are shown the 'events': suicide bombings, bombardments of civil neighbourhoods, assassinations of political activists or terrorists. What we do not see is the undermining of the idea of society itself. One of the popular rumours circulated among Palestinians echoes something spoken of more than once in the Israeli press: that if Blair and Bush go to war against Iraq, then that will be the 'right time' for the Israeli military to expel the Palestinians, or at least a portion of them. For when the Western press is full of reports of Anglo-American war aims defined in moral terms, who will notice towns and villages suddenly disappearing? How many noticed during this long and exhausting summer that most of the Palestinian people were under house arrest? During the first week in September, Daniel Barenboim came to play in a West Jerusalem chamber music festival. He was booed by right-wing hooligans as a 'traitor', because the day before he had entered Ramallah 'illegally', and given a concert to besieged children in the local cultural centre. The hall was overcrowded; a friend of mine in Ramallah said she hadn't seen such happiness in a long time. As I finish this article it is the eve of Yom Kippur, the most sacred day for Jews. We have to ask God to forgive our sins, so the Palestinians are under full curfew, and the schools are closed. A is at home. S says: 'One day at school, six days at home.' At the little house
belonging to A's family, a pregnant woman, Y, is in her
ninth month. Her two sons, aged four and three, remember
nothing but closures and deprivation and poverty: their
father has had no work since his taxicab was destroyed
last winter by shots from a helicopter while it was
parked at the side of the road. They pray for her to go
into labour during the day: at night no Palestinian can
move; two weeks ago four workers in a village near Hebron
were shot dead on their way from a workshop as evening
fell. What if it comes at night? I ask S. 'God is great,'
she answers. Palestine's Humanitarian Crisis - Six months without a steady paycheck and school is about to begin29-Aug-06 The school year is about to start here in Palestine, but exactly what it will look like this year is anyone's guess. Most families are looking at the situation with extreme anxiety. Are the government schools going to open as striking teachers protest the non-payment of salaries? How can families register their children for school with all of the accompanying fees for school books, stationary, uniforms, transportation and when they have balances owing from the last year which they cannot pay? One woman came to our office yesterday with three small children all seeking to register them in school. She was told that she had to pay her outstanding bill from last year before she could think to register them for this year. Unfortunately, she is a homemaker and her husband is terminally ill with liver cancer. She is trying just to figure out how to put food on the table to feed her family, but now faces the additional problem of finding a way to keep her children in school with the fact that her husband, a man of 43, will die any time of liver cancer. "People are seriously depressed," said
Mervat Naber, head of Caritas Jerusalem's Social
department. "They are going into their sixth month
without government wages. What would any of us do under
these circumstances? The mood in Palestine is simply
awful and morose. Yesterday, in my office, I received one
phone call after the other requesting help for students
in schools and universities. People do not have money to
pay their bills. Schools and universities, facing
mounting debts from unpaid bills from last year, have had
to institute strict policies on registrations for the
upcoming year. Either the people clear their debts, pay
1/2 of their due fees up front, pay for their books and
uniforms in advance, or they face the fact that their
children will not be registered for school," said
Mervat Naber. The issue of the school year is on many minds. It is
scheduled to begin on September 2 and no one knows if it
will start on time. Because teachers have not been paid,
many are contemplating holding a strike in protest of
non-payment of their wages. Many of these teachers cannot
afford to travel to their schools and many of their
students and their families cannot afford school bags,
school books or supplies. Teachers do not wish to go on
strike, but they are wondering if they will ever get paid
and be able to take care of their own families. Tensions to travel to school are also on the minds of
children and their parents. Save the Children reported
that "some children are afraid of the long walk to
school, because of ongoing military activity near their
homes, and parents face the difficult decision whether to
send their children out on the street or not." Of course, teachers are not the only employees of the Palestinian National Authority waiting to receive their salaries. Everything in Palestine is tied to the PNA's inability to pay its employees and in the cut off of aid from the donor community and the withholding of customs revenue from the Israeli government (which according to UN OCHA "amounts to roughly $60 million per month or roughly 50% of PA revenues."-The Humanitarian Monitor, 7/06, pg. 1). A trickle of support has come through, but it is just a drop in the bucket of what is needed. "A minimum payment of NIS 1,200 (US$260) was made to all PA employees on 22 July. NGO's are also feeling the cut off in support. Many NGO's are cutting back on their programs, moving offices, laying off staff and not able to respond because their funding has been cut. The response to the UN Consolidated Appeals Process (CAP) appeal for funding where some $383 million dollars was requested (revised up from $215 million) has been only 39% of the total requested. Smaller NGOs and community based organization face similar or worse shortfalls which negatively affects their programs. Many NGOs who requested assistance through the CAP process have received nothing. Of course, the poorest of the poor are suffering the most. The Palestinian Ministry of Social Affairs "began the distribution of March 2006 cash subsidies to 40,289 Social Hardship Cases (SHC) in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. These families received subsidies of between NIS 100 and 600 NIS (US$24 and 136) per family depending on the household size and composition. However, the equivalent of four months of cash subsidies to these families remained outstanding at the end of July."(OCHA, The Humanitarian Monitor, July 2006, pg. 2) These families are the elderly, the chronically ill, those with handicapped members, the injured, widows, and other vulnerable segments of the society. Because of the current situation, Caritas Jerusalem has been inundated with requests for social assistance from the poor. Due to the dramatic deterioration in the situation in
Palestine, particularly in the Gaza Strip, Caritas
Jerusalem has submitted a revised SOA to Caritas
Internationalis for about $2.4 million dollars (USD) with
increased support requested for family support (food,
water, direct social assistance) and for urgent medical
treatment due to injuries received as a result on the
ongoing violence in Gaza and the West Bank. Caritas
Jerusalem is requesting interested parties who wish to
support this appeal to contact us. |
|