April/May 1994, Page 9
Seven Views: Reassessing Declaration of Principles of Peace
in Light of the Hebron Massacre
Hope Turns to Disappointment, Despair and Desperation
By Edna Homa Hunt
Since the Oslo agreement, headlines in the international media
keep focusing, and very superficially so, on negotiations. But on
the ground lies the continued—indeed, deepening—anguish
and despair of daily life for Palestinians under Israeli occupation.
Where at first there was hope and, most significantly, palpable
expectations for alleviation of generation-old oppressions visited
upon ordinary people, there spread disappointment that quickly became
desperation.
I have spent a month moving about the population centers of the
West Bank and Israel. I chose not to go to Gaza because I do not
know the area or its people well enough to gather meaningful impressions
from a "flying visit."
It is from the Palestinian people's vantage point that I have observed
the Israeli occupation, felt and empathized with its tragedies.
I myself am Palestinian, though not Arab. Mostly, I am just a human
being.
I spoke with friends of many years' standing and others I sought
out. Over the duration of my stay, I learned that reactions were
less about endorsement or rejection of the agreements than skepticism,
fear and, from many, disillusionment with and undisguised anger
at Chairman Yasser Arafat and his close entourage in Tunis.
Mention of Arafat's fall from adulation, an adulation so long felt
and expressed by an overwhelming majority of the men and women in
the street, brought tears to the eyes of some with whom I spoke.
Where oh where is there a hero to rally around, a symbol of hope
aroused and held in abeyance, a leader who could redress the debilitating
discrepancy between Israel's power and Palestinian weakness?
Paradoxically, while suffering under Israeli occupation and opposing
it, there was hope! Someday it would end. Even a year ago when I
was there, no one could specify an end-point. But in the very vagueness
of entertaining hope there was comfort, strength, an emotional life
raft. Now, Palestinians were in a straitjacket fashioned by the
leader they had trusted, and others who articulated reassurances
that a significant, real shift had taken place. Of course, only
time will tell...
There also were suspicions expressed about the motives of an older
generation of "insiders" quickly appointed from Tunis
to directing positions in various economic and administrative "coordinating"
committees. Many of these "bodies" were still "ghosts,"
with no more than a name to denote future functions. But already
the broader disenfranchised public saw in them an exacerbation of
known corruption and a deepening division between "haves"
and "have-nots. "
Contrasts
Almost everywhere in the West Bank I saw the physical manifestations
of a quarter of a century of human suffering and emotional despondency.
I noted the absence of tended plantings; too many piles of rubble;
city-centers that long ago bore the signs of civic pride and prosperity
now were just there, too painful for me to characterize.
Crossing over from East to West Jerusalem was like entering another
universe. Teddy Kollek to the contrary, Jerusalem remains a divided
city: socially, economically, culturally and, above all, emotionally.
The contrast with West Jerusalem was too agonizing for me to bear:
wide streets, carefully tended parks, gleaming stone buildings,
glittering lights, opulent shops. Life was being lived to the fullest,
the most optimistic. If there was grief anywhere, it was private;
not transformed into enduring physical reminders. Even the settlements
that encircled all centers of Palestinian habitation exuded the
power of long-term presence, the strength of permanence.
Senseless
I was in Ramallah the day after 15-year old Rami Ghazzawi was killed
by Israeli soldiers in his school yard! In response, that day, the
population erupted in furious protests. But, the day after, silent
grief fell all over the town. The graffiti-defaced shutters of stores
were down and a grim expression seemed to distort the face of the
handsome taxi driver as he took me to the home of my friends, a
Bir Zeit University professor and his family.
The Bir Zeit community was in mourning, as hundreds, perhaps thousands
of other Palestinian communities have been, when their children,
mothers and fathers were killed or maimed by Israeli soldiers, death
squads, jailers and interrogators. I felt privileged to be able
to share their grieving, this time in person.
Later I learned that a "senior army officer" called at
the Ghazzawi home to offer his apologies for the "regrettable
incident. " I ask all who read this who are fathers and mothers
to see in your mind's eye, to feel what it might be like to be offered
an apology in place of a son or daughter.
"And what about our [Israeli] victims of murder?"
I can hear passionate Israelis throw in my face. "What about
the young kindergarten teacher killed (by 'terrorists,' is the invariable
description) in her car on the road, near El Bireh?" Indeed,
a very short hour before I myself was to travel on that road, back
to Ramallah for more conversations. Yes, I mourn for her too . But,
on behalf of my Palestinian friends, I offer no apology, only deep
regret. Both the deaths I have chosen to mention were grievously
wrong, serving no purpose whatsoever—if the death of any human
being ever does...
On the Use of Language
I am clearly not original in observing the use of language to create
wide social acceptance of a policy of deliberate murder. But I have
to register my feelings of offense and anger at the sight of a full-page
photograph on the front page of the Saturday, Nov. 26 supplement
of Yediot Ahronot of a seated young man, face masked by a
red-and-white keffiyeh. Diagonally across the photo in large
red letters was the caption: "Erased from the list." Beneath
the photo the text read: "IDF this week eliminated the
No. I wanted in the territories. " (Emphasis is mine.)
The photo was that of Imad Aqaal, a commander of several Hamas
fighting units in Gaza. He was alleged to have killed 100 Israeli
soldiers. But regardless of what he was alleged to have done, the
description of killing him as "erasure" conveys dehumanization
of a quality I have always associated with genocide.
Ultimately those using such language, accepting it as "appropriate,"
or reading it without attentiveness, will themselves become dehumanized.
Ample signs in daily life in Israel itself already reveal that the
process is well under way.
Death on the Road
The connection may be spurious, but I have wondered at the terrifying
carnage on Israeli roads. During the first week of my stay in Israel,
28 people were killed in car accidents. Two weeks later, first four
young men and then an entire family were killed all at once.
All manner of experts have been analyzing this death toll, ad nauseum.
(One sample: The Jerusalem Post Magazine, Nov. 19, 1993.)
The analysts are all "technical" people, all men. They
mention the "human factor" last in a string of causal
factors, but fail to delve into the depths, the intricate complexities
of what this "human factor" may be about. Alcohol-die
culprit in the U.S.-is hardly ever involved. Is it perhaps the disease
I called "dehumanization" which has contaminated the nervous
systems of Israeli men?
While the death of a single Israeli at the hands of Palestinians
sends the whole country into paroxysms of hysteria, I wondered aloud
to several Israeli acquaintances—after one particularly tragic
accident—why this slaughter meets with public silence. Of
all the answers I heard, one stuck in my memory: "We accept
these deaths as we accept cancer—we can do nothing about it."
Paradox
Headline in Yediot Ahronot as Prime Minister Rabin arrived
in the United States: "The Road to Peace: Rabin will present
in the U.S. the list of weapons required to defend the peace."
The Zionist Vision: Building!
Here we were, barely a couple of months after Rabin and Arafat
had embarked on the road to negotiating details for implementing
"self-rule"—of one sort or another—when there
burst on the public scene, in Israel, the new master plan for a
major and long-range building program: along a north-south axis
of the inland ridge of hilltops, parallel to the coast, and stretching
from northwest Galilee south to Beit Shemesh, due southwest of Jerusalem.
With settlements continuing to be built all around Jerusalem and
major roadways being stretched north, south and east out of "greater
Jerusalem" pulverizing Palestinian neighborhoods along the
way, what will remain for the Palestinians to self-rule"? On
top of that, comes another "wall" of Israeli habitation,
based around three substantial urban centers—Modi'in, Yiron
and Beit Shemesh—to accommodate 130,000 households.
Without much publicity or fanfare, the cornerstone for the largest
of these cities—Modi'in—was laid in mid-December. It
was planned for a day after Dec. 13, "W-day" (withdrawal
day), the day that never was. But the cornerstone-laying was. The
plan's implementation had begun.
While the Sharon-Shamir plan of the -20 Stars" had as its
geopolitical objective the obliteration of the "Green Line,"
the declared objective of Benjamin Ben-Eliezer, the Labor government's
housing minister, is to respond to Israelis' needs within the "Green
Line."
I see nothing mutually exclusive about the two settlement-and-city-building
strategies. Between them they will succeed in choking off any Palestinian
state west of the Jordan.
These housing plans for the next millennium are based on assumptions
of "peace," continued immigration and a target population
of seven to eight million people. But not a word about the needs
of the Palestinian population; their needs for space. What about
space for growing food? For industry? For shade? And most crucial,
who will have to give up water? You can guess.
Dr. Edna Homa Hunt represents the fifth generation of her Jewish
family born in Jerusalem. A management consultant based in Winter
Park, FL, she is active in Middle East peace efforts. |