Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Real Madrid vs. Barcelona

the thing with the kids that would drive me nuts sometimes is that in the middle of the lesson, as i would be talking in front of the class, i'd see pairs of boys with decks of those stupid stupid stupid pokemon cards, shuffling them, sifting through them or better yet, standing up, facing one another and high-fiving each other with them every 10 minutes.  i'd storm up to them to say "you know i can SEE you right?" and take their cards away, sometimes they'd hand it over with a sly smile and other times they'd plead and beg, realizing that the teacher caught them when they had their BEST deck in hand.  and this is how I, Ms. Fahmida, started collecting my own growing collection of those stupid stupid cards.  I might have close to 500 hundred now, and once in a while, to entertain ourselves, Maggie and I play around with them, in the teacher's room, after making sure that there are no students in sight.  I really thought that by the end of the year, my little cubby in the teacher's room would be a explosive vault of just cards.

but i realized in the recent past, almost with a bit of sadness, that it had been a while since i had confiscated any cards at all.  or bouncy balls.. or toy cars.. or rubber sticky rats (which are just gross looking) .. or prank toys.. or little circular disks that pop up when you press down on them, or other obnoxious man made creations that make trying to teach hyperactive youngens a living  nightmare.  

my most recent confiscation however was a Real Madrid poster being swooned over by a bunch of 4th grader girls.  they had a mini heart attack when i took that one away. 

students here NEED to know which team i support.  randomly in the middle of class, or recess, they shoot up their hands or run up to me  to ask "TEACHER! Real Madrid or Barcelona??" i had looked at them with a blank face the first several times they did this, especially when kids that i had never seen before would run up to me, so interested in knowing my affiliation, because i had no idea what they were even  talking about or what they were saying to me (anyone and everyone who knows me in the slightest can vouch for my sports retardation).  i asked my roommate about this, and she told me "just pick one, they won't leave you alone until you tell them which one is your team".  the obessions with these two teams is really amusing, especially because the affiliation seems so arbitrary, especially to a little first grader in palestine.  So of course, and i can shamelessly admit to the fact that i've never watched a match, so i dont feel any guilt or betrayal doing this, i claim real madrid around real madrid fans and barcelona around the other fans.  my homeroom class was distraught because one group was taunting the other saying that i was on their side, and the other side retaliated going NO SHE'S ON OUR SIDE! and then when both looked at me..well that was just awkard.  i tried to make them laugh by saying "hey kids I'm Real Barcelona!".  no one found it funny. 


during one of my tutoring sessions, i told my student about this, and the 15 year old appreciated the humor in the awkardness.  but then i got stuck in another sticky situation; somehow as we were all laughing about this, and by all i mean my 15 year old student, and her 12 year old sister ,the two brothers, 16 and 14 also chimed into the conversation, asking if i was real madrid or barcelona.  i took their side.  then they asked Israel or Palestine and then after that it was "Fatah or Hamas?" and then that was time to shut up.  

speaking of these rivalries, M and I had a fun time explaining the nature of college rivalries to Gabriella during our Egypt time, who just stared at us puzzled and intrigued.  Maggie told Gabriella that to me, F, the shades of the color blue hold extreme significance, which of course led me to explain to her the distinction between Carolina blue and Duke blue, and that they are very very different blues, that there is no confusing them, one is the good blue and the other is the bad blue.  Someone chimed in saying "like Israel, their flag comes in shades, and its Carolina blue" which of course drove me bonkers because the Israeli flag is DEFINITELY DUKE BLUE.  Is that weird that the duke blueness of the flag gives me strange satisfaction? its definitely defintely the bad blue. 
the end. 




(p.s. sorry to anyone that though the title of this post meant that i actually went to see a real match or that i know anything about football ;)

Saturday, April 10, 2010

denied entry part II


At the end of the day, though Gabriella was deported, she is safe and sound and she is going back home.  She wasn’t tortured, she wasn’t physically hurt and she wasn’t abused.  What is jarring is not the fact that she was denied entry, but why she was denied entry.  We don’t know exactly why,  but clearly because in this part of the world she was flagged as a person, as an academic, whose presence was a threat.  Someone somewhere did not like either her opinions or involvements and she was flagged.  Someone knew that she was in Palestine, that she was pro Palestine, and quite presumably reported her to security before we even got there. They don’t shoot down internationals like they shoot down Palestinians, they simply send them back home and tell them to never come back again.

I went through a full spectrum of emotions coming back yesterday.  Egypt was a blast, and I certainly have to dedicate posts on just Egypt, but one crucial thing that I surprisingly did not anticipate feeling was feeling happy to be in a free country.  I met up with a good friend from undergrad now studying abroad at AUC and when she asked me how I liked cairo so far, my instant response was “well it feels great to be in a free country!!”.  What did I mean by that? I was taken back by my own response.  Coming back yesterday, I understood my own answer.  

My life here can be defined by movements along and across two kinds of lands : the occupied land and the occupier’s land, and I as a person am not free in any way to express myself freely in either of these spaces.  It’s tiptoeing around boundaries and lines, quite literally, that defines every move I make and every truth and lie that spills out of my mouth.  It’s an obsessive thing, because it has to be, and its engulfing.  Unfortunately.  Gabriella was the most careful out of all three of us, in terms of what she said in front of whom.  But clearly not careful enough.  Today in school after the principal of the school found out what happened, she told us as a reminder to be aware that there are spies in Ramallah and many of them are internationals themselves who come here, but with different agendas.  Not everyone is here for the same thing.  Some people do believe that Palestine as a land and Palestinians as a people should be wiped out, and internationals standing against that should be kicked out of here.

I was able to taxi hop in Cairo going from one corner of the city to the other, going from  suburban wealthy areas to narrow alley ways leading up to old mosques to cafes to bazaars, and taking a day trip to Alexandria, a 3 hour ride from Cairo, and coming back in time for dinner and bed the same day. I did all that without ever obsessing obsessively about having my passport in hand for soldiers to check, or worrying about checkpoints.  I go t to where I wanted to and needed to go, without having to worry about tear gases, shootings, demonstrations or clashes.

When the first set of settlements came to view sitting on the bus, I realized what I meant when I said, it feels great to be in a free country.  These settlements.  Settlers.  Settlers don’t exist in free countries. Sitting behind us on the bus was an AMERICAN couple talking about going to different areas of Israel, but having to pass through Palestinian villages, and saying that when they hit the Palestinian territories they’ll need to buy guns.  I have to admit how disgusted  I was to be sitting in an Israeli bus for the 7 hour ride from Eilat to Jerusalem, feeling like I was trapped by ignorance and arrogance, thinking that that ignorance and arrogance is the reason why my friend was stuck back at the border, in the middle of the Sinai, by herself, confused and crushed by what to do next and where to go next.

I couldn’t pull out of a chain of cycling thoughts spiraling in and out of two repeating thoughts of ‘what the hell am I doing here, why am I here??” to “why in the world should I not be here??” i couldn’t make up my mind if I feel disempowered being here again or if I feel more empowered then before, being lucky enough to come back to work and having a job that I absolutely love.  We came in through Qalandia.  That’s another thing.  Checkpoints certainly don’t exist in free countries. 

Friday, April 9, 2010

denied entry ( an excerpt from Spring Break)


We left in a rush after school last Wednesday, excited, pumped, and nervous.  For me it was just adrenaline shooting up and down, for many many reasons.  First of all, the last school bell marked the beginning of a much needed spring break.  I really think the teachers were much happier than the students to hear that bell ring.  The night before and the morning of, M and I had packed up all of our stuff, carefully packing each item, for our weeklong vacation to come to Egypt.  Yes it was to enjoy spring break, no doubt, but more importantly this was a visa run, as in our three month visa that we were using would expire and we needed to exit the country and hope and pray to be able to come back in again with another visa to make our stay and work here last for at least until the summer.  Under Israeli law, it is illegal for any international to stay in the occupied Palestinian territories for more than 48 hours.  Cleeeeeeearly..we’ve broken a few “rules”.

 I was experiencing adrenaline rushes, wiping out every trace of Palestine involvements for the last three months, every item that we packed up was scrutinized, our computers were completely wiped out, labels from shampoos and conditioners and chip bags and snack bags were peeled off and removed and most public things online we had to get rid of.  So this blog entitled “fahmida goes to Palestine” was down for a bit, for obvious reasons :)

It was the three of us leaving, M, myself and Gabriella ( Maggie’s friend).   Throughout the process of packing, knowing that a very probably ending to the vacation may be never seeing this house in Ramallah or being kicked out of here, I could not make up my mind if I was packing to leave leave or simply for an innocent vacation.  It was both.

Hailing a taxi in Ramallah to get to Jerusalem catch a 5 hour bus ride to the Taba border  we crossed over  with a sigh of relief after a full day of journeying with little to no problems from Israeli immigration and were greeted with a friendly “Welcome to Egypt” sign on the other side of the immigration building in the middle of nothingness in the Sinai Desert at 11pm at night.  Another extremely dodgy 9 hour bus with a sleep deprived bus driver across the Sinai followed,  leading us finally to our 12th floor hostel room in downtown Cairo, where the three of us would stay together for the next 4 days.

The jostle of Cairo was captivating and I was exhilarated to be in the middle of a big boisterous city, wide eyed at the lineup of mannequins from top to bottom of display windows, the cabs, run down buildings, glorious mosques, bazaars and fully alert and awake at 2am in our room because of the sheer volume of the city; though I might have been trying to sleep, the city was certainly up and beating with a pulse. 

Gabriella and I spent a whole day together, gone to explore the pyramids at giza, to gape with wonder and dodge vendors trying to sell us camels and horses and dodge the heat of the sun. Up till then, Gabriella was just a friend of Maggies, and I knew this that and the other about her, but never really had the chance to actually get to know her.  She bounced around from being a girly girl to this genius academic professor from York (her actual profession) and I was intrigued by her perspectives.  It was fun spending so much time with her and laughing at silly things.  Giza followed by the pyramids at Sakkara then a fun girls night out at an Indian restaurant and followed by an even bigger treat to be swallowed within automated glass doors into a 8 story high City Stars Mall.  Our last 2 days together were spent by the beautiful Red Sea in Dahab.  Wow. Breathtaking. Gabriella and I had a blast smoking sheesha, which is not something I usually do, but it was a deal indeed to sit by the Red Sea, smoke amazing sheesha for about a dollar, hearing the beach and the sounds of the beach late into the night.  And of course, its during these outings that people you barely know start feeling like friends.  I learned more and more about Gabriella, her frustration with her extremely successful career as an academic and her choice to live in Palestine.  We were all talking about our lives and our plans, and where things go from here, and she kept on saying “my problem is that I really can’t imagine leaving Palestine.  I really can’t”.  We exchanged stories of our reaction to Jerusalem, and it felt so nice to speak to someone who feels as chaotic as I do, when I first experienced Jerusalem and when I go to Jerusalem.  She kept on saying that it breaks her heart every time to go to there, to see people not being allowed to pray or being denied basic rights in general.  Sitting down in a café looking out at the crystal waters of the Red Sea, you could see Saudi Arabia to your left.  “it breaks my heart to see and think about the fact that these people aren’t helping their own brothers and sisters”.   One thing was clear.  She really really loved Palestine, so much so that she wanted to stay for a long time, and doing that would actually jeopardize her career back in Europe. 

Last night, the three of us sat on our beds going over our stories and preparation for immigration early this morning.  All of us were set, we rehearsed questions, we rehearsed answers and a had a last magical night out in Dahab, by the sea, sitting with our 2nd or 3rd cup of Hibiscus tea. 

This morning, up at 5:30am, we all mechanically got ready, boarded the taxi and made our way across the Sinai again to get to the border.  The usual, I was taken aside apart from M and Gabriella to be questioned, and truly if anyone was to get screwed, it should and would have been me.  This time around, I was a Hindu Bengali American.  M got her passport back almost instantly, while Gabriella and I waited.  The three of us with our luggage sprawled out by us, standing in a nearly empty building just waited.  The wait turned into 3 hours, and we entertained ourselves with small talk and Gabriella and I got a huge thing of cappuccino to keep ourselves awake, talking about silly things, sprinkling in how we could go out to do certain things in Tel Aviv, and how lovely Tel Aviv is for certain things (there are microphones all over the buildings, and they pick up every bit of conversation, so it’s not that we had freedom to talk about whatever we wanted however we wanted, even that had to be strategized). After a long wait, I got my passport back, and I took it with a sigh of relief.  Now all we were waiting for was Gabriella’s. 

They took her in, questioned her, I couldn’t hear anything, but just watched her be taken into the room, and then asked to leave, then asked to sit for about 10 minutes and then taken back in again.  Finally she came out, looked at us and said “I’ll call you guys later on…they wont let me in”, took her bags and was forced to leave.

Stunned.  I was absolutely stunned.  Leaving with M and exiting out of the building with our luggage strapped to our back or hanging from our shoulders to face the sun and getting into the cab, I thought of weird things, like “but wait, we have your bus ticket to Jerusalem, we all got roundtrip tickets, what about your ticket” or “wait but you forgot your water bottle”.   I could not believe that second, or for the next 7 hours that three of us started this vacation and 2 of us came back. And that she was actually being deported.  Not in my wildest dreams did I think that the three of us would not come back, and not in my wildest dreams did I think that that would be my goodbye to Gabriella, someone that I was genuinely looking forward to spending more time with in Ramallah.

More to come soon…

Monday, March 29, 2010

voice of music

honestly, there is something extremely unique that gently bellows out of an Oud.  i think the first time i heard its sound was at a show that was being organized by some friends at UNC and a palestinian student had taken the Oud to stage, explaining that it was a very traditional instrument, and by just himself and his instrument on stage, he had strung its strings and hummed a soothing song in Arabic.

the shape makes me think of a wooden tear drop and i have to admit at first i wasn't completely struck by its sound. it was a foreign voice to me.

the teacher's room at school is a realm of its own i feel at times.  and so entirely different from how work rooms in the States would be.  during the two daily recess periods, a large tray of tea glasses and a large kettle of tea is brought out accompanied by a large pot of sugar. fresh mint leaves are sometimes brewed with the tea which leaves a deliciously sweet and subtle aroma steaming out of the kettle.  that's usually the morning breaks.  the afternoon breaks are spruced up a little more strongly with smaller arabic kettles of harsh, strong turkish coffee being served in tiny, miniature cups. the turkish coffee needs to be served in cups that small because each sip is like taking 10 espresso shots. it's better to not serve them in glasses or normal sized cups.

tea and coffee is served and everyone takes out their mini sandwiches to munch on, usually the round pita bread (except calling it  pita bread is unjust because this bread tastes about a million times better because its just so darn soft and delicious) stuffed with cheese, or cucumber and tomatoes or humus.  or a pack of biscuits is ripped open.  if one person opens a bag of anything, be it a small bag of chips, or cookies, or nuts or whatever, they go around the entire room asking everyone if they would like one.  it is such a sweet gesture.  and everyone freely just helps themselves to a piece.  it's a small gesture of hospitality that i think says volumes.  i am uber appreciative of it when my stomach is grumbling a little more than usual by break time.

and so with each teacher coming in and out, also comes in and out different personalities. there are the older, traditional, conservative Muslim men teachers, dressed in stiff and crisp suits that never interact with the females who sit on the other side of the single long table in the room.  there are a handful of first year young teachers and women teachers, ranging in age from a nice spectrum of early 20s to maybe early 50s, who chit chat away (about things that i dont understand).

my favorite is the music teacher.  he's got crazy hair and i love it! and he brings his Oud to school every day and every Tuesday he takes it out in the teacher's room to play a tune that everyone in the room knows.  and that sends the room in a subtly comical but extremely sweet and melodic trance.  teachers sometimes shout out suggestions for him to play a tune, and there was even ONE time when i saw one of THOSE stiff, and traditional muslim men teachers who not only was softly singling along BUT for a split second he put up both of his arms to snap his fingers and dance a little.  i gloat to have caught that moment because the next time i see mr. no smiling man, i think to myself, you dance and laugh after all, just like the rest of us.

those are the times that i REALLY wish i knew arabic.  i want to understand the words that everyone hums along to with so much endearment and attachment.  these are not pop songs, but decade old songs about nature, struggles, or life in palestine or the arab world.  i have to ask for translations sometimes, but coming from a background where english is not my first language, i know that so much meaning is lost in translation, especially with songs or words of poetry.  words can sometimes be translated, but emotions attached to those words certainly can't.

Somehow, this instrument, so unique in its voice and sound, speaks so much as its sound are strung out by hands that have taken ample amount of time to know it.  It sweeps everyone off of their unrelated daily tasks and brings them together to literally sit together, and sing with it.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Over a plate of sliced apples and a side of pistachios

Oudy's mom brought out a giant platter of fruit, filled with sliced bananas, peeled oranges, tiny yellow plum like fruits (i have no idea what they are called in English, but they are delicious; one of those fleshy, juicy, sour, mouth puckering fruits with a couple of seeds inside of them that you have to spit out and you have to tolerate the fact that almost always a little bit of the juice squirts out as you pierce your teeth into them), and sliced apples.  I was sitting in their living room, with his dad sitting on the sofa adjacent to mine and Oudy sitting on the other side, watching some random Arabic game show on T.V.  Two days prior to that I would have never thought that I'd be in their house, enjoying a hospitable serving of fruit and pistachios munching away and talking to them like family friends.

 But here I was, graciously welcomed into the home of yet another student.  I'm almost used to the chain of events that lead up to this moment now.  What starts out as a concerned parent either waiting inside the main office or outside in the playground (an empty parking lot, not really a playground) to talk about their child, asking me what it is that we are doing in class, asking me about who i am, with their guard up drilling me like a sergeant and requesting  things from me that no other teacher is required or even expected to do (like sending home a detailed "objective" sheet that outlines the chapter objectives and what I do in class, or creating a password protected account for every single one of my students on my blog so that I can evaluate every student every night and send notes to parents) turns into a 30 to 40 minute conversation between them and I,  and as I answer all of their questions in detail without losing my patience I see their defensive guard slowly melt away and then the conversation ends with "Are you free tomorrow night? Maybe after school?".  Of course I never reject an invitation, because getting to meet my students outside of class and school, and getting to meet the entire family is thrilling. And it's always fun for the kid to have his teacher come home with him to watch tv. 

I learn a lot through these conversations, which is why I love meeting families so much.  They hyperactive but extremely brilliant kid in class, whose mischief  is sometimes skin crawlingly aggravating but sometimes cute in retrospect (sometimes) I discover has a dad that works in the Palestinian Military, who speaks fondly of having lived in Maryland for a year,  and a mom that works with the Ministry of Public Health.  Their curiosity about me is fascinating to me, but kind of fun, I get to explain why it is that I love what I'm doing right now so much.  I'd be lying if I didn't say that I feel an unspoken pressure having to prove myself to them though, especially when they ask me about my age (his mom literally said "oh my God, only 23? you are a babbbyy!").  Every single one of them asks me if I like Palestine and their faces break out into an appreciative smile when I tell them that I don't just like it, I really love it and I think the land is beautiful, and that I am truly grateful  to be here, and that in my brief stay here so far I've encountered incredible amounts of kindness.

And in these situations, there is always a moment of brain and heart jerking comment or conversation that leaves me a little (by little i mean a lot) dazed, and inches me toward understanding the occupation a tiny bit more.

Oudy's dad was candidly talking about living here, in Ramallah, and his village, and how he'd like me and M to meet his extended family and take us there one day.  I can't even remember how small talk after small talk led to this but maybe it was after a comment about how checkpoints were closed last week.  Or maybe it was after talking about how soldiers do whatever they feel like whenever they feel like, or maybe it was after his comment of "you realize that you are not living in a free country right?" when he started telling me  story after story of what happens in checkpoints.

"they don't let pregnant women go through the checkpoint sometimes, as she is going into labor, they stand in her way and the hospital.  and you know how Qalandia is, the queues of people are crazy, it's always so crowded.  there was one woman who they wouldn't let through and she was forced to give birth at the checkpoint.  You know what the soldiers did after she gave birth? they took the newborn and held it, and then passed it to another soldier.  And you know what he did?"  I shrugged no.  "He took his M16 and shot it, and left the mother alive, and she went crazy"

The TV was still going, Oudy and his siblings were crawling in and out of the room, we were drinking tea at this point, still munching on the pistachios, and he told me this the same way someone would tell you what the weather was like that day.  I stared at him for a good 10 seconds at least, not knowing how to respond. My face was stuck in a grimace for a long time, as I was trying really hard to comprehend what he just said.  A soldier shot a newborn at a checkpoint after the mother had given birth.  In front of a crowd, where everyone saw what happened.

"Things like this happens all the time.  This is not news to us" he said after all I kept on saying was "..I can't believe that".

I don't know what perplexes me more, the fact that there is a possibility that an incident like this happened/happens or that they are not jarred by this at all.  He continued to tell me more stories (one was about a father and son trying to cross a checkpoint in Gaza, and the soldier opted to repeatedly shoot 17 times at the kid, leaving him dead on his dad's lap)

It's one of those things where your mind stops grasping, and all you keep saying is "wait that can't be real.  a human being can't be capable of doing that to a newborn can they?"

but isn't that the same way  people had reacted when the incidents of the Holocaust were slowly being revealed for the first time? so shocked and disgusted that people denied that any of it was true? The irony here is that the victims of that historical mar, are now doing the same exact thing to another group of people.

M and i have had many conversations, and at the crux of everything is that people here are not seen as people or human to  proponents of the other side of the conflict.  Take any genocide, and that's the crux of the matter, when one group of humans start regarding another as beasts , the paramount of evil that spews out is unbelievable.

And somehow the predators of this situation have convinced the world that they are the victims in the situation and that their "right to exist" must be defended at all costs.



Monday, March 22, 2010

Happy Palestinian Mother's Day

School Saturday was a hectic chaos because everyone was up in arms about the Mother's day show that the kids have been practicing for (for months) and today was finally the day they'd be able to light up the stage with the poems and songs and skits that they had learned.  Parents started spilling in around 12 and the mass confusion of which class goes into the auditorium at which time, which classes don't, where the teachers are supposed to be, who they have to take in, if there was a recess or not, which building certain classes needed to be in, all of that was a hodgepodge of confusion and almost a calamity.  I felt like a headless chicken running around; first taking my class to another building where supposedly all lower grades would have to stay until their cue to come in would be announced, then being told that that information was wrong and i had to shift my class, then being told that all of that was wrong and there was a new schedule, and then at some point realizing that i was inside of a classroom with only half of my class, and i had absolutely no idea where the other half had gone.

by the end of the day i was a mess and I used all of Sunday to decompress and detox from Friday (by doing absolutely nothing but writing, sleeping and finally praying) and I had completely wiped out "mother's day" from my mind.

Until this morning.

One of my student beaming in smiles handed over a red carnation to me and said "Happy Mother's Day!", and then another student followed, giving me a small red rose.
Can a teacher ask for a more wonderful way to be greeted?  lol I don't think so.  Not only was I touched by the flower, the gesture and her smile, but I had to stop for a few seconds to actually think of what that gesture meant. Almost all of the female teachers in the school got flowers from various students, each walked into the teacher's room with a couple of red or pink carnations at least.  One of the biggest things I had to get used to in the school system, here outside of the States, is the level of endearment and physical affection that teachers and students mutually show each other.  Not a day goes by now that I don't get attacked with hugs (at least once a day, some of those hugs are killer ones, like the ones that actually hurt physically), and each class period is infused with hugs, but strict reprimanding, lots and lots and lots of yelling, but loving as well, and of course teaching  :)   ...kind of like the relationship one has with their parents, with their mothers. 
And so it makes sense for teachers to also get Mother's Day gifts, don't you think? We don't do that in the States, someone should really suggest that one.
I've never been on the receiving end of a Mother's Day gift, and so today getting those flowers certainly meant a lot, .now I suddenly feel like I went from unmarried and single to having 60 children.
Cheers and happy mother's day to everyone!


(after Friday, I spent a lot of time trying to figure out a lot of things and being stuck in a mental warp. i got some nice nuggets of wisdom from my roommate who told me it was ok to be overwhelmed by everything that is going on around me, but it's not so great to internalize everything.  life goes on, and you have to do the little things that make life go on (like stop watching the news obsessively and go grade some papers, make dinner, watch a movie and read a book and go to bed).  I kept on thinking about the 2 teenagers that were shot dead by Israeli officers on Saturday in Nablus and 2 more on Sunday, feeling frozen by the amount of violence and inhumane deaths that this place has endured and is continuing to endure.  However, there's things one can change, and there's things one can't.  I know I will not be able to refrain myself from being opinionated about the political situation here but I also realize that feeling immobile doesn't help anyone and getting caught up in that would unjustly turn me blind to seeing the daily beauties of life here, living and working in Palestine.  And that is something that I definitely would like friends back home to get a glimpse of, Palestine beyond the violence)

Sunday, March 21, 2010

"Why Protest Rebuilding a Synagogue"








Recently, along with the clashes, a synagogue in East Jerusalem was re-opened which caused extreme violence in the area.  This is an article that I received over a listserv that I'm on that I feel does a good job of explaining why the reopening of the synagogue was so offensive and provocative to many. Enjoy the read. 


Why protest building a synagogue




The Hurva synagogue was destroyed in the 1948 war by the Jordanian army.  Before 1948, synagogues were used by Zionist underground forces for illicit activities including hording weapons.*  But why is there a furor over building it again? First we must recognize that International law is rather clear that East Jerusalem is illegally occupied by Israel and per the Geneva conventions, and buildings or activities in the occupied areas are subject to those conventions.  Any transfer of population to the occupied areas including infrastructure for these individuals is considered proscribed settlement activity contrary to both the letter and the spirit of the law. 

Second, Israel News reported that: "According to a centuries-old rabbinical prophecy that appears to be coming true, on March 16, 2010, Israel will begin construction of the Third Temple in Jerusalem.  During the 18th century, the Vilna Gaon, a respected rabbinical authority, prophesied that the Hurva Synagogue in Jerusalem, which was built during his day, would be destroyed and rebuilt twice, and that when the Hurva was completed for the third time, construction on the Third Temple would begin" http://www.israeltoday.co.il/default.aspx?tabid=178&nid=20063 Many Israelis believe this and there is a proliferation of designs, ceremonies and other events to launch this coming age of building a third temple. There are Muslim religious sites there: the first Qibla or direction of prayer for Islam and the third holiest site are the Haram Al-Sharif on this site.  There are Israeli digs underneath that threaten the site already and this only added fuel to the fire.

Third, Palestinians, Arabs, Muslims, and much of humanity, wonder why is it that such a synagogue is reconstructed but none of 1200 mosques and nearly 200 churches destroyed by Israel over the past 6 decades not allowed to be reconstructed? For me personally and for mostPalestinains, we know the history shows Jews, Christians, and Muslims living peacefully together for 1400 years under Islamic rule (with very few exceptions).  We know that it is possible to simply have a Jewish area, a Christian area, a Muslim area or even mixed areas.  We know it is possible even to intermarry, have friendships, etc.  But Zionism had a different idea and it did not revolve on coexisting but on ethnic cleansing and destruction of others.  How else can we explain the destruction of 530 villages and towns? How can we explain the rapid growth of colonial settlements on Palestinian land or even inside Palestinian homes? There is surely enough space here for all. Why are Palestinians denied the right to go to school just this week (see story and picture where they even held school at the checkpoint, http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=269548). Why not simply live and let live.  The density of population inside the Green line is now nearly 1/8th that of areas of the West Bank and Gaza that are designated reservations/ghettos for the native Palestinians. If Jews want to live in the old Jewish quarter of East Jerusalem and rebuild the synagogue there, why not allow the Palestinians to return to the old neighborhoods in West Jerusalem and rebuild the many churches and mosques there?

AIPAC issued a statement supporting Vice President Biden who claimed that there is no space between the US and Israel.  In other words, the US and Israeli interests and policies are/must be one and the same including on starvation, oppression, colonization etc.  (and oh yes, we have to always put Iran first now that we finished off Iraq for the sake of Israel). US General David Petreausdisagrees:

"Insufficient progress toward a comprehensive Middle East peace. The enduring hostilities between Israel and some of its neighbors present distinct challenges to our ability to advance our interests in the AOR. Israeli-Palestinian tensions often flare into violence and large-scale armed confrontations. The conflict foments anti-American sentiment, due to a perception of U.S. favoritism for Israel. Arab anger over the Palestinian question limits the strength and depth of U.S. partnerships with governments and peoples in the AOR and weakens the legitimacy of moderate regimes in the Arab world. Meanwhile, al-Qaeda and other militant groups exploit that anger to mobilize support. The conflict also gives Iran influence in the Arab world through its clients, Lebanese Hizballah and Hamas."

I would go much further and say the US interests and treasury have already been crippled by thesubserviant relationship to Israeli lobbies.  If the lobby finally succeeds in deepening the conflict with Iran, it will not be Iran that loses, but US and Israel will suffer a horrible blow.  The US economy would go into a tail spin and the value of the $3 billion dollars in US military aid to Israel will be reduced even further as the US dollar accelerates its decline.

ACTION: AIPAC and Christian Zionists are mobilizing thousands to write the congress and white house to keep funding and supporting Israel in its policies of colonial settlement expansion.  We can do no less write to the white house via http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/ and to congress viahttp://house.gov/


Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD
Popular Committee to to Resist the Wall and Settlements-Beit Sahour
A Bedouin in Cyberspace, a villager at home

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Saturday, March 20, 2010

winnie the pooh

i have a lot to write that i will get to very soon, but I did want to say a grateful thanks to friends who have sent extremely heartfelt messages that has left me motivated and inspired. 
thanks to a friend for sharing this quote with me, because it's certainly helping me get through the week :)
"Promise me you'll always remember: You're braver than you believe, and stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think" - A.A. Milne, Winnie the Pooh

Friday, March 19, 2010

Friday prayer, Tear gas and Rocks

Friday morning I woke up unsure of the day's plan, still distraught from the week, still uncertain about how to perceive what's going on around me.  It was a mental tug of war trying to decide if I should go to Jerusalem, the epicenter of where things have been really going wrong, with my roommate for the day or not.  I finally decided to go for it, because the alternative would have been to just sit in my room to brew over things, ask and ask questions that had no answers.

My roommate, another friend from Nablus and I caught the 9 o'clock bus  from the Ramallah bus station to head towards Jerusalem.  The checkpoints supposedly earlier in the morning are not 'that bad' and as an international we had an alternative option of taking an alternative bus that goes around the checkpoint and not actually through  it.  This privilege is given to those with Israeli ID's and to those with international passports.

Qalandia checkpoint was eerily quiet in the morning, however, the remnants of the week long clashes were more than visible.  Mounds of displaced dirt, evident of where the soldiers had chased down protesters, soot on the streets, evident of fires, and burning tires from earlier in the week.

This was my first time in the Old City of Jerusalem.  Gated on all sides by ancient high walls, like a monstrous fort in the middle of a spacious western bustling city, the old city is like an intense mixture of the world's oldest structures, most sacred sites, meeting at the same spot.  The proximity of things, how incredibly close together  everything actually was, was something that I was completely unaware of and not only baffled by but completely perplexed by.   I felt frozen.  Standing in one spot, in front of me was the Dome of the Rock, the oldest Islamic building in the world, right in front of it was Al-Aqsa Mosque, the third holiest site in Islam, and in between was the Wailing Wall, the holiest of sites for Jews, and behind me was the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, a spot venerated by Christians as the spot where Jesus Christ was crucified.

How about all that for a nice Friday morning?  I couldn't take enough deep breaths to take it all in.

Around 11:30 we walked around the winding streets, covered with shops, weaving in and out of the Muslim, Jewish and the Armenian Quarter (all of which are so close they might as well be rooms in a big house) and the crowd kept on getting bigger and bigger.  Why? Like I said this was the epicenter of where things are really going wrong.  Last Friday, Israeli soldiers had prohibited Muslim men under the age of 50 to even enter the Old City, let alone pray the Jumaa prayer at the Al-Aqsa Mosque, and this week they had done the same thing. The city streets were littered with soldiers.  As prayer time crept up, so did the tension.  Standing on the entrance to the Al-Aqsa Mosque, we saw the soldiers blocking and monitoring who is going in, turning away those who were under 50, and arguing over who actually looked 50 or not.

Outside of the old city, soldiers with masks, grenades, guns, tear gas stood around hundreds of Muslim men who stood on the streets to make their call to prayer.  They pulled out their prayer rugs (laying them out horizontally so that more than one could pray on one), or grabbed  pieces of cardboard from the shops and bazaars behind them to serve as prayer rugs for their obligatory weekly prayer, as soldiers stood firmly with their M16 rifles watching them intently.  Photographers and journalists hovered around snapping away pictures from different angles of this event.  You probably won't see this on any American mainstream news.  The Israeli soldiers were also filming internationals who were watching, because they have a tendency to record those who shouldn't be seeing the 'wrong' things, they film internationals who attend protests so that at immigration they can be turned away.

It was heartbreaking to stand there and watch.  I kept on wondering what went through the soldiers' minds, what were they thinking, what were they defending, and if any part of them felt a glitch in their hearts for standing in the way of those who wanted to pray at their place of worship with guns and tear gas.

I made my way home a couple of hours after that, after walking around the city for a bit more.  When I got to the Arab Bus Station to catch my bus number 18 to get back to Ramallah, the bus driver told me that he would only drive to the border.  Normally, that bus goes straight through and drops everyone off at the center of town in Ramallah.  I was too tiered from the day but aware enough to realize ok that must mean that Qalandia has been closed off, and there's probably problems at the checkpoint.  About half an hour of driving, and seeing some protests on the way (protests about the new settlements that are being built), the bus stopped in front of Qalandia and everyone walked across the checkpoint, and on the other side I found a bus driver who asked me if I was trying to get to Ramallah.  Once inside, a friendly man told me that yes I was on the right bus and this one would drop me  off where I needed to go.

Again Qalandia was eerily quiet.  However, as soon as it started driving off, I could see a crowd of men slowly emerging closer.  it was funny because it was the typical, stereotypical scene that I've seen in news clips, young men with Keffiyahs wrapped all around their faces.

Suddenly there was a loud "POP! POP! POP!" and white smoke, I realized that it was a soldier shooting tear gas at the Palestinian boys and then a loud CLANK that made me jump out of my seat.  It was a rock that was hurled at the bus.

I couldn't have been happier to walk back home when the bus dropped me off.  It felt good to walk the same street that I took to and from school every day and turn the corner to walk in to the apartment thats been mine for the last two and a half months, it felt really nice after an emotionally draining day to feel like I got home safe and sound.

...with more questions on my mind, then I had woken up with in the morning.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ag1mArePD-M

Thursday, March 18, 2010

clashes and confusion

emotions here have been running high.   a series of raids in the Al-Aqsa mosque (why Israel?) to more raids (come on Israel), to prohibiting palestinian muslims (anyone under age 50,  like the age group that is most likely to get really pissed off) 
from Friday prayer AT the Al-Aqsa mosque  (really? forcing people OUT of their place of worship while they are worshipping?  not letting people pray the most important prayer of the week AT the place they consider the 3rd holiest site in their religion? no thats not intentionally provoking anyyything at all) to blocking off the west bank entirely.  At first I woke up on Saturday hearing that the west bank is blocked off until Sunday, then it was Monday then it was Tuesday. The clashes have just been getting more and more intense, at the checkpoints especially.  Demonstrations and riots have been getting increasingly worse, and everyday its been a pattern of checking different websites to see which city was locked down that day, or which city reeeally had it bad.  The images running through BBC and CNN of the clashes in Qalandia checkpoint, the checkpoint that you need to cross to go to Jerusalem have been alarming for me, because though I have not physically witnessed them (since I am in school or tutoring until about 6 or 7pm daily) I know that those clashes are taking place 5 miles down the road from me every afternoon. Where I come from, that means I'm in the danger zone. 

The provocations have been getting irritatingly worse.  But as I’ve learned from sitting for hours pointlessly in a narrow corridor without any windows or objects for no reason other than the IDF just wanted me to sit there without my passport, soldiers do things just for the hell of it. These series of events in the recent past, like Israel confiscating the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron and declaring it as an Israeli hertage site   (http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=263273),    


raiding Al-Aqsa, rebuilding a synagogue in East Jerusalem (honestly just to make people more mad and pissed off, almost as a testy move to convey that they can do whatever they want whenever they want no matter how inappropriate or pointless it may be, to show that palestinians can't do anything about it, and if they do, they'll be marked by the world as terrorists), declaring new construction plans for more settlements, has made many people say that this may be the start of another Intifada, the third Intifada.  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/8571399.stm


hold up.  the 3rd Intifada. 


this is the part when my feelings get really mushed up and muddled.  first of all, I didnt and still don't understand the Intifadas fully.  at school i keep on getting snippets and snapshots of what life was like during the Intifadas.  One teacher told me, "we were just locked in our house for 3 months at a time, we couldn't go out, we couldnt open our windows, have the shutters open, because if they (the soldiers) saw our face they'd shoot at us, snipers are ready to shoot, and about every 10 days we were allowed 2 hours to go out to get food, we were going crazy, my family played cards so many times that i thought my head was going to explode".  Israeli tanks surrounded everything, and people were imprisoned in their homes. stepping out meant rolling tanks shooting at them. the kids in school that are now in the 1st grade and 2nd grade, I think, were all born during the Intifada, and there's outrageously insane stories of how they were born, either in their houses, or en route dodging tanks to get to a hospital with no facilities or staff or better yet in their cars.


what i feel around me is stifling, it's as if everyone internally is under this pressure cooker machine, feeling narrowing walls about to crush them, but it never crushes them.  it perpetually inches inwards closer and closer but there doesn't seem to be a stopping point.  After a long week of school (it always feels like that on Thursdays), I stopped by a shop next to our school, and struck a very sweet conversation with the shop owner. A highly educated woman, native to Jerusalem, who can not leave Ramallah to get to Jerusalem to see any of her family because she married someone from the West Bank, she was telling me in her small shop that no matter what the world thinks, the truth is that "they" (Israel) just want the land without the people, they just want the land, she kept on repeating.  


I don't know what to think because extreme volatility is infused and mixed with extreme uncertainty.  One moment there's talks of a 3rd Intifada and the next people are like, O no, things suck but they're fine, we're not in a position to have an Intifada.  (http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=269138)  


I was told to stock up on food, because you never know what might happen.  My roommate and I looked at each other at one point to wonder wait is this the time to stock up on food or get rid of food? like is this a weekend stock up on food because some crazy shit might break loose or really get rid of stuff because we might have to pack up our bags soon?  


As comical as this is, when we did go to the grocery store, I stared at the shelves for a long time, wondering what the hell do you buy if you are preparing for a lockdown, and after 20 minutes of staring, I had a bag of pretzels and a toothbrush.   I don't even like pretzels.  On the way home, I was appalled at myself for not thinking about buying bottled water.  Clearly...I'm not cut out for this ( ? )


So at this point, in thinking about lockdowns, or Intifadas, I don't know if I feel really politically aware or really foolish because nothing might happen at all.


At the end of the week, I found out that the chances of an Intifada are slim because if there was one, it would be the Palestinian public revolting against their own government, not Israel.  The government doesn't want that.  So believe it or not, the government run channels here in Palestine are not showing that much about current clashes.   The internal strife in the country would butt heads for a raging civil unrest.


In light of all the Obama, Biden, Clinton talks about their embarrassment that Israel is continuing their plans of constructing 1600 new settlement homes, I'd like to end this post with this picture that I think says a lot.  For the first month that I was here, I saw this on my walk back from school, and all I recognized was Obama's signature silhouette without understanding the caption underneath.  It's funny, after the mainstream coverage of the Obama administrations's dismay about the settlement issue, then  Obama getting slapped with the label of being anti-semitic and then hearing how now the two parties are saying, of course there was never any tension, this poster makes more sense.

This was a giant billboard in Ramallah:
Roughly translates to : In the one year that Obama has been President, what has changed for us?


truly, people here really don't think anything is going to change.  a picture here, a meeting there and a handshake here appeases the outside world for a while, but people here know that nothing is going to change for them.  they have to continually deal with the obnoxious, unnecessary, inhumane treatment from a group of people who simply wants the land, no matter what the price may be.