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Nablus Invasion Diary III: Resistance, Hypocrisy, and Dead Men Walking
Anna
Baltzer writing from Nablus, occupied Palestine, Live from Palestine,
14 March 2007
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After a long wait a mother and her child are finally permitted to
enter the Old City with bread for hungry families unable to go
outside during curfew. |
[...
PREVIOUS]
13 March 2007
What most struck me about the Nablus invasion wasn't the killing of
unarmed civilians. It wasn't the obstruction of medical workers and
ambulances, or the indiscriminate detention of males, or the occupied
houses and curfews. What I will remember for the rest of my life is the
steadfast resistance of the people of Nablus.
I came to Palestine to document and intervene in human rights abuses and
to support nonviolent resistance to the Occupation. As I delivered bread
and medicine with medical relief workers throughout the invasion, I
wondered if I was really fulfilling my mission. Wasn't handing out aid
simply accommodating and enabling the curfew?
An experienced Israeli solidarity organizer named Neta Golan eventually
clarified things for me. She explained, "It's very good to distribute
bread and medicine to needy people, but the real power and purpose of what
you are doing is something else: First and foremost, you are supporting
Palestinians who are breaking curfew. That is nonviolent resistance. And
as you move around in spite of the army's indiscriminate imposition of
house arrest, you empower others to do so as well. If the army knows there
are dozens or even hundreds of civilians in the streets, and that several
of them are internationals, they cannot shoot anything that moves, which
they have done during curfews in the past."
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UPMRC volunteers accompany a mother and her child to an ambulance in
spite of the curfew. |
Neta was right. Simply being outside was a powerful form of nonviolent
resistance. But the Palestinians didn't need much empowering -- from the
first day of the invasion, I saw various civilians on the streets and in
cars driving through the city, defying the army simply by trying to carry
on some semblance of daily life.
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Israeli soldiers confiscate the IDs of medical relief volunteers and
prevent them from delivering medical services. |
Some
Palestinians went a step further in defiance. Once when the army stopped
me and Firas from UPMRC from entering part of the Old City with bread,
Firas waited ten minutes and then said, "Anna, come with me." He grabbed
as many bags as he could carry, and began walking past the jeeps. I
grabbed twelve pounds of bread and scrambled after him past the soldiers,
who had come out of their jeeps and were yelling, "Hey! Stop! What are you
doing? We said you can't enter!" Firas kept walking steadily and I turned
around to the soldiers. "We're delivering bread to hungry people. What are
you going to do, shoot us?" They were speechless and held their fire.
As we walked away, Firas smiled at me and said, "Next time it will be
easier." Indeed, when we returned with more bread, the soldiers told us we
could go this time but only for five minutes. "Sure," we said and kept
walking, knowing the 18-year-olds were trying to salvage some power in the
situation.
Resistance was creative and ubiquitous: When speaking English loudly to
remind soldiers that internationals were around became tedious and forced,
one Palestinian girl suggested that we sing her favorite song, "I Will
Always Love You," by Whitney Houston. So we sang together as we came
around corners to soldiers breaking into houses, annoyed at us for
disturbing the silence of their invasions. I hoped that singing would be
both nonthreatening and humanizing in the eyes of the soldiers, while
still achieving our objective. When the army prevented medical workers and
internationals from entering the Old City, they gathered posters and paint
and put together an impromptu demonstration, documented by all the media
who were also barred from the Old City. The protesters sat yelling cheers
in front of an occupied hospital until jeeps gassed them.
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After being released from detention, Dr. Ghassan treats a boy with
serious burns. After being detained, Israeli soldiers tried to
arrest Dr. Ghassan again at a demonstration on March 7th at Huwarra. |
The most powerful demonstration came a week later in honor of Women's Day.
The Women's Union in Nablus organized a rally and march in conjunction
with the Public Committee Against Closure, UPMRC, the Union of Health
Committees, and other local groups, for the city of Nablus to reassert
their power and rights after a week ofinvasions. Hundreds of Palestinians,
mostly women, gathered and marched to Huwwara -- the checkpoint enclosing
the city from the South -- carrying flags and pictures of sons, husbands,
brothers, and fathers who are wanted or imprisoned, or have been killed by
the army. Hundreds of women held their ground as soldiers equipped with
riot gear pushed the crowd back.
My colleague Nova recognized one of the pushing soldiers from the invasion
because our interaction with him had left such an impression. On Wednesday
during curfew we were accompanying a doctor on duty when the soldier
forbade our group to pass. He explained, "That man is not a doctor. He's a
killer." We were incredulous, and I prompted him to explain further. "An
Arab killed my friend, and this man is an Arab." I replied, "I'm sorry to
hear about your friend, but that doesn't mean that all Arabs are killers."
He was unmoved. He was also not alone. The soldier holding Firas and me
back had also shamelessly pronounced his wrath for Arabs. Certainly there
are racists everywhere in the world, but it's particularly striking to
listen to such hatred from a teenager who has been handed an M16 and near
impunity in the land of the people he despises.
Of course, most of the soldiers didn't volunteer such remarks and probably
considered themselves charitable to the Palestinians, given the
circumstances. One soldier who detained us for half an hour bragged about
all the food and medicine he'd allowed through. He couldn't understand
what the Palestinians were still complaining about. I asked him where he
was from.
"Tel Aviv."
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Israeli soldiers occupy the Old City. |
"So
if armed Palestinians invaded Tel Aviv, shut the entire population in
their homes, and allowed aid workers to bring around food and medicine,
you wouldn't complain?"
He said that was different. I asked how. He changed the subject. I asked
him how long he was going to punish my colleague and me by detaining us on
the street. He said he wasn't punishing us, that we just had to wait a
little while, which was normal. I asked:
"So if armed Palestinians stopped you outside your house, demanded your
ID, and prevented you from going to work, you would consider that normal?"
He changed the subject again.
The Occupation and invasions have been happening for so long that soldiers
forget they are illegal occupiers with no legitimate authority in the
area. It's as if the Mafia took over New York City; it may be beneficial
to obey at certain times, but it's certainly not the law. The Occupation
itself is illegal according to international law. But even according to
agreements signed by Israel, Nablus is in Area A, the 12-17 percent of the
West Bank where Israelis are forbidden according to Oslo II. This is the
same Oslo II that is among the agreements Israel and the rest of the world
are demanding that Hamas recognize in order for the Palestinian population
to regain the lifeline of economic support that was pulled a year ago.
It's always illuminating to switch the pronouns around. Israel arms
teenagers and sends them into Palestinian cities, where they consistently
kill unarmed civilians. What happens when Palestinian armed teenagers
enter an Israeli city? Israel violates Oslo II every day, but the
Palestinian government will not be recognized or returned its own tax
dollars until it fully accepts the same agreement. (The agreement, by the
way, falls vastly short of international law and full human rights for
Palestinians.) Israel is justified in planning major offensives against
Palestinian fighters. What about attacks against Israeli fighters, the
soldiers themselves? It's worth noting that the soldiers are the very
targets of the wanted men, not Israeli civilians. Al Aqsa Martyr's Brigade
plans attacks against armed fighters illegally occupying and confiscating
their -- Palestinian -- land. It would seem the hunter and hunted in
Nablus are guilty of the same crime: attacking the enemy's soldiers.
Except that armed struggle against illegal occupation forces is actually
protected under international law, whereas Israel's occupation is not.
I met some of the hunted the day before I left Nablus, including a leader
of Al Aqsa Martyr's Brigade, whom I'll call Moussa. An acquaintance led a
colleague and me to where a group of them were sitting and drinking juice
in the Old City. They welcomed us and brought us sweet coffee. Moussa was
a soft-spoken man not much older than forty, while most of the other
wanted men were mere teenagers, curious and excited to meet foreigners.
Moussa raised his voice just once during our conversation, to yell at one
of the boys for trying to take my picture on his cell phone. He said it
could be extremely dangerous for soldiers to find evidence of our meeting
if/when the men were caught or killed, and refused my business card for
the same reason.
After some time, I asked Moussa if he had a message to the people of
America. He thanked me for the opportunity and began to speak:
I am
from the Palestinian armed resistance to the Occupation. I am opposed to
violence against any civilians, whether they are Palestinian or Israeli,
Muslim or Jewish. I hate fighting, but when soldiers invade our homes, our
land, and our lives, it is our duty to resist them, to resist the theft of
our water, our self determination, and our dignity. We are human just like
you. We want to live, to have families, a normal life. But if we must
fight to our death to protect what is ours, our land, the future of our
children, we are ready to do so.
I invite you to look at maps and statistics of this conflict over time. I
lament the killing of innocent people on both sides, but the tremendous
disproportion of land and water rights, civil liberties, and civilian
casualties on the two sides is undeniable. The international community
calls us terrorists, but we would welcome any objective international
presence to bear witness to what is happening here and come to their own
conclusions. Is beating unarmed children, medical workers, and even
internationals not terror? Is taking advantage of lulls in violence --
when the press isn't watching -- to accelerate expansion of settlements in
land and water rich areas not a crime?
Palestinians have coexisted harmoniously with Jews in the past, and we are
ready to do so again. After all, Jews are our brothers and sisters, people
of faith just like us. As our party Fatah has said many times before, we
are ready to live in peace with Israel if there can be a just and viable
resolution to the issues of borders, distribution of water, settlements,
Jerusalem, and the refugees. These are our conditions, and they are also
our rights.
Moussa is a dead man walking, but he will continue to resist as long as he
can, as will all the people of Nablus in their own ways. I relay Moussa's
message not to defend violence, but because I believe his perspective has
a right be heard. Different sides of any conflict deserve to have a voice,
but the mainstream media is unlikely to pick up Moussa's speech, just as
they haven't picked up anything but the most sensationalistic aspects of
the invasion. They haven't mentioned the way beautiful old houses were
destroyed by soldiers looking for nonexistent tunnels. They haven't
mentioned the walls of the Old City broken down by Israeli hummers too
wide to fit down the narrow streets, and the water pipes along the walls
that were busted and sprayed throughout the curfew, costing the city tons
of its precious clean water supply. They haven't mentioned the
400-year-old Turkish baths that soldiers used as a military base between
operations, and then destroyed from top to bottom. Several families were
dependent on the cultural jewel, which we found in ruins, playing cards
all over the floor left by soldiers next to the benches where they would
have slept.
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Israeli Army vehicles damaging buildings and roads in the Old City.
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The media haven't mentioned the house burned from the inside, or the
families of wanted men who were beaten and detained, or the 15-year-old
boy shot in the wrist with a rubber bullet while he was out buying bread
for his family. They haven't mentioned the way the jeeps returned every
night, even after Israel announced that the operation was over. I would
like to tell you about each of them in detail, but to be honest, with
every passing hour there are new tragedies to report and attend to. I also
know that this report is already longer than most busy Americans will have
time in their daily lives to read. If you did make it this far, thank you,
and until the world stops silencing Palestinian tragedies and voices,
please help me let these stories be heard.
All images by
Anna Baltzer.
Anna Baltzer is a volunteer with the International Women's Peace
Service in the West Bank and author of the book, Witness in Palestine:
Journal of a Jewish American Woman in the Occupied Territories. For
information about her writing, photography, DVD, and speaking tours, visit
her website at
www.AnnaInTheMiddleEast.com. The
decisions and opinions of the writer do not necessarily reflect those of
the International Women's Peace Service.
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