Citizen Diplomacy, War is SO over
Starhawk, writer, earth activist, feminist visionary
and all around amazingly Witchy woman, who wrote
CODEPINK's original call to action just sent around her heartsick meditation on
her time spent in Palestine and how we can all stand in solidarity with our
sisters and brothers during this dark time. Action ideas are from US Campaign
to End the Occupation of Palestine- check them out!
From Starhawk:
Dear friends,
All day I've been thinking about Gaza, listening to reports on NPR, following the news on the internet when I can spare
a moment. I've been thinking about the friends I made there
four years ago, and wondering how they are faring, and imagining their terror
as the bombs fall on that giant, open-air prison.
The Israeli ambassador speaks movingly of the terror felt by Israeli children
as Hamas rockets explode in the night. I agree with him--that no child should
have her sleep menaced by rocket fire, or wake in the night fearing death.
But I can't help but remember one night on the Rafah
border, sleeping in a house close to the line, watching the children dive for
cover as bullets thudded into the walls. There was a shell-hole in the back
room they liked to jump through into the garden, which at that time still held
fruit trees and chickens. Their mother fed me eggs, and their grandmother
stuffed oranges into my pockets with the shy pride every gardener shares.
That house is gone, now, along with all of its neighbors. Those children wake
in the night, every night of their lives, in terror. I don't know if they have
survived the hunger, the lack of medical supplies, the bombs. I only know that
they are children, too.
I've ridden on buses in Israel. I understand that gnawing fear, the squirrely
feeling in the pit or your stomach, how you eye your fellow passengers
wondering if any of them are too thick around the middle. Could that portly
fellow be wearing a suicide belt, or just too many late night snacks of hummus?
That's no way to live.
But I've also walked the pock-marked streets of Rafah,
where every house bears the scars of Israeli snipers, where tanks prowled the
border every night, where children played in the rubble, sometimes under fire,
and this was all four years ago, when things were much, much better there.
And I just don't get it. I mean, I get why suicide bombs and homemade rockets
that kill innocent civilians are wrong. I just don't get why bombs from F16s
that kill far more innocent civilians are right. Why a kid from the ghetto who
shoots a cop is a criminal, but a pilot who bombs a police station from the air
is a hero.
Is it a distance thing? Does the air or the altitude confer a purifying effect?
Or is it a matter of scale? Individual murder is vile, but mass murder, carried
out by a state as an aspect of national policy, that's a fine and noble thing?
I don't get how my own people can be doing this. Or rather, I do get it. I am a
Jew, by birth and upbringing, born six years after the Holocaust ended, raised on the myth and hope of Israel. The myth goes like
this:
"For two thousand years we wandered in exile, homeless and persecuted,
nearly destroyed utterly by the Nazis. But out of that suffering was born one
good thing--the homeland that we have come back to, our own land at last, where
we can be safe, and proud, and strong."
That's a powerful story, a moving story. There's only one problem with it--it
leaves the Palestinians out. It has to leave them out, for if we were to admit
that the homeland belonged to another people, well, that spoils the story.
The result is a kind of psychic blind spot where the Palestinians are
concerned. If you are truly invested in Israel as the Jewish homeland, the Jewish state, then you can't let the Palestinians
be real to you. It's like you can't really focus on them. Golda Meir
said, "The Palestinians, who are they? They don't exist." We hear,
"There is no partner for peace," "There is no one to talk
to."
And so Israel, a modern state with high standards of hygiene, a state rooted in
a religion that requires washing your hands before you eat and regular, ritual
baths, builds settlements that don't bother to construct sewage treatment
plants. They just dump raw sewage onto the Palestinian fields across the fence,
somewhat like a spaceship ejecting its wastes into the void. I am truly not
making this up--I've seen it, smelled it, and it's a known though shameful
fact. But if the Palestinians aren't really real--who are they? They don't
exist!--then the land they inhabit becomes a kind of void in the psyche, and it
isn't really real, either. At times, in those border villages, walking the fencelines of settlements, you feel like you have slipped
into a science fiction movie, where parallel universes exist in the same space,
but in
different strands of reality, that never touch.
When I was on the West Bank, during Israeli incursions the Israeli military
would often take over a Palestinian house to billet their soldiers. Many times,
they would simply lock the family who owned it into one room, and keep them
there, sometimes for hours, sometimes for days--parents, grandparents, kids and
all. I've sat with a family, singing to the children while soldiers trashed
their house, and I've been detained by a group of soldiers playing cards in the
kitchen with a family locked in the other room. (I got out of that one--but
that's another story.)
It's a kind of uneasy feeling, having something locked away in a room in your
house that you can't look at. Ever caught a mouse in a glue trap? And you
can't bear to watch it suffer, so you leave the room and close the door and
don't come back until it's really, really dead.
Like a horrific fractal, the locked room repeats on different scales. The
Israelis have built a wall to lock away the West Bank. And Gaza itself is one
huge, locked room. Close the borders, keep food and medical supplies and
necessities from getting through, and perhaps they will just quietly fade out
of existence and stop spoiling our story.
"All we want is a return to calm," the Israeli ambassador says.
"All we want is peace."
One way to get peace is to exterminate what threatens you. In fact, that may be
the prime directive of the last few thousand years.
But attempts to exterminate pests breed resistance, whether you're dealing with
insects or bacteria or people. The more insecticides you pour on a field, the
more pests you have to deal with--because insecticides are always more potent
at killing the beneficial bugs than the pesky ones.
The harshness, the crackdowns, the border closings, the checkpoints, the
assassinations, the incursions, the building of settlements deep into Palestinian territory, all the daily frustrations
and humiliations of occupation, have been breeding the conditions for Hamas, or
something like it, to thrive. If Israel truly wants peace, there's a more
subtle, a more intelligent and more effective strategy to pursue than simply
trying to kill the enemy and anyone else who happens to be in the vicinity.
It's this--instead of killing what threatens you, feed what you want to grow.
Consider in what conditions peace can thrive, and create them,
just as you would prepare the bed for the crops you want to plant.
Find those among your opponents who also want peace, and support them. Make
alliances. Offer your enemies incentives to change, and reward your friends.
Of course, to follow such a strategy, you must actually see and know your
enemy. If they are nothing to you but cartoon characters of terrorists, you
will not be able to tell one from another, to discern the religious fanatic
from the guy muttering under his breath, "F-ing Hammas, they closed the cinema again!"
And you must be willing to give something up. No one gets peace if your basic
bargaining position is, "I get everything I want, and you eat my
shit." You might get a temporary victory, but it will never be a peaceful
one.
To know and see the enemy, you must let them into the story. They must become
real to you, nuanced, distinctive as individuals.
But when we let the Palestinians into the story, it changes. Oh, how painfully
it changes! For there is no way to tell a new story, one that includes both
peoples of the land, without starting like this:
"In our yearning for a homeland, in our attempts as a threatened and
traumatized people to find safety and power, we have done a great wrong to
another people, and now we must atone."
Just try saying it. If you, like me, were raised on that other story, just try
this one out. Say it three times. It hurts, yes, but it might also bring a
great, liberating sense of relief with it.
And if you're not Jewish, if you're American, if you're white, if you're
German, if you're a thousand other things, really, if you're a human being,
there's probably some version of that story that is true for you.
Out of our own great need and fear and pain, we have often done great harm, and
we are called to atone. To atone is to be at one--to stop drawing a circle that
includes our tribe and excludes the other, and start drawing a larger circle
that takes everyone in.
How do we atone? Open your eyes. Look into the face of the enemy, and see a
human being, flawed, distinct, unique and precious. Stop killing. Start
talking. Compost the shit and the rot and feed the olive trees.
Act. Cross the line. There are Israelis who do it all the time, joining with Palestinians on the West Bank to
protest the wall, watching at checkpoints, refusing to serve in the occupying
army, standing for peace. Thousands have demonstrated this week in Tel Aviv.
There are Palestinians who advocate nonviolent resistance, who have organized
their villages to protest the wall, who face tear gas, beatings, arrests,
rubber bullets and real bullets to make their stand.
There are internationals who have put themselves on
the line--like the boatload of human rights activists, journalists and doctors
on board the Dignity, the ship from the Free Gaza movement that was rammed and
fired on by the Israeli navy yesterday as it attempted to reach Gaza with
humanitarian aid.
Maybe we can't all do that. But we can all write a letter, make a phone call, send an email. We can make the Palestinian people visible to
us, and to the world. When we do so, we make a world that is safer for every
child.
Here is a good summary of some of the actions we can take. Please feel free to
repost this. In fact, send it to someone you think will disagree with it.
Starhawk
www.starhawk.org