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(YellowTimes.org) – The Palestinian village of Mas'ha,
south of Qalqilia, is about 3 miles away from the June 1967 border --
also known as the Green Line -- that separates Israel from "the occupied
territories."
Mas'ha is poor and run down. The color of unfinished
concrete dominates. Its desolate main road consists mainly of closed
shops, evidence of better days. The village, situated on what used to be
a major traffic artery, was once a regional marketplace but its fortunes
soured when the Israeli army blocked the main road. The roadblock is a
300 ft stretch of unpaved road bound on both ends by five feet high
mounds of earth and boulders. The boulders prevent cars from driving
across Mas'ha past the entrance to the abutting, illegal Israeli
settlement of Elkana.
Since the roadblock was erected three years ago, about
half of Mas'ha's 4000 inhabitants left. Most of those remaining are
unemployed. A few enterprises continue to struggle. We watched their
workers unloading and hand-carrying heavy merchandise, sofa beds,
construction material, etc. up and down the boulders, like endlessly
patient ants silently suffering the caprices of a child, whose cruel
entertainment is placing obstacles in their path.
Elkana is in a different universe. Its immaculate,
red-roofed houses follow a serpentine road through a fenced-in bed of
lush, dark green vegetation that contrasts with the typical
Mediterranean faded green of the hills surrounding it. Water is
plentiful and government subsidized, but this same water is denied to
Palestinians. This open secret is the eco-political miracle of Elkana.
The air-conditioned bus that services Elkana and three
other nearby settlements will take us to Tel-Aviv for a ridiculously
cheap price -- thanks to the largess of the Israeli government -- on
perfectly paved roads. In contrast, our morning trip to Mas'ha took us
on hilly, unpaved roads that grind down the old "service" cars that ride
it daily.
On the seam line between Elkana and Mas'ha, the effects
of Israel's policies of apartheid and colonization are visible and
palpable. On the one hand, boundless investment of money is required,
making Elkana safe, inexpensive and attractive to Israelis, including
subsidies for housing, water and transport, top rate infrastructure and
a constant military presence. On the other hand, Palestinians in Mas'ha
are subject to neglect, harassment and economic warfare.
It's been over a year now since Israel began erecting a
physical barrier between its Jewish and Palestinian population centers.
Palestinians call it the "apartheid wall." Israelis call it in Hebrew
the "separation fence" -- Apartheid means separation.
Along most of its length, the barrier consists of a fence
with electronic sensors, razor wire filled trenches, a trace detection
road and a patrol road. The barrier is a massive, 60-100ft wide, sand
color wound that cuts through the olive groves in the surrounding hills.
On olive trees a thousand feet away, the olives are covered with a thick
layer of dust.
The barrier is an assault on the landscape. There is an
obscenity to it that is hard to convey in words. It is a monumental
defacement of the land, an iconoclastic expression of self-absorption
and loathing. Looking at it hurts the eyes.
Most Israelis believe the barrier is situated on the
Green Line. But Sharon's government adapted the barrier to the age-old
goals of Zionism -- taking ever more land while getting rid of the local
inhabitants. The path of the barrier sends deep fingers inside
Palestinian areas, trying to include not only as many settlements as
possible, but also as much land that still belongs to Palestinians as
possible, while leaving often as little as the built areas of the
villages on the other side. The barrier cuts through the cultivated
fields and separates villages from their livelihood and water sources.
It is the same old story of dispossession repeating itself.
Already, much land has been confiscated from Palestinians
and hundreds of trees have been uprooted to make way for the barrier.
The lands west of the barrier have not been confiscated, but access to
them has been made so difficult that cultivation is unprofitable, and in
some areas impossible. Farmers are at times prevented from getting to
the fields, at times beaten and harassed, at times allowed on foot,
without access to their mechanized tools. There is no end to the
creativity of the Israeli security apparatus.
If farmers fail to cultivate their land, Israel is likely
to use Ottoman laws to declare the land "public." This confiscation
method has been used often in the past. Knowing that, farmers continue
to farm their unprofitable fields on the other side of the barrier.
Some have moved to
sleeping in the fields.
But in Mas'ha, the building of the barrier is reaching
unimaginable heights of absurdity and racism. The barrier is supposed to
pass between Mas'ha and the illegal Elkana settlement. But the fence of
Elkana is only a few feet away from the last house in Mas'ha, which
belongs to Hani Mohammad Abdullah Amer and his family. In order not to
inconvenience the settlement, the planners had the barrier pass to the
east of Hani's house, separating it from the village, in fact
imprisoning Hani and his family between the settlement's fence and the
barrier. The army told Hani that he would be allowed to pass back and
forth to the village two or three times a day, but that he will be
forbidden from having visitors in his house.
This is the shape of the "peace" Israel is imagining
between itself and a Palestinian "state"; a peace in which Israeli
soldiers decide whether a Palestinian homeowner can have visitors in his
house.
The world view that makes such outrage possible was
summed up succinctly by the supervisor of the private security firm that
accompanies the construction of the barrier. In one of their many verbal
fights, Hani doesn't shy from giving his tormentors a piece of his mind
-- the supervisor told Hani, "you belong to the past."
But Hani doesn't think he belongs to the past, and has no
intention of fading silently in order to facilitate Jewish colonization
of the land. He has refused Israeli attempts to buy him off and is
committed to struggle for his right to lead a normal life in his own
home.
The village of Mas'ha launched a campaign to stop the
barrier. Organizers of the Land Defense Committee and PARC (Palestinian
Agricultural Relief Committee) in the village linked with Israeli peace
activists and international groups that support Palestinian rights and
set up a "peace tent" that stood in the way of the bulldozers.
Villagers from Mas'ha and other villages have also
successfully lobbied Arafat and Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian "Prime
Minister," to make the barrier a national priority in the negotiations
with Washington. This effort finally bore modest fruit when Abbas
succeeded in making the "apartheid wall" (around Qalqilia, the barrier
becomes a prison wall with watchtowers) a sticking point between Bush
and Sharon. There were even hints from the State Department that a
reduction of aid might be considered unless Israel freezes construction
of the barrier. (!!!)
On August 5, Israel's security forces attacked the peace
tent in order to allow the bulldozers to crush Hani's hen house. The hen
house stood in the projected path of the barrier. Forty-seven peace
activists were arrested, including four Israelis and three Palestinians.
The border police came at 7:00 AM, first attacking people with cameras.
One international peace activist who held a camera had two of his ribs
broken but he managed to pass his camera back to bystanders before being
hauled in.
Most arrestees were released a day later, after the
internationals signed a commitment to stay out of the Occupied
Territories. One of the peaceful protesters, a Palestinian from Mas'ha,
remained in jail for an additional day. Soon after the arrest, the
Shabak (the fearsome and cruel Israeli security agency) let his family
in Mas'ha know that "he isn't coming back." This amounted to
psychological torture. Shabak is particularly worried about non-violent
Palestinian peace activists.
Israel's security apparatus never misses an opportunity,
no matter how petty, to discourage cooperation between Palestinians and
Israelis. The day after, we stood near Hani's house, by a recently
uprooted fig tree, its leafs barely beginning to shrivel, and watched as
25 Israeli peace activists arrived in Mas'ha, stepped into the roadblock
and forced the bulldozers to halt construction of the barrier.
The action was spirited and effective. The protesters
occupied the bulldozers with signs that described the barrier as a
ghetto wall and called for an end to the land theft. After a long and
polite standoff, the police gently arrested them; they were all Israeli
Jews. During the standoff, the family of the still jailed Palestinian
was told that he could not be released because the officer in charge of
his case was busy arresting protesters in Mas'ha.
The people of Mas'ha understand the message of the
colonial security forces: "surrender, call off the protests, tell the
solidarity activists to go home, and we'll let you live, sort of." But
so far, the people of Mas'ha shrugged it off with a bitter smile. They
don't want to live at the mercy of Shabak. The people of Mas'ha want to
continue the fight for peace with equality and dignity.
[Gabriel Ash was born in Romania and grew up in Israel.
He is an unabashed 'opssimist.' He writes his columns because the pen is
sometimes mightier than the sword - and sometimes not. He lives in the
United States.]