Israel

01/15/2010

Ten Days on the West Bank: A New Year’s Hope for Peace

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By Jack Nusan Porter, Ph.D.

Beit Sahour, West Bank, Palestine. I recently returned from the West Bank, a term that Israeli radical settlers don’t like. They prefer Judea and Samaria; and Palestinians don’t like the term either. They prefer “Palestine.” Welcome to the Middle East.

 

I stayed with the Nimeer and Shama Rishmawi family in this predominantly Christian village. Both Beit Sahour (Canaanite for “magic” I am told) and Beit Jala are Christian towns. They are just outside Bethlehem, or Beit Lechem, “House of Bread or Meat” in Hebrew, but it has Canaanite roots that give it an older translation. However, Bethlehem, which was once 75 percent Christian in 1948, is now only 25 percent Christian.

 

I asked my hosts where they all went, and they replied that most of the Beit Sahorians moved to America, to Saginaw and Flint, Michigan. Thousands of Christian Palestinians live there quietly, under the radar. In general, sadly, Christians—in this case, Orthodox Christians such as the Rishmawis—are dwindling in number, not only in Palestine/West Bank but also in Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon and throughout the Middle East.

 

However, this was Christmas time and the Rismawis who number as many as 800 clan members in the town and throughout the West Bank, were celebrating the pre-Christmas season; one of Nimeer (Arabic for “tiger”) Rishmawi’s brothers owns a Christmas shop in Beit Sahour, next door to his house. Plastic Santas ten feet high are out front; tree decorations and toys of all kinds line the store shelves. I bought three red and gold Santa hats. I love Christmas and I’m not Christian.

 

Nimeer and Shama Rishmawi live in a large stone (what some call “Jerusalem stone”) home filled with three generations, their son George and his wife Fida (“sacrifice” in Arabic) and their two lovely children, Bisan and Basin.

 

Their family goes back hundreds of years, back to the time of Jesus Christ who roamed these fields and valleys. Shama was an excellent cook and I will miss her cooking and her family very much. Palestinian hospitality is without equal.

 

While in the West Bank, I acted as a Palestinian and was treated as a Palestinian until I flashed my American passport. I stood in line at some dozen checkpoints, whether between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, Ramallah and Jerusalem, and other points in between. Sometimes, the lines moved quickly; other times, there were delays, especially during the four-day Muslim feast of El-Eid (a festival ironically based on Abraham’s attempt to sacrifice Isaac; however in the Muslim version, Ishmael replaces Isaac). Young kids were not used to the security searches and did not take off their clothes or bags or belts fast enough. Frustrating, but it gave me time to talk to Palestinians.

 

The checkpoints are like airport security but more intense—for example, Israel has on record every single Palestinian citizen and they must place their palms down on a pad and their picture and background shows up; if it doesn’t show up, you don’t go through unless you have a pretty good excuse or the soldier is tolerant that day. The checkpoints are not manned by Andy Frain guards but by young 18-20 year-old soldiers, both male and female.

 

Palestinians also need a special pass to get to the Jewish side. One of my hosts, Eyad Burnat, was not able to get a pass to Jerusalem which means he cannot get an exit visa to America to speak because the US consulate is in Jerusalem. A catch-22. Can’t get to Jerusalem; can’t go to America.

 

Nimeer had to go to a hospital in Jerusalem but could only get a one-day pass. Shama has not visited Jerusalem in years yet she is only a 20-minute ride away.

 

There are worse indignities—I visited the town of Bi’lin, west of Ramallah. Every Friday there is a non-violent demonstration at a fence that intrudes on Palestinian farm land and olive groves. Demonstrators include not only Bi’lin residents but many “internationals,” people from England, Scotland, Ireland, France, Greece, and even a few Americans and Israelis. I was a rarity—an older American Jewish leader—few had ever seen one, so rare in fact, that I was interviewed by Iranian TV, Palestinian TV, French media and Irish media.

 

True, at times, some kids throw rocks over the fence; there is however no way to throw the rocks directly at soldiers; they are lobbed over but the soldiers easily avoid them and have large shields to protect themselves. Also true, at times, some demonstrators tried to pry open this gate that divides the fence, and this is a fence, by the way, not the infamous wall, just a wire fence.

 

However, soldiers lob many volleys of tear gas, percussion bombs, and even rubber-coated bullets. Some demonstrators have died. No soldier has ever died in Bi’ilin. There are also raids; I didn’t witness one while I stayed in Bi’lin, but about a month later, five jeeps filled with thirty soldiers and border police, came into town to harass the “internationals,” hustled them outside in the rain at night, checked their passports, and invaded their living space. No reason; just harassment since the Israelis are not happy with the Bi’lin website and publicity that the “internationals” bring to the “fence.” It’s bad public relations for Israel.

 

I talked to numerous Palestinians and felt neither fear nor intimidation, and they all asked me to take a “message to Obama”. Both Muslims and Christians alike have this almost mystical belief that I could bring a message to him, a message of peace and justice in this holiday season. I told them I knew Senator John Kerry and I would bring that message to him and via him to Obama and Hilary Clinton. They trust that I will.

 

What do they want? First and foremost, human dignity and  respect; a reduction of the checkpoints; more easily obtained exit visas and passes to other parts of the region; less arbitrary searches and seizures; more water; but mostly, more respect and dignity. Many Palestinians are “post-nationalist;” they want to go beyond a state and a flag and an army—they want simply respect and human rights.

 

They blessed me and thanked me and told me that maybe only the Messiah can bring peace to this troubled region.  Is Obama their “messiah?” I certainly hope so.


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Comments

July 1st, 2010 - 09:26:16
By Angela
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:07:30
By Jonathan Wolf
An amazingly "kumbaya"ish article for Ameinu, which I have always thought was dovish and hopeful but also realistic and (where necessary) tough. After all, the Israeli party you support is part of the very questionable current government.
Jack Nusan Porter (whom I have known casually for decades) paints a picture of Israeli military harassment of Palestinians and of (the annoyingly biased and misinformed/ uninformed) 'internationals', which is likely quite true, and also of West Bank residents who only want dignity and fair treatment, like blacks in the U.S. South 50 years ago, which is NOT the whole story. Unfortunately (as Dr. King z"l, a sharp critic of Israel's detractors as well as a passionate advocate of human dignity, might have noted) there are real dangers in loosening security and allowing all of the Palestinians who seem sincere to cross into Israel.
Rabin and Barak and Olmert really wanted to 'give peace a chance'. It didn't work out so well (Dennis Ross and Bill Clinton, in their memoirs, say that Arafat torpedoed Taba), and now we have a quarrelous, right-wing Israeli government.
The problem is a lot deeper than dignified treatment for Palestinians. Porter, and Ameinu, know that, right??
Of course it is deeper Mr Wolf.
But practice "kumbaya" as much as possible.

It is better than practice of a camel.
Have a nice day Mr Wolf.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:54:15
By Angela
So does this mean no one else loves Christmas?

Sincerely, Angela
March 9th, 2010 - 07:53:50
By Angela
Does this mean most of these people do not like Christmas?

Thank you once again.
P.S.
To the Editor.
I noticed that right after I posted eeveryone else jumped on the bandwagon.So you just needed someone to prime the pump. Why thank you.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:53:33
By Jack Nusan Porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:10:39
By Sherwin Harris
Writer states he "felt no fear" talking to palestinians.
Thats because they have nothing to fear. Nobodies gunning for them. A drive through the area shows them living boldly and openly, unfenced in their settlements in stark contrast to Israelis who are in well fortified settlements and for good reason.
He reports on restrictive conditions at checkpoints. Just to remind him, these are established to contain palestinian attackers. They work.
He points out that they are manned/womaned by 18-20 year old Israeli soldiers. Let me ask you, what are the 18-20 year olds doing where you live? Do these Israeli youngsters not have a similar right to a normal life? Attend college and so forth?
Palestinians have NEVER demonstrated that they are true partners for peace. They have never established a stable governance.
They have proved that they are willing to be tools of international radical islamic jihad. He reports that 75% of the christian arabs have left the town. He does not report the extent to which radical islamic hostilities have produced this result.



You generalize way too much about Palestinians. The people I met want peace...and justice, and a little land and to stop the indignities they suffer from. They are not willing tools of radical Islamic jihad--this is bs. They fear radical Muslims as much as we do--they want a secular state, most Palestinians.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:53:20
By jack nusan Porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:09:36
By Larry Uman
thank you for your efforts to bring peace and understanding to the region.
Thank you, Larry.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:53:14
By Jack Nusan Porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:08:29
By Robert Haymond
A nice "feel-good" article meant to impress diaspora Jews whose connection to Israel is slight and whose knowledge of the dangers and insecurities of Jewish life is even less. Did the author ever consider that the dwindling number of Arab Christians has nothing to do with Jews but, rather, with a Muslim population which refuse to recognize any other people in the mideast except as "dhimmis"? Did the author bother to write about the many ambushes and murders of Jewish people caused by Arabs whose main inclination is to destroy Jews and Jewish life? Therefore the checkpoints and caution about who is let into Israel and who is not. The author makes it all sound so wonderful and peachy keen, his "Palestinian" experience, but the reality for Jews is something else again. What this author seems to want, in the name of "peace", is a Judenrein Westbank, as if we Jews do not belong in Samaria and Judea. And, incidentally, economic life for Palestinians is thriving on the other side of the Green Line. If you haven't taken note from personal experience, google mideast journalist Tom Gross and read what he has to say about life there.
Not true, Robert. Christians leave because of lack of opportunity for their children, not because of Muslim hatred of them. True, in Iraq there is violence against Christians but not on the West bank. That's a myth. Also, the P's that i talked to want to live with Jews, even settlers. In a P state, in a two-state solution, Jews can live in a Palestine; they will be welcomed just as Irish or french or italians would be welcomed. It's the settlers that do not want to live with arabs.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:52:59
By jack nusan porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:07:30
By Jonathan Wolf
An amazingly "kumbaya"ish article for Ameinu, which I have always thought was dovish and hopeful but also realistic and (where necessary) tough. After all, the Israeli party you support is part of the very questionable current government.
Jack Nusan Porter (whom I have known casually for decades) paints a picture of Israeli military harassment of Palestinians and of (the annoyingly biased and misinformed/ uninformed) 'internationals', which is likely quite true, and also of West Bank residents who only want dignity and fair treatment, like blacks in the U.S. South 50 years ago, which is NOT the whole story. Unfortunately (as Dr. King z"l, a sharp critic of Israel's detractors as well as a passionate advocate of human dignity, might have noted) there are real dangers in loosening security and allowing all of the Palestinians who seem sincere to cross into Israel.
Rabin and Barak and Olmert really wanted to 'give peace a chance'. It didn't work out so well (Dennis Ross and Bill Clinton, in their memoirs, say that Arafat torpedoed Taba), and now we have a quarrelous, right-wing Israeli government.
The problem is a lot deeper than dignified treatment for Palestinians. Porter, and Ameinu, know that, right??
Thank you, Jonathan. Yes, the problem is complex but solvable. Obama, like a shark, must contantly move forward to a two-state solution, or we die . Eithe we live together or we will die together. It is that simple....and complex.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:52:38
By jack nusan porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:06:20
By Angela
Thank you for this article.
Irael will always be Israel to me.

But there was a Palestine and there still is.


I love Christmas also.
Dear angela--thank you for your comment. I love Christmas especially to celebrate it on the West bank with Christian and Muslim friends. There are so many myths and half-truths--we have all been brainwashed.

Go to Indymedia-Ireland for pictures of myself and the demonstrations at Bi'ilin.
March 9th, 2010 - 07:52:26
By jack nusan porter
QUOTE: January 22nd, 2010 - 09:10:39
By Sherwin Harris
Writer states he "felt no fear" talking to palestinians.
Thats because they have nothing to fear. Nobodies gunning for them. A drive through the area shows them living boldly and openly, unfenced in their settlements in stark contrast to Israelis who are in well fortified settlements and for good reason.
He reports on restrictive conditions at checkpoints. Just to remind him, these are established to contain palestinian attackers. They work.
He points out that they are manned/womaned by 18-20 year old Israeli soldiers. Let me ask you, what are the 18-20 year olds doing where you live? Do these Israeli youngsters not have a similar right to a normal life? Attend college and so forth?
Palestinians have NEVER demonstrated that they are true partners for peace. They have never established a stable governance.
They have proved that they are willing to be tools of international radical islamic jihad. He reports that 75% of the christian arabs have left the town. He does not report the extent to which radical islamic hostilities have produced this result.



As noted with another comment--that is a myth--Christians on the West bank are not in danger of their lives by "radical Islamists" they leave because of the Israeli occupation that gives their children no future. They leave to make a future for their children.
I speak only of the west bank--in Iraq or Iran it is different. Most p's i talked to see radical Islamists as Jews do--as a great threat to a secular democratic Palestinian state. They agree with all of you about radical jihadists.
January 22nd, 2010 - 09:10:39
By Sherwin Harris
Writer states he "felt no fear" talking to palestinians.
Thats because they have nothing to fear. Nobodies gunning for them. A drive through the area shows them living boldly and openly, unfenced in their settlements in stark contrast to Israelis who are in well fortified settlements and for good reason.
He reports on restrictive conditions at checkpoints. Just to remind him, these are established to contain palestinian attackers. They work.
He points out that they are manned/womaned by 18-20 year old Israeli soldiers. Let me ask you, what are the 18-20 year olds doing where you live? Do these Israeli youngsters not have a similar right to a normal life? Attend college and so forth?
Palestinians have NEVER demonstrated that they are true partners for peace. They have never established a stable governance.
They have proved that they are willing to be tools of international radical islamic jihad. He reports that 75% of the christian arabs have left the town. He does not report the extent to which radical islamic hostilities have produced this result.



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