Daily Kos

The Wall, Hillary, Bob Marley and Oprah

Fri May 25, 2007 at 05:26:47 AM PDT

Oprah is going to Israel for a solidarity visit.

Will she go to the Little Town of Bethlehem: Occupied Territory and bear witness to what the INDIGENOUS people of The Holy Land have suffered after 40 years of OCCUPATION?

Will she visit The Wall, which devours 1.5 MILLION USA TAX DOLLARS PER MILE to construct 30 foot high slabs of abominable concrete and electricfied razor wire that the International Court of Justice has deemed ILLEGAL and must come down.

Will she stand in solidarity with the NONVIOLENT resisters of the now 40 years of OCCUPATION?

Winfrey was honored by the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity for her contribution to promoting humanitarian issues.

Wiesel called on Winfrey to visit Israel, where "the major war against terror is currently taking place."

In her speech, Winfrey said she sympathized with the suffering of the people of Israel, and that she intended to accept Wiesel's invitation and come with him to Israel.

Israel's UN Ambassador Danny Gillerman, who attended the event, said that a visit of a figure with such influence on the international media could help bring an end to the indifference towards the terror threat faced by Israelis.-http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3403333,00.html

On November 15, 2005, Senator Hillary Clinton stood on the Jerusalem side of The Wall and was quoted in Ha'aretz, expressing support for The Wall because it "is against terrorists" and "not against the Palestinian people."

Senator Clinton did NOT visit the Little Town of Bethlehem, which is Occupied Territory, to see what The Wall has done to the Bethlehem economy. But I have.

On New Years Eve Day 2005, I visited a family who had just rebuilt their home in Dheisheh, one of three 59-year-old refugee camps in Bethlehem. The Hammash family had rebuilt on the very same spot after the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) blew their former home up without any reason or compensation. The usual reason given for home demolitions, as well as anything the Israeli army does that denies human rights is: "Security"!

The Hammash residence is deep within the Dheisheh refugee camp, at least a mile from The Wall. Mr. Hammash told me that in 2004, the IDF banged on his door and informed the family that their home would be demolished within fifteen minutes. The family all got safely out, but their home was but a memory a few moments later.

"No one in our family had ever been in any trouble with the Israeli government before and no family member had ever been arrested. They picked us to be an example of the power and control that Israel has to deny basic and inalienable human rights," Mr. Hammash told me without any bitterness at all.

What impresses me most every time I go to Palestine is that every Palestinian I speak with all have the most forgiving spirits and unflappable patience. I thought of Senator Clinton's inaccurate and insensitive remarks about The Wall not being against the Palestinian people, and I still wonder what she would say about Palestinian homes being destroyed without any reason at all.

An Uncle, who lived down the stairs from the family, also had his home blown away on the very same day. Relatives took them all in, for the poor in Palestine take care of the poor and don't look to the government to do what people of good will, will do automatically: care for the widow, the orphan, the ill and the prisoner.

Whenever I need a taxi while in Bethlehem or Jerusalem, I call Sam. He can comfortably transport eight in his van and he has an excellent sound system. Sam is an Orthodox Christian in the Syrian Church and has a gorgeous wife and two beautiful kids. Sam has VIP papers which enable him to chauffeur the Patriarchs around town without as much hassle as a regular Palestinian would have to endure at the checkpoints.

Sam, his wife and I rode to the Ben Gurion Airport, three hours prior to my 1 AM flight home on January 5, 2006, the final day of my second of four journey's to Israel and Palestine since June 2005. We talked a little but mostly we listened to the music of Bob Marley. When we arrived at the checkpoint at the entrance of the airport, Sam rolled down his window and smiled at the young soldier and said, "Shalom" but it sounded more like "Salaam."

Sam's VIP pass meant nothing to the soldier and we were all ordered to disembark and pull out all of my luggage. My passport was demanded without a smile and Sam was led into the interrogation room while his wife and I remained out in the cold trying to laugh at the absurdity of the situation. Another soldier examines and probes the van as he thoroughly looks for b-o-m-b-s. The paranoia I see in so many Israeli's has got to be, some kind of holocaust hangover blinding them to the fact that the oppressed have now become the oppressors; for every one they cross paths with is a terror suspect.

After Sam's van is thoroughly examined for b-o-m-b-s, I received my passport back marked with a red sticker upon it. Back in Sam's van his wife expertly removed the sticker and all the glue from my passport. The sticker brands one as having come through occupied territory. Sam informs me that my third degree would be airport security's territory and that was why the soldier never asked me any questions.

Sam smiled wryly as he told me, "This is what the Nazi's did to the Jews before the Holocaust when they made them wear the Star of David. They marked them as the enemy. Now anyone who knows Palestinians or visits occupied territory gets a sticker on their passport to label them as friends of the enemy."
Then Sam turned up the volume on his Bose system and Bob Marley and the Wailers erupted through the speakers:

Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Don't give up the fight.

My luggage had been filled with Arabic nonviolent literature but Sam cautioned me to leave it all with him to avoid the extra hassle it could cause me during the routine questioning by airport security. So, I left everything with him that I could get on the Internet but kept books, a CD and a DVD. Sam warned me on what I should and shouldn't say when I undergo my interrogation from the inquisitive employees at the Ben Gurion Airport.

While in Bethlehem, I shared with many about my experience of having my computer confiscated by EL AL employees at JFK Airport, during my December 2005, pre-flight checking in process. Every Palestinian told me "don't worry about it."

But every American I spoke with during my time in Israel and Palestine, freaked out when I told them about El Al confiscating my lap top for over an hour before I boarded the plane at JFK for my second trip to the Holy Land. Every American believed that they had downloaded my files, read my emails and perhaps even injected a Trojan into my soft ware. Those Americans had fallen into fear and paranoia, but I hear the music of Palestine:

Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Stand up for your rights
Get up, stand up
Don't give up the fight.

I had no fear of any airport security and I always honestly and briefly answer every question with a smile. Every employee I encountered smiled back at me, except for one, and nobody asked me any "explosive" questions. Three different young women examined and swabbed every item and surface in my luggage and then I experienced frisson: the chill in the thrill of the rush you experience in a moment of delight, excitement or fear.

The unsmiling young woman examiner came upon the book from the Holy Land Trust conference I had attended December 27-30, 2005 entitled: Celebrating Nonviolent Resistance. She never looked my way, but she read the cover and scanned all the pages most thoroughly. She then walked away and had a conversation with another young woman, who returned with her and after my luggage passed the inspection, she told me to come with her. She led me to a small dressing room and told me to strip down to my bra and panties. I kept a smile on my face and the pat down was over within a few moments.

I wondered if the nonviolent literature and my easy cooperation perhaps left a few seeds of thought germinating in Tel Aviv that night, but I forgot all about the experience when I landed in JFK fourteen hours later. I had crashed for five solid hours out of the thirteen hour flight. But, I awoke to vivid images of The Wall that still remain brutally fresh in my mind.

In my minds eye, I still see the concrete boa constrictor and electrified fence that divides, separates, humiliates, dominates, controls and denies inalienable human rights to every Palestinian.

When I landed at JFK Airport, Terminal Two to wait three hours for my connection home, all I could think about was The Wall and all the injustice's I had witnessed in Israel and Palestine. During my trips to the occupied territories in June 2005, and the three in 2006, every local, taxi driver, would be terrorist, and I knew the many ways around the concrete boa constrictor and electrified fence which still has gaps, holes, and other ways to get around checkpoints and avoid The Bethlehem Terminal which divides the sister city of and from Jerusalem.

The Israeli government and Senator Clinton both claim The Wall is all for Security. The International Court of Justice in The Hague has deemed The Wall illegal and that it must come down.

The concrete boa constrictor and electrified fence is a master plan to divide, separate, humiliate, dominate, control and deny inalienable human rights to the indigenous people of Israel Palestine.

In Palestine and in the Unrecognized Villages* in Israel, there are olive trees that were rooted centuries ago, for olive trees can live for thousands of years, if they are not plowed down. Twenty five olive trees can support a typical family in Gaza, the West Bank and in the Unrecognized Villages, where every little child knows the names of the ancient olive trees, and they always be, names of mommies, sisters and favorite aunts, for the olive trees are a member of their families.

In 1948, 20% of the total population of the Holy Land was Christian. Today they number less than 1.3% and continue to shrink fast. Palestinian Christian roots go back to the first century when Christ walked the earth and promised that: "the peacemakers are the children of God." (Matthew 5:9)

At The Terminal in Bethlehem, upon the thirty foot high Wall, a hundred square foot sign from The Minister of Tourism hangs and proclaims in Orwellian doublespeak, "Peace be with you."

By the 6th century the conflicts in the Middle East were already old news, and a prophet rose up in Jerusalem, "Peace, peace, peace, they say, when there is no peace." (Jeremiah 6:14)

For twelve days around Christmas 2005, I lived in the Little Town of Bethlehem, which is occupied territory. For twelve days I walked "through streets that were dead" (Bob Dylan) in the morning, noon and night and everywhere I did go, shops were closed, restaurants empty. A few locals would be around and tour buses would quickly come and go at the Church of The Nativity.

But stores remain closed and restaurants empty because tourists don't want to see, hear or know about occupied territory. The Terminal is not The Way tourists in buses and taxis go; The Terminal is the way only Palestinians and the curious go, who want to know what's really going down in the Holy Land: which is in pieces.

Imagine what a wonderful world it would be if leaders of the world would listen deep to the cries of the poor, the oppressed and the occupied. Imagine a world where people would plant olive trees and build playgrounds and construct bridges of community and global neighborhoods, not apartheid walls that are designed to divide.

The Way to security is knowing ones neighbor, and ones neighbor is ones sister and brother, for everyone is a child of God.

To be blessed with Peace we must resist evil with good and God has already told us all that is required: "Act justly, be merciful and walk humbly with your God." (Micah 6:8)

* Over 100,000 Arab Israelis live in 100 Unrecognized Villages throughout Israel to this day. They are citizens of Israel and pay taxes, but receive no services, nor are their villages on any map.

The Fierce Urgency of Now , in the 40th year of occupation of Palestine, should compell all people of good will, seekers of truth, pursuers of peace and workers for justice to send Oprah an email @

http://www2.oprah.com/...

Ask her to visit occupied territory and bear witness to the Christian Exodus, which has rendered their numbers to less than 1.3 from 20% of the total population of the Holy Land since 1948.

Ask her to take members of Congress with her.

In Solidarity "we have it in our power to begin the world again."-Tom Paine

Tags: Israel, Palestine, International Law, human rights, freedom, war, peace (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 56 comments

  •  Great...Oprah's coming... (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Pumpkinlove, eileen fleming

    Like our traffic isn't bad enough.

  •  is that the best you can do? (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    willb48

    Do you live in Israel?

    I am returning for my 5th trip in July, to bear witness and report the truth.

    "For you shall know the truth and THE TRUTH will set you free."- JC, John 8:32

    e
    http://www.wearewideawake.org

    •  Why would I attempt (4+ / 0-)

      to have an intelligent conversation with someone who associates themselves with people like this?

      You know, a diary like that would get you immediately banned from DKos.  Even recommending it would get you banned.  Why do you still post your material on that site?

      •  EXACTLY WHY am I bannable? (0+ / 0-)

        I have been banned before, and NEVER received a reason from the DK as to why.

        Enlighten me, is free speech and deep thought illegal at the DK?

        •  A few things (1+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          Pumpkinlove

          First, I didn't say you were bannable.  In fact, I haven't seen anything you've written which would constitute a bannable offense.  What I said was that you have associated yourself with people on thepeoplesvoice.org who would be banned for writing things like "The Zionists killed JFK, own the Congress, and caused 9/11".  If you want to maintain any credibility, you should remove your posts from this site, and stop posting there.

          Second, there is no First Amendment on DKos.  This is Markos's site.  Period.  If he wants to ban all people with a "d,f,or b" in their username, he can.

          Third, my understanding was your previous banning was a glitch, per the explanation of a Front-Pager.

        •  No, you have not been banned. (1+ / 0-)

          Recommended by:
          Warren Terrer

          If you had been banned, you would not be here, because banning is permanent. I'm guessing you thought you were banned for some reason having something to do with your comprehension skills. Those same comprehension skills that made you think dfb1968 was calling you bannable, not the post he was pointing to.

          However, I think it's quite clear that you're in a very tenuous place, given that you crosspost your ... stuff ... on what's plainly a hate site, despite your knowledge that it's plainly a hate site. At best, it shreds your credibility as a progressive; none of your excuses for why you continue to post at a hate site have been found to be very persuasive. At worst, yes, it makes you someone the editors decide DKos is better without.

          In memory of Tom Disch.

          by zemblan on Fri May 25, 2007 at 05:52:59 AM PDT

          [ Parent ]

      •  oh, i see, you are still STUCK on PV (0+ / 0-)

        I am ONE of hundreds of writers published by PeoplesVoice- It is called Peoples Voice, because people have many voices,

        I stand by MY WORDS, why can't you stick to THE TOPIC and comment on MY WORDS?

  •  Just another extremist (5+ / 0-)

    and separationist putting out propaganda

  •  What are you implying? (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Pumpkinlove, zemblan, eileen fleming

    Are you somehow implying that the Christian Exodus from  the Holy Land has more to do with the Israelis than with terrorism and Islamic militancy?

    •  thanks for this ? (0+ / 0-)

      It is complicated and convoluted, long strange trip, but all roads lead to Jerusalem:

      I was writing fiction June 2005, but EVERYTHING reported in this excerpt from my first book, is factually reported and all people are who they really are:

      Rev. Theodore Hessburgh, president emeritus of the University of Notre Dame began the evening with a pledge: "The peace of the world begins in Jerusalem."

      Dr. Tsvia Walden, of the board of directors of the Peres Center and Geneva Initiative, offered a plan: "There is a need for a third party in the negotiations that could enable both sides to trust each other. There are more people in this region interested in making concessions; they all want peace so desperately."

      The coordinator of World Bank emergency services to the PA, Rania Kharma, commented, "We all need to be the bridges to our leaders and carry the message that only justice, equality, and human rights will bring peace. Give people justice, and they will reward you with peace."

      Sheik Imad Falouiji warned, "Religions must go back to their origins. God commands us to love each other and live together. This Holy Land was given to all people. This land is on fire. There is an occupation that must be removed. The language of peace cannot succeed without justice for all."

      Jack remembered President Bush’s second inaugural promise: "In the long run, there is no justice without freedom, and there can be no human rights without liberty...All who live in tyranny and hopelessness can know the United States will not ignore your oppression or excuse your oppressors. When you stand for liberty, we will stand with you."

      The bishop of Jerusalem, Rt. Rev. Riah Abu Assal, recaptured Jack’s attention as he stated, "Peace is an act. Blessed are the peacemakers, not the peace talkers. Peace is possible in the Holy Land. The root cause for the lack of peace since 1967 is the occupation. For peace to make progress in the Middle East, we need to deal with the root cause. Religion was not meant to bring death. All those involved in searching for peace should commit themselves to work for justice and truth."

      -KEEP HOPE ALIVE
      16 Days In Israel Palestine

      I am heading back for a 5th in July and will report asd I go on WAWA:
      http://www.wearewideawake.org

      •  Not sure (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Pumpkinlove

        if there is an answer in there somewhere.

        But as you chose to conflate your anti-Israeli screed with the issue of Christian Exodus, I hope that you could clarify your statements on this. That much I believe you owe to the persons who are willing to read your diaries.

  •  Also, Eileen (0+ / 0-)

    Given your obviously devout Christianity, why would you never say one word about stories like this?

    •  stick to MY STORY (0+ / 0-)

      Are you so limited as to not have eyes to see what I AM saying to thee?

      hee hee-lighten up Jake,

      Dr Jake Hunter is a major character in my first book; Keep Hope Alive;
      why not comment on this:

      A CELT, AN ARAB, AND A ROMAN

      Below the drone of the engines, Dr. Jake Hunter cursed as he fly-cast his bass popper into the tannic, tinted waters of Buck Lake. "Damn, that’s the fourth plane to land today. Now with Disney being built in our backyard, it will soon be forty, then four hundred, then four thousand, no doubt. Here I am, surrounded by lily pads and cypress trees, being observed by deer and cougar, and people are going to start pouring in here.

      "All this talk of Orlando becoming a resort destination--man, this pisses me off; why can’t people leave things as God made them, open and green? Places to be quiet, places of silence, places to just be--God have mercy on us, if what I feel in my bones is happening here in citrus land and cattle country; everyone’s selling out!

      "Damn, financial greed will be the destruction of nature and a most unholy thing. Please, God, don’t let the Mormons sell out; these thousands of acres of virgin land need to be protected. This is home for your trusting creatures, and where I run to every chance I get, away from all the demands and pressures of being a thirty-year-old internist in Winter Park! God, you know I don’t mean to whine; I am very grateful for my life, my work, and my family. Thank you, but if I can’t get totally away and alone from it all, I’d go berserk!

      "This is church for me; here in the silence of nature, I hear you most clearly. Hmm, it makes me wonder about my Celtic roots. God, I think those old Druid dudes were onto something. They lived and breathed your presence in nature, in shady places by water--thin places where the veil between the visible world and invisible is thin, indeed. As the great Celtic teachers taught, the grand volume of God’s utterance is the word of God in creation. Creation is to be preserved, enjoyed, and tended. All ground is holy, and this is church for me--except when those damn planes buzz over."

      e
      http://www.wearewideawake.org/

  •  I've been to Dheisheh . . . (6+ / 0-)

    You wrote: "On New Years Eve Day 2005, I visited a family who had just rebuilt their home in Dheisheh, one of three 59-year-old refugee camps in Bethlehem."

    Dheisheh neighbors, but is not in, Bethlehem.

    • Pope John Paul II: "It is important to me that my pilgrimage to the birthplace of Jesus Christ, on this the two thousandth anniversary of that extraordinary event includes this visit to Dheisheh. It is deeply significant that here, close to Bethlehem, I am meeting you . . ."

    • Bethlehem University: "At Dheisheh refugee camp in the occupied West Bank near Bethlehem . . ."

    I bring this up because I notice a distressing pattern of factual errors in your reporting on matters that it is relatively easy for me to check that makes it difficult to credit factual claims that you make that I cannot so easily check. When combined with your stubborn defense of your continued association with the People's Voice website, it also makes it difficult to credit your judgment and interpretations.

    You have some interesting things to say, and I think you mean well. But unless you succeed in doing a better job of getting your facts right and distancing yourself from the likes of the People's Voice website, your impact and persuasive abilities will suffer.

    •  I beg to differ (0+ / 0-)

      Bethlehem is also Beit Jala and Beit Sahour; the suburbs of Bethlehem which are still very small.

      Perhaps I was not in downtown Bethlehem at Dasheish and I only quoted the pope-he is human and makes mistakes too.

      Here is where I was and the family I wrote about documented by a young peace and justice pursuer:

      http://www.risaalalys.com

      Here is another refugee Holy Land refugee camp-

      http://vids.myspace.com/...

      why NOT focus on the matter at hand and quit micro-managing my passion!

      I am pouring out my heart, soul and guts to you- I am human, I will make errors,

      But my heart and gut are on fire:

      NOW is the time for all people of good will to rise up and demand 2 states, 2 people, and then there is hope for justice which will lead to peace and security.

      Are you involved in this?

      http://www.june5thinitiative.org/

      •  Incidentally... (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Pumpkinlove

        ...bethlehem was part of the international corpus that was part of Jerusalem.

        Personally, I don't think that the corpus has any significance anymore.  But many Palestinian advocates insist that Jerusalem must be internationalized.  Yet they say that Bethlehem is "Palestinian land."

  •  Is the U.S. paying for the security barrier/wall? (3+ / 0-)

    You wrote: ". . . The Wall . . . devours 1.5 MILLION USA TAX DOLLARS PER MILE to construct . . ."

    I have understood, perhaps incorrectly, that US law forbids US aid from being spent in the occupied territories. If so, then to the (unfortunate) extent that the barrier sits on occupied territory, i.e., beyond the Green Line, any US funding would be unlawful.

    What evidence do you have that US-government funds, i.e., tax dollars, are being spent, or have been spent, to construct the barrier?

    You could have a scoop. Or, you could have another problem with factual inaccuracy.

    •  I don't think... (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Pumpkinlove, eileen fleming

      ...money is being spent on the wall.

      Except to the extent that money is fungible, of course.

      But generally U.S. aid has to be spent on American made weapons.  What the U.S. is really doing is subsidizing its own defense industry.

    •  evidence (0+ / 0-)

      The fact was reported in one of 2007's

      The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs

      I have to go offline now, but when i return tonight, i will have page for you.

    •  evidence (0+ / 0-)

      "Financed with U.S. aid at a cost of $1.5 million per mile, the Israeli wall prevents residents from receiving health care and emergency medical services. In other areas, the barrier separates farmers from their olive groves which have been their families' sole livelihood for generations."


      Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
      Page 43, Jan/Feb. 2007

  •  How do you choose the Palestinians you speak to? (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Doughnutman, Pumpkinlove, rumky

    You wrote: "What impresses me most every time I go to Palestine is that every Palestinian I speak with all have the most forgiving spirits . . ."

    Palestinians have a great deal about which to be, or not be, forgiving. Continued armed attacks on Israel, and the evident support such attacks enjoy among wide segments of the Palestinian population, strongly suggest that many Palestinians, understandably, are not currently in a very forgiving frame of mind.

    Have you considered the possibility that, if you only speak with Palestinians you "have the most forgiving spirits," then you are speaking with a rather unrepresentative sample?

    As a would-be journalist, does this concern you?

  •  I did not... (3+ / 0-)

    ...go to the little town of Bethlehem.  But several of my colleagues did.  It's definitely hurting.

    It's not hurting because of the wall, but because it's been taken over by Hamas.

    Bethlehem was, even during the first intifada, relatively peaceful.  Tourists and pilgrims came there.

    Since the PNA, and now particularly Hamas has taken over, Bethlehem is considered more dangerous. Still, they really want tourists to come, and my colleagues who went said that their guide in Bethlehem was begging them not to associate most residents with the terrorists who are making things bad.

    My colleagues said there were something like 20 cabs looking to pick up tourists to take to the Church of the Nativity.  The intifada has absolutely devestated their business.

    I wish I could have gone.  Instead, I had an appointment to meet family for dinner in Abu Ghosh, an Israeli Arab town that is known for its friendly and peaceful relations with the neighbors.

    I was curious what Israeli Arabs had to say about the state of Israel.  I was wondering if I was going to hear about the apartheid like conditions and the oppression and humiliation they face.

    Instead, the gentleman that I talked to found out that I spent time in Chicago, and he wanted to talk about the years that he was there running a limo service.  He really loved the Chicago Bulls.  He said Michael Jordan was a great guy, but that Scottie Pippen was, in his words, an "asshole" who wouldn't even shake his hand, let alone talk to him.  We had a good laugh at my expense because I'm a big Knicks fan and the Bulls had some legendary victories over the Knicks during the years we were there.

    The cab driver who took us back to where we were staying in Jerusalem didn't speak much English, but proudly proclaimed "Abu Ghosh and Israel, friends!"  He also talked about the time he visited is cousin in America and got to see over a dozen large cities, which he really liked.

    He also suggested going to see "Mini Israel," which unfortunately we couldn't fit into our itinerary.

    As for the wall, I did see it.  And I saw precisely why it's built as a wall (as opposed to a fence) where it is.  When you look at the topography it makes perfect sense.

    •  Did you also see (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Pumpkinlove, eileen fleming

      the temporary walls (although they are still there) that had to be put up around Gilo because of the nightly sniper fire coming from Bethlehem?

      •  No, didn't go to Gilo n/t (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        eileen fleming
        •  GILO (0+ / 0-)

          excerpted from:

          http://www.dailykos.com/...

          Hillary Clinton:
          "...The highest priority of any government is to ensure the safety and security of its citizens and that is why, as I have said, I've been a strong supporter of Israel's right to build a security barrier to keep terrorists out. I have spoken out against the International Court of Justice for questioning Israel's right to build that fence of security."

          If The Wall were actually built on Israeli land, Clinton could almost get a pass on her procuring, but any map of The Wall clearly illuminates that The Wall is all about grabbing land and resources and dividing the indigenous peoples of that land from their families and holy sites.

          Clinton also apparently doesn't read the august, Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, "Financed with U.S. aid at a cost of $1.5 million per mile, the Israeli wall prevents residents from receiving health care and emergency medical services. In other areas, the barrier separates farmers from their olive groves which have been their families' sole livelihood for generations." [6]

          Clinton continued selling out we the people seeking truth, peace and justice as she babbled to AIPAC "On my trip to Israel a little over a year ago, I went to see the fence with my own eyes. During a trip to Gilo, a Jerusalem neighborhood, I was greeted by Col. Danny Tirza, who was overseeing the construction of the security fence."

          The facts on the ground are that Clinton's Orwellian spun 'neighborhoods' are all ILLEGAL colonies for everyone exist on legally owned Palestinian land.

          This reporter also went to see "the fence" which in actuality is composed of 25 to 30 foot high concrete slabs with razor wire, trenches, sniper towers, electric fences, military roads, electronic surveillance, remote controlled infantry and buffer zones that stretch over 100 miles wide that deny Palestinians access to their land, families, jobs, and resources.

          Clinton's Jewish only colony of Gilo is less than a mile away from the ancient indigenous Christian village of Beit Jala , which is a five minute car ride from downtown Bethlehem. The Wall will soon completely separate Bethlehem and her sister villages of Beit Sahour, and Beit Jala from the northern parts of the West Bank. Because of Bethlehem's significance to and historic ties with Palestinian East Jerusalem, Bethlehem 's economic demise may well mark the beginning of the end of any viable Two-State solution.

          If The Wall is completed in this area, 4000 dunums of the areas most fertile land will be isolated in order to accommodate for the expansion and the building of the ILLEGAL colonies/settlements of Gilo and Har Gilo. This means Beit Jala will have no potential for expansion.

          This growing ghettoization of Bethlehem is not only destroying ancient communities, but the influx of nearly 900 new settlers, and plans for 30,000 new settlers to colonize the occupied West Bank, violates International Law and the Road Map, which prohibits settlement expansion.

          The Wall and all of Israel's settlement colonies are illegal under International Law, but Clinton cares naught for the rule of law and the truth is The Wall is an APARTHEID Wall for it divides, separates, humiliates, dominates, controls and denies inalienable human rights to the indigenous people of the Holy Land.

          Clinton continued her soliciting, "Col. Tirza's explanation in his graphic depiction of what was part of the daily life of people living in that one neighborhood, gave me an even greater appreciation for the imperative of the fence and the need to do everything possible to protect Israel against these continuing attacks."

          The truth is the 'attacks' originated because of the illegally settled inhabitants that are encroaching upon the indigenous people of Beit Jala and the 40 years of Occupation. International Law states occupation is to be temporary and the occupiers are not to transfer their population into occupied territory.

          What Clinton is clueless of is the fact that in the year 2000, in Beit Jala, some hopeless militants who had given up on the peace makers of the West to demand Israel adhere to International Law, UN Resolutions and the UN Declaration of Human Rights, infiltrated this previously peaceful Christian village to shoot into the illegal colony of Gilo. The Israeli Defense Force immediately retaliated and the bedroom of George of Beit Jala was decimated.

          The shrapnel that pierced the wall of George's sanctuary read "Made in USA" and was delivered from American made Apache helicopters that buzzed over his innocent head. If George had been in his bed, he would be dead.

          I first met George of Beit Jala in June 2005, shepherded by an Internet connection, George Rishmawi, a Palestinian Christian, who met with the USA delegation from the interfaith, non-profit Olive Trees Foundation for Peace/OTFFP, of which I am a member. The OTFFP is dedicated to raising awareness and funds to help replace the over one million olive trees The Wall has destroyed.

          During my initial visit with George of Beit Jala, I learned that he, his sister and mother all suffer from post traumatic stress syndrome, but Clinton, the USA and Israeli government just consider that 'collateral damage'. George's father told me he has no bitterness about what happened even though the snipers had not even been near their home. The most difficult thing for him is the lack of employment opportunities in Bethlehem and being dependent on relatives and friends to feed his children.

          much more on WAWA:
          http://www.wearewideawake.org/

      •  Gilo (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Rusty Pipes

        i have seen Gilo and it is illegally encroaching on Beit Jala, west Bethlehem.

        PLZ return tonight- i will fill you in, in detail,
        bust must say bye bye few hours,

        e

        •  Whether it is or not (4+ / 0-)

          If you feel that gives people the right to shoot randomly into people's homes and cars, then we're done here.

          •  of course NOT (0+ / 0-)

            I depolore and condemn ALL violence.

            I do NOT care who wears the uniform or how nobel they believe their cause; anytime an innocent is caught in the crossfire of violence; they are terrorized.

            Are you aware of:

            http://www.ifamericansknew.org/

            It is the goal of If Americans Knew to provide full and accurate information on this critical issue, and on our power – and duty – to bring a resolution.

            118 Israeli children have been killed by Palestinians and 934 Palestinian children have been killed by Israelis since September 29, 2000.

            1,021 Israelis and at least 4,098 Palestinians have been killed since September 29, 2000.

            7,633 Israelis and 31,307 Palestinians have been injured since September 29, 2000.

            The U.S. gives more than $7,023,288 per day to the Israeli government and military and gives no money to the Palestinians.

            Israel has been targeted by at least 65 UN resolutions and the Palestinians have been targeted by none.

            1 Israeli is being held prisoner by Palestinians, while 10,756 Palestinians are currently imprisoned by Israel.

            0 Israeli homes have been demolished by Palestinians and 4,170 Palestinian homes have been demolished by Israel since September 29, 2000

            Israel currently has 223 Jewish-only settlements and ‘outposts’ built on confiscated Palestinian land. Palestinians do not have any settlements on Israeli land.

            MUCH MORE: http://www.ifamericansknew.org/

    •  oh dear me! (0+ / 0-)

      THIS WILL BE THE FIRST COMMENT I WILL GET TO-

      IT will be a long re-comment, but i must leave computer now.

      PLZ be patient and check back tonight JPhurst.

      e
      http://www.wearewideawake.org/

  •  Oprah also told a woman in her show to shut the (0+ / 0-)

    Fuck up when she questioned the rational of the Iraq invasion way back in 03'

    She is clueless on foriegn policy stuff.

  •  How can we take seriously (6+ / 0-)

    reportage that uncritically passes on the following?

    Sam smiled wryly as he told me, "This is what the Nazi's did to the Jews before the Holocaust when they made them wear the Star of David. They marked them as the enemy. Now anyone who knows Palestinians or visits occupied territory gets a sticker on their passport to label them as friends of the enemy."

    Sam is referring to security precautions taken at Ben Gurion Airport. Evidently, people given a red sticker in their passport are subject to greater scrutiny than people who are assessed to be less of a risk. Of course, the only time anyone in the airport sees the red sticker is when the passport has to be presented for baggage check.

    Don't you think that equating this procedure with "what the Nazis did to the Jews before the Holocaust when they made them wear the Star of David" betrays a gross lack of judgment?

  •  why (0+ / 0-)

    can't you argue without bringing up nazis?

    What would prevent Captain America from being a hero "Death, Maybe"

    by Doughnutman on Fri May 25, 2007 at 02:17:56 PM PDT

  •  The Wall, Hillary, Bob Marley and OPRAH (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    eileen fleming

    Oprah Winfrey is the honorary co-chairman of the Desmond Tutu Peace Foundation. How is she going to explain to her dear friend and mentor on whose board she sits advocating peace and equality, the very man who Israel denied access to in November for a UN fact-finding mission into the Beit Hanoun massacre, and the very man who also calls for divestment because this was one of the most powerful weapons in dismantling apartheid in South Africa, her acceptance of this invitation for a "solidarity visit"? Desmond Tutu himself was one of the first to compare the occupation to apartheid http://jmm.aaa.net.au/...
    Of divestment, Tutu wrote:

    "If apartheid ended, so can this occupation, but the moral force and international pressure will have to be just as determined. The current divestment effort is the first, though certainly not the only, necessary move in that direction.
    Since Oprah is going to be in Israel, the only prudent thing for her to do considering her honorary co-chairmanship on the board of Tutu's foundation is to use this opportunity to also visit the Occupied Territories and speak with those living there, perhaps SHE can visit Beit Hanoun and speak to the survivors directly, a visit denied to her mentor. Her acceptance of this invitation as it stands is in direct contradiction of her honorary position on one of the world’s most esteemed peace foundation’s board.

    The world loves you Oprah, now do the right thing

  •  UPDATE on Oprah (0+ / 0-)

    Rima Abdelkader, a NY-based journalist and a graduate of Pace University in NY wrote:

    http://www.arabisto.com/...

    Don Bustany responded to the YvetNews.com article on http://www.isrealli.org, a project of the Israeli Consulate in New York City, "I think it’s wonderful that Oprah’s going to Israel.  And I urge her to visit the West Bank while she’s there.  Surely they would let her through the check points."

    Greta Berlin from Women in Black, Los Angeles is one of many who have initiated a campaign encouraging people to write to Oprah to visit the West Bank.  She said, "At first, many of us thought we’d write to her and tell her how appalled we are that she’s going.  We’ve now decided that she should, in fact, go.  Many of us have already written to her producer encouraging Oprah to go...visit the occupied West Bank ... talk to the Palestinians ... see the wall for herself."

    Another blogger from http://desertpeace.blogspot.com/ expressed his sentiment on her planned trip and said, "Let her visit with Bassam Aramin, the father of 10 year old Abir, murdered by Israeli soldiers while at play in her schoolyard.  Let her stand at a checkpoint and watch a pregnant Palestinian woman be prevented from going to the hospital to have her child."

    ...Former Archbishop Tutu: "If apartheid ended, so can the occupation, but the moral force and international pressure will have to be just as determined."

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