Monday, 23 February 2009

Israel-Hamas arms embargo urged - BBC News

Amnesty International has called for a freeze on arms sales to Israel and Palestinian groups such as Hamas following the recent Gaza conflict.

The human rights group said it had evidence both Israel and Hamas had used weapons sourced from overseas to carry out attacks on civilians.

It called for the UN Security Council to impose the embargo on all parties.

Both Israel and Hamas have rejected the conclusions of the report, in which Amnesty accuses each of war crimes.

In the report, Israel is accused of illegal use of white phosphorus and other armaments supplied by the US in Gaza, while Hamas is condemned for launching unguided rockets into Israel.
Complete article at: BBC News/Middle East


At last somebody is urging for arms embargo on Israel after all it has done all these years. This is , most probably, not going to lead anywhere as if it comes to the security cancel it'll find someone to veto it, being too biased (although it is not) or whatever any other silly reason. Instead, everybody is thinking how to stop smuggling through the evil tunnels of Gaza.

Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Israel 'evicts Jerusalem families'

More than 1,500 Palestinians living in East Jerusalem could be made homeless after Israel told them their homes are illegal and are to be demolished.

Complete new at:Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Israel 'evicts Jerusalem families'

Interestingly that all these "illegal" houses are owned by Arabs. I suppose that the ones losing their homes like this would soon be deported (transferred) to the West Bank, and thus become refugees. They would also loose their identity card defining them as Jerusalemites and thus would never have the chance to live in Jerusalem anymore. In the place of the "illegal structures" new houses are going to be built for more Jewish migrants, and thus the same tragedy since more than 60 years is still continuing, chase the original population from its homes and villages erase then their traces and claim that this place has been always inhabited by Jews. I don't know where is the limit of sick Zionist thinking?
Here you are an 11 years old article about this practice. Please note that it is talking about the former Netanyahu government and not the one that is being formed now:

ISRAEL STEPPING UP DEPORTATION OF JERUSALEM'S ARABS
Nov. 06th 1998
by Nomi Bar-Yaacov

JERUSALEM (9/15 - AFP) - Israel is developing new legal weapons to accelerate the deportation of Arab residents from east Jerusalem despite government promises to curb the practice, Israeli rights activists said Tuesday.

The human rights groups Betselem and Hamoked told a press conferencet hat the interior ministry was enlisting the help of the state social security agency to track down Palestinians whose residency rights have allegedly lapsed.

A joint report by the two groups said that cancellations of Jerusalem residency permits jumped from an average of 30 per year from 1987 to1995 to more than 600 annually since the nationalist government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu came to power in May 1996.

The rhythm accelerated further during the first three months of 1998,with 178 Palestinians having their residency permits revoked and another 500 cases put under review, they said.

Loss of residency permits forces Palestinians, many of whose families have lived in Jerusalem for generations, to move to the West Bank or abroad. They also lose benefits offered by Israel's social security system and access to public schools.

Amid growing public criticism of the deportations, Netanyahu promised more than a year ago to review the policy, including making it "easier for those who have lost their Jerusalem residency to retrieve their identity cards."

"We want to make life easier for Arabs and Jews alike" in the city, he said at the time.

But Eliahu Abram, a lawyer with Hamoked, said Netanyahu's government had done just the opposite and was now even using the social security agency to force out Arab residents.

"The National Insurance Institute has become an integral part of the quiet deportation policy which the ministry of interior is effectuating," said Abram.

The institute, he said, requires Palestinians from east Jerusalem to provide numerous documents when they apply for health care, entry to schools or other benefits.

Even when the documents are provided, including leases or proof of home ownership, copies of utility bills and local tax payments, applicants are often rejected, a move which forces families to locate elsewhere, Abram said.

When it comes across persons who lack proper documentation, the insurance institute passes the information on to the interior ministry which is charged with revoking residency rights, he said.

Israel justifies the deportations by saying they only affect people who have forfeited their permanent residency rights by living outside Jerusalem for seven years or more.

Palestinians respond that Israel issues virtually no building permits to Arabs in east Jerusalem, forcing some residents and notably young couples to move abroad or into suburbs in the West Bank.

Many women who reside in east Jerusalem but marry men from the West Bank are also forced to give up their residency by an Israeli refusal to grant their husbands or children identity cards.

Human rights organisations have challenged the government's policy on east Jerusalem residency to Israel's supreme court on grounds it is racially discriminatory.

In a move Abrams described as potentially ground breaking, the high court for the first time demanded an official justification for the deportations.

The government's response is expected to be given to the high court incoming days, he said.

Israel captured east Jerusalem from Jordan in the 1967 Mideast war and annexed it as part of Israel's "eternal capital."

Since 1967, Israel has built 40,000 public housing units and settled some 170,000 Jews in the sector and major new Jewish quarters are planned.

During the same time only 600 housing units were built for Palestinians, who hope to make east Jerusalem the capital of a future state of their own.


source: Middleeast.org

Friday, 20 February 2009

Netanyahu chosen to be Israeli PM

Shimon Peres, Israel's president, has asked Benyamin Netanyahu, the leader of the Likud party, to form a new coalition government within six weeks.
Peres and Netanyahu held a news conference in Jerusalem on Friday where Netanyahu accepted the offer.
"I hereby designate Benyamin Netanyahu to form the upcoming government ... there are many challenges ahead," Peres said.
Parties representing 65 legislators have backed Netanyahu to become prime minister, he said.
Complete article can be read at Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Netanyahu chosen to be Israeli PM


Such an irony, Ehud Barak started the war on Gaza in order to secure the elections. Gaza is destroyed and Barak failed on all fronts! I am curious to know about the 1 state solution Netanyahu talks about. Probably it is going to be like this: There is only one state, keeping the rest of the "Land of Israel" under occupation, expanding settlements and giving the "others" some limited autonomy in case they agree to live under this Apartheid state. If not, the "transfer" is the ultimate solution to deal with these ungrateful people that are tolerated in that land. It does not matter that this "was" their land too. It might take another a few 10,000s of dead people in order for these idiots to understand that another 1 state solution is the solution but only Zionist Aprtheid has no place in it!

Thursday, 19 February 2009

Tadamon! / Gaza: Discord in narratives on war

Jooneed Khan, journalist and author, offers reflections on these major divergences in narrative presented on the Gaza conflict. Khan spoke with Tadamon! for a live broadcast on CKUT community radio in Montreal.
The whole interview can be read at: Tadamon! / Gaza: Discord in narratives on war

I find the whole interview very good and analysing the situation in a reasonable way. However, I found the last section very persuasive:
The Conservative government position was in-line with a narrative coming out of Washington and followed-up by most of the western governments, which was the erroneous claim that Israel’s military actions were entirely defensive. A similar line that Shimon Perez told [the Turkish Prime Minister] Erdogan at the World Economic Forum, that Israel’s actions were defensive.

The reality of Israel’s ongoing military occupation, established in 1967, is seldom mentioned in western political discourse. Multiple resolutions from the U.N. outline Israel as an occupying power in the West Bank and Gaza.

It is amazing that the word occupation is barely mentioned in our coverage, this dimension which is so central to understanding the situation in Palestine-Israel, is seldom mentioned. Israel as an occupying power is victimizing the civilian population of Gaza, the Palestinians, through collective punishment, in contravention to the Geneva Convention, a fact totally admitted from much western media coverage. A key point of context also admitted by Harper, the Conservative government and also from the opposition in Canada, the Liberals.

Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Israel seizes West Bank land

Palestinians and peace activists have protested against Israeli settlements [GALLO/GETTY]

Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Israel seizes West Bank land: "Israel seizes West Bank land
Israel has taken control of a large area near a prominent settlement in the Palestinian West Bank, paving the way for a possible construction of 2,500 settlement homes, officials have said."

Wednesday, 18 February 2009

Israel launches air strikes on Gaza



GAZA (Reuters) - Israeli warplanes struck a number of sites in the southern Gaza Strip on Wednesday, causing some damage but no casualties, Palestinian residents and Hamas security officials said.

Read the complete news at: Israel launches air strikes on Gaza | World | Reuters

This is a reminder now to the Palestinians that there is no use of all talks that have been conducted so far for truce. Now, the Palestinians can give up the dreams of releasing some of their prisoners for the kidnapped soldier. The deal offered by Israel now is either you release him or we keep you all prisoners, the way it was before the war, only with much more destruction.
In fact I am convinced that whatever conditions the Palestnians would accept they won't get the crossings opened and surely they would not get life with dignity.

Quest for justice

Source: In-Vaid-Ing the Blogsphere

The author of the source blog says:

"I got this email on one of the email lists I’m on…

This article was sent to Debbie Ducro, an American-Jewish journalist with the Kansas City Jewish Chronicle. She published it, and was fired the next day."


I tried to look at the mentioned newspaper but for somehow I was not able to open the webpage. I am going to post the whole article that caused the sacking of the journalist. Telling the truth should not be treated with loosing work. So, I am multiplying her article making it reachable to more people in this world who would appreciate her courage.


By Judith Stone

I am a Jew. I was a participant in the Rally for the Right of Return to Palestine . It was the right thing to do.

I’ve heard about the European holocaust against the Jews since I was a small child. I’ve visited the memorials in Washington , DC and Jerusalem dedicated to Jewish lives lost and I’ve cried at the recognition to what level of atrocity mankind is capable of sinking.

Where are the Jews of conscience? No righteous malice can be held against the survivors of Hitler’s holocaust. These fragments of humanity were in no position to make choices beyond that of personal survival. We must not forget that being a survivor or a co-religionist of the victims of the European Holocaust does not grant dispensation from abiding by the rules of humanity.

“Never again” as a motto, rings hollow when it means “never again to us alone.” My generation was raised being led to believe that the biblical land was a vast desert inhabited by a handful of impoverished Palestinians living with their camels and eking out a living in the sand. The arrival of the Jews was touted as a tremendous benefit to these desert dwellers. Golda Meir even assured us that there “is no Palestinian problem”.

We know now this picture wasn’t as it was painted. Palestine was a land filled with people who called it home. There were thriving towns and villages, schools and hospitals. There were Jews, Christians and Muslims.

In fact, prior to the occupation, Jews represented a mere seven per cent of the population and owned three per cent of the land.

Taking the blinders off for a moment, I see a second atrocity perpetuated by the very people who should be exquisitely sensitive to the suffering of others. These people knew what it felt like to be ordered out of your home at gun point and forced to march into the night to unknown destinations or face execution on the spot. The people who displaced the Palestinians knew first hand what it means to watch your home in flames, to surrender everything dear to your heart at a moment’s notice. Bulldozers levelled hundreds of villages, along with the remains of the village inhabitants, the old and the young. This was nothing new to the world.

Poland is a vast graveyard of the Jews of Europe. Israel is the final resting place of the massacred Palestinian people. A short distance from the memorial to the Jewish children lost to the holocaust in Europe there is a levelled parking lot. Under this parking lot is what’s left of a once flourishing village and the bodies of men, women and children whose only crime was taking up needed space and not leaving graciously. This particular burial marker reads: “Public Parking”.

I’ve talked with Palestinians. I have yet to meet a Palestinian who hasn’t lost a member of their family to the Israeli Shoah, nor a Palestinian who cannot name a relative or friend languishing under inhumane conditions in an Israeli prison. Time and time again, Israel is cited for human rights violations to no avail. On a recent trip to Israel , I visited the refugee camps inhabited by a people who have waited 52 years in these ‘temporary’ camps to go home. Every Palestinian grandparent can tell you the name of their village, their street, and where the olive trees were planted. Their grandchildren may never have been home, but they can tell you where their great-grandfather lies buried and where the village well stood. The press has fostered the portrait of the Palestinian terrorist. But the victims who rose up against human indignity in the Warsaw Ghetto are called heroes. Those who lost their lives are called martyrs. The Palestinian who tosses a rock in desperation is a terrorist.

Two years ago I drove through Palestine and watched intricate sprinkler systems watering lush green lawns of Zionist settlers in their new condominium complexes, surrounded by armed guards and barbed wire in the midst of a Palestinian community where there was not adequate water to drink and the surrounding fields were sandy and dry. University professor Moshe Zimmerman reported in the Jerusalem Post (30 April, 1995), “The [Jewish] children of Hebron are just like Hitler’s youth.”

We Jews are suing for restitution, lost wages, compensation for homes, land, slave labour and back wages in Europe . Am I a traitor of a Jew for supporting the right of return of the Palestinian refugees to their birthplace and compensation for what was taken that cannot be returned?

The Jewish dead cannot be brought back to life and neither can the Palestinian massacred be resurrected. David Ben Gurion said, “Let us not ignore the truth among ourselves… politically, we are the aggressors and they defend themselves.. .The country is theirs, because they inhabit it, whereas we want to come here and settle down, and in their view we want to take away from them their country…”.

Palestine is a land that has been occupied and emptied of its people. Its cultural and physical landmarks have been obliterated and replaced by tidy Hebrew signs. The history of a people was the first thing eradicated by the occupiers. The history of the indigenous people has been all but eradicated as though they never existed. And all this has been hailed by the world as a miraculous act of God. We must recognise that Israel ’s existence is not even a question of legality so much as it is an illegal fait accompli realised through the use of force while supported by the Western powers. The UN missions directed at Israel in attempting to correct its violations of have thus far been futile.

In Hertzl’s ‘The Jewish State’ the father of Zionism said: “We must investigate and take possession of the new Jewish country by means of every modern expedient.” I guess I agree with Ehud Barak ( 3 June 1998) when he said, “If I were a Palestinian, I’d also join a terror group.” I’d go a step further perhaps. Rather than throwing little stones in desperation, I’d hurtle a boulder.

Hopefully, somewhere deep inside, every Jew of conscience knows that this was no war; that this was not G-d’s restitution of the holy land to it’s rightful owners. We know that a human atrocity was and continues to be perpetuated against an innocent people who couldn’t come up with the arms and money to defend themselves against the western powers bent upon their demise as a people.

We cannot continue to say, “But what were we to do?” Zionism is not synonymous with Judaism. I wholly support the rally of the right of return of the Palestinian people.

Sunday, 15 February 2009

Roses for Valentine?

It is hard to describe the current situation regarding Gaza for the moment. All what was heard in the news were 2 kinds of talks:

  • Palestinian-Palestinian talks under Egyptian hospices in order to find a consensus between the 2 main rival factions Fatah and Hamas. There were accusations, disputes etc. on what is legitimate, what is not, how far is the PLO the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian People or not, whether the PLO should be expended to contain many parties it is containing like Hamas, etc. The major objective is to form a unified representative of the Palestinians to be a part in peace talks with Israel. The dispute is also to find a unified representative to receive the aids for Gaza as the Western countries don't want to give it to Hamas and Fatah (in fact it should be the Palestinian Authorities, led by those) is not present in Gaza. At the end I lost track and I don't know what was the outcome of all that

  • Palestinian-Israeli talks also under the same Egyptian hospices (particularly the Head of the Egyptian Intelligence Services, and I wonder why an officer like that is doing all this and not the ministry for foreign affairs for example?) to find a final agreement on ceasefire and opening the crossings. They disputed first on its time frame (Hamas was convinced to agree prolonging it form 1 to 1.5 years), opening all the crossings (Hamas was convinced to agree with a verbal Egyptian statement that the crossings are going to be partially opened, apart form the Rafah one) and other minor disputes. It looked all encouraging till the interim Israeli Prime Minister put another condition today, which is no opening of the crossings till the captured Israeli soldier Gilead Shalit is released. As far as I know that it agreed before unofficially that this is not a part of this agreement. Now it is, and the talks are running the danger of failing.

In the same time these major things are occurring:

  • Everybody is so worried regarding the tunnels between Egyptian and Palestinian sides of Rafah and experts are being sent there with most sophisticated equipment to stop this smuggling. You should take into consideration that most food is coming over to Gaza through these tunnels as the crossings are still closed

  • the crossings are, as already mentioned, are mainly closed. Only a part of the international aids excluding building materials and food are coming through. Egypt was also busy confiscating financial aids going to Gaza. They are also very dedicated to this closing of the crossings and are very nervous when anybody is lamenting or accusing them if treason fir doing so and playing the Israeli game of letting Gaza hunger.

  • The Gazans are now are sitting on a pile of rubble of their destroyed homes, many of them (some 30,000 to 50,000 people) are now living in tents. All this during winter and while markets are virtually empty because of the effective tunnel and crossings control. Some of people who were wounded as the war ended died because of not sufficient medicinal aids (stuck at the crossings): Basically, Gazans with their destroyed land are now being neglected or disregarded by the world as news are concentrating on talks and elections

  • Elections took place in Israel with the centre left party Kadima ahead in only one seat of the rightist Likud Party. The first one is allegedly a (pretty falcon like) dove of peace looking forward for a 2 state solution (under their conditions they are imposing now by arms) whereas the second is overtly denying the peace talks to the Palestinians and is looking for a 1 state solution (i.e. sovereign Israel and some partial autonomy for the occupied territories). The problem is that there is a third party, an ultra-rightist Yisrael Beiteinu party, that is probably going to define who forms this government. These want to force all Palestinian citizens of Israel to vow loyalty to Jewish State (i.e. recognize its Apartheid system and thus recognizing that they don't have much place in it being non Jews). It looks like the second and the third party are going to form the future government. In fact no matter who does it looks bad for the Palestinians in the occupied territories but the I think that this rightist coalition might be even a disaster

So, what are Hamas's choices in the talks with Israel? Take it or leave it. This means:

Take it: basically accept all Israeli conditions, accept that the crossings are going to be mostly partially closed (or opened as you see it), give the captured soldier back while thousands Palestinian prisoners are detained in Israel. I bet you that after accepting the condition with the Israeli soldier Israel shall find another condition to squeeze the Palestinians for more concessions. And after all that the new government shall find ways to end the cease fire in their way.

Leave it: Wait till the rightist Israeli government come, which is certainly won't be negotiating. In their eyes (not only in theirs) Gaza (don't forget, occupied territories) are a part of the Land of Israel. Crossings are totally closed, Gazans hungering and Israel keeps the right to itself to do another invasion, or better do continuous air strikes. What can Hams do then? Fire the rockets that can't even make a hole in the ground?

It does not look good at all for Palestine. When I then look at the destroyed Gaza, what is going to become of it? What did this war bring other than death and destruction? Probably nothing and the world is sleeping. The world was caring for only roses for Valentine Day and the Dutch government asked Israel to let Gaza export some roses for this important day. A whole truck full of red roses was allowed to pass the crossing to enable the European lovers to give a red rose a gift to their beloved ones, the rest of the roses crop is being fed to sheep and other animals as it is not allowed to export them. Meanwhile, Palestinians are allowed to watch their beloved ones hunger or even die.

VOA News - Pro-Palestinian Activist Released in Cairo After Arrest

Egyptian authorities have released a 26-year-old German-Egyptian Internet blogger, five days after he was arrested following a march supporting Palestinians in the Gaza Strip
The complete news can be read here:
VOA News - Pro-Palestinian Activist Released in Cairo After Arrest
He is also describing the detention conditions in this article:
Freed blogger describes interrogation in Egypt
at the Associated Press Website.

Saturday, 14 February 2009

Doctor's story hits home in Israel

Source: BBC NEWS | Middle East

A video showing the impact the story of Dr. Izzadin Abu Alaish, 3 daughters of whom have been killed by an Israeli tank shell in their home, on the Israeli population as they watched the tragedy on TV. It was the first time they see Palestinian causalities as human and not only a dehumanised bunch of fanatics.

Friday, 13 February 2009

Bridges to Islam

by HAJIM OVADIA, 07.02.2009
Source Der Semit (In German)

The author is Jewish with roots in Iraq, Marocco, Syria and Turkey. He is remembering throughout history that people with Jewish religion living under Islamic ruling never suffered as much as they did under Christian ruling. He is reminds that in the fact only fanatic Christendom was the cause of many blood baths like the Inquisition or the Cruisades. He is remembering the tolerance in the enlightened era of Islam in Andalusia.
He ends his article with saying:
"When we speak of religion today the danger that is menacing the world not Islam but the fanatic religious ones, whomever they are. It is true that most of them are nowadays Muslims,but in the same extent there is a religious fanaticism in the USA, the country that engraved the separation of the religion from the state on its flag. It is stopping the development of research in Genetics through the use of embryonic cells, it fights against supporters of abortion and discriminates homosexuals.
(I wonder why he forgot about the Jewish fanatics who are terrorising the West Bank?)
The answer against fanaticism should be supporting those who represent moderate Islam, the shining light of Andalusia in Cordoba and Granada, and bring them back and a build new generation of religious leaders, that can adapt themselves to the shifting modern times. In the same time educate the Western Civilisation to get acquainted with Islam. It is time to start a dialogue, to accept the alien and not a dialogue that tries to force the other to adapt my way but, one that can solve conflicts and tensions when every people or culture are allowed to be nurtured by their own identity and special tradition. It is a difficult and long way, but history is also patient. It will wait. Meanwhile we don't need new bridges but open the old existing ones to the traffic again"

Monday, 9 February 2009

Israeli elections: Be afraid. Be very afraid - World, News - The Independent


Donald Macintyre reports from Jerusalem on an election campaign that is still too close to call, but one with ominous portents
Source:The Independent-World, News

Saturday, 7 February 2009

UN halts Gaza aid over 'thefts'

Source: Aljazeera, February 07, 2009

A major UN relief agency has stopped importing aid into the Gaza Strip, after its supplies were allegedly stolen for a second time this week.
The UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) said that 10 lorries loaded with humanitarian supplies were seized by Hamas members at Gaza's Kerem Shalom crossing on Friday." UNRWA has suspended all imports of aid into the Gaza Strip following the confiscation of hundreds of tonnes of food aid," a statement from the Unrwa said.
"UNRWA's suspension of imports will remain in effect until the aid is returned and the agency is given credible assurances from the Hamas government in Gaza that there will be no repeat of these thefts."
Hamas has said the seizure was a mistake and that they are working to return the lorries.

Second instance
According to UNRWA, it was the second time this week that Hamas members had seized aid supplies. Its officials said that Hamas members had seized 3,500 blankets and 400 food parcels at gunpoint from an UNRWA store on Tuesday. Mike Kirsch, Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting from Gaza City, said: "Hamas officials are saying this whole thing is just a big misunderstanding.
"They are saying that the 10 trucks that were intercepted ... they believed was aid coming from Hamas, from the ministry of social affairs, that was on the Israeli border, in effect that the trucks got mixed up with the UN trucks." And what has since happened is that Hamas has received documentation from the UN that verifies that these trucks belonged to the UN and Hamas is now saying these trucks will be returned on Saturday."

Humanitarian crisis
Christopher Gunness, a UNRWA spokesman, told Al Jazeera that UN aid shipments into Gaza will not restart until all the aid seized by Hamas is returned.
"Until we get all of this aid back, and until we receive credible assurances from the Hamas government, the suspension of our imports of aid into Gaza will continue," he said.
"Let me make one thing clear, we have some supplies in Gaza, we are going to continue with those distributions those are not suspended." Gaza is in the midst of a humanitarian crisis. A stiffling economic blockade imposed by Israel for the past 18 months has crippled its economy and caused severe food and medicine shortages.
Israel's 22-day long assault on the Palestinian territory has worsened the situation further, forcing many Palestinians to live on handouts.

Hamas charge
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Ahmed Yousef, a senior Hamas offical, said: "Our relationship with UNRWA is a strategic one. There are some mistakes that have been committed by some people."
He said steps were being taken to resolve the issue. A senior Hamas leader, however, had earlier in the week accused UNRWA of indulging in discrimination in its distribution of aid. Ahmed al-Kurd, the Hamas government's social affairs minister in Gaza, had demanded that aid be distributed more "widely and fairly".
UNRWA only provides assistance to those Palestinians holding refugee status.

Is an Israeli Jewish sense of victimization perpetuating the conflict with Palestinians?

This article analyses and summarises the article I posted in a posting last week

By Akiva Eldar, February 05, 2009, Source: Haaretz
A new study of Jewish Israelis shows that most accept the 'official version' of the history of the conflict with the Palestinians. Is it any wonder, then, that the same public also buys the establishment explanation of the operation in Gaza?
A pioneering research study dealing with Israeli Jews' memory of the conflict with the Arabs, from its inception to the present, came into the world together with the war in Gaza. The sweeping support for Operation Cast Lead confirmed the main diagnosis that arises from the study, conducted by Daniel Bar-Tal, one of the world's leading political psychologists, and Rafi Nets-Zehngut, a doctoral student: Israeli Jews' consciousness is characterized by a sense of victimization, a siege mentality, blind patriotism, belligerence, self-righteousness, dehumanization of the Palestinians and insensitivity to their suffering. The fighting in Gaza dashed the little hope Bar-Tal had left - that this public would exchange the drums of war for the cooing of doves.
"Most of the nation retains a simplistic collective memory of the conflict, a black-and-white memory that portrays us in a very positive light and the Arabs in a very negative one," says the professor from Tel Aviv University. This memory, along with the ethos of the conflict and collective emotions such as fear, hatred and anger, turns into a psycho-social infrastructure of the kind experienced by nations that have been involved in a long-term violent conflict. This infrastructure gives rise to the culture of conflict in which we and the Palestinians are deeply immersed, fanning the flames and preventing progress toward peace. Bar-Tal claims that in such a situation, it is hard even to imagine a possibility that the two nations will be capable of overcoming the psychological obstacles without outside help.
Scholars the world over distinguish between two types of collective memory: popular collective memory - that is, representations of the past that have been adopted by the general public; and official collective memory, or representations of the past that have been adopted by the country's official institutions in the form of publications, books or textbooks.
The idea for researching the popular collective memory of Israeli Jews was raised by Nets-Zehngut, a Tel Aviv lawyer who decided to return to the academic world. At present he is completing his doctoral thesis in the International Center for Cooperation and Conflict Resolution at Columbia University's Teachers College. The study, by him and Bar-Tal, entitled "The Israeli-Jewish Collective Memory of the Israeli-Arab/Palestinian Conflict," examines how official collective memory in the State of Israel regarding the creation of the 1948 refugee problem has changed over time.
Bar-Tal became enthusiastic about the idea and, with funding from the International Peace Research Association Foundation, he conducted a survey in the summer of 2008 among a representative sample of 500 Jewish Israeli adults. The study demonstrated that widespread support for the official memory testifies to a lower level of critical thinking, as well as belief in traditional values, high identification with Jewish identity, a tendency to delegitimize the Arabs, and support for taking aggressive steps against the Palestinians.
In a telephone interview from New York, Nets-Zehngut says it is very clear that those with a "Zionist memory" see Israel and the Jews as the victims in the conflict, and do not tend to support agreements or compromises with the enemy in order to achieve peace. This finding, he explains, demonstrates the importance of changing the collective memory of conflicts, making it less biased and more objective - on condition, of course, that there is a factual basis for such a change.
Bar-Tal, who has won international awards for his scientific work, immigrated to Israel from Poland as a child in the 1950s.
"I grew up in a society that for the most part did not accept the reality that the authorities tried to portray, and fought for a different future," he says. "I have melancholy thoughts about nations where there is an almost total identity between the agents of a conflict, on the one hand, who nurture the siege mentality and the existential fear, and various parts of society, on the other. Nations that respond so easily to battle cries and hesitate to enlist in favor of peace do not leave room for building a better future."
Bar-Tal emphasizes that the Israeli awareness of reality was also forged in the context of Palestinian violence against Israeli citizens, but relies primarily on prolonged indoctrination that is based on ignorance and even nurtures it. In his opinion, an analysis of the present situation indicates that with the exception of a small minority, which is capable of looking at the past with an open mind, the general public is not interested in knowing what Israel did in Gaza for many years; how the disengagement was carried out and why, or what its outcome was for the Palestinians; why Hamas came to power in democratic elections; how many people were killed in Gaza from the disengagement until the start of the recent war; and whether it was possible to extend the recent cease-fire or even who violated it first.
"Although there are accessible sources, where it is possible to find the answers to those questions, the public practices self-censorship and accepts the establishment version, out of an unwillingness to open up to alternative information - they don't want to be confused with the facts. We are a nation that lives in the past, suffused with anxiety and suffering from chronic closed-mindedness," charges Bar-Tal.
That describes the state of mind in 2000, when most of the pubic accepted the simplistic version of then-prime minister Ehud Barak regarding the failure of the Camp David summit and the outbreak of the second intifada, and reached what seemed like the obvious conclusion that "there is no partner" with whom to negotiate.
Bar-Tal: "After the bitter experience of the Second Lebanon War, during which the memory of the war was taken out of their hands and allowed to be formed freely, the country's leaders learned their lesson, and decided that they wouldn't let that happen again. They were not satisfied with attempts to inculcate Palestinian awareness and tried to influence Jewish awareness in Israel as well. For that purpose, heavy censorship and monitoring of information were imposed" during the Gaza campaign.
The professor believes that politicians would not have been successful in formulating the collective memory of such a large public without the willing enlistment of the media. Almost all the media focused only on the sense of victimization of the residents of the so-called "Gaza envelope" and the south. They did not provide the broader context of the military operation and almost completely ignored - before and during the fighting - the situation of the residents of besieged Gaza. The human stories from Sderot and the dehumanization of Hamas and the Palestinians provided the motivation for striking at Gaza with full force.
Nets-Zehngut and Bar-Tal find a close connection between the collective memory and the memory of "past persecutions of Jews" ("the whole world is against us," and the Holocaust). The more significant the memory of persecution, the stronger the tendency to adopt Zionist narratives. From this we can understand the finding that adults, the religious public and those with more right-wing political views tend to adopt the Zionist version of the conflict, while young people, the secular public and those with left-wing views tend more to adopt critical narratives.
The atmosphere in the street and in the media during the weeks of the Gaza war seems to have confirmed the central finding of the study: "The ethos of the conflict is deeply implanted in Jewish society in Israel. It is a strongly rooted ideology that justifies the goals of the Jews, adopts their version, presents them in a very positive light and rejects the legitimacy of the Arabs, and primarily of the Palestinians," notes Bar-Tal.
For example, when asked the question, "What were the reasons for the failure of the negotiations between [Ehud] Barak and [Yasser] Arafat in summer 2000?" 55.6 percent of the respondents selected the following answer: "Barak offered Arafat a very generous peace agreement, but Arafat declined mainly because he did not want peace." Another 25.4 percent believed that both parties were responsible for the failure, and about 3 percent replied that Arafat did want peace, but Barak was not forthcoming enough in meeting the needs of the Palestinians. (Sixteen percent replied that they didn't know the answer.)
Over 45 percent of Israeli Jews have imprinted on their memories the version that the second intifada broke out only, or principally, because Arafat planned the conflict in advance. Only 15 percent of them believe the viewpoint presented by three heads of the Shin Bet security services: that the intifada was mainly the eruption of a popular protest. Over half those polled hold the Palestinians responsible for the failure of the Oslo process, 6 percent hold Israel responsible, and 28.4 percent said both sides were equally responsible.
Among the same Jewish public, 40 percent are unaware that at the end of the 19th century, the Arabs were an absolute majority among the inhabitants of the Land of Israel. Over half of respondents replied that in the United Nations partition plan, which was rejected by the Arabs, the Arabs received an equal or larger part of the territory of the Land of Israel, relative to their numbers; 26.6 percent did not know that the plan offered the 1.3 million Arabs a smaller part of the territory (44 percent) than was offered to 600,000 Jews (55 percent).
Bar-Tal claims that this distortion of memory is no coincidence. He says that the details of the plan do not appear in any textbook, and this is a deliberate omission. "Knowledge of how the land was divided could arouse questions regarding the reason why the Arabs rejected the plan and make it possible to question the simplistic version: We accepted the partition plan, they didn't."
However, his study shows that a larger percentage of the Jewish population in Israel believes that in 1948, the refugees were expelled (47.2 percent of respondents), than those who still retain the old Zionist version (40.8 percent), according to which the refugees left on their own initiative. On this point, not only do almost all the history books provide up-to-date information, but some local school textbooks do as well. Even on the television program "Tekuma" ("Rebirth," a 1998 documentary series about Israel's first 50 years), the expulsion of the Arabs was mentioned.
Nets-Zehngut also finds a degree of self-criticism in the answers relating to the question of overall responsibility for the conflict. Of those surveyed, 46 percent think that the responsibility is more or less evenly divided between Jews and Arabs, 4.3 percent think that the Jews are mainly to blame, and 43 percent think that the Arabs and the Palestinians are mainly to blame for the outbreak and continuation of the conflict. It turns out, therefore, that when the country's education system and media are willing to deal with distorted narratives, even a collective memory that has been etched into people's minds for years can be changed.
Bar-Tal says he takes no comfort in the knowledge that Palestinian collective memory suffers from similar ills, and that it is also in need of a profound change - a change that would help future generations on both sides to regard one another in a more balanced, and mainly a more humane manner. This process took many decades for the French and the Germans, and for the Protestants and the Catholics in Northern Ireland. When will it finally begin here, too?

Gaza burn victims exhibit possible signs of white phosphorous wounds

Gaza burn victims exhibit possible signs of white phosphorous wounds - Haaretz
05/02/2009
By Amira Hass

GAZA - Palestinian doctors at a number of hospitals in the Gaza Strip informed foreign medical experts allowed into the area over the past two weeks that they were witnessing an unexpected deterioration in the condition of their burn victims.
They described the same phenomenon: Two weeks after being injured, the burn victims seemed to be getting worse, requiring skin grafts abroad.
In other instances, internal tissue was also destroyed. Some of the wounded died a week to 10 days after being injured, even though they had not appeared to suffer extensive injuries. The doctors only later discovered that their liver and kidneys had been affected. But at this point, it was already too late to save many of the wounded.
The precise number of those who suffered burn wounds and then died is still uncertain.
Doctors take care to note that until the necessary laboratory work is done, they will be unable to determine with certainty if the burns were caused by the white phosphorus bombs the IDF dropped during its ground offensive in the Gaza Strip.
They are also unable to state with certainty whether the patients' deterioration and the spread of infection stemmed directly from being hit with the phosphorus mortars.
However researchers from Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, who have spent the past three weeks in the Gaza Strip, have concluded with certainty that the white phosphorus bombs struck residential neighborhoods.
The initial treatment of the burns, before the doctors in the Gaza Strip had realized that they were caused by white phosphorus, was deemed useless.
"We had never seen phosphorus burns before," a veteran foreign surgeon told Haaretz. "In the [medical] literature, what is known about these burns is what was done as experiments, in lab conditions, or in military bases, perhaps as the result of accidents."
However, three Israeli documents Haaretz received, which were written during Operation Lead Cast, describe the sort of burns caused by white phosphorus and match the descriptions of the medical personnel in the Gaza Strip. The documents were prepared by the office of the IDF chief medical officer, the Medical Field Operations HQ and Magen David Adom.
A document bearing the signature of Dr. Zvi Feinberg, chief of medicine at Magen David Adom, and Rami Miller, a senior paramedic, writes that "white phosphorus contained in a bomb or a missile ignites when it comes into contact with oxygen ... the phosphorus that comes into contact with skin causes serious and deep burns."
Another document, this one signed by Dr. Gil Hirschorn, who is also a colonel in the army and head of trauma in the office of the IDF's chief medical officer, states: "During Operation Cast Lead, intelligence was received that Hamas was making use of an ordinance that contains phosphorus. Phosphorus is a poisonous substance, white-yellowish, similar to wax, that is used in mortar shells and hand grenades.
"When the phosphorus comes in contact with living tissue it causes its damage by 'eating' away at it. Characteristics of a phosphorus wound are: chemical burns accompanied by extreme pain, damage to tissue ... the phosphorus may seep into the body and damage internal organs. In the long run, kidney failure and the spread of infection are characteristic ... In conclusion: a wound by an ordinance containing explosive phosphorus is inherently dangerous and has the potential to cause serious damage to tissue."
A document entitled "Exposure to White Phosphorus," prepared by Medical Field Operations HQ and sent from the Health Ministry notes that "most of the data on phosphorus wounds stems from animal testing and accidents. Exposure to white phosphorus is highly poisonous, according to many lab experiments. Burns covering a small area of the body, 12-15 percent in lab animals and less than 10 percent in humans, may be lethal as a result of its effects, mostly on the liver, heart and kidneys."
Haaretz visited a number of homes in the Gaza Strip that show clear signs of being hit by phosphorus shells. At least one of the children hurt in such an attack will require a skin graft abroad. In another instance, four children and the father died as a result of a white phosphorus bombing.

Thursday, 5 February 2009

Israel shelled Gaza doctor's home

An Israeli probe into the death of the three daughters of a Gaza doctor Izeldeen Abuelaish in the recent offensive there has concluded they were killed by Israeli fire.
The father-of-eight added: "I have two options - the path of darkness or the path of light. The path of darkness is like choosing all the complications with diseases and depression, but the path of light is to focus on the future and my children."


The complete article can ber read at:
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Israel shelled Gaza doctor's home

Wednesday, 4 February 2009

Gaza desperately short of food after Israel destroys farmland

Gaza desperately short of food after Israel destroys farmland. Officials warn of 'destruction of all means of life' after the three-week conflict leaves agriculture in the region in ruins. Gaza's 1.5 million people are facing a food crisis as a result of the destruction of great areas of farmland during the Israeli invasion.
According to the World Food Programme, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation and Palestinian officials, between 35% and 60% of the agriculture industry has been wrecked by the three-week Israeli attack, which followed two years of economic siege.

Read the complete article at : Gaza desperately short of food after Israel destroys farmland | World news | The Observer

Israel to place restrictions on Al Jazeera Channel - International Middle East Media Center

What was that about the only democracy in the Middle East? And what about freedom of media? No freedom of media who don't comply to "our" rules, especially not those worthless Arabs, that are breaking our media clamp downs.

Source:International Middle East Media Center by Ghassan Bannoura

The Israeli Foreign Ministry decided to place restrictions on the Qatari based Al Jazeera Channel office staff in areas controlled by Israel, Israeli media reported on Tuesday.
The decision by Israeli is part of a government response to closing the Israeli trade office by the Qatari government in Doha last month.

Qatar closed the office to protest the Israeli offensive on Gaza which started on December 27th, and lasted for 22 days. 1,340 Palestinian were killed by the Israeli air, sea, and ground bombardment.
According to the sources, the restriction will be implemented in three steps and will be carried out in Israeli areas and Palestinian Authority controlled areas. First, Israel will not renew the visas of Al Jazeera staff that do not hold Israeli documents.

Second, the reporters of Al Jazeera will not be allowed to speak to Israeli MP's, and will only be given access to three government spokespeople that will include the Israeli PM's office, the Israeli Army and the Foreign Ministry.

Third, Al Jazeera reporters will have reduced accessibility to government and military bodies, and will not be allowed into briefings or press conferences.

Al Jazeera is the largest Arab satellite News Channel, and the only Arab channel that has an English TV and web service. The Jerusalem office of Al Jazeera told IMEMC that their office has not received an official notice by the Israeli government regarding the new restrictions.

Monday, 2 February 2009

Prosecutor looks at ways to put Israeli officers on trial for Gaza 'war crimes' - Times Online

The International Criminal Court is exploring ways to prosecute Israeli commanders over alleged war crimes in Gaza.

The alleged crimes include the use of deadly white phosphorus in densely populated civilian areas, as revealed in an investigation by The Times last month. Israel initially denied using the controversial weapon, which causes horrific burns, but was forced later, in the face of mounting evidence, to admit to having deployed it.

The complete article: Prosecutor looks at ways to put Israeli officers on trial for Gaza 'war crimes' - Times Online

We must adjust our distorted image of Hamas | William Sieghart - Times Online


Wounded and killed Policemen in front of bombarded police station


A British Policeman is telling how he found Gaza before war, how friendly the policemen were whom they met and how unjust it was to call these clerks militants and terrorists. He also is (or maybe was?)describing how Gaza is and not is being suggested by mass media it as a stronghold of Islamists. he is also undermining the position of the EU and USA and how they tried to topple teh democratically elected Hamas government.

We must adjust our distorted image of Hamas | William Sieghart - Times Online

Emotions in Conflict: Correlates of Fear and Hope in the Israeli-Jewish Society

Source: Emotions in Conflict: Correlates of Fear and Hope in the Israeli-Jewish Society (PDF File)

An academic psychological study by Eran Halperin, Daniel Bar-Tal, Rafi Nets-Zehngut, and Erga Drori

Abstract:
This study explores the relations between collective memory, delegitimization of the rival, and personal experiences, on the one hand, and personal and collective fear and hope, on the other hand, in the context of the Israeli-Arab conflict. A questionnaire was administered to 217 Israeli-Jewish undergraduates
from three academic institutions in Israel. The dependent variables were levels of fear and hope on a personal and collective level, whereas the independent variables were collective memory of the Jewish past, delegitimization of Arabs,and the personal experiences of contact with Arabs, military service in the
occupied territories, close relationships to a terror victim, and family relationships with Holocaust survivors. Results show that (a) delegitimization of Arabs has the highest correlations with fear and hope, personally as well as collectively; and (b) the centrality of Jewish collective memory is directly related to levels of collective fear. In addition, we found a combined interaction effect of collective memory and personal contact with Arabs on fear, and of collective memory with political orientation and various elements of life experience on hope. It seems, hence, that the level of centrality of collective memory serves to moderate the influence of conflict-related life experiences on personal and collective fear and hope.
Intractable conflicts are prevalent worldwide, and in all of them emotions play an important role (Bar-Tal, 2007b). Some of these emotions fuel the conflict and prevent its peaceful resolution, whereas others are necessary to embark on the road of peace. In the first category, fear is a central emotion, whereas in the other, hope best symbolizes the attempt to change and opt for peace. The study of these emotions, hence, is of major importance in the understanding of the psychological forces that energize conflict and motivate its resolution. 35
Whereas the major thrust of emotion research has been in the individual context (see Roseman, 1984; Scherer, 2004), this study attempts to elucidate some of the antecedents to fear and hope in the situation of conflict both on the individual and on the collective level. Specifically, in this study we explore the influence of a few main variables such as collective memory, delegitimization of the rival, and personal experiences on the evolution of collective and personal fear and hope in the context of the Israeli-Arab conflict.

Sunday, 1 February 2009

Olmert warns of 'severe' Gaza raids


Cartoon by Latuff
Comment on fllowing news: Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Olmert warns of 'severe' Gaza raids

I wonder how this disproportionate answer will be? The news say: "At least three rockets were fired from the Gaza Strip on Sunday, but caused no damage or injuries, police said.". Will the answer be something like 35 air raids and 53 victims among them 27 kids, 15 women dead and another quarter of Gaza city destroyed? I am very sure that they learnt that next "disproportionate answers" shall be from air and see as ground incursions cost Israel too much, especially from PR point of view despite of all the control on media coverage they are imposing.
Please not that it was "al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades" who shot them, i.e. Gatah, i.e. President Abass's faction. How should I understand that? A patriotic act of resistance or an attempt to draw more punishment to Hamas, i.e. the Gaza population?
Please also note in the bottom of the news that Netanyahu is vowing that Iran won't have nuclear weapons. So, is Israel the only one allowed to have arms of mass destruction in the Middle East (something lore than 200a Atomic bombs and other peanuts)? Iraq was destroyed because the it was suspected of possessing such weapons. What about Israel who possesses them actually (oh, no they always denied it, but never allowed te UN to audit them, as they are more influential than the UN)?

WOMEN'S LENS - Un coup d'oeil de femme: Erase my grandfather's name from Yad Vashem



WOMEN'S LENS - Un coup d'oeil de femme: Erase my grandfather's name from Yad Vashem
translated from the French by Aimée Kligman

Original: Effacez le nom de mon grand-père àYad Vashem, par Jean-Moïse Braitberg
LE MONDE | 28.01.09

Mr. President of the State of Israel, I write you so that you can intervene with those who have lawful right to have the name of my grandfather, Moshe Bratjberg, removed from the Yad Vashem Memorial, which is dedicated to the memory of Nazi Jewish victims. He was gassed at Treblinka in 1943, as well as other members of my family who died during deportation in different nazi concentration camps during the Second World War. I ask you to grand my plea, Mr. President, because what happened in Gaza, and in a more general context, the fate imposed on the Arab people of Palestine for the last sixty years, disqualifies Israel, in my eyes, as the center of rememberance of the evil perpetrated on Jews, and thus to all of humanity.
You see, ever since I was a child, I have been living among survivors of these death camps. I have seen the numbers tattooed on their arms, I have heard the accounts of torture; I have known of impossible mourning and I have shared their nightmares.
They taught me that these crimes should never again be repeated; that never again should a man, strong by his alliance to an ethnic or religious group should disdain another, should
deny him of his most basic rights that include a dignified life in security, devoid of obstacles, and of light, as distant as it may be, of a future of peace and prosperity.
Thus, Mr. President, I see that despite several tens of resolutions taken by the international community, despite the striking evidence of injustice bestowed upon the Palestinian people since 1948, despite the hopes born out of Oslo and despite the recognition of the right of the Israeli Jews to live in peace and security, and confirmed several times by the Palestinian Authority, that the only answers brought about by the successive governments of your country have been violence, spilled blood, incarceration, ceaseless controls, colonization and plundering. You will tell me, Mr. President, that it is legitimate for your country to defend itself against those who launch rockets on Israel, or against the suicide bombers that take with them many innocent Israeli lives. To this, I would answer you that my feeling for humanity does not change according to the victims' citizenships.
On the other hand, Mr. President, you steer the destiny of a country that claims not only to represent the global Jewish community, but also the memory of those that were victims of Nazism. And this is what concerns me and is unbearable for me. By keeping at Yad Vashem, in the heart of the Jewish State, the name of those close to me, your State holds prisoner the memory of my family behind the barbed wires of Zionism, and makes it hostage to a so-called moral authority that commits the abomination of denial of justice on a daily basis.
Therefore, please, remove the name of my grandfather from the sanctuary dedicated to the cruelty imposed on the Jews so that it may not justify anymore that which is imposed on Palestinians. Please accept, Mr. President, the assurance of my respects.