Monday, July 21, 2008

Ni'lin

I came across the following article posted at www.infoshop.org and thought I'd pass it along here.

A West Bank Town's Fight to Survive

"Jerusalem bulldozer 'terrorist' kills 3 in rampage," read the headline of a CNN article describing the recent attack of a Palestinian construction worker that left three Israelis dead and scores wounded. A Google news search indicates that the brutal assault was mentioned in 3,525 news articles. USA Today, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, BBC, Fox News and Al Jazeera as well as all the other major media outlets covered the incident. Lesser-known media sources, such as the Khaleej Times in the United Arab Emirates, the Edmonton Sun in Canada and B92 in Serbia, also featured the event. Indeed, one could safely assume that almost all news outlets around the globe provided some type of coverage of the attack.

Another Google news search, this one using the name Ni'lin, produces only seventy-five results. A few major outlets have carried the story about the brave resistance to Israeli seizures of land staged by the residents of this Palestinian town in the occupied West Bank, but CNN, the LA Times and USA Today have not. Sources like the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times provided a short caption, no more. Considering that over the past two months the residents of Ni'lin have managed to make a mark on the history of popular opposition, the limited coverage of their campaign is not a mere oversight.

Ni'lin's story is one of incremental dispossession. The residents of this agrarian town lost a large portion of their land in the 1948 war. After the 1967 war, Israel took advantage of the town's location near the internationally recognized Green Line and began confiscating its land for Jewish settlements. First, seventy-four dunams (four dunams equal one acre) were expropriated for the settlement of Shilat. Next, another 661 dunams were seized to build the settlement Mattityahu. In 1985, 934 dunams were confiscated to build Hashmonaim, and six years later 274 dunams were appropriated for Mod'in Illit. Finally, in 1998, twenty more were sequestered for the settlement of Menora. All together, more than 13 percent of the town's land has been expropriated for settlements.

In 2002 Israel began building the separation barrier, which is illegal according to the International Court of Justice. Recently construction of the segment near Ni'lin began; if it's completed, an additional 2,500 dunams, or about 20 percent of the land that remains in the residents' possession, will be seized.

This time, however, the residents had had enough. In the beginning of May they launched a popular campaign to stop the dispossession, and despite the brutal attempts to suppress the uprising--which has included a curfew and shootings that have left close to 200 people injured -- they are unwilling to bow down. This is no minor feat, since the annals of history suggest that it is extremely rare for a whole town to stand up as one person and practice daily acts of disobedience, particularly when confronted with such a violent response.

The events unfolding in Ni'lin also provide the perfect ingredients for a good story. During the first three days of the curfew ambulances were not allowed into the town; the body of one deceased resident was kept for four hours at Ni'lin's entrance before the military let his family bring in the remains for burial; a woman in labor was prevented from leaving the village and was forced to deliver the baby at home; a 12-year-old boy was taken from his home by soldiers and held for two days without charges; elderly women were beaten; and three residents were seriously wounded by live ammunition.

So why do most media outlets fail to cover this ongoing campaign? The reason is straightforward: covering the struggle in Ni'lin would shatter the stereotypical perception of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict provided by mainstream news sources. Unlike the bulldozer attack, which reinforces the pervasive understanding of this conflict, the events in Ni'lin uncover a much more complex reality. This story does not involve Palestinians perpetrating terrorism against a civilian population but rather popular acts of civil disobedience that persist despite the ruthless repression of an occupying power.

Another aspect of Ni'lin that goes against existing stereotypes is that Palestinians and Jews are not fighting on different sides of this fray, but rather scores of Jewish Israeli and international activists are standing beside the Palestinians residents as they try to stop military bulldozers from destroying Ni'lin's land. Indeed, among those injured are many Israelis.

The story of Ni'lin is, in other words, the story of a colonized people resisting colonization. This is not the way the mainstream media has been accustomed to portraying the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and judging from the Google news results, most editors are not ready to change their approach. The historic campaign in Ni'lin--as well as many other nonviolent, mass civil disobedience campaigns against the occupation in places like Bi'lin and A'ram--is still unfit to print.

Afterword

When the military realized that violence on the ground cannot stop the residents' emancipatory drive, it began arresting both Palestinian and Israeli protesters in the hope that hefty legal costs would do the job. To support the legal expenses incurred at Ni'lin, click here http://www.awalls.org/donations.

Neve Gordon teaches politics at Ben-Gurion University. Read about his new book, Israel's Occupation (University of California Press), and more at www.israelsoccupation.info.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

prisoners, letters, books

I'm sweaty. And drinking hot tea. It's a really good combination--hot summer weather plus hot drink.

Somewhere, somewhen, someone asked how the prisoner support thing is going. It's okay. I've been writing to a prisoner stuck in some prison here in Colorado. The group hasn't grown at all. I'm not very surprised. But I do have an idea for "Unchained Letters" (that's the prisoner support group) during the anti-DNC protests. Monday of the convention has a theme of 'end the prison industrial complex/support political prisoners' and it would be great to have a space set up where people could write quick letters to prisoners. We could supply a list of political prisoners and people could write to whomever they wanted. Letter writers could just stick their letter in an envelope with the name of the person they are writing to written on it and then "Unchained Letters" could bottom-line getting the letters mailed after the convention.

One of the reasons this idea excites me is that it is a way to create something more out of a mass mobilization like the convention protests. In other words, the end result of the protests are not just a bunch of people converging on a city, some getting arrested, and then everybody taking off. Along with all that would be a big flood of letters of support sent to prisoners (and there are other things folks are working on to help ensure that the conventions aren't just a one-time, big protest without any effect outside of that time and space).

Anyway, the idea is exciting.

I was recently in Olympia, Washington. There was a lot of really great stuff going on there--sustained projects, radical communities, real resistance to the war in the form of blockading weapon shipments sent from the port. One project that I checked out is a books to prisoners project that has been going on for about seven years in Olympia. Prisoners send written requests for books (these requests vary from specific titles to very general requests for something to read) and then folks working on the project search through a huge selection of donated books, find something appropriate, package it up, and mail it off. It is really, really awesome! Maybe the prisoner support group here can some day grow into a project like that!

Friday, July 18, 2008

today

It's been some time. Lots of different things happening and some things the same. And now music in the afternoon and a feeling that things are happening. There is movement that cannot be contained. There is motion like water, like waves against the shore, like currents, like the sky at night.

stones resting neath the currents of the river--cool, dark, and thirsty

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Hither came Conan, the Cimmerian, black-haired, sullen-eyed, sword in hand, a thief, a reaver, a slayer, with gigantic melancholies and gigantic mirth, to tread the jeweled thrones of the Earth under his sandalled feet.