While the Occupation is business as usual
for Israel, there should be no business with
Israel
In Occupied
Palestine
Zionism in practice
Israel’s Daily Toll on Palestinian Life, Limb,
Liberty and Property
24 hours to
8am June 23,
2008
Main source of statistics:
Palestinian Monitoring Group (PMG).
Three 17-year-olds & another
youngster abducted
Peaceful protesters injured &
overcome by teargas
Home invasion –
vandalism
Journalists taken
prisoner
Settler gunmen search & molest
travellers
4 attacks – 24 raids – 3
injuries
14 taken prisoner – 20
detained
88 restrictions of
movement
Home invasions &
occupations: 21:20, the town of Ibwin - 02:30, the village of Deir Abu Mishal –
02:40, the village of Ramin - the town of Surif - the town of
Bani Na’im.
Palestinian attacks: none
Resistance – injuries: Ramallah and El Bireh –
12:00, two people were overcome by
teargas and another injured in an Israel Army assault on a non-violent
international anti-annexation Wall march in the town of Na’alin.
Israeli attack: Tulkarem – 22:20, the Israeli Army shot its way round the town of
Atil.
Israeli attack:
Bethlehem –
19:15, Israeli
troops raided the town of Tekoa and assaulted people in the
streets.
Israeli attack – home invasion –
vandalism: Hebron – Occupation troops raided the town of Bani Na’im and
vandalised the contents of a house with stun-grenades during a home invasion.
One person was taken prisoner.
Home invasions – abductions:
Ramallah and El Bireh –
21:20, Israeli troops raided the town of Ibwin, invaded a
number of houses and abucted four youngsters – three 17-year-olds: Mohammad
Shehadeh, Shadi Nofal Abu Hamed, Salim Zaki Salim and another, Sami Mohammad
Abdel Karim, whose age was not
reported.
Property violations: Ramallah and El Bireh – 18:30, the Israeli Army raided the village of Ein
Yabroud and searched a vehicle spare parts store.
Violations: Salfit – 09:00, the Israeli Army arrested two journalists, Rami
Juha Jihha and Fouad
Froukh, at the Za’tara checkpoint
and detained four members of a Ramatan News Agency crew and took them to the
Occupation settlement of Ariel.
Occupation settler
violence: Nablus – 09:40, settler gunmen at the road junction to the
village of Talfit searched and otherwise molested passing
Palestinians.
Recent news
updates:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Religion, Politics
and Media, Palestine in the American
Imagination
by
Ramzy Baroud CounterPunch June 21/22, 2008
As
Palestinians hurriedly buried their loved ones in the Gaza Strip following a
deadly Israeli onslaught, which further contributed to Gaza’s worst humanitarian
crisis since 1967 [1], US and Israeli celebrities rallied at a Los Angeles
benefit concert for the Israeli town of Sderot, located near the border of Gaza.
[2] Hollywood movie stars Sylvester Stallone, Jon Voight, Valerie Harper and
comedian Larry Miller mingled with Israeli celebrities such as singer Ninet
Tayeb and others. Children from the Israeli town of Sderot, which received the
lion’s share of homemade Palestinian rockets, were cheerful nonetheless. Song
and dance, interrupted occasionally by solemn messages of support delivered via
satellite by both Republican and Democratic Presidential candidates, replaced
the cries of sirens the images of huddling families in the town’s shelters. It
was a bittersweet moment, that of solidarity, a renewal of the vow made too
often, that Israel’s plight is that of America, and Israel’s security is an
American priority, and, indeed, ‘God loves those who love Israel’.
Welcome to America’s parallel reality on Israel and
Palestine, barefaced in its defying of the notions of commonsense, equality and
justice, ever-insistent on peeking at the Arab-Israeli conflict from a looking
glass manufactured jointly in the church, in the Congress and in the news room,
where the world is reduced to characters interacting in a Hollywood-like movie
set: good guys, well groomed and often white-skinned vs. bad guys bearing
opposite qualities. One may become accustomed to watching, reading and
listening to the chorus of support that America – its politicians, most of its
mainstream media and a large conglomerate of its churches and clergies –
tirelessly offer Israel. But one must never dismiss such support, as typical,
expected or, as some of Israel’s supporters would put it, ‘special’ and
‘historic’. As simplistic and naďve in its articulation as the so-called
pro-Israeli sentiment in the United States may be, in actuality, its intricate
manifestation of political, religious, and cultural factors are as old, in some
way, as the United States itself. To understand these factors, some
deconstruction is in order. This article merely aims at shedding light at some
of these factors and the history behind them.
Religion Meets
Politics – Old and New
“They own the [Holy] land, just the mere land, and that's all they do
own; but it was our folks, our Jews and Christians, that made it holy, and so
they haven't any business to be there defiling it. It's a shame and we ought not
to stand it a minute. We ought to march against them and take it away from
them.” -- Mark Twain, Tom Sawyer Abroad, 1894. Americans are commonly accepted
for being more religious than their Western counterparts, whether in Canada or
in Europe. After all, the American Dream was largely initiated by what is widely
interpreted as a religious pilgrimage on board the Mayflower in 1620. The
history of colonisation of the American continent, of course, goes back to
earlier years; nonetheless, it was that particular ‘pilgrimage’, in cultural
consciousness, that defined the historic relationship between the immigrants
from Europe and the so-called New World. One rather significant omission which
often occurs is the recognition of the many nations in the new physical
landscape, which in fact existed.
Although the Native Americans’ plight has received a
somewhat fair share of deserved analysis, I mean to emphasise here an important
component that makes their story most relevant to my argument. Native Americans
were dismissed as non-existent, were seen as an obstacle to the harbingers of
civilisations, and, when they were recognised as an entity, political or
cultural, it was meant merely to juxtapose their backwardness, their
irrelevance, their savageness, with the progressiveness, the relevance and the
civility of the newcomers. They too, the immaterial ‘Indians’ may have
merely owned the land (although Native Americans didn’t believe in such a
concept to start with), but it’s “our folks, our Jews and Christians, that made
it holy.” The religious aspect of colonisation is significant in the sense that
it validates the cruelty of the physical uprooting, the massacring and the
dismissal of entire races. “Where a command and a faith are present, in certain
historical situations conquest need not be robbery,” Martin Buber wrote once.
[3] If God, particularly the American God, justifies such acts, who are we, mere
mortals, to defy His will? America was and remains in the minds of some, a Holy
Land, with many of its towns bearing the name Salem, just like city of
Jerusalem, occupied and illegally annexed by Israel. Such notions as legality
and illegality might be relevant to the United Nations (itself rendered
irrelevant once by US President George W. Bush himself) [4], but among large
circles of American religious institutions, these notions are extraneous to the
point of ridicule.
But there is more, of course, to the ‘special
relationship’ that justified Israel’s robbery of Palestinian land in an American
religious, political and intellectual landscape than their combined search for a
holy land and their textual, often selective interpretations of the Old
Testament. In 1879, a scale model of the Holy Land known as the Palestine Park
was constructed on Lake Chautauqua, New York by Reverend John Heyl Vincent. J.
A. Miller explains, Palestine Park was a “visual aid for the legions of Sunday
school teachers who flocked to the Chautauqua Institute to bone up on biblical
history and geography.” It was the “first ever example of a theme park, a
quintessential American construct.” [5] It featured: “…a life-size Tabernacle
built to the specifications given in Exodus, a pyramid, a model of Jerusalem,
and a small scale replica of the biblical Holy Land itself - complete with a
ten-foot-long Dead Sea, a smaller Sea of Galilee, and markers for important
biblical sites - landscaped into the rocky terrain of the shoreline …which
serves as the Mediterranean Sea.” [6] The Chautauqua Institute was
established five years before the Park, and “spawned hundreds of ‘assemblies’,
throughout America, their popularity lasting until radio and cinema decimated
their customer base.” That customer base was not only large, but influential,
for it included such luminaries as “Amelia Earhart, Helen Keller, Thomas Edison,
George Gershwin and at least nine presidents. Ida Tarbell, famed muckraker of
Standard Oil, happily recollected cavorting on Palestine Park’s Mount Hermon as
a girl.” [7]
Miller argues, that although there were many smaller
precursors on American church grounds, “Palestine Park is the iconic example of
what geographer John Kirtland Wright called geopiety, ‘a deep religious devotion
to a vision of the Holy Land concocted from a ‘curious mix of romantic
imagination, historical rectitude, and attachment to physical space’.” [8] He
proceeds, “Geopiety is a particularly Protestant obsession originating in
England in the 16th century and culminating in the Balfour Declaration. Long
before Herzl revved up the Jewish branch of geopiety, the Archbishop of York
pugnaciously encapsulated the concept in 1875: “Our reason for turning to
Palestine is that Palestine is our country. I have used that expression before
and I refuse to adopt any other”. [9] While these roots continued to be
firmly planted, newer religious phenomena helped contribute to that construct,
thus widening the parameters of the Park to include a larger segment of American
society, using television as the new and relentless platform. Welcome to the
Armageddon-seeking American Evangelicals. While the advocacy for Israel by
various evangelical churches is both bizarre – since the ultimate objective of
this crowd is the annihilation of most Jews and the conversion of some as
prerequisites for the Rapture – and widely acknowledged, their influence on the
political culture of America is not equally recognised. Pastor John Hagee, for
example, a “televangelist to 99 million viewers and pastor of the 18,000-member
Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas, established Christians United for
Israel (CUFI) in 2005 following the publication of his book, ‘The Jerusalem
Countdown: A Warning to the World.’ Hagee envisions CUFI as the Christian
version of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the powerful pro-Israel
lobby whose political clout has significant influence on US foreign policy in
the Middle East.” [10]
Journalist Max Blumenthal took his cameras to the
CUFI’s Washington-Israel Summit held in July 2007, in Washington DC. The result
was a documentary entitled, “Rapture Ready: The Unauthorised Christians United
for Israel Tour.” It opens with a dialogue with former Republican House Majority
Leader Tom Delay, who was asked how important is the Second Coming is in his
support of Israel. “Obviously, it is what I live for. Really, I hope it comes
tomorrow. Obviously, we need to be connected to Israel to enjoy the Second
Coming of Christ.” [11] Robert Weitzel reports, “John Hagee is not
without fawning friends in Washington. Presidential hopeful John McCain made a
campaign stop at the Summit and admitted to the audience that, ‘It's very hard
trying to do the Lord’s work in the city of Satan . . .’ House Minority Whip Roy
Blunt followed McCain to the podium and assured the faithful that ‘This is a
mission, this is a vision that I believe is a vision for God's time.’ Senator
Joe Lieberman was there and described Pastor Hagee as an "Ish Elokim," a man of
God. Never one to be left out of a well-attended Christian Right convocation,
President Bush sent his best wishes, ‘I appreciate CUFI members . . . for your
passion and dedication to enhancing the relationship between the United States
and Israel. Your efforts set a shining example for others . . .’ [12]
Popular
Culture
To examine the relationship between political and
religious cultures and the popular culture in America is not an easy task, since
the relationship is neither one-way nor linear. However, those preaching their
version of God, aspiring to hold on to their political powers, understood well
how to communicate their messages to the general public. Pop cultures are hardly
shaped by polemics, reason and dialectics but by rather seemingly simple and
indirect gestures that overtime ingrain lasting impressions. Combined with an
already existing bias regarding Palestine, as disseminated by religious and
political institutions, popular culture is constantly bombarded with positive
imagery and language depicting Israel, and negative representations of
Palestinians. In popular sitcoms such as Friends, Malcolm in the Middle
and others, references are quite often made of Israel. One of Friends’ main
characters, Chandler, had an Israeli girl friend, attractive and funny. When it
was time to break up, he feared that her fighting skills, obtained during her
service in the Israeli army would make such a task too difficult. That image of
Israel, and the Israelis, being funny, attractive and fearsome is recurring in
American television. Palestinians on the other hand are mentioned, sporadically
(outside the evening news), and almost always in a negative light. I was up for
a big surprise watching an episode of American Dad, one of the most watched
animation programmes following the Simpsons. The show comes across as
progressive, in a roundabout sort of way. A young boy, one of the show’s main
characters, was frustrated by the fact that he couldn’t figure out how to
operate a home-made rocket. “If a five year old Palestinian boy can do this, so
could I.” In another segment, another reference was made to the “anti-Zionist
Aryan brotherhood,” an imaginary group that equates an anti-Zionist affiliation
to white supremacy. Many such references are made on American television as well
as the big screen. However, I will focus the remaining part of the article on
media language and its contribution to the manufacturing of an alternative,
convenient reality regarding the Middle East, but Israel and Palestine in
particular.
Media
Language
In the competitive world of media today, swift and
conveniently selective reporting is of prime importance. GoogleNews, for
example, claims to scan 4500 news sources, of which only a few are highlighted
as main stories. There are thousands of similar services, all competing to
produce a story in the fastest time. Thorough - and thus slower - reporting is
relegated and crucial information often appears too little too late. The
corporate media’s depiction of the Gaza story, following Hamas’ election victory
in January 2006, and which culminated in the clashes between Fatah and Hamas and
the latter’s capture of Gaza in June 2007, was reduced to a few typical
headlines, depicting Palestinians as unruly, uncivilised, criminal and
unpredictable (thus incapable of being a trustworthy peace partner, as often
parroted by Israel.) The imprisonment of 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza
– where a humanitarian crisis, unemployment and poverty are still underway –
should have been depicted first and foremost as a humanitarian disaster
compelled by an Israeli siege. The dates related to the successive stages of the
siege should follow a line of political, not ‘security’ logic. Any reasonable
timeline of recent events could easily verify that (the formation of the Hamas
government in March 2006, the ousting of the pro-Israeli Palestinian security
apparatus in June 2007 and so on being followed by dramatic Israeli moves to
tighten the siege on Gaza, Hamas’ stronghold).
But little of that seemed relevant to the way the Gaza
story was amply reported. Like the Iraq story, where the two main trusted
sources are the occupation and its puppet Iraqi government, any story of
relevance to Israel and Palestine has to be validated by the official Israeli
source and to a lesser but growing extent by their allies among Palestinians.
The rest are ‘extremist’, radical and hell-bent on the destruction of the
‘Jewish state.’ Note how the Jewishness of Israel is often emphasised whenever
the word ‘destruction’ or similar words are infused. This is what Bridget
Johnson wrote in the Los Angeles Daily News, chastising the United Nations’
Human Rights Council for its condemnation of Israel’s siege on Gaza: “There was
zero mention of Hamas' continued rocket attacks on Israel -- which preceded the
cut-off of supplies that has caused such an uproar -- or Hamas' refusal to
renounce violence against and attempted destruction of the Jewish state.” [13]
The claims were preposterous – especially that of a small group’s ‘attempted
destruction’ of a country saturated with nuclear arms. The words ‘destruction’
and ‘Jewish state’ are simply passed as an innocent ‘opinion’, read by millions
of Americans. There are many notable omissions as well. Hamas has repeatedly
called for a mutual ceasefire, that was also repeatedly rejected or simply
ignored by Israel. The siege followed the democratic election of Hamas, not the
rocket attacks. Also conveniently missed is the disparity between the numbers of
Israelis killed as a result of the Palestinian rockets – 10 in six years of
violence – and Palestinians killed by Israeli ‘retaliation’ - over 120
Palestinians in Gaza alone within 9 days, starting February 27. [14]
The killing of any civilian anywhere is tragic, but
the facts are rarely contextualised by the media. This is only the tip of the
iceberg since human suffering cannot only be measured by those who die, but also
those who continue to live in perpetual torment. For Johnson, this is
irrelevant, since this is not about right and wrong, but a war of language. To
win the war, one must have command over language – and the way it’s manipulated
– and access to platforms that reach the largest number of readers. An easy
recipe to victory in this non-conventional war is an intentional mix of terms as
Islamic extremism, al-Qaeda, Hamas, Jewish state, security, existential threats,
right to exist, juxtaposed with images or clips of angry Palestinian youth
burning Israeli and American flags, ‘side-by-side’, and you will have an
American public and government standing in eternal solidarity with Israel.
While most US politicians are self-seeking, power hungry and would do
whatever it takes to be elected, the average American, unlike what it may seem,
is not born ‘pro-Israel’, and ‘anti-Palestinian.’ Most Americans are
pro-the-manufactured, yet misleading images of Israel reach their homes through
television, wait at their doorsteps in the morning and confront them through the
web. Israel has mastery over the language of the Western media, which, again,
helped create a parallel reality that has little correlation to the real world,
that of facts, numbers and actual events. That alternative universe only exists
on the pages of New York Times, the images of CNN, and the blabber of Fox News
‘experts’. According to that narrative, Palestinians, are irrational, suicidal,
demonic, mad, extremists, self hating, and all the rest.
Conclusion
There is no serious, equitable debate regarding Palestine and Israel in the US
media, nor any other cultural, political and religious circles. If the existing
narrative is to be called a debate, then it’s one with an imagined, not real,
language, almost entirely irrelevant to the realities in Palestine and Israel.
It’s one that is largely predicated on a narrow minded, apocalyptic religious
discourse which for decades has found itself an accepted point of departure for
most politicians, even those who falsely pose as liberals. Between the two
discourses, that of misguided religious fantasies and pandering politicians,
there exists enough room for alternative narratives. Unfortunately, that space
is too overwhelmed by cultural misconceptions, institutional bias and deliberate
confusion, introduced and instilled deliberately by media producers, pundits and
the other manufactures of American popular culture. Until the gatekeepers of pop
culture in America are seriously challenged, Palestine will continue to reside
in the American imagination as a battle between good and evil, a ‘Holy Land’
that must be wrestled from the hands of those who might have owned the land, at
one point, but now, they “haven't any business to be there defiling
it.”
___________________________________________
Ramzy Baroud is an
author and editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many
newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian
Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press,
London).
(This article was first
published in the Palestine Internationalist Journal, Volume 3 Issue 3, Apr 2008
– South Africa)
Bibliography
[1] Gaza humanitarian
Crisis 'Worst Since 1967', MSNBC. www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23497420/
[2]) US, Israeli Stars
Rally at L.A. Benefit Concert for Sderot. www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/959308.html
[3] Martin Buber, On
Zion:The History of an Idea, 1974, p. 146
[4] Matthew Rothschild,
Bush Trashes the United Nations. The Progressive, April 2003. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1295/is_4_67/ai_99818480
[5] J. A Miller, Palestine
Park, The Palestine Chronicle, http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=13390
Jan 8, 2008
[6] Timothy Beal,
Roadside Religion, 2005, p. 28
[7] J. A Miller, Palestine
Park, The Palestine Chronicle, http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=13390
Jan 8, 2008
[8] Timothy Beal,
Roadside Religion, 2005, p. 28
[9] Issam Nassar, “In
Their Image”, Jerusalem Quarterly, October 2003 www.jerusalemquarterly.org/details.php?cat=4&id=185
[10] Robert Weitzel,
Children of Palestine and Israel: Cannon Fodder for the Rapture, The Palestine
Chronicle, http://palestinechronicle.com/view_article_details.php?id=13592
[11] Ibid
[12] Ibid
[13] Bridget Johnson,
The UN can learn something from Rambo. The Los Angeles Daily News. www.dailynews.com/columnists/ci_8102360
[14] Aljazeera, Hamas sets
terms for Israeli truce. http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/B09F81FA-14D9-4BCA-A7BD-AF2E52693830.htm
and Amnesty International, Children and civilian bystanders in Gaza death
toll:www.amnesty.org/en/news-and-updates/news/children-and-civilian-bystanders-gaza-death-toll-20080303
Web
link http://www.counterpunch.org/baroud06212008.html
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Palestinian Resistance
Ali
Kazak's newsletter Occupied Palestine: News and
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contains many news summaries that include
both armed and non-violent methods of resistance to the Occupation. The
newsletter also contains much other useful
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Simpol:
Restoring Democracy – Enabling Justice
Simultaneous
Policy (SP)
Global justice
movement
Since the atrocities of September 11, 2001, the tolerance of state authorities
to street protest or to other forms of protest has become extremely low. Since
SP would operate through existing political systems it does not depend on any
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Unlike most other NGOs Simpol could not therefore be accused of being
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political processes. However, this is not to suggest that non-violent protest
represents an inappropriate form of action. Ineed, protest is surely vital if
world problems are to be brought to wider public attention. But the key point is
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