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Sarajevo Haggadah

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Sarajevo haggadah

Antaea Darom

Israeli women's art

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Torah as music

Ben Heine

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ceramic bowl

Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

Ben Heine

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Eldrige Street shul

Lower East Side

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

Yiddish version

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Posts Tagged ‘israeli-border-police’

Israeli Border Police: Shoot Arab Citizen in Cold Blood, Get Probation

Sunday, December 30th, 2007

Haaretz reports on the value that the Israeli justice system places on the life of one of its Arab citizens:

A Tel Aviv Court on Sunday sentenced a border patrolman who shot and paralyzed a Kafr Qasem resident to six months of community service and a year of probation.

In 2003, Haim Castro shot Salah Amar from a distance of a half a meter, claiming that his life was in danger and he acted in self defense. The court dismissed this claim and ruled there was no threat to Castro’s life.

Since the shooting, Amar has been listed as 100% disabled.

Although 20 Israeli citizens have been killed by Israeli security forces since the outbreak of the Second Intifada in September 2000, Castro is the first person to be convicted for shooting an Israeli citizen.

What type of community service do you think Castro will get? I think he should be forced to wash Salah Amar’s bed pans for a year.

What makes this crime and sentence even more heinous is that this is the same Kfar Qassem in which Israeli soldiers shot and killed scores of residents during the 1948 War when their commander ordered them to kill anyone violating curfew (which the residents had no idea existed). Just last week, Shimon Peres apologized for the massacre.

There are a few right-wing commenters here who enjoy defending the Border Police. This one’s gonna be tough for them but I’m sure they’ll give it a shot, so to speak.

Bassam Aramin Mourns: ‘I’ve Lost My Heart, My Child’

Saturday, January 27th, 2007
abir araminAbir Aramin: the wages of war are death…of the innocents

I’ve written two posts about the heartbreaking death (or was it murder or negligent homicide?) of 11 year old Abir Aramin, a Palestinian schoolgirl shot dead by Israeli Border Police recently. But Gideon Levy has published a full profile of Bassam Aramin, her father and co-founder of Combatants for Peace (or as Haaretz more aptly translates, “Fighters for Peace”). In the profile, Levy offers Aramin’s own account of his daughter’s death in the fullest statement I’ve read anywhere in the media.

I’m choosing to quote a large portion of the concluding section because it is so poignant, so tragic and so damn powerful. Read it and weep, as they say. It begins below with Aramin recounting his release from an Israeli prison in which he had been held for his activities as a young Palestinian militant:

“When I was released in 1992 an atmosphere of hope had already become evident. I got married and started to have children. I would always dream about them, that they wouldn’t live the bad life my generation lived. I wanted to protect them. To explain everything to them so that they wouldn’t grow up like me, not knowing anything. That they would know what Palestinians are and what Israelis are … that they would fight against the occupation and help develop a good economy, that they would play, create and study like all the children. All the children want to be doctors; actually Abir wanted to be an engineer. That’s the way I wanted to raise my children.

“I found myself in Fighters for Peace and after the first meeting we knew that we were going to be together for a long time, and that we had a great responsibility to fight for life, for freedom, to explain the value of human life, because we are the instruments of war on both sides. To explain to the Israelis who don’t know what occupation is that their sons are becoming cruel murderers who think that they are protecting security and are doing the opposite, endangering security.

“Once a female student approached me after a lecture in Hatzor Haglilit – I was told that it was a very difficult place that had been the target of many Katyushas – and she said to me: You’re the first Palestinian I’ve met. She embraced me and said to me: ‘Now I’ve made peace with the Palestinians. I will no longer believe the news, or the government, or all the lies. I’ve simply understood.’ That greatly encouraged me, because here there was someone on the other side who understood and accepted you.”

“Last Tuesday I was still sleeping when Abir went to school. She had a math test. At 9:30 I went off toward Ramallah to work. Abir had told me a day before that she wanted to go to a girlfriend’s house to study, and I said to her: Oh no, you won’t. I’ll help you study.

“I was riding in a taxi, looking out for my daughters who were coming out of school. On the left I saw a Border Police jeep. I looked at them and thought: Why are they coming now? To abuse our children? Inshallah, nothing will happen. My daughters will only inhale gas. When I arrived at the Al-Ram intersection a teacher from the school called me and told me that Abir had fallen, and asked that her mother come to school to pick her up. I called home to tell her mother, and Arin, my older daughter, who is 12, was crying. I didn’t understand a thing. A neighbor took the phone and told me: The soldiers fired at your daughter’s head and she’s been wounded.

“I called the school and they told me they had taken her to Makassed Hospital [in East Jerusalem]. I immediately drove to Makassed, on the way I saw the Border Police jeep next to the local council building, but I thought that there was no time for speeches now. When I arrived at Makassed they told me that her condition was very critical. They told me she needed an operation. I was afraid and I told them that she had an Israeli ID and I wanted to take her to Hadassah Hospital. In order [to] speed things up I contacted the Peres Center for Peace, whose staff really helped me and sent a Magen David Adom ambulance and took her to Hadassah. There they decided that no operation was necessary. Thank God, I said to myself.

“At 7 P.M. her condition deteriorated; suddenly she needed an operation. We have to hope for a miracle, the doctors told me. I understood that my daughter needed a miracle and there are no miracles these days. I told myself that I didn’t want to take revenge. The revenge is that this ‘hero,’ whom my daughter endangered and shot at, be put on trial. Afterward she was officially declared dead.

“From what I was told I understood that the children threw stones and the Border Police threw a grenade at Abir’s head, from behind, from a distance of four meters. At first they said she had been wounded by a stone. I’m familiar with that game, but I didn’t believe that they would sink to such a despicable level – sorry for using that word – when they said on Channel 2 that Abir had been playing with something that exploded on her head. Her fingers were whole and her head exploded? They’re contemptible, I said. Liars. They send a boy of 18 with an M16 and tell him that our children are his enemies, and he knows that nobody will stand trial and therefore he shoots in cold blood and turns into a murderer.

“I’m not going to exploit the blood of my child for political purposes. This is a human outcry. I’m not going to lose my common sense, my direction, only because I’ve lost my heart, my child. I will continue to fight in order to protect her siblings and her classmates, her girlfriends, both Palestinians and Israelis. They are all our children.”

Combatants for Peace leaders (though not Bassam) will speak here in Seattle in early February:

Thursday, February 8th, 7 pm, Seattle University, Schafer Auditorium, Lemieux Library, (Columbia & Broadway)

Friday, February 9th, 8:00 am, Temple De Hirsch Sinai, 1511 East Pike

If you live here, attend and help Abir’s death have some meaning beyond the pointless tragedy that it is.

Palestinian Militant Becomes Warrior for Peace Even As Israeli Border Police Kill Daughter

Tuesday, January 23rd, 2007

There is much individual suffering in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But more often than not I write less about individual suffering and more about broad concepts and analysis of policy. Today’s post returns to the theme of individual suffering.

I am a member of Brit Tzedek. As such I do various tasks on behalf of the local and national organization. One is to host a Brit Tzedek graphic ad in my sidebar, which I’ve done for some time. Locally, I’ve helped raise money for the Seattle chapter as I’m a former non-profit fundraiser. I volunteered to help promote the local appearance by an Palestinian militant and Israeli army officer who’ve both renounced violence as a means of settling their conflict. The speakers are members of Combatants for Peace, an Israeli-Palestinian group devoted to creating reconciliation between the two peoples.
combatants for peace banner

Brit Tzedek is hosting the national tour for Combatants for Peace. They’ve already spoken in many cities and will arrive in Seattle on February 8th for two appearances at Seattle University and (the next day) Temple De Hirsh Sinai. Shimon Katz and Sulaiman Al Hamri will speak on:

* Thursday, February 8th, 7 pm, Seattle University, Schafer Auditorium, Lemieux Library, (Columbia & Broadway)

* Friday, February 9th, 8:00 am, Temple De Hirsch Sinai, 1511 East Pike
brit tzedek logo
Last week, Brit Tzedek announced that one of Combatants co-founders, Bassam Aramin, lost his 10 year old daughter, Abir, to Israeli Border Police fire in their local village of Anata (near Jerusalem). The NY Times covered the story today in a joint profile of Bassam and his group:

His daughter, Abir, was in an upbeat mood last Tuesday after completing a math exam at the Anata Girls School. She walked out the front gate and crossed the dusty street, where she bought a small gift for her mother, Salwa, who had helped her study.

As Abir emerged from the store, a clash was erupting between stone-throwing Palestinian youths and the Israeli border police. A moment later Abir was hit in the back of the head, a blow that threw her headlong into the street, according to her sister, Areen, 12, who was with her. After three days in Hadassah University Hospital in Jerusalem, Abir died without ever regaining consciousness.

Israel’s separation barrier, a towering concrete wall here, is just a few yards from the adjacent boys’ and girls’ schools, and the area was the scene of frequent confrontations during its construction. But work on the wall was finished several months ago, and the area was calm until the border police began patrolling neighborhoods on the West Bank side of the wall in recent days. Youths threw stones at the Israeli jeeps on several occasions, residents said.

abir aramin deathMourners carrying body of 10-year old Abir Aramin (Awad Awad/AFP-Getty)

Notice that it was the mere presence of the Border Police that fueled the demonstration. Had there been no provocation from them, there would have been no demonstration, no stone-throwing, and Abir would have come home and given her mom a lovely present. Here we have the Israeli-Palestinian conflict writ small. Not content to let well enough alone, Israeli forces flaunt their presence to “teach Palestinians” a lesson. Palestinian children respond with the only weapon at their command, stones. Police reply with their weapons of choice when confronting children: stun grenades and rubber bullets. Is this all making sense to you??

NPR’s Linda Gradstein (audio version) portrays the activity of the Israeli Border Police in the runup to this incident in a much more provocative way:

Palestinians here say a jeep load of police drove by and began taunting another group of students, several of whom responded by throwing stones at the jeep. The witnesses say the police then fired tear gas, stun grenades and rubber bullets.

Such provocative Border Police behavior, even goading children into deadly confrontation are fully in line with previous tragic incidents. Chris Hedges documents such tragic and lethal behavior in a heart-rending 2001 interview he gave on Fresh Air:

…Every afternoon–you know, you could almost time it–around 3 or 4, the Palestinian kids, who have nowhere to play, would play–would go out on the dunes and they’d have kites or rag balls and this kind of stuff. And I remember–I heard it the first day. And I speak Arabic, so I’m listening over the loudspeaker to the worst curse words in Arabic, and phrases like, you know, ‘All the Palestinians who live in Khan Yunis are dogs,’ which is calling an Arab a dog is particularly insulting. And I couldn’t–I just couldn’t believe what I heard.

And I walked out towards the dunes and they were–the–over the loudspeaker from an Israeli army Jeep on the other side of the electric fence they were taunting these kids. And these kids started to throw rocks. And most of these kids were 10, 11, 12 years old. And, first of all, the rocks were the size of a fist. They were being hurled towards a Jeep that was armor-plated. I doubt they could even hit the Jeep. And then I watched the soldiers open fire. And it was–I mean, I’ve seen kids shot in Sarajevo. I mean, snipers would shoot kids in Sarajevo. I’ve seen death squads kill families in Algeria or El Salvador. But I’d never seen soldiers bait or taunt kids like this and then shoot them for sport. It was–I just–even now, I find it almost inconceivable. And I went back every day, and every day it was the same.

So you can see that the Border Police are more than happy to kill even children for sport.

Usually, such violence is distant from us here in the U.S. We don’t know who died. We didn’t witness their suffering. We don’t know them. But Bassam’s loss is different. We were all invested in making this tour a success since the stakes have become so high and the crisis so deep there. So Bassam’s pain is our own.

I hope you will ensure Abir didn’t die in vain by doing something on behalf of Israeli-Palestinian peace. My first wish if you live in Seattle or any other city which will host a Combatants event is that you will make a strong effort to attend.

The Israeli Border Police are a notoriously violent and vicious bunch of thuggish law enforcement agents. They are known for their gratuitous violence against innocent as well as guilty. In fact, they make almost no distinction between the two. That is why I greet their “explanation” for what happened with such deep skepticism.

While Palestinian eyewitnesses say Abir was struck by a rubber bullet and possibly a stun grenade, the police claim a rock thrown by a Palestinian demonstrator killed her. This is an almost laughable hypothesis for several reasons. First, no witness saw a rock hit her. Second, while a rock might kill a person how many times have you heard of someone killed by a thrown rock? Third, there is the record of lies and distortions used by both the Israeli police and army whenever tragedies of this kind happen. Fourth, the spokesperson who mouthed this obscenity did not witness the incident and merely advanced this ludicrous hypothesis as a supposition rather than a solid claim (Haaretz: “‘The girl may have been hurt by a stone thrown by the protesters,’ said a security source.”). There is almost a standard operation procedure of blaming the killing on the Palestinians themselves. When 8 Palestinian beachgoers were killed by Israeli munitions last summer, the IDF first claimed that Palestinian militants mined the beach, a statement which died a quick death and was never heard from again.

Here are the dueling stories of what killed Abir Aramin:

Areen and other Palestinian witnesses say they have no doubt that Abir was hit by Israeli fire. Michael Sfard, a prominent Israeli lawyer representing the Aramin family, said he had received a rubber-coated steel bullet that witnesses said they had found at the scene, which he presented to the Israeli police.

A preliminary report of the autopsy conducted by an Israeli government pathologist and one appointed by the Aramin family found that Abir’s head wounds were consistent with the impact of a rubber-coated bullet, though other possibilities could not be ruled out, Mr. Sfard said.

But the Israeli police say the autopsy did rule out the possibility of a rubber-coated bullet. The police say an investigation has found that police officers fired tear gas but has not confirmed the use of such bullets. A police official, speaking on condition of anonymity because the inquiry is continuing, said the police suspected that Abir might have been hit by a rock that one of the Palestinians had thrown toward the police.

The police say the autopsy DID rule out a bullet. The Aramin’s lawyer disputes that claim. But note that even the police concede that she may’ve been killed by a stun grenade. According to Haaretz, the police claim that she wasn’t killed by a bullet because the head wound was too large. However, even the Haaretz story notes that during the operation to save her life, doctors removed a portion of her skull. So how can the police claim to know with certainty what type of weapon killed her? Further, it is very common for the IDF and police to release quick statements denying responsibility in incidents such as this. There seems to be some view that the proper way to respond to such Israeli-made disasters is to deny, deny, deny. Doesn’t matter whether there’s a shred of truth to the denial. Just putting the denial out there is deemed a useful tactic by the spinmeisters.

Haaretz reports that the scene of the attack is near three schools housing hundreds of students. Can someone explain to me why Border Police would be firing potentially lethal ammunition in such a vicinity? Of course, we already know the answer: any police force that would fire rubber bullets at children doesn’t credit the lives of said children being worth more than two bits. Why don’t such police officers consider if the tables were turned and it were their own children getting blasted with lethal force. I am afraid I may be attributing to these people more humanity than they are worthy of.

Would anyone care to lay odds that Abir was killed by the police and not by a demonstrator?

NPR also broadcast this report on Abir’s death.