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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-occupation’

Former Israeli Defense Minister Warns of BDS, Sanctions

Thursday, June 9th, 2011
benyamin ben eliezer

MK Benyamin Ben Eliezer, quoth the raven, "BDS"

Usually in mainstream Israeli political discourse, BDS is the “love” that dare not speak its name.  If the Knesset is seeking to pass a law to criminalize references to the Nakba, all the more so references to the terrible act of ‘delegitimization’ (what an ugly, ungainly word) that is BDS.  It’s simply treif in polite political discourse.  Which is why comments made this week in the Knesset by Labor MK Benyamin Ben Eliezer in retort to Bibi Netanyayhu’s triumphalizing about his recent hero’s welcome in Washington, DC, are all the more shocking.

Ben Elizezer, a former IDF commander and defense minister, wasn’t shy about telling this emperor he had no clothes:

“Listen, Bibi,” MK Benjamin Ben-Eliezer growled, “I congratulate you on your hug from Congress, but it will not take us off the path to confrontation. Our situation in Europe is very bad. President Obama said everything we wanted him to say. Now you have to announce that Israel will vote for a Palestinian state in the UN this September … As a former industry and trade minister, I tell you: The markets are closing. We will suffer a devastating economic blow.”

I asked Ben-Eliezer how Netanyahu, who likes him, reacted to his tough talk. “He nodded his head,” Ben-Eliezer said.

While Bibi’s supporters may respond that this is much ado about nothing as Israel’s economy seems to be chugging along just fine, it is true that markets are closing just as Ben Elizer said.  And they will continue to close.  Israel’s multi-national conglomerates which depend on international markets will gradually see those markets become hostile to them as Israel continues to defy the international community regarding the Occupation.  Eventually, Israel will find itself in a situation like that of South Africa.

What Israelis–who sometimes remind me of teenagers by tending to see themselves as invincible–don’t realize is that they, like Blanche DuBois, depend on the kindness of strangers.  That is, Israeli companies market themselves to the world and the success of the export economy is what powers the engine of Israeli growth.  What Israelis further don’t realize, is that while Israeli products are useful and even important in some fields, the world can survive without them.  There is no Google or Facebook or even Microsoft among Israeli companies.  The world economy will not come to an end if there is a massive international boycott of Israeli companies or products.

So Fuad is warning Israel that come September, when Palestine is recognized by the General Assembly, and Obama’s friendly veto in the Security Council is for naught, and Palestine begins to clamor for sanctions against Israel because it retains the territory of a fellow UN member, the body will eventually have to act.  It may not happen immediately.  It may even take months or a year.  But eventually, sanctions will take hold as a viable political concept regardless of how Israel acts to defend itself or repeal the assault.

The former Israeli trade minister is the proverbial canary in the coal mine.  He’s warning Bibi & Co. what’s ahead as they maintain the same posture of rejectionism and intransigence which have stood them in such good stead till now.  It won’t be so easy down the road.  There will be a price to pay just as South African paid a price.  Unfortunately, I don’t see an Israeli deKlerk waiting in the wings to rescue Israel from pariah status and being blackballed among the nations.

If we wait another three years, and Meir Dagan continues speaking truth to power, then perhaps he has the pragmatism.  But three years is a long time in the Middle East and in Israeli politics, an eternity.

 

Israeli Naksa Day War Crimes at Majdal Shams

Sunday, June 5th, 2011

naksa day wounded protester

Naksa Day wounded protester dragged to safety (Nir Elias/Reuters)

Today and Nakba Day may go down in the recent history of the Israeli-Arab conflict as two days in which Israel massacred unarmed Arab civilians in cold blood thus meriting a war crime investigation.  Approximately 600 Palestinian supporters massed today at Quneitra and Majdal Shams on Israel’s Golan border and attempted to repeat their earlier crossing of the border on Nakba Day a few weeks ago.  They were met with three battalions of IDF soldiers, police and attack dogs.  When the protesters were still on the Syrian side of the border, IDF snipers opened fire on those within 200 meters (600 feet).  Arab children approached the fence as a group and they too were fired upon and wounded.

The IDF is claiming, as usual with no supporting evidence, that a demonstrator threw a Molotov cocktail which landed in a mine field and ignited a mine, which killed most of those who died.  The video of the event should easily prove or disprove this claim.

Here is the typical lame, mealy-mouthed garbage that passes for IDF justification for its murderous behavior:

“Our firing was measured and cautious,” a senior Northern Command officer said. “We tried to avoid casualties, but at the same time, we’re not willing under any circumstances to allow them to damage the border [fence] or cross it.”

The use of live fire was justified, he added, because this is an international border, and “sovereignty must be upheld at any cost.”

qalandia protesters non violent resistance

Qalandia activists place their bodies between IDF 'skunk truck' and protesters in act of non-violent resistance (Ahmad al-Nimer)

Interesting that the officer mistakenly claims that this is an “international border,” which it isn’t.  It is a disputed border with Israel clinging to territory it conquered and stole from Syria and which it refuses to return despite the fact that Syria has expressed multiple times its willingness to resolve all differences.  Under international law, I believe a case can be made that Israel was not defending its own border, and that it was firing on the protesters from territory which once was Syrian and will again be as soon as Israeli leaders come to their senses and return it in exchange for long-term peace.  How do you justify killing Syrians because they’re attempting to cross into territory that international law deems to be Syrian?  I think Israel has stuck its fist into a hornet’s nest on this one.

Let’s be clear, given the previous massacre on Nakba Day, to kill another 22 demonstrators as Syria is claiming, while wounding hundreds more, is an out and out war crime.  What’s more, there will ample video documentation of Israel’s slaughter by Syria TV.  For those who may argue there simply was no other way, it must be noted that the Quneitra protest was quelled largely with non-lethal means.

Though the IDF succeeded in preventing a mass border crossing Sunday, officers voiced fears that Israel has lost the initiative

Gee d’ya think?

The slaughter at Majdal Shams is like déjà vu all over again.  How many times have we seen the IDF repeat virtually the same bloody scenario (Lebanon 2006, Gaza 2009, Mavi Marmara, etc.)?  It seems useless to remind the international community that repeating the same action which failed the first time (and all previous times it’s been attempted) is the definition of insanity.  How long will the world allow this bloody insanity to continue before it puts its foot down and intervenes?  For the love of God, vote for Palestinian statehood come September.  And if Obama undermines this effort shame upon him.  He presents no viable alternative.  Does he want to go down in history as the American Nero, fiddling while Israel and the frontline states burn?

New at Truthout, ‘Washington Visit, Bibi’s Waterloo?’

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

My latest story at Truthout, Washington Visit: Bibi’s Waterloo? It summarizes my thinking about the disaster that was Bibi’s Washington visit (both for U.S. and Israeli policy), and conversely the hopeful international developments that militate against Bibi’s rejectionism and Israel’s seemingly endless Occupation.

IDF Recruits Congolese to Enforce Occupation, Do Israel’s Dirty Work

Thursday, May 26th, 2011
mkomo twins

Mkomo twins, former Congolese refugees, now enforcing Israel's Occupation of Palestinians (Oren Nachshon)

Not to be outdone by Muammar Qaddafi’s mercenary African army, the IDF too recruits Africans to put the screws to West Bank Palestinians.  Two Congolese twins enlisted in the IDF and were assigned to the Kfir brigade, whose mission is to patrol the West Bank.  Kfir is known as one of the most brutal of IDF units because it operates the checkpoints, performs the late night searches, and generally does the dirtiest work of Occupation.

Yisrael HaYom, Israel’s right-wing daily funded by Sheldon Adelson, proudly profiled the military induction ceremony at the Western Wall for Regis and Jess Mkomo, 21 year-old twins who are Congolese refugees.  Their mother of course is extraordinarily proud of them, saying that they were babies of 4 years when they arrived in Israel and that the country had turned them into ‘real men.’  Men with guns that is.  Which they will undoubtedly use as all the other members of their brigade do to harass Palestinians under Occupation.

She continues:

It does me good to see that the nation believes in them and relies on them and gives them a chance.  It’s also a great honor to the [Congolese] community as this is the first time anyone has [been allowed to] enlist.  This is a good example how the children of foreign workers and refugees can contribute a lot to the nation.

Regis also talks proudly of this opportunity to serve his adopted country:

I am on the way to becoming a soldier and I will fight on behalf of the nation.  I don’t feel different either in the army or in terms of my citizenship.  Israel is my home.  I lived here all my life.

His brother Jess says that he knew almost all his life that he wanted to be a combat solider so he could “defend the nation and defend his mother.”  One of the leaders of the Israeli Congolese community notes that:

African refugees generally have a negative connotation within Israel, but that this proves that we have a good side and a desire to contribute to the State of Israel.  This is a great honor for us.

I wonder whether after beating a Palestinian boy, or speaking harshly to a Palestinian grandmother any hint of the savage irony of their situation will creep into their consciousness.  These boys were plucked from the chaos of the Congo and brought to a different and better life in Israel.  All well and good.  But what does the State do to them (an enterprise they participate in gratefully)?  It turns them into the same sort of brutal soldiers who forced their family into exile in the Congo in the first place.  All of which proves that Israel itself, a nation born at least partly out of the suffering of the Holocaust, can lose its bearings and sense of historical irony.

I only hope that the Mkomo twins will remember this verse from Exodus in the course of their military service while policing the West Bank:

Remember the stranger, for you too were strangers in the land of Egypt.

Palestinians are today’s Israelites, the stranger seeking justice and freedom after decades of bondage under Occupation.  It is a terrible irony that boys who themselves were refugees less than two decades ago will now be enforcing Israel’s will against another degraded people.  What have we done?

To Israel: The Palestinians are Coming! The Palestinians are Coming!

Sunday, May 22nd, 2011

russians are comingApologies to all you youngsters out there who don’t remember the hilarious comedy spoof of the 1970s starring Alan Arkin and an amazing cast, The Russians are Coming! The Russian are Coming!  The plot revolved around a Russian submarine which runs aground on the New England coast, thus throwing the populace into a hysterical uproar, believing that the arrival of the sub presaged a Russian invasion of America.

nakba day golan protest

Druze protesters breach the Israeli border


Of course the recent Nakba Day protests in which thousands of Palestinians and their supporters penetrated the Israeli border from territory of five frontline nations are no comedy, unless it’s one of the darkest kinds.  The joy felt by the Druze on the Israeli side of the border when their brethren crossed a mine field and leapt over a fence to meet them, quickly turned to horror when the IDF mowed down four of their number though they were completely unarmed.  Israel has faced no consequences for its heinous overreaction.

What I wanted to get at in the reference to the movie though is the vast divide between the average Israeli Jewish response to the border violation and the response of foreigners.  For Israelis, these were looming hordes come to rape and pillage Israel.  They had to be stopped by any means necessary including lethal violence.  They had to be taught a lesson not to tinker with Israel lest they repeat these theatrics.

For the average foreign observer, the Israeli response was typically bellicose, aggressive and brutal.  It showed the obtuseness of Israel both to the injustices it has perpetrated and to the perception of its behavior on the world stage.  So in my film analogy, the Israelis were the hysterical New England residents believing their country was about the be overrun.

Returning to Nakba Day…what did Israel expect from its own counter-provocation?  The demonstrations will now take on a continuing life of their own.  The IDF responded in precisely the way the organizers of this protest would’ve expected.  And now that Israel has drawn blood, the protesters have been in effect dared to take up the challenge.  If the IDF had merely treated the border violations as a civil matter and turned the protesters away in a non-lethal manner, the protests would’ve likely petered out or taken a different form.

But now, Israel has thrown down the gauntlet.  And one thing Israel may find is that the Arab world, in the aftermath of the democratic revolutions which convulsed Arab capitals from Tunis to Damascus, is in no mood to back down in the face of bullies.  Israel may have the most powerful army in the Middle East, but what can it do against the possibility of tens of thousands or protesters piercing its borders?  Can it afford to murder hundreds as has happened in Syria?  Does it have enough political capital left in the international community to withstand the universal condemnation this would arouse?  Not to mention calls for international criminal prosecution?  Does Bibi think Barack will cheer him on as Bush did when Israel slaughtered over 1,000 Lebanese civilians in 2006?

Similarly, when Israel mowed down nine Turkish pro-Palestinian activists on the Mavi Marmara, it provoked a series of such flotillas chugging to Gaza.  Now, the Turkish foreign minister has warned Israel not to toy with Turkey by considering another military attack on a Turkish convoy planning to set sail for Gaza in June.  This could set up some sort of armed confrontation between the two former allies.  Isn’t it interesting how quickly relations and alliances shift in the Middle East?

I predict Bibi will fold in the face of the Turkish threat and these ships will reach Gaza.  Israel tends to back down when it realizes its opponent is as strong as it is.  Israel’s army and political leadership prefers to bully states and entities with weak military forces like Palestine, Syria and Lebanon.  That’s why there hasn’t been an armed confrontation with Jordan since 1967.  And conversely, it’s why it attacked the Mavi Marmara and forcibly prevents other unarmed ships from breaching the Gaza siege.  If any of these ships had a military escort, the situation would be different.

With the UN General Assembly vote looming in September, Palestinian activists will test Israel to determine how it will react to such protests.  If Israel continues to overreact and kills more activists and gets into a pissing match with Turkey, it will strengthen the movement for statehood.  This will also take the wind out of the sails of the Obama administration in its effort to carry water for Israel by vetoing the resolution in the Security Council if it makes its way there.

Abbas Pre-Empts Bibi’s U.S. Visit in N.Y. Times Op-Ed

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

Mahmoud Abbas has pre-empted Bibi Netanyahu’s U.S. visit and May 24th address to a Joint Session of Congress with an eye-opening op-ed in today’s N.Y. Times.  There is some interesting material in it. But the money quote is this:

Palestine’s admission to the United Nations would pave the way for the internationalization of the conflict as a legal matter, not only a political one. It would also pave the way for us to pursue claims against Israel at the United Nations, human rights treaty bodies and the International Court of Justice.

What he’s saying is that recognition of statehood by the UN would allow Palestine and its world supporters to ratchet up pressure on Israel considerably.  This might include imposing sanctions on Israel for continuing an illegal Occupation of a sovereign state’s territory.  This could go a very long way toward strengthening the BDS movement as well.  It might include prosecution of war crimes cases against IDF officers and Israeli leaders as hinted in the Goldstone Report.  The sky’s the limit.

This in turn might place pressure on Israel’s leaders to be more flexible in the positions they adopt in peace talks.  When faced with a choice of recognizing a Palestinian state and withdrawing to 1967 borders, this might seem more palatable than spending a few years awaiting trial at the Hague.  Israel’s generals and leaders, not particularly known for their selflessness, would likely prefer self-preservation to standing on principle and refusing a peace deal if it meant they might spend some of the best years of their lives in a prison cell.

The reverse may be true as well, as some Palestinian militant leaders might find it far more convenient to soften their militancy and political demands rather than being called to the Hague to explain their own attacks on Israeli civilians.

Secret Arrests in Awarta Connected to Itamar Murders

Monday, April 11th, 2011

awarta idf pogroms

Results of IDF pogrom-like activity in Awarta (Rabbis for Human Rights)

According to an Israeli source, the IDF and Shabak made a major arrest yesterday in the Palestinian village of Awarta of three residents suspected of involvement in the Itamar murders of five members of the Fogel family.  This is connected to, but in addition to the arrest of well over 100 residents of the village, including 100 women alone, in an attempt to smoke out those responsible.  Further, Israeli media are reporting (Hebrew and in English) a coordinated campaign of pogrom-like activity involving destruction of home furnishings and ransacking of entire homes by the security forces.

This from Ynetnews:

Yaakov Manor, a left-wing activist who visited the village on Sunday, recounted one such raid in a Palestinian home.”The soldiers entered rooms and broke furniture, broke a washing machine belonging to the family and a refrigerator as well. The soldiers tipped over oil containers and broke closets,” he said.

Road-blocks prevent access to the village via roads or highways.  Some village lands have been “requisitioned” by the military and transferred to surrounding settlements in further acts of collective punishment which are forbidden by international law.

The only thing we have to be thankful for is that the three suspects, whose identity isn’t yet known to me as the detention is under gag order, weren’t summarily executed as is common in such situations.  The likely reason for this is that these detainees may possess knowledge that would lead to others involved in the attack.  It isn’t helpful to an investigation to murder suspects who can lead you to the bigger fish.  I’m also guessing that in light of the bonanza of pro-Israel hasbara generated by the Goldstone revelations, it wouldn’t exactly look good for Israel to continue behavior that was excoriated in the original Gaza war human rights inquiry chaired by the judge.

Another indication of major sensitivity on the part of the Israeli censor regarding activities in Awarta is the removal of an eye-witness account by Israeli human rights activist Hagit Back of her visit to the village.  And in a further indication of the capriciousness of censorship her article is available in full (in Hebrew) and uncensored here.

Other Israeli media reports have noted vaguely the existence of a gag and the increasing urgency and intensity of the investigation (Hebrew) into the murders, leading a reader to expect that such arrests and possible resolution of the case might be imminent.

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Arab Democratic Revolution: Bringing It All Back Home–to Palestine

Monday, February 28th, 2011
palestinian non violent resistance to occupation

Palestinian non-violent resistance to Occupation

Larry Derfner wrote a suggestive column in the Jerusalem Post about what he hopes is the coming Palestinian democratic revolution.  AP’s West Bank reporter also traces developments on the ground there.

All this got me to thinking about how such a thing might happen.  Before I lay out my ideas I want everyone to understand that I do this not as a Palestinian, so I assume a certain humility in suggesting that others do things based on my own vision of how a Palestinian non-violent revolution could evolve.  I’m also aware that what Larry and I suggest in both our pieces may end in the death or maiming of Palestinians.  The only thing that heartens me about this is that such sacrifices will bring their people closer to realizing its national dreams and also ending an Occupation which is disastrous for the Israeli people as well.  What I hope to do is start a dialogue with my Palestinian and Israeli brothers and sisters.  It may be that what I suggest below is useful.  It may not be.  “You take what you need and leave the rest” as The Band used to sing.

While I admire Larry for his courage in being one of the lone lefty columnists at the Post and for the power of his voice, I think his column omits some critical differences between the Palestinian condition and those of other Arab nations where protests have toppled, or threaten to topple a powerful dictatorial elite.  These differences render a potential Palestinian revolution much more complicated.  First, you have two Palestinian populations, one in Israel which faces huge levels of disenfranchisement and discrimination; and another in Palestine which faces severe fragmentation given the alienation between Hamas and Fatah.  While both populations would benefit tremendously from such a movement for true democracy, their conditions and needs are quite different.  Israeli Palestinians need equality within Israel’s political and economic system.  Palestinians of the Territories need to rid themselves of the Occupation regime and gain sovereignty over their own land in an independent state.  While there are elements that tie these two conditions together, they are not the same and this complicates the situation for those seeking radical change.

Second, the Arab revolutions of Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Bahrain, Libya, etc. are indigenous revolutions within a discreet country in which the masses have arisen against their own leaders.  Palestine, on the other hand is occupied by an outside nation, Israel.  While the PA and Fatah are largely discredited politically, I don’t see any evidence that the masses of West Bankers are eager to chuck Fatah, nor do I see Gazans seeking to topple Hamas.  The problem for Palestinians (at least as they see it) is not so much their own leaders as Israel itself.  Yes, Palestinians need democracy and unity.  They need new elections and to be ruled by a single, coherent government in the form of a PA that includes both Fatah and Hamas and other political groupings.  But besides this indigenous political problem, there remains that 900 pound gorilla, Israel.

This makes the Palestinian revolution that much more difficult since they seek to topple not their own leaders, but an Occupation regime which Israel has installed and maintains.  So to an extent Palestinians will need to enlist the support of Israelis themselves and to a greater or lesser extent the outside world to dismantle this system of oppression.  This makes their task almost insurmountable in my opinion given that Israel shows absolutely no interest in doing so and world powers are equally disinclined to intervene forcefully.

Building on some of the elements of Larry’s column, here are some of my thoughts about how to create a Palestinian revolution:

Within Israel, Palestinians should attempt to build a mass movement that will formulate a few basic, easy to understand demands.  Then, following the example of Egypt, Tunisia and Bahrain, hundreds of thousands should march from their villages to Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa and occupy Rabin Square (Tel Aviv), Tzion Square (Jerusalem) and a similar central location in Haifa as Egyptians did Tahrir Square.  Israeli Bedouin should prepare to march en masse on the Negev villages from which they’ve been displaced.  Israeli Druze should mass in the Golan for reunification with their families on the Syrian side of the border.  Gazans should mass at the Israeli border crossings and demand their opening and the end of the siege.

menachem froman with korans for burned mosques

Rabbi Menachem Froman bears new Korans for burned Palestinian mosque

Israeli Jewish activists have a role to play here as well.  Instead of demonstrating only on Fridays at Sheikh Jarrah, they must create massive encampments to blockade the settler enclaves there which have dispossessed Palestinians from homes they’ve occupied for generations.  I would like to see Israeli Jews and Palestinians linking arms as Dr. Martin Luther King did in Selma with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel.  Let’s see the forces for change led by Rabbis Menachem Froman and Arik Aschermann on the Israeli side and non-violent Palestinians like Mustafa Barghouti on the Palestinian.  Let’s call it the March Toward Freedom or something of the sort.  Let us dare the forces of repression to confront us and then allow the world to judge who is right and who is wrong.

American Jews have a role as well.  Jewish Voice for Peace, American Friends of Peace Now and other anti-Occupation forces should prepare to lobby strenuously for U.S. intervention to maintain the peace and end expected Israeli violence.  If prevailing assumptions are derailed by this massive resistance, then the consensus to maintain the status quo may be undermined.  Openings for new ideas and bold action can be created by such an explosive crisis.

Again, there are severe obstacles facing Israeli Palestinians that did not face Egyptians.  The latter regime was undemocratic, corrupt and sclerotic.  Israel is a quasi-democracy and at least nominally responsive to its citizens.  Its security apparatus is far more robust than Egypt’s.  No Israeli police will refuse to fire on demonstrators if ordered to do so.  No military personnel will mutiny and join the resistance.  Israel’s security forces will be disciplined and implacable.  There is no overtly corrupt elite on which the recruits will turn.

I have no doubt that Shabak will react harshly to any plans of the sort I’ve outlined.  They’ll arrest leaders en masse before such a plan gets underway (which is why it would be important to follow the Egyptian model and not have a single leader or even group of leaders–this much be a mass, decentralized movement).  The police-intelligence apparatus will mobilize huge levels of force to prevent such a march and they’ll do everything in their power to prevent Israeli Arabs from reaching their destinations.  The resistance should designate secondary targets if they are prevented from accessing their primary ones.  They should bring their tents and provisions and prepare to stay for the duration or until they are assaulted by the security apparatus.

Even if they fail, I think the level of brutality used against them will severely tarnish Israel’s reputation.  With each new massacre, with each war, with each new challenge to the Israeli system, the contradictions and inequities become ever more apparent.  Whatever the outcome of this effort, it will continue a progression toward an elemental, even existential crisis, an ongoing process of fragmentation of Israel’s dysfunctional political system.

As for Palestine, the strategy here must be different.  Palestinians must target more directly the symbols and presence of Occupation.  They should identify several key settlements (Ariel would be one) and mass hundreds of thousands to gather around them and lay non-violent siege to them.  This would be a perfect mirror of what Israel is doing to Gaza and I imagine would cause an immediate end to the Gaza siege.  Unlike in Gaza though, I don’t advocate starving settlers.  Rather their daily lives should be severely disrupted.  Their contact with the outside world (Israel) should be severed.  They should not go to work.  They should not leave their settlements.  They should not have electricity or telephone or television.  They should be made to feel how isolated they are.

If the IDF wants to break such sieges with violence then go right ahead.  A non-violent siege broken up with massive levels of violence would further and perhaps fatally wound the Occupation as a viable concept in the eyes of the world and perhaps even the most die-hard Israelis.

The Bilin protests against the Apartheid Wall should be escalated.  They should be brought to multiple villages which face losing access to their fields and land.  Palestinians should rally at places where the Wall isn’t complete and non-violently demand its dismantling.  If possible they should enter Israel, sit down just across the Green Line and symbolically occupy a few meters of Israeli territory.  Again, given the levels of brutality the IDF and Border Police have used against Bilin demonstrators I have little doubt that they would continue with such a policy of suppression.  However, if there were tens of thousands at these protests instead of hundreds as there are now, it would be much harder for Occupation forces to disrupt them.

Palestine is ripe for such a process of radical democratic change.  The question is how Israel will react.  Whether it will show the true ugly form of Occupation to the world, or whether it will succeed in finessing such a crisis and defusing it with little damage to its reputation.  If, as I believe is possible, Israel reacts with enormous levels of violence, this could sow the seeds of intervention by the international community to end Israel’s domination of Palestine.  It could set the state for a radical transformation both within Israel and Palestine.

What are the chances of this happening?  What were the chances on January 24th that Egyptians would topple the Mubarak regime?  You’ve got to start somewhere. And as the current Arab movements for change have shown, you’ve got to think big.  And you’ve got to try.  Just because you’ve failed 100 times before doesn’t mean the 101st time you’ll fail again.