None dare call it treason!

From: silk (smbc1@wxs.nl)
Date: Mon Nov 13 2000 - 07:56:04 EST

  • Next message: Susan Cogan: "Re: None dare call it treason!"

    Quest for Justice
    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 Mier even
    assured us that there "is no Palestinian problem."

    We know now this picture wasn't as it was painted. Palestine was a land
    filed 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 7 percent of the
    population and owned 3 percent 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 leveled
    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
    leveled 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 (April 30, 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 labor 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. It's
    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 (only 52 years old) has been
    all but eradicated as though they never existed. And all this has been
    hailed by the world as a miraculous act of G-d.

    We must recognize that Israel's existence is not even a question of legality
    so much as it is an illegal fait accompli realized 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.
     
    The author can be contacted at: Meadowrock1@aol.com



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