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Galilee College - Hannah Safran calls for Israeli "resistance"
against the existence of Israel on the anti-Semitic Counterpunch web
Site
http://counterpunch.com/safran03262009.html
"Ready to be Traitors"
The Israeli Resistance
By HANNAH SAFRAN
March 26, 2009
On January 8, 2009, 13 days into the war on Gaza, 45 people, Jews
and Arabs, came together in Haifa to discuss how to proceed with our
anti-war activities. Each one of those present in the room had
already participated in more than one action against this war in
Gaza.
In Haifa itself, the third largest city in Israel, there have
been at least two demonstrations each day – one at lunchtime at the
university and the other later in the evening in downtown Haifa,
where many Palestinian citizens of Israel live. At both
demonstrations both Palestinians and Jews have been present.
Five days earlier, on the first Saturday after the start of the
war, most of us went either to Sachnin, a Palestinian town in
northern Israel, to join some 25,000 people for a demonstration, or
to Tel Aviv – the largest city – were there were another 10,000
people. All of the protesters were citizens of Israel, but the
Israeli-Jewish press hardly mentioned the Sachnin demonstration,
because it was mainly Palestinians who demonstrated. The press also
hardly mentioned the Tel Aviv demonstration, because it routinely
ignores the Jewish left.
We all felt these protests were not enough. We wanted to bring
the message home to Israelis who refuse to see that their government
has engaged the country in yet another unnecessary and cruel war.
Most of those in the Haifa meeting knew each other from years of
protest against Israeli occupation of the occupied territories and
especially from the anti-war protests during the second Lebanon war,
when Haifa itself was bombarded. However, there were also new faces
– young men and women who added to the sense that we are increasing
in number and there is still hope.
We belong to a growing public that does not buy into the Israeli
propaganda of ‘there is nobody to talk with’ – the idea that we,
Israelis, are eager to make peace but they, the Palestinians, are
not interested. We have come of age during the past eight years of
activism against all odds.
Many of us are long-time, dedicated peace activists. We come from
organizations such as Women in Black (a 21-year-old vigil against
the occupation), the Hadash party (a coalition of left-wing groups
and the Communist Party), Ta’ayush (an Arab-Jewish activist group),
the Haifa University Forum Smol (left wing lecturers and students),
Isha L’Isha feminist centre and many other groups, all of them
working in their own way for politics of social justice and peace.
We are Jewish and Palestinian Haifa residents, all citizens of
Israel. But nobody in mainstream Israeli politics or even academia
is ready to recognize that these alliances are the nucleus of the
new left in Israel today. Even the (only) liberal daily newspaper
Ha’aretz, which has claimed since the year 2000 that there is no
left in Israel, refuses to recognise that something else has
developed on the ruins of the old Zionist left.
Haifa is not unique in its grass-roots peace activism and its
ability to bring people together beyond political differences. Many
groups have been active for years and their numbers have increased a
hundredfold since the beginning of the second intifada in 2000.
Breaking the Silence (a group of ex-servicemen who are exposing what
is happening in the occupied territories), the Anarchists Against
the Wall (a group of dedicated brave, mainly young people, who are
at the forefront of demonstrations against the wall), the Women’s
Coalition for Peace (a coalition of nine women’s organizations), New
Profile (which advocates de-militarisation of Israeli society) –
these are only a few of the many different groups active around the
country.
In addition, there are the human rights organisations that are
doing an extremely important job despite the belligerent Israeli
establishment. Organisations such as Physicians for Human Rights and
B’Tselem have dedicated staff and volunteers who are part of the
movement for peace. I should also mention the many groups of
Palestinians in Israel, such as Mossawa (‘Equality’), Adalla
(‘Justice’) and Women Against Violence, who campaign against war and
racism and for the cultural and civil freedoms of their oppressed
community. These organisations are mobilising growing numbers of
young women and men who are dedicated to the struggle for civil
rights, human and women’s rights for the Palestinians of Israel.
One remarkable phenomenon was the declaration against the war,
circulated within five days of it beginning, by 24 women’s
organizations. The declaration called for an end to the bombing and
demanded that war should stop being an option. The organisations
signing this statement went beyond women’s peace organisations such
as the Women’s Coalition for Peace. This time, for the first time,
it included a mixture of organizations promoting social, legal and
financial rights for women.
The Haifa-based feminist organization Isha L’Isha went even
further and issued a statement calling ‘upon the government of
Israel to bring about the end of the cruel siege on Gaza, to stop
immediately its attacks, to free the residents of the south from
their role as hostages in the hands of politics without future, and
to fulfil the role for which it was elected – to bring about
prosperity and economic security, peace and security, today and for
generations to come, for all women and men in Israeli society, while
creating true alliances with all the residents of the area’.
We should recognise this change, and hope for joint action by
these organizations and other civil society groups such as the
environmental movement. The process that dismantled the old party
system in Israel brought many people to take part in local community
groups, dissatisfied with their social and political oppression.
These groups have not yet been able to formulate a common platform
for change, and they are facing the resistance of the hegemonic
Ashkenazi (Jews of European descent) establishment, which refuses to
recognize their existence and importance. But in spite of their
orchestrated attempt to make the entire left-peace-resistance
movement invisible, these social forces, together with the new left,
might one day group together to effect change.
The refusal to recognize our existence has served the propaganda
machine of Israel well, especially in times of war. The Israeli
media work in unison with the government to present a unified voice
of the Jewish population, supporting military action small and
large. This seemingly unified voice is presented in opposition to
the Palestinians in Israel who are naturally opposing the war and
the occupation.
Any demonstration, articles or public statements against the war
are discarded as representing Arabs and not Jews. The ‘only
democracy in the Middle East’, as Israel portrays itself, does not
allow dissent. If you are against its military offensive you are
immediately branded a traitor. From this, the idea follows that all
Palestinian citizens of Israel who oppose the war should be stripped
of their citizenship. Such racism is what all of us, Jews and Arabs,
have to suffer when we decide to publicly oppose the war.
There are a growing number of people ready to be considered
‘traitors’. When Israel conquered the rest of Mandate Palestine in
1967 (most of it had already been taken in 1948 to create the state
of Israel) there were only a handful of Jewish people who publicly
opposed that occupation.
The first group to do so was called Matzpen (‘Compass’), a group
of perhaps fewer than 100 people altogether. They launched a brave
struggle against the Israeli policies of expansion and oppression.
Forty years later, their insight and courage is now manifested in
about 60 peace groups of different kinds and a thousand people
marching in the streets of Tel Aviv on the first evening of the war.
It is not even just the left who oppose Israel’s policies. Even
the Council for Peace and Security, a group of ex-generals and high
ranking officers, had called on the government – just a month before
the war on Gaza – to accept the Saudi peace plan and to go ahead
with a two-state solution.
And the amount of protest is growing daily. Around the world,
Jews are speaking up against the myth of ‘one people, one voice’.
They are fed up of supporting Israel, with its obvious refusal to
follow a peaceful solution to the conflict. As I write, eight
Canadian-Jewish women are invading the Israeli consulate in Toronto,
chanting anti-Israel slogans. A group of Israelis who live in
Holland issued a statement against the Israeli attack on Gaza. A
week ago a branch of Women in Black in Melbourne, headed by an
Australian Israeli woman, organized a demonstration in front of
Government House and managed to get on the main news channel. The
Faculty for Israeli-Palestinian Peace, based in the US, organised a
petition against the bombing of the Islamic University in Gaza.
We, the resistance movement in Israel, will continue our struggle
against the war in Gaza and the racism that prevails within Israeli
society. We will continue to grow, we will connect to other social
and environmental protest groups, and we will hopefully help change
our society for the better.
Dr Hannah Safran is a feminist peace
activist and a co-founder of Women in Black, Haifa
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