God Bliss by Gila Svirsky

We have a weekend home in the sweetest little town in Israel – Nahariya. This small, northern town caresses the Mediterranean at a particularly picturesque location, and from our balcony we can watch the sailboats skimming along the placid sea. In the early morning, we see the fishing boats go out, a spotter aloft in the prow scanning the azure waters for fishy schools below, and in the evening we take drinks on that balcony (verbena tea for me) and watch the sun lower itself from a swirly pink sky and sizzle out into the sea. And then the dog has her last outing for the day, and we settle down to dinner and a good movie on TV. It could be bliss.

Last night I watched a popular weekly TV satire called “A Wonderful Country”, reprising Israel’s good deeds in sending a field hospital and PR team to Haiti. PR team? Yes, and well worth it, with the Israeli doctors saving lives and delivering babies enough to warrant many press releases. “Good job, good job, Israelis!” gush the patients. From under the rubble, one Hatian peers out and moans, “It was almost worth having an earthquake to meet all you wonderful folks from Israel.”

It’s hard work transforming international public opinion after the Israeli bombardment of Gaza one year ago, which played out so poorly in the Goldstone Report and European capitals. But in Israel, there’s no need to shift public opinion at all, after that very popular war. “What blockade? There’s no blockade of Gaza,” said my cousins in Jerusalem, who are as well informed as most Israelis. If you place a million people under siege and the local media are not there to cover it, does the siege exist?

And does protest exist, when the police crack down on peaceful demonstrators exercising their right to disagree with state policies? Over 700 protesters were arrested during the Gaza War for trying to make anti-war statements. Nonviolent demonstrators who march every Friday in Palestinian villages where the Separation Barrier is being erected have experienced live fire, stun grenades, tear gas, and new forms of crowd control – the “skunk guns” that smelled so bad even the police were forced to stop using them. These methods have already caused deaths and injuries. Ongoing protests in East Jerusalem against the eviction of Palestinians from their homes to make room for settlers have met with more arrests and brutality. Last week, to the misfortune of the police, they also arrested the director of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, a bad way to improve relations with civil society.

So is it all about image? Inside Israel, it’s about no image. Israeli media carried no reporting whatsoever from inside Gaza during the bombardment, and it was considered subversive during the fighting to listen to reports from CNN, the BBC or, God forbid, al-Jazeera. It is still forbidden for Israeli journalists to enter Gaza and report how families are bearing up in homes with gaping holes in their roofs because Israel does not allow construction materials to be brought in. Now if the Gazans only lived in Haiti… As for the West Bank, why should the journalists bother? Brutality by the army is not new and hence not newsworthy. To catch anybody’s attention, human rights organizations like B’Tselem have to resort to teaser headlines, smart animations, and videos of Gaza rappers (full disclosure, I’m affiliated with B’Tselem).

So here’s what grabbed the headlines in Israel all week: Sarah Netanyahu, the prime minister’s wife, was accused of underpaying and overworking the cleaning lady. If you’re out and about in Israel, you better have a clear opinion about this: Is it true, or just a plot to undermine the peace plan that our Prime Minister is eager to launch? Here’s a hint: Riding by our demonstration for economic justice several years ago, Sarah Netanyahu got out of her chauffeur-driven car to share her views with us: “If I get along on minimum wage,” said Sarah, “anyone can.” One hardly knows where to begin.

There is a country full of people on this beautiful Saturday afternoon watching the sailboats skim by, driving out to catch the fields full of red poppies after the heavy winter rains, or walking their dogs through daffodils. But they won’t be crossing the Separation Barrier anytime soon to witness the horrors on the other side, and the news on TV in the evening won’t bring that horror into their homes. “What occupation?” is now the most common reaction of passersby to our Women in Black vigil in Jerusalem. For the young, it’s an honest question; for the older, it’s a smirk and walk on.

———-

Cross-posted with Gila Svirsky’s kind permission.

Via The Nobel Women’s Initiative:

The Nobel Women’s Initiative is deeply concerned by the detention of Nobel Peace Laureate Mairead Maguire and other human rights activists on the Free Gaza Movement mission to deliver aid to the people of Gaza by boat.  Israeli naval forces forcibly boarded the Free Gaza boat and detained the human rights workers late this afternoon, 23 miles off the coast of Gaza.  Earlier in the day, the Israeli Naval Forces ordered the boat—at gun-point—to turn back.

Maguire is traveling on the Free Gaza fishing boat, accompanied by a sister boat called the Spirit of Humanity.  The boats are carrying construction materials, three tons of medical supplies, and suitcases full of children’s toys—all items banned by the Israeli government.

The approximately 30 activists on board include a former Congresswoman, Cynthia McKinney, as well as envoys from Gulf nations. This is the eighth mission of the Free Gaza Movement, an international human rights group formed in 2006 to bring attention to the Israeli blockade of Gaza.  Past mission participants have included parliamentarians, human rights workers, and other dignitaries./p>

Before embarking on the journey, Maguire said:  “We sail to Gaza to break this cruel siege of Gaza by the Israeli Government,and to show the people of Gaza that the world does care what is happening to them.”

“It is appalling that in this the 2lst century, the Israeli government is allowed to carry out its policy of collective punishment of an entire people [by continuing] to keep borders closed and refuse the people of Gaza basic necessities for living – food, medicines, cement, and building materials.”

Over the weekend, I wrote a post about Laila El-Haddad, a Palestinian writer who, when trying to return to her home in Palestine from the United States, was held for 36 hours at the Cairo airport, and ultimately refused passage to Palestine and forced, along with her two young children to return to the U.S.  As a result of the ordeal both she and her children became quite ill and it has taken her a few days to write the details of her horrendous experience.  It is now posted on her blog, where she writes about why she was not allowed into Palestine:

I hold a Palestinian Authority passport. It replaced the “temporary two-year Jordanian passport for Gaza residents” that we held until the Oslo Accords and the creation of the Palestinian Authority in the mid ’90s, which itself replaced the Egyptian travel documents we held before that. A progression in a long line of stateless documentation.

It is a passport that allows no passage. A passport that denied me entry to my own home. This is its purpose: to mark me, brand me, so that I am easily identified and cast aside without questions; it is convenient for those giving the orders. It is a system for the collective identification of those with no identity.

It is a long post, but one which I will excerpt no further because it should be read in its riveting  entirety.

Just a quick update to say that Laila El-Haddad is back in the United States but apparently sick to her stomach, no word on how her children are doing yet, will post a more complete update when I know more or you can follow her under Gazamom on Twitter.

The Global Voices blog has sent out an urgent message regarding the well-being of Palestinian blogger Laila El-Haddad who lives both in the U.S. and Palestine  and her 2  American-born children, the youngest of  whom is still in diapers.  El-Haddad was trying to travel from the U.S. to Palestine to be with family and was stopped at the Cairo airport  where she was detained for some 36 hours and was told she would be deported.

However in the meantime, her U.S. visa expired, so it is very unclear where she would be sent to.  During much of the ordeal, El-Haddad sent out messages via her blog and also on Twitter  under the screenname GazaMom.  And then her tweets and posts stopped.  There are grave concerns regarding her safety and that of her children.

That she twittered and blogged through as much of this as she has is an amazing act of bravery.  Here are a few of her twitter posts (intentionally unedited) that speak for themselves:

i don’t think I have ever gone such a long stretch with no sleep. I am beginning to halluciate.

unfortunately could not film there; though could have tried to hide my flip. oh well.

i was placed in a detention room with 17 others for 3 hours then taken to a room and asked “if that’s what I wanted for the forseable future

thinking of going on a hunger strike

now sprialling into the world of the kafkaesque- no one has answers and I don’t know how to get them

waitng and waiting. this man has no answers and my file has been disappeared or cast aside for teh moment. running out of diapers.

will be shocked if Yousuf and Noor’s immune system survives this 24 jolt – eating and sleeping off roach ridden premises included

new information: apparently, I am a security and political threat

anyone have an inside connection w/ Egyptian amn il dawla?

The irony of this story taking place on Passover is hard to miss and raises a number of issues. First, if you doubt the value of Twitter, this may make you a believer.  Secondly, when we think of the travel problems faced by Palestinians, we usually think of it in terms of restrictions placed on them by the Israelis.  Clearly the problem goes beyond that.  At this point there is the possibility that she is not sending messages because she is on a plane, but the question is to where because if her  U.S. visa has expired, it is not at all clear that she will be allowed back into the U.S.

Most importantly, as the material posted and linked to on Global Voices makes all too clear, this isn’t an unusual situation save that she was able to contact the outside world via the internet. It is also important to note that variations of this story play out along borders between Israel and  Palestine and closer to home,  U.S./Mexican border and at borders throughout the world every day.

A mom, 2 small children, detained in horrific conditions, deported–this truly is the definition of inhumane and we join the chorus of voices demanding to know where Laila El_Haddad and her children Yousuf and Noor are and that they be immediately freed and granted the human right to be united with their family.

Ironic footnote via HuffPo–El Haddad was able to send out messages because the wi-fi at the Cairo airport, unlike El-Haddad, is free.