[Scpg] [starhawk] Denied Entry PC Teacher Starhawk Deported from Israel Report

Wesley Roe and Santa Barbara Permaculture Network lakinroe at silcom.com
Sun Mar 16 12:32:32 PDT 2008


Denied Entry
By Starhawk

Today is March 16.  Five years ago, I was in a small village in the
Occupied Territories of the West Bank of Palestine with a group of
volunteers from the International Solidarity Movement, which supports
nonviolent resistance against the Occupation.   We had gone because the
villagers were being menaced by tanks from the Israeli military, and
wanted witnesses, but by the time we arrived, the tanks had gone.  Instead
we wandered through the olive groves, studded with pink cyclamen and
blood-red anemones, and ate barbecued lamb in the courtyard of an ancient
stone house with domed ceilings and arched portals.  It was a strangely
idyllic day—until on our way back to Nablus we got a call.
Down in Rafah, in the Gaza strip, a young volunteer named Rachel Corrie
had been crushed to death by a an Israeli military bulldozer as she
attempted to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian family’s house.

	Today I sit in a room in Washington D.C.  overcome by grief as in the next
room my new friend Laurie writes out card after card with the names of the
dead—American soldiers and Iraqi civilians, pile after pile of them.  I’m
grieving for all the dead, and a bit for myself, because I meant to be
back in Palestine, or at least in Israel, now.  But I have been denied
entry and sent home, because of my past work with the ISM.  I have been
denied entry, even though my intentions this time were strictly to work
with permaculture and ecology groups, including the three Israeli groups
that have sent me formal invitations, and even though Israel claims to be
a refuge of last resort for everyone born Jewish, as I am.  The fact that
I’m here, not there, is a measure of how much the Israeli authorities fear
a movement of nonviolent resistance in general, and the ISM in particular.
Why is nonviolence so threatening?  Violence attacks the body, but
nonviolence threatens something deeper and more tenuous—the
self-perceptions and rationalizations that let basically good people act
in cruel and heartless ways.  The Israel/Palestine conflict enacts on a
mass scale some of the same dynamics as family abuse.  Israel is like the
abused child who grows up to be an abuser.

Abusers generally feel like victims—and truly the Jewish people have been
victimized, again and again in history, culminating in the still unhealed
wounds of the Holocaust.  Every rocket attack, every shooting spree in a
Yeshivah, every suicide bomb in a bus reinforces that sense of fear and
persecution that seems to cry out for violence in return.

Once in Germany I walked through an exhibition on the propaganda of the
Holocaust.  One cartoon seemed to illuminate the dynamics of the current
conflict:  a burly, blond, muscle-bound body-builder of a German clubbing
a weak, cringing, forelocked Jew.   Israel was founded by a generation
that said, “Never again will we be the ones who cringe and get clubbed.”
Instead, she has spent sixty years on the Nautilus, building her military
muscle.  But somewhere deep inside is still the perception that Israel is
tiny, fragile and weak and anyone who attacks her is the giant with the
club.  And so the suffering of the Palestinians, the real disparities in
power, become invisible.

Nonviolence dramatizes and makes visible the true power differentials.
Week after week, unarmed Palestinians and their allies march to the Wall
to face tear gas, rubber bullets, clubs, and at times, live ammunition.
Women sit in front of bulldozers, children march out of school to confront
soldiers.

Nonviolence humanizes the enemy.  When the Palestinians are seen as
‘animals’, as filled with blind, irrational, implacable hatred, it is easy
to hate them in turn and to justify every system of control and every
incursion.  But nonviolence gives the enemy a face.  Moreover, in the
demonstrations against the Wall and the peace camps set up in the
villages, Israeli peace groups often come to stand with their Palestinian
allies, shattering the myth that Israelis and Palestinians can never get
along, never collaborate or work together for common ends.
Abuse is perpetuated by secrecy and silence.  The ISM and other peace
groups such as the Women’s International Peace Service and the Christian
Peacemaker Teams have brought thousands of witnesses into the places that
outsiders are not supposed to go: into refugee camps under siege, into
villages and streets and checkpoints and the daily, dehumanizing grind of
life under occupation.  They witness, they write, they take pictures and
videos, and then they go home and talk to people.  They go where the
mainstream media is unwilling to go, and tell the stories that are not
being told.

And the ISM, in particular, has heroes and martyrs.  Working with the ISM,
I’ve been privileged to meet people of truly staggering courage—among whom
I do not rank myself.  My own courage is middle rank.  Yeah, I’ll stand in
front of a tank, but at the end if it doesn’t stop I’ll get out of the
way.  I’ve known a woman who would walk up to artillery and put her hand
over the mouth of the gunbarrel.  Rachel and her team stood out in front
of Palestinian wells, day after day, under fire from Israeli sniper towers
in the distance.  Tom Hurndall ran under bullets to rescue children under
fire from Israeli snipers, who targeted and murdered him.  And there are
many, many more.

I feel somewhat overrated to be counted among their company.  My plans, as
I’ve said, were actually different this time.  I had hoped to work with
the land, to teach some of the techniques of bioremediation that I know
and to learn from the many wonderful groups there.  I feel great grief
that I cannot do that work.  But if that is the price of my commitment to
justice and nonviolence, I am willing to pay it.  It’s a tiny price,
indeed, a miniscule sacrifice, compared to those, like Rachel, who have
given their lives.

Starhawk
www.starhawk.org

To read a longer account of my experiences, see:
www.womenandspirituality.net

To download two songs I cowrote with my brother, Mark Simos, about Rachel,
Tom and Rafah, see:
www.songsofconscience.com


To support the work of the ISM, see:
International Solidarity Movement
www.palsolidarity.org

Permaculture and green groups working in the West Bank can use your
support for their work.  Tax deductible checks can be written to:

Global Village Institute
PO Box 90
Summertown, TN 38483

Send c/o Alayne Deptula
Earmark checks:  West Bank projects









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Starhawk is a lifelong activist in peace and 
global justice movements, a leader in the 
feminist and earth-based spirituality movements, 
author or coauthor of ten books, including The 
Spiral Dance, The Fifth Sacred Thing, Webs of 
Power: Notes from the Global Uprising, and her latest, The Earth Path.

Starhawk's website is www.starhawk.org, and more 
of her writings and information on her schedule 
and activities can be found there.




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