Saturday, May 10, 2008

[Palestine] The South: Fragile Desert Ecology, CPT, Operation Dove, and Hafez

Bedouin subsistence life is gentle to the land. Their diet consists of dairy products and meat from their animals, bread from the wheat they plant and harvest in the slopping ravines, and a few purchased food products.  Goats and sheep provide milk, meat and wool.  A few olive trees, grape vines, and tomato plants provide treats now and then.  Bedouins dwell in tent-like housing or caves, carefully using the water they draw from deep cisterns on the hill slopes.  When necessary, they walk, use donkeys and take public transportation to nearby towns. They are a people who seem happy with their families and simple life.


However, the Israeli settlers have established large scale agribusinesses which are not environmentally friendly. The limited availability of water and the waste byproducts from intensive agribusiness pose a potential longer-term threat to the delicate desert environment.

MPTers arrived in Tuba on time to do school patrol for the Bedouin children coming home from school, which we repeated the next morning. Later, the team spent time visiting with two families and helping a bit with the harvesting of the wheat.

This gregarious young woman gives the team an ongoing commentary in Arabic whether the team understands or not.

Despite the unfamiliar beauty of the land and the welcoming spirit of the Bedouin families, there was a sense of fear in the area. The Christian Peacemaker Team [CPT] had reported to them an invasion three days earlier of 20 heavily armed Israeli settlers, army, and police into the nearby At Tuwani village. Several Palestinians were injured and a member of Operation Dove [an Italian peace team that works with CPT] had a possible eye injury. All were returned from the hospital to the village before we left. The Israeli army and police did not respond to the pleas of the Palestinian villagers or the internationals from CPT and Operation Dove even when the police and soldiers were witnesses to the brutality of the Israeli settlers. After hearing this report, MPTers walked two and a half hours with great alertness through desert land where settlers have harassed and seriously injured Palestinians and internationals.

In the evening as the shadows crept across the hills and the women were drawing water, the 17-year old daughter from the family who lives in the cave, spotted two settlers coming down a hill a distance from them. When she pointed out the settlers, she seemed a bit hysterical. Her mother had been beaten by settlers a few months ago. To the relief of the young women drawing water, the settlers turned and returned to the settlement. However, the village invasion news, the citing of settlers on nearby distant hill, and the fact the Israelis were celebrating 60 years of independence [which for Palestine means 60+ years of occupation] kept the team alert.

Some MPTers slept fitfully that night wondering if settlers would invade to hurt the people and destroy their dwellings or animals and also hurt them. However, the team only has to deal with this feeling of fear for a brief time compared to the daily occupation the Bedouins feel for themselves, their children, and their livelihood.

Hafez - "Gandhi of the South.'

Returning to At Tuwani, the team stopped to visit Hafez, whom some MPTers call “Gandhi of the South.” He shared his inspiring life story, which is always difficult for him to tell because he relives the suffering at each telling. A few years ago, Hafez was at a meeting with Israeli peace activists when he received a call that his 71-year-old mother was being attacked and beaten by Israeli settlers from the nearby settlement. The settlers were attempting to steal the sheep his mother was herding in an area close to his home. Despite the threat of death with settler rifle shots near his feet, Hafez moved toward his mother. The settlers stopped and retreated, leaving the sheep with Hafez’s mother when they saw the Israeli activists had come to tape the events with video cameras.

Hafez says he thought of revenge, but decided that violence against violence would only continue the violence and would eventually destroy his whole family. Even when faced with this horrible event he chose nonviolence and has continued to work with the Bedouin people of the area, developing leaders and helping to educate people in nonviolence. In a demonstration two years ago, he suffered broken ribs and received a court order that keeps him away from demonstrations, but not the opportunity to continue to organize the people and direct demonstrations by phone from a distance.

The team left with heavy hearts for the suffering of the Bedouin people, but with hope for the future because of the nonviolent work of the communities there, led by the “Gandhi of the South.”