[NYTr] Avnery: Bil'in! Bil'in!

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Sun Sep 9 16:20:40 EDT 2007


Gush Shalom - Sep 8, 2007
http://zope.gush-shalom.org/home/en/channels/avnery/1189295338/

BIL'IN! BIL'IN!

by Uri Avnery

WHEN MY friends fall prey to despair, I show them a piece of painted
concrete, which I bought in Berlin.

It is one of the remnants of the Berlin wall, which are on sale in the
city.

I tell them that I intend, when the time comes, to apply for a
franchise to sell pieces of the Separation Wall.

Sometimes, when I give a lecture before a German audience, I ask: "How
many of you believed, a week before the fall of the wall, that this
would happen in their lifetime?" No one has ever raised their hand.

But the Berlin wall fell. This week it happened here, too - true, only
in one place, to a small section of the fence, when the Supreme Court
decided that the government must dismantle the obstacle (which at this
place consists of a fence, with ditches, patrol roads and razor wire)
and relocate it nearer to the Green Line.

THE BIBLE commands us: "Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth, and let
not thine heart be glad when he stumbleth" (Proberbs 24,17). It is a
very hard commandment to obey.

The enemy, in this case, is the "Separation Obstacle". It is hard not
to rejoice, even when it is a limited joy, a conditional joy, because
we have won a battle, not the campaign.

First of all, a part of the land of Bil'in has been redeemed, but not
all of it. The new fence will still be far from the Green Line. The
length of the section to be dismantled is less than two kilometers.

Second, Bil'in is only one of many villages whose land has been stolen
by means of the wall.

Third, the wall is only one of the means of occupation, and the
occupation gets worse by the day.

Fourth, in many other places the Supreme Court has confirmed the path
of the fence, even though it steals Palestinian land no less than at
Bil'in.

Fifth, the Bil'in decision also has a negative side: it gives the court
an alibi in the eyes of the world. It confers on the settlers an
apparent legitimacy in many other places. It must not be forgotten for
a moment that the Supreme Court is essentially an instrument of the
occupation, even though it tries sometimes to mitigate it.

As if to underline this point, the court itself hastened this week to
issue another ruling, giving retroactive authorization to another
neighborhood that has also been built on Bil'in land.

Yet in spite of all this: in this desperate struggle, even a small
victory is a big victory. Especially since it happened in Bil'in.

FOR BIL'IN is a symbol. In the past two and a half years, it has become
a part of our life.

Here, every Friday, for 135 weeks without exception, a demonstration
against the fence has taken place.

What is so special about Bil'in, a small and remote village, whose name
was known before to just a few outsiders, if any?

The struggle there has become a symbol because of an unusual
combinations of traits:

A- STEADFASTNESS. The courage of the Bil'iners. In other villages, too,
the demonstrators have shown courage, but here the sheer dogged
persistence arouses admiration. Week after week they came back. The
activists were arrested again and again, wounded more than once. The
entire village has suffered from the terrorism of the occupation
authorities.

More than once I was stirred at the sight of this small village's
resistance. I saw the armored jeeps storming in, sirens screeching
hysterically, the heavily armed policemen jumping out and throwing gas
and stun grenades in all directions, young boys stopping the jeeps with
their bodies.

B- PARTNERSHIP. The three-cornered partnership between the people of
the village, Israeli peace activists and representatives of
international solidarity.

This is a kind of partnership that is not expressed in highfaluting
speeches or sterile meetings in luxury hotels abroad. It was forged
under clouds of choking tear gas, under the jets of water cannons,
under fire from stun grenades and rubber-coated steel bullets, and in
ambulances of the Red Crescent as well as army detention facilities. It
has given birth to comradeship and mutual trust, just when these seemed
to have been lost forever in our country.

Since the death of Yasser Arafat, cooperation between Palestinians and
Israeli peace movements has declined in several spheres. Many
Palestinians have despaired of the Israelis, who have not achieved the
hoped-for change, and many Israeli peace activists have despaired in
face of the Palestinian reality. But in Bil'in cooperation has
flourished.

The Israeli activists, headed by the resolute young women and men of
the "Anarchists Against the Fence", have proved to the Palestinians
that they have an Israeli partner they can trust, and the people of
Bil'in have proved to their Israeli friends that they are reliable and
determined partners. I am proud of the part Gush Shalom has played in
this struggle.

Now the court has proved that such demonstrations, which many
considered hopeless, can indeed bear fruit.

C- NON-VIOLENCE. Always and everywhere. Mahatma Gandhi and Martin
Luther King would have been proud of such disciples.

The non-violence was entirely on the side of the demonstrators. I can
testify as an eye-witness: in all the demonstrations in which I took
part, I saw not a single instance of a demonstrator raising a hand
against a soldier or policeman. When in one of the protests stones were
thrown from among the protesters, video films conclusively proved that
they were thrown by undercover policemen.

True, there was violence at the demonstrations. A lot of violence. But
it came from the soldiers and the border-policemen who could not bear,
I presume, the sight of Palestinians and Israelis acting together.

Generally, it happened like this: The demonstrators marched together
from the center of the village towards the fence. In front there
marched young men and women wearing or carrying symbols of
non-violence. On one occasion, they were handcuffed to each other,
another time they were holding high portraits of Gandhi and Martin
Luther King, another time they were carried in cages - imagination and
creativity were given free rein. Sometimes well-known personalities
marched in front, arms locked.

Near the fence, a large contingent of soldiers and border-policemen
were waiting for them, wearing helmets and bullet-proof vests and armed
with rifles and grenade launchers, with handcuffs and sticks dangling
from their belts. The protesters did not stop but advanced towards the
gate, banging on it, shaking it, waving flags and shouting slogans. The
soldiers opened fire with gas and stun grenades and rubber-coated steel
bullets. Some protesters sat down on the ground, others retreated and
then came back again and again. Some were dragged away with their bare
backs scraping along the road and the rocks, choking on the gas.
Arrests were made. Wounds were treated.

When the demonstration came to a close and the participants headed back
towards the village, the local boys would start to sling stones at the
soldiers, who responded with rubber bullets. Chases took place between
the olive trees, with the light footed boys generally having the
advantage.

Sometimes, the stone-slinging started even earlier, when the boys saw
from afar the concentration of forces lurking in the village groves and
the demonstrators being dragged brutally towards the army vehicles.
But, in accordance with the standing agreement among themselves, the
protesters never joined in the violence, not even when they were
dragged on the rock-strewn ground or were kicked and beaten while lying
there.

This combination of steadfastness, partnership and non-violence is what
turned Bil'in into a beacon of the struggle against the occupation.

THE BIL'IN affair has another face, which was revealed in all its
ugliness over the last few weeks.

The Supreme Court has decided that the path of the fence in this sector
was not based on security considerations, but was designed to enlarge
the settlement. For us, of course, that was not a startling revelation.
Everyone who has been there, including foreign diplomats, has seen it
with their own eyes: the path was fixed in such a way that the Bil'in
land was annexed de facto to Israel, to serve for a huge new housing
project called "Matityahu East", in addition to the settlement called
Matityahu (and also Modi'in Illit and Kiryat Sefer) that is already
standing.

In a second decision this week, the Supreme Court, for the sake of a
spurious "balance", decided that the housing project that is already
standing in Matityahu, also on Bil'in land, can remain there and may
now be populated, in spite of the fact that the same court has in the
past forbidden this.

And who built Matityahu?

Some weeks ago, a huge scandal was exposed. The culprit is a building
company called Heftsiba. It collapsed, taking with it the apartments
that its clients had already paid for. Many of them have lost their
entire savings.

The owner of the company fled and was tracked down in Italy. The
company's debts come close to a billion dollars. The police suspects
that the fugitive has stolen immense sums.

And lo and behold: this is the same company that built the original
Matityahu neighborhood, and that intended to build the new Matityahu
project on land stolen by means of the "Security Fence". It also built
the monstrous Har Homa housing project and other neighborhoods in the
occupied territories.

Who can now deny what we have been saying for years, that the
settlements are a huge business of billions upon billions of dollars,
which is entirely based on stolen property?

Everybody knows the hard core of settlers, nationalist-messianic
fanatics, who are ready to drive out, kill and rob, because their God
told them so. But around this core has gathered a large group of
gangsters, real estate operators, who conduct their dirty and hugely
profitable business behind the screen of patriotism. In this case,
patriotism is indeed the refuge of scoundrels.

Talia Sasson, a lawyer appointed at the time by the government to
investigate the setting up of "illegal" settlement outposts, has
concluded that most of the ministries and army commands have violated
the law and secretly cooperated with the settlers. It may appear that
they acted out of patriotic sentiments. I have my doubts. I dare to
guess that there must be hundreds of politicians, officials and
officers who have received large bribes from businessmen who made
billions from these "patriotic" transactions.

P.S.:

The man who invented the wall was Haim Ramon, then a leader of the
Labor Party. Ramon started out as one of the "doves' of the party (when
that was popular). Later he jumped ship to the Kadima Party (when that
was profitable).

This week Ramon proposed cutting off the electricity that Israel
supplies to the Gaza Strip, as punishment for the Qassam rockets fired
at Sderot. It must be remembered that from the beginning of the
occupation, Israeli governments have prevented the setting up of
independent water and electricity works there, so as to make sure that
the Strip would be completely dependent on Israel in matters of life
and death.

Now Ramon proposes cutting off this lifeline, to plunge Gaza into
darkness, to stop electricity for hospitals and refrigerators, as a
collective punishment - which constitutes a war crime. His government
has accepted the proposal in principle.

If Bil'in represents the struggle of the Sons of Light, Ramon surely
represents - quite literally - the Sons of Darkness.


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