"This is Sharonistan" - report on two anti-Wall events
At the rendezvous point in the Liberty Bell Park. A hitch developed: the Jerusalem Ta'ayush people, who took upon
themselves to organize the morning event, had underestimated the number of people. As more and more activists arrived
from Tel-Aviv, Haifa and Jerusalem itself, it turned out that there weren't enough buses to transport everybody to the
demonstration site in Sawahre, and the whole action was delayed for an hour. The mostly young organizers stayed
remarkably calm: "It is very good that many came."
As the cavalcade set out at last across the invisible border between West and East Jerusalem, the activiststs meanwhile
got detailed instructions for the eventuality of confrontation with the police. However, the contingency plans remained
unused, no problems whatsoever with the police..But as we found later, the police was active further east, blocking the
way for many Palestinian villagers who wanted to join the demonstration. Still. when we alighted from the buses, there
was a considerable Palestinian crowd, of all ages, to welcome us.
Sawahra valley. It really looked like a replica of the Berlin Wall, that wall which had fallen exactly fourteen years
ago - a long row of giant concrete panels planted in the middle of a pastoral landscape. Did the Israeli military
consciously emulate the East-German example? Or is this just what engineers/bureaucrats routinely come up with?
In no time, the dull grey was overlaid by an enormous lot of graffiti, as Israeli, Palestinian and international
activists simultaneously pulled out spraypaint bottles and cheerfully set to work . There was complete freedom of speech
- no attempts to censor or streamline: "Barrier for peace" / No more ghettos! / No to the Apartheid Wall! / There are no
good walls. / Here ends the Zionist dream and begins the nightmare. / Arabern raus, this is Sharonistan. / Zionism of
dispossession. / Riv Muren Swedent. / Make peace - not walls./ Pull down the wall. / The Wall will fall. / This wall is
killing Israel, too. / Two states for two peoples. / Non au mur. / Planting and sowing is better than the wall of blood.
/ One state for two peoples. / IDF go home. / The IDF is a terrorist organization. / Yes to reconciliation. / Remember
the Warshaw Ghetto. / This is not the Israel we dreamed of. / Down with the wall. / Yes to peace - No to the wall. /
Another future without a wall. / This is Israeli supremacy and Apartheid. / Yes to the Green Line. / Peace begins with
vegetarianism. / This is not security, this is stupidity. / Ghetto Palestine. / Wall = ethnic cleansing. / Stop the
shame! / The wall kills the chance for peace. / Concrete is not security. / Do you see a Nazi in the mirror? / We want
peace, we don't want wall. / No to ghettos - Yes to compassionate listening. / Enough of Dispossession and Provocation;
Long Live Peace and Brotherhood. / No hands meet when walls are built. / Let the Palestinians live! / Somebody is
calling from the other side, do you listen? / Love thy neighbor. / Down with Zionist terrorism. / Long Live Free
Palestine. / Peace Now! / Peace immediately! / Amor no guerra. ./ Remember the Maginot Line. / Remember the Bar-Lev
Line. / This is occupation is killing us. / Love without borders. / Legalize hash. / Education and not the wall. / The
occupation kills, we want peace - and now.
And, in some places also the standard inscription of each block (Ministry of Defence - Department of Construction) was
transformed: Department of Destruction / Department of Occupation / Department of Apartheid / Ministry of Oppression.
And the Japanese word for peace, painted on many corners looked like an ornament. (Two separate groups of Japanese
activists had arrived as well as the Buddhist monk, long-time resident of Jerusalem and a fixed feature of
demonstrations.)
Then we set out in procession to the top of the hill, with Palestinian flags, rainbow peace flags, red flags of the
DFLP, the round Gush Shalom Two- Flag signs... En route, some information over the megaphones: The concrete blocks are
not yet in their final place. Construction has been temporarily stopped by an appeal to the Supreme Court. The rally
will take place at the wall site as designated by the army where Sawahre inhabitants have been maintaining a protest
tent for the past month.
Niham Abu-Gush, head of the Sawahre Civic Committee, addressed the gathered crowd: "Do you see the beautiful view of the
valley? The mountain on the other side? When the wall is erected here, you will see nothing. And the houses over there
have all got demolition orders." He was followed by Beate Zilversmidt of Gush Shalom ("The wall destroys Israel from the
inside, economically and morally") and Yigal Bronner of Ta'ayush ("It has nothing to do with security; only with
annexation and ethnic cleansing.") *** Between the morning action and the evening rally in Tel-Aviv,
news broadcasts told of 11 Palestinians shot to death by soldiers in different locations during the past 48 hours...
*** At Tel-Aviv's Cinematheque Square a giant screen was erected. In an effort to bring some of the occupation reality
to the city, the images and the noise of bulldozers cutting down olive trees; soldiers shooting teargas grenades;
demonstrators being dragged away from a bulldozer which they tried to block. Activists circulating among the crowd
distributed a realistic replica of the confiscation order signed by General Moshe Kaplinsky of the Central Command:
"Under my authority as commander of military forces and according to my judgment that it is needed for security reasons
I order a strip of land at a varying width of 47 to 60 metres to be transferred to the possession of the army and be
declared a closed military zone, as designated in the enclosed map." The map, however, marked the confiscated strip down
a major Tel-Aviv thoroughfare...
Lin Dovrat and Hulud Badawi were the inspiring moderators, alternatingly in Hebrew and Arabic. Speeches were delivered
by Einat Podgorny of Ta'ayush ("We will not stay silent about this crime and the destruction of our future"); Na'ama
Nagar of ICAHD ("The Wall unilaterally annexes large parts of the West Bank, severely damaging property and living
conditions"); the remarkably vivid Hannah Safran - Women's Peace Coalition (Israeli society is full of oppression,
violence and hatred - against Palestinians, against migrant workers, against women, against the poor"); Adam Keller -
Gush Shalom ("Sharon had this annexation map ready since the 1970s, implementing it first through settlement activity,
now through the Wall"); the poet Rawda Murkus ("At Tuwani village I feel occupied / And all women are occupied with
me").
Most impressive was the direct appeal of Ossama Zachalke from the Sawahre Civic Committee who had joined the bus from
Jerusalem. "People of Tel-Aviv! I came here to tell you what this wall will do to us in Sawahre. This is not a wall of
separation between Israelis and Palestinians, but between Palestinians and Palestinians, between people of one village.
We in Sawahre are 30 000 people. The wall will divide us, 20 000 on one side, 10 000 on the other. Eight hundred
families will be divided, in some places brothers are divided from each other, in another place a father and a son. In
the one part, pupils will not be able anymore to go to school and it will be forbidden to die, as the cemetery will be
on the other side."
Moderator Lin Dovrat then reminded the audience that Sawahre was but one of many dozens of afflicted towns and villages,
and asked everybody to stay tuned for further activity, among other things signing the petition on the website:
www.gader.org
The anti-Wall Coalition includes: Alternative Information Center
* Black Laundry
* Coalition of Women for a Just Peace
* Green Action
* Gush Shalom
* HaKampus Lo Shotek
* HaKav HaYarok
* Independent Media Group - Indymedia
* Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
* Mas'ha Group * One Struggle
* Peace Now * Ta'ayush - Arab-Jewish Partnership
* Women Against The Wall
* Yesh Gvul
P.S.: The Israeli & Palestinian actions are part of a global campaign which includes demonstration in the U.S. (New York, Washington,
Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, San Francisco, New Orleans etc..; and one event or more in England, Scotland, France,
Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland, Norway, Sweden, Australia, South Africa, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Bangladesh
and Jordan - details on: http://stopthewall.org/worldwideactivism/62.shtml
Freelance photographer Eyal Ofer gave us the link to his recent series of professional photos of the Wall: http://www.pbase.com/yalop/fence