Photo stories on Palestine/ Articles about Budrus
Photo stories on Palestine/ Articles about Budrus and
Biddu
1/ Photo stories by Larry Towell, Magnum Photos
2/ Letter from Budrus, by Mark Sorkin, in The Nation
3/ Westerners Brave Tear Gas in Israel Barrier Battle, by Cynthia Johnston, Reuters story
1/ Photo stories by Larry Towell, Magnum Photos
To view the two
photo stories shot by Larry Towell during February and
March, visit 1) A Wall Through
The Heart, and 2) Resistance. http://www.magnumphotos.com
2/Letter from Budrus, by Mark Sorkin, in The
Nation "The van drops us off at the top of a hill and
rattles around the bend. It is the middle of the afternoon
in Budrus, a tiny village in the occupied West Bank ten
miles northwest of Ramallah, and the neighborhood seems
deceptively quiet. A few boys and girls linger outside
their homes, picking at cactus bushes. Others peek out from
second-floor windows to watch the visitors walking by. A
dirt road winds down to an expanse of olive groves that
stretches for about 700 dunams (175 acres) to the Green
Line, the internationally recognized border with Israel.
It's a bucolic scene, violently interrupted by the
razor-wire fence on the outer edges that threatens to tear
through the middle of the groves. If construction here
continues, the 1,200 residents of Budrus--the vast majority
of whom depend on agriculture for work--will lose a large
portion of their fields. An Israeli bulldozer has already
carved a preliminary path, and uprooted trees lie in its
wake."
For the full article, please go to:
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20040614&s=sorkin
3/ Westerners Brave Tear Gas in Israel Barrier
Battle, by Cynthia Johnston, Reuters story BIDDO, West
Bank (Reuters) - When they come to protest against Israel's
West Bank barrier, foreign activists sometimes wear
bandannas soaked in vinegar. Peter, a European activist
who has already been hit twice with rubber bullets at
pro-Palestinian demonstrations, swears it works better than
a whiff of raw onion to ease the burn of tear gas fired by
Israeli soldiers. Western activists have been repeatedly
fired on, tear gassed and arrested at protests in the West
Bank and Gaza since a Palestinian uprising began in 2000.
Two have been killed. But the activists keep trickling
in, confronting bulldozers at West Bank towns like Biddo
where Israel is clearing land for a barrier it says will
stop suicide bombers. Israel sees them as idealistic
dupes for militants who, sworn to Israel's destruction,
have killed hundreds of people since 2000. Palestinians say
they lend moral support and make it more difficult for
soldiers to use violence. For the full article, copy and
paste the following link:
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=ourWorldNews&storyID=5237408&pageNumber=0
INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT http://www.palsolidarity.org