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Inoltra: [JerryLevin] From The Inside Looking Out: Report-59: What Will They Take Away Next?--
- Subject: Inoltra: [JerryLevin] From The Inside Looking Out: Report-59: What Will They Take Away Next?--
- From: Luca Pulitini <lpulitini at yahoo.it>
- Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2005 13:53:09 +0200
Nota: allegato messaggio inoltrato. From: "jlevin0320" <jlevin0320 at yahoo.com> Jerry Levin CPT Hebron, West Bank CPT's Hebron Land Line: 011 972 (0) 2 222 8485 Jerry's Cell Phone: 011 972 506 512 075 Sis's Cell Phone: 011 972 547 471 956 Sis's Bethlehem Land Line: 011 972 (0) 2 274 3861 jlevin0320 at yahoo.com 2455-E Arlington Crescent Birmingham, AL 35205 Phone/Fax: 205 933 8007 Jerry's Cell Phone: 205 422 9599 Sis's Cell Phone: 205 266 1464 >From The Inside Looking Out: Report-59 --What Will They Take Away Next?-- What follows is the fifty ninth in a series of micro-reports, commentaries, and or analyses that I am sending routinely from the Occupied Territories and other areas in the Middle East. If the information or ideas seem helpful, please feel free to forward them to others. It would be a privilege to add their names to this mailing list, if so requested. I can be reached at: jlevin0320 at yahoo.com. As always I will be grateful for any feedback. Also my more recent experiences in the Middle East have been collected in a new book, "West Bank Diary." If you are interested in obtaining a copy, please contact Hope Publishing House, Pasadena, CA at 1-800-326-2671 or via e-mail at: hopepub at sbcglobal.net. (Hebron, West Bank, Palestine September 21, 2005) Just as soon as the retreat from Gaza was more or less concluded shortly after the middle of last month Israeli military units in the Hebron area were replaced by troops whose reactions to CPTers and other internationals has been at times noticeably milder than during all the increasingly turbulent and violent years following Oslo and the second uprising. So pronounced and pervasive has been the difference that one suspects that the troops' restraint are due to deliberate "good cop" indoctrination mandated from above designed to disarm or at least deflect the hearts and minds of us international activists and communicators. So these days we have encountered soldiers and border police shouting cheerfully, "Good morning," as we pursue our daily round of school patrols and other sorties, while others have been cheering us on our way with the ubiquitous "Have a nice day." [See From The Inside Looking out report #5, August 24, 2002: "Have A Nice Day" for an earlier account of the have-a-nice-day phenomenon]. Some of the above, after learning who we are and what we are about actually have encouraged us, softly saying, so as not to be overheard by their comrades, "It is good what you are doing." Others, however, while mouthing the usual pretext for their repressive exploits, "it is our duty to protect the settlers from terrorists," at the same time may try to telegraph a more subjective attitude by adding grimly "I am not permitted to tell you my personal opinion." (Chauvinist soldiers never seem to have that problem,) But others do find a way to make it clear that, although they fear the "terrorists" that it is their "duty" to ferret out, they are angered by the provocative wildly orthodox wildly nationalist settlers of the Old City who make doing that job more difficult. One soldier who during several earnest conversations he initiated implied circumspectly that he doesn't like his duty to be protecting Hebron's settlers. He knows my name. He also knows from our conversations that besides being CPT my professional history has been in journalism. Despite his leanings, he nevertheless astonished my wife, Sis, and me recently when we ran across him at a major checkpoint trouble spot leading into the Old City. The background to the episode is this. I had just finished filing a series of straight CPT hard news reports with my byline. They were later expanded and incorporated into one of my subsequent personal From The Inside Looking Out report [#58, September 8, 2005: "Because We Are All Palestinian]. The stories had to do with problems female teachers and students had encountered at the beginning of the new school year at that checkpoint and another one like it at the other end of the Old City. As we started to walk by him the soldier asked, "You are the CPT reporter?" Wondering what he might be getting at, I answered, "Yes, but I'm not the only one." Then he said something that was quite revealing about the kind of attention the military authorities give to not only what CPT does in Hebron but what we write as well. "Yes, I know" he said, "but you are Jerry and I read what you wrote about the women at the check point." Not knowing what to expect next, what shoe might drop next, but assuming some kind of argument or even rebuke, I asked, "And?" And…here's the surprise. He replied, "What you said was very objective." Hearing that, Sis felt encouraged to tell him, "His reports are translated into Hebrew." She was referring to the translations of >From The Inside Looking Out that our friends at Checkpoint Watch have been putting out over their website. The soldier's reply to that bit of information was, "That is important." Good Cop. Bad cop? You don't have to look very far. I am reminded that more than twice as many Israeli soldiers protested the retreat from Gaza than those who have been refusing to serve in the West Bank. And now that the army is out of Gaza it is being moved into the West Bank in order to increase its capability of enforcing an occupation that is still effectively whittling away parts of western Palestine: absorbing some into Israel behind the "annexation" wall or into settlements still perching ulcer like atop hilltops in Palestinian territory. And while these below the radar subtractive activities are taking place, the Israelis are making tiny so-called concessions that are designed to convince the rest of the world that all is increasingly benign on the western front. When it's not. For instance they talk about reducing the amount of access limitations to Israeli city, towns and villages in the West Bank, when the fact is that just around the Old city of Hebron there are more than ever before. More than 100! Occupation officials are also pointing to other developments in Hebron where last week the Israeli military gave the Palestinian Authority the go ahead to move traffic-halting road blocks at the Bab iZaweyya intersection a quarter of a mile closer to the Old City to a point on Upper Shalaileh Street marking the border between the Palestinian Authority administered H1 area and Israeli tightly controlled H2. H2 is the area where the four arch orthodox arch nationalist settlements are located. Besides getting the go ahead from the Israeli army to move the road blocks, Palestinian security forces also completed a month long move of most of the portable vegetable stands blocking Bab iZaweyya and Upper Shalaileh Street to a newly constructed market area a block above and running parallel to Upper Shalaileh Street between Bab iZaweyya and the H1/H2 border. Not only are the H1 merchants and shoppers pleased to be free of the congestion, which was particularly worrisome to women and girls, but so are the drivers of cabs, jitneys, trucks and private vehicles, who for the first time in several years can drive unimpeded all the way down to the newly moved road blocks. The Palestine Authority was also allowed to permit the placement of portable dry goods stands along either side of Upper Shalaileh Street half the distance between the road blocks and the Beit Romano checkpoint a quarter of a mile a way, so long as there is room for Israeli jeeps or land rover type vehicles to make their way easily along it. A high ranking Palestinian Authority security officer told me that besides relieving congestion in H1 another benefit of the roadblock- moving concession that he proudly said the PA was able to get from the Israel military would be more shoppers venturing down into the Old City. And for a couple of days following, Old City shop keepers seemingly cheered by those changes on the ground could be seen sprucing up their spaces - cleaning, painting and repairing, while a few long shuttered shops opened for the first time in several years supposedly in anticipation of better days. Talking to shop keepers in the Old City, however, I get a different story. What is good for H1 merchants, I was told, is not necessarily going to be good for H2's Old City merchants. One said, "The Palestinian Authority and the [Hebron] municipality don't really help us." And, in fact, life in the Old City does continue grim and marginal. Business has not picked up. Another shopkeeper who depends on a tourist trade that has been squeezed almost completely dry since the uprising said, "Moving the road blocks still does not help enough. Many days I still don't take in a shekel." "Sure some people are cleaning up their shops, and others are opening up again," I was told by still another shopkeeper, "but not because the Israelis say to the PA that they can move the roadblocks. Ramadan is coming and we are getting ready for better business we hope to see when more people come through to the Ibrahimi Mosque to pray." Then he adds wearily, "Maybe they will come if the Israelis don't get in the way." With respect to the Israelis getting in the way, CPT has been getting a rash of complaints about Israeli patrols stepping up their practice of invading Old City homes, ordering residents out of upstairs rooms and then installing themselves there in order to peer out threateningly "for terrorists." The intrusions last from a few hours to overnight. And in one case important personal items were taken. Despite the fact that one soldier involved admitted to CPTer Dianne Roe that articles were taken, and despite official complaints being lodged, nothing has been returned. By the end of the week the H1/H2 border changes, although a source of wonder to many Hebron residents also continued to be a subject of dubious concern. One long time occupant of the Old City squeezing between the relocated roadblocks said, "I can't get used to this. I haven't seen cars down here for years." But then reflecting on the on going effects of the occupation on the Old City's dwindling population and business life, she added, ""We have been given this," she said pointing to the cars and taxis where they hadn't been in a long time. "But" she wanted to know, "what will the Israeli's want to take away in return? They always want more." To cap off these contradictory events, the Good Cop phase with respect to the way CPT and other Internationals are being hailed these days by the Israeli military may be coming to an end. Internationals located in Tel Rumeida have been ordered to stop participating in school patrols set up to escort teachers and students on their way to and from Qurtuba Girls School from long running violent settler harassment. And just this morning while on School Patrol as I was about to ask an Israeli soldier pawing through the backpack of a nine or ten year old Palestinian boy on his way to school, the soldier suddenly stopped, turned full face to me, and with a sarcastic sneer waved at me even though I was only about eight feet away. Then he turned back and continued with a leer to look through the kid's belongings. A few minutes later, fellow CPTer Christina Gibb also on school patrol told me that while she was at another check point she was suddenly confronted by a soldier on duty who angrily said, "It's all the internationals fault. It is you have made the Palestinians hate us." To receive CPT Hebron's weekly reports, news alerts and other messages concerning its violence reduction activities, send your request to be added to its E-mail list to cptheb at palnet.com. And to discover more about Christian Peacemaker Teams, please visit the website at: www.cpt.org. Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/JerryLevin/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: JerryLevin-unsubscribe at yahoogroups.com <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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