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Written by Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh – Bethlehem Dr. Mazin Qumsiyeh – Bethlehem
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Category: News News
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Published: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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Last Updated: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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Created: 19 December 2008 19 December 2008
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Since 2002, we have faced the enormous human costs of a massive,
concrete segregation wall. The wall zigzags around Bethlehem, placing
fertile Palestinian agricultural lands on the "Israeli side" and in
many cases goes straight through centuries-old villages - separating
Palestinian families from each other and from their jobs, hospitals,
schools, churches and mosques. The wall and checkpoints meant that many
faculty and students can no longer make it to school at Bethlehem
University and our student body has steadily lost its geographic
diversity. The biblical and literal path from Nazareth to Bethlehem is
blocked by many checkpoints and thirty-foot high slabs of concrete.
Many of my relatives lost jobs in Jerusalem or lost livelihoods that
depended on the city of which we are a suburb. It is virtually
impossible for West Bank Palestinians to obtain permits to enter
Jerusalem or for Jerusalemites to engage in commerce with us. Even if
one gets a rare permit, checkpoints make travel unpredictable and often
impossible, precluding maintaining a decent economy. Unemployment is
now at 45%, nearly twice what it was during the US Great Depression.
But we can be thankful that we are not living in Gaza where things are
far worse. Yet, the whole area feels like a ticking time bomb.
Israel's desire to acquire maximum geography with minimum Palestinian
demography is the root of the suffering afflicting the Holy Land. Today
there are 6 million Palestinian refugees and displaced people. Amnesty
International has observed that the “peace processes” failed because
Israel has ignored human rights, including the right of native
Palestinians to return to their homes and lands. There is now a broad
international consensus (with the exceptions of the US and Israeli
governments) on the danger to international peace and security posed by
Israel's continued violations of human rights and international law.
Clearly if one wants peace in the Middle East and beyond, the path
starts by giving justice to Palestinians. I am doubly pained as an
American and a Palestinian Christian because my taxes support this
60-year carnage. Israel is the largest recipient of US foreign aid and
the US administrations still go out of their way to cater to Israeli
lobby influences.
The logic of military and political power dictates that Israel is now
building more Jewish settlements and demolishing more Palestinian homes
and farms inspite of its obligations under signed agreements and under
International law. The current Israeli government is even moving
further right to fend off the extreme right of Netanyahu before the
elections. The incoming Obama administration has appointed Israeli
apologists to key positions of power (Hillary Clinton, Rahm Emanuel)
indicating we should expect no “change”.
Israel as the occupying power is responsible for the welfare of those
under its belligerent military rule per the applicable Geneva
conventions. Yet, Israel has intentionally de-developed the
Palestinian economy. With the collusion of the EU and the US the
economy of the West Bank and Gaza became even more dependent on Western
“humanitarian aid”. Some 30% of this aid is siphoned off into Israel
and some 30% goes to support Palestinian “security forces” whose job
seems to focus not on protecting Palestinians from settler attacks but
to fight any Palestinian who dares to resist the occupation or
challenge the usurpation of his land.
There is a system of corruption involving governments and “authorities”
trickling down to people. This is coupled with a media strategy that
makes it look as if the only choices available to Palestinians are
blowing themselves up or capitulation and endless negotiations. This
sad state of affairs did not just happen but was engineered and is
actively managed to perpetuate occupation and dependency. Why else
would Israel deny entry to academics coming to teach at the
universities here or entry to equipment for even the simplest of
industries? Why deny Gaza electric power and equipment to treat the
sewage and thus let sewage of 1.5 million people flow into the
Mediterranean Sea polluting Europe and even Tel Aviv?
But we are hopeful; history is not static as is amply illustrated by
many historical example including the rise and fall of the Bush
dynasty. Here in Bethlehem, we derive strength from knowing that the
foreign military occupation that existed at Jesus’s time has ended. We
derive hope from the thousands of visitors who come every year to show
us solidarity. We derive contentment and patience from our faith and
prayers. We derive energy from our work for peace with justice. The
heads of our churches this year asked the International community to
consider “what would Jesus do” in this situation of injustice.
In this season celebrating the birth of the Prince of Peace, let us all
resolve to pray and work for ending the occupation that began in 1967
and for implementing other Internationally recognized Palestinian
rights. When we succeed, people of all religions (Jews, Christians, and
Muslims) and all backgrounds will share this small piece of earth in
harmony and peace. This will be the real change that we have been
working for and that will finally shed the shackles holding US foreign
policy.
This is our prayer this holiday season.
- Mazin Qumsiyeh, PhD is Chairman of the Board of the Palestinian
Center for Rapprochement Between People - www.pcr.ps - and is a
professor at Bethlehem University in the occupied West Bank. He
contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com. Contact his through
his website: http://qumsiyeh.org
Previous material I wrote in Previous Christmases (some directly
relevant to today, some depressingly showing how little things change):
http://www.qumsiyeh.org/christmas2007/
http://www.qumsiyeh.org/christmas2006/
http://mideastchristians.virtualactivism.net/newsarticles/mazin.htm Christmas 2002
http://www.jerusalemiloveyou.net/spip.php?article60 Holiday message 2002
http://www.mediamonitors.net/mazin1.html Christmas 2000
http://qumsiyeh.org/aseasonofmayhem