The monologue of the Religious Right is over and a new conversation has begun! Join the God's Politics dialogue with Jim Wallis and friends Brian McLaren, Diana Butler Bass, Becky Garrison, Gareth Higgins, Shane Claiborne, Mary Nelson, Gabriel Salguero, Tony Campolo, and others.

Get e-mail updates



About Jim Wallis
Read His Bio
Events
Press Coverage
Multimedia
Books
Get Sojourners

August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006

Subscribe
RSS Feed
On Beliefnet
Blog Heaven
Quizzes
Prayer of the Day
Inspiration
Meditations
Prayer Circles
Memorials
News & Society
Home
Huffington Post
Crooks and Liars
TalkingPointsMemo
Street Prophets
Andrew Sullivan
Cross Left
Think Progress
Emergent Village
Bene Diction Blogs On
Chuck Currie
Commonweal
Connexions
The Parish
Faith and Policy
Faith in Public Life
Faithful Progressive
First Born Son
Gathering in the Light
I Am a Christian Too
Imitatio Christi
Jesus Politics
Latino Leadership Circ.
Perspectives
PhaithofStphransus
Philocrites
Pomomusings
Prodigal Sheep
ProgressiveChristianAl
Public Theologian
Talk To Action
The Corner
The Wittenburg Door
Theoblogical
Waving or Drowning
Willzhead
XpatriatedTexan
 
 
 

The Gaza Cease-Fire and Palestinian Nonviolent Resistance (by Philip Rizk)

I arrived in the West Bank the afternoon of Saturday, June 7, and hit the ground running. The next morning we starting filming for a film on Palestinian nonviolent resistance I am working on this summer. That Sunday, we did a long interview with Daoud Nassar, whose family owns a plot of land in the Palestinian village of Nahalin, just a few kilometers south of Bethlehem. The legal documents to the land date back to 1916, yet the family has been battling in Israeli courts for more than 15 years to have their ownership recognized by the Israeli state. The land lies on a hill surrounded on all sides by Israeli settlements. The neighboring settlement of Neve Daniel already has a master plan to expand across the land of the Nassars and their neighbors.

Parallel to the legal battles, the Nassars have done everything to prevent the confiscation of their land. In the summers they host children's summer camps and nonviolent resistance training camps. They also continue to come up with creative ways of resisting Israel's intention of removing them from their property by gathering winter rains when they are not permitted to connect to the water system of the nearby village, and digging out old caves because they cannot legally build above ground. Israeli land annexation is occurring all over Israel, yet the Nassar's case reveals a rare example of perseverance and creativity, and they have achieved international support to persist in fighting for their land.

On Thursday, June 19, after months of back-and-forth movements, a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas finally came into effect. With this rare time of calm between Israel and Gaza, many Palestinian farmers with land on the border areas are taking the chance to begin clearing their fields of the damage from recent Israeli incursions. The Egyptian-brokered agreement entails a gradual prisoner exchange and an immediate loosening of the siege that was intensified after Hamas' takeover of power in the Gaza Strip one year ago. Gazans who over the past year have experienced a severe shortage of all sorts of building materials, such as cement, wood, and glass, are hopeful that the agreement will actually be carried through in order to revive some local businesses. In recent months, the most vital commodity to be cut from the Gazan market is petrol. With insufficient supplies, life has been slowed to an excruciatingly slow pace. In such dire days, there is hope that the cease-fire will improve life, yet four days after its start the agreement has allowed for little change to be felt on the ground.

The day prior to the onset of the cease-fire, I had the longest day of filming in my life, from 4 a.m. to 10 p.m. In the village of Ghwein, the last Palestinian community before the border between the West Bank and Israel, lies a small community whose inhabitants live in caves as their ancestors have for hundreds of years. In 1948, such farming communities all over the country were forcefully displaced by Israeli troops, the inhabitants of Ghwein also were pushed out of half of their village in the valley. Since that time more and more land has been confiscated, dividing the village from access to much of their farmland and even more vital wells. In these forgotten village lands, Israel will destroy any home that is built, so life in the caves remains frozen in time. Having experienced a dry rainy season, they have barely sufficient water to make it. Life is becoming increasingly unsustainable. If the families leave, tempted by the luxuries of city life, Israel is certain to annex their land for the construction of another settlement, like it has in so many other locations around them. So the families of Ghwein are remaining steadfast in resisting the occupation.

In Ghwein, Abu Mohammed told us of the realities of growing up as a farmer under occupation. Life is suddenly whittled down to the very basics: land and water. This Palestinian Life takes an oral history approach to the Palestinian experience by featuring farmers such as Abu Mohammed, rather than the "expert" opinions of journalists, historians, and political analysts.

Together with a Palestinian film crew from Bethlehem, producer Julie Norman and I have just a week left to capture stories of resistance in the West Bank. Next week I will travel to Gaza to film a final sequence connecting these stories to those of a Gaza under severe siege.

Philip Rizk is an Egyptian-German Christian who lived and worked in Gaza from 2005-2007. The film project is still underfunded -- check out the film site and make a contribution at thispalestinianlife.blogspot.com.

 

Comments

Apparently Mr. Rizk hasn't kept up with the latest news regarding the "ceasefire", namely that the Palestinians in Gaza are back to what they do best, throwing rockets into Israeli communities:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7472819.stm


Just days after the "ceasefire" goes into effect and Gaza is right back at it. That says it all regarding their wish for peace.

Yeah, I wouldn't call launching rockets durring a ceasefire "nonviolent resistance."

Nice piece Philip and keep up the good work. Don't take any notice of these Zionists or the biased BBC - they are just about to get a complaint. The rest of the world knows who breached the ceasefire first.

Thank you Philip. I look forward to seeing the film when it is released.
I hope that some of the other posters here will get to see it too, and that they might have the humility to learn...

meurig

Is it Zionist to note that Palestinians launched rockets into Israel?

Would it not display humility to say yes, I have read of those rocket attacks too, but here are the circumstances, and here is why we should also consider the plight of the Palestinians who are not engaged in violence... etc.

Christians, the enemy is not each other!

Thanks for your article, Philip. I also visited Daoud Nasser and family back in 2006. Even though they have many visitors, I fear for the safety of the family from the attacks of settlers who want this property to secure this section of the West Bank in total Israeli control.

And thank you, Rene. for your work in looking past the violence, discrimination and hate to seek a workable solution that will begin to build a world so the children of Israelis and the children of Palestinians can begin to understand each other so maybe one day they can hear each other and maybe teach us all to listen a little better.

It is so much better to do this than to pursue yet another campaign of ethnic cleansing.

Post a Comment

Are you aware of our Rules of Conduct?







 

 
Recent Posts
The Indescribable Drama of Transfiguration (by Phyllis Tickle)
The Olympics, Human Rights, and Holy Mischief (by Jarrod McKenna)
Am I Liberal or Conservative? Or Both? (Part 1, by Romal Tune)
Voice of the Day: Allan Boesak
Verse of the Day: Father of Mercies
Daily News Digest (by Duane Shank)
Slavery Apology--One Step Forward (by Jim Wallis)
Exploitation Isn't Kosher (by Allison Johnson)
Tennessee Church Shootings: The Culture War's Latest Casualties (by Craig Detweiler)
Verse of the Day: 'do not despise one of these little ones'
 
 
 

 
Explore Beliefnet
News & Society
Today's Headlines
Complete Politics Coverage

More Faith & Politics
Interview with Jim Wallis
Conservative Blogger Rod Dreher
Responding to a blog post? Read our Rules of Conduct first.