[PAA-Discuss] Arresting Gandhi

Juli3 at aol.com Juli3 at aol.com
Mon Feb 1 10:09:07 EST 2010





Arresting Gandhi
“Violent Clashes” and the Arrest of  Abdullah Abu Rahma

He's a Palestinian man, and he has one of those very  Muslim-sounding names 
with “Abu” in it (it means “father of”). Any time his  name is mentioned 
in the media it tends to be quickly lined up with phrases  like “violent 
clashes.” If the article is more than one paragraph long then  somehow or other 
the topic of suicide bombing will make its way into the  discussion. And 
the Israelis have charged him with weapons possession and have  arrested him 
(the weapons are an assortment of used bullets and tear gas  canisters that 
have been fired at Abdullah and his family, but no matter).  Many readers 
will by then have decided by then that it's all pretty scary and  complicated 
and they'd best move on.

The Israeli military's “tougher  line” on “West Bank protests” made its 
way into the New York Times last Friday  and mention was made of some of 
those arrested, injured and killed by the  Israelis in the course of the weekly 
Friday protests that are now happening in  a number of villages – villages 
like Bil'in, where Israel's massive new wall  is being constructed just 
outside the town, cutting the village off from its  farmland, its water and the 
livelihood of its residents. As part of their  “tougher line” the IDF been 
arresting protest organizers, or in many cases  killing them, always claiming 
the killings are accidental. Basem Abu Rahma,  for example, was recently 
killed by a high-velocity tear gas canister shot  directly at his chest, the 
same type of weapon that nearly killed American  activist Tristan Anderson 
months before.

And now Abdullah is in jail.  The overwhelming majority of the world 
community doesn't know, and why should  they? After all, the Palestinians have yet 
to find “their Gandhi” – Bono said  so, among others. And the IDF 
spokesman quoted by the Times says of the weekly  protests, “these are violent, 
illegal, dangerous riots.” Therefore there is  justification for the hundreds of 
Palestinian children killed by the IDF over  recent years – sometimes they 
were throwing rocks. Let's stay with the logic  here a moment. Take their 
land and build walls around it, arrest their parents  for organizing 
nonviolent protests, kill their children for throwing rocks  (while arresting their 
parents), call all that “violent, illegal, dangerous  riots” and do it all 
again the next day.

Spokespeople for Israel like  to say that if people in, say, Europe had to 
deal with this sort of thing the  Europeans would be doing the same sorts of 
things as the IDF, except worse,  since as everybody knows (or at least as 
all Israelis have been told  repeatedly by their leaders since birth), the 
IDF is the most moral army in  the world.

For what it's worth I'd like to try to put all this into  some kind of 
context. I have been to Bil'in, I stayed at Abdullah Abu Rahma's  house, and I 
witnessed the “violent clashes.” I have also been in the midst of  many far 
more “violent clashes” in Europe than what I witnessed in Bil'in, and  I 
think the contrast is completely relevant.

Bil'in

The Israeli  military's new tactic (if “new” is even remotely applicable 
here) is nothing  short of breaking down doors in the middle of the night and 
arresting the  pillars of the community for the crime of being pillars of 
the community. If  Abdullah Abu Rahma were in a different context, say in 
some equally small town  in Massachusetts, he's undoubtedly the sort of guy who 
would be an active  member, and perhaps occasionally president, of the 
local Rotary Club. He's the  sort of guy anybody from anywhere would recognize 
in their community – a  reliable, gentle man without any grandiose ambitions 
in life, a family man,  content with village life. But due to circumstances 
he finds himself on the  front lines of an ever-encroaching, ever-expanding 
process of annexation and  settlement -- the land-hungry state of Israel. So 
instead of presiding over  Rotary Club meetings he spends his time trying 
to get foreign media attention  on what is happening to his village. Instead 
of giving his second house to his  children he uses it for young people from 
around the world who come every  Friday for the weekly protests he 
organizes against the wall.

Abdullah  is very familiar with Ramallah, only a half hour drive from 
Bil'in (depending  on the ever-present possibility of the IDF's moving 
checkpoints). He knows  where every office of every media outlet is in this little 
capital city, and  when I visited in 2005 he took me to every one of them, 
encouraging the  reporters for Al-Jazeera, Al-Arabia and others to come cover 
this week's  protest. The weekly protests often feature visiting dignitaries 
of some kind,  and this week it was two musicians – me and an elderly 
classical pianist from  the Netherlands who was a Jewish holocaust survivor and an 
outspoken critic of  Israeli policies.

At first the protest in Bil'in followed a familiar  format. We held a small 
rally involving a couple speeches, a song and an  instrumental piece on the 
piano. Then we marched towards the site where the  wall is being built. 
More speeches and music. The military, in riot gear,  began clubbing and 
arresting people and firing tear gas.

What followed  that was a departure from what might be called the normal 
European script.  Children as young as ten began throwing stones, popping out 
from behind  buildings to throw a stone, then ducking back again, while the 
soldiers fired  rubber-coated steel bullets, tear gas canisters and other 
projectiles at  them.

The Friday I was there several were arrested but no one was  killed or 
seriously injured. Other occasions have been far more lethal, and in  the course 
of identical scenarios over the past months and years in the West  Bank and 
Gaza many hundreds of children have been killed by the  soldiers.

Stones are certainly potentially harmful things to have  thrown at you, no 
doubt, but in the context of soldiers in riot gear armed  with machine guns 
and usually hiding behind tanks and armored bulldozers,  stones are a 
symbolic protest, meant to evoke images from Jewish mythology, of  little David 
taking on the invincible Goliath.

The children are killed  for throwing stones, and what are the consequences 
for the killers? Nothing  other than the pangs of their own consciences. 
Why? Because Israel is only a  democracy for Israeli citizens, and the 
millions of Palestinians living in the  West Bank and Gaza are occupied subjects, 
not citizens. And in the minds of so  many Israeli Jews the Palestinian 
children are just future “terrorists” and  not worth defending from the soldiers 
-- from their sons, brothers and fathers  who are doing the killing.

Europe

Contrast can be illuminating.  Seeing the stone-throwing youth I am 
reminded of many scenarios in which I  have found myself in Europe. Except in 
Germany and Denmark the youth throwing  the stones have been older, mostly in 
their older teens or twenties, and there  are more of them, many more. The 
police are dressed in riot gear like the  Israelis, but they don't usually have 
guns, and if they do they almost never  use them. They fight rocks with 
clubs and tear gas. They charge and they  retreat. As in the Israeli media, the 
European media derides the youth with  stones as misguided and violent. The 
youth are arrested, sometimes jailed for  months for their offenses.

The differences are many. The European  stone-throwing youth are charged 
for their offenses, unlike the Palestinian  kids who are often held 
indefinitely without charges. Also, the European youth  are rarely killed, and when 
they are, there are consequences. Why are there  consequences? Because in 
Europe there is something more more closely  resembling democracy than in 
Israel. Mass movements of citizens in the streets  and voters in the voting booths 
have made sure over the decades that the  police are not allowed to use 
whatever weapons they want and kill citizens  with impunity. When Carlo 
Giuliani was killed in Italy during the G8 protests  nine years ago, hundreds of 
thousands of regular Italian people poured into  the streets across the 
country to protest the killing of this 23-year-old  anarchist youth. Several 
months ago in Greece a teenager was killed by police  in Athens and since then 
the whole country has been rocked by massive protests  and riots against 
police brutality.

But Israel, some will say, is a  victim of “terrorism.” By extension these 
stone-throwing youth are somehow  “terrorists” and therefore different 
standards apply. But it's not true. In  recent years in Madrid and London 
scores of people have been killed in suicide  bombings, but this has not led the 
Spanish or British militaries to start  killing en masse Spanish or British 
youth who may be (and often are) misguided  enough to throw rocks at the 
police in the course of a  protest.

Escalation

In Denmark there is a group called Parents  Against Police Brutality. These 
are people who tend to see the police as often  playing a provocative role 
(for example in destroying the anarchist social  center, Ungdomshuset not 
long ago) and they go to protests more or less as  observers to make sure the 
police aren't hurting their children. They're not  there to tell the kids 
what to do, they're just there to make sure the police  don't hurt them. 
Whereas in the western media the question is rhetorically  asked why the 
Palestinian parents allow their children to go throw stones at  tanks, nobody asks 
why the parents of Denmark let their kids go throw stones  at cops. The 
Danish parents would generally just prefer that the police would  stay home in 
the first place and not give their kids such an obvious and  deserving target 
for their frustration (since they weren't born yesterday and  they remember 
that it was the police who destroyed their social center, for  example).

In Germany, following the fairly sizable riots during the G8  meetings in 
Rostock, some conservative politicians were complaining that the  police, a 
number of whom had suffered broken bones in the melee with  protesters, 
needed to be better armed. The politicians said the police should  be given 
tasers, pellet guns, and whatever else. The police chief responded  that they 
didn't want projectiles, as this would escalate things in future  
confrontations with angry citizens.

It's been years since there's been  any significant Palestinian-led 
violence against Israelis, and Israel is  increasingly at risk of being seen 
universally, maybe even eventually in the  US itself, as the aggressor. Shooting 
children looks especially bad when the  kids don't have suicide vests on, if 
all they're ever doing is throwing stones  at tanks. Knowing that if they 
suppress peaceful protest by arresting people  like Abdullah Abu Rahma, Jamal 
Juma, and many others, this will help encourage  other, less peaceful forms 
of protest, the Israeli leadership seems to be  doing its best to foster a 
more violent opposition, hopefully one just violent  enough to give Israel 
the justification it needs to continue to keep the  Palestinian population 
controlled through wanton brutality.

Maintaining  a lack of democracy, keeping the Palestinian population in a 
state of fear,  and maintaining at least a smokescreen of viability in the 
eyes of the west by  having a legitimately violent menace to combat are all 
essential ingredients  to keeping Israel Israel, or at least to keeping the 
West Bank for their  settlers. The Palestinians most definitely have their 
adherents to Ghandian  nonviolence, I have met many of them – and they are 
being systematically  arrested.


David Rovics
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