Eileen Fleming
[Israel Palestine] Since 2004, in the agricultural West Bank village of
Bil'in, every Friday afternoon after prayers at the mosque,
Palestinian farmers, workers, mothers, children, in nonviolent
solidarity with justice and peace seeking Israeli and International
volunteers, have been braving tear gas, beatings, bullets, arrests,
and even death to rise up against The Wall and to resist the well
equipped Israeli army with nothing more than their own bodies.
On March 14, 2008, twenty-five year old USA citizen, Blake Murphy,
from Boston, Mass. was targeted, assaulted, pepper sprayed in his
eyes, hauled off and arrested, by the Israeli Special Undercover
Unit/ISUU, because of his nonviolent volunteer work with the
International Solidarity Movement (ISM) in the West Bank.
VIDEO of his capture can be witnessed below or
@: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
Translation from the Hebrew being yelled by the ISUU is:
"That's him! That's the one!
The International Solidarity Movement (ISM) is a Palestinian-led
non-violent resistance movement committed to ending Israel's
illegal occupation of Palestinian land and calls for full compliance
with all relevant UN resolutions and international law.
Blake Murphy had been working for the last eight and a half months
in the Palestinian Occupied Territories with ISM, and for over the
last six had been the media coordinator for ISM.
This civilian journalist spoke with Blake via cell phone on March
20, 2008 while Blake was being held at the Security Detention
area at Ben Gurion Airport for his deportation flight back
to the states.
"I grew up in a Unitarian Universalist family and so was
imprinted with social justice values. I came to Israel open
minded because I wanted to learn for myself what was going on.
You really cannot understand The Occupation until you are here
and living under it. When I arrived, I lived with Israeli friends
who are nonpolitical. Then I decided to take the ISM training
course which teaches about the culture and the history of
nonviolent resistance.
"The more I learned, the angrier I got about how my tax dollars,
my families tax dollars, all American's tax dollars go to support
The Occupation."
During Fiscal Year 2007, the U.S. gave more than $6.8 million
per day to Israel and $0.3 million per day to the Palestinians.
http://www.ifamericansknew.org/
"Since the October War in 1973, Washington has provided Israel
with a level of support dwarfing the amounts provided to any other
state…Total direct U.S. aid to Israel amounts to well over $140 billion
in 2003 dollars. Israel receives about $3 billion in direct foreign
assistance each year, which is roughly one-fifth of America's entire
foreign aid budget. In per capita terms, the United States gives each
Israeli a direct subsidy worth about $500 per year. This largesse is
especially striking when one realizes that Israel is now a wealthy industrial
state with a per capita income roughly equal to South Korea or Spain."-
John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt,
The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy
Blake informed me, "At first I was held at Ma'ale Adumin in a
police station. They took my shoelaces and belt, and I still haven't
gotten them back. Then they transferred me to the Russian
Compound and kept me in solitary confinement for a while.
Then they let me into an area where I could make phone calls but I
could still hear them beating the Palestinians who were in solitary
confinement.
"At the Russian Compound I shared a cell with three others and
we would all fluff our pillows; not for comfort, but to drive
the roaches out.
"The guards tried to be intimidating; even my social service worker,
who is supposedly there to help me, tried to intimidate me.
"Then they transferred me to Masilyahu, which is between Tel Aviv
and Jerusalem. Compared to the Russian Compound, it was pretty nice.
It's a detention center for asylum seekers and refugees. We had TV
and phone. But, I had to beware of collaborators, which is widespread.
It's easy when the police are questioning you to remain silent. But
because they use other prisoners to get information, they make you
more comfortable.
"I didn't do anything illegal or that I am ashamed of, but I didn't
want to get any Palestinian in any more trouble.
"Last Tuesday, they sent me back to court. They put me in a cell
with fifteen other people; it was about 3x6 feet and only half of
us could sit down all scrunched up. That was the most demoralizing
experience of it all. I sat there eight hours and these Palestinians
would go and come back in, saying they had been given another thirty
months or two more years; sometimes it was for drugs and sometimes
it was just for nothing at all.
"The harassment I received was nothing compared to what the
Palestinians get. I also knew all the time I had a get out of jail card
and they would deport me. But it was possible they could have
charged me and given me jail time."
After eight hours of waiting to face the judge, and locked up in a
room meant for eight, but filled with fifteen, denied a translator
in court, and being held in a cell awaiting to see a judge without his
lawyer being informed, Blake's trial was cancelled without him being
informed until court had closed for the day.
"It may have been a mistake, but as it happened on a Tuesday,
the only day visitors are allowed at Masilyahu, maybe it was just
to keep me from seeing my friends.
"I had been arrested before-when I was in Nablus. We stood in
the way of the Israeli forces as they replaced a roadblock on
the "Fabric of Life Road" which is Orwellian speak, because
what the road actually is; is an apartheid road, separate and
not equal. Palestinians must drive through tunnels and sewage,
but Israelis have contiguous roadways."
I then phoned another former ISM Media Coordinator, and
American Jew, whom I call R who told me, "I know Blake and
know all about his work in Nablus, which is a very conservative
place. He had dreadlocks and the Palestinians-in fact-everyone
loved Blake, because he is a conscientious, dedicated worker.
"Blake is one of those people who have no implication to or are
connected to Israel Palestine for any reason except because of their
strong moral compass. People like Blake just cannot stand the
hypocrisy. Neither can I.
"I was raised in a politically Zionist family. My grandfather was a
union worker and after the Six Day War he moved to Israel, but
my mother stayed in America. My sister made Aliyah and when I was
seventeen I traveled to Israel with my synagogue. At nineteen I lived
for three months in a kibbutz. I was very pro-Israel and when ever I
heard anything against Israel, I was just like a sieve; it just
washed over me.
"But in 2003, with the Iraq War, my views become irreconcilable.
It was then that I realized Zionism is incompatible with everything I
believed in; which is equal human rights, the separation of church and
state, not discriminating against any other.
"I wondered how Jewish Americans can be for equal human rights, the
separation of church and state, not discriminating against any other and
yet be a good Jew and support the state of Israel, where one out of five
people are not Jewish and have no human rights.
"I got connected with Jews Against the Occupation and met all these
conscientious, intellectuals walking alongside of nonviolent Palestinians
and that led me to my work with ISM. I have been to Bil'in, I have
breathed tear gas, seen my friends Billy-clubbed, shot at with rubber
bullets and live ammo. Americans of all faiths, internationals in
solidarity with nonviolent Palestinians is a very beautiful thing and
is exactly what the world has been demanding."
JOIN IN:
http://www.palsolidarity.org
Learn More:
http://www.bilin-village.org
November 11, 2006 WAWA Blog;
http://www.wearewideawake.org
MEMOIRS of a Nice Irish-American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory,
Eileen Fleming
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