Dear Family & Friends:
In his weekly reflections which he shares with us, Patriarch
Emeritus Michel Sabbah is quoting Prophet Isiah: "Strengthen all
weary hands; steady all trembling knees; and say to the faint-hearted:
Be strong, do not be afraid' (Is 35: 3-4).
Very comforting words indeed, but much easier said than done when we
have been subjugated to a brutal occupation over and above a
dispossession that has lingered for almost seventy years. As strong
as they try to be, the Palestinians are afraid and children are
terrified as they never know whether they will find their home when
they come back from school, or just a pile of rubble, or when a dear
father, brother or sister will be picked up by the army in the middle
of the night.
Yet once again Patriarch Sabbah draws our attention to what Prophet
Isaiah said "He gives justice to the oppressed; he gives food to the
hungry; he sets prisoners free" (Ps 146: 6-7).
I keep wondering how we keep holding onto hope when there is no
justice, when families are separated and not allowed family
reunification, when our young people are languishing in Israeli jails
and when we see so many hungry people, especially children. Those
children who constitute the largest sector of the wave of refugees
from all over our region trying to seek a safe haven after being
exposed to so much brutality due to foreign wars imposed on their
countries. Yes our hands are weary, and our knees are trembling, and
we do not know what the future holds for us, and that is why it breaks
our heart to see some of our young people leaving the country to seek
a better future for their children. However most of us are determined
to stay put, although very often we feel like crying out “Until when O
Lord, until when?”
From our land, the Holy Land where our Lord Jesus Christ was born,
I send you warm greetings and best wishes for a Joyful Christmas and
a Peaceful New Year.
Sunday, December 18, 2016
Tuesday, November 8, 2016
On The American Elections
Now that it is almost over, I could not resist a few lines
on this election campaign
The US has become a laughing stock as the parties went low down that lane
Commentators have written about Evil and lesser Evil as the only choice
A tragedy when a super power cannot come out with a good or
better voice
For Trump to represent the
Republicans seemed at the
beginning like a joke
But the joke ended up on the Democrats seeing that Trump was
no bloke
The thrust of Obama and Michelle was needed to salvage the
party’s prestige
Having Hillary lose against Trump would be a disaster they could never appease
In a few hours we will really know and may the Lord have
mercy on this globe
Whether it is the evil or lesser evil who will run the show,
we will all have to cope
For us Palestinians it does not matter any more another disappointment
So we’ll simply watch as you lament your fate or
rejoice with enjoyment
Friday, October 14, 2016
The Irony of the Veto
thought it was ironic that France and its allies would condemn Russia
for using its veto right in the resolution submitted by France.
Maybe it is high time that the structure of the United Nations and
the power given to the five permanent members in the Security Council
should be reconsidered so that there is no double-standard in
sanctioning countries that violate International Law.
If anybody knows that feeling of frustration because of the veto
power it is us Palestinians. We have been taking our case to the
United Nations ever since 1948 when we were dispossessed of our
country and our right to return. Although we have never given up on
the UN to redress the grave injustice inflicted upon us, we also
realize how impotent that body has been in implementing its
resolutions.
Over and above being dispossessed of our land, freedom, and right to
self –determination, we have had to bear with a military occupation
for almost fifty years. And to add insult to injury, every time a UN
resolution is presented to sanction Israel for its violations
against a whole population living under a military occupation, the
American veto is there to salvage Israel.
So now, Russia has given the Western countries a taste of their own
medicine.
Thursday, October 6, 2016
Reflecting on the kidnapping of the human rights activists on the Zaytouna-Oliva.
From past experience with other Freedom Flotillas sailing to Gaza, I
am not certain whether those women human rights activists were sure that
they will be able to reach Gaza. Yet their
determination to challenge the blockade gave hope to the people of Gaza that they are not being
abandoned and forgotten. But when Israel can get away with blocking
the arrival of the Zaytouna-Oliva on its peaceful mission and kidnapping the
thirteen activists including some distinguished women without any compunction,
then there is something very wrong with the application of international law – a
law that has been hijacked by those in power whereby some get away with
their violations, and others are sanctioned. With every new election in
the US and with every new appointment of a UN
Secretary General we continue to hope that Israel
will stop being treated above the law - being the spoiled and
pampered child of the US. No wonder
the world is in a mess, and my heart aches not only for the people of Gaza but
for the people of Syria who are being sacrificed while their country has
become the battle field for the big powers.
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Too Little, Too Late, Mr. Obama.
Dear Mr. Obama:
I still recall that day when I watched with
awe and great respect your inauguration ceremony while I was visiting the USA. As I wrote to you on January 22, 2009, you were indeed an inspiration and a source of
hope not only for the Americans but for me as a Palestinian,
especially when you focused on the issue of justice. An
issue which was also stressed in the sermon
of Rev. Sharon Watkins during the National Service, the day after
your inauguration. At last, I thought that the USA as a super
power, and its good and genuine people deserve a leader of your intelligence
and stature. Now that the new elections
are close, may the Lord have mercy on the Americans and the rest of the world
irrespective of who gets elected.
For the last eight years we have been waiting
for some action that would really make you worthy of the Nobel Peace Prize
which you received upon your election as president. Not only did you not help in bringing justice
and peace to our region, your unwavering support for the state of Israel
financially and through the American veto at the UN, made it possible and
easier for Israel to continue flouting international law. While your statements regarding settlements
and confiscation of Palestinian land did not go beyond the rhetoric of
condemnation, it was not surprising that Israel
has been able to get away with all the
violations of human rights and international law, as well as ignoring the stated policies of the US itself regarding settlements and
confiscation of land.
With the signing of your last
agreement with Israel for the amount of $38b for the next ten years, you are
actually rewarding Israel and helping it use the arms bought according to that
agreement to crush the Palestinians and further oppress them as they continue
to struggle for their basic rights and
for liberation from a brutal military occupation. I am sure
you could have used that enormous amount of money to meet the many
domestic challenges that are facing the USA these days such as health care,
education, homelessness and hunger.
It was interesting to hear
your recent speech at the United Nations.
You suggested that “we must go
forward, and not backward” stressing that democracy, human rights and international law that you
forged remain the firmest foundation for human progress in this century. You further stressed the fact that more
people than ever are free to choose their own leaders. I was wondering what democracy are you referring to? The democracy imposed by
the US through wars and the destruction of
whole countries,(like Iraq, Libya
and Syria) or the democracy in which the
results of democratic and transparent elections (as in the case of the Palestinian
Territories) were not accepted by the US government? Of course I realize that some of that took
place before your first term. But not
much has changed since then, especially regarding the human rights as well as the
national rights of the Palestinians.. The shuttle diplomacy of Mr. Kerry proved
as futile as his recent mediation with the Russians in Syria.
It was refreshing to hear you say that you have had
your share of mistakes. However there is
a lot to atone for, and I am just wondering if you will have time to atone for
those mistakes. We continue to hear news about a possible legacy that you plan to
leave in November through an initiative that will set new parameters for the
two state solution. Whether this is true or not, you have unfortunately
missed many opportunities during the last
eight years, and while you were still
holding the reins. Dare we hope, or will
this last minute initiative be Too Little Too Late.
A Concerned Palestinian Grand-mother
Wednesday, August 3, 2016
Reflecting on Terrorism
On the 27th
of July, I had to take my car to be serviced at the
Chevrolet garage in Talpiot on West Jerusalem. On my way back, my
cousin drove me through areas that were so familiar to me in West
Jerusalem when we were living there before
1948. It was a very strange feeling, as
the same buildings were still there, but
not the same people. Driving in front
of the
King David Hotel and the YMCA
across the street, evoked the memory of July
22, 1946, almost
seventy
years ago to date, when the wing of King David Hotel that housed the Secretariat of the British Mandate Government was bombed, killing
91 people and injuring more than 50,
including British, Arabs, and Jews. It was officially announced that
the bombing
was a terrorist attack carried out by the Irgun, a militant Zionist
underground
organization which was headed by Menachem Begin. The bombing of the Semiramis Hotel in
January 1948 killing all the members of the Palestinian owners of the
Hotel was
another heinous act of terrorism by another Jewish underground
organization,
the Haganah. The intention of the Jewish
underground at the time, was to instill fear in the British Mandate and
the
Arab Palestinians so that they would leave Palestine.
The Deir Yaseen massacre on April 9, 1948 led exactly to that, when the
Jewish underground drove around Jerusalem in their tanks
with some of the survivors of that massacre and urging all Palestinians
to
leave lest they face the same fate like those who were massacred in Deir
Yasseen.
These
incidents were part of our first experiences with
terrorism and terrorist acts, which have become a daily event in this
crazy
world of ours. However it is often forgotten who the first
perpetrators of terrorism in our region were. During that period
Menachem Begin, was wanted by the British
mandate government, yet he was officially
received by the British Royal
Court during his term as Prime Minister of Israel between
1977-1983.
However, it is ironic
that the source of our worry these days might not be ISIS or
Al-Qaida that should be controlled by
the powers who created them, if they wish to do so. It is those phenomena beyond human control, like natural
disasters and viruses such as the Zika
virus that might become the nightmare.
No weapons, bombs, drones or even
knives can prevent a bite of an infected
Aedes species mosquito.
Friday, July 22, 2016
Missed Opportunities
As Palestinians, we
have always been blamed for having missed on many opportunities and generous
offers that could have guaranteed our
liberation and independence. It is always easy to claim so in hindsight. But the
choices we have been offered were always either bad choices or worse
choices. So no sane Palestinian would have accepted any of those offers,
whether it was the partition plan of
1947 or the "generous offer" of Ehud Barak, or the ongoing peace negotiations
under which new realities have been created and which had obliterated the
Palestinian right of return in accordance to UN resolution 194 on December 11,
1948. But the history of the partition
of Palestine
and the process of the ethnic cleansing of its indigenous Palestinian
population is well known by now. Thanks to the many historians, including
Israeli historians, such as Ilan Pappe and others who refuted the Israeli claim
that the Palestinians left their homes and towns in 1948, on their own and basically
at the request of Arab leaders.
Britain
and the USA
played a major role in the Palestinian Nakba in 1948, and despite all UN
resolutions to redress the glaring injustice done to the Palestinians at that
time, they continue to hinder any action towards granting the Palestinians
their legitimate rights, including the right of return. That is why I felt that rating Mr. Obama should
be related to the many missed opportunities during his two-term
office as president of the USA.
Without putting an end to that grave injustice,
there will never be peace or security for the whole region.
The
election of Mr. Obama was a turning point in the
tradition of the US
elections, and the American people were ready for that change. Nobody
could have done that better than Mr.
Obama, especially that we were hoping he
would live up to the responsibility granted to him by the Nobel peace
prize that he was awarded a priori. Of course there was the Iran deal,
and the reconciliation with Cuba as well as the closure of Guantanamo,
but the real test to make him
deserve that prize would have been by solving the Palestinian problem, a
grave
historical injustice which we all felt at the beginning of his term that
he
would genuinely address. Yet he eventually fell in the same pattern
of
his predecessors, caving in to Israeli demands and vetoing any
resolution that
was not in favor of Israel,
as well as shielding Israel
continuously from any measures for violating international law and
United
Nations resolutions, despite the personal humiliation that he was
exposed to by
the Israeli Prime Minister.
Of course we realize the strength of the Israeli lobby in
the USA,
without which no president gets elected, but once Mr. Obama was elected for a
second term, there was his missed opportunity.
He could have been an honest
broker, abiding by the same standards wherever human and political rights were
violated. He would have gone down in
history had he been able to stand up for the Palestinian legitimate
rights against the ongoing Israeli aggression and dispossession which
according to international law are
illegal, and his Nobel
peace prize would have been well earned.
Dare we hope that he will seize the opportunity of the remaining period of
his term to take a courageous stand and really make a difference???
Some of you might have read my letter
to Mr. Obama which was
published as Appendix VIII in my book Reflections from Palestine: A
Journey of Hope. I had written it to Mr. Obama after watching
his inauguration speech in January 2009, while I was visiting the US at
the time. It is below.
Mr. Barack H. Obama
The President of the USA
The White House
Washington, DC
Dear Mr. President:
I watched with awe and great respect your inauguration ceremony while I was visiting the USA. You were indeed an inspiration and a source of hope not only for the Americans but for me as a Palestinian, especially when you focused on the issue of justice. An issue which was also stressed in the sermon of Rev. Sharon Watkins during the National Service, the day after your inauguration. At last, I thought that the USA as a super power, and its good and genuine people deserve a leader of your intelligence and stature.
But somehow, Mr. President I was rather disappointed when you spoke after the announcement of the appointment of Senator Mitchell as a special envoy to the Middle East. You highlighted your commitment to the security of Israel without any reference to the word "justice." The grave injustice that was inflicted on the Palestinians upon the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948 and the occupation of the rest of the Palestinian Territories in 1967 is at the core of the Middle East conflict. So without justice, and peace no security can be granted to Israel or the whole region. In fact without the justice that was granted to your people in the aftermath of the civil rights movement, you would not be where you are Mr. President. So my heartiest congratulations to you Mr. President. The world is looking forward to that great change under your leadership.
So please do not let us all lose the spark of hope that was rekindled with your inauguration speech, and let justice be at the back bone of your domestic as well as foreign policy, especially for us Palestinians who had lost hope when Israel failed to withdraw from the occupied territories in compliance with UN resolution 242, and after the Oslo peace accords withered in thin air despite all the futile negotiations. Had the injustice inflicted on the Palestinians been redressed without delay there would have been no reason for Hamas to surface and to resort to arms struggle twenty years after the occupation. Surely Israel has the right to defend itself, but not when it is occupying and oppressing other people. In your speech this morning Mr. President you did not even allude to the occupation, and you put the occupier and the occupied on the same level. You are a well learned and well informed leader, so you certainly are aware that the Palestinians did accept to establish their state on only 22% of historic Palestine. The Arab initiative which you referred to in your speech is based on that offer as well. It is up to Israel now to prove that it is genuinely serious about peace.
So if you are truly committed to the security of Israel Mr. President, please do help Israel end its occupation of the Palestinian Territories. You have enough resolutions, peace agreements, and initiatives for Mr. Mitchell to work with, which could cut down the time and expense of another American shuttle diplomacy. Then you Mr. President, the secretary of state and Mr. Mitchell will go down in history for ushering a new era of justice, peace, and security for both the Israelis and Palestinians.
Respectfully yours,
Samia Khoury
A Concerned Palestinian Mother
Thursday, May 26, 2016
The Policy of Confiscation
Living
under the Israeli occupation, we are damned if we are alive, and we
are damned if we are dead. This is how I felt when I was watching the
parents of a fifteen-year old boy receiving the body of their son Hassan
Manasrah after he was shot and killed seven months ago, but his body
remained “confiscated” during all this period. And to add insult to
injury the funeral had to take place at night with only 40 persons
allowed to attend. Over and above, they had to pay a guarantee
of NIS20,000 (around $5000) which would also be “confiscated” should
they violate the conditions set for his funeral.
Under
what law in the world can this happen? Even world-renowned criminals
who are executed are entitled to a decent burial. As if it is not
enough that ever since 1948 the confiscation of Palestinian land has
been ongoing under a variety of justifications, now it seems that
the most recent innovative and demonic measure of the Israeli
occupation forces, is to “confiscate” the bodies of Palestinian martyrs
. Of course one could consider our young men and women who have been
languishing in Israeli jails, many of them without charge or trial as
being “confiscated” as well.
After
a lot of international pressure the Israeli government decided to start
releasing the bodies of the young Palestinians before the month of
Ramadan. Soon after three bodies were released last night including
that of Hassan Manasrah, Ala’ Abu Jamal, and Fouad Abu Rajab
Tamimi, the occupation forces announced that it will not pursue the
policy of releasing the bodies. Not surprising now that the Minister of
Defense is non-other than the right wing Avigdor Lieberman from the
extreme right, who has very openly called for capital punishment to be
applied to Palestinians only .
A
number of years ago when Jorg Haider, the notorious right wing
leader, was elected in Austria, the whole world was up in arms against
him until he was forced to resign. When it comes to Israel, there might
have been some voices objecting to the appointment of Lieberman but
certainly not loud enough to bring about a change in the decision of the
Israeli prime minister. Currently the Israeli military is still
withholding nine bodies, seven of them from Jerusalem. Why?? Can any
decent and sane mind answer my question. Isn’t killing them and
punishing their families by blowing up their homes sufficient?
Sunday, May 1, 2016
How does Israel get away with it?
In his new book, War Against The People, Jeff Halper poses theis question in the introduction
of the book: “How does Israel get
away with it?” A question we
so often pose ourselves, as
victims of this brutal occupation.
Indeed how does it?? The
oppressive measures it has used are no more surprising, and when we think it
cannot get worse, it actually does get worse. Yet it is unacceptable
indeed that the international community should over-look such a grave injustice
and allow the occupation of the Palestinian people to linger on for forty nine
years after their dispossession sixty
eight years ago. Where is the
world’s conscience? And where is
the United Nations that does not hesitate to impose sanctions on countries that
do not abide by international law, yet seems to turn a blind eye to the atrocities that are taking place in
our region. Under the pretext that
Israel has the right to defend itself, it continues to get away with it. And even when a resolution is passed,
the UN runs short of a mechanism to implement it.
Indeed every
country has the right to defend itself within its secure borders, but not when
its borders are not defined and continue to expand; and certainly not when it is occupying another people and continues to covet their
land, their homes and their holy places.
The daily violations by Jewish
religious extremists of the status quo agreed upon in 1967 for visiting the
Noble Sanctuary, one of the holiest Muslim sites, has triggered a lot of confrontation and violence. The agreement clearly allows Jewish
visitors, just like any other
visitors, to visit the site through the visitor’s gate, with the permission of
the Muslim authorities in charge of the compound of the Noble Sanctuary. The problem is that those Jewish
religious extremists continue to create havoc and to provoke the Muslim
community by entering under the protection of the Israeli police from a
special entrance and performing religious rites on the site. All
this is in violation of the Status Quo agreement of 1967. According to OCHA, the UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs, 30 Israelis, mostly
soldiers, have been stabbed to death, whereas 187 Palestinians have been
shot and killed by Israeli soldiers, during the last few months.
“Shoot to kill” is the new policy of the Israeli army, even
when the victim has been “neutralized, ”
as we saw clearly on the TV screen when the Israeli soldier Elor Azarya shot the Palestinian Abdel-Fattah el-Sharif from Hebron. The
rally in support of Elor at the
Rabin Square in Tel Aviv claiming him as a hero is very significant, and that
explains exactly how they continue to get away with it. Of course had there not
been a camera on the scene, the incident would not have been documented. A couple of days ago, a Palestinian pregnant
mother of two children, Maram Abu
Ismail, and her brother Ibrahim
Taha entered through the wrong lane into Qalandia check point, and were shot to death. Even if they had planned to attack the soldiers, it would
have been very easy for the soldiers to shoot at their legs and neutralize
them. But they did not give them a
chance to be questioned why they were in that lane. And to
add to the inhumanity of the shooting, the Palestinian ambulance was not
allowed in to assist them until they bled to death.
Amidst all this France comes up with a new initiative for an
international conference. We can
see this as getting on the hamster wheel for an endless round of negotiations once again. For more than
twenty years, the negotiations proved to be futile, and in fact disastrous as they
simply provided an opportunity for
Israel to establish new facts on the ground, and to grab more land. So if France and its allies are really
concerned and serious about this initiative, it can exert
all its effort on putting
an end to the occupation as a starter.
We have given up on the US as an “honest broker,” and there are no signs
of hope coming out of the American
elections campaign. In fact without the moral and financial support of the USA,
Israel would not have been able to get away with it.
I just received the Gush Shalom ad for the week which I
thought was significant and worth sharing with you:
No amount of American aid Can ensure the future of a country
which lives by the sword and rejects the chance of reaching peace!
So Israel will have to make a choice: To continue to live by the sword or to
abide by the words of its prophet Micha: “What does the Lord require of you but
to do justice and to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God.” (Micha
6:8)Saturday, March 19, 2016
The Only Survivor of the Dawabsheh Family
This past week, the five-year-old
Ahmad, the only survivor of the
Dawabsheh family, was released from hospital.
Ahmad’s home in Douma, in the Nablus area of the
Palestinian occupied territories, was
burnt by Israeli settlers on July 31, 2015.
His 18-month-old baby brother was scorched to death and died immediately
after the attack, while his parents died later on in the
hospital where they were being treated
for their severe burns. Ahmad was at a complete loss searching for
his parents as his grandfather and the extended family gathered to welcome him
back home, where there was no more a home.
At
his young age, Ahmad is
already a football fan. And with a welcoming initiative from the Real
Madrid football team, Ahmad’s
grandfather accompanied the little boy to Madrid to meet Christiano
Ronaldo, who is
very popular and well known among the Palestinian football fans. Ahmad
had a warm welcome in Madrid not only by Ronaldo, but by the rest of
the team and their
Manager, the French retired player
Zinedine Zidane, who seemed to have worked behind the scenes to arrange
for Ahmad’s visit.
Our local TV station showed
Ahmad last evening enjoying his visit and running around the field while the
team were signing their names on his special Real Madrid shirt with his name on
its back, and which he was wearing with
pride as the signatures were being added.
The team also presented him with a football, signed by its members, which I am sure he will cherish for the rest
of his life. I just wonder what the
future will hold for this little boy who still needs to go back to hospital for
further medication and follow up.
I am also wondering what is going go in the mind of this
little boy. Is he aware of the brutal
death of his family. Or will he see the
good in people who made this special visit to Madrid a memorable one. It is a blessing his grandfather is still
around to take care of him. But crimes
like that of the Dawabsheh family should never happen to anybody anywhere, otherwise
there will be no room for
humanity anymore. So much has happened
since July 2015, and more than two hundred children have been killed by the
occupation forces. Only last week
Israel’s Air Force killed 10 year old Yassin Abu Husa and his sister Asra 6 in
Gaza, supposedly in retaliation to a
rocket fired from Gaza by a splinter group, that fell on an open field and hurt
no one. Yassin and Asra were certainly not
carrying knives or being a threat to the security of the soldiers.
When will this occupation and
its brutality ever come to an end so that the young people can enjoy their childhood,
and have fun going to school and playing football??
Tuesday, February 23, 2016
Reflecting on Another Concert
Friday,
February 20, 2016 was a memorable occasion as many
people from Ramallah and Jerusalem gathered at the Naseeb Shaheen
Auditorium at Birzeit University to attend a concert. We were sorry
that Naseeb had passed away
before seeing this great achievement completed. In fact the auditorium
is the fourth building
on the campus contributed by the Shaheen family.
The young musicians of the Edward Said National Conservatory
of Music were privileged to join the Palestine National Orchestra and a
few guests from the Geneva Conservatory
of Music in the last of three performances under the baton of the Swiss and
Australian conductor Elena Schwarz. They
had already been in Bethlehem,
and in Nablus at Al-Najah
University. The program included a composition by
Salvador Arnita, a Palestinian who had taught at Birzeit when it was a high
school before 1948 (Images of Palestine,
from Suite no. 4 “Oriental Sketches.” It
also included “Wedding,” composed by the renowned Syrian composer Kinan Azmeh,
who was the first Arab to win the top prize at the Nocolay Rubinstein
International Competition in Moscow
in 1997.
Dima Bawwab a young Jordanian Soprano excelled in Puccini’s
Quando m’en vo, from “La Boheme,” and O mio babbino cara from “Gianni Schicchi.” She also sang
Agustin Lara’s Grenada
which was beautiful and lively,
especially with the accompanying percussions. Attached is a photo.
As
I was listening and watching the bright faces of those
young musicians, while enjoying the
comfortable seat in this beautiful and newly inaugurated auditorium, I
tried to
forget for a moment all about the occupation outside this small haven.
Yet I could not help but wonder. Will this nightmare ever come to an
end? Despite what we have gone through, we have
been able to establish universities and institutions and hold on with
our
“Sumud” trying to provide our youth with a glimpse of hope for a better
future. Will that day ever come? Don’t we deserve a better life?
Don’t all those young people languishing in
Israeli jails have a right to freedom. I
kept hoping this concert will be a celebration for the freedom of
Mohamed
Al-Qiq, a graduate of Birzeit
University who has been
wrestling for his life after a long hunger strike in protest of his
administrative
detention without charge or trial.
On the way to the car I was sharing my thoughts with
Leen, the ten-year old granddaughter of
my sister. She held on my hand and
said: I think we should do something
about it! With the wisdom of children, I rest my case. Samia
Thursday, January 14, 2016
The ESNCM Orchestra
Amidst all the political
absurdities and the violence that is encompassing our region, we managed to
enjoy a lovely evening last night at the Augusta Victoria Church on the Mt. of Olives,
which ironically has been an area of clashes and road blocks by the Israeli
occupation forces recently. Yet all this
was behind us, and we forgot all about it at least for a couple of hours, as we
watched and listened to the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music Orchestra accompany the Singkreis Wohlen Choir from
Switzerland in the first, fourth and sixth part of Bach’s Christmas Oratorio in this beautiful
and inspiring church. And to add to the
Palestinian touch of the performance we were privileged to have Mariam Tamari (the
daughter of Vladimir Tamari, the renowned Palestinian artist and his Japanes
wife Kyoko) as one of the soloists along
with Martin Snell, and Dieter Wagner, who was also the conductor; a lively and charming conductor indeed.
After
a lot of clapping and a standing ovation and an encore
of the last lively section of the Oratorio, the conductor announced
that this was the last of their three
performances. The other two were at St.
Francis Church in Bethlehem and at Birzeit University at the newly
inaugurated Nasib Shaheen theatre. He also announced that the
orchestra will be accompanying
the Swiss choir in three different venues in Switzerland after two
weeks. I just
hope that music will continue to be an
expression of solidarity with our people and it will continue to uplift
our
spirits and give those young people some hope for the future.
Update: Here is a video about the event
Monday, January 11, 2016
Getting Away With It
The resignation of the Indonesian diplomat Makarim Wibisono as UN
special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights in occupied Palestine seems to be due
to one of the many flaws of the UN body.
Mr. Wibisono announced that he was resigning at the end of March, because Israel
refuses to give him access to the Palestinians living under a military
occupation in the West Bank and Gaza. If the UN appoints any position like that of
the Rapporteur it should be able to guarantee that he or she can function, and should urge Israel to
facilitate the mission of the Rapporteur, and not the other way round. Why is it that everybody caves in when Israel
is concerned and accommodates for its demands, to an extent that it often makes
the UN look like a redundant body? I
should think Mr. Wibisono as a UN representative should not have resigned but
used some of the UN tools to pressure Israel to facilitate his job.
Another incident on caving in on a different level took
place on January 3, when Jewish-Israeli passengers of an Aegean flight
demanded the removal of two passengers from the flight heading from Athens to Tel Aviv simply because they were
Palestinians. One of them was a citizen
of Israel,
and the other had an Israeli residency and had already passed the security
checks and boarded the plane. But the
passengers accused them of being “terrorists” and insisted that they should be removed from the
plane. Although the pilot had said that
anyone who does not feel safe to fly should disembark, yet he did not protect
those two passengers who were eventually so harassed that they got off the
plane.
Once again Israel
acts as if it is above the law. In fact
nothing it does is surprising any more, but what is surprising and
disappointing is that they are allowed to get away with it with impunity.
Friday, January 1, 2016
Happy New Year
As I watched
the rains fall this morning on the last day of the year, I could not help but
think of how much rain we would need to cleanse all the atrocities of
this past year. I recalled
the words of Shakespeare in Macbeth after he had murdered the king and stood
looking at his bloody hands: “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood Clean from my
hand?”
We are bidding farewell to a year that
has been infested with atrocities and violence as a result of grave injustices,
greed, and immorality. We have sadly watched how money and power
have been manipulated
by world leaders to determine the destinies of peoples and deprive them of
their right to live in dignity in their own country.
In our region, where water has
always been scarce, and has become more so with the draining of its resources
by the Israeli occupation, I wonder whether there will ever be enough water to
cleanse the atrocities of this past year, and to give hope to the people of the
region that justice and peace will prevail.
With best wishes for a peaceful New
Year.
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