We Are Surrounded by Images of War and Violence.
We Present an Image of Peace.
Report
From Gila Svirsky, Coalition of Women for Peace
Friends,
There seemed to have
been two elections in Palestine on Sunday: the one conducted in
the West Bank and Gaza, and the one in Jerusalem.
Voting day in the West
Bank and Gaza was marked in many places by a mood of ebullience
and celebration. There was singing, dancing, the firing of guns
into the air, families strolling together to the polling stations.
Palestinian women’s organizations had spent weeks encouraging
women to vote, and many women did show up for their first election,
especially in urban centers. While not all checkpoints were eased
and not all Palestinians wanted to vote under an occupation regime,
the overall climate was one of hope and a new beginning.
Voting day in Jerusalem,
on the other hand, was marked by a flawed process. The Israeli government
could not prevent Jerusalem’s Palestinian residents from participating
in the elections, but it wanted to avoid the appearance of Jerusalem
being part of the Palestinian Authority. Therefore, the authorities
designed a voting system that was a pearl of Talmudical caginess,
allowing for the vote, but giving it the appearance of an absentee
ballot being cast in Jerusalem for sending to a Palestinian state
that was “somewhere else”. Therefore, voting was carried
out only in post offices, where marked ballots were handed to postal
clerks who inserted them into special mailboxes, presumably to be
“mailed” to Palestine. Special attention was given to
the location of the slot. The Israeli authorities felt strongly
that a slot on the top of the box would give the appearance of a
real ballot box. Therefore, these mailboxes had slots on the side.
Here’s a photo (left) I took of a man at one of these red
mail-ballot-boxes, behind a glass pane and inaccessible to the voter.
Note also the lack of privacy, with the clerk looking on as he leans
on the counter marking his ballot, and the next voter edging closer.
Worst of all, only 6,000 Jerusalemites out of 125,000 were allowed
to vote in town, with the rest dispatched to voting stations out
of town, to which access through checkpoints was eased, but still
not easy.
Under these conditions,
many Palestinians in Jerusalem refused to vote. And many were afraid
to vote, in fear that Israel would regard that as grounds for canceling
their Jerusalem residency rights. It’s no wonder that a Palestinian
woman carrying a bunch of bananas stood outside the main post office
on the Palestinian side of Jerusalem, handing out flyers that called
Israel a “banana republic democracy”.
I too wanted to see the
excitement on the other side of town, so I answered the call of
Bat Shalom, a women’s peace organization, to help keep the
extremist Israeli right from carrying out their threat to disrupt
the proceedings. As six of us walked together toward the Palestinian
side of Jerusalem, an Israeli police officer stopped us, said he
knew of our plan, and that our presence would “provoke counter-demonstrations”.
We argued for a while, and then he announced we were under arrest,
to prevent us from ‘disturbing the peace’. We were shocked,
but a moment later he was distracted by a phone call, so we simply
slipped away and melted into the side streets, splitting up so we
would be less obvious if he sent a posse. One would think the police
had better villains to worry about.
Despite the many difficulties
and Israel’s grudging cooperation, the vote did take place,
leaving many Palestinians and even Israelis with a sense of elation.
A real election was held – with real competition and no mud
slinging – and the candidate who consistently called for an
end to the violence and negotiation of a real peace was swept into
power with 62% of the vote. Now the proverbial ball is in Israel’s
court, and the excuse for not negotiating is long dead and buried.
Other good news
24 hours later and on
the Jewish side of town, the new Israeli government – comprising
Likud, Labor, and United Torah Judaism, an ultra-Orthodox party
– was sworn in, thanks to Sharon’s wily brinkmanship
with the extremists from his own party who oppose the disengagement
from Gaza. The government will now have the parliamentary strength
it needs to get out of Gaza, and Shimon Peres is back in power,
defying age, wisdom, and public incredulity.
And the anti-evacuation
settlers are digging their own graves. Once considered the last
of the idealists, support for the settler movement has plummeted
among Israelis in the wake of recurring violent clashes with Israeli
soldiers evacuating settler outposts. Today, the settlers are regarded
as the anti-democratic, lunatic fringe. In truth, the vast majority
of settlers are far more moderate, and would leave the territories
in a heartbeat for the price of their property, but the fanatics
are now setting the tone and image.
By the way, in a small
meeting this evening where former US President Jimmy Carter, chief
election observer in the Middle East, spoke to the participants
of the Ecumenical Accompaniment Program (which I was lucky to have
attended), this honorable man berated people for using the term
“fence”. Said Jimmy, “Israel has successfully
convinced the United States that this is an innocuous fence, as
if it were a fence around a cow pasture, but this is really a dividing
wall and we should refer to it as such…This wall is one of
the most vivid vulnerabilities of Prime Minister Sharon’s
policies.” Bravo, Mr. Carter, for more plain talk.
Monday was also a red
letter day for supporters of human rights, as Israel’s High
Court ruled that lesbian couples may now officially adopt each other’s
children. We are all grateful to Tal and Avital Yaros-Hakak, who
sacrificed their privacy to establish this important precedent.
Finally, the tragedy
in the Indian Ocean, and it takes a religious extremist to have
figured it out: A Muslim cleric announced that the Zionists caused
the Tsunami. This was practically confirmed by a rabbi in Israel,
who announced that God doesn’t like non-Jews, and that’s
why he dropped all this water on them. Jewish-Muslim consensus,
at last, helping us understand the mystery of God’s ways.
Shalom from Jerusalem,
Gila
___________________
Gila Svirsky
Coalition of Women for
Peace
www.coalitionofwomen.org
For more information
email mailto:wibbaltimore@hotmail.com