Date: Sat, 20 Apr 2002 15:37:56 -0400
From: jordan flaherty <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Bethlehem to Jenin to Nablus
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To: undisclosed-recipients: ;
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Notes from an international civilian in Palestine
April 20, 2002

The horrors I've seen and heard this last week will stay with me 
always.  But I will also remember the generosity I've received from 
every Palestinian I've met, the bravery I've seen, the hope and 
kindness in the face of all this terror and brutality.

Last week, after two weeks of staying in the Al-Azzeh refugee camp in 
Bethlehem, I travelled north with a small group of activists.

Leaving Bethlehem, we defied curfew, avoided tanks, climbed over 
roadblocks and travelled towards Jenin.

We stayed with a kind family in a village near Jenin.  Soldiers and 
military checkpoints blocked every possible route into the city. 
Just that morning, a Palestinian had been killed walking in the 
valley near the military checkpoint.

In this village, the school had been turned into a temporary shelter 
for men from the Jenin refugee camp.  How sad, to meet refugees twice 
removed - forced out of their original homes by the Israeli military 
decades ago, and now forced out of the refugee camp that has been 
their home for most of their lives.

They told the most haunting stories.  Stories of loved ones killed by 
missles and bulldozers.  Stories of torture and terror.  All of them 
had been taken from their homes by soldiers, most of them beaten or 
tortured, then all were stripped of their clothes and left by Israeli 
soldiers in this village.  200 of them so far, with more arriving 
daily.  550 in the next village.  The residents of the village all 
worked together to help the refugees, providing food, shelter, and 
clothes for the men. (Only men had been left in this village.  Its 
still unclear what the soldiers did with the women arrested).

A group of activists with video cameras and sound recorders stayed 
behind to document the stories of these refugees, while others 
continued onward into Jenin.  Several friends of mine travelled into 
the Jenin refugee camp, site of the most brutal massacre of this 
cruel and bloody invasion.  Perhaps none of them will ever be the 
same again.  They told me stories of body parts strewn across floors, 
more bodies buried beneath rubble, others burned beyond recognition. 
Mass graves, destroyed neighborhoods, and everywhere the smell of 
decaying flesh.  This was not a battle between two armies.  This was 
mass murder, with Apache helicopters, planes, missles, tanks and 
bulldozers, used against a mostly unarmed civilian population.

I left with a small group to go to Nablus, where the killing was 
continuing, and only one international civilian was there to observe 
the military abuses.  We hiked for three kilometres over mountains 
and through villages, attempting to hide from tanks and jeeps.

We stayed in a medical center, and by day we rode with ambulances. 
In several Palestinian cities, international observers are riding in 
ambulances.  This is because the Israeli soldiers continue to target 
doctors and relief workers for assassination.  In the last two weeks, 
eight medical workers in Nablus were killed by the Israeli military. 
All of the ambulances had bullet holes.  Every day we were there, 
soldiers would detain the ambulances at least once, for at least two 
hours.  Three times in five days, they forced everyone out of the 
ambulance, made them strip to their underwear, and stand for hours in 
the hot sun.

These paramedics and ambulance drivers and medical volunteers were 
truly among the most awe-inspiring people I've ever met.  Throughout 
the harassment and terror, they continued to go out, day after day.

At night, we were kept awake by the sound of airplanes, missles, and 
tank shelling.  By day, we saw the devastation.  The Casbah, Nablus' 
old city, was in ruins.  I saw schools, hospitals, and churches, in 
buildings two thousand years old, reduced to a pile of rubble.  I saw 
medics trying to rescue a young boy, burned beyond recognition by a 
tank shell.  I visited a hospital where the morgue was so full of 
dead bodies that they had to store some in an ice cream truck.  I saw 
a refugee camp overrun with trash and sewage because no one could 
leave their houses for two weeks to repair the damaged infrastructure 
or pick up garbage.  The are just glimpses from this latest invasion.

I looked in the face of a fifteen year old Palestinian girl, a 
volunteer medic, shaking and crying in fear, as we tried to stop 
Israeli soldiers from seizing her.  I was punched and kicked and 
beaten by those same soldiers.

But above all, I'll never forget the people I've met here.  The 
friends I've met, the love and forgiveness and generosity, are what 
I'll take home with me.

For the latest news: Indymedia Palestine, http://jerusalem.indymedia.org

Press contact: Kristen Schurr 011 972 59 357 526, or 011 972 67 341 268

For Bethlehem, contact Georgina: 011 972 55 840 767

For Jenin, contact Sofia: 011 972 55 851 896

Adam and Huwaida: 011 972 55 975 374

An International presence in occupied Palestine is urgently needed! 
Please come, or lend your support to others going.  For information 
on Freedom Summer in Palestine, see www.palsolidarity.org, or write 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 
Yoshie

* Calendar of Events in Columbus: 
<http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/calendar.html>
* Anti-War Activist Resources: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/activist.html>
* Student International Forum: <http://www.osu.edu/students/sif/>
* Committee for Justice in Palestine: <http://www.osu.edu/students/CJP/>

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