Biddu:
The Struggle Against The Wall
By Yediot Aharonot
06 May, 2004
Countercurrents.org
Biddu
is a beautiful Palestinian village, surrounded with vines and fruit
orchards, a few miles to the east of the Israeli border of 1967. In
the last couple of months, the village, that has lived in peace with
its Israeli neighbors even during the present Intifada, has become yet
another symbol in the history of Israel/Palestine.
The misfortune of
this village is that its lands, as well as the lands of the other small
Palestinian villages nearby, border the "Jerusalem corridor"
- a sequence of Israeli neighborhoods to the North of Jerusalem. Israeli
control of this land would enable territorial continuity "clean
of Palestinians" from this corridor to the settlement of Givat
Zeev, built deep inside the occupied West Bank, close to Ramallah. In
the massive annexation project of Sharon and the Israeli army, this
is the kind of land one "does not give up". For this reason,
Israel is imprisoning the villagers inside a wall, and is grabbing their
land. Biddu, and the ten villages around it, are allowed only one option
- to sit quietly and watch as the fruit orchards that they have nourished
from one generation to another, turn into the real-estate reserves of
the Jerusalem corridor.
But rather than
obeying, the village of Biddu united with the other nearby villages
to defend their land. In the new model of popular resistance that has
developed along the line of the wall in the West Bank, the whole village
- men women and children - are going out to put their bodies between
the bulldozers and their land. A basic principle in this form of struggle
is that of non-violence. Use of arms is strictly forbidden, and there
is also visible effort on the part of the communities to restrain the
youth from throwing stones. A second principle of the resistance is
that it is a joint struggle of Palestinians and Israelis, whose fate
and future are intertwined. Like in other areas of the wall, the people
of Biddu have called on the Israelis to join them. -"Raise the
voice of reason, the voice of logic, above the sound of the bullets
and the sound of the oppression ..." - they wrote in an open letter
to the settlements and the Israeli neighborhoods around them.
Indeed, Israelis
have answered the call - from the young activists against the wall,
to the neighbors from the Mevaseret Tzion neighborhood in the Jerusalem
Corridor. Thirty of the latter have also joined an appeal that the villages
submitted to the supreme court of Israel, against the appropriation
of their land. But in the eyes of the army, this new model of Palestinians
and Israelis demonstrating together is the most dangerous. In Biddu
the army has already posed snipers on the roofs, used live ammunition
and killed five Palestinians. Dozens of others have been wounded. Following
the media coverage and the protest, the army's use of live fire has
decreased, but its violence has not. On April 17, Rabbi Arik Asherman
was arrested in Biddu, when he tried to protect a Palestinian child
strapped on to the hood of a military jeep
In response to the
violence of the army, the women of Biddu called for a quiet and small
protest demonstration of women only, on Sunday, April 25th. About 30
Israeli women answered the call - women of diverse ages and from a wide
array of occupations. In Biddu, we met with Palestinian women, and with
women from the international organizations active in the occupied territories.
A quiet protest walk started - less then a hundred women, carrying posters.
There was no man in sight, nor children, who could potentially throw
stones. We constituted no threat whatsoever. But for the army, this
does not matter. "We will not allow this demonstration" -
a voice in uniform announced. Tear gas and stun-grenades directly followed.
Paralyzed where I stood, I watched a hallucinatory scene. In the midst
of the fog of smoke and tear gas, there were still a few women standing,
silently lifting their posters in front of the soldiers. But then, out
of the fog burst warriors on horses and charged into the women holding
the posters. I have seen cops on horses before, but this was a different
sight. It was dead clear that their batons were meant for breaking bones.
Molly Malekar, the director of the Bat-Shalom organization, ended her
quiet protest against the army's violence with a broken shoulder, and
a severe blow to her head.
The army blocks
any route of protest. It is no longer allowed even to stand silently
with posters. And this does not hold only for Palestinians. From the
army's perspective, we Israelis are also given only one option - sit
silently and watch as our country loses its human face. But since Israel
is still, officially, a democracy, it is not permissible for the army
to be the body that determines the limits of the freedom to protest.
It is necessary to form an independent committee of inquiry into the
armys violence in Biddu, and to bring those responsible to justice.
Translated from Hebrew by Netta Van Vliet