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Hebron: Building Bridges, Not Walls
by Art Gish
Instead of building walls that separate, one of the tasks of peacemakers is to build
bridges. This past weekend I had an opportunity to help build some bridges by
hosting a delegation of seven Jewish people from New York who came to Hebron for two
days to connect with Palestinian people here.
As soon as I met them in the middle of Hebron, they told me they wanted to be
identified as Jews so that "they could tell Palestinians that some Jews care about
them, that not all Jews are bad." Within minutes as we walked through the
Palestinian market, a Muslim shop owner stopped us and invited us to his home for
coffee. The Jewish delegation accepted his invitation.
As soon as our Muslim host learned that these people were Jews, he expressed delight
at having Jews in his home. He told them that during the massacre of Jews in Hebron
in 1929, his family, like many other Muslim families in Hebron, hid Jews in their
home to save their lives. He then went on to tell how horrible the Israeli settlers
are who live beside his home. His family has experienced continual harassment from
the settlers. In March, 2002, settlers threw rocks through the windows of his home,
one of which hit his 13 year old daughter who is now blind in one eye. It seemed
important for him to share his suffering from settlers to these Jews.
Israeli soldiers stopped the group as they attempted to walk on a street that is now
only for Jews. When the soldiers learned that these were Jews, they said, "Then
there is no problem".
>From there we went to the Beqa'a Valley just east of Hebron and the Kiryat Arba
settlement to spend the night in Palestinian Muslim homes. On the way we saw "The
Wall" being built near the Kiryat Arba settlement, and saw land which just ten days
before had been confiscated from the families with whom we would spend the night.
We saw where a beautiful Palestinian vineyard had been bulldozed just days before
and was now being covered with rock.
In addition to eating scrumptious Palestinian food, the Jews listened to the painful
stories of the loss of these families' land, physical attacks on them by both
settlers and soldiers, , and their fears for the future. There, near "the wall of
hate", Jews and Muslims shared their hopes and fears. There, where the wall that is
meant to separate Jews and Arabs, Jews and Arabs came together.
After leaving the Beqa'a Valley, these Jews expressed amazement that these
Palestinian Muslims, who had suffered so much from Jews, showed no sign of
bitterness or hatred toward Jews. One of the hosts told the group, "If I hate, then
my heart will turn cold."
Ironically, Israeli soldiers stopped them as the group tried to enter the old city
and told them that Jews are prohibited from entering the old city. The group's
arguments that they needed to get their things at the Christian Peacemaker Team
apartment and get to their bus to Jerusalem did not convince the soldiers. They then
walked down the street and entered the old city from the next entrance, again
defying the wall that separates people.
I just witnessed a miracle. People who are supposed to be enemies hugged and kissed
each other right in the midst of horrible fear and suffering endured by both sides.
What is of more significance than to reach out to one's "enemy", to build bridges
instead of walls?
Meanwhile, the bulldozers are busy in Hebron bulldozing Palestinian land to build
more walls. How I wish every fearful person in the world could experience what we
experienced this weekend.
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Christian Peacemaker Teams is an ecumenical initiative to support violence reduction
efforts around the world. To learn more about CPT's peacemaking work, please visit
the following website: http://www.cpt.org. Photos of CPT's projects may be viewed
at: http://www.cpt.org/gallery.
Source: Place 4 Peace, January 20, 2004.
Visit the Place 4 Peace website at http://www.place4peace.com/
Distributed by the Common Ground News Service.
Copyright permission has been obtained for publication.
