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April 2, 2001
Friends,
A short story that is not over yet:
Yesterday two massive bulldozers arrived at the Palestinian village
of Dir Istya to knock down1500 olive trees that provide a livelihood for many
of these villagers. The army used the excuse of security -
preventing
stone-throwing from the cover of the trees - although these were young trees and could hardly provide cover.
While court appeals had been filed in previous weeks to prevent this
destruction, all appeals were dismissed and the villagers knew their
orchard was threatened. When a settler was recently injured badly by
a rock thrown nearby, a decision was made to demolish the trees at once,
as a kind of collective retribution against the whole village. Yesterday
the bulldozers came and began their work.
Not far from here, however, is another Palestinian village where Neta
Golan, 29, spends considerable energy monitoring army and settler abuse
of the local Palestinian villages, and intervening whenever possible.
Neta is an Israeli Jewish woman who is part of the Coalition of Women
for a Just Peace, and she is often a one-woman show, calling out to
the Israeli soldiers from inside the Palestinian village to stop them
from shooting in. This has worked a couple of times, perhaps because
the soldiers were shocked to hear a fellow-Israeli speaking Hebrew to
them from inside the firing zone.
When Neta heard that the
bulldozers arrived, she ran to the site together with two other young
women - Zipporah Ryter, 28, an American, and Yasmine Jayal, 22, a German-Palestinian.
The villagers were already there, and together they all walked in front
of one bulldozer and sat down. It stopped in its tracks. After some negotiations, threats, and determined responses by those resisting,
one of the soldiers approached the Palestinians and explained that the
army would not bulldoze any more, but the Palestinians had to move so
the bulldozer could turn around. As soon as the Palestinians gave the
bulldozer room to maneuver, it promptly drove through and mauled another
tree. The Palestinians and the women returned to block the bulldozers.
Soon army reinforcements arrived and out-numbered the Palestinians and women. They forcibly arrested the three women, who refused to move of
their own accord, and also one Palestinian man who had been photographing
them.
As a result of their action, 'only' 150 trees had been bulldozed. And meanwhile, the legal department of the local Quaker center managed to
get a temporary injunction to prevent the further destruction of the
orchard, pending more legal activity.
Late last night, the three women were released on bail. Now the legal
work has to run its course, and the resistance is prepared in case that
fails.
Please feel free to donate to pay for this and other activities -- bail wcosts money, organizing demonstrations and protest will also cost money,
and everyone is working on a volunteer basis.
Thanks,
Gila Svirsky
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