Indymedia 
West-Vlaanderen
Over ons | Contacteer ons | Schrijf me in | Agenda | Publiceer | faq | participeer | hulp | links | irc
white themeblack themered themetheme help




zoeken




kalender
kalender
Voeg zelf jouw evenementen toe


nieuwsbrief
Wil je de
Nieuwsbrief van Indymedia ontvangen?
inschrijven
uitschrijven








Powered by SF Active

afprintbare versie - email dit artikel
Middle East and End of the World
door S O Donnell [ e-mail: | Telefoon: | adres: ]
op Monday, Feb. 13, 2006 at 9:40 PM

Rising tensions in the Middle East


On the Middle East and the End of the World
by Stojgniev O’Donnell

As it came into sight, the elderly Palestinian driver turned to us with pain in his eyes and shook his free palm at the wall, as if to ask us to explain it. Though he glimpses it daily, the quiet, distinguished gentleman in western clothing will not accept its existence. Not far from that wall, which has caused such grief among Palestinians, we were refused passage to Palestinian Bethlehem. Passing within the wall’s shadow, we detoured and succeeded in crossing a second Israeli checkpoint leading to Bethlehem.

The wall, of course, is illegal, and much of the world has demanded Israel tear it down. It’s not a traditional wall, but rather a line of tall, rectangular concrete slabs stood up on end, with a circular leave-out at the top of each. The wall has disrupted everyday life for many Palestinians. I got some sense of that in our efforts to cross into Palestinian-controlled territory. But the primary impression for the visitor is one of ugliness. The wall lacks the dignity of traditional fortifications and smacks of the ugly practicality of modernity. Not only has it disrupted their lives, but the Palestinians have to face its concrete ugliness every day.

The wall tells us something about the future, for such structures like the Berlin Wall are never permanent. To build such a physical barrier is to admit, at least in the back of one’s mind, that someday the wall will come down. Who will predict the manner in which this wall is demolished?

The weight of history in Israel and Palestine hangs everywhere like humidity. In the Garden of Gethsemane, I observed olive trees which already breathed and produced fruit in the time of Christ. I’m reluctant to juxtapose history and religion, something which Americans often attempt so falsely and ridiculously, yet one can hardly help thinking that human history and the future of mankind are linked to the lands in and around Jerusalem. Entering the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, I was overwhelmed by the energy of history. At that moment, I felt that, indeed, I was at the center of the world. According to Christian visionaries, important Biblical events took place on the sites of previous significant Biblical events. It is said the bones of Adam and Eve rest beneath the site of Golgatha within the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, where also the Last Judgment will begin.

I wondered how many Christian Palestinians carry in their veins the blood of Biblical Jews. If a Chosen People survives today, where do we find them? Unfortunately, the numbers of Christian Palestinians and other Christian Arabs, with few friends in the world – certainly not America, have been shrinking for decades.

A recent issue of The New Yorker (23/30 January 2006) includes a biographical essay by an Israeli journalist who interviewed Ariel Sharon over the years. The Middle East might be a safer place if there were more Israelis like Sharon, i.e. more Jews brutally honest about Israel and their opposition to Arabs. To be sure, Sharon was implicated in the slaughter of innocent Palestinians at the Sabra and Shatila refugee camps. His ranch of some one thousand acres stands on the site of a Palestinian village destroyed in 1948. Yet Sharon was relatively free of the complexes that plague Jews. Speaking about the rest of the world, he said, “If the Jews were to disappear, they’d…be happy.” Sharon understood well the opposition of the Palestinians and their allies (he admitted admiration for their unwavering determination). He was pessimistic about peace in the Middle East. Viewing world events today, who will disagree with him on that point?

Israel understands that it can survive only through the protection of the United States, its chosen shabas goy. Over the past decades all Jewish efforts, honest and dishonest, respectable and perfidious, have been concentrated on forging an Israeli-American alliance. As America succumbs to the influence of the Jews, it is alienated from the rest of the world. At the beginning of the twenty-first century, we observe three quite simple political divisions in the world, split today between Israel/America (with cowardly Britain lurking in the background), the Muslim world, and disinterested parties which don’t want to fight the next (and last?) war. The opposition to Israel and America is led by Iran, a nation of zealots who seem eager to escalate tensions in the Middle East. The wall in Palestine, Iran’s nuclear aspirations, the West’s senseless, tactless disrespect of Islam and the subsequent rage erupting throughout much of the Muslim world – all these events portend the escalating conflict. One needn’t admire Sharon to share his pessimism.

In allying itself with Israel, America has signed on to a troubling future. Those of my own faith and blood, those of my nation, have nothing to gain by participating in that conflict. It is not our war, and it is immoral for us to participate. Unless one relishes irrationality, one will stay clear of Jews and their allies, for the Jew provokes irrationality.

I am convinced that Armageddon will be something entirely different from what Americans and especially their pro-Israeli Amen section imagine. There are no “good guys” in the Middle East these days, and those who want to build for the future are advised to cut their ties to America and Israel. At this point in history, to consent in any way to America is to support Israel.

9 February 2006
from a backward place

Voeg een commentaar toe



IMC Network: www.indymedia.org africa: ambazonia canarias estrecho / madiaq nigeria south africa canada: alberta hamilton maritimes montreal ontario ottawa quebec thunder bay vancouver victoria windsor winnipeg oost azi: ë: beirut israel palestine europa: alacant andorra antwerpen athens austria barcelona belgium belgrade bristol bulgaria croatia cyprus estrecho / madiaq euskal herria galiza germany grenoble hungary ireland istanbul italy la plana liege lille madrid marseille nantes netherlands nice norway oost-vlaanderen paris poland portugal romania russia scotland sverige switzerland thessaloniki uk-gb west vlaanderen latijns amerika: argentina bolivia brasil chiapas chile colombia ecuador mexico peru puerto rico qollasuyu rosario santiago sonora tijuana uruguay valparaiso ozeanien: adelaide aotearoa brisbane darwin jakarta manila melbourne perth qc sydney zuid-azi: verenigde staten: arizona arkansas atlanta austin baltimore binghamton boston buffalo charlottesville chicago cleveland colorado danbury, ct dc hawaii houston hudson mohawk idaho ithaca kansas city la madison maine miami michigan milwaukee minneapolis/st. paul new hampshire new jersey new mexico new orleans north carolina north texas nyc oklahoma philadelphia pittsburgh portland richmond rochester rogue valley san diego san francisco san francisco bay area santa barbara santa cruz, ca seattle st louis tallahassee-red hills tennessee urbana-champaign utah vermont western mass worcester west azi: process: discussion fbi/legal updates indymedia faq mailing lists process & imc docs tech volunteer projecten: print radio satellite tv video regio's: oceania united states topics: biotech



© 2000-2003 (((I)))ndymedia West Vlaanderen.
Alle artikels zijn © door de respectievelijke auteurs. Tenzij anders vermeld is alle inhoud vrij te gebruiken voor non commercieel gebruik als je de bron vermeldt. Deze site gebruikt SF Active v.0.9.4
All articles are under © by their authors. Unless otherwise mentioned, all content is free to reproduce and rebroadcast for non commercial use when the source is mentioned. | Disclaimer | Privacy