home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT1908>
- <title>
- July 23, 1990: An Intifadeh Of The Soul
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- July 23, 1990 The Palestinians
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 36
- COVER STORY
- An Intifadeh Of the Soul
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>During the 2 1/2 years of their uprising, the Palestinians have
- been building a nation without a state. No matter what happens,
- they will never be the same.
- </p>
- <p>By Lance Morrow--Reported by Jamil Hamad
- </p>
- <p> Now, after five days, the army lifts the curfew.
- </p>
- <p> In a bright June morning, all the locked-up normalities come
- tumbling into the streets of Nablus--the fruits and
- vegetables, the figs and grape leaves and fragrant mint, the
- baklava with its hovering bees, the butchered goats and lambs
- and live chicks in cardboard boxes, rectangles of softly
- agitating yellow fluff. The narrow alleys of the Casbah fill
- with the smells and bustle of marketing after curfew.
- Palestinian life in the steep-sided hills of the occupied West
- Bank makes one of its dreamlike passages back to the state of
- mind in which, for a moment, it feels normal.
- </p>
- <p> Then, just at noon, news shoots through the Casbah, an
- articulate electricity: there was an Israeli army raid a moment
- ago--one activist killed, many captured.
- </p>
- <p> Now groceries tumble back behind shutters. Mothers drag
- children, fleeing up the lanes. Adolescent boys collect on
- corners, muscles jumping, vibrating for revenge.
- </p>
- <p> A thin young man with the look of an unslept jailbird--he
- is wanted by the army, like his best friend who was killed just
- now--stops for a second, his body's engine racing, in front
- of a shop with a mannequin in its window dressed in a stately
- white wedding gown. The fugitive speaks with a distracted
- courtesy, wanting to be polite but needing to flee for his
- life, and then vanishes into an alley. The owner of the shop
- slams down his steel curtain over the window with the wedding
- gown. The mannequin bride goes blank.
- </p>
- <p> Curfew again: Nablus returns to its motionless antiworld,
- its un-Palestine.
- </p>
- <p> The glaziers of Jerusalem will be rich if the intifadeh goes
- on like this. They charge $1,500 to install car windows that
- are shatter-resistant. People are paying. The Palestinian
- uprising is 2 1/2 years old. It has hardened into a dreary,
- bitter ritual. The reciprocal stoning and beating obey Newton's
- Third Law of Motion--for every action there is an equal and
- opposite reaction. Each side has found its threshold of
- acceptable suffering and cruelty.
- </p>
- <p> On both sides, the leadership, such as it is, grows more
- evasive, craven and empty. In a war of victims, no one plays
- the grownup. Among the Palestinians, effective moral authority
- now has a median age of 14 or 15 and a good throwing arm.
- Fathers and grandfathers have signed over their moral duties
- to the children in the streets. The traditional patriarchy
- begins to disintegrate. The Palestine Liberation Organization
- still serves as banner and facade, but many Palestinians
- believe that it is increasingly feckless, corrupt and out of
- touch. The failures of leadership on either side of the struggle
- collaborate to create a sense of hopelessness. Hamas, the
- fundamentalist Islamic movement, feeds handsomely upon the
- ambient despair.
- </p>
- <p> Some American Plains Indians in their late 19th century
- twilight took to ritual "ghost dancing" in the hope of ridding
- themselves of the white man. The intifadeh is either ghost
- dancing or nation building, and sometimes it is both
- simultaneously. It has crystallized the Palestinians' sense of
- themselves as a nation, but it is a phantom nation still,
- incandescent but insubstantial.
- </p>
- <p> To many Israelis, the intifadeh is no more than a chronic
- irritation. They worry more about the possibility of war with
- Syria or Iraq. Worry more, that is, until the stones get
- personal. One Sunday a month ago, the philosopher David
- Hartman, who says, "I will not be at peace in Israel until the
- Palestinian has achieved his dignity," was riding in a taxi up
- the Mount of Olives. He was thinking about Maimonides and the
- relationship between Jewish tradition and modernity. Suddenly
- modernity came through the window in the form of a chunk of
- Jerusalem stone the size of an avocado, heavy and jagged. It hit
- Hartman in the face and might have killed him. Hartman keeps
- the stone on the windowsill in his office. As you walk in the
- door, he stabs the air with his finger: "Look at this! This is
- not an instrument of protest, this is an instrument of murder!"
- And then, recovering philosophy a little, he shakes his head:
- "The veneer of civilization is very thin."
- </p>
- <p> There is no such veneer in Shati refugee camp in Gaza. Not
- long ago, Mohammed Abu Zinnada, a 68-year-old blind imam, died
- after the Israel Defense Forces raided his house in the middle
- of the night. The I.D.F. says it touched no one, and the man
- died of a heart attack. The family tells a rather detailed
- story of how the I.D.F. forced its way in, clubbed the blind
- imam with rifle butts, beat his grandson Naim, 9, and even
- knocked around his manifestly retarded son Hussein, 29.
- </p>
- <p> An Israeli patrol chased Imad Khatib, 13, just down the
- street from the imam's house the other day. The boy's crime was
- flashing a V sign at the soldiers. They caught Imad, who weighs
- 70 lbs., beat him repeatedly, raised him high in the air, threw
- him to the ground and kicked him with their boots. Several
- witnesses say that three of the soldiers took souvenir pictures
- of this exploit--even passing the camera around so everyone
- could be in the shot.
- </p>
- <p> In 1937 Britain's Palestine Royal Commission observed, "No
- other problem of our time is rooted so deeply in the past." I
- have seen the past, and it doesn't work. It is a deepening
- disgrace.
- </p>
- <p> At the birth of Israel 42 years ago, one people crashed back
- into history, another spilled out of it. For the world's Jews,
- 1948 was a miracle after nearly 2,000 years of diaspora. For
- the Palestinians, the year was what they call al nakba, the
- disaster.
- </p>
- <p> When the intifadeh began, the Palestinians thought they had
- arrived at last at their St. Crispin's Day--their long
- delayed critical mass as a people. They would mobilize a new
- identity, reassemble the atoms of dispersal. In a story by the
- late Palestinian writer Ghassan Kanafani, the driver of a
- tanker truck is smuggling Palestinians across the desert to
- illicit jobs in the Persian Gulf. The occupants silently
- suffocate in the heat of the tanker as it waits at a border
- checkpoint. They could have banged on the sides to attract
- attention in order to save themselves, but they were too
- afraid.
- </p>
- <p> The intifadeh has been a loud, persistent banging on the
- sides of the tanker. And although the uprising has helped
- develop the Palestinians as a people, they remain inside the
- tanker, and the sense of suffocation is growing more desperate.
- The Arab Godot has not arrived to deliver their freedom. The
- Palestinians in the occupied territories have grown tired of
- waiting.
- </p>
- <p> The Zionist idea was so powerful, it has been said, that it
- created not one nation but two. The Palestinian existence since
- 1948 has been one long, surreal search for that nationhood. As
- the Palestinian American author Edward Said has written, "Their
- story cannot be told smoothly." The Palestinians, in any case,
- are diverse. Like any people, they have many stories.
- </p>
- <p> THE MADMAN'S VICTIM'S TALE
- </p>
- <p> There is not a Palestinian anywhere who believes that the
- killings at Rishon Le-Zion, south of Tel Aviv, on May 20 were
- the work of a madman lost in some apolitical lunacy.
- Conversely, every Israeli probably believes that the man held
- responsible, Ami Popper, 21, an Israeli soldier dismissed from
- the army as being unsuitable for military service, was exactly
- that: an isolated crazy.
- </p>
- <p> The seven laborers killed by Popper came from Gaza towns and
- refugee camps. One of the dead, 35-year-old Youssef Abu Dakka,
- traveled each day to work as a laborer building houses in
- Israel. Now, in the bright midday sun of the courtyard of his
- house, the family gathers to receive official sympathizers. The
- victim's mother, her sharp bird's eyes silently following
- everything, sits on a sheepskin in a shadowed corner. The
- father, Ibrahim Abu Dakka, has a ceremonial place among the
- encircling men. A leader of the Gaza Laborers' Union, a man of
- swelling gravitas, delivers a harangue about the son's
- unforgettable martyrdom.
- </p>
- <p> Jamal Abu Dakka, 28, Youssef's brother-in-law, who was there
- at the shootings, tells what happened. At 6 in the morning, the
- laborers were driving in a Peugeot 504 toward work in Rishon
- Le-Zion. A man dressed in an Israeli army uniform waved their
- car down. He told the laborers to get out but to leave the
- car's engine running. He ordered the six men in the car to join
- other Palestinians sitting on the ground, and asked in Hebrew,
- "Do you know why you are here?" The men said no. The Israeli
- said, "Better for you not to know." Then he opened fire with
- a Galil assault rifle, killing seven of the laborers and
- wounding eleven. He jumped into the Peugeot and drove away.
- </p>
- <p> The killings on "Black Sunday" blew fresh rage into the
- uprising. The territories rioted for three days; 14 more
- Palestinians died and an additional 800 were wounded.
- </p>
- <p> EVERYBODY COMES TO RICK'S
- </p>
- <p> On the road outside the American Colony Hotel in East
- Jerusalem, a bus is burning. A Molotov cocktail sailed out of
- the dusk moments ago and burst into bright wild blossom.
- Presently the flames subside, and the bus is reduced to an
- abandoned black shell, like that of a hermit crab on the beach.
- </p>
- <p> The American Colony is the Rick's Cafe Americain of East
- Jerusalem, a place where journalists, diplomats, scholars and
- P.L.O. contacts meet. The hotel's basement bar is a rock-walled
- grotto, a honeycomb of whisperings. In an upstairs salon called
- the Pasha's Room, Mohammed, a leader of the Palestinian popular
- committee in Bethlehem, explains how it came to pass that 40
- years ago he was born in a cave.
- </p>
- <p> His village was partly demolished by the Haganah, the Jewish
- militia, in 1947. His family moved to a cave at Wadi Fokin,
- southwest of Bethlehem. There his mother gave birth to
- Mohammed. Eventually, the family settled into Dheisheh refugee
- camp near Bethlehem, in what was then Jordanian territory. When
- he was 17, there came the second nakba, the decisive disaster
- of the 1967 war. The air shrieked with Israeli jet fighters,
- and with rumors that they would destroy the camp and massacre
- everyone in it. The Palestinians took to the roads again,
- struggling to get across the Jordan River.
- </p>
- <p> Once in Jordan, Mohammed joined Al Fatah, the largest
- faction within the P.L.O. He forsook Islam. He groped toward
- an identity, inventing himself. He put himself on a heady diet
- of Hegel, Nietzsche, Arab nationalism. He became a communist.
- </p>
- <p> But Mohammed has an independent, defiant mind that tends to
- swerve in unorthodox directions. After a year in prison, "I
- decided that the slogan of destroying Israel was a waste of
- time," he says. "This conflict has to be settled through two
- states, Israeli and Palestinian." When he was in jail in the
- mid-'70s, he tried to persuade fellow prisoners of that. The
- prisoners' court judged him a traitor and tried to kill him for
- being an Israeli stooge. The Israelis tortured him, he says,
- for being a Palestinian agitator. The countervailing dangers
- seem to have given him a strange serenity.
- </p>
- <p> Mohammed, unorthodox still, accepts a cold beer. "Each
- people," he says, "must have its story of ordeal."
- </p>
- <p> THE TRIBE OF BLESSINGS
- </p>
- <p> The hills of Moorpark, Calif., look like a memory of
- Palestine, except they are greener. They do not have the harsh
- abstraction of the landscape that lies ten time zones to the
- east--or the army vehicles that crawl up the roads like
- porcupines, bristling weapons.
- </p>
- <p> When the intifadeh was younger, more hopeful for them, the
- Barakat family gathered for a reunion in Moorpark. Barakat
- means "blessings." This was an ingathering of the tribe of
- blessings. The five brothers were there, all together for the
- first time in 30 years. Adnan arrived from Jordan, Samih from
- Kuwait, Walid from Germany, Khaled from Morocco. Adel, who
- lives in Moorpark, was host. Each brother speaks English with
- a different accent, and each has a passport from a different
- country. "This is what it means," they said, "being a
- Palestinian."
- </p>
- <p> The brothers told the story of a Palestinian, carrying only
- Egyptian travel documents, who spent six weeks in 1983 flying
- from one airport to another in the Arab world, refused entry
- in one country after another. His papers said he was stateless.
- Finally, Jordan let the wanderer in.
- </p>
- <p> Other Arabs mistrust Palestinians almost as much as Israelis
- do, and often treat them worse. Palestinians are considered too
- cosmopolitan, too educated, too apt to stir up trouble, too
- dangerous politically. "The Jews of the Arab world," the
- Palestinians call themselves with a complex, rueful pride. The
- Arab states think it best to keep them in refugee camps,
- watched by the secret police, in order to dramatize their
- misery and to justify revenge: to force them to play their part
- in the pageant of Arab honor.
- </p>
- <p> But Palestinians have also proved to be their own
- accomplished enemies, with a long record of missed political
- chances and a tradition of terrorism that the West has had
- trouble accepting as the work of freedom fighters. It is no
- wonder that even their Arab brothers are sometimes afraid to
- let them in.
- </p>
- <p> The Barakats, reunited, told stories about when they were
- young in Anabta, their native village, near Nablus. Adel, now
- prosperous with real estate, remembers the primal Anabta,
- famous for its olive and almond trees, where he wants to retire
- to play backgammon and think of his childhood: "You have the
- most happiness in your life when you are a child. You had good
- dreams and you were happy in your village."
- </p>
- <p> Palestinian memories of the native villages grow idealized
- in exile and occupation. The world's 4.5 million Palestinians
- have polished the stone of that primal Palestine in nightly
- retellings until it shines in the mind like the first
- innocence: ur-Palestine, the origin myth.
- </p>
- <p> The Palestinian after the fall has been double-selfed,
- abstracted out of homeland. But many Palestinians have also
- flourished, soared even, in their forced dispersion. It is not
- always pitiable to be double-selfed.
- </p>
- <p> The memories are a stylized passion for the essential thing:
- a land, and therefore an identity of one's own. Would all those
- Palestinians prospering in Kuwait or Detroit, working as
- doctors, merchants, engineers, really wish to return, to invest
- their money and skills in the Palestinian homeland they demand?
- If the homeland ever comes, reality will test nostalgia.
- </p>
- <p> THE DAUGHTERS OF GAZA
- </p>
- <p> Three daughters of Abu Faisal sit in the sunlight in a
- courtyard in Gaza. Zeita remembers the evening during Ramadan
- when soldiers fired tear gas because the shabab (young
- Palestinians) had been throwing stones in their refugee camp,
- Jabalia. A canister sailed over the wall into the courtyard.
- Screams, confusion. The canister pinwheeled on the floor,
- spewing gas. The daughters ran for the bottles of cologne that
- they keep. They soaked tissues with it and held them to nose
- and mouth as they retreated gasping to the corners of the house.
- Cologne works against tear gas. So do onions.
- </p>
- <p> Two of the sisters are named for other sisters who are now
- dead. One night in 1971, six armed P.L.O. fedayeen were
- crossing the street, just outside the house, and heading east
- toward Israel when they were spotted by an Israeli patrol.
- </p>
- <p> A street battle started. One Palestinian fell wounded.
- Faika, who was 18, also belonged to the P.L.O. She grabbed her
- two-year-old sister Hanan as a prop--just a baby-sitter
- blundering into a fight--and got to the fallen man, seizing
- his Kalashnikov. She was about to start firing when the
- Israelis shot her down, and her two-year-old sister. There are
- many martyred babies in the tribal cause. "We are proud of our
- sisters who were killed," say the girls in the courtyard. Their
- shining black eyes are direct and passionate.
- </p>
- <p> The house of Abu Faisal is a peaceful island this morning.
- Outside its walls, the unpaved, rutted streets brim with last
- night's rain. Goats browse in the street garbage. Donkeys graze
- among gravestones. An open sewer empties into an enormous,
- death-gray cesspond. Astonishing metal debris lies everywhere,
- as if a sadist of automobiles had been stabbing cars and
- ripping them apart and scattering their flesh.
- </p>
- <p> THE ZEAL OF THE ABSENTEE
- </p>
- <p> Samar Dudin Karajah has a sharp and beautiful face. She is
- 28, the daughter of a former Jordanian minister, and dresses
- like a European woman of privilege. Married to a young lawyer,
- she lives in Amman and teaches drama at the Aliya Girls School.
- She is now on a maternity leave.
- </p>
- <p> "A Palestinian always has a sense of pain wherever he is or
- whatever he does," she says. "Every Palestinian is in exile."
- When she teaches grade-school children, she makes up plays.
- Here is a Palestinian girl crossing the Allenby Bridge from
- Jordan to the West Bank. An Israeli soldier gives the girl
- candy, but then he breaks open her doll to see if she is
- carrying anything dangerous. The girl throws the candy back at
- the soldier.
- </p>
- <p> "We were brought up," says Samar, "to distinguish between
- Zionism and Judaism. My mother had many Sephardic Jewish
- friends. But Zionism emerged out of the Holocaust. So why do
- the Palestinians have to pay for that? They were the victims.
- Now we are the victims. They came and took our land! They
- cannot solve their agony by victimizing the Palestinians."
- </p>
- <p> She chokes on her outrage. "Why do we have to explain
- ourselves so much?"
- </p>
- <p> THE POLTERGEIST'S TALE
- </p>
- <p> Steep Nazareth in a bright sun. The 60,000 Arabs here are
- Israeli citizens, but the character of the town is distinctly
- Arab, with winding streets and souks. The Jews live on an
- opposite hill in modern houses with broad streets that might
- have been transplanted from suburban America.
- </p>
- <p> In Israel more than 700,000 citizens are Arab. They regard
- themselves as third-class citizens. They have made a
- double-jointed accommodation with the Israeli state.
- </p>
- <p> Johny Jahshan works as an accountant in the Galilee
- Christian College. His house on a hillside overlooking Nazareth
- has a middle-class comfort that makes a stranger think twice.
- This is a dissonance one sometimes feels among Palestinians who
- live very well. Their comfort does not invalidate their
- grievance, but it subtly shifts the moral ground, or at least
- complicates their status as victims. Israel has been
- economically profitable for many Palestinians, even as Israelis
- have exploited Palestinian labor and markets. Now, however,
- Palestinians are boycotting as many Israeli products as they
- can.
- </p>
- <p> The Palestinians living in Israel feel thrice removed. First
- in privilege and status come the European Jews, then come the
- Oriental Jews, then, a distant third, the Israeli Arabs. Many
- of their grievances sound like the complaints of American
- blacks, and sometimes Israel gives off something of the Old
- South, of race hate and sheer meanness. The other evening on
- Salah el-Din Street in East Jerusalem, a middle-aged man in a
- business suit was stopped by a beefy policeman who addressed
- him in Arabic: "Ya, walid [Hey, boy]!" The policeman took the
- Palestinian's left hand and twisted it back slowly, painfully,
- saying softly all the while in Arabic, "You do intifadeh, boy?
- I think you're intifadeh, boy!"
- </p>
- <p> It sometimes seems to a Palestinian in Israel as if he and
- his family had been killed in an accident and now live on as
- ghosts in the same house. Another family, Jewish, has moved in.
- The ghosts observe the new tenants with sardonic commentary.
- The new tenants watch the furniture move and objects fly
- through the air. The Arabs have become poltergeists at their
- old address.
- </p>
- <p> But it is, after all, a Jewish state. A stranger proffers
- hard-line Israeli logic: "Look, wars have consequences. This
- is a violent and dislocating century that has created millions
- of refugees all over the world. There are more than 200 million
- Arabs in the Middle East and North Africa, occupying 5 million
- sq. mi. There are 3.8 million Israeli Jews on a tiny sliver of
- land. The Arabs have tried in war after war to destroy Israel.
- The Jews have prevailed. What do you expect from them? Besides,
- what law of history says that a people aspiring to be a nation
- will have a state? Look at the Kurds, the Armenians, the
- Basques, the Ibos."
- </p>
- <p> Jahshan answers, "The Crusaders and the Turks were here for
- a long time, and then they left. Israel is only 42 years old.
- They can kill us all and send us anywhere. Do you think we will
- forget? Honor! People die for honor! He who does not have land
- does not have honor."
- </p>
- <p> BUTCH AND SUNDANCE
- </p>
- <p> The village of Kafr Ni'ma lies in the hills west of
- Ramallah, a high village with an ancient terracing of stones.
- The people there grow figs, olives, almonds, grapes, plums. On
- a hill opposite, across the valley, one sees the bright white
- cubes and rectangles of a Jewish settlement--a bedroom
- community for people who work in Jerusalem. The settlements on
- the West Bank are usually erected on the high ground for
- defense, and sit upon the landscape like moon stations.
- </p>
- <p> A green-eyed 16-year-old named Farid, who wants to become
- a doctor when he grows up, is sitting in the back seat of the
- car, explaining how to stone Israeli soldiers. "You stay behind
- walls, follow the soldiers, throw and then dodge out of sight.
- Always know where you are, and have a way to escape in mind."
- </p>
- <p> It is his duty to throw stones, Farid believes. "Sooner or
- later you will die, so there is nothing to be afraid of. They
- took our land, they killed our brothers, they arrested my
- friends. Our life is not so good that we can regret losing it."
- </p>
- <p> Palestinian flags flutter everywhere in the village. The
- walls are coated with spray-painted slogans. The army will
- arrive soon and order the villagers at gunpoint to take down
- the flags and paint out the slogans. When the army leaves, the
- flags and slogans reappear.
- </p>
- <p> Nassim and Mahmoud, leaders of the popular committees that
- run the village, sit smoking in a large bare room. Nassim, 31,
- is tall, thin, with calm dark eyes, though his crossed leg
- jumps in spasms when he speaks. Mahmoud is a short, blondish
- tough guy. They are Butch and Sundance, outlaws of the
- intifadeh.
- </p>
- <p> The popular committees formed during the uprising have
- assumed much of the social, economic and political authority
- of running the territories. There are food committees,
- education committees, health committees, and public-safety
- committees, which guard the villages against Israeli settlers.
- </p>
- <p> The surrounding hills are filled with caves, where the
- Palestinian activists often hide. One moonlit night, some
- months after our talk, a young collaborator led Israeli
- soldiers to the bush that concealed the cave where Mahmoud had
- set up a cozy apartment, with mattress and blanket, a lantern
- and jars of olives. Mahmoud is now in an Israeli jail.
- </p>
- <p> THE EXECUTIONER
- </p>
- <p> Of the 947 Palestinians killed so far during the uprising,
- at least 230 have been shot, beaten, stabbed or hacked to death
- by fellow Palestinians. Collaboration is not the only capital
- offense. Some victims have offended Islamic factions by
- trafficking in drugs and sex. Others were killed in personal
- vendettas.
- </p>
- <p> An activist who calls himself Yazeed is 29. He bites at his
- fingernails, his thin face crossed by sudden gusts of anger and
- fear, and says, "Killing the collaborators will cut the fingers
- of the Shin Bet." Yazeed has spent seven years in Israeli jails
- for his work in what he calls the "armed struggle against the
- Zionist occupation." He refuses to marry: "Why should I? I have
- nothing to offer my children." Besides, he expects to be a
- martyr.
- </p>
- <p> Yazeed says he has personally executed three people accused
- of collaboration. He feels no remorse. He insists that
- collaborators are given warnings, a chance to "come to their
- senses."
- </p>
- <p> Why does a Palestinian become a collaborator? Life under
- occupation is very inconvenient; the occupier controls every
- detail. The Shin Bet, the Israeli internal security agency, can
- arrange a thousand favors to ease the way. They might come to
- an unemployed university graduate, for example, and say, "Why
- suffer? We can make you a teacher." In return the Shin Bet will
- start by asking something very easy: "We just need the names
- of your neighbors." By degrees the collaborator is drawn deeper
- into the web. If he tries to retreat, the Israelis say, "We
- will expose you as a collaborator." It is widely believed in
- Nablus that Shin Bet agents have given drugged drinks to
- Palestinian women, then removed their clothing and taken
- pictures, threatening to shame them by showing the pictures to
- their families unless they cooperate. Some corrupt village
- mukhtars (headmen) have collaborated in exchange for permission
- to gouge money from their people. That is a dangerous game.
- Such collaborators wind up turning their homes into armed
- fortresses, with transmitters to keep in touch with the Shin
- Bet.
- </p>
- <p> THE PRISONER'S TALE
- </p>
- <p> Pictures hang high on the walls of a Palestinian's house,
- the tops of the frames nearly touching the ceiling. Is it that
- such elevation of the gaze suggests respect for the figures
- pictured there--for the father staring down in formal Arab
- robes, for the first son, working in one of the gulf states and
- sending home the money that the family survives on? Such images
- look down upon Qassem in his sitting room. His own gaze is
- lowered. He is talking about his prison time and about being
- interrogated by Israeli agents.
- </p>
- <p> Qassem has served three stretches in jail on suspicion of
- being an activist. He is a man in his mid-30s, with black
- Heathcliff eyes and deep grooves like parentheses around his
- mouth. In the dusk he recalls the rituals of interrogation.
- </p>
- <p> "You begin with two days and nights isolated, standing up,
- handcuffed, with a sack over your head. You just hear crying,
- loud voices, an iron door slamming. You are very frightened.
- If you fall, they throw cold water on you to wake you up."
- </p>
- <p> Ex-prisoners are always very precise about how many hours,
- or days, they have been subjected to various stages of
- interrogation, but it is hard to know how they can be sure of
- the passage of time, especially if their heads are covered with
- sacks.
- </p>
- <p> He continues. "Then they start the interrogation. They make
- you very, very tired, physically and mentally. You forget
- everything outside after a time. You are utterly alone. There
- are two of them, and they play good guy and bad guy, the bad
- guy slapping you and spitting on you. You wonder, `Where does
- he get so much spit from?' They dig at your genitals with a
- boot or a stick. Sometimes they tie you to a pipe so that you
- cannot stand or sit or kneel and leave you that way for days.
- </p>
- <p> "The sacks they put on your head are never cleaned, and they
- smell of vomit. They can add more sacks, and you begin to
- suffocate--that works very fast on some guys.
- </p>
- <p> "You cannot imagine your joy at the words `Take him to the
- cell.' After many days of isolation," says Qassem, "I sometimes
- missed seeing the interrogator if he did not show up. To see
- a human face--even his!"
- </p>
- <p> THE GLOBAL VILLAGE
- </p>
- <p> In the village of Deir Dibwan, northeast of Ramallah, the
- newer houses are made of rich blond limestone, with lemon trees
- in the front yards and, on the roofs, miniature Eiffel Towers
- to brace television antennas. The village has simultaneously
- the smell of goats and an air of affluence. It is a theme park
- of Palestinian authenticity, a once-was village sustained by
- money from America. Deir Dibwan has a population of 8,000. At
- any given time, some 4,000 are in the U.S. making money.
- </p>
- <p> Once immigration was irrevocable. The refugee boarded a ship
- and departed for the New World. He might return to the
- ancestral village years later and try to remember his
- childhood. But now immigrants can go time-traveling in their
- own histories, back and forth. One family, the Dalias, have
- been commuting thus between their pasts and their futures since
- 1926, when a forebear, Abdul-Hameed Dalia, began shuttling
- between the Middle East and the New World. The resulting state
- of mind may be painfully torn, but is often miraculously freed
- and creative. A sense of being treacherous to the tribe and
- its values coincides with a heady liberation.
- </p>
- <p> THE STONES
- </p>
- <p> The diamond cutter stares at the stone until it discloses
- its inner structure, its secret. If the moralist stares long
- enough at Palestine/Israel, he thinks it will disclose a
- miracle of resolution.
- </p>
- <p> But the place is not one stone. Here are two monoliths that
- by an intolerable trick of metaphysics stand upon the same
- spot. The Muslim's Dome of the Rock looms above the Jew's
- Western Wall. The promised land is also hell in a very small
- place.
- </p>
- <p> Sunlight shafts down upon Jerusalem through gunpowder
- clouds, the city immobile, the sky above in tumbling motion
- like time-lapse photography. Pure light and Jerusalem stone
- give the city its astonishing beauty. The dolomite limestone
- changes miraculously with the light: blind white at noon gone
- to pink and rose and peach at sunset.
- </p>
- <p> The stones have a strange abstract fertility, like dreams
- breeding. They come teeming up in geometries to make temples,
- cities. They also have their power in smaller sizes. They come
- up in the hands of children and fly through the air, to make
- a nation, or at least to trouble the dream of Zion.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-