WAWA/WeAreWideAwake is my Public Service to America as a muckracker who has journeyed seven times to Israel Palestine since June 2005.
WAWA is dedicated to confronting media and governments that shield the whole
truth.
We who Are Wide
Awake are compelled by the "fierce urgency of Now" [Rev MLK, Jr.] to raise
awareness and promote the human dialogue about many of the crucial issues of our
day: the state of our Union and in protection of democracy, what life is like
under military occupation in Palestine, the Christian EXODUS from the Holy Land,
and spirituality-from a Theologically Liberated Christian Anarchist
POV.
"Observe good faith and justice towards all nations; cultivate peace and harmony with all...and passionate attachments for others, should be excluded; and that, in place of them, just and amicable feelings towards all should be cultivated. The nation which indulges towards another a habitual hatred or a habitual fondness is in some degree a slave...a passionate attachment of one nation for another produces a variety of evils." George Washington's Farewell Address - 1796
"My aim is to agitate & disturb people. I'm not selling bread, I'm selling yeast." Unamuno
"Imagine All the People Sharing All the World." John Lennon
"If enough Christians followed the gospel, they could bring any state to its knees." Father Philip Francis Berrigan
"You can stand me up at the gates of hell, but I won't back down." Tom Petty
"If I can't dance, it's not my revolution." Emma Goldman
"We have yet to begin to IMAGINE the power and potential of the Internet." Charlie Rose, 2005
Only in Solidarity do "We have it in our power to begin the world again" Tom Paine
"Never doubt that a few, thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world: Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." Margaret Mead
"You shall know the truth and the truth will set you free." John 8:32
DO SOMETHING!
Photo of George shown here and in web site banner courtesy of Debbie Hill, 2000.
We hold these truths to be self-evident: That all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights; that, among these, are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; that, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed; and, whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it. -July 4, 1776. The Declaration of Independence
Israeli bulldozers today destroyed a garden and children’s playground in Beit
Jala, and 100 fruit and olive trees in Al Walaja, both in the Bethlehem
district, to make way for the continued construction of their illegal apartheid
wall. Soldiers present used violent force to remove Palestinian, Israeli and
international activists who attempted to prevent the destruction. Two Israelis
were arrested immediately, and six internationals were later arrested.
In Beit Jala, this is the second time, that this particular garden and
playground has been bulldozed. A legal injunction preventing further
destruction expired this week. Following the previous demolition, in early
March, local Palestinian residents and international supporters rebuilt the
playground and planted new olive trees in the garden. All these were today
destroyed.
Twelve people, representing six different nationalities, sat in front of the
Caterpillar bulldozer as it moved up to the garden. Soldiers forcefully removed
all twelve, several of whom sustained minor injuries, and one of whom was
hospitalized with suspected broken ribs after his stomach was repeatedly
stamped upon by one of the soldiers.
After soldiers forced everyone but the owners of the garden up to the road
above, they joined approximately 50 other internationals and local residents to
hold a demonstration which lasted into the evening. Overlooking the wreckage of
the morning’s destruction, the protesters chanted and sang, asking only to be
allowed back down to the house, where bulldozing had finished, to speak with the
family there. Late in the afternoon, six activists, from the USA, Italy, Spain,
Germany and France, managed to access the house via a back route, bringing food
in to the family, before being arrested by Israeli Border Police, accused of
illegally entering a Closed Military Zone.
In Al Walaja, Israeli military prevented any internationals or journalists from
accessing the area to observe the uprooting of approximately 40 olive trees.
The International Court of Justice has ruled that the building of Israel’s
apartheid wall is in violation of international law. When complete, the wall
will run for over 700km, the vast majority of it passing through and
effectively annexing Palestinian land in the West Bank.
When people ask me why do I go to occupied Palestine [seven
times since June 2005] and why do I care so much about such a small plot of real
estate, I reply, that I went the first time to meet a little boy of Beit Jala, [a suburb of Bethlehem] and to be the Christian delegate amongst the Palestinian and
Jewish co-founders of the Olive Trees Foundation for Peace, an
interfaith non-profit dedicated to raising awareness and funds to purchase
trees to replace those that have been destroyed by The Wall.
But, my last six trips to Israel and occupied Palestine have been driven by the fierce urgency
of now and a sense of calling; to go-bear witness-and report about the lives of
regular people living under military occupation and to learn about and support
the grass root efforts of Israeli, Palestinian and International nonviolent
activists against the occupation of Palestine.
I also leave hearth and home for occupied territory because injustice anywhere
reverberates all over the world and American taxpayers are culpable in where our Government lays down our money. Annually, over 3.2 billion USA tax dollars are sent
to Israel to support the now 43 years of military occupation of the indigenous
peoples of the Holy Land.
It was at an Olive Trees Foundation for Peace meeting, that I met a Catholic
woman who showed me a photo first published by the Florida Catholic in 2000; a
photo that irrevocably changed my life.
Photographer Debbie Hill, captured three year old George [it is his photo that
adorns the banner of my website] of Beit Jala, a once peaceful Christian
village a five minute car ride from downtown Bethlehem, the morning after the
Israeli army destroyed his sanctuary.
Israeli forces had retaliated against a few hopeless militants who had
infiltrated George's neighborhood to snipe across the way into the illegal
settlement/colony of Gilo, about a mile from the top of the hill not far from
George's home.
The shrapnel that blew apart the wall of George's bedroom read 'Made in USA'
and was delivered via American made Apache helicopters.
The second I saw George's eyes, in that photo, my heart said "DO
SOMETHING!"
What could I possibly do I wondered, but I did make a copy of the photo, put it
in a frame and placed it upon the altar [a bar high table] in the upper room of
my home. Dozens of times a day, I stop and gaze into the eyes of that little
boy of Bethlehem and wonder what it will take to end the insane cycle of
violence in the Holy Land; which is in pieces-bantustans.
When I met George for the first time in June 2005, I vowed to him that the rest
of my life would be dedicated to doing all I could to help bring about the end
of the occupation of Palestine.
Of course I had no clue as to what I would or could possibly do, or how
much of an 'impossible mission' I had promised a little child of Bethlehem.
But, every morning I wake up and wonder what I can do today in the pursuit of
peace and justice; equal human rights for all, for that is the only way Israel
will ever be secure.
A month after my first return home from occupied territory, I put up my website
and became a civilian journalist; which is best understood as one who goes out
of their comfort zone to report for the benefit of we the people, without
orders or censorship from editors or paychecks from conglomerates.
The first civilian journalist may well have been Rachel Corrie, the altruistic
young American and volunteer with ISM/International Solidarity movement who was
run over and killed by the weight of a Caterpillar bulldozer in Gaza in 2003,
four days before America bombed Baghdad.
Rachel and other NONVIOLENT activists had spent hours protesting against the
demolition of the home of a pharmacist with five children in Gaza. The Corrie
family has sought but has yet to receive justice; an open Congressional
investigation and admission of accountability by the Caterpillar Company which
continues to reap profits from manufacturing products that further the military
occupation of Palestine.
On February 7 2003, Rachel wrote:
"No amount of reading, attendance at conferences, documentary viewing and
word of mouth could have prepared me for the reality of the situation here. You
just can't imagine it unless you see it - and even then you are always well
aware that your experience of it is not at all the reality…Nobody in my family
has been shot, driving in their car, by a rocket launcher from a tower at the
end of a major street in my hometown…When I leave for school or work I can be
relatively certain that there will not be a heavily armed soldier waiting…at a
checkpoint with the power to decide whether I can go about my business, and
whether I can get home again when I'm done…I am in Rafah: a city of about
140,000 people, approximately 60% of whom are refugees - many of whom are twice
or three times refugees. Today, as I walked on top of the rubble where homes
once stood, Egyptian soldiers called to me from the other side of the border,
'Go! Go!' because a tank was coming. And then waving and [asking] 'What's your
name?'
"Something disturbing about this friendly curiosity. It reminded me of how
much, to some degree, we are all kids curious about other kids. Egyptian kids
shouting at strange women wandering into the path of tanks. Palestinian kids
shot from the tanks when they peak out from behind walls to see what's going
on. International kids standing in front of tanks with banners. Israeli kids in
the tanks anonymously - occasionally shouting and also occasionally waving -
many forced to be here, many just aggressive - shooting into the houses as we
wander away…There is a great deal of concern here about the "reoccupation
of Gaza". Gaza is reoccupied every day to various extents but I think the
fear is that the tanks will enter all the streets and remain here instead of
entering some of the streets and then withdrawing after some hours or days to
observe and shoot from the edges of the communities. If people aren't already
thinking about the consequences of this war for the people of the entire region
then I hope you will start."[1]
It was the events of THAT DAY we call 9/11 topped off by President Bush's
advice a few days later to we the people that we should all go shopping if we
wanted to help, that drove my curiosity to learn "about the
consequences" of USA foreign policy in the Middle East.
Being a Christian, I also was driven by the need to forgive, love and do good
to my 'enemies' that led me to connect with the interfaith non-profit
OTFFP/Olive Trees Foundation for Peace during the summer of 2003.
I connected with the OTFFP after reading two oped's published in the Orlando
Sentinel written by the Palestinian Muslim and American Jewish Co-Founders of
the OTFFP regarding the need for open dialogue that recognizes, respects and
empathizes with the pain of the other; for when that happens, anyone of good
will, will be moved by compassion to do something to alleviate the pain of the
other.
The OTFFP organization united American and Israeli Jews, Christians and Muslims
after THAT DAY we call 9/11 to literally extend the olive branch of peace to
all the cousins in Father Abraham's family in Israel Palestine by providing the
funds to purchase fruit bearing trees on both sides of The Wall. So far, 30,000
have been rooted.
After a few phone calls and emails to the OTFFP organization, I committed to
attend a Sunday afternoon OTFFP meeting in south Orlando following the final
third of my first year of weekend retreats for students in a two year formation
program for Spiritual Director's.
During 2002-2003, I participated in a central Florida, Episcopal-Methodist
Formation Program for SD/Spiritual Director's/SD's. SD's are not counselors or
therapists, but are centered and prayerful people who have learned to listen
with their hearts to any other speaking of their struggles with God.
I knew going into the program that I would NOT be hanging out a shingle as an
SD, I was drawn to be there for the curriculum; studying the saints and various
ways of prayer. That is also when I began to write creative spiritual
literature.
But on a Sunday afternoon in the summer of 2003, after concluding my final
weekend retreat I attended my first OTFFP meeting and my life was irrevocably
changed; and it began that morning during a guided meditation.
The workshop leader instructed my class to close our eyes and breathe deep and
slow as she invited us to enter into a long corridor with many closed doors;
and then, she went silent. Immediately, I imagined myself skipping, jumping,
dancing and running past miles of closed doors as I headed to the end of that
long corridor. I was aware of, but not interested in any of the closed doors on
my right and left. I headed straight ahead although it was a while before I saw
the enormous cathedral sized double doors at the very end of the hallway. As I
approached the wooden doors they slowly opened into the inner space and I could
see trees and mountains. After crossing the threshold, I realized I stood upon
a mountain top and I could see for miles. There were people of every color and
creed, in diverse dress and all were at rest and in peaceful harmony under
those trees.
When the workshop leader interrupted my reverie, I did not want to leave that
mountain top. I also had no clue if I had a glimpse of heaven or a possibility
for this world, but as I was on my way to meet some of the Olive Trees for
Peace people I thought that had something to do with my imaginative meditation.
I was the first to arrive at Dr. Diab's home for the meeting, and on that
Sunday I was the only Christian in a room filled with American Jews and
Palestinian Muslims.
I was in awe of all of them as I prayed, "Jesus Christ! Will you look at
all these Muslims and Jews doing exactly what you commanded your followers must
do; forgive, love and bless ones enemies. Imagine when all we Christians do it
too!"
It was that fateful day that led me to travel two hours every Tuesday afternoon
for many months in order to listen and write down Dr. Diab's memoirs, with the
intention that it would be for his grandchildren.
But being an Irish story teller, American dissident and spiritual creative, I
had no control over the six fictional characters that welled up within me and
who began to converse with Dr. Diab during the days that followed our Tuesday
meetings. Not until I completed,
KEEP HOPE ALIVE did I even realize that my
'imaginary friends' also represented six different ways to intuit, love and
serve God.
KEEP HOPE
ALIVE
is also an historical fiction based on the memoirs of a 1948
Palestinian Muslim refugee who became an American citizen with Top Secret
Clearance during the Cold War and founded the non-profit interfaith Olive Trees
Foundation for Peace as a positive response to THAT DAY we call 9/11.
Because of my connection to the OTFFP, I journeyed the first time to occupied
territory in June 2005. I wrote down everything I experienced, felt in my gut
and wondered about. I went places I had never imagined existed and I did things
I never thought I would or could; such as leaving Ramallah for Jerusalem late
at night with a driver I did not know and who only spoke Arabic.
On that morning, I rode along with Dr. Diab and his driver to Ramallah from
Jerusalem, and witnessed the Wall in full frontal, brutal view. On my left was
a thirty foot high wall of concrete; on my right, only rows of bankrupt
businesses.
"Financed with U.S. aid at a cost
of $1.5 million per mile, the Israeli wall prevents residents from receiving
health care and emergency medical services. In other areas, the barrier
separates farmers from their olive groves which have been their families' sole
livelihood for generations."
[Washington Report on Middle East
Affairs, Page 43, Jan/Feb. 2007]
Dr. Diab and I had an appointment at the Palestinian Authority’s compound,
where Arafat is now buried.
We met with Rafiq Husseini, who had been the chief of staff to President Abbas until just recently, and he informed us:
“We have lost more than 1.1 million fruit-bearing trees in Palestinian
territories. Trees are about food, the environment, and life. Ancient trees
have been demolished by tanks, and we thank the Olive Trees Foundation for
Peace for addressing the need to replace them and rebuild the faith of our
people. Palestine has always been tolerant to people of all religions. The Jews
came here out of Spain along with many Arabs — and then came Zionism. When one
wants to take over another, war happens. President Abbas is a very bad
politician; he does not lie! He is ready to move on from the past. We have quit
crying over our losses; we must move on. Live and let live is the motto of this
administration. We can not carry on a battle; it must stop. Peace can only
happen with peace, not force. President Abbas has promised, ‘We will do
whatever it takes to show the world we want peace.’ We need America to help us.
The best thing would be for Americans to come and see the truth of the
situation for themselves. I encourage Americans to come and see the Wall; it
has nothing to do with security, but everything to do with grabbing water and
more land. When Americans understand the real situation, things will change for
the better. The humiliation at the checkpoints is beyond belief. It can drive
anyone to desperation. We condemn all terrorism, but resisting occupation is
necessary.”
After that meeting, Dr. Diab set off for his home village in the Galilee and I
explored Ramallah with a friend who was born and lives there. Just before
midnight, my friend walked me through the checkpoint to where the cabs waited.
I cringed when I saw the watchtower’s small window lit up, and I considered how
easy it would be to be shot at and never see it coming. The ground was rocky,
uneven, and littered with debris and the only light was from the moon.
My friend bargained with a cabbie in Arabic and I marveled that I, who even
hated to fly before 9/11, with absolutely no sense of direction at all, who
only speaks and understands English, was traveling alone through occupied
territory without any fear at all.
After two weeks of traveling through Israel Palestine with ten other Americans
connected with the OTFFP, I remained alone in Jerusalem for the following three
days and once again, my life was irrevocably changed.
A Little History:
In April 2005, two months before my first trip to Jerusalem, I turned the TV on
that had last been tuned onto the History channel. They were broadcasting a
show called, "Sexpionage" all about Russian female spies and one from
the Mossad.
The very first clip that ran before my eyes was of Vanunu being transported to
his closed door trial depicting his inspired move to write upon his palm:
"HIJACKED" and the Rome flight number he had been on. That was
followed by a clip of Shimon Perez in 1986 stating that Israel would never be
the first in the Mid East to possess nuclear weapons.
Then, a black and white photo of a bearded, unkempt and disheveled Vanunu
filled the TV screen and I thought his eyes looked just like George's of Beit
Jala's, and again, I heard in my heart:
"Do Something!"
I did email Vanunu after that show to thank him for what he had done in 1986
and to let him know that I and nine other Americans would be in his territory
in two months and we would like to take him to dinner or lunch.
But, just days before that trip, a Palestinian American warned me not to
contact Vanunu as Israel had denied him the right to speak to not just foreign
media but also ordered him to not speak to any foreigners at all.
I said,
"What kind of democracy is
that-that tells people who they can and cannot talk with?"
Only because a friend from Ramallah happened
to be in Jerusalem on the third Tuesday in June, and phoned to invite me out to dinner the moment I stepped out of
the shower after Hebron, did I venture out again and by chance met Vanunu on the first day of summer in 2005 and began a series of interviews with him.
I had no hunger for food after my day in Hebron but as we walked towards the
Old City and neared St. Georges Cathedral where Vanunu had been living, I asked
my friend if he knew about Vanunu. He recalled hearing about Vanunu's release
from prison in 2004, but he did not know Vanunu was a Christian who had grown
up in an Orthodox Jewish home but rejected the faith at 14 years old.
As we entered the courtyard, Vanunu was on his way out to a meeting and with a
few minutes difference, we would have missed him completely.
Instead, I was startled by his physical presence, for I had imagined Vanunu to
be dark eyed and much taller than I at 5'4". Vanunu is not much taller or
heavier than I, but what knocked me for a loop was how the sun on the first day
of summer illuminated his eyes to a light green-blue that immediately reminded
me of the eyes of an old woman I met in 1998, who irrevocably changed my life.
Her name was Bernice and I crossed paths with her for the first time just a few
weeks after I began visiting someone at a local nursing home. As I walked down
the hallway, Bernice called out, "Help me. Help me."
I had been a registered nurse for twenty-five years and when ever I hear
someone ask for help, I am compelled to do something, or at least try. All
Bernice wanted was for me to change her position, for she was completely
paralyzed. From a distance I thought her eyes were dark, but as I approached
her, I was startled at how light green-blue they were. That day was the
beginning of my now ten year nursing home ministry, and although I have no clue
what color Jesus' eyes may have been, in that moment, I sensed/experienced the
presence of The Other; that mystery we call God, for lack of a better word.
Crossing paths with Bernice was the first time I had known a visceral,
intuitive experience of the presence of God within another. It happened for the
second time in the courtyard of St. George's Cathedral in 2005, during the
chance crossing of paths with Vanunu, who inspired me to do something I had not
yet imagined I would or could.
During our third meeting, while Vanunu was telling me about growing up in
Marrakesh, Morocco he asked me if I had ever seen the "Dorothy
Day" movie, "The Man who Knew Too Much" for the beginning
scenes were shot where he grew up.
He meant to say Doris Day, but in that moment I realized my childhood dream of
being Brenda Starr-a comic book red headed investigative journalist had matured, for Vanunu's slip of the tongue was the catalyst
for me to begin to imagine following in the footsteps of Dorothy Day, the 20th
century socialist muckraker who became a Christian and a voice for the
voiceless in her newspaper "The Catholic Worker" which persists
today.
Dorothy Day understood that,
"Love
is not the starving of whole populations. Love is not the bombardment of open
cities. Love is not killing......Our manifesto is the Sermon on the Mount,
which means that we will try to be peacemakers."
During my travels through occupied Palestine and after listening with my heart
to the people who shared their stories with me, I asked everyone, "How can
I help? What can I do to try to be a peacemaker?"
Everyone responded,
"Tell our
stories."
Which is what Rachel Corrie and Dorothy Day did for the ignored and marginalized.
"HOPE has two children.The first is ANGER at the way things are. The second is COURAGE to DO SOMETHING about it."-St. Augustine
"He who is not angry when there is just cause for anger is immoral. Why? Because anger looks to the good of justice. And if you can live amid injustice without anger, you are immoral as well as unjust." - Aquinas
Everyone has the right to freedom of
opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions
without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and
ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.
" In the final analysis, it is between you and God. It was never between you and them anyway."-Mother Teresa
“You cannot talk like sane men around a peace table while the atomic bomb itself is ticking beneath it. Do not treat the atomic bomb as a weapon of offense; do not treat it as an instrument of the police. Treat the bomb for what it is: the visible insanity of a civilization that has ceased...to obey the laws of life.”- Lewis Mumford, 1946
The age of warrior kings and of warrior presidents has passed. The nuclear age calls for a different kind of leadership....a leadership of intellect, judgment, tolerance and rationality, a leadership committed to human values, to world peace, and to the improvement of the human condition. The attributes upon which we must draw are the human attributes of compassion and common sense, of intellect and creative imagination, and of empathy and understanding between cultures." - William Fulbright
“Any nation that year after year continues to raise the Defense budget while cutting social programs to the neediest is a nation approaching spiritual death.” - Rev. MLK
Establishment of Israel
"On the day of the termination of the British mandate and on the strength of the United Nations General Assembly declare The State of Israel will be based on freedom, justice and peace as envisaged by the prophets of Israel: it will ensure complete equality of social and political rights to all its inhabitants irrespective of religion it will guarantee freedom of religion [and] conscience and will be faithful to the Charter of the United Nations." - May 14, 1948. The Declaration of the Establishment of Israel