Tuesday, March 18, 2003
[Rachel
Corrie was a 23-year old American
University student in Washington state,
USA, who went to Palestine and tried to
stop the killing of Palestinians and the
illegal destruction of their homes. Her
murderer has still not been
charged.] An
American Martyr-May She Rest in
Peace Rachel
Corrie's last Email home An
explanation from Craig and Cindy
Corrie, parents of Rachel
Corrie |
We are now in a
period of grieving and still
finding out the details behind
the death of Rachel in the Gaza
Strip.
We have raised
all our children to appreciate
the beauty of the global
community and family and are
proud that Rachel was able to
live her convictions. Rachel was
filled with love and a sense of
duty to her fellow man, wherever
they lived. And, she gave her
life trying to protect those that
are unable to protect
themselves. Rachel wrote
to us from the Gaza Strip and we
would like to release to the
media her experience in her own
words at this
time.
-- Statement March 16,
2003 |
Excerpts
from an e-mail from Rachel Corrie to her
family on February 7, 2003 from the Gaza
Strip.
HAVE been in Palestine for two weeks and
one hour now, and I still have very few
words to describe what I see. It is most
difficult for me to think about what's
going on here when I sit down to write
back to the United States -- something
about the virtual portal into luxury. I
don't know if many of the children here
have ever existed without tank-shell holes
in their walls and the towers of an
occupying army surveying them constantly
from the near horizons. I think, although
I'm not entirely sure, that even the
smallest of these children understand that
life is not like this everywhere.
An eight-year-old was shot and killed
by an Israeli tank two days before I got
here, and many of the children murmur his
name to me, "Ali" -- or point at the
posters of him on the walls. The children
also love to get me to practice my limited
Arabic by asking me "Kaif Sharon?" "Kaif
Bush?" and they laugh when I say "Bush
Majnoon" "Sharon Majnoon" back in my
limited Arabic. (How is Sharon? How
is Bush? Bush is crazy. Sharon is
crazy.) Of course this isn't quite what I
believe, and some of the adults who have
the English correct me: Bush mish
Majnoon... Bush is a businessman. Today I
tried to learn to say "Bush is a tool",
but I don't think it translated quite
right. But anyway, there are eight-year-
olds here much more aware of the workings
of the global power structure than I was
just a few years ago -- at least regarding
Israel. Nevertheless, I think about the fact
that 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 is not at all the
reality: what with the difficulties the
Israeli Army would face if they shot an
unarmed US citizen, and with the fact
that I have money to buy water when the
army destroys wells, and, of course,
the fact that I have the option of
leaving. 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. I have a home. I am
allowed to go see the ocean. Ostensibly it
is still quite difficult for me to be held
for months or years on end without a trial
(this because I am a white US citizen, as
opposed to so many others). When I leave
for school or work I can be relatively
certain that there will not be a heavily
armed soldier waiting half way between Mud
Bay and downtown Olympia at a checkpoint
-- a soldier with the power to decide
whether I can go about my business, and
whether I can get home again when I'm
done. So, if I feel outrage at arriving and
entering briefly and incompletely into the
world in which these children exist, I
wonder conversely about how it would be
for them to arrive in my world. They know
that children in the United States don't
usually have their parents shot and they
know they sometimes get to see the
ocean. But once you have seen the ocean and
lived in a silent place, where water is
taken for granted and not stolen in the
night by bulldozers, and once you have
spent an evening when you haven't wondered
if the walls of your home might suddenly
fall inward waking you from your sleep,
and once you've met people who have never
lost anyone -- once you have experienced
the reality of a world that isn't
surrounded by murderous towers, tanks,
armed "settlements" and now a giant metal
wall, I wonder if you can forgive the
world for all the years of your childhood
spent existing -- just existing -- in
resistance to the constant stranglehold of
the world's fourth largest military --
backed by the world's only superpower --
in it's attempt to erase you from your
home. That is something I wonder about
these children. I wonder what would happen
if they really knew.
AS an afterthought to all this rambling, I
am in Rafah, a city of about 140,000
people, approximately 60 percent of whom
are refugees -- many of whom are twice or
three times refugees. Rafah existed prior
to 1948, but most of the people here are
themselves or are descendants of people
who were relocated here from their homes
in historic Palestine -- now Israel. Rafah
was split in half when the Sinai returned
to Egypt. Currently, the Israeli army is
building a fourteen-meter-high wall
between Rafah in Palestine and the border,
carving a no-mans land from the houses
along the border. Six hundred and two
homes have been completely bulldozed
according to the Rafah Popular Refugee
Committee. The number of homes that have
been partially destroyed is greater.
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. Followed by waving and "what's
your name?" There is 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.
In addition to the constant presence of
tanks along the border and in the western
region between Rafah and settlements along
the coast, there are more IDF towers here
than I can count -- along the horizon, at
the end of streets. Some just army green
metal. Others these strange spiral
staircases draped in some kind of netting
to make the activity within anonymous.
Some hidden'just beneath the horizon of
buildings. A new one went up the other day
in the time it took us to do laundry and
to cross town twice to hang banners. Despite the fact that some of the areas
nearest the border are the original Rafah
with families who have lived on this land
for at least a century, only the 1948
camps in the center of the city are
Palestinian controlled areas under Oslo.
But as far as I can tell, there are few if
any places that are not within the sights
of some tower or another. Certainly there
is no place invulnerable to apache
helicopters or to the cameras of invisible
drones we hear buzzing over the city for
hours at a time. I've been having trouble accessing news
about the outside world here, but I hear
an escalation of war on Iraq is
inevitable. 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 they will
start. I also hope you'll come here. We've been wavering between
five and six internationals. The
neighborhoods that have asked us for
some form of presence are Yibna, Tel El
Sultan, Hi Salam, Brazil, Block J,
Zorob, and Block O. There is also need
for constant night-time presence at a
well on the outskirts of Rafah since
the Israeli army destroyed the two
largest wells. According to the municipal water office
the wells destroyed last week provided
half of Rafah's water supply. Many of the
communities have requested internationals
to be present at night to attempt to
shield houses from further demolition.
After about ten p.m. it is very difficult
to move at night because the Israeli army
treats anyone in the streets as resistance
and shoots at them. So clearly we are too
few.
I CONTINUE to believe that my home,
Olympia, could gain a lot and offer a lot
by deciding to make a commitment to Rafah
in the form of a sister-community
relationship. Some teachers and children's
groups have expressed interest in e-mail
exchanges, but this is only the tip of the
iceberg of solidarity work that might be
done. Many people want their voices to be
heard, and I think we need to use some of
our privilege as internationals to get
those voices heard directly in the US,
rather than through the filter of
well-meaning internationals such as
myself.
I am just beginning to learn, from what
I expect to be a very intense tutelage,
about the ability of people to organize
against all odds, and to resist against
all odds. Thanks for the news I've been getting
from friends in the US. I just read a
report back from a friend who organized a
peace group in Shelton, Washington, and
was able to be part of a delegation to the
large January 18th [2003] protest
in Washington DC. People here watch the
media, and they told me again today that
there have been large protests in the
United States and "problems for the
government" in the UK. So
thanks for allowing me to not feel like a
complete polyanna when I tentatively tell
people here that many people in the United
States do not support the policies of our
government, and that we are learning from
global examples how to resist.
Rachel's
body, still in her bright red jacket, lies
crushed, while her stunned co-workers look
on 
Israeli
Bulldozer Kills U.S. Woman, 23
Jenin:
The Israeli Army Bulldozer driver's
story
More
shocking
photographs  -
|