I
don't want it to be construed as 'She
deserved it.' But to recklessly send
students -- many of whom are
well-intentioned -- to send them into
harm's way in defiance of United States
State Department travel restrictions is
doing a great disservice
... -- Wayne
Firestone, director of the Center for
Israel Affairs at the Hillel
Foundation [Rachel
Corrie was a 23-year old American
University student from 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.]
The New
York Observer Wednesday, April 30, 2003 Rachel
Corrie Died In Palestine Rubble, But Her
Issue Lives by
Philip
Weiss ON THE morning of March
10, Cindy Corrie stopped inside
Union Station and called her daughter
overseas to go over the facts one more
time, before setting forth for the
Capitol, a copy of The Christian
Science Monitor under her arm, to
lobby Congressmen on two issues: the human
rights of Palestinians, and American
embassy protection for internationals like
her daughter, who was taking part in
protests in the occupied
territories. That was the last time mother and
daughter spoke. Six days later, Rachel
Corrie, 23, died when she was crushed
by an armored bulldozer outside the home
of a Palestinian pharmacist in the Gaza
Strip. Washington Congressman Brian
Baird was soon back in touch with
Cindy Corrie, to help her get her
daughter's body back to Olympia, Wash. And
since then, Mr. Baird has introduced
legislation calling for an investigation
of the circumstances of Rachel Corrie's
death, which the Israelis have ruled an
unfortunate accident. It is widely said that Mr. Baird's bill
is doomed. The Jewish Forward says
the legislation will never reach the
floor, adding (inaccurately) that only
Arab-American groups are for it. Only 19
Congressmen have signed on to the bill,
chiefly Democrats such as Georgia's
John Lewis, who was badly injured
himself in nonviolent protest during the
civil-rights movement. The two Washington
Senators have made mild statements about
Ms. Corrie, but their offices didn't
return my calls. The refrain everywhere
these days is, "Israel is the only
democracy in the region." All the same,
Ms. Corrie's death would seem to mark a
fresh phase in the effort to bring
criticism of the long Israeli
occupation into the American
mainstream. Many grassroots Jewish groups have
endorsed Congressman Baird's legislation.
They tend to be small, but have gained
force in major urban centers, and have
names like Jews Against the Occupation
(New York), Not in My Name (Chicago) or A
Jewish Voice for Peace (in the Bay Area).
And they all see the 36-year occupation as
a disaster for Israeli society. "Rachel Corrie represented the finest
tradition of nonviolent peacemaking," said
Rachael Kamel of the Jewish
Mobilization for a Just Peace, in
Philadelphia. "An investigation is needed
not only to clarify the circumstances of
her death, but also to help Congress and
the American public understand more fully
the violence carried out every day in the
occupied territories. "Rachel Corrie is a
hero," said Washington-based Charles
Lenchner, president of Jews for Peace
in Palestine and Israel. "These
international volunteers represent the
best of what American values are all about
-- Martin Luther King-style action." Sadly, the issue has gained greater
momentum from further bloodshed. Since Ms.
Corrie's death, two other members of the
group she was a part of, the International
Solidarity Movement, have been grievously
injured in shootings by the Israeli
Defense Force.
Wayne Firestone, director of the
Center for Israel Affairs at the Hillel
Foundation, says that the international
movement is a small one -- and a dubious
one. "It's deeply disturbing to see young
people being sent into a war zone against
U.S. policy," he said. "I don't want it to
be construed as 'She deserved it.' But to
recklessly send students -- many of whom
are well-intentioned -- to send them into
harm's way in defiance of United States
State Department travel restrictions is
doing a great disservice, not just to the
goal of peace in the area, but to the
interests of these young people." Hillel and other mainstream Jewish
organizations won the last battle on the
home front in which they were engaged: the
Israeli divestment movement. Last year, critics of the occupation
circulated petitions on major campuses
seeking divestment from companies doing
business in Israel. They met strong
resistance. Hillel groups organized
protests, with the slogan "Wherever We
Stand, We Stand With Israel." Many
university administrators opposed the
policies, and some of them, said
Jeffrey Ross, campus-affairs
director for the Anti-Defamation
League, were "not card-carrying
members of the pro-Israel community." Most
prominently, Harvard
[Jewish]
president Lawrence Summers said
that the movement was "anti-Semitic in
effect if not intent." Mr. Summers' charge caused enormous
agitation and pain in the Boston area.
Some academics protested that no criticism
of Israel could be allowed. "They were
totally unprepared for the rage -- often
from Jewish colleagues, Jewish friends,"
said one person who supported
divestment. In place of thoughtful, sensitive
professors, this next chapter features
young activists sleeping in Palestinians'
houses, walking down lanes in the West
Bank, and also drawing scorn back
here. "I
didn't anticipate that anyone would be
able to come up with a rationalization for
what happened to Rachel, but she's been
treated as rape victims have been
treated," Hilda Silverman, a member
in Boston of Jewish Women for Justice in
Israel/Palestine. And Susan Jacoby
of Women in Black, a loose-knit group of
women who oppose the occupation, wrote to
me: "I hope that in your own work you will
not be participating in the intensifying
and vitriolic campaign to smear that young
woman's name and deny her contribution to
the NON-violent movement and the cause of
peace with justice." A widely circulated article in the
Jewish press on Ms. Corrie's death said
that she died "sheltering Palestinian
murderers." A similar article said that
Rachel Corrie was protecting tunnels used
by terrorists to bring weapons in from
Egypt. Some have highlighted a picture of
Ms. Corrie at a protest, burning a paper
image of an American flag. "Alice," 27, a Jewish Englishwoman who
is a member of I.S.M. and comforted Rachel
Corrie as she died, says that the land on
which Ms. Corrie was crushed is outside
the house of an English-speaking
Palestinian pharmacist and his wife and
three children, in a zone that Israelis
have sought to clear in all kinds of ways,
from bulldozing to random shootings into
living rooms. Yes, there are tunnels into
Egypt from homes in Rafah, Alice says, but
the armed Palestinians who built them give
I.S.M. a wide berth, and vice versa. I.S.M. says that the other two members
who were injured were also engaged in
nonviolent protest. Brian Avery,
24, an American, was walking down a road
at dusk in the embattled West Bank city of
Jenin when he was shot in the face. He is
said to be recovering, but will require
several more surgeries. Tom
Hurndall, 21, an Englishman, was
hustling children away from an Israeli
tank on a square in Rafah, the city in
which Rachel Corrie died, when he was shot
in the head. He is now on life support,
and his father, a lawyer, has also called
for an international investigation. For over a year, I.S.M. had operated in
the belief that as internationals, they
were immune to certain types of attack.
That feeling is over, and I.S.M. is
reconsidering its tactics. Still, leaders say the movement doesn't
lack for recruits. "Before the last month,
we were getting maybe seven applications
every three days," said Tom
Wallace. "I think the last time I
checked, we were getting 10 a day." Mr. Wallace, 43, cut his teeth in AIDS
activism in Boston. Alice comes out of the
antiglobalist movement. It would seem that
hundreds of young people have flowed
through I.S.M., chiefly from the United
States, Canada, the U.K., Sweden and
Italy. They have sought to stop certain
actions by the Israeli army -- for a time,
I.S.M. says, Corrie and other activists
camped outside a well that the I.D.F. was
trying to destroy -- but also to bring
American attention to the protested
practices. | Website
note: Abraham Foxman,
wealthy and controversial chief
of the Anti Defamation League,
likes to refer to himself as a
"Holocaust survivor." As a
biography
on this website shows, he was not
even born when Hitler invaded his
native Poland, and he was looked
after by Polish Catholics
throughout the war; his parents
also "survived". | Rachel Corrie's death has focused
attention on the Israeli policy of house
demolition, under which the army will
bulldoze houses belonging to families said
to have a connection to suicide bombers.
"What Saddam Hussein would do is
torture and shoot the family; what Israel
does is destroy the house as a deterrent,
to get them to think twice," said
Jeffrey Ross of A.D.L.The Israeli human-rights group B'Tselem
says that there have been 271 house
demolitions in the last year and a half.
It says the process is "extrajudicial" --
i.e., without a requirement of proof by
any judicial body -- and represents a
"gross violation" of proscriptions against
collective punishment. In America, Rachel Corrie's death
raises a different question: Is there a
place in our politics for those who see
the occupation as objectionable and feel
that the U.S. must put more pressure on
the Israeli government to change? That argument has come down, in the
eyes of some, to the person and motivation
of Rachel Corrie. Very well: Rachel Corrie was
passionate, highly focused and grew up in
an internationalist-oriented family.
Foreign-exchange students (from Brazil,
Japan and Russia) stayed in the Corrie
house, and in high school, Rachel visited
Russia and came back saying, "My heart is
in Olympia, but my soul is in Russia." Her
older brother and sister pursued more
conventional paths. In college, Rachel
worked part-time for three years serving
the mentally ill. She had such enormous empathy for the
suffering of others that she could be a
pain in the ass. She pushed her handsome,
reserved boyfriend to cry -- and when he
finally did, ate the tear and recorded the
event with triumph in her journal before
leaving him for the zillionth time, he
said, smiling, at her memorial service at
Evergreen State College in March. That service began with a prayer from
Rachel's Jewish uncle. And many of her
teachers from elementary school spoke with
awe about the girl's sense of purpose. A
film was played in which 10-year-old
Rachel made a fierce statement about
children's deaths from hunger: "People in
Third World countries think and laugh and
smile, just like us. We have got to
understand that we are them; they are
us." That universalist feeling is what took
her to Rafah and death, as it would have
taken her to Philadelphia, Miss., 40 years
ago. She was in an American tradition. "We know that Rachel's death has been
politicized," her mother said. "I would
like people to know that we're receiving a
tremendous amount of support from Jewish
people around the world. And I also want
people to know how much empathy we have
for what the Israeli people have suffered.
I feel that I know something of their
pain." As she held off the bulldozers made by
the American company Caterpillar, Rachel
joked about dressing in glam-rock costumes
instead of the orange vest that didn't
save her, about playing Pat Benatar's
"Love Is a Battlefield" on a boombox. She was hard-working and hard-laughing,
her blond hair was greasy, her room was a
mess. "Rachel was a hometown girl," said
Evergreen college president Thomas
(Les) Purce, who'd known her for many
years. Maybe she has managed to bring an
issue back with her. You may reach Philip Weiss via email
at: [email protected]. -
Last
e-mail home of US student Rachel
Corrie, crushed to death trying to stop
the illegal destruction of Palestinian
homes (Her
Israeli murderer has still not been
charged)
-
Israeli
Bulldozer Kills U.S. Woman, 23
-
Jenin:
The Israeli Army Bulldozer driver's
story
-
More
shocking
photographs
-
Israeli
Army tanks fire on American,
Palestinian memorial demo for Rachel
Corrie
-
|