On Sunday mornIng, our sixth day on our journey, we all attended The Evangelical Lutheran Christmas Church in Bethlehem. We were welcomed open-armed by the congregation and worshipped in Arabic and English.
2017 October Pilgrimage
Tent of Nations: “We Refuse to be Enemies”
21 October 2017
This afternoon we drove through green, terraced land to the Tent of Nations farm for lunch and a tour. The farm has been passed down through the same family for 101 years. Despite having a clear paper trail of ownership stretching back through Jordanian, British, and even Turkish rule, the Nassar family has been locked in a 26-year long legal battle in Israeli courts to keep their land. Throughout this time, the six surrounding settler colonies have been rapidly expanding. This afternoon we drove through green, terraced land to the Tent of Nations farm for lunch and a tour. The farm has been passed down through the same family for 101 years. Despite having a clear paper trail of ownership stretching back through Jordanian, British, and even Turkish rule, the Nassar family has been locked in a 26-year long legal battle in Israeli courts to keep their land. Throughout this time, the six surrounding settler colonies have been rapidly expanding.
We heard about the many struggles that Tent of Nations has been confronted with over the years including:
- Israeli uprooting of 1500 olive and other fruit trees, in an attempt to claim the land is uncultivated
- Rubble dumped to block the road leading to the farm
- Demolition orders for the cistern rain collection system (there is no water or electricity service to the area)
- Legal notification papers scattered randomly throughout the property instead of being delivered to the office. Volunteers help keep an eye out for these documents, which must be given immediately to lawyers to contest various demolition orders. Through all of these attacks, Tent of Nations has retained a commitment to positive action rather than reaction.
To me, it is clear that the Nassars and the friends who work in partnership with them are constantly planting. They are planting olive trees, but they are also planting seeds of empowerment in their community. In particular, their empowerment program for women is an investment that bears fruit years down the line, as mothers share what they have learned with their children. There are many forces at work to uproot the work at Tent of Nations, but as Amal Nassar says, “we plant again.”
~ Sarah Morgan
Occupation on Steroids
21 October 2017
Before we visited it, Palestine’s largest city Hebron was described to me as “the occupation on steroids.” When you see the map of Israeli settler colonies in the West Bank, it looks like Swiss cheese, with the Palestinian territories resembling (ever shrinking) holes. Touring Hebron, I felt as though this same dynamic was manifesting at the level of the city block. We walked through the Palestinian souk in H2—the section of the old city under Israeli military control—where at street level, Palestinian merchants still operate their storefronts, while Israeli settlers occupy the floors above. Nets catch trash and rocks thrown by the settlers out their windows at the Palestinians. Each Saturday, settlers walk the souk in propaganda tours, accompanied by 1-2 Israeli Defense Forces or Border Police Officers per settler, and are known to be particularly hostile. A settler in a tour group once said to our guide Usama, “This is our land. We’ll occupy it all. We’ll kick you out, and kill all Arabs.”
I’ve been excited to visit Christian Peacemaker Teams’ (CPT) Hebron office, having been aware but not deeply knowledgeable of their work for some time. CPT staff and volunteer delegations provide Palestinians in Hebron, particularly children, with accompaniment, witness, nonviolent intervention, and other actions to help reduce the severity of violence they experience from Israeli Defense Force officers, and to document human rights violations.
Listening to CPT’s presentation, I was impressed by the intentionality of their method, which prioritizes partnerships with the people most directly affected, following their lead regarding how and in what ways to intervene. We watched a video that one of their peacemakers shot, documenting a military officer’s excessive use of force on a Palestinian teenager. In addition to this documentation, the peacemaker’s intervention included calmly but emphatically drawing attention to the officer’s actions, by repeatedly demanding that he loosen his chokehold to allow the young person to breathe, and asking what the young person was accused of having done.
Amongst social justice-committed people of my generation and younger, I have felt like pacifism has begun to acquire a bit of a bad rap, associated with the complacency of privileged individuals who make theoretical arguments against violence while doing little to address injustice. The peace that they seek is one of comfort and the absence of conflict. The work of the Christian Peacemaker Teams reminds me that pacifism can be active, risk-taking, and maybe even a bit militant. In the social movements course for high school students that I teach each summer, I try to highlight instructive historical examples of faith-based pacifists, such as the folks (mostly church people) who committed civil disobedience by providing housing for individuals escaping conflicts in Central America during the sanctuary movement of the 1980’s, or the Quakers who in the late 1970’s broke into the FBI headquarters in Media, Pennsylvania and exposed the abuses perpetrated by the FBI’s Cointelpro program. There is currently a very robust conversation amongst young people about what it means to be a person with privilege, and operate as an ally to those who are systemically marginalized. To me, these examples provide compelling models for an approach to allyship that is especially relevant in situations like the one our Pilgrimage has been seeking to understand in Palestine.
~ Tim Jones-Yelvington