|
This is the time of feasts and holidays.
We are on our second day of Eid El Adha, the Muslim Feast of Sacrifice;
Hanukkah, the Feast of Lights, was celebrated few days ago. Christmas
is around the corner. As we celebrate our separate holidays, it is clear
that we have not yet found the middle ground that would enable all of us
to genuinely share the celebrations of each other. There are many
theories, academic arguments and practical reasons of why we have not
yet arrived at the middle ground. Some would lay the blame on this side
or that and yet others would put the blame on all sides and show their
inability to make acceptable political compromises. Yet, there are
groups on both sides that continue to insist that it is not possible to
arrive at peace, let middle ground, with the other side. Some would want
to argue that on this Christmas time and in reference specifically to
Bethlehem that politics should be out and only the best in the religious
traditions as reflected particularly in tourists and pilgrims arriving
to Bethlehem should be highlighted. Turning a blind eye to politics is
sure to bring people together, according to this argument. This is a
surrealistic a position as imagining that there is no concrete wall
surrounding Bethlehem, the town of nativity.
That the current state of relations
between our two peoples is separation is best illustrated with the
concrete separation wall surrounding Bethlehem and its environs. The
separation wall is a reminder that the twinning relationship that
existed historically between Bethlehem and Jerusalem is nowadays
blocked. Aesthetically, though, the separation wall destroys the simple
image of Bethlehem as a small town with care-free shepherds wandering
over hills with their flocks. This is an image that millions of children
worldwide have grown up with. Anyone visiting Bethlehem today would know
that this is not so and that the harsh reality of concrete separation
renders Bethlehem and its people unable to exercise even basic rights of
travel back and forth to Jerusalem let aside needed economic and other
pursuits.
An Israeli who heard me speak one time
about the separation wall reminisced about the good times when we all
used to travel freely throughout the Palestinian Territories and Israel.
He argued that the separation wall was a security necessity because of
suicide bombers and others who seek to use violence against Israel. The
argument has been made so many times but in the end it is the absence of
willingness to make the needed concessions for peace that makes
separation walls a necessity. The necessity lies in peace making and not
in separation walls. The responsibility to move forward towards peace
lies squarely on both Israeli and Palestinian sides. There is no excuse
trying to derail any moves towards peace by insisting that it is the
other side’s responsibility to show its willingness and readiness to
stop the use of the military and violence, respectively. We are
symbiotically tied to each other and while Christmas and Bethlehem stand
out only around the last week of December, the message of Bethlehem is
one calling for people to be together and for the good will to overcome
the particular interests and narrow interpretations and interests of
political positions.
As Christmas approaches, the Israeli
Ministry of Defence in charge of access to Bethlehem through the gates
of the separation wall together with the Israeli Ministry of Tourism
would want to give the foreign tourist and pilgrim visiting Bethlehem
the feeling that all is well. Aside from the Peace Signs that greet the
visitor ironically at the checkpoints and gates of the separation wall,
symbolic gifts are also given to tourists to pass them on to the
children of Bethlehem. Special permits, like in Muslim holidays, are
given to hundreds of Bethlehem’s Christians to move back and forth
freely to Jerusalem. Likewise, hundreds of Arab Israelis and
Palestinians from East Jerusalem have relatively open access to visit
the holy sites in the town of nativity. Yet, what appears to be
magnanimous on the part of Israeli officials during the Christmas season
points precisely to the problem that is caused by separation.
An American friend of mine once proposed
to some Israeli officials that the permit system that allows
Palestinians over a certain age to move freely during the Christian and
Muslim holidays should be extended year round. When the Israeli
officials told him of the security aspect that prevents them from doing
this, his response was if the permit system worked during Christmas,
Easter and Ramadan why wouldn’t it work year-round? My wise American
friend challenged the Israeli official to make a test by allowing for
three months Palestinians
over 45 years of age to move freely in
and out of Bethlehem and other Palestinian towns and villages. If the
three months prove successful then those above the age 40 would be next
to be given free access, and so on. That the Israeli politics of
security determines every little thing in the Palestinian Territories
does affect Bethlehem as it affects other Palestinian towns and
communities.
At this Christmas time, it is important
to think seriously about moving away from cosmetic steps aimed at
beautifying separation particularly between Jerusalem and Bethlehem.
Instead, we should all think how to open up Bethlehem and to open up all
Palestinian towns, villages and localities to each other. We are not
asking for free access to Israel; we are seeking to be able to move
freely within the Palestinian Territories. If you would argue that this
is not possible till peace arrives, then the question is what are you
doing to advance prospects of peace? And how would you convince average
Palestinians that you are serious about peace negotiations?
Separation is not the answer,
Christmassy and holiday greetings and symbolic gestures are not the
answer either. The answer lies in creating a middle ground that would
advance the prospects for peace and that would make the twinning of
Bethlehem and Jerusalem a reality once again. This middle ground will
not be created if there is no willingness on your part to end the
military occupation of Palestinian lands. Permit systems, given around
Christmas and Easter time and the Muslim holidays, are a reflection of
continuing occupation bolstered by the system of separation and hence,
in their very nature, point to the abuse of basic human rights that is
ongoing and that cannot beautify military occupation.
On our part we need to send you a clear
message that we have opted for peaceful means to challenge continuing
occupation. Violence, in whatever form and method, will only produce a
vicious cycle in which nobody could win. Christmas time is a time for a
message of peace and good will. It is a time to remind each and everyone
of us that the great holiday traditions in Judaism, Christianity and
Islam can and should be shared and appreciated by all. When the time
comes that Bethlehem and Jerusalem are open to each other and when
Palestinians and Israelis can move freely throughout the Land, then we
would all know that we have done what is needed in order to reconcile
our historic political differences and to move onward towards touching
base with the human in each other.
Happy
Hanukkah Merry Christmas Blessed Eid El Adha
|