Posts Tagged taayush
Al-Tal’a, Um Zaituna
Posted by Joseph Dana in Southern Hebron Hills, West Bank on January 31st, 2010
A report from David Shulman about the South Hebron Hills:
January 30, 2010 Al-Tal’a, Um Zaituna
“The most desperate fights are often the most hopeful,” Istvan says to me as we stand on the hill looking down at the shepherds and their sheep. You can always rely on Istvan for the surprising Hungarian perspective on things—not usually an optimistic one, but humane and morally acute in a dark, perhaps ironic way. This is his fourth trip with us to South Hebron. He likes the Ta’ayush mode, which he thinks exemplifies the central Gandhian principle: what is inside shapes what is outside; if you can overcome your own weaknesses and fear, you will have an incalculable effect on the most recalcitrant situation. Besides, there’s another consideration of a totally non-instrumental nature. He cites an extreme example. Those Germans and Poles and others who saved the lives of Jews during the Nazi period didn’t do it to defeat Nazism; they did it because it was right, a moral act in need of no justification or corroboration outside itself.
This comes as a timely reminder, because yesterday afternoon I was harangued at some length by a former colleague, a Russian humanist of the old school, by now thoroughly disillusioned: in a struggle, he said, between those with principles, driven by moral concerns, and what he calls the “Hottentot” rule—”If I take your wife, that is good; if you take my wife, that is bad”—in such a struggle, the Hottentots will always win. [I hope my Hottentot readers will forgive him, and me.] Moral scruples, in short, always weaken you; it’s the thugs who come out on top. So here we are in the living laboratory of South Hebron, where we can perform an experiment, in real time, to test these two opposed hypotheses.
We’ve come to accompany the Palestinian shepherds, who have been harassed in recent days even more than usual by Israeli settlers. The settlers, backed up by the army and the police, are constantly driving the shepherds at gunpoint off their historic grazing grounds; sometimes they beat them or throw rocks at them or even shoot at them for good measure. We divide up into three groups, each one responsible for one large herd; I am entrusted with the Al-Tal’a/ Um Zaituna contingent. I find Jamil, together with some 80 or 90 sheep and four of his young sons and other boys, on the rocky slope just under the cow-barn of the Maon settlement. He gives me a radiant welcome, his face alight with pleasure; Jamil is a true bon vivant, odd as the term might sound in the harsh desert setting of South Hebron. (You can see him in the attached picture.) He’s also monolingual in Arabic, a great advantage for me. He tells me that this morning settlers have already pointed their guns at him and his sons and told him to go away—or they would shoot. I think the sheep and the children are still a little too close to the settlement, and together we decide they’ll move some ways down the hill.
So far so good. The sheep are also happy—these slopes, normally inaccessible to Palestinian shepherds, are thick with fresh green undergrowth and the delicious thorny leaves the sheep adore. It’s rained a bit this winter; the soil is reviving under wind and winter cloud, a ravishing pastiche of green and grey. Here the name of the game, as we know well, is somehow to gain time—an hour, two, three, long enough for the herd to graze to its fill before the soldiers and the settlers turn up, as they always do. I have instructions from Amiel to avoid confrontation this time: if we see them approaching, we are to get the shepherds out of danger as quickly as we can. No arrests, if possible, today.
We talk, we laugh, we play. Jamil wants me to mount his donkey, Humara. How is it? he asks after I’ve clambered up on top. Much better than driving a car, I say. The children, as always, want their picture taken; they solemnly introduce themselves and, one by one, come to shake our hands. “Are you afraid of the soldiers?” little Ibrahim asks me, and I say, “No, not afraid, but I don’t want any trouble for you.” An hour goes by, wind whipping at our faces. I dismount from Humara. There is dust in the air, a sign of coming storm.
First we see the police cars driving up to Maon, blue lights flashing. They sit there, waiting. I’m hoping they just came by to have a look and won’t come at us, especially since we’ve now opened up a substantial gap between the herd and the outer perimeter of the settlement. But of course the hope is quickly dashed. A large posse of soldiers and cops is soon marching toward us over the rocks [see attached photo]. They reach Zvi and the other Um Zaituna flock first. Even at a distance, I can see them performing the remorseless stages of their beloved ritual: there is a piece of paper being waved at Zvi and the shepherds, clearly the signed order declaring this little patch of desert a Closed Military Zone; the order is examined, photographed, there are the always Quixotic protests, followed by threats from the soldiers and, after a few minutes, a gradual withdrawal of our people eastwards, deeper into the desert. Maybe, I say to myself, the soldiers won’t bother Jamil and his Ta’ayush protectors. No such luck. Having heroically driven the Um Zaituna flock down toward the wadi, the soldiers and policemen pick their way over the rocks toward us.
Ta’ayush has a new website
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel on December 30th, 2009
Please have a look and bookmark the new site
Ta’ayush Report-Shabbat 3 October 2009
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, Southern Hebron Hills, West Bank on October 9th, 2009
The following is a report on a Ta’ayush action from 3 October 2009:
שבת 03.10.09
בבוקר יום שבת יצאנו לפעילות יחד עם תושבי טוואה שבדרום הר-חברון. מתנחלי מעון פלשו לתוך שטח הואדי המפריד בין טוואנה למעון ושתלו שם גפנים, למרות שזוהי אדמת העיר טוואנה. המנהל האזרחי קבע (לאחר שתילת הגפנים), שהשטח של מעון הוא עד סוף הגפנים, ושאר השטח הוא של טוואנה (זאת למרות שלפני כן ובעצם מאז ומתמיד כל השטח הוא של טוואנה), אבל למרות טענה זו המנהל קיבע גדר כמה מאות מטרים אחרי הגפנים, באופן שגזל עוד שטח מתושבי טוואנה.
לפיכך, יצאנו עם תושבי טוואנה לשתול סברסים ליד הגדר שקבע המנהל ופנימה לתוך השטח שלהם, על מנת לקבוע עובדות בשטח ולסמן את הגבול. תושבי טוואנה חוששים שהגדר פשוט תלך ותתרחק כל פעם עוד קצת אל תוך שטחם, דבר שייגמר בהפקעה גמורה של כל השטח. לאחר כשעה של חפירת בורות לשתילים והתחלת השתילה הגיעו הצבא והמשטרה. למרות נוכחותם, הם לא מנעו מאיתנו לעבוד, והעבודה הסתיימה כעבור שעתיים. כל השתילים שהיו במריצות נשתלו וסומנו במעגל אבנים סביבם, ואף הושקו.
מטוואנה המשכנו לסוסיא הפלשתינית, שם אורגן יום בניית והעפת עפיפונים לילדי האזור ולילדי פעילים. גם לשם לווינו על ידי הצבא, אך הוא לא מנע מבעדנו את הפעילות. הפעילות התנהלה על מי מנוחות ועפיפונים חגו בשמי סוסיא. מפתיע וגם משמח היה (למרות שלא אמור להיות שום דבר מפתיע בהעפת עפיפונים שאינה נחשבת מעשה פלילי, אבל במציאות שלנו כנראה לכל פעולה יש פוטנציאל כזה ) לראות את הילדים נהנים, למרות שנוכחות הצבא הרתיעה אחדים.
Saturday 03.10.09
On Saturday morning we went to work with the residents of Twane in south Mount Hebron. The settlers from neighboring Ma’on invaded the valley which lies between them and Twane and planted grape vines in the land owned by the Palestinians. After the settlers took over the land de facto, the military Civil Administration declared all the land which they planted as belonging to them and the remaining land as belonging to Twane (even though all of the land in the area is owned by Twane). However, when the Civil Administration erected a fence between the two areas it was put up, not immediately after the vines but several hundred meters inside the Palestinian land, in such a way as to take over a larger part of their land.
We went with the residents of Twane to plant sabra cactuses near the new fence on the Palestinian side in order to mark the border and show the Palestinian ownership of the area. The Palestinians are worried that the fence will be inched forward as time goes on, slowly taking over the whole of their land in the area. After working the land for about an hour, and just as we were beginning to place the plants in the ground the police and army arrived. However there was no attempt to stop us from working and after two hours the work was done. All the seedlings in the wheelbarrows were planted, marked with a circle of stones and watered.
From Twane we continued to Chirbet Susya, where there was a kite building and flying day for the children of the area and the children of the activists. We were followed by the army but they did not interfere with the activity which took place without any problems. It was nice and surprising to see the children having fun despite military presence which frightened some of them (there of course should be nothing surprising in the success of the activity, as kite flying is in no way illegal and yet it seems that in our reality even this is not to be taken for granted).
Combatants for Peace in the West Bank
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, West Bank on July 25th, 2009
Ta’ayush joined Combatants for Peace near Tul Karem to build a protest structure next to an illegal outpost. They are working on getting television coverage of the event which means the main footage will not go out until tomorrow. Below is a sneak peak of my footage of the day.
Picnic at an Illegal Outpost
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, West Bank on July 12th, 2009
Yesterday, members of Ta’ayush set out to have a picnic at an illegal outpost built on Palestinian land next to the settlement of Susya in the southern West Bank. Susya is divided into three places; Palestinian Susya, Jewish settlement Susya and archeological site Susya. Often, the first construction of an illegal outpost is a synagogue which the IDF is less willing to destroy. About one year ago settlers from Susya built a synagogue on the privately owned land of a local Palestinian. The area is known as Flag Hill (Givat HaDegal). Within weeks, the settlers had laid a foundation for one house and sure enough today a house now stands on Flag Hill. The IDF actively protects the house despite there being no full time inhabitants.
We encountered problems before we even arrived at the outpost. A minibus of Ta’ayush activists was stopped at the main checkpoint separating Jerusalem and the southern West Bank. Soldiers asked for our ID cards and without a stated reason held us at the checkpoint for over an hour. Presumably, they were requesting an order from a high commander that would bar us entry to the West Bank, efficiently denying us freedom of movement because we were engaged in left wing actions. This order never came. The commander at the checkpoint wrote down our names and ID numbers while informing us that we were not allowed to enter the south West Bank and if we were found to be in a “military area” we would be detained for 48 hours. This, of course, was a lie as he had no authority to issue such a statement and it was not put in writing. He was trying to frighten us which he failed to achieve. We entered through another checkpoint and eventually made our way to the picnic.
Ta’ayush has been monitoring the expansion of Flag Hill and yesterday decided to have a peaceful picnic in protest of the Army’s active participation in maintaining this outpost. We were a group of Jewish Israelis invited by the Palestinian land owner to have a picnic on his land. We thought, by all accounts, we had every right to be there. As we walked up the hill to the outpost, five or six IDF soldiers came to greet us. Without an order from a commander, they could do nothing so we continued and set up our picnic complete with hummus, watermelon and homemade pita from the land owner. A commander arrived within minutes and pronounced the area a closed military zone ordering us to leave within five minutes or face arrest. We continued to enjoy the picnic as the Army began arresting people, going after Ezra Nawi first.
The IDF arrested three people and removed the rest of us, over 20 people, from the hilltop. We returned to the land owner’s home and waited for word from those arrested. They were driven to a checkpoint about 15 minutes away from Susya and simply dropped off. One of those arrested told me that he was saying to the soldiers, “you are showing me that you broke the law and not me. If I did something wrong arrest me! Take me to a judge. But you are unwilling because I did nothing wrong and you did”
How is the Right Going to Spin This?
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, West Bank on July 10th, 2009
I am surprised that Fox News has decided to cover the weekly protests against the wall in Bil’in. To those who are informed of the situation here, Bil’in is a well known story of oppression and protest. Tireless peace activists from all parts of the world have lost their lives and been seriously injured at Bil’in. The world has, until recently, been unaware of this story. My friend Max Blumenthal covered the story of Bil’in two months ago for the Daily Beast and has been writing articles about the situation there recently on the Huffington Post. Certainly he has helped to get the story noticed by the mainstream American press. With the news that Fox News is covering the story, I hope that change is coming and our collective work for the village of Bil’in has not been in vain.
For more videos of the weekly protests in Bil’in please visit Yisrael’s youtube channel here. He has been there on ground with a video camera almost from the beginning.
Settler Violence Makes it to the Evening News
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel on July 6th, 2009
Hagit Ofran of Peace Now is doing amazing work documenting settlement growth and settler violence. Every time that we have a question about the origin of this settlement or that outpost, Hagit is the first person to call. Peace Now also has an office in the United States that is doing excellent work spreading facts on the ground.
Yesterday, Peace Now was on the ground in the West Bank but this time with a television crew from Israel Channel Two. What they found was what we often encounter, settler violence. Here is the video that channel two produced and was broadcast on the nightly news.
For more information please go to the Peace Now website.
South Mt. Hebron Hills on the 4th of July
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, West Bank on July 5th, 2009
Yesterday, members of Ta’ayush accompanied sheep herders from the village of Tuba to their lands near the settlement of Maon in the Southern West Bank. We spent the early morning with them as their sheep grazed and did what ever sheep do. We were joined by members of the international NGO Christian Peacemakers Team. They have volunteers living in the neighboring village of Tuwani and are working as a monitor of settler and IDF violence against the villagers. Every day they accompany the children of the villages to the main school in Tuwani. The road connecting the villages to Tuwani passes next to the settlement of Maon. The settlers of Maon have often attacked the children and anyone with them including the CPT teams. It is a heartbreaking and disgusting situation that settlers with the cover of the IDF attack children on the way to school. I was struck by the resilience of these volunteers in discussing their experiences in Tuwani.

CPT member after having been attacked by settlers while protecting childern on their way to school in Tuwani in 2004/5
We continued to talk and the sheep continued to do what ever sheep do until the army came with a closed military zone order forcing us to leave the area. As you can see in the video, one of our goals was to receive a reason for applying the order on us. This reason never came and most likely will never come. The closed military zone order relies on the ‘discretion of the commander present” and as such a reason for applying the order on peaceful citizens not breaking any law seems within reason.
Leaving Tuba we received a call from Palestinians living in a village near the illegal outpost of Avigal. They told us that the setters had attacked some residents in their village. We raced over to the village and because of our new found popularity with the security forces in Tuba, two police jeeps raced over with us, following us through the West Bank to see where our next stop would be.
We arrived in the village, with our police escort, and got the story; a group of settlers from Avigal entered the village and broke the legs of three goats and then attacked two men. The villagers were able to capture the incident with some poor quality video on their cell phones, which I have and I have not been able to figure out how to convert. If anyone knows how to convert .3gp to .avi please e mail me.
The police acted as if the villagers were lying and that there might be some chance that the villagers were the ones attacking the settlers. This insanity passed but soon the police thought that the main issue was us. They thought that we were provoking the situation by simply being there. We answered, as you can see in the video, with the simple fact that if we had not been there the police would have never come and taken the complaint. Once again, our mere presence was one of the major factors in getting this complaint filed and hopefully receiving some justice for these villagers.
Peace Court in Jerusalem
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel on July 1st, 2009
More than 70 people gathered outside the Peace Court today to support Ezra in his sentencing.
Only a few of us managed to get in. At first, Ezra requested that everyone be permitted to enter and
that the sentencing will take place in a larger hall, but his request was denied, and therefore the hearing
did not start on time. As a result, the judge decided to postpone the sentencing to August 16, 8.30 AM.
When told about the amount of letters sent on behalf of Ezra (more than 15,000 signatories through the
Jewish Voice for Peace campaign — we brought a stack of 100 papers with a list of names), the judge
said, “Wow, that much…”
Ezra’s lawyer, Lea Tzemel, is convinced that the international campaign has a positive impact on the
case. Please continue to spread the word, tell your friends and family to sign the letters in the campaign
JVP is running (http://www.freeezra.org




Antony Loewenstein Accompanies Ta’ayush for a Day
Posted by Joseph Dana in Israel, Jerusalem, Southern Hebron Hills, West Bank on July 13th, 2009
Antony Loewenstein joined Ta’ayush last Saturday for our picnic at an illegal outpost. He filled a lovely report at Mondoweiss today about the day:
Dining at a hamburger joint on the weekend in Jerusalem with a few members of Israeli peace group Ta’ayush,including Joseph Dana, we were struck by the people eating around us. They were mostly young, American Jews laughing and enjoying the atmosphere. They were living the dream. A short stay in Israel for them is a blast. Parties, some history, Zionist indoctrination and mission accomplished. Palestine and Palestinians don’t exist. The occupation is invisible. The West Bank is “dangerous”, their parents and guides tell them. It is a false Israel, an illusion that is carefully crafted and maintained. Without it, the Zionist entity would collapse but there’s no evidence that’s happening any time soon.
A day with Ta’ayush activists on Saturday was a necessary counter-point to this other Israel. We met in central Jerusalem at 7 am and soon around 15 Israeli Jews and a few internationals arrived. One Ta’ayush member, Daniel, born in Russia but now an Israeli citizen, told me that he had no hope that Israeli society would change without outside pressure. Some others gathered, ranging in age from 20s to 50s and from students to academics, and they thought similarly. Sadly, the Israeli Left is dead. Now only a handful of groups actively pursue human rights in Palestine and challenge Israeli military policies. They feel utterly alone in this pursuit.
Dana has written about the difficulties experienced by our mini-bus at a checkpoint near Jerusalem. Our IDs were taken – humorously, the soldiers were unable to find the number on my passport, despite it being clearly marked – and we were unable to leave for over an hour. It was simply a case of ritual humiliation. The IDF had no right to hold us or refuse entry into the West Bank, but arbitrary rules are the name of the game under occupation. The soldiers were young, under 20 like most of them, and clearly bored. They wanted to show who was boss and what better way than annoying a handful of mouthy Israelis? We eventually turned back, found another checkpoint and sailed past. So much for being a security threat.
It’s hard to convey the sparseness of the West Bank. Palestinian villages are scattered here and there with groaning settlements sitting above or near them, often shadowing their daily rituals. The first action of the day was eating a picnic at an illegal outpost next to the settlement of Susya in the southern West Bank.
There has been a great deal of discussion in the Western press recently about the nature of outposts and the apparent clash over them between Barack Obama and Benjamin Netanyahu. Amos Harel wrote in Haaretz a few days ago that this debate is a convenient distraction:
“The outposts are a continuation of the settlements by other means. The sharp distinction Israel makes between them is artificial. Every outpost is established with a direct connection to a mother settlement, with the clear aim of expanding the takeover of the territory and ensuring an Israeli hold on a wider tract of land. Construction in the outposts is integrated into the overall plan of the settlement project and is carried out in parallel to the seizure of lands within and close to the settlements.”
The reality of outposts is deception on a mammoth scale, a price paid principally by Palestinians whose private land is being stolen.
photo by Laura Weisman
Ta’ayush activist Jesse Hochheiser visited the same outpost near Susya in June and blogged about his experiences. The photographs on the post clearly show the early stages of a concrete house. On Saturday, that house had progressed and looked nearly finished. A makeshift synagogue was erected nearby, a collection of branches and sticks. The outpost is illegal under both Israeli and international law.
We were invited by the Palestinian owner of the land to ascent “Flag Hill” and have the picnic. We had passed through a few Palestinian villages on the way, quiet baking in the hot, morning sun. A few children stood and stared while the men looked happy to have company. Women were largely absent.
The groups of activists, from Ta’ayush and the International Solidarity Movement, spread out and began walking up the small, rocky hill. A number of IDF soldiers saw and approached us but had no authority to stop our journey. We continued, a hot breeze blowing, and many of us carried frozen drinks and food for the picnic.
It was a surreal sight. Around 25 Israelis and internationals walking on Palestinian land, accompanied by IDF soldiers, simply wanted to enjoy a meal on a hilltop. It was a provocation, of course, but a legal one. I was constantly told during the day that it was important to bear witness and document the insidious ways in which the IDF protects the religious settlers and refuses to offer the same courtesy to the Palestinians. The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled that Palestinians should not be blocked from accessing their agricultural lands but this is rarely, if ever, enforced. American tax-dollars at work.
We reached the summit, plastic sheets were unfolded and watermelon, hummus and pita bread were laid on the ground. People began eating and singing. One of the activists was Ezra Nawi, currently facing prison for lawfully protesting. The Palestinian owner of the land explained in Arabic his right to be there and farm the area. A Ta’ayush activist said in English that they the IDF had no right to remove them.
But within a few minutes, many more soldiers arrived and a commander announced that we had five minutes to disperse or we would be arrested. It was a “closed military zone”, an oft-used term to suggest an emergency situation when, in fact, there is no emergency. There were no settlers to be seen, so the IDF’s motives were clear. The goal was to protect the nascent outpost and allow it to flourish. From little things, big things grow.
Nawi was soon dragged away, as were a few others (though released soon after, Nawi was hit some time later by soldiers.) Watermelon and pita bread lay strewn across the dirt. Many activists filmed the proceedings, including a German documentary maker who captured soldiers physically abusing one of the detained. An IDF soldier sprinted after him, clearly trying to obtain or blank the tape of evidence. He failed, not least because activists rushed to protect his camera.
Looking around from the hilltop, it was hard to imagine the religious significance of the place. Fundamentalist Jews regard all of the West Bank as granted by God, but what of many in the Diaspora? At the moment the IDF soldiers were dragging away non-violent activists, in clear breach of Israeli law, I wanted my Zionist colleagues to watch with their own eyes and tell me this was a Judaism of which they could be proud. Protecting settlers ensures a never-ending occupation. I was astounded to hear that the Israelis often used obscure British and Ottoman colonial laws to restrict access to particular West Bank areas.
Joseph Dana told me later in the day that, “Israel is a country directed by the military. A dictatorship with relative freedom of speech, but virtually no debate about the behaviour of the IDF.” Most Israelis either don’t want to know or know and don’t care.
The next visit of the day was Hilltop 26, a tiny outpost near the major settlement of Kiryat Arba (Dana and his partner Mairav Zonszein wrote about the saga for Haaretz recently and documented the IDF’s consistent protection of the settlers). The outpost itself has been destroyed a number of times by the Israeli state but magically re-appeared soon after. It’s political theatre of the most serious kind.
The outpost reminded me of a shantytown. Rubbish littered the area around the makeshift house. Tin, plastic and synagogue seats were seemingly thrown together to please God. A handful of teenage boys with light moustaches paced the hilltop, one videoing the activists who had arrived unannounced. A small bookshelf, dirty couches, a battered van, dogs without water tied in the beating sun and a sign of progress; electricity. When a Ta’ayush activist accused one of the religious fundamentalists of this fact, he accused her of being a “liar”. A light bulb gave the game away.
The IDF soon arrived. The activists were simply making their presence known to the settlers and letting them know that they were being watched. The outpost was illegal under Israeli and international law. Soon more soldiers appeared in trucks. Around 20 IDF officers for 30 activists. Some heated words were exchanged between the settler kids and activists in Hebrew. It was a standoff that legally should have ended only one way; the settlers would be removed and refused entry back to the land. Alas, the state’s response was predictable.
We were soon told that the area was a closed military zone and we would have to leave. A couple of Ta’ayush activists had decided to try and get arrested to keep their colleague Ezra company; they believed in never leaving anyone alone in custody. We stood our ground then pulled back. More IDF soldiers arrived. The settlers growled like rabid animals. One even remained seated in a crusty couch for most of the encounter, such was his confidence in remaining put. We moved forward, tried to engage some of the Ethiopian IDF officers, then withdraw. It was a highly co-ordinated dance.
Soon some of the officers approached the settlers and presented them with an order to leave. An intense discussion ensued, with squinted eyes checking out the court order. We were again ordered to leave the area. The settlers hesitated and complained. During this entire time, a dusty breeze and mosquitoes created an uncomfortable atmosphere.
Word had clearly emerged that the settlers were under watch. Some female friends of theirs arrived, and although I’d been warned that they often spat in the direction of the activists, this time they merely shot daggers in our direction. I wondered how God felt about extremist kids robbing other’s land in his name.
The theatre performance progressed. The activists were directed to move down the hill and the settlers followed soon after. We saw them joking with the soldiers, so we knew that their removal would be temporary, probably no more than 10-15 minutes.
Later in the day, Ta’ayush activist Mairav Zonszein told me that she wondered how Palestinians cope with their reality day in, day out. Human rights workers monitor, film, document and disseminate the reality of the occupation, but most of them live in relatively comfortable Jerusalem or Tel Aviv.
A day in the life of the West Bank.
antony loewenstein, outpost, taayush, West Bank
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