Overcoming Speechlessness
by Alice Walker
July 2009
In this essay, poet Alice
Walker writes of encountering "the horror" (as in Joseph Conrad's
novel, 'The Heart of Darkness') in Rwanda, Eastern Congo and Palestine/Israel
and finding her voice again after a period of speechlessness. Part of what has
happened to human beings, she believes, is that we have, over the last century,
witnessed cruel and unusually barbaric behavior that was so horrifying it
literally left us speechless. We had no words to describe it even when we
viewed it; nor could we easily believe human beings could fall to such levels
of degradation; we have been deeply frightened. This self-imposed silence has
slowed our response to the plight of those who most need us, often women and
children but also men of conscience who resist evil but are outnumbered by
those around them who have fallen victim to a belief in weapons, male or ethnic
dominance, greed and drugs.
[Here is Walker's account of
her experience of Gaza. This excerpt opens with a brief description of how she
was able to recover after discovering unspeakable cruelty and violence suffered
by the people of Rwanda and Eastern Congo. The entire essay can be found in
Alice Walker's Blog at: <http://www.alicewalkersblog.com/2009/07/overcoming-speechlessness-poet.html>
a.r.]
Coming home I fell
ill with the burden of this story... I felt as if my own heart had been taken
out of me, and this assault on the planetary human body that I represent,
brought me low.
I
was fortunate to have a Sangha (a Buddhist community) to which I could
eventually turn. Sitting around me as I talked, two of our members realized I
needed even more of a healing than simply being able to speak about what I had
witnessed and heard of what is happening to the people of the earth. They
immediately devised a ritual for my care. Placing me on the green grass of my
yard, surrounding me with flowers, stones, photographs of those who comfort us
(I placed several under my blouse: John Lennon, Pema Chodron, Howard Zinn, the
DaLai Lama, Amma and Che among them) and their own loving words, they helped me
shed tears of hopelessness, as I asked myself and them: What has happened to
humanity? Followed by more tears of resolve. Because whatever has happened to
humanity, whatever is currently happening to humanity, it is happening to all
of us. No matter how hidden the cruelty, no matter how far off the screams of
pain and terror, we live in one world. We are one people. My illness proved
that. As well as my understanding that Generose’s lost daughter belongs to all
of us. It is up to all of us to find her; it is up to us to do our best to make
her whole again. There is only one daughter, one father, one mother, one son,
one aunt or uncle, one dog, one cat, donkey, monkey or goat in the Universe,
after all: the one right in front of you.
***
And
so I have been, once again, struggling to speak about an atrocity: This time in
Gaza, this time against the Palestinian people. Like most people on the planet
I have been aware of the Palestinian -Israeli conflict almost my whole life. I
was four years old in 1948 when, after being subjected to unspeakable cruelty
by the Germans, after a “holocaust” so many future disasters would resemble;
thousands of European Jews were resettled in Palestine. They settled in a land
that belonged to people already living there, which did not seem to bother the
British who, as in India, had occupied the land and then, on leaving it,
decided they could simply put in place a partitioning of the land that would work
fine for the people, strangers, Palestinians and European Jews, now forced to
live together. When we witness the misery and brutality still a daily reality
for millions of people in Pakistan and India, we are looking at the failure,
and heartlessness, of this plan.
I
got to Gaza the way I have gotten so many places in my life: a sister called
me. My friend, the writer, Susan Griffin, with whom I was arrested protesting
the start of the war against Iraq in 2003 sent an email. Would I be interested
in going to Gaza? With CODEPINK, the women’s peace group that had gotten us
into such soul strengthening trouble six years before. She would go, she said,
if she could sell the book she was currently writing. This is how so many of us
live; I remember this when I look about the world and want more witnesses to
the scenes of horror, brutality, chaos. We all have to work to feed ourselves,
look after our families, keep our heads above water. I understand this
completely; and wasn’t sure I was free enough myself, to go. However, it
happened that, in the same week that the Israeli military began its 22 day
bombardment of Gaza, a refugee camp that became a city and is today a mere
sliver of Palestine left to the Palestinians (a city and environs that Israel
had laid siege to months before, keeping out food and medicine and building
materials, among other necessities) my own sister had died after a long
illness. Our relationship had been a good one for most of our lives, and then,
toward the end of her life, it had become strained. So much so that when she
died I had not expected to feel devastation. Surprise. As I was grieving her loss, I learned of the dropping of
bombs on the people of Palestine. Houses, hospitals, factories, police
stations, parliament buildings, ministries, apartment buildings, schools, went
up in dust. The sight of one family in which five young daughters had been
killed was seared into my consciousness. The mother, wounded and unconscious,
was alive. Who would tell her? I waited to hear some word of regret, of grief,
of compassion, from our leaders in Washington, who had sent the money, the
earnings of American taxpayers, to buy the bombs destroying her world. What
little concern I became aware of from our “leaders” was faint, arrived late,
was delivered without much feeling, and was soon overshadowed by an
indifference to the value of Palestinian life that has corrupted our children’s
sense of right and wrong for generations. Later our government would offer
money, a promise to help “rebuild.” As if money and rebuilding is the issue. If
someone killed my children and offered me money for the privilege of having
done so I would view them as monsters, not humanitarians.
I
consulted my companion, who did not hesitate. We must go, he said. The sooner
we reach the people of Gaza, the sooner they’ll know not all Americans are
uncaring, deaf and blind, or fooled by the media. He went on to quote Abraham
Lincoln’s famous line about fooling the people. You can fool some of the people
some of the time, but not all of the people all of the time. Americans, we
know, are, for the most part, uninformed about the reality of this never-ending
“conflict” that has puzzled us for decades and of which so many of us, if we
are honest, are heartily sick. We began to pack.
It’s
a long way to Gaza. Flying between San Francisco and Frankfort, then from
Frankfort into Egypt, I kept my mind focused by meditating as much as possible,
reading Aung San Suu Kyi and Alan Clement’s book THE VOICE OF HOPE, thinking
about Desmond Tutu and his courageous statement earlier in the month about the
immorality of the walls Israel has built around Palestinian villages as well as
the immorality of the siege itself. President Jimmy Carter’s book PEACE NOT
APARTHEID, I had read before leaving home. I also ate a good bit of chocolate.
And slept. Arriving in Cairo at three-thirty in the morning, my first task,
assigned by the beautiful, indomitable and well loved co-founder of CODEPINK,
Medea Benjamin, was to meet with her and the U.S. Ambassador to Egypt,
Ambassador Scobey, at ten-thirty a.m. to ask for assistance in crossing the
border into Gaza from Egypt. After a few hours rest, I appeared early for the
meeting (concerned that Medea had not arrived yet) which, though cordial, would
yield no help. Even so, I was able to have an interesting talk with the
Ambassador about the use of non-violence. She, a white woman with a southern
accent, mentioned the success of “our” Civil Rights Movement and why couldn’t
the Palestinians be more like us. It was a remarkable comment from a
perspective of unimaginable safety and privilege; I was moved to tell her of
the effort it took, even for someone so inherently non-violent as me, to
contain myself during seven years in Mississippi when it often appeared there were
only a handful of white Mississippians who could talk to a person of color
without delivering injury or insult. That if we had not been able to change our
situation through non-violent suffering, we would most certainly, like the ANC,
like the PLO, like Hamas, turned to violence. I told her how dishonest it seems
to me that people claim not to understand the desperate, last ditch, resistance
involved in suicide bombings; blaming the oppressed for using their bodies
where the Israeli army uses armored tanks. I remembered aloud, us being
Southerners, my own anger at the humiliations, bombings, assassinations that
made weeping an endless activity for black people, for centuries, and how when we finally got to a court room which
was supposed to offer justice, the judge was likely to blame us for the crime
done against us and to call us chimpanzees for making a fuss. Medea arrived at
this point, having been kept circling the building in a taxi that never landed,
and pressed our case for entry into Gaza. While appearing sympathetic to our
petition, our ambassador emphasized it was dangerous for us to go into Gaza and
that her office would be powerless to help us if we arrived there and were
injured or stranded. We were handed some papers telling us all the reasons we
should not go.
Next
we were at a strange ministry whose name never registered, to fill out forms
whose intent escaped me. Several CODEPINK women were already there, waiting
their turn for the bit of paper we needed to move a step closer to the Egyptian
border crossing at Rafah, the only one available (maybe) for us. There I met a
CODEPINKER who instantly made me happy to be with CODEPINK again. She’d been
waiting for hours, felt she was growing into her chair, and we laughed at the
absurdity of bureaucracy everywhere, which keeps you waiting interminably for
some bit of paper that you feel sure is thrown into the trash or into a
creaking file drawer as soon as you leave the room, never again to see the
light of day. I also reconnected with Gael Murphy, who reminded me we had
shared a paddy wagon after being arrested in front of the White House a few
days before George Bush started his ill-fated war on the people and animals,
rivers and dwellings, mosques and libraries of Iraq. She handed me an illustrated
postcard that showed plainly what the situation between Israel and Palestine
came down
To:
in 1946 the Palestinians owned Palestine, with a few scattered Jewish villages
(picture one); some years later, under a United Nations plan for partitioning,
Palestine and Israel would each own roughly half of the land (picture two);
from 1949-1967 the Israel “half” grew by about a third; after the 1967 war,
Israel doubled its land mass by virtue of the land it took from Palestine at
that time. The last picture shows the situation in 2008: Palestinian refugees
(in their own country) live in camps in the West Bank and Gaza, and the whole
land is now called Israel. On the back of this card are words from former
Israeli president Ariel Sharon, known as the butcher of Sabra and Shatila
(refugee camps in Lebanon where he led a massacre of the people) where he talks
about making a pastrami sandwich of the Palestinian people, riddling their
lands with Jewish settlements until no one will be able to imagine a whole
Palestine. Or know Palestine ever existed.
No
one can imagine a whole Turtle Island, either; now known as the United States
of America, but formerly the land of Indigenous peoples. The land of some of my
Native ancestors, the Cherokee, whose homes and villages were obliterated from
the landscape where they’d existed for millenia, and the Cherokee forced -
those who remained - to resettle, walking “the trail of tears,” a thousand
miles away. This is familiar territory. As is the treatment of the Palestinian
people. On the bus ride through the Egyptian desert, toward the Rafah gate,
which leads into Palestine, I think about this particular cycle of violence
humans have made for themselves. Hitler learned from the Americans how to
“cleanse” Germany of the Jews. Even to the use of Jewish hair to stuff
mattresses. Indian hair had been mattress stuffing long before. Indian skin
made into various objects. Indian children and families, massacred. Not because
they were “savages” - one glance at their art told anyone who they were, but
because the European settlers who came to America wanted their land. Just as
the Israelis have wanted, and have taken by force, Palestinian land. Like
Americans they have attempted to hide their avarice and cruelty behind a
mountain of myths: that no one lived in Palestine, that the Palestinians are
savages, that there’s no such thing as a Palestinian (Golda Meir’s offering),
that the Israelis are David and the Palestinians Goliath. Which is ridiculous,
if you haven’t been indoctrinated against the Palestinians for centuries from
reading the Bible where, as the Philistines, they are forever causing trouble
for God’s children, the Hebrews. And then, there’s Hollywood, which has a lot
to answer for in its routine disregard for Arabs, generally, but which, where
Palestine and Israel are concerned, projects Israel as always in the right, no
matter what it does, as American politicians, for the most part, have learned
to do. This is not good for Israel, or the United States, just as always
praising the regrettable behavior of one’s child, or of anyone, can only lead
to disaster. A disaster, where Israel is concerned, that is happening before
our eyes, even if the media in America refuses to let Americans fully see it.
I
had not been on a bus with so many Jews since traveling to the 1963 March On
Washington by Greyhound when Martin Luther King, John Lewis and others spoke so
passionately of Black Americans’ determination to be free. I went with a
half-Jewish young man named, not so ironically when I later thought of it,
David. He was not considered really Jewish because his mother was Irish, and
you can only be a real Jew if your mother is Jewish. I didn’t know that then,
though. I thought his behavior, coming to the side of the oppressed, very
Jewish. It was fairly Irish, too, but at the time the Irish in Boston, except
for the Kennedys, seemed far from their tradition in this area. They were
regularly stoning and /or shouting obscenities at black children who tried to
attend “their” schools. It was moving to hear the stories of why the Jews on
our Gaza bound bus were going to Palestine. Many of them simply said they
couldn’t bear the injustice, or the hypocrisy. Having spoken out against
racism, terrorism, apartheid elsewhere, how could they be silent about
Palestine and Israel? Someone said her friends claimed everyone who spoke out
against Israeli treatment of Palestinians was a. a self-hating Jew (if Jewish)
or anti-Semitic (though Palestinians are Semites, too). She said it never
seemed to dawn on the persons making the anti-Semitic charge that it is
Israel’s behavior people are objecting to and not it’s religion. As for being
self-hating? Well, she said, I actually love myself too much as a Jew to
pretend to be ignorant about something so obvious. Ignorance is not held in
high regard in Jewish culture.
One
story that particularly moved me was this: A woman in her late Fifties or early
Sixties stood at the front of the bus, as we passed donkey carts and Mercedes
Benzes, and spoke of traveling to Palestine without her husband, a Jewish man
who was born in Palestine. Several times they had come back to Palestine,
renamed Israel, to see family. To attend graduations, weddings, and funerals.
Each time they were held for hours at the airport as her husband was stripped,
searched, interrogated, and threatened when he spoke up for himself. In short,
because his passport was stamped with the place of his birth, Palestine, he was
treated like a Palestinian. This Jewish husband sent his best wishes, but he
could no longer endure travel in so painful a part of the world. By now most of
us are aware of the dehumanizing treatment anyone not Jewish receives on
crossing a border into Israel. Especially brutal for Palestinians. I thought:
even our new President, Barack Hussein
Obama, were he just anybody, and not the president of the United States, would
have a humiliating time getting into Israel. The poet, and rebel, in me
instantly wanted him to try it. To don the clothing of an average person, as
truth seeking people do in Wisdom tales, and travel into Israel. To learn what
is real and true, not by traveling through the air, but by walking on the
ground.
***
Riding
on the bus, listening to the stories of people drawn to the side of the
Palestinian people, I leaned into the landscape. Mile after mile of barren
desert went by, with scatterings of villages and towns. The farther into the
Sinai we went the more poverty we saw. One sight in particular has stayed with
me: the Bedouin, formerly the Nomads of the desert, attempting to live
alongside the road or on the barren hills, without their camels, without
mobility. Sometimes in dwellings made of sticks and straw. Occasionally lone
women in flowing black robes walked along a ridge in the heat, going someplace
not visible to the eye. Hundreds of tiny white brick houses, most unfinished,
studded the hills. I asked my friend: What do you think those small white
buildings are? He said: bunkers. Mausoleums? But no, seeing them appear in all
manner and stage of construction, over hundreds of miles, I saw they were poor
peoples’ attempts at building housing for themselves. They looked like bunkers
and mausoleums because no one was around them, and because they were so small:
some of them barely large enough to lie down in, and often with no windows,
only a door. I realized people who worked far away and were able to return to
build only sporadically were building them. This is true in many places in the
world, and I was moved by the tenacity of people trying to have a home, no
matter how uprooted or displaced they have been. Creating and having a home is
a primary instinct in all of nature as well as in humankind; seeing these tiny
dwellings, with no water sources, no electricity, no anything but white mud
bricks, made me remember my own childhood feelings of insecurity around
housing, and the preciousness of having a home, as we were forced to move, year
after year.
I
came out of this reverie to hear the story of Cindy and Craig Corrie, the
parents of Rachel Corrie. Rachel Corrie was murdered when she tried to stop an
Israeli tank from demolishing a Palestinian house. I was struck by her parents’
beauty and dignity. Cindy’s face radiates resolve and kindness. Craig’s is a
study in acceptance, humility, incredible strength, and perseverance. Rachel
had been working in Palestine and witnessed the ruthlessness of the deliberate
destruction of Palestinian homes by the Israeli army, most surrounded by
gardens or small orchards of orange and olive trees, which the army
consistently uprooted. No doubt believing the sight of a young Jewish woman in
a brightly colored jumpsuit would stop the soldier in the tank she placed
herself between the home of her Palestinian friends and the tank. It rolled
over her, crushing her body and breaking her back. The Corries spoke of their
continued friendship with the family who had lived in that house. Everywhere we
went, after arriving in Gaza, locals greeted the Corries with compassion and
tenderness. This was particularly moving to me because of a connection I was
able to make with another such sacrifice decades ago in Mississippi, in 1967,
and how black people became aware that there were some white people who
actually cared about what was happening to them. The “three civil rights
workers” as they became known, were James Cheney, a young African American
Christian man, and Andrew Goodman and Michael Schwerner, both white Jewish men
from the North. The Northerners had been called to the Civil Rights Movement in
the South by their conscience, having watched the racist and sadistic treatment
of black people there. The three young men were riding through the backwoods of
Neshoba County, Mississippi when their car was firebombed. They were dragged
from the car, bludgeoned and shot to death; their bodies were buried in a dam
that was under construction in the area and would not be found for months.
While America waited for the bodies to be found, black and white people working
for black liberation in the South discovered new ground. Who could not love
these young men, all three of them, for risking their lives to change ours? And
so, in every church, every Sunday, prayers went out for James, yes, but also
for Michael and Andrew. They became ours, just as the Corries have become
family to the Palestinian people. This is one of the most beautiful passages
for human beings. It is as if we enter a different door of our reality, when
someone gives her or his life for us. Why this should be, is a mystery, but it
is the mystery, I think, behind all the great myths in which there is human
sacrifice - not on an altar but on the road, in the street - for the common
good. At a meeting of the Veterans of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement
held in Jackson, Mississippi last year, I saw the widow of Michael Schwerner.
There she was, over forty years later. There she was, still belonging to her
own people, and still, also, one of us.
***
We
arrived in the Gaza strip in the afternoon, after being kept at the border
crossing for about five hours. Long enough to become accustomed to the bombing
someone informed us is a constant just inside the Palestinian border, reminding
the Palestinians of the Israeli presence during the cease fire. I had never
been so close to bombs being dropped before, and I took the opportunity to
interrogate my life. Had I lived it the best way I could? And so forth. A young
Palestinian man, Abdullah X, a student of video at a school in Egypt, had come
on the bus with us. His story was that he had managed to leave Palestine on
scholarship to go to school in Cairo three years ago. Because of the siege, and
all borders being closed, he had not been able to see his family. He had not
seen them for three years. Because of Israel’s bombardment of Gaza he feared
for the lives of his family and was determined to see them. Abdullah might have
stepped out of ancient Assyria. With his large dark eyes, olive complexion, and
hair in curly dark ringlets, he is a striking young man. Between Cairo and the
Gaza border, he had, without doing anything special, made many of us on the bus
care about him. Sure enough, the Egyptian border patrol gave him a hard time.
When I was told of this by a woman who had stood next to him until ordered away
by a patrolman, we decided to stand some distance from him, while he seemed to
be pleading to be allowed to visit his parents, and to send the mother force,
the universal parent force, to speed his liberation. We stood together, closed
our eyes, and sent every ounce of our combined energy to Abdullah’s back. When
he was given his passport and allowed to join us, we cheered. We could only
imagine what going back into Gaza meant for him. It was his home, and much of
it had been obliterated. We could not know at the time that, coming out of
Gaza, Abdullah would be kept at the border crossing, not permitted, as he had
feared, back into Egypt with us. We would wait for him, but ultimately we would
leave him there. He had realized his education, his future, were at risk. But
the love of his family, his home, his land, was very strong. Later we would
also have a glimpse of his father, and his relationship with his father. We
were moved by the love and affection expressed between them . For what could it
mean to know from day to day that you could easily lose each other to the
madness of war? A war brought to your door by people who claimed everything you
had, no matter how little was left, was theirs’?
***
Rolling
into Gaza I had a feeling of homecoming. There is a flavor to the ghetto. To
the Bantustan. To the “rez”. To the “colored section.” In some ways it is
surprisingly comforting. Because
consciousness is comforting. Everyone you see has an awareness of struggle,
of resistance, just as you do. The man driving the donkey cart. The woman
selling vegetables. The young person arranging rugs on the sidewalk or flowers
in a vase. When I lived in segregated Eatonton, Georgia I used to breathe
normally only in my own neighborhood, only in the black section of town.
Everywhere else was too dangerous. A friend was beaten and thrown in prison for
helping a white girl, in broad daylight, fix her bicycle chain. But even this
sliver of a neighborhood, so rightly named the Gaza strip, was not safe. It had been bombed for 22 days. I thought of
how, in the U.S. the first and perhaps only bombing on U.S. soil, prior to 9/11,
was the bombing of a black community in Oklahoma. The black people who created
it were considered, by white racists, too prosperous and therefore “uppity.”
Everything they created was destroyed. This was followed by the charge already
rampant in white American culture, that black people never tried to “better”
themselves. There is amble evidence in Gaza that the Palestinians never stop
trying to “better” themselves. What started as a refugee camp with tents, has
evolved into a city with buildings rivaling those in almost any other city in
the “developing” world. There are houses, apartment buildings, schools,
mosques, churches, libraries, hospitals. Driving along the streets, we could
see right away that many of these were in ruins. I realized I had never understood
the true meaning of “rubble.” Such and such was “reduced to rubble” is a phrase
we hear. It is different seeing what demolished buildings actually look like.
Buildings in which people were living. Buildings from which hundreds of broken
bodies have been removed; so thorough a job have the Palestinians done in
removing the dead from squashed dwellings that no scent of death remains. What
this task must have been like, both physically and psychologically, staggers
the mind. We pass police stations that were simply flattened, and all the young
(most Palestinians are young) officers in them killed, hundreds of them. We
pass ministries, bombed into fragments. We pass a hospital, bombed and gutted
by fire. If one is not safe in a hospital, when one is already sick and afraid,
where is one safe? If children are not safe playing in their schoolyards, where
are they safe? Where are The World Parents of All Children? The World
Caretakers of All the Sick?
***
My
companion and I are assigned to the home of two sisters who share their space
with friends and relatives who come and go. One morning I get up early to find
an aunt sleeping on the floor in the living room. Another time, a cousin. In
the middle of the night I hear one of the sisters consoling her aged father,
who sounds disoriented, and helping him back to bed. There is such respect,
such tenderness in her voice. This is the same place that, just weeks earlier,
was surrounded by rocket fire, a missile landing every 27 seconds for 22 days.
I can only imagine what the elderly residents must feel, as, even in their old
age they are subjected to so much fear. Each morning we are sent off to learn
what we can in our four days in Gaza, well fed on falafel, hummus, olives and
dates, sometimes eggs, tomatoes, salad and cheese. All of it simple, all of it
delicious. More delicious because we realize how difficult it is to find such
food here; the blockade keeps out most of it. Delicious also because it is
shared with such generosity and graciousness. Always the culinary student, I
try to learn to make the especially tasty dish that consists mainly of tomatoes
and eggs. I learn the tea I like so much is made out of sage! On International
Women’s Day we leave for the celebration for which we have come, a gathering with
the women of Gaza.
***
Gael
Murphy, Medea Benjamin, Susan Griffin and I, along with twenty or so other
women had been arrested for protesting the war on Iraq on International Women’s
Day, 2003. If the world had paid attention we could have saved a lot of money,
countless sons’ and daughters’ lives, as well as prevented a lot of
war-generated pollution that hastens globe-threatening climate change. How doofus humans are going to look -we
thought as we marched, sang, accepted our handcuffs - still firing rockets into
apartment buildings full of families, and dropping bombs on school children and
their pets, when the ice melts completely in the Arctic and puts an end to our
regressive, greed sourced rage forever. That had been a wonderful day; this
International Women’s Day, of 2009, was also. It was the kind of day that makes
life, already accepted as a gift, a prize. Early in the morning of March 8th,
we were shuttled to a Women’s Center in the North of Gaza City, to meet women
who, like their compatriots, had survived the recent bombardment and, so far,
the siege.
This
center for women was opened under the auspices of the United Nations, which has
been administering to the Palestinian people since 1948, when thousands of
Palestinians fleeing their homes under Israeli attack, became refugees. It is a
modest building with a small library whose shelves hold few books. It isn’t
clear whether most of the women read. The idea, as it is explained to us, is to
offer the women a place to gather outside the home, since, in Palestinian
culture the mobility of most women is limited by their work in the home as
mothers and caretakers of their families. Many women rarely leave their
compounds. However, today, International Women’s Day, is different. Many women
are out and about, and women who frequent this particular center are on hand to
welcome us. After arranging ourselves around a table in the library, we, about
thirty of us, sit in Council. I learn something I’d heard but never
experienced: Arabs introduce themselves by telling you they are the mother or
father of one of their children, perhaps their eldest: then they tell you how
many children they have. They do this with a pride and joy I have never seen
before. Only one woman had one child. Everyone else had at least five. There is
a feeling of festivity as the women, beautifully dressed and wearing elegant
headscarves, laugh and joke among themselves. They are eager to talk. Only the
woman with one child has trouble speaking. When I turn to her, I notice she is
the only woman wearing black, and that her eyes are tearing. Unable to speak,
she hands me instead a photograph that she has been holding in her lap. She is
a brown-skinned woman, of African descent, as some Palestinians (to my
surprise) are; the photograph is of her daughter, who looks European. The child
looks about six years old. A student of ballet, she is dressed in a white tutu
and is dancing. Her mother tries to speak, but still cannot, as I sit, holding
her arm. It is another woman who explains: during the bombardment, the child
was hit in the arm and the leg and the chest and bled to death in her mother’s
arms. The mother and I embrace, and throughout our meeting I hold the
photograph of the child, while the mother draws her chair closer to mine.
What
do we talk about?
We talk about hatred.
But
before we talk about hatred I want to know about headscarves. What’s the deal
about wearing the scarf? Why do so many women wear it? I am told something I’d
never considered: in desert countries most of one’s hydration is lost at the
back of the neck, which can quickly lead to heat stroke, so a headscarf that
wraps around the neck is essential to block this loss. The top of the head is
covered because if a woman is living a traditional life and is outside a lot,
the sun beats down on it. This causes headache, dizziness, nausea, stroke, and
other health problems. In Gaza, one of the women pointed out, there were many
women who did not wear scarves, primarily because they worked in offices. This
was true of the women in whose home we were sheltered. They seemed to own a lot
of scarves that they draped about themselves casually, just as my friends and I
might do in the United States.
Because
I had shaved my head a week or so before going to Gaza, I understood exactly
the importance of the headscarf. Without a covering on my head I could not bear
the sun for more than a few minutes. And, indeed, one of the first gifts I
received from an anonymous Palestinian woman was a thick black and red
embroidered scarf, which I wore everywhere, gratefully.
Our
host told us a story about the uglier side of the headscarf business: On the
first day of bombing she was working downstairs in the basement and wasn’t
aware that her apartment building was next to one that was being shelled. When
the policemen came to clear her building, and she stepped out of the elevator,
one of them, a political and religious Conservative, was taken aback at the
sight of her bare head. So much so that instead of instantly helping her to a
shelter, he called a colleague to come and witness her attire. Or lack thereof.
He was angry with her, for not wearing a
headscarf, though Israeli rockets were tearing into buildings all around them.
And what could we do but sigh along with her, as she related this experience
with appropriate shrugs and grimaces of exasperation. Backwardness is
backwardness, wherever it occurs, and explains lack of progressive movement in
afflicted societies, whether under siege or not.
***
One
of the triumphs of the Civil Rights Movement is that when you travel through
the South today you do not feel overwhelmed by a residue of grievance and hate.
This is the legacy of people brought up in the Christian tradition, true
believers of every word Jesus had to say on the issue of justice, loving
kindness, and peace. This dove-tailed nicely with what we learned of Gandhian
non-violence, brought into the movement by Bayard Rustin, a gay strategist for
the Civil Rights Movement. A lot of thought went into how to create “the
beloved community”, so that our country would not be stuck with violent hatred
between black and white, and the continuous spectacle, and suffering, of
communities going up in flames. It is astonishing, the progress, and I will
always love Southerners, black and white, for the way we have all grown.
Ironically, though there was so much suffering and despair as the struggle for
justice tested us, it is in this very “backward” part of our country today that
one is most likely to find simple human helpfulness, thoughtfulness and impersonal
courtesy. I speak a little about this American history, but it isn’t history
that these women know. They’re too young. They’ve never been taught it. It
feels irrelevant. Following their example of speaking of their families, I talk
about my Southern parents’ teachings during our experience of America’s
apartheid years. When white people owned and controlled all the resources and
the land, in addition to the political, legal and military apparatus, and used
their power to intimidate black people in the most barbaric and merciless ways.
These whites who tormented us daily were like Israelis who have cut down
millions of trees planted by Arab Palestinians; stolen Palestinian water, even
topsoil. They have bulldozed innumerable villages, houses, mosques, and in
their place built settlements for strangers who have no connection whatsoever
with Palestine; settlers who have been the most rabid anti-Palestinian of all,
attacking the children, the women, everyone, old and young alike, viciously,
and forcing Palestinians to use separate roads from themselves.
It
feels very familiar, I tell them, what is happening here. When something
similar was happening to us, in Mississippi, Georgia, Alabama, I say, our
parents taught us to think of the racists as we thought of any other disaster.
To deal with that disaster as best we could, but not to attach to it by
allowing ourselves to hate. This was a tall order, and as I’m talking, I begin
to understand, as if for the first time, why some of our parents’ prayers were so
long and fervent as they stayed there, long minutes, on their knees in church.
And why people often wept, and fainted, and why there was so much tenderness as
people deliberately silenced themselves, or camouflaged atrocities done to or
witnessed by them, using representative figures from the Bible.
At
the end of the table across from me is a woman who looks like Oprah’s twin. In
fact, earlier she had said to me: Alice, tell Oprah to come see us. We will
take good care of her. I promised I would email Oprah, and, on returning home,
did so. She laughs, this handsome woman; then speaks earnestly. We don’t hate
Israelis, Alice, she says, quietly, what we hate is being bombed, watching our
little ones live in fear, burying them, being starved to death, and being
driven from our land. We hate this eternal crying out to the world to open its
eyes and ears to the truth of what is happening, and being ignored. Israelis,
no. If they stopped humiliating and torturing us, if they stopped taking
everything we have, including our lives, we would hardly think about them at
all. Why would we?
***
There
is, finally, a sense of overwhelm, trying to bring comfort to someone whose
sleeping child has been killed and buried, a few weeks ago, up to her neck in
rubble; or a mother who has lost fifteen members of her family, all her
children, grandchildren, brothers and sisters, her husband. What does one say
to people whose families came out of their shelled houses waving white flags of
surrender only to be shot down anyway? To mothers whose children were, at this
moment, playing in the white phosphorous laden rubble that, after 22 days of
bombing, is everywhere in Gaza? White phosphorus, once on the skin, never stops
burning.
There
is really nothing to say. Nothing to say to those who, back home in America,
don’t want to hear the news. Nothing to do, finally, but dance.
The
women and I and everyone with us from Code Pink went across the hall to a big
common room where music was turned up full volume. At first I sat exchanging smiles
and murmurs with an ancient grandmother who was knitting booties, and who gave
me two pairs, for my own grandchildren. Sitting didn’t last. Without preamble I
was pulled to my feet by several women at once, and the dance was on. Sorrow,
loss, pain, suffering, all pounded into the floor for over an hour. Sweat
flowing, wails and tears around the room. And then, the rising that always
comes from such dancing; the sense of joy, of unity, of solidarity and
gratitude to be in the best place one could be on earth; with sisters who have
experienced the full measure of disaster and have the heart to rise above it.
The feeling of love is immense. The ecstasy, sublime. I was conscious of
exchanging and receiving Spirit in the dance. I also knew that this Spirit, which
I have encountered in Mississippi, Georgia, the Congo, Cuba, Rwanda and Burma,
among other places, this Spirit that knows how to dance in the face of
disaster, will never be crushed. It is as timeless as the wind. We think it is
only inside our bodies, but we also inhabit it. Even when we are unaware of its
presence internally, it wears us like a cloak.
***
I
could have gone home then. I had learned what I came to know: that humans are
an amazing lot. That to willfully harm any one of us is to damage us all. That
hatred of ourselves is the root cause of any harm done to others, others so
like us! And that we are lucky to live at a time when all lies will be exposed,
along with the relief of not having to serve them any longer. But I did not go
home. I went instead to visit the homeless.
Coming
out of a small grouping of tents, with absolutely nothing inside them, no
bedding, no food, no water, were middle - aged and elderly people who looked as
if their sky had fallen. It had. An old, old man, leaning on a stick, met me as
I trudged up a hill so I might see the extent of the devastation. Vast. Look,
look! He said to me in English, come look at my house! He was wearing dusty
cotton trousers and an old army great coat. I felt dragged along by the look in
his eyes. He led me to what had been his house. It had obviously, from the
remains, been a large and spacious dwelling; now he and his wife lived between
two of the fallen walls that made a haphazard upside down v. She looked as
stunned and as lost as he. There was not a single useable item visible. Near
what must have been the front entrance, the old man placed me directly in front
of the remains of bulldozed trees: They broke my house, he said, by bombing it,
and then they came with bulldozers and they broke my lemon and olives trees.
The Israeli military has destroyed over two and a half million olive and fruit
trees alone since 1948. Having planted many trees myself, I shared his sorrow
about the fate of these. I imagined them alive and sparkling with life,
offering olives and lemons, the old man and his wife able to sit in the shade
of the trees in the afternoons, and have a cup of tea there, in the evenings.
You
speak English, I observed. Yes, he said, I was once in the British army. I
supposed this was during the time Britain controlled Palestine, before 1948. We
walked along in silence, as I did what I had come to do: witness. Code Pink
members and my companion and I walked through the rubble of demolished homes,
schools, medical centers, factories, for half an hour. After the bombing the
Israelis had indeed bulldozed everything so that I was able to find just one
piece of evidence that beauty had flourished on this hillside; a shard from a
piece of colorful tile, about the size of my hand. Someone in our group wanted
it, and I gave it to her. They had taken pains to pulverize what they had
destroyed.
Coming
upon another grouping of tents, I encountered an old woman sitting on the
ground in what would have been, perhaps, the doorway of her demolished,
pulverized home. She was clean and impeccably dressed, the kind of old woman
who is known and loved and respected by everyone in the community, as my own
mother had been. Her eyes were dark and full of life. She talked to us freely.
I gave her a gift I had brought, and she thanked me. Looking into my eyes she
said: May God Protect You From the Jews. When the young Palestinian interpreter
told me what she’d said, I responded: It’s too late, I already married one. I
said this partly because, like so many Jews in America, my former husband could
not tolerate criticism of Israel’s behavior toward the Palestinians. Our very
different positions on what is happening now in Palestine/Israel and what has
been happening for over fifty years, has been perhaps our most severe
disagreement. It is a subject we have never been able to rationally discuss. He
does not see the racist treatment of Palestinians as the same racist treatment
of blacks and some Jews that he fought against so nobly in Mississippi. And
that he objected to in his own Brooklyn based family. When his younger brother
knew he was seeing me, a black person, he bought and nailed over an entire side
of his bedroom the largest Confederate flag either of us had ever seen. His
brother, a young Jewish man who had never traveled South, and had perhaps
learned most of what he knew about black history from Gone With the Wind, expressed his contempt for black people in this
way. His mother, when told of our marriage, sat Shiva, which declared my
husband dead. These were people who knew how to hate, and how to severely
punish others, even those beloved, as he was, of their own. This is one reason
I understand the courage it takes for some Jews to speak out against Israeli
brutality and against what they know are crimes against humanity. Most Jews who
know their own history see how relentlessly the Israeli government is
attempting to turn Palestinians into the “new Jews,” patterned on Jews of the
holocaust era, as if someone must hold that place, in order for Jews to avoid
it.
Lucky
for me, my husband’s family were not the only Jews I knew, having met Howard
Zinn, my history teacher at Spelman College in 1961, as my very first (secular)
Jew, and later poet Muriel Rukeyser, at Sarah Lawrence College, who like Grace
Paley, the short story writer, raised her voice against the Israeli Occupation
of Palestine and the horrible mistreatment of the Palestinian people. There are
my Jewish friends of the planet: Amy Goodman, Jack Kornfield, Noam Chomsky,
Medea Benjamin, and Barbara Lubin, who are as piercing in their assessments of
Israeli behavior as they have been of African or African American, or Indian,
or Chinese, or Burmese behavior. I place my faith in them, and others like us,
who see how greed and brutality are not limited to any segment of humanity but
will grow wherever it is unchecked, in any society whatsoever. The people of
Israel have not been helped by America’s blind loyalty to their survival as a
Jewish State, by any means necessary. The very settlers they’ve used American
taxpayer money to install on Palestinian land turn out to be a scary lot,
fighting not only against Palestinians, but against Israelis, when they do not
get their way. Israelis stand now exposed, the warmongers and peacemakers
alike, as people who are ruled by leaders that the world considers irrational,
vengeful, scornful of international law, and utterly frightening. There are
differing opinions about this, of course, but my belief is that when a country
primarily instills fear in the minds and hearts of the people of the world, it
is no longer useful in joining the dialogue we need for saving the planet.
There is no hiding what Israel has done or what it does on a daily basis to
protect and extend its power. It uses weapons that cut off limbs without
bleeding; it drops bombs into people’s homes that never stop detonating in the
bodies of anyone who is hit; it causes pollution so severe it is probable that
Gaza may be uninhabitable for years to come, though Palestinians, having
nowhere else to go, will have to live there. This is a chilling use of power,
supported by the United States of America, no small foe, if one stands up to
it. No wonder that most people prefer to look the other way during this
genocide, hoping their disagreement with Israeli policies will not be noted.
Good Germans, Good Americans, Good Jews. But, as our sister Audre Lorde liked
to warn us: Our silence will not protect us. In the ongoing global climate
devastation that is worsened by war activities, we will all suffer, and we will
also be afraid.
***
The
world knows it is too late for a two state solution. This old idea, bandied
about since at least the Eighties, denounced by Israel for decades, isn’t
likely to become reality with the massive buildup of settlements all over what
remains of Palestinian land. Ariel Sharon is having the last word: Jewish
settlements exactly like a Pastrami sandwich; Palestinian life erased, as if it
never existed, or crushed under the weight of a superior Israeli military
presence and a teaching of Jewish supremacy sure to stunt Palestinian identity
among Arabs living in Israel.
What
is to be done? Our revered Tolstoi asked this question generations ago,
speaking also of War and Peace. I believe there must be a one state solution.
That Palestinians and Jews, who have lived together in peace in the past, must
work together to make this a reality once again. That this land (so soaked in
Jewish and Palestinian blood, and with America’s taxpayer dollars wasted on
violence the majority of us would never, if we knew, support) must become, like
South Africa, the secure and peaceful home of everyone who lives there. This
will require that Palestinians, like Jews, have the right of return to their
homes and their lands. Which will mean what Israelis most fear: Jews will be
outnumbered and, instead of a Jewish state, there will be a Jewish, Muslim,
Christian country, which is how Palestine functioned before the Europeans
arrived. What is so awful about that?
The Tribunals, the generals will no doubt
say. But both South Africa and Rwanda present a model of restorative justice in
their Truth and Reconciliation Councils. Some crimes against humanity are so
heinous nothing will ever rectify them. All we can do is attempt to understand
their causes and do everything in our power to prevent them happening, to
anyone, ever again. Human beings are intelligent and very often, compassionate.
We can learn to heal ourselves without inflicting fresh wounds.
Watching
a video recently about Cuba’s role in the ending of apartheid in South Africa,
I was moved by the testimony of Pik Botha, once a high ranking official of
white South Africa. He talked about how liberating it had been when South
Africa was forced to attend talks prior to negotiating Nelson Mandela’s release
from prison and a change from a fascist white supremacist regime to a
democratic society. He said the feeling of not being hated and feared and
treated like a leper everywhere he went was wonderful. The talks were held in
Egypt and for the first time he felt welcomed by the Egyptians and took the
opportunity to visit the pyramids and the Sphinx and to ride on a camel! As a
white supremacist representative of a repressive, much hated government, he’d
never felt relaxed enough to do that. His words demonstrate what we all know in
our hearts to be true: allowing freedom to others, brings freedom to ourselves.
It is true that what one reads in the papers sometimes about the birthing pains
of the New South Africa can bring sadness, alarm, and near despair. But I doubt
that anyone in South Africa wishes to return to the old days of injustice and
violence that scarred whites and blacks and coloureds so badly. Not just
citizens of South Africa were demoralized, oppressed and discouraged by white
South Africa’s behavior, but citizens of the world. Israel helped keep the
racist regime in power in South Africa, giving it arms and expertise, and still
the people of the world, in our outrage at the damage done to defenseless
people, rose to the challenge of setting them free. That is what is happening
today in Palestine.
The
world has found its voice and though the horror of what we are witnessing in
places like Rwanda and Congo and Burma and Israel/Palestine threatens our very
ability to speak, we will speak. And we will be heard.
***
Suggested reading,
listening, viewing.
A
Letter to the Editors of Ms. Magazine,
in my book In Search of Our Mothers’
Gardens, Womanist Prose. 1983. This is an essay/memo written a few weeks
prior to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and a few months before the Beirut
massacres; in response to an article by Letty Cottin Pogrebin: “Anti-Semitism
in the Women’s Movement” which appeared in the June issue, 1982. I am writing
about my refusal, as a woman of color, to be silenced. And how black history supports
this stance.
My Interview in Gaza with
reporters from Democracy Now
“Sister Loss,” an essay about the
bombing of Gaza that appears on my blog.
Peace Not Apartheid, by President Jimmy Carter.
One Country, by Ali Abuniah (probably the most important book
to read on Israeli/Palestinian issues at this time). Abuniah gives a remarkably
balanced account of the Palestine/Israeli history, as well as a convincing
argument for choosing a one state solution.
A People’s History of the United States, by Howard Zinn. Israel
learned a lot of its behavior from America, this vital resource illustrates
this.
Also: On YouTube: A wide selection
of Noan Chomsky’s teachings on Israel and Palestine.
The writings and taped lectures of
Edward Said.
2009
Alice Walker
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