Today
is my birthday. As facebook posts came in last night with birthday wishes from
Palestinian and Israeli peacemakers – people who I’ve been so privileged to
meet, listen to, work with and learn from over the past several decades, I
realized that I have a birthday wish also.
Writing
today as a woman, as a mother, a peacemaker, a global citizen, a spiritual
human being and American Jew, my wish this year is for a Palestinian state. Not
because I’m some great fan of the modern nation state with all of its many
perils, not the least of which is nationalism and ethnocentrism…but because Palestine
is a nation, and deserves its place
among the other 192 sister countries that comprise the United Nations.
This
September, the Palestinian Authority will
petition the United Nations for membership, with plans to declare statehood by
the end of the year. Most analysts believe that if it came to a vote today, the
resolution would pass the U.N. General Assembly with the support of at least
130 out of 193 member nations. Gearing up to face what one Israeli leader called a
“political and diplomatic tsunami” coming their way, some of our own political
leaders in the U.S. are beginning to threaten the Palestinian leadership with severe
measures if they persist with their “audacious” request for independence,
including a Security Council veto on the vote, and cutting U.S. aid.
“Statehood is a game-changer,” said
Gershon Baskin, co-Director of the respected think tank, Israel-Palestine Center
for Research and Information. “Once Palestine is a member state of the United
Nations, Israel is no longer occupying ‘undefined disputed territory.’”
"Palestinians prayed near Israeli soldiers on Friday. They were protesting land confiscation in the village of Qusra, near Nablus." from NY times, April 2, 2011 |
This “game” is sorely in
need of changing. These past decades, I’ve not only been listening, I’ve been
watching. The territorial views from all of the high hills and vistas in the
West Bank reveal a vast and sprawling network of Israeli settlements extending
deep into the heart of Palestinian territory. Half a million settlers – roughly
15% of the Israeli population, now inhabit over 200 trailer outposts, towns and large
cities in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, and their growth continues
unabated. A comprehensive report published last year by the Israeli Human Rights
Organization B’tselem, which included analysis of aerial photography and relied
on Israeli military data, shows that settlements control 42% of West Bank land
(this figure does not include substantial additional territory controlled by
the Israeli military).
This year, we in the international
community have a significant opportunity to help bring sanity and international
law to bear on this disastrous and even suicidal settlement policy, by
encouraging our lawmakers and governments to support Palestinian statehood, and
nurture a healthy future for Israelis and Palestinians.
Even
if this is not “your” cause; even if you don’t know much about it, please take
some time today and join me in a heartfelt vision for historical and ancestral
healing for Israel and Palestine. Send your love – because this is how it’s
going to happen, with love, not with more hatred or anger or violence. We don’t
need more arguing about victims and perpetrators, we need loving acts that will
relieve this vicious polarization and acknowledge the humanity of everyone
involved. Send your love – imagine the most graceful, peaceful transition to Palestinian
statehood, with humane relations with her neighbors; imagine dignity, justice
and safety for all…and please, peaceful nights and sweet dreams.
Thank
you for listening. This has been my wish for decades, actually.
I hope it will be your wish too. I’m blowing out the candles now.
Leah
Green
Founder,
Compassionate Listening Project.
"To be free is not merely to cast off one's chains,
but
to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others."
4 comments:
Happy Birthday, Leah! And thank you for that wonderful birthday wish. I wish also that peace will come to Israel and Palestine, and I wish that our government would contribute to that peace effort in a strong way. I am still working in a small way in the effort to bring peace to Israel and Palestine by chairing the Peace and Justice Committee in our church. I think about you often and am so thankful for the opportunity that Bonnie and I had to be on last year's commpassionate listening trip. My best wishes on your special day and for all the good work that you are doing. Love, Joan
Leah, what a gorgeous message from a beautiful soul -- y-o-u.
Love, Libby and Len
"Leah, I love your integrity, your passion for justice and truth, and your sharp mind. UN recognition of Palestine could be a step towards what all of us yearn for--freedom, dignity and security for Palestinians and Israelis. As long as Palestinians live as second-class citizens, Israelis can never be truly secure..." - Anthony
I wish you the best year ever in your great journey as the effects of CL will start to really do some waves. Mark my word, and this wonderful birthday of yours. What would we have done without you ! You're the pillar that brought this wonderful learning community to be connected. Thank you ! Merci, merci et bonne fête!
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