[faithandlife] Re: [[FaithandLife] Re: Interesting Article]

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From: Peter Brewer <bppeter@...>
Date: Thu, 26 Dec 2002 13:47:52 -0500
My Brothers

Cruelty is cruelty no matter if it is done by Isreali troops against
Palestinian Christians or done by Nazi SS troopers against innocent Jews.  I
see no difference between the Isreali government's pogroms against the
Palestinians and Bedouins and Hitler's "Final Solution."

When I lived in the Middle East the Palestinians that I knew all said the
Isrealis had learned their lessons well from the Nazis.

+Peter


<cranmer@...> wrote:
Thought y'all might be interested in this article...
Fr. J.+

By Sean Hawkey (Editor of Action and Website Manager:  "Blessed is the fruit
of thy womb. A real-life, modern-day nativity story")

 (Bethlehem) -- When Nahed Fawaregh became pregnant earlier this year she
and her husband felt blessed, she was due to give birth in the first days of
December and would travel to the nearby maternity hospital in Bethlehem.

Nahed and her family live in a small village called Ma'sarah (meaning Olive
Press) where the countryside is spotted with olive groves and vineyards.
There is no maternity clinic in Ma'sarah so she would travel to nearby
Bethlehem to give birth. While many of the villagers drive small herds of
goats and sheep, Nahed's husband drives a taxi, so getting to the hospital
wouldn't be a problem.

Nahed, who just turned 20, was the subject of family affection as her baby
grew, friends gave her small gifts, old ladies knitted little jumpers and
everyone made sure she ate what she wanted. Nahed was a radiant picture of
health and happiness.

At midday on November 27 Nahed went into labour. She had already prepared a
bag and she set off with her husband in the taxi for Bethlehem. They went on
the only road that isn't dug-up and blocked-off with piles of earth and
rubble by Israeli bulldozers. But only certain people are allowed on this
road: Jewish people who live in the heavily guarded settlements. The
innocuous term "settlements" doesn't accurately describe the expanding
colonies: cities and towns built on the highest land, taken by military
force and inhabited by some 400,000 people, many of them east-european
immigrants. The local people are left with the ever-diminishing gaps between
the colonies and the roads that join them up, the water they need for
irrigation diverted to the Israeli-occupied land.

The Fawareghs knew they were forbidden to travel on the Jewish-only road but
it was an emergency. They prayed that they wouldn't run into an Israeli
patrol, but they did.

A jeep with four soldiers of the Israeli occupation forces caught them and
held them at gunpoint. The soldiers said nothing even though it was obvious
that Nahed was in pain. Her waters broke and Mr Fawaregh pleaded with the
soldiers, they told him to shut up. Nahed began to bleed but the soldiers
still said nothing, they just kept them waiting.  Finally, after two hours,
they let them go.

This was neither a mistake nor an isolated case. This is part of the routine
persecution of the Christian and Muslim people of Palestine, it is Israeli
policy. In fact, this is so common that the Israeli occupation forces are
being issued with medical kits to deal with women who "choose to give birth
at checkpoints".

Bethlehem is under curfew, the streets are patrolled by tanks. "This is a
prison" explains Mitri Raheb, a resident priest: "if you leave your house
you will be shot". Tank crews shout through loudhailers as they roar past
the houses: "don't come out, you animals". The afternoon that Nahed arrived
in Bethlehem a Mr Rabayia, who had gone to get some bread for his family,
was shot dead by occupation troops. He was shot in the back of the head with
an explosive bullet. Often such murders are
reported as crossfire, people here explain in despair =F1 "that means that
we cross and they fire".  Helplessly, I watched his mother and wife gnashing
their teeth and tearing at their hair and clothes with grief.

In Bethlehem, a statue of the Virgin Mary stands above the entrance of the
maternity hospital called the Holy Family, she is riddled with Israeli
bullets. When Nahed finally arrived at the hospital it was clear that the
long delay had been critical. Her baby boy was dead.

Nahed tells me her story quietly, she is full of grace, "I offer up my
suffering to God" she says. As I look at her I can't help thinking that you
can see the whole story in her face, not just her own story but Palestine's
story.

Hawkey, Sean, WACC 357 Kennington Lane, London SE11 5QY, UK Email:
sh@...  web: http://www.wacc.org.uk Tel: 44 (0)20 7582 9139


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