by Kate Sprutta Elliot and
used by permission from July-August 2007 "Lutheran
Woman Today"
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available of this article
I’ve worked in publishing for some 20 years now. When I travel
or attend an event, I am always looking for an article to write,
which means I am always taking notes, busily writing down facts,
listening for a good quote. While I’m listening or looking
sometimes even when I’m talking — I’m thinking, "Where’s the
story here? What will I write? Are there any good photos?" This
is what I do.
This means that I’m always at a little distance from what I’m
experiencing. I like it that way. It’s exhausting to be fully
engaged with everything. Since people know that it’s my job,
taking notes gives me permission to be an observer, not a
participant.
In January, I went on a trip sponsored by ELCA Global Mission,
as part of the ELCA’s "Peace Not Walls" initiative. We went to
Jerusalem, Bethlehem, Jayyous, and Ramallah in the West Bank. We
were on a global accompaniment trip to learn first–hand about
the situation in the Holy Land.
Our little group of 12 met church leaders in the Evangelical
Lutheran Church in Jordan and the Holy Land (ELCJHL), including
Bishop Munib Younan. We also met volunteers with the World
Council of Churches’ Ecumenical Accompaniment program. We talked
with some governmental and political leaders, the former grand
mufti of Jerusalem (a high-ranking Muslim religious official), a
rabbi, and Mennonite and Jewish peace activists. We visited
Lutheran congregations, schools, and Augusta Victoria, the
hospital run by the Lutheran World Federation. That’s the short
version of our trip.
But this trip was different: I put down my pen and quit taking
notes. It might have been the pace of our travel — we were
really tired. Or it might have been a prompting of the Holy
Spirit. I began to really listen to people. I tried to be fully
present to each person and in each place. This is hard work —
much harder than taking notes and photos.
One reason this is hard is that when you really attend to
someone, you may hear difficult things: pain, fear, anger,
hopelessness. And to be really present to someone who is sharing
their feelings, you have to open yourself to feeling them too.
St. Paul says if one part of the body hurts, the whole body
hurts. That’s what happens in the church. That’s compassion and
the mystery of being the body of Christ, joined one to another
by our baptism.
Instead of a full notebook and a suitcase stuffed with brochures
and business cards, what I brought back from my trip to the Holy
Land were actual experiences and stories. I want to share some
of them with you.
SECURITY AND SEPARATION
My experience of the Holy Land was framed by three things —
security, separation, and suspicion. Before we left the airport
in Frankfurt, Germany, we were already dealing with Israeli
security personnel. One member of our group — a pastor, flying
out of Berlin — was questioned by Israeli security for three
hours before she was allowed on the plane to Tel Aviv. Even her
laptop computer was searched, her e–mail opened. Everywhere we
traveled, it seemed that we were stopped at checkpoints, our
passports inspected, our drivers questioned. There is compulsory
military service in Israel and the checkpoints are staffed by
young soldiers, so you find yourself faced with a 20-year-old
with an automatic rifle slung over his or her shoulder, both
bored and wary.
For us, as U.S. citizens and tourists, the security was
unnerving and frustrating. For the Palestinians who live in
Israel, security is more than an annoyance. Israel’s security
measures — the separation barrier and the checkpoint system —
make daily living a struggle. The separation barrier is a fence
in some places and a concrete wall in others. It is designed to
physically separate Palestinian areas of the West Bank from the
Israeli settlements built there and from Israel itself. Its
purpose is to prevent suicide-bombers and other attacks.
If you are a Palestinian living in Israel, you live under a
complicated system that controls where you live, what roads you
can drive on, and where you can go. It would take several pages
to describe fully, but in short, your movement is greatly
restricted. For instance, Palestinians have different license
plates on their cars. If you are caught driving on the wrong
highway or road, you can be arrested and jailed. Another
example: If you are a Palestinian whose family is not from
Jerusalem, you have to apply every year for a permit to live in
the city — and that might be denied, even if you have a job
there.
Imagine having to wait in a checkpoint line (sometimes for
hours) to get to school or to work or to the doctor. In the
United States, we take access to roads and the ability to travel
for granted. Until I heard an Israeli lawyer at the UN Office
for the Coordination for Humanitarian Aid in Jerusalem talk
about access to roads as a major contributor to the humanitarian
crisis there, I never gave roadways a second thought.
Essentially, these restrictions and the Israeli separation
barrier are forcing Palestinian people to live in confined
areas. Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has been criticized
for using the word apartheid (literally, apart-hood ) to
describe the situation of the Palestinians in the occupied West
Bank and Gaza, but the system under which they live has a
similar effect if not intent: It enforces separation, with
severe economic and social ramifications.
Consider the farmer we met in Jayyous. He lives in the village
but his orchards are outside of town. The separation barrier
runs between his house and his land. We visited him in his home,
where he served us tea and anise cookies and coffee spiced with
cardamom. We went with him to the checkpoint on the edge of
town.
He and his wife have permits to cross at the checkpoint, but his
sons were denied permission. When we were there, the soldiers
put up a sign saying that the checkpoint would be open for only
15 minutes twice a day. This means that if he is working the
land and needs something or feels ill, he has to wait until the
appointed time to return home. It also means that if he is late
or there is a long line to get through at the checkpoint, he may
not be able to get to his orchards that day.
Access to roads has economic significance for him as well.
Because of the system, he is greatly restricted as to where he
can go to sell his produce — many markets are not open to him.
Now, multiply his situation many times. And then add to that the
many other people who cannot get to their jobs, their schools,
or their businesses, and you can see that the system has created
poverty, frustration, and anger — whether it’s called apartheid
or not.
Education and Empowerment
I learned another thing from the farmer in Jayyous. The people
we met have a high regard for education — higher than most
people I know here in the States. The farmer has four grown
children and proudly told us where they went to university and
what degrees each one held. We wondered: Why would this farmer
spend his hard–earned money sending all his children abroad to
get university degrees? He said, "Well, your land can be taken
away, and your home, and maybe your freedom, if you are put in
jail. But no one can take away what’s up here (tapping his
head). They can’t take away what you learn and read. You always
have your education."
We visited Lutheran-run schools and talked with students and
teachers. The schools serve both Christian and Muslim children
and teach tolerance and respect — as well as providing an
excellent education. The children we met there were like the
children you meet in many Places — some shy, some curious, full
of energy, and ready to smile. The older ones can tell you about
American music and movies. We asked one boy, about 14, if he
thought that the movies accurately portrayed life in America. He
thought for a moment and said, "We don’t think America is as
violent as it looks in your movies."
We also visited a technical school run by the Lutheran World
Federation that trains young men and women in the trades —
plumbing, woodworking, telecommunications, and other vocational
skills. These programs give young people a chance at employment
and hope for the future.
The emphasis on education does not end with the children and
young adults. At the International Center of Bethlehem, we had
lunch with the Rev. Mitri Raheb, a Lutheran pastor and founder
of the center. This Lutheran-based, ecumenically oriented
institution serves all Palestinians. At the center there are
workshops and classes in everything from conversational French
to water color painting to Pilates to health and wellness to
cooking to dance. They hold art exhibitions and screen films and
provide conference space for meetings. Their mission is
"equipping the local community to assume a proactive role in
shaping their future.... Through empowering the local community,
developing human resources, cultivating artistic talents, and
facilitating intercultural encounters, the ICB actively promotes
the building of Palestinian civil society."
Heroism and Hope
Everywhere we went, we met heroes. They wouldn’t call themselves
that, but we could see it. These are ordinary people who,
despite the hardships of living under such limitations, go to
work and do ministry that makes a difference in their
communities. From the pastors and teachers to the peace
activists and UN humanitarian aid staff to the health–care
workers at Augusta Victoria Hospital, we saw people working
hard, doing their best to make life better for others.
At Augusta Victoria Hospital in East Jerusalem, we toured the
state–of–he–art oncology unit and the pediatric dialysis
program. This LWF–run hospital offers medical services to all
Palestinians regardless of ability to pay. We met with Dr.
Tawfiq Nasser, the director of the hospital, and the Rev. Mark
Brown, the regional representative for the LWF. Nasser told us
about some of the difficulties the hospital has encountered,
from struggling with the government over tax issues to the
challenges presented by the security situation.
For example, Nasser told us that when they schedule an
operation, they need to line up a team — a surgeon, nurses, and
an anesthesiologist — as well as the patient. If any one of
these people is stuck at a checkpoint, surgery has to be delayed
or postponed. He said, "The situation is impossible. This is no
way to practice medicine."
Yet, in our time at the hospital, we could see the amazing good
work being done there by the dedicated staff. As part of its
special 20th anniversary offering this year, Women of the ELCA
is supporting Augusta Victoria Hospital. To learn more, go to
www.womenoftheelca.org/20years/avh.html.
Presence and Peace
As part of my inter–unit work at the churchwide office, I serve
on the committee for the ELCA’s "Peace Not Walls" campaign.
Sometimes (usually when I’m on my way back from a committee
meeting) my colleagues tease me: "Did you solve the Middle East
crisis yet? What’s taking you so long?" Once, when a group of us
were discussing the initiative, a colleague in Communication
Services put a jagged piece of concrete on the table. We looked
at the rock and we looked at her. She said, "It’s a piece of the
Berlin Wall. When will we learn that walls don’t work?"
Do you remember when the Berlin Wall fell? I watched the news
stories on TV — people dancing in the street, crying and
laughing and celebrating. No, walls don’t work. A wall can’t
resolve conflict, and may not even contain it. But a wall
becomes a powerful symbol — a symbol of control and security on
the one side, and a symbol of oppression and alienation on the
other. Over the long term, this leads to division, not peace. By
our prayer and advocacy, we can make a difference.
Kate Sprutta Elliott is editor of Lutheran Woman Today.
"Peace Not Walls" is the ELCA campaign to "stand for justice in
the Holy Land." The 2005 ELCA Churchwide Assembly adopted this
strategy to promote a peaceful solution to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict and to call for a halt to
construction of the separation barrier and its removal from
Palestinian land. The ELCA is working with other Lutherans and
with ecumenical and interfaith partners toward:
• safety and security for all Israelis and Palestinians,
• reduction of poverty and unemployment, and
• a negotiated final status agreement that includes a shared
Jerusalem as capital of two independent states and with access
and full rights in the city for Jews, Christians, and Muslims.
The article first appeared in Lutheran Woman Today at
http://www.lutheranwomantoday.org/featuredArticles/0707article2.html
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