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EYEWITNESS FROM JERUSALEM |
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A WEEKLY JOURNAL WRITTEN BY SISTER MARY |
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Jerusalem Journal # 11 March 17, 2001 |
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The
almond tree blossoms, harbinger of springtime here in Palestine/Israel began to
bloom last month and now, because of the abundant rains, even the areas of the
desert of Judah and the Negev are green with a variety of wild flowers.
Small yellow daisies, unaware of the political border restrictions are carpeting
areas of the Egyptian northern Sinai right on into this country. Even the
heat of the sun is once again felt in the land. It is as though nature is
trying to give us some relief from the fears and/or oppression which hold a
tight grip on most of the inhabitants here.
Since the Israeli's closed off Ramallah and the nearby villages by digging a
large trench around the area over a week ago, 200,000 Palestinians are virtually
prisoners in their own towns with no entrance or exit through the area.
One member of the Israeli Knesset (legislature), Mr Issam Mahoul, said that even
the worst regimes would not dare to do what Israel is doing today to the
Palestinians -- making concentration camps out of the Arab towns -- and he
called on all the people of this land who are concerned about humanitarianism
and peace to tear down the closure points, to fill in the deep trenches.
His colleague condemned his too timely remarks and the implied comparison of
what the Israelis are dong to what the Nazis did to the Jews. But in
reality many people here are seeing the situation as just that. One German
woman who feels great empathy for the Jews, recently remarked to me: "It
seems that what the Jews learned out of the concentration camps was to apply the
same procedures to the Palestinians now." More and more people are
seeing this comparison as all too real.
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