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EYEWITNESS FROM JERUSALEM |
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A WEEKLY JOURNAL WRITTEN BY SISTER MARY |
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Jerusalem Journal # 46 9
February 2002 |
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Although a week has passed, I am still "unpacking" my experience of
planting olive trees with the Rabis for Human Rights. Perhaps because I have
seen so many ancient olive presses and present day harvesting of olives, as well
as last year's effort to prevent destruction of olive trees by Israeli settlers
in the Palestinian village of Deir Istiya, I've felt a bit of overload
throughout this week. The olive tree is one that gives
everything for use: its shade, its leaves for victory laurels, its fruit for
food, oil for light, food, medicine, ointment, soap, fragrance and ritual
anointing. Its pits are used as fuel and the wood for carving and fuel. Those
whose lives are intertwined with the olive tree in these ways consider
themselves blessed. Many of the olive trees in the Palestinian villages are
hundreds of years old, some even a thousand or more. They have been gentle and
generous "family members' for innumerable generations. It is not
unusual for a man to tell you that his father's great grandfather planted this
olive grove during the Turkish occupation or before. For the
Christian community here in Palestine, this tree is also a symbol of the
rootedness to their land for the past 2000 years. Like the olive tree, the
Christian community here has withstood the vicissitudes of a long history of
occupation, and continued its steadfast presence and faithful witness to Christ
since apostolic times. The olive tree has become a political symbol for
all the Palestinian people, expressing their endurance and resilience during
this chaotic time of violent oppression. No wonder the settlers are
so intent on uprooting any olive trees nearby their settlements on lands
confiscated from Arab villages. Even the Israeli Occupation Force has been
know to uproot olive trees using chains attached to American-made Apache
helicopters. In fact, since the Oslo "peace" Accords in 1993,
Israelis have managed to uproot over 52, 500 olive trees; far more were uprooted
than we could plant. Last
week when I returned to the Palestinian village of Deir Istiya, I stood
underneath an ancient uprooted tree. Its roots literally help boulders
three feet or more in diameter, up in the air above my head. My heart told
me it was evil to do this to this ancient tree. But I knew that even more
evil was what had been done to the people of this village who had offered me a
gentle and warm hospitality. These families were losing their trees, and
thus their livelihood, as settlers bulldozed roads through the village olive
groves, destroying the trees in their way. In the
story of Noah the olive leaf was a symbol of the end of chaos. Yet those
who claim the Torah as sacred, seem to have forgotten.... |