Sheikh Jarrah - a microcosm of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

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Another Friday, another protest in Sheikh Jarrah. 

Another Friday where Israeli police react with fury and force, trying to bar and then break up the event, and arresting peaceful protesters. 

Another Friday and more evidence that democracy - and key pillars of democracy like freedom of speech and freedom of association, let alone the freedom to protest peacefully - are under threat in Israel.

When the Sheikh Jarrah protests first started an Israeli friend told me that they would never have any impact -- that Jerusalem is something that Israelis just can't think rationally about.  He said that even though we are talking about settler activities in neighborhoods that few Israelis can find on a map, let alone ever visit, the average Israeli hears "Jerusalem" and stops listening. 

I hope he is wrong.  Because this is about more than settlers targeting houses in this one Palestinian neighborhood.  Sheikh Jarrah is a microcosm of the entire Israeli-Palestinian conflict - as pointed out by Didi Remez in a podcast he did with APN earlier this week, following his arrest in last week's protest.  It is about Israeli actions and policies that are wholly inimical to peace.  It is emblematic of the battle between those who believe in a negotiated peace -- for Israel's own sake -- and those who prefer the zero-sum logic of occupation, domination, and perpetual conflict. 

In one neat little package the Sheikh Jarrah protests encompass the core issues at the heart of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the peace process: territory, settlements and borders, displacement of Palestinians, and of course, Jerusalem.

I have watched (from afar) these protests grow, week after week.  I have watched them gather more and more "mainstream" support, especially in the face of the extraordinary actions of Israeli police. I hope my friend turns out to be wrong -- that Sheikh Jarrah will be the issue that focuses Israelis minds on what is really at stake and motivates them to action.

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I was there yesterday for the first time. It was the biggest event yet. An impressive mass of demonstrators gathered at the entrance to the settlement to show that this apartheid won't hold.

I think that as the settlers returned to their homes after the Sabbath prayers and saw hundreds of people in their way protesting against them, they realized that their attempts to ethnically cleanse the region will not go without resistance, and this time resistance will also come from the Israeli side. I saw disappointment and fear in the eyes of some of them.

Here are pictures and videos I took in the event:
http://picasaweb.google.com/mariosav/SheikhJarrahDemonstration2212010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0WRMeO5Zz4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExSh3gNOSVk
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kI_7_0GXnQ4

Hi Mario
I live in Canada and I am neither a Jew nor a Muslim. But I have followed the Israel-Palestine conflict since the 60's, agonized over it, written letters to the editor of Canadian newspapers (ones that all got published) and a few to newspapers in the region as well (two of which also got published).
This is just to say you give me hope. Protest by non-Muslim Israelis. Amazing. The world is crazy but not entirely so.
Keep up the good fight.

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