Al-Jazeerah: Cross-Cultural Understanding
www.ccun.org www.aljazeerah.info |
Opinion Editorials, November 2013 |
||||||||||||||||||
Archives Mission & Name Conflict Terminology Editorials Gaza Holocaust Gulf War Isdood Islam News News Photos Opinion Editorials US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles) www.aljazeerah.info
|
Extremist Israeli Settlers Assassinate Palestinian Olive Trees By Paul Balles Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 5, 2013
The still slow life is mine, my
days are years.
Tied
to the soil, I reach towards the sky,
as
men rush by, so driven by their fears,
and
with their fears intact pass on and die.
From Plato's Olive Tree
Unknown author
This is the olive picking season.
Like other harvests, it should be a season of joy. However, the
land-grabbing occupiers of Palestine have imbued Israeli youth with the
destructive arrogance of conceited, swaggering, self-loving Jews.
“A
group of extremist Israeli settlers set ablaze more than 350 Palestinian
olive trees” reports the International Middle East Media Centre. (Sept. 23,
2013) “Extremists further attacked a Palestinian orchard, south of Nablus,
and uprooted its trees.” According to
the Palestine News Agency (WAFA), “Israeli settlers Monday (Oct.14, 2013)
cut down olive trees in the village of Ras Karkar, west of
Ramallah....Settlers always attack villages during the olive picking season
and destroy olive trees to harm the local Palestinian population who live
from harvesting olive crops.” Noam Chomsky
observes, “The result, predictably, has been severe disruption of
Palestinian lives, and according to UN reports, a decrease of more than 80%
in number of farmers who routinely cultivate their lands and a decline of
60% in yield of olive trees, among other harmful effects.”
Local human
rights groups allege that more than 800,000 olive trees have been uprooted
since Israel occupied the West Bank in 1967. “The ancient
olive trees are regarded by Palestinians as a symbol of their connection to
the land,” reports Al-Jazeera. “Each year during the olive harvesting
season, such incidents spike across the West Bank – where more than 515,000
Israelis occupy over 125 settlements, considered illegal under international
law.” Oxfam
confirmed in a report that “Olives are the area’s most important crop, whose
oil is exported around the globe and whose annual harvest is a crucial
source of income for about 100,000 farming families. Olive cultivation
contributes up to $100 million in income for some of the poorest Palestinian
communities.” According to
Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, 80,000 Palestinian families depend
on olives as a sole source of income, which constitutes 14% of the
Palestinian agricultural output. “In the
village of Burin on Sunday, 20/10, Palestinian olive pickers and Israeli
volunteers were attacked by masked settlers,” says 925 Magazine. “Olive trees
are a Palestinian national symbol, a fact acknowledged by Israeli settlers
who continually seek to destroy them,” writes Daoud Kuttab.
The story of Palestine in the olive
tree deserves to be heard. The Story of
Palestine By Anonymous If olive trees
could speak, what would they tell us? Would they
recount the glories witnessed in this hallowed place?
Would they tell of the horrors that
transpired long ago in the name of many things? Would they
recall the small human lives that lived for generations in pastoral dignity?
Would they give evidence of the
suffering and abuse inflicted by mechanical monsters and ill-inspired men? Would they
share the love they have received from the once young and now old who tended
them?
Would they boast of the healing, the
wealth and the comfort they bring? Would they
complain of the loneliness of the field and the neglect of the world?
Would they speak of the hope and
courage that lives in the earth and endures in the souls of their children? The olive
trees speak all this and more to people who are ready to hear. Concludes
Mahmud Darwish, “If the Olive Trees knew the hands that planted them, Their
Oil would become Tears.” |
|
Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah & ccun.org. editor@aljazeerah.info & editor@ccun.org |