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Opinion Editorials, September 2006, To see today's opinion articles, click here: www.aljazeerah.info |
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Human Price of the Israeli Occupation of Palestine Israeli daily aggression on the Palestinian people Mission and meaning of Al-Jazeerah Cities, localities, and tourist attractions
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Flowers in Bint Jubail, South Lebanon By Samia A. Halaby Al-Jazeerah, September 20, 2006 In the south of Lebanon, a popular revolution is taking place, and its chosen leadership is Hizbullah. In speaking with people, their animation, their sense of community, their commitment to the collective of the community, their disregard of individualism, their complete moral and emotional assurance of what is good and right, their total disrespect of inequality animates them and all they do. In Bint Jubail we saw almost total destruction and this destruction encompassed all parts of life yet in the middle of this damage there were a few amazing Jewels of life bubbling open. In the south of Lebanon the landscape is covered with the dust of missiles and destruction. The trees, the weeds, and the cultivated plants have a sickening yellow dust that immediately impresses a sensation of poison and death. Inside the villages, the dust and garbage spread through all parts of the town regardless of the damaged areas. Areas of massive destruction looked like strange cliffs and fields of broken cement chunks interspersed with bits of brightly colored cloth or plastic. Children's shoes, schoolbooks, clothing, shards of wooden furniture, and shiny bits of metals were all smashed flat and embedded in the rubble. Of all the villages that we saw, Bint Jubail was most completely ground-up by Israeli missiles sent with messages of racist hate. The town seemed abandoned with some amazing exceptions. Shop after small shop had its doors damaged,
pockmarked, bent out of their frames, made inaccessible by mounds of
broken cement. Slabs of cement hung precariously askew from bent lines of
steel reinforcements. Yet in the middle of this general yellow-gray there
were some precious flowers of life blooming from somewhere deep in the
hearts of the people. At the side of his shop door was a huge gash where cement and cinderblocks were absent, yet sandals, slippers, shoes, and shoe boxes were being arranged enticingly, colorfully like blooms of organized labor and beauty in the midst of the Israeli created destruction. Across the street was the woman's shop where
beautiful scarves, folded and stacked, or hanging from their corners in
bunches -- waving in the air. Down the street there was music and a few more open
shops. The magnetic enthusiasm of the songs drew us irresistibly. We found
a cart with tapes, CDs, and other Hizbullah paraphernalia all joyfully
presented. They cried to see the destruction but were
determined to stay. She proudly pointed to where several rows of olive
tress curved along a mountain, and told us that the Israelis never got
beyond that line and that the brave defenders were able to stop them and
their tanks. Our friend of the scarf was just like a worker in Yugoslavia, some years before the fall of working-class rule, who waited for me and a friend on the road knowing that we would be hours in a restaurant that she had directed us to. On our way out we found each other and she took us home with her and gave us incredible in-depth details of the life of a worker in a working-class state. She was enlivened by the same energy as our new friend in the south of Lebanon. Always, the revolutionary spirit skips a few
unfortunate ones. As soon as we were away from the shoe and scarf shops a
little jeep came by and I asked if they would let us interview them; and
the old man near the door and his son behind the driver's wheel
immediately began to apologize saying that they were not Arabs, that they
were Phoenicians. Did the man and his son in the Jeep think me an Israeli? Did they think me an American reporter? After a bit of discussion, they seemed to flip politically and the son gave an interview that contained no indication of his Phoenician I-am-not-an-Arab apology. Another older woman came running trying to tell us her personal problems. There was much that was interesting in what she said. Her family lands had been partially occupied by the Israelis since 1948 and more was taken during this past war of July 2006. She was angry and told of her many responsibilities with which she could not cope. She had to care for four grandchildren whose mother was American and who refused to take them over to America so that they would be safe. But I noticed that each and everyone one of the people we talked to was wearing clothes that indicated they had a clean organized domicile, and that they must have had water in which to wash. No one looked like they lived in the dust and destruction; while we, arriving in a van, walking around briefly, were dusty and disheveled.
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Opinions expressed in various sections are the sole responsibility of their authors and they may not represent Al-Jazeerah's. editor@aljazeerah.info |