« Portrait | Interview Highlights

Interview with Adi Dagan

Can you tell me about your background, how you became active?

I grew up in a fairly left-wing home. As a child I always went to demonstrations with my parents and we always talked about current events at home. It always interested me. But I think that I became really active in the past three or four years.

What made you want to be involved?

Three years ago I lived in Jerusalem. I was living in the city center then, when the intifada1 began, and there were many bombings close to my house. It was really scary. I was fed up with sitting at home and watching television and getting mad. I wanted to do something active to change the situation.

Had you been active in any organization before then?

A little bit, but not regularly. I would go to demonstrations or try to join groups here and there - at the university - but nothing regular, only sporadically.

What did you study?

My BA is in psychology and my Masters is in History.

What do you do now?

Currently I am the Coalition of Women for Peace's2 media coordinator. In addition to that, I'm very active in Machsom Watch,3 and I am their spokeswoman.

Can you tell me about both, how did you come to join them?


Chronologically speaking, three years ago I realized that I wanted to become active, so I joined Machsom Watch in Jerusalem. I started going to Kalandia checkpoint4 every week. After about a year of this activity, the women - we were a smaller group at the time - asked me to be the group's spokesperson. We wanted to reach the public with all the materials we were gathering and with our documentation of what was happening at the checkpoints.5 This is actually our goal, and one of the main methods of accomplishing that is using the media. So I started to do that. I also increasingly felt I wanted to spend all my time working in this realm and not to have to work in one place and volunteer someplace else. That's how I came to work at Coalition of Women for Peace. My job has two components: the first is performing spokesperson duties for the joint body. The Coalition has nine organizations but there's the joint body of the Coalition's activities, its projects, messages, and campaigns. The second is supporting each of the nine organizations' communications work.

What do you do in Machsom Watch, at Kalandia checkpoint for instance?

Our main aim is to document the checkpoints and what happens there and the violations of human rights. We see their presence as a breach of human rights because they prevent Palestinians from traveling in the regions where they live - I'm referring to the internal checkpoints, not to the few lone checkpoints between Israel and the territories. Our main objective is to document and bring material to the Israeli public and the world and to say: here's what the occupation looks like and these are the checkpoints. We have other aims aside from the main objective; we believe that when we stand at checkpoints our presence there scales down the abuse or human rights' violations to a certain extent. It doesn't transform the reality into something completely different, but it has some impact. Another aim is to meet the Palestinians at the checkpoints. For Palestinians it means encountering a different Israeli - meaning not the settlers6 and soldiers they are familiar with - but people who really aspire to achieve peace. That's the kind of activity we do.

Can you describe where Kalandia checkpoint is?

Kalandia is a very large checkpoint between Palestinian North Jerusalem7 and Ramallah.8 It's on the main road, in the middle of an urban sequence of neighborhoods, such as Beit Hanina, A-Ram, merging into Kalandia, Samira Mis,9 Ramallah; in the middle of it runs a main road and the checkpoint. Everything there is changing now as a result of the reality of the wall.10 When we arrived there four years ago it was a major junction between Jerusalem and Ramallah and in the middle of it stood the checkpoint. People from all over the southern West Bank,11 Bethlehem12 and Hebron13 traveled to Ramallah, passing through Kalandia, or traveling from Ramallah to Jerusalem through Kalandia. It's a very central throughway.

How does the wall affect Kalandia checkpoint now?

The reality of the wall is very complicated because it is constructed on the municipal borders of Jerusalem that were defined in '67,14 annexing East Jerusalem. It cuts off A-Ram from Ramallah and severs Ramallah from Jerusalem. So it isn't all that clear, an underground passage and a huge terminal might be built to replace the checkpoint, but it isn't clear. The current situation - the checkpoint - is far better than what is going to happen with the wall.

What is the current situation at the checkpoint?

What we witness in general at the checkpoints, at Kalandia checkpoint specifically, is that fewer and fewer people are able to pass, and fewer and fewer people are even trying. Carving the West Bank into very small cantons and restricting travel between them is a trend that is only getting stronger, so in Machsom Watch we don't focus on the issue of checkpoints but rather on the larger issue of travel restrictions,15 along with the closure16 and travel permit policies.17 Part of that issue is also the wall.

Can you talk about your experience monitoring checkpoints?

I just want to say that I stopped going to checkpoints because I just couldn't take it anymore. I did it for two years and it became unbearable. It was mainly a feeling of being crushed, as though someone were stepping on you. It was a sense of a lack of control over life, of someone taking your life away from you, just taking it away, a very bad feeling of helplessness and identifying with the people who need to cross the checkpoint then. Young soldiers stand there and they decide who passes and who doesn't. It feels very bad. After two years of seeing that I think that rather than improving, the situation is only getting worse. I couldn't bear it any longer, now I'm dedicating my experience in the field to the issue of the media because I hope maybe that will be successful.

Can you tell me about a certain event that affected you personally?

Certainly. At the end of March 2003 I arrived at Kalandiya checkpoint with another woman from Machsom Watch and a child was shot there. The soldiers shot a child, killing him; we were there when it happened.18 That was very, very, very traumatic and it was very difficult for me to return there afterwards. I kept imagining it happening all over again. Every soldier seemed potentially capable of killing a child. The tension was horrible. There was also the feeling that we hadn't managed to prevent it. That was difficult to deal with.

How do you think your work with Machsom Watch furthers peace?

My standing at checkpoints doesn't directly further peace, but there are different stages involved in the process. Currently the groups I'm involved with and the kind of work I do oppose the occupation. We haven't yet reached the stage of working towards peace. Working towards peace is a crucial stage which I believe must take place. Our standing at checkpoints and documenting is meant to convince the Israeli public that it's in an undesirable situation that is only leading us farther away from a solution, that we shouldn't be there, and that maybe later on there will be an agreement.

There's the matter of meeting Palestinian people there and that is a very intense encounter that draws us closer and that is significant. One of the reasons that I went to checkpoints for two years was my desire to stop referring to the Palestinians as "the other" and to build relationships with individual people. In today's state of affairs it's so easy to turn people into the collective "they" and to believe that all this is taking place somewhere else when actually everything is very close by. We have to continuously keep in mind that it's not something that's taking place far away from here. It's happening to people like us. We can't think about it in abstract terms.

Did any relationships develop between you and Palestinian people at the checkpoints?

Sure, there are women [Israeli activists] who have been going to the same checkpoints for the past four years. They get to know lots of people who live there and pass through there, exchanging phone numbers. People call to tell them about a problem and they try to help them from home. There are also just plain friendships. If somebody doesn't show up then people ask about her, where she is, what happened to her. Every person chooses to what extent to personalize her work, but relationships definitely exist between people there.

What kind of relationships, if any, develop with the soldiers?

We get to know them or recognize them, too, and that's also a matter of personal preference. As an organization, our approach towards soldiers is very businesslike; it is neither embracing nor hostile. Dialogue with them concerns what happened during that day, what the [army's] procedures are. We're a third element at the checkpoint so we don't identify ourselves with the army. We walk a thin line with the soldiers and with the army in general because there are all sort of different interests stemming from different concerns that need to be balanced. That's very problematic.

Can you say more about Machsom Watch's relationship with the Israeli army?

From the army's perspective our presence isn't so comfortable for them because we publish stories that maybe they would prefer people not know about.19 On the other hand, they use us. They claim that because they allow us to be there that shows they support our work. That's a little like us being their fig leaf, and they can then claim that there's a human rights organization basically saying that things are alright. On the other hand, we don't want to cooperate because we oppose the policies that the army is implementing, and yet we do turn to them and submit complaints. There is ongoing dialogue with them and we have to be careful not to venture to places where, politically speaking, we don't want to find ourselves. There are many forces involved in the matter and it isn't simple. We also have many arguments among ourselves regarding how the relations should be.

Are you responsible for coordinating with the army?

No. that's not at all a part of my responsibilities. There are other women who do that because the communications work is enough responsibility. Personally I can't see myself doing that; I think every person should do what suits them in terms of their perceptions and character.

Did you serve in the army in the past or do you do reserve service?

I did compulsory service.20

How do you think you are perceived by the soldiers at the checkpoint?

In general it's not that pleasant for them, just like it wouldn't be pleasant for anybody in a situation where people stand observing their actions, writing everything down and also approaching them, asking questions and occasionally making comments. In general, that's not exactly what they would like from us! It varies, it varies in that our presence is occasionally actually pleasant for them and they even say things like, "Good thing you're here." They like to tell us what's on their minds; they tell us about how hard it is for them. There are those who hate us, often they are settlers - civilians - but also some in uniform, and we simply drive them mad. They can't tolerate the presence of Israelis who have a stance so opposed to theirs. And there's the majority, which is indifferent. They aren't interested in anything because of the numb state they are in; they just aren't interested.

How do you relate to the question in general of security and the checkpoints, their role for the sake of security?

For instance, if at checkpoints people were checked for bombs or whatever and then allowed to continue like happens here at the entrance to a mall, then it would be less of a problem, and maybe we [Machsom Watch] wouldn't have to come to the checkpoints at all. But after you come there you understand that that's not what takes place there at all. There is a very minimal and arbitrary physical inspection, which at some checkpoints doesn't even take place. A person's ID card is inspected and if they come from a certain place and aren't supposed to be outside their allotted living area, they can't pass.21 That's how it is. Men between the age of 16 and 25 need a permit to pass through the checkpoint, for example. I'm talking about scores of checkpoints, and the meaning is that they can't really leave their houses to go to the city nearby or anywhere. It paralyzes life.

That's what we discovered about the checkpoints; that's what brought us to the conclusion that checkpoints mostly don't serve security needs. Again, I'm referring to the internal checkpoints. Now even if the checkpoints do fulfill security needs in some way, as the army claims, there are things known to all of us, including the fact that Palestinians who go to apply for a permit at the DCO [liaison office] are often pressured to become collaborators.22 It's a widely known fact; it's really not something that we discovered. "Come help us out and in return you'll get a permit for your child to go to the hospital." So there are many ways in which the checkpoints are used indirectly for security needs. The issue came up in the appeal to the High Court of Justice in the case of the wall. It's called proportionality; let me explain. It means we compare how much the population is harmed to the security benefit. For instance, the High Court of Justice ruled that in the case of the wall, it must be moved because the harm is too extensive. In relation to the checkpoints, one could say Palestinian men shouldn't leave their homes at all, and that will contribute to the Israelis' security. Maybe it will, but there are things that cannot be done according to international law, and the checkpoints are a violation of international law.

I think we all have our own red line for what we are prepared to let the army do for the sake of security. We could also bomb the cities and be done with it! So the issue is that it seems to be a total imbalance, and to a certain extent, a lie. I say a lie because there aren't physical searches at the checkpoints; rather, the checkpoints pen people into all sorts of areas. Why is this done? That's what a military occupation looks like, that's what control looks like. It states who's in charge; the Israeli army is in charge and that's the situation and "you" must accept that, "you" must let go of your aspirations, we're the strong side and that's the story.

Did the situation at the checkpoints come as a surprise to you?

Yes, I mean I really understand it now but at first I kept learning something new about the occupation23 and how the system works, and also about the large bureaucracy with the matter of permits. It's complicated on purpose and there are many types of permits; orders are changed on a daily basis regarding who is allowed to pass and who isn't. At first I was amazed at the discovery of these mechanisms.

I don't think that I ever thought that the checkpoints were a security measure, because as I said this was at a time when all the bombings in Jerusalem were taking place five minutes away from my house, and the last thing I felt was secure. I truly believe that the issue of security is symptomatic, meaning that it's superficial and that one must take a profound look in order to view the deeper issues. I think that if we remain at the level of security we won't ever get out of this.

How did you feel the first time you went to a checkpoint with Machsom Watch?

The first time I went to a checkpoint was during Passover.24 During the Jewish holidays, there is always a closure imposed and nobody passes through checkpoints. We went to Kalandia and it was empty; there was nobody there. On one hand, in terms of it being my first time, maybe it was a more gradual introduction, but I did see the physical environment. I felt as though I'd arrived in India, in the third world. It looked so bad-- so dirty, so neglected-- with barbed wire fences and mud. I remember that shocked me even without the presence of people there. When I came back a week later it was full of people and it was overwhelming-- lots of people, children, women and men and taxis and stalls with vendors and it was, wow! It flooded me and for the first months I went to the checkpoint when I came home I couldn't stop thinking about it for hours, I kept recalling the images. I couldn't fall asleep. It was emotionally flooding, the visual images. It is initially very overwhelming. You get accustomed to it. It's amazing how you get used to anything! That's just the way it is, when something is new it is visible and when you get used to it you start to pay attention to different impressions than from that first day. At first it was as though a spaceship transported me to a completely different world that is located 15 minutes away from my house. This place follows different rules and has a different language, but the encounter with Palestinians was amazing. I had so many conversations with people; I learned so much about what happens there. It's really amazing.

Do you think Israelis are aware of the situation at the checkpoints?

No. Maybe more today, in part thanks to Machsom Watch, I think. But no, in general, we say that you have to be there in order to comprehend. We explain what's going on to people who are distanced from it all. We try to bring people along because when people go there I think they grasp that there is a problem and that the checkpoints aren't a 100% solution. People generally didn't understand what the problem is, where things are taking place or why; I think that today when you mention checkpoints in Israel people know something about it and they aren't comfortable with it, they know it's a problematic matter. The average Israeli still doesn't understand it in full, but whoever is frequently there, sees it.

Are your guests [the Israelis you bring to see the checkpoints] political figures?

No. Our goal is to bring the next door neighbors-- anybody. Of course there are many journalists and people who publish and write, but we invite everybody. That's also our chance to invite men to come along because men can't become members of the organization, but as visitors everyone is invited. We invite everybody and we try to organize tours to the checkpoints actively and to initiate activities.

Why can't men be a part of your organization?

There are different levels; first of all the practical level. This is how it began. There was an understanding that the presence of a male third party at a checkpoint could achieve the opposite of what we wanted to, meaning adding tension. There's a certain tension during the encounter between Israeli men and soldiers, which can be even more complex than our encounter, which is also complex, as I described. There is also the matter of a certain identification in that men also get called for reserve service, meaning that there's a chance they were also in reserve service in this type of situation from the opposite side. I'm certain that if there were men in Machsom Watch it would have come to an end long ago. I'm sure the army wouldn't allow it because of the tension and violence. I'm sure that if I were a man I would have been beaten up by soldiers at the checkpoints by now because there is a lot of stress and anger. Those are the practicalities, but I think that beyond that we like being in an organization that belongs only to women. It gives us more power, allows us to do the things we want to. Personally, it suits me. I think that in mixed organizations men are often the ones who become the decision makers and determine things and women are pushed aside. I feel that I have a better sense of partnership and equality.

Does the army endorse your activity? How does it work?

The army officially permits our presence at checkpoints-- I mean the high ranks do. The soldiers in the field continuously try to get rid of us. They say, "No, closed military zone, you can't be here, move away, move there, don't speak to them." But we have a permit from the high ranks. Sometimes they allow our presence there because even they understand that they won't be able to get rid of us and that if they do, there will be a heave price to pay publicity-wise, which won't serve them well.

What is your approach as women? I know there are women who come as mothers of soldiers and as maternal figures. How did you approach it? How do others?

As I explained, that's not our approach towards soldiers. We adopt a businesslike approach in order to understand the situation and to receive information. As an organization we don't have a common approach to the issue of military service in the Occupied Territories. Obviously every woman has her own personal style, but the organization continuously attempts to manage the manner of activity so as not to become aggressive towards the soldiers, but not embrace them either. A kind of neutrality. We don't call upon them to refuse to serve,25 nor do we strengthen them in their "national mission." Personally, it's hard for me. It was really a major problem I had-- standing at checkpoints I got very irritated at the soldiers! I know it doesn't serve the purpose; it doesn't serve anything, but we are human beings and it's difficult because of the frustration that there is a person who tells people not to pass or to wait, detaining them or worse things than I've described. Again, I have nothing personal against the soldiers but that's the situation. It's also our claim that in such a situation you and I would become very inhumane and immoral. I don't think that there's something wrong with the soldiers as soldiers but rather that the situation is wrong.

Can you tell me about a confrontation you had with a soldier?

I can't recall anything special, I've had many; I don't know whether confrontation is the right term; we argue over people being detained for long periods at the checkpoints. There was one time when one soldier wanted all the people who were standing and waiting at the checkpoint to move, I don't know, maybe 200 meters back and wait there. The people didn't really feel like moving back. They couldn't really understand what he wanted and ultimately they wanted to stay close by in order to hear the soldier who would call to them that it was their turn. So then he decided to punish them and close the checkpoint completely until they moved. I found myself not quite attempting to convince him, but maybe more yelling at him, "What are you doing, why are you punishing these people, stop it immediately." It got to the point where he was firing into the air. That was very stressful. Of course he couldn't close the checkpoint, and his commander came and opened the checkpoint. There are things where a person has personal ambitions like that, and it's hard to watch.

What are your goals as media coordinator?

As spokeswoman - I'm talking about Machsom Watch still - that's really a difficult question. I think that initially it was very clear to me that I wanted the international audiences and the Israeli public to know that that the checkpoints aren't a security measure but rather a form of collective punishment, an infringement of human rights. Today I'm more skeptical regarding the public, especially the Israeli public. I think that we succeeded very nicely in reaching the international audiences and received a lot of coverage, but in general I see that making the Israeli public take an interest in what happens on the Palestinian side isn't working that well…I'm debating the matter. It's undecided. There's another approach that's gaining momentum: showing the effects of the checkpoints and the occupation on soldiers and on the army, showing the extent of the harm to our side. Perhaps this is an effective approach but it doesn't really appeal to me; however I see that it's something the press is always interested in.

Are you referring to Shovrim Shtika?26 [literally 'breaking the silence']

Yes, for example. But we also have something to contribute there because the press is always interested if I bring them a story about something involving a soldier at a checkpoint, a soldier who fired [his gun], injured, or abused. If there is a soldier involved they are interested. If I tell them that there's been a closure in Nablus27 for a month, or something general like that - closure is such an arbitrary act - they are less interested in that. Frankly I'm indecisive; I'm not sure what the objectives are. There is the approach of trying to change the concept that there is no choice of being in this situation-- that we must be there and we must fight -- but what the objectives are is a question that hasn't really got an answer currently.

Do you have a specific strategy concerning the Israeli audience?

Like I said, not really. We've tried all different approaches; some are pushing for discussing the harm caused to Israeli society and some want us to present the damage done to the Palestinians. We're a large organization and there are many women and many different voices. It's like a choir that sings in many parts, it isn't that focused.

What successes do you see regarding international audiences?

Again, I am usually in touch with the press and ever since I've been in this position, foreign journalists join us at least twice a week at the checkpoints. My estimate is that the checkpoint story has coverage all over Europe, the United States, and I recall journalists from places such as Australia, South Africa, and Brazil. We're told that people hear and know about it and that it receives a lot of coverage.

What do you hope will happen in the future?

Well, the optimal situation would be that it would bring countries to apply pressure on Israel to enter negotiations, to withdraw from the Territories,28 and to do what it takes to make these things happen. Again, after four years I'm pretty skeptical. I'm not sure it'll happen, but we do what we can. I don't know!

How does the connection between the organizations work in the Coalition?

A coalition is more intricate because there are many voices, many approaches, and many directions. All in all, I think it's working nicely and that the common denominator is very large. A joint organization strengthens the individual organizations, especially the smaller and perhaps more active ones, and that strengthens joint activities. What we also try to do in the coalition is to strengthen the groups - the organizations - and also to use all the organizations' resources for the joint work.

What are the drawbacks to the way you currently operate?

The issue of strategy, what the goals are. I think you were there on the day when we talked about the media campaign, I really didn't think that up myself; I was at a media workshop and that was raised. They really stressed the issue of strategy, of naming your objectives and choosing activities accordingly, and not doing scattered activities hoping that they will have some impact. It's even more difficult at the Coalition because every organization has a different emphasis. Sometimes there are issues that are important for women from Machsom Watch that women from New Profile aren't interested in, and the other way round. So there needs to be something that is common yet focused: a statement.

It's also difficult finding a statement that the Israeli public will be able to relate to, and then there's the constant tension between what we really think - our most profound truths - and what the public can grasp and digest. I think what we lack is strategy, as well as a better connection with the Israeli public. That's a difficult matter because we're a radical organization that is very distant from the consensus. The million dollar question is how to relate-how to influence people and not alienate ourselves-without deterring people. There is the sense of being perceived as an out of touch minority.

Your idea for a media strategy was to pick an issue and focus on it for a certain amount of time. Have you figured out what that issue will be?

Yes. All sorts of ideas have been raised, and we're going to dedicate the next meeting to that matter. Again, because I deal with the matter of the media I know how difficult that is. Beyond the fundamental decision we need to do some copywriting work and decide how to present the issues. The Israeli society is so diverse. The question of which connections and links can be made to bring people to relate to the issues is a very difficult one. There are many women in the coalition that have been active for many years. They are used to certain thought patterns. There are people that think that if they simply state their truth then people will say "wow--" they'll faint dead away and say, "Now, why didn't I think of that!?" But things don't work that way. You have to go the route of persuasion, and for that you need to touch upon things that worry people and not things they aren't concerned with. It's a difficult matter, but I think that if we want to work with the Israeli public that's what needs to be done.

What do you think you should choose to focus on?

I don't know, I'm really debating the options.

What are the options?

I don't know, maybe whether to adopt the approach of talking to Israelis about what the true economic costs of the occupation are on the personal level. What did I contribute and what did I receive from the occupation is a slogan showing that it comes to one huge minus sign. There's the approach of showing that there really is a peaceful solution and someone to talk to. We have a sticker with the slogan There is a Partner [in Hebrew with a feminine ending on 'partner' - Yesh Partnerit], taking the approach of talking about Palestinian women and ourselves, for instance. I don't know. It's something that needs to be thought through thoroughly in order to come up with something successful. I have examples of successful campaigns: the issue of poverty combined with the workers' socio-economic campaign against Netanyahu's29 policy. He talked about 'parasites' - the people who weren't working and yet were receiving allowances from the state - and how it must be ended. It was a very successful campaign on his part. The counter-campaign did a spin on it, raising the issue of people who are employed and yet are still poor. That's a fine example of how an important and central issue can be shaped into a campaign. The poor workers were the subject for discussion over the past few months. It takes a lot of wisdom to find an approach that can be readily accepted.

What do you think is the difference between the slogan There is a Partner and the approach of talking about the cost of the occupation for Israeli society? What do you think would be the effect of each?

I don't know. I'm really debating it; it's not simple at all. The There is a Partner campaign relates to the matter that we discuss often: the need to give people hope, meaning we have to say there's an alternative, there's something better to be achieved. On the other hand, having talked to people - you know, taxi drivers - people are very cynical and what has happened over the past four years is that people really don't believe [in a solution] anymore, so we don't want to come across as being fantasists and as having very unrealistic and unfounded ideas. Those are the pros and cons of that. The price approach - on one hand it's been discussed so much and the truth is that a large part of the Israeli public is willing to make compromises and what is missing is the political leadership to carry it out. On the other hand I think that we must reach Israelis through their pockets. That's an issue that concerns many people: where the money is going. People are very upset about the economic situation. It's always a problem because these topics are always extremely complex and doing a campaign is very complicated… I envy people who are sure of what they want to say. Take other issues you've [Just Vision has] dealt with - the Bereaved Families Forum30 - they're a part of a more humane and emotional sphere, maybe it's more complicated in the field of politics.

What does the slogan There is a Partner mean? What are you trying to say?

It's the basic issue of having someone to talk to on the other side and there being a partner for peace;31 there aren't only people there who want to throw us into the sea. Regarding the matter of the partner [female], that's part of the Coalition's message about women's roles in a resolution - that feminist women have much to contribute. It's also to remind people that there are women and civilians there, because all that Israelis hear is about armed terrorists, even female terrorists.32 That was the idea of the sticker.

Which specific roles can women play in a peace process?

I think that women, drawing on feminist approaches - not necessarily every woman by default - contribute to solutions that aren't based on force in which the strong side imposes its will on the other side, but rather to a more equality-based approach. This approach addresses the other side's needs. It doesn't just focus on how I can convince the other side to relinquish those needs. It's an approach that views the range of aspects of life and not just security, territory, things like that; it asks rather what the implications are on other aspects of life.

You have been active in the project of tours of the wall. Can you tell me about that?

It's a project run by the Coalition of Women for Peace that invites the broad public to meet the wall; we call it "seeing and talking about it." We have a very special approach and I think a very successful one, and also a very unusual one for left-wing organizations. It is that we both provide people with information - of course that's information we deem important, and our position is being opposed to the wall and we don't hide anything - but we also certainly give people a chance to talk and discuss what they think and to cope, to process what they had thought up until then, together with having visited the wall, how it contrasts or doesn't.

The approach is true dialogue-you know when you say dialogue everyone imagines us all in harmony, hearing the same views and emerging alike, and that's not the way it is. In my opinion it's a fantastic opportunity. I stand in front of a group and I can tell them what I think, I can listen to what they think, and when they leave maybe something inside them will change but with all the respect and understanding of people in another frame of thought. They won't leave the tour thinking as I do, but maybe in some slight way I'll succeed in influencing them or undermining what they thought prior to that, and make them think more critically and differently. I really love this project. I think it's very successful and has proven to be successful because people are very pleased with the tours and they are also people who aren't convinced, who don't share our opinions. People come from all over. They are pleased with the information they receive, from the reality they don't know and didn't recognize earlier, and from the chance to discuss things.

Who comes to the tours?

It travels by word of mouth. People hear about it from other people and groups come. We've had high school classes -of course they don't come through the Ministry of Education or the principal. Some teacher heard about it and decided that in the course of a three-day seminar in Jerusalem, studying the Holocaust,33 she'd get in a tour of the wall. That's a true story. Those poor kids came straight from Yad Vashem34 to the wall. But there were youth movements, such as Beitar,35 a right-wing youth movement with kids from Hebron [Jewish settler children], something completely… We've had groups from kibbutzes.36 Now we're beginning a series of tours for students in Jerusalem, together with Hacampus lo Shotek [The Campus Will not Stay Silent] and Ta'ayush37 to take tours from the university to a neighborhood in Jerusalem where there's a wall, such as A-Ram or Abu Dis.38 There are people who sign up on their own, and we gather a group of people and take them.

Why would groups like Beitar bring kids to the tour of the wall?

An interesting question. The tour with Beitar was in Lod.39 We give tours in Lod and Ramle40 because there are separation walls there too. I don't know, there must have been a very open counselor there. I don't think that morality belongs only to the left-wing. There are thoughtful and moral people on the other side too [the right wing]. I think it's nice that people from all over seek information that they aren't receiving any other way. The atmosphere during the tours is that every person will do whatever they want with the information and take it where they want to and not be brainwashed or anything. I think that people think it contributes to their thinking regardless of their opinions. There were amazing processes. There were youths that said they wanted to volunteer in Lod and assist in Arab neighborhoods! It goes to show that anything is possible, that this is really the right approach. It wasn't easy. We had a Palestinian guide from Lod and he had a difficult encounter with the children, but there's much to be gained.

What do you think about progression in the case of the teacher who brought children from a tour of Yad Vashem to a tour of the wall?

That was an example of a teacher's initiative. I think that ideally if she had planned it, or we had planned it, we wouldn't have brought 16 year olds to the wall right after they were at Yad Vashem. That isn't justified and doesn't serve a purpose; that's the way things worked out. Schools are brought for a seminar in Jerusalem and that's our chance to fit in, but it [that progression] isn't justified in any special way.

Who do you most want to take on a tour of the wall in Jerusalem?

Actually, from the Israelis - anybody. We had a preliminary tour, just us tour guides in Jerusalem and my immediate response after was that I wanted my family to see it, or my friends, meaning people who mean a lot to me, so that they could understand what I was talking about. But I'm glad to see any group from the Israeli public. We discovered that people's political opinions don't predict how they will behave during a tour or what will come up, because it raises very profound issues of identity, separation and security, and all sorts of issues that aren't only relevant for the Center or the right-wing, all Israelis have them. That's why the tours I guide with Israelis are fascinating, interesting, and important. It's important for me that people from abroad know about the wall but it's less urgent for me.

Can you give an example of a group you presumed would react a certain way and that surprised you?

Well, the example of the kid from Beitar who said, "I want to volunteer here and help." That was something we never expected to happen. There are people from the left-wing who suddenly say, "Yes, but we need a wall against suicide bombings" or such things. We've learned there's no way to predict certain responses and that there's a wide range of responses. That's the beauty of it, and that's what's interesting about it. The encounter with the wall is like a psychological projection, people see it as things from their fantasies or nightmares. So that's very enriching and interesting.

What do you say to somebody who says, "No, we really do need the wall" during the tour?

My approach is not to argue. I won't say, "It's not true that we need the wall." I do my part during every tour. My approach is to undercut and challenge [people's previous perceptions]. I talk about the misery it causes the Palestinians; on the political level I ask them where they think this is leading, what kind of reality is being created here for us all, which is a very important level I think. Also on the level of security and the solutions: is this really a good or effective solution? I try to examine all the levels and hope that part of that will reach people. But if somebody were to say that to me I wouldn't respond, and what's nice is that the last hour of the tour is a discussion group. We sit together for a discussion after people have eaten, and they can talk. Often this type of reaction will come up during the group's discussion and then the group responds. People talk amongst themselves and I'm merely a facilitator. I'm there to ensure people speak in turn and that everyone has spoken and that people don't scream at each other. I enable the process, but at this point I don't participate.

Do people yell at each other during these discussions?

No, people don't yell but rather they articulate very painful and intense experiences and really talk to one another. In mixed groups, say a group of Jewish Israelis and Palestinians, the dialogue is very powerful.

What challenges does the project pose to you as a spokesperson? In what ways do you think the project needs to be developed?

Advertising the project in the media is what I'm working on now. My goal is focused and clear: I want people to come to the tours. That's also the indication of success. If I've given a television interview two weeks ago I check how many people came following that with Orit, the project coordinator. I have a very specific goal and I'm not trying to convince the media to discuss the issue of the wall but rather to encourage people to come to the tours.

Who are you trying to reach through the media?

Everybody really. We intended the project for the Israeli public and we stress that it's appropriate for anyone. It's not intended for people that we want to mobilize or people who share our beliefs, but to anyone who wishes to learn about the wall. Lots of people haven't seen it, aren't familiar with its route or why its construction has been halted in certain places. People are very curious and they don't usually get an opportunity to satisfy it, so it's a chance.

What would you like to see happen after people go home from the tours?

As I said, we believe that people can shift their opinions a little. A person who's completely opposed to the wall may become active after the tour. Somebody who didn't know a thing about the wall knows a little bit more, and when they see it on television they will be able to analyze things according to the frame of knowledge they received. We've had groups of right-wing people and during the tour they face the wall's price that simply cannot be ignored. We aim to make people think beyond, within the frameworks of their opinions, and undermine the banal concepts of brainwashing and what people hear from the media concerning these issues.

How has being active changed or affected your life?

First of all, it's very intense; over the past six months I think it's really taken over my life. I'm very busy doing things and sometimes I feel that it's becoming my life and that can be a concern. I think I'm continuously becoming more conscious and aware of my environment, and that's not simple.

Do you have any doubts regarding the things you do?

My main doubts concern how effective all this is; how much of a chance this has of being influential, whether it's pointless-maybe what we're doing is nothing more than a drop in the sea.

What do you say to yourself when you think about that?

I tell myself that as long as I live here, this is my way of living here. This is my way of coping with the situation and influencing it. I can't stand on the sidelines or ignore what's happening. There are occasional moments of hope, but not many!

How does your family react to what you do?

They support me and are very proud of what I do. They don't necessarily agree with all the things I say, but they are very much in favor of my being involved and active. They view it as a positive thing.

Do they participate too?

No.

How would you define your community?

In the field of activism or in general? I don't know, what do you mean, how do I define it?

Are you part of Israeli society in any way? Do you live within Israeli society or within one of its groups?

I think that the job I chose for myself is an attempt at being a middleperson or in a mediating position - creating a link between the ideological group I belong to and the rest of society. I have a profound sense of belonging to my group, meaning I'm not stuck in between. I come from that group but I'm trying to bridge and link it to other groups and to the public, but I certainly regard myself as representing my group.

How does the conflict affect your life?

It generally affects it for the worse because I find myself telling myself that I can't believe that this is the state of our lives, that these are the things we must occupy ourselves with. Enough! I want to live in a normal place where people can busy themselves with more positive tasks, like creative initiatives and things that feed the soul and the mind. I feel like we are involved in such a primitive - I hate that term - conflict, a blood feud over land. I don't share those sentiments; that's so remote from the way I want to live. Sometimes I just can't believe that this is how I'm spending my time; I truly believe that this won't occupy me for the rest of my life, I have no intention of it. But who knows; I know many women who work with me who are 50, 60 years old and they've been doing this for 30 years.

On the other hand I see the positive aspects the conflict has on me. I think it forces me to make a huge effort and stimulates creativity and other things, and that's also important to me. We are truly dealing with life and death situations - human rights and vastly important issues. I feel that I'm lucky to be able to take part in it and that I'm not completely helpless, like in many places in the world where people are. The situation in Africa is so terrible and nobody takes an interest in it. That's something too. We call it empowerment in our field. I'm discovering things about myself that maybe I wouldn't have in other circumstances. I hope this way of life will be over soon. I'm willing to do this but I don't think it's the right way to live in the long term.

How do you view peace?

That's a very difficult question. I think that the first stage is ending the occupation in the Territories and then some sort of self-determination and liberation for the Palestinians in the Territories. But I don't think that can be the end of the process. I view peace as being a confederation or cooperation so that neither side exploits the other, and to avoid us resuming control in an indirect way. This is so that all people will be able to live here and feel secure and be free and enjoy equality. I think that these elements are indispensable; without them we will remain at the level of empty slogans. That's why I feel that we're light years away from peace.

What will the region look life when there is peace?

According to my vision of what peace is, it gets very complicated to even define this country. If there will be a real peace with the Palestinians and with the neighboring countries then it will resemble Europe, and people from all over will immigrate to the region. It's a known fact that after the peace accords were signed with Jordan, Jordanians came to work at the Dead Sea and drew illegal workers here because they can earn more here. I can imagine that if there are more or less open borders, people will be able to pass freely and come here from Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan. That of course undermines everything this country claims it wants to be - Jewish and democratic. This is why I'm skeptical about us ever achieving this kind of peace, skeptical about there being a mass aspiration here towards that. I think that the result would be that this country would lose the character it's trying to protect.

Unfortunately, what preserves the state's character is the conflict; it is the conflict that enables people to use excuses and become entrenched in a collective identity that would be likely to melt away and diverge in a state of peace. Currently there isn't much of a collective identity; there are specific groups and sectors - Russian speakers, Arab citizens,41 Mizrachis,42 Ashkenazis43 - but the sense of besiegement and risk is something that unites these people. At the checkpoints you can see a soldier who just arrived from the Ukraine; he isn't even Jewish and barely speaks a word of Hebrew yet he is yelling 'don't pass' at a Palestinian. This is a form of socialization that keeps people together here. I think that once the conflict is resolved we will have to face all the internal conflicts, and that includes such intense conflicts that who knows what will happen.

What do you view as the roots of the conflict?

I think the root of the conflict is Zionism.44 I'm very interested in this subject now, far more than the occupation. That's a topic for a very long conversation, I don't know whether this is the time for it.

Are Zionism and a Jewish state important to you?

I think that before the state's establishment the goal was to create a normal state for the Jews. From that aspect Zionism served its purpose, it did create a state where Jews live as equal citizens. I think that after a certain point, after Zionism achieved the state's establishment and aliyah,45 the immigration that brought so many Jews here, and greatly reduced security risks by making peace with some of the neighboring countries, it became an obstacle for normal life here. To me living in a normal country can't include adopting apartheid and racist and religious discrimination.

I think Zionism is an obstacle to normal life here and that's why I'm not in favor of retaining the definition of a Jewish state. I assume there can be a state with a Jewish majority; I'm not opposed to that. I'm not saying we need to get rid of the Jewish majority at any cost. I think that my aspirations have changed, and that I want this to be a normal country where equality isn't sanctioned by religion and for there not to be an ever present census - how many of them and how many of us. I feel I'm always being reminded I'm Jewish; if it isn't in the religious sense then it's in the ethnic sense and I'm very uncomfortable living this way. I want to live somewhere where nobody will care about my religion. That was also Zionism's aspiration: a normal life, people not being conscious which group they belong to, that's what really went on in the Diaspora. That's what's problematic. There isn't a significant difference between what is being done to Palestinians in the Territories under the occupation to what's being done to Palestinians in Lod in terms of inequality and viewing them as people who deserve less, excluding them from "us." I don't think we can keep going on like this.

What do you think needs to change in order to change the situation?

What needs to change is the perception of "us" and "them," Jews versus others. We need to use civic concepts, and this does happen quite often in practice. I have Arab friends and I feel we are close in terms of being Israeli. I feel there is a lot in common with Israeli Arabs - a certain closeness. We really do live in the same place. Culturally we share a lot, but on the level of consciousness there is a very large barrier between "us" and "them." Thai "others" or Arab "others" - those are a perceived as a real threat. This needs to change, and I think in practice it is changing because there are many people here that are "others"; it's still very far from the current situation though. I'm aware that that's a sort of utopia.

Which international audience is the most influential in the region?

That's pretty obvious I think, the United States.

Why?

In many areas-- in their political and financial support of Israel. People say we're the 51st state. We're not entirely an independent country. We depend on the States for many things. It's also the largest force in the world so all the surrounding countries - Syria, Egypt, Jordan - are influenced by it. I'm not saying that Europe or other places have no impact. Unfortunately, the United States is a deciding element and we are paying the price for being their extension in the Middle East.46

Do you think the US has misconceptions regarding the conflict?

The US prioritizes Israeli interests, or alleged interests, over Palestinians interests. The US isn't blind to their interests, it doesn't ignore them, but in terms of importance they see Israel as coming first and not incidentally, since Israel also serves their interests.

Why did former peace processes fail?

I think they failed in truly addressing the other side's needs. In processes such as Oslo47 and Camp David,48 there was an attempt to gain as much as possible. We want as few Palestinians on our lands and to annex as much land as possible. We want to profit financially but not to invest anything. That's the approach, but there needs to be a win-win approach. That means I win but the other side does too, even because of the practical reason that this is how it can succeed or be sustainable. I don't think I see that in any peace process or in any leader here.

Can you give an example of an attitude that needs to change?

Yes, for example the issue of the settlement blocs. Both Likud49 and Labor50 are in favor of them, they say it is annexing only 3% of the lands, 5% of the lands, land exchange etc. But people who deal more deeply with the matter and are in the field understand that for example, Ma'ale Adumim51 or Gush Etzion52 are places that strategically speaking enable continuing the control over the entire West Bank. I think it's manipulative to talk about land exchange in these places. This is the embodiment of the power-based approach of maintaining as much as possible at the expense of the other side, hoping it'll give in and accept these terms because its situation is so terrible. I don't think that can really serve any kind of stability.

Is a two-state solution53 an acceptable solution according to the vision of peace you mentioned earlier?

Yes. As an initial stage I think it's pretty much the only solution that can be considered because I think that most Israelis and most Palestinians wouldn't want to live in a joint framework; it's problematic after a history of prolonged struggle and imbalance. I think that in the long term separation will be difficult to maintain, especially in such a small area that is so densely populated, and also according to my vision. Peace means cooperation and open borders and much more freedom. Take the EU,54 where people can live in any of the countries, work in any country there. I think that's the meaning of peace.


Notes

We have done our best to provide accurate, fair yet succinct footnotes to help you navigate the interviews. Our research team comprises more than 6 individuals, including Palestinians, Israelis and North Americans. Still, we recognize that these notes cannot capture the full complexity of this contested conflict. Therefore, we encourage you to seek additional sources of information, we welcome your feedback and appreciate your openness.

Second Intifada Arabic for “shaking off.” The second intifada is sometimes called the Al-Aqsa (Aksa or ‘Aqsa) Intifada or the Armed Intifada. It refers to the recent Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. The second intifada began in September 2000 following the breakdown of diplomatic efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and immediately following Ariel Sharon’s (then, an Israeli opposition leader) police escorted visit to the Temple Mount/ Haram al-Sharif. Sovereignty over the Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif and their holy sites (including the al-Aqsa mosque). Sharon was highlighting a major point of contention in negotiations as both Jews and Muslims greatly revere the area. There is debate as to whether the second intifada was a spontaneous uprising catalyzed by Sharon’s visit to the Temple Mount/Haram al-Sharif, or a planned revolt by certain Palestinian leaders, including Yasser Arafat. Unlike the first intifada, the second intifada involved suicide bombings and more use of arms, in addition to mass rallies, general strikes and various other strategies. The exact end date of the second intifada is ambiguous. Some claim it is ongoing. See also First Intifada. See Hartley, Cathy, ed. A Survey of Arab-Israeli Relations, 2nd ed. London and New York: Europa Publications, 2004. See online “The second Intifada.” 8 December 2003. AlJazeera.net. November 2007 http://english.aljazeera.net/English/archive/archive?ArchiveId=187 and “Al-Aqsa Intifada timeline.” 29 Sept 2004. BBC News Online. 9 November 2007 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3677206.stm

Coalition of Women for Peace Founded in November 2000, this coalition includes both independent women and nine women's peace organizations comprising Jewish and Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel. Together they promote a two-state solution, an end to militarization and occupation, equality for citizens within Israel as well as the inclusion of women in any process for peace. See: Coalition of Women for Peace.

Machsom Watch Machsom is Hebrew for "checkpoint." Founded in January 2001, this organization includes over 400 women from diverse communities across Israel. Members monitor the behavior of Israeli soldiers and police at checkpoints and report their findings publicly in order to protect the rights of Palestinians as they cross checkpoints to enter Israel or return to locations within the West Bank and Gaza. See MachsomWatch.

Kalandia Checkpoint (also transliterated as Qalandia) is located south of the West Bank city of Ramallah and north of Jerusalem. The Kalandia checkpoint, operated by the Israeli army, serves as a major crossing point for Palestinians between much of the northern West Bank and Jerusalem.

Checkpoints Roadblocks or military installations used by security forces to control and restrict pedestrian movement and vehicle traffic. The Israeli army makes widespread use of checkpoints in the Occupied Palestinian Territories in order to control the movement of Palestinians between Palestinian cities and villages and between the Occupied Palestinian Territories and Israel. Checkpoints can be large and semi-permanent structures resembling simple basic border crossings (such as the Kalandia checkpoint between Ramallah and Jerusalem or the Hawara checkpoint between Nablus and Ramallah) or small, temporary barriers on roadways or outside towns or villages. The security forces at a checkpoint exercise total control over movement through the checkpoint. Depending upon the location of the checkpoint, soldiers may and often do check the identity papers of every vehicle passenger and/or pedestrian who wishes to pass through. At certain checkpoints, mostly those that delineate Areas A, B and C, soldiers refuse passage to all who have not obtained permits from the Israeli military’s Civil Administration in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Palestinians and Israeli observers cite frequent, if not routine, incidences of delay and harassment of Palestinian civilians at checkpoints, regardless of the status of their papers. There are currently checkpoints at the entry and exit points of every large Palestinian populated area in the West Bank, on every major road within the West Bank, and at every crossing point on the Green Line between Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, in addition to many smaller checkpoints within the West Bank. According to the Israeli Army, a checkpoint is a “security mechanism to prevent the passage of terrorists from PA territory into Israel while maintaining both Israeli and Palestinian daily routine,” used to “facilitate rapid passage of Palestinians while providing maximal security to Israeli citizens.” See also “closures” in the glossary. See Keshet, Yehudit Kirstein. CheckpointWatch: Testimonies from Occupied Palestine. London: Zed Books, 2006. For facts, figures, and maps on the web, see “Machsom Watch.” Women for Human Rights. 21 June 2007 and Smith, Chris. “Closure: The Daily Reality of Israel’s Occupation.” Middle East Report Online. 27 August 2001. 21 June 2007and “Restrictions on Movement.” B’Tselem. 21 June 2007

Settler Refers to a Jewish Israeli living in a settlement – a Jewish community in the Occupied Palestinian Territories of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and, before the 2005 “disengagement”, the Gaza Strip. The settlements, established following Israel’s capture of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip in the war of 1967, are widely recognized as illegal under international law. See Settlements, Settlement Blocs and Settlement Subsidies.

Jerusalem Known as Al Quds (“The Holy”) in Arabic and Yerushalayim or Zion in Hebrew. A city located in the center of both Israel and the West Bank portion of the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Home to approximately 730,000 people from all three monotheistic religions, as well as sacred sites from these faiths within close proximity, including the Western Wall, the al Aqsa Mosque and the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. The Green Line, or the 1949 cease-fire line between Israel, Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Lebanon, demarcates the unofficial boundary between Israel and the West Bank, and divides Jerusalem. Israel immediately declared Jerusalem as its capital in 1948, and enshrined this in its Basic Laws in 1980. Palestinians aspire to declare Jerusalem as the capital of a nascent Palestine. Following the War of 1967, Israel extended its sovereignty to the Eastern half of the city, including the Old City and the holy shrines, which were controlled by Jordan from 1948. Israel “unified” East and West Jerusalem in its 1980 “Jerusalem Law”, leaving borders undefined. Most countries do not recognize Israeli sovereignty over the entire city, an opinion codified in UN Security Council Resolution 478. Rather, they regard Jerusalem’s status as undetermined, pending final status negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians. See: “Jerusalem” Kumaraswamy, P.R. Historical Dictionary of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Oxford: The Scarecrow Press, 2006. To read the text of the 1980 Basic Law see Basic Law-Jerusalem-Capital of Israel. Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 19 June 2007.

Ramallah Palestinian city in the West Bank, about 16 kilometers north of Jerusalem. Est. population 40,000. The population of the Ramallah District, including its surrounding 88 towns and villages is 220,000. It is headquarters to the Palestinian Authority.

Beit Hanina and Samira Mis are Palestinian neighborhoods in the north of Jerusalem within the city's municipal boundary. A-Ram and Kalandia Refugee Camp fall partly inside the municipal boundary and partly outside.

Separation Barrier Also termed the “wall, separation wall, security fence and Apartheid Wall”, and “annexation wall,” by some. A long structure of connected walls and fences that separates Israel from parts of the West Bank, and restricts the movement of Palestinians from the West Bank into Israel. It runs both along the Green Line and within the West Bank. Critics and proponents disagree over the intent behind the structure, its route, and its name. Begun in 2002 as an alleged reaction to the violence of the second intifada, its construction is still in progress. Israel claims security concerns necessitate its construction, and cite decreases in suicide bombings within Israel since its construction as proof that the structure is both effective and required. Opponents claim the structure is an attempt to annex occupied Palestinian territory and unilaterally define future borders. They also maintain that the route of the barrier steals privately owned land, and makes certain Palestinian villages and cities economically unviable. Israel has modified some of the routes in response to an Israeli High Court of Justice ruling as well as in response to international pressure, but the route is still disputed. The debate over its legality was flamed after the International Court of Justice (ICJ) issued an advisory opinion declaring it a breach of international law. See Kershner, Isabel. Barrier: The Seam of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2005. For online statistics and analysis see “Separation Barrier.” B’Tselem. 9 November 2007 http://www.btselem.org/English/Separation%5FBarrier/

West Bank Geographical territory located to the west of the Jordan River and the Dead Sea. Israel refers to it as “Judea” and “Samaria.” It has been under Israeli military control since 1967, although certain powers and responsibilities were transferred to the Palestinian Authority as part of the Oslo process in the 1990s (see Oslo process and Areas A, B and C). The Palestinian population of the West Bank is approximately 2.5 million, in addition to approximately 270,000 Jewish settlers. The West Bank, along with the Gaza Strip, comprises the Occupied Palestinian Territories. See “West Bank.” 1 November 2007. CIA World Factbook. 10 November 2007 https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/we.html

Bethlehem A city in the West Bank, about 10 kilometers south of Jerusalem. Home to the Church of the Nativity, the city is of particular significance for Christians who believe it is the birthplace of Jesus Christ. Est. population 30,000, the vast majority of whom are Palestinian.

Hebron A Palestinian city in the West Bank, located 30 kilometers south of Jerusalem. Al-Khalil (“Friend of God”) in Arabic and Khevron in Hebrew, its population is approximately 160,000, the majority of whom are Palestinian Muslims, with approximately 400 Jewish settlers living in the center of the city and an Israeli military presence. Tension between the settler and local Palestinian population is high, with the Israeli army and settler population often severely limiting the movement and security of Palestinian residents. Hebron is the site of numerous massacres in recent history (See 1929 Riots and Baruch Goldstein/Hebron Massacre). The Temporary International Presence in the city of Hebron (TIPH) has been present in the city since 1997, after requests by both Israeli and Palestinian authorities to observe and report breaches of human rights law and regional agreements. The city is home to the Tomb of the Patriarchs, known in Islam as the Ibrahimi Mosque, the supposed burial site of the biblical patriarchs and matriarchs, a site sacred to both Muslims and Jews. See online the Temporary International Presence in the City of Hebron at http://www.tiph.org/

East Jerusalem was captured and then annexed by Israel following the Six-Day/June War of 1967. For further information on East Jerusalem see B'tselem (The Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories) http://www.btselem.org/English/Jerusalem/.

Mobility Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza Strip are subjected to limited mobility, primarily as a result of Israeli measures in the Occupied Palestinian Territories designed, according to Israeli authorities, to ensure the security of Israelis within the 1967 borders and settlers in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. The measures also prevent Israelis from traveling to and from certain areas of the West Bank and Gaza without special permits. See “checkpoints” and “closures” in glossary.

Closures Closures are restrictions imposed by the Israeli army by and large on Palestinians attempting to travel within areas of the West Bank, East Jerusalem, Gaza and Israel. Closure often means sealing off a population center so that individuals cannot get in or out unless they have a special permit. See also “checkpoints” in the glossary. See Keshet, Yehudit Kirstein. CheckpointWatch: Testimonies from Occupied Palestine. London: Zed Books, 2006. For facts, figures, and maps on the web, see “Machsom Watch.” Women for Human Rights. 21 June 2007 http://www.machsomwatch.org/eng/homePageEng.asp?link=homePage&lang=eng and Smith, Chris. “Closure: The Daily Reality of Israel’s Occupation.” Middle East Report Online. 27 August 2001. 21 June 2007 http://www.merip.org/mero/mero082701.html and “Restrictions on Movement.” B’Tselem. 21 June 2007

Travel Permits Israeli-issued travel permits are required primarily for Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza for travel into Israel, and at times throughout East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza. Israelis seeking to travel to Area A regions (land under full civilian and security control of the Palestinian Authority) as delineated by the Oslo Accords, must also receive permits. The policy of obligatory travel permits is part of a more comprehensive restriction of movement imposed on Palestinians from the Occupied Palestinian Territories by the State of Israel. The Israeli government maintains that the measures are necessary for Israel’s security. See “Restrictions on Movement.” B’Tselem. 10 November 2007 http://www.btselem.org/English/Freedom_of_Movement/Index.asp

15-year-old Omar Musa Matar was shot by Israeli soldiers at Kalandia checkpoint on March 28, 2003. He died from his wounds five days later. See "The 144th Child," Haaretz Magazine, April 11 2003 by Gidon Levy: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=282462&contrassID=2&subContrassID=14&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y and a response published in Haaretz by Dagan, an eyewitness to the shooting: http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=291269&contrassID=2&subContrassID=14&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y

For example, see one of Machsom Watch's monthly summaries, which includes Palestinian testimonials of checkpoint experiences for that month http://www.machsomwatch.org/eng/summariesEng.asp?link=summariesEng&lang=eng

Military Service Israeli Law requires that all Israeli citizens and permanent residents begin serving in the Israeli Defense Forces at the age of 18. Effective 1948 and codified in the 1986 National Defense Service Law, which stipulates that all men serve 3 years, and women 20-21 months. All non-Jewish women and all Palestinian men, except Druze, are automatically exempt from service, although volunteers are occasionally admitted and some Bedouins are encouraged. Reserve service is required until the age of 51 in the case of men, and 24 in the case of women.

For information on ID checks at checkpoints see the BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/middle_east/03/w_bank_checkpoints/html/id_checks.stm

Collaborator In the context of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Palestinians who work for the Israeli intelligence in gathering secret information about other Palestinians in exchange for financial compensation, travel privileges, or protection are known as “collaborators.” In some cases, Palestinian militant groups have killed Palestinians suspected of being collaborators.

Occupation The “Occupation” is used to refer to Israel’s military control of the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza Strip. It may also refer to Israel’s occupation of the Syrian Golan Heights, although the territory was annexed by Israel in 1981. International legal bodies do not recognize the annexation. See “Occupied Palestinian Territories.”

Passover Jewish holiday commemorating the exodus of Jews from slavery in Egypt.

Refusenik/Conscientious Objectors Soldiers or reservists in the Israeli army who refuse to serve in the West Bank and Gaza Strip or in the Israeli army altogether are commonly known as (and often refer to themselves as) “Refuseniks,” a term that was first applied to Jews who were not allowed to leave the Soviet Union to come to Israel by the Soviet government. For an Israeli to legally avoid military service based on the grounds of conscience or refusal, one must be granted Conscientious Objector (CO) status. Hundreds of Israelis have refused service in the Occupied Palestinian Territories on moral grounds since the outbreak of the second intifada. Israel court martialed about 280 for the decision. Many serve up to 35 days in jail. The Refusenik movement gained popularity after a group of Israeli reserve officers and combat soldiers drafted the Combatant’s Letter in January 2002, outlining their justification for conscientious objection. See Courage to Refuse. 19 October 2007.

Shovrim Shtika [Breaking the Silence in English] is an Israeli organization of former soldiers who served in the Occupied Territories. Their homepage reads, "Since our discharge from the army, we all feel that we have become different. We feel that service in the occupied territories and the incidents we faced have distorted and harmed the moral values on which we grew up." See Shovrim Shtika.

Nablus A Palestinian city in the northern West Bank. Est. population 132,000.

Occupied Palestinian Territories Also known as the “Territories,” “East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza”, the “Occupied Territories” or as “Judea, Samaria and Gaza.” In the context of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, this term generally refers to two non-contiguous territories captured by Israel following the war of 1967 (“June War,” “al-Nakba,” or “Six-Day War”), but does not usually include the Golan Heights. East Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza are considered occupied by much of the international community and are treated as such by many international legal instruments. The Territories, or some part of, are slated to be the basis for an independent Palestine. Some members of the Israeli government refer to the Occupied Palestinian Territories as “disputed territory,” while certain right-wing factions in Israel consider the territory an integral part of biblical Israel and thus modern political Israel. See “International Law and ‘Occupied’/ ‘Disputed’ Territory Debate” and “War of 1967.”

Netanyahu, Benjamin (1949-) Member of the Israeli Likud party; recent Minister of Finance in the Israeli Knesset (parliament) but resigned in August 2005 to protest the Israeli withdrawal of settlements from Gaza. Netanyahu had previously served as Ambassador to the UN from 1984-1988, deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1988-1991 and Deputy Minister in the Prime Minster’s cabinet in 1990 and 1991, where he participated in the Madrid Peace Conference and the negotiations in Washington. Elected Prime Minister from 1996–1999. Netanyahu and Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat signed the Wye River Memorandum – a continuation of the Oslo peace process – in 1998. Netanyahu went on to win the Likud Party Chairman elections in December 2006, obtaining 44.4% of the vote. See Gresh, Alain and Dominique Vidal. The New A-Z of the Middle East. New York: IB Tauris, 2004. See online Benjamin Netanyahu. 10 September 2007 http://www.netanyahu.org/biography.html

Parents Circle-Bereaved Families Forum is a joint organization of more than 500 Israeli and Palestinian bereaved families working together for reconciliation and an end to violence. See http://www.theparentscircle.com/

Ehud Barak coined the term 'There's no partner' after the failure of the Camp David talks in 2000.

Since the outbreak of the second intifada until September of 2004, at least 8 suicide bombings have been carried out by Palestinian females. For example, see Peter Enav. "Female Palestinian Suicide Bomber Kills Two Israeli Policemen, Wounds 16 People at Jerusalem Bus Stop," The Associated Press, 22 Sept 2004. For information on the larger trend of women suicide bombers, see an interview with the host of National Geographic Channel Explorer's Special Edition: Female Suicide Bombers http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/12/1213_041213_tv_suicide_bombers.html

Holocaust The systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of millions of people, including six million Jews—approximately 1/3 of the world’s Jewish population—by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. “Holocaust” is a word of Greek origin meaning “sacrifice by fire.” The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933, believed that Germans were “racially superior” and deemed groups including Jews, Roma, the physically disabled and homosexuals to be “inferior” and thus unworthy of life. They devised what they considered to be the “Final Solution to the Jewish Question,” which entailed the process of exterminating Jews. During the era of the Holocaust, the Nazis also persecuted Communists, Socialists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, as well as other groups. See the US Holocaust Memorial Museum website.

Yad Vashem A museum in Jerusalem that commemorates the Holocaust. Yad Vashem is also a leading reference center for Holocaust studies. http://www.yadvashem.org/

Beitar Founded in the 1920s, Beitar (also Betar) is a Zionist youth movement in Israel and the Jewish Diaspora. Beitar was shaped by the ideas and worldview of Ze'ev Jabotinsky. Some of its activities include: summer camps, Israel tours, and the promoting and facilitation of aliyah-- the official immigration of Jews to Israel.

Kibbutz A community established by and for Jews based on communal property, in which members have no private property but share the work and the profits of some collective enterprise, typically agricultural but sometimes also industrial. Initially founded in Ottoman Palestine on socialist ideals and currently located by and large in Israel, many kibbutzim (plural for kibbutz, Hebrew) have become privatized in the last few decades.

Ta'ayush Ta'ayush (Arabic for coexistence) is "a grassroots movement of Arabs and Jews working to break down the walls of racism and segregation by constructing a true Arab-Jewish partnership." Its major activities include protesting the construction and existence of The Wall/Security Barrier and raising awareness and funds for Palestinians subjected to house demolitions and potential displacement from villages. See http://www.taayush.org/.

A-Ram and Abu Dis are Palestinian neighborhoods within the municipal boundary of Jerusalem.

Lod Known as Lod in Hebrew; al-Lydd in Arabic. It is located in central Israel, just southeast of the greater Tel-Aviv area. Lod is home to Ben Gurion Airport.

Ramle A city in the central region of Israel. Est. population 60,000 Jewish and Palestinian Arab-Israeli inhabitants.

Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel Also known as “Palestinian citizens of Israel,” “Palestinian Israelis,” “1948 Palestinians,” or “Arab Israelis.” Refers to those Palestinians and their descendents who remained in the area that became the State of Israel in 1948. They were granted Israeli citizenship. Until 1966 most of them were subjected to military rule that restricted their movement and some of their rights. The tension in Israel between its “Jewish” and “democratic” nature has historically meant that many Arab minority rights have been neglected. According to Adalah, The Legal Center for Arab Minority Rights in Israel, since 1967, “The state [has] practiced systematic and institutionalized discrimination in all areas, such as land dispossession and allocation, education, language, economics, culture, and political participation.” While their standing in Israel has improved since Israel’s independence, Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel experience periodic persecution, felt strongest during the October 2000 riots in which 13 Palestinian Arab Israelis were killed in ten days. In 2004, Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel made up approximately 18-19% of the Israeli population. They live within the State of Israel, participate in government and hold Israeli citizenship, but do not serve in the military. See Lustick, Ian S. “Palestinian Citizens of Israel.” Philip Mattar, ed. Encyclopedia of the Palestinians. New York: Facts on File, 2005 and Bligh, Alexander, ed. The Israeli Palestinians: an Arab Minority in the Jewish State. London: Frank Cass, 2003. See also Adala and Mossawa online at http://www.adalah.org/eng/ and http://www.mossawacenter.org

Mizrachi Jews [literal translation from Hebrew is "Easterner"] Refers to Jews of Middle Eastern origin.

Ashkenazi Jews Ashkenazi Jews are of Eastern European and Yiddish-speaking origin and heritage. Along with Sephardic Jews, it is one of the two major ethno-cultural branches of Judaism. Ashkenazim and Sephardim maintain many different religio-cultural traditions.

Zionism The belief that the Jewish people should have a national homeland, and refuge from persecution, in Israel. Supporters of this idea are called Zionists. The Zionist Movement took shape in Europe in the late 1800s with the First Zionist Conference in Basel, Switzerland. The movement advocated the ideology of Zionism, a national liberation ideology of the Jewish people with several strands, foremost being the establishment of a Jewish state within the biblical Land of Israel (Eretz Yisrael or Zion). Zionism has many manifestations, from religious to secular, each defining a distinct view of which land should be settled, and how it should be done. See http://www.mideastweb.org/zionism.htm

Aliyah (Hebrew, pl aliyot) To ascend. Traditionally used to describe the act of a Jew moving to Eretz Yisrael, or the historic land of Israel (See Eretz Yisrael in glossary). In modern Israeli history, refers to the various waves of immigration to what is now the state of Israel, beginning with the First Aliyah of 1882 to Palestine. From the 1880s to the end of World War II, Palestine experienced five major waves of Aliyah, and another major influx following the war. Since the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, Israel has codified encouragement of Aliyah to Diaspora Jews in the Law of Return. See Kumaraswamy, P.R. “Aliya.” Historical Dictionary of the Arab-Israeli Conflict. Oxford: The Scarecrow Press, 2006.

Dagan is referring to the notion that United States' close strategic and financial relationship with Israel in conjunction with the United States' recent actions in the Middle East (particularly in Iraq) has had an adverse affect on Israel's public image.

Oslo Process This process was unveiled with the signing of the Declaration of Principles (DOP) by Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) Chairman Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on the White House lawn in 1993, although it was preceded by an exchange of letters between Rabin and Arafat and back-channel negotiations by Israeli and Palestinian academics. In those letters, Israel recognized the PLO as the sole legitimate representative body of the Palestinian people and the PLO recognized Israel’s right to exist in peace and security. The DOP called for a permanent settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict based on United Nation Resolutions 242 and 338. It also led to the creation of the Palestinian National Authority (PA or PNA) as part of the 1995 Oslo Interim Agreement. Yasser Arafat became President of the PNA. A series of agreements between the Israeli government and the PNA followed. The agreements are known collectively as the Oslo Accords. The Oslo process was set back with the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin in 1995. After the failure of the Camp David Accords in 2000, it ended with the assumption of the second intifada in September 2000. See Smith, Charles D. Palestine and the Arab-Israeli Conflict, 5th ed. Boston: University of Arizona, 2004. See “The Oslo Declaration of Principles.” MidEast Web. 13 September 1993. 11 September 2007 http://www.mideastweb.org/meoslodop.htm

Camp David An American presidential getaway in Maryland. In the context of the Arab-Israeli conflict, two significant events took place at Camp David, often referred to as Camp David I and Camp David II. At Camp David I (September 1978), Egyptian President Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Begin reached a bilateral agreement, with assistance and pressure from American President Carter, in which Israel would return the Sinai Peninsula in exchange for recognition and peace with Egypt, thereby establishing a precedent for “land-for-peace” negotiations. The Agreement called for talks between Israel, Jordan, Egypt and Palestinian representatives to create a framework for negotiations regarding the status of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. This goal was never met. Camp David II refers to the last Oslo process-related meetings between Yasser Arafat, Ehud Barak and Bill Clinton in the summer of 2000 over “final status” issues such as the settlements, Jerusalem, Palestinian statehood, the rights and entitlements of Palestinian refugees and more. Negotiations broke down and no agreement was reached. The collapse of the process was followed shortly thereafter by the second intifada. See Swisher, Clayton E. The Truth About Camp David: The Untold Story of the Collapse of the Middle East Peace Process. New York: Nation Books, 2004, Sher, Gilead. The Israeli-Palestinian Peace Negotiations, 1999-2001: Within Reach. London & New York: Routledge, 2006, Shamir, Shimon and Bruce Maddy-Wetzman, eds. The Camp David Summit-What Went Wrong? Brighton: Sussex Academic Press, 2005 and Malley, Robert and Hussein Agha. “Camp David: The Tragedy of Errors.” New York Review of Books (August 9 2001), pp 59-65, online at http://www.nybooks.com/articles/14380

Likud Party Hebrew for “union”. One of two traditional political parties in Israel, founded in 1973. Likud tends toward the conservative, center-right of the political spectrum. The Likud grew out of the “Revisionist” movement of Ze’ev Jabotinsky as the main right-wing opposition to the dominant Labor Zionist Movement and Labor Party. Its early leaders, such as Yitzhak Shamir and Menachem Begin, had roots in the Stern Gang and Irgun—two organizations that employed militant tactics against the British and occasionally Arab inhabitants during the time of the British Mandate. Likud was ideologically committed to establishing Jewish sovereignty over all of British Mandatory Palestine and, until recently, ideologically opposed to any territorial compromise with the Palestinians (“Land for Peace”). Its first electoral victory came in 1977. Likud Prime Minister Menachem Begin, during the first Likud mandate, signed a peace treaty with Egypt, which involved Israeli military and civilian withdrawal from the Sinai Peninsula following the “Land for Peace” model. Begin subsequently launched the War of 1982, with Ariel Sharon serving as Minister of Defense. In 1991 Likud Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir headed the Israeli negotiation team at the Madrid Conference, spearheading Arab-Israeli direct negotiations. More recent Likud leaders, such as Benjamin Netanyahu, have led neo-liberalist economic measures. Dispute over Israel’s unilateral withdrawal from the Gaza Strip in August 2005 led Likud Prime Minister Ariel Sharon to leave the party and establish the Kadima (Hebrew, “forward”) party, which rivaled the Likud and won in the 2006 elections. See online “Likud.” Knesset. 7 September 2007. http://www.knesset.gov.il/faction/eng/FactionPage_eng.asp?PG=13

Labor Party Mifleget Avodah in Hebrew. One of two major political parties in Israel that tends toward the center-left of the political spectrum, it emerged from the labor Zionist movement in the 1930s. Its leaders include many of the principal founders of the State of Israel, including the first Israeli Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion. Founded on socialist and Zionist principles, it dominated the Israeli government until 1977. Labor became the leading Israeli political party favoring territorial compromise for peace, and was the party that first officially recognized the PLO when Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres signed the Declaration of Principles and launched the Oslo Peace Process with Yasser Arafat in 1993. See online “Israel Labor Party.” Knesset. 7 September 2007. http://www.knesset.gov.il/faction/eng/FactionPage_eng.asp?PG=0

Ma'ale Adumim An Israeli settlement in the West Bank outside of Jerusalem. Est. population 30,000. It is the largest Jewish settlement in terms of population in the West Bank.

Gush Etzion The "Etzion bloc" refers to an area southwest of Jerusalem, between Bethlehem and Hebron in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, anchored by the large settlements of Efrata and Beitar Illit, a rapidly expanding ultra-orthodox settlement abutting the Green Line. The area includes 10 settlements and nearly 50,000 settlers as of 2007. Four settlements were established in the Etzion Bloc between 1943-1947 yet were lost during the War in 1948. The area was not included in the proposed Jewish state according to the UN Partition Plan of 1947. In 1947, 35 Hagana men were killed in a battle en route to the bloc. In May 1948 the settlements surrendered to Arab forces; 240 residents of Kibbutz Kfar Etzion were killed, another 260 were captured, and the settlement was razed. Kfar Etzion was re-established as part of the settler movement after the War of 1967 and was the first settlement in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Some Israelis view it as a symbol of reconnecting with Jewish history. See Settlements in Focus. 9 Feb. 2005. Americans For Peace Now. 19 June 2007 See also Gush Etzion. 19 June 2007 www.gush-etzion.org.il, Jewish Virtual Library. 27 February 2008

Two-state solution Refers to the notion of establishing a sovereign Palestinian state alongside a sovereign State of Israel. Has been the most accepted framework in Palestinian-Israeli peace talks since the Oslo process began in 1993. Key disputed issues for a two-state solution include: the actual boundaries of a nascent contemporary Palestine; the location of its capital; the nature of government; the type of economic relations with its neighbors; the handling of Palestinian refugees seeking repatriation to Israel and/or Palestine or compensation by Israel; the degree of access to natural resources as well as control over borders; the contiguity of land; defense matters and air space; Israel’s final borders and jurisdiction; access to and control over Jerusalem’s holy sites by both states; the status of Israel’s settlements.

European Union See http://europa.eu.int/index_en.htm