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Address to the UN Security Council Regarding
Resolution 1325 by Gila Svirsky
23 October 2002
Your Excellencies,
Allow me to begin by telling you about the
secret meetings held between Palestinians and Israelis that began
15 years ago. These meetings were secret because it was illegal
for Israelis and forbidden for Palestinians to meet in those years.
A number of groups were then getting together, but only one group
persisted over time - resolutely grappling with the most difficult
issues - and crafted an agreement that was signed and publicized
several years before the Oslo Accords. Above all this agreement
declared establishment of a free, independent and secure state of
Palestine side-by-side with a free, independent and secure state
of Israel as the core of a political settlement.
As profound as this moment could have been
in the history of the Middle East, very few people heard about it.
Why? Because the agreement was written by women. You may wonder
whether the agreement was rejected for other reasons, perhaps because
it was a radical statement dreamed up by utopians or marginal people.
But these women were neither marginal nor radical. Each delegation
included prominent political leaders - members of parliament, government
ministers, an ambassador, and a party head.
As for the content of the agreement, most
of its principles have now become matters of consensus among both
Israelis and Palestinians. Despite the current magnitude of brutality
- or perhaps because of it - surveys consistently show that a decisive
two-thirds of Israeli Jews would support a peace agreement that
includes Israeli withdrawal from the Palestinian territories, evacuation
of most Israeli settlements, and creation of a Palestinian state.
Most Palestinians hold the very same views. Indeed, only extremist
political leaders on both sides fail to understand that these principles
will ultimately set the terms of peace between our nations.
Clearly, the agreement was both pragmatic
and moderate. In fact, had the women who wrote it been internationally
recognized negotiators, the two Intifadas that followed might have
been prevented. This is but one example of the need to implement
and enforce Security Council Resolution 1325.
At the grassroots level women have also been
at the forefront of peacemaking. In 1988 women in Israel founded
the movement now known as Women in Black. Dressed in black to mourn
the victims on all sides, Women in Black has kept a one-hour vigil
every single Friday for the past 15 years. On street corners throughout
Israel, Arab and Jewish women hold signs demanding an end to the
Israeli occupation and pursuit of a just peace.
The Women in Black movement quickly and spontaneously
spread around the globe as a public forum for women to say no
to war and injustice. In Italy Women in Black protest the Israeli
occupation and the violence of organized crime. Women in Black in
Bangalore, India call for an end to abuse by religious fundamentalists.
During the war in the Balkans Women in Black, Yugoslavia set an
inspirational example of interethnic cooperation. Today, Women in
Black throughout the world are engaged in a struggle to prevent
a war from being launched against Iraq. For their remarkable work,
the international movement of Women in Black, represented by the
movements in Yugoslavia and Israel, were nominated for the Nobel
Prize for Peace and won the Millennium Peace Prize awarded by UNIFEM
[the UN Development Fund for Women].
In Israel, the womens peace movement
extends well beyond Women in Black. We are Bat Shalom, the organization
formed to promote the principles of the pre-Oslo peace agreement
described earlier. We are New Profile, women seeking to end the
militarization of Israeli society. We are Machsom Watch, women preventing
human rights violations at checkpoints. We are the Movement of Democratic
Women, Jewish and Palestinian women citizens of Israel struggling
for peace and justice. These and other organizations, joined together
in the Coalition of Women for a Just Peace, are united in relentless
effort to bring the bloodshed to an end.
The womens peace movement in Israel
is absolutely breathtaking: It is alive with new ideas, indefatigable
as women have always been, and at the vanguard of creative thinking
about how to get to peace. Israeli and Palestinian women march together
under the banner We refuse to be enemies. Indeed, the
Israeli and Palestinian womens peace movements have already
made peace: on paper, in our hearts, in the lessons we teach our
children, and in the behavior we model. We are allies for peace,
united in our struggle against extremists and warmongers on all
sides.
Is it not preposterous that not a single Israeli woman, and only
one Palestinian woman, have held leadership roles at a Middle East
peace summit? Instead, the negotiators have been men with portfolios
of brutal crimes against each other - military men who have honed
the art of war and who measure their success by the unconditional
surrender of the other. Is it any wonder that we are still locked
in combat?
Ultimately this occupation, like every other in history, will come
to an end. The general parameters of that ending are already drawn
and in agreement. What we need now is leadership committed to swiftly
concluding this era awash in blood, leadership that understands
the price we pay in death and destruction for every hour of delay.
What we need now is leadership with expertise at reconciliation
and rapprochement. What we need now is women.
Thank you.
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