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Women Put Their Mark on
MidEast Peace Efforts
By Brenda Gazzar
Aril 26, 2007 - (WOMENSENEWS) Women are pushing
the envelope on peace activism in the Middle East, with a nearly
30-country annual bike ride for peace that was followed within a
few days by the shooting of a Nobel Prize-winning Irish peace activist
at a West Bank demonstration.
"Freedom is Feminine." That's the message Nida Awine chose
to paint in large, Arabic script on the structure that Israeli officials
call the "separation fence" or "security fence"
and Palestinians often call the "apartheid wall."
Awine's handiwork appeared on the section of the structure located
in this West Bank village that borders Jerusalem.
The towering cement structure was blank until Awine and other women
painted it with political art, including a door bearing the words
"To Be Opened" and a yellow sphere proclaiming "The
Sun Will Rise 1 Day."
The Palestinian university student was one of about 350 women from
nearly 30 countries who joined a third annual cycling tour for women
through Syria, Jordan, Lebanon and the occupied West Bank that organizers
hope is drawing attention to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to
promote peace and freedom in the region.
Even Syrian first lady Asma al-Assad joined the women by cycling
with them through her country.
This year's Follow the Women ride lasted 12 days and ended April
18, just a few days before well-known peace activist Mairead Corrigan,
who shared the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize for her activism in the Northern
Ireland civil conflict, attracted more attention to the barriers
that have become symbolic of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Corrigan was reportedly wounded by a rubber bullet on April 20,
along with a number of other activists while protesting the separation
barrier near Ramallah in the West Bank, according to local press
reports. Two Israeli border policemen were also injured by rock
throwing from protesters. Organizers call these weekly protests
nonviolent. Israeli officials say they regularly turn violent, with
at least some participants hurling rocks with slingshots or even
trying to cut down the barrier and Israeli forces responding with
measures such as teargas, stun grenades and rubber bullets.
"This was a nonviolent protest that turned into violence. It's
not right," said Naomi Chazan, a member of the steering committee
of the International Women's Commission for a Just and Sustainable
Israeli-Palestinian Peace and a former Israeli Parliament speaker.
The state of the conflict of the moment "is more conflictual
than one would like it to be. Even those who are fighting for peace
find themselves in a conflictual situation."
Women Become Peacemakers
Grassroots and other women's initiatives around the world are becoming
more directly involved with efforts to resolve the conflict, as
the state of Israel celebrates its 59th birthday on April 24 and
Palestinians commemorate their "naqba," or "disaster"
in which at least half a million Palestinian refugees fled during
the 1948 Arab-Israeli war.
"I do not count on these politicians--men and women--to free
my Palestine, my people," said Awine, 20, who was armed with
a paintbrush dipped in red paint for the activity and who dreams
of being a writer. "I count on the human beings, on the people,
because these persons have the power, have the will, and know the
value of living as a free human being."
Since the start of the second Palestinian intifada, or uprising,
in September 2000, nearly 4,040 Palestinians have been killed by
Israeli security forces, mainly in the Occupied Territories, and
705 Israeli civilians and 316 Israeli security personnel have been
killed by Palestinians through the end of March 2007, according
to the Jerusalem-based B'Tselem, the Israeli Information Center
for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories.
While more men than women have been killed in this conflict, women
suffer in a broad range of indirect ways that can be further complicated
by cultural mores, says Fabrizia Falcione, a women's human rights
officer for UNIFEM, the United Nations Development Fund for Women.
Conflict's Heavy Burdens
For example, a Palestinian woman who is cut off from her land and
thus her work by the separation wall, military checkpoints or through
denial of permits, will have a more difficult time in finding another
job than a man. "Very often, men allow women to go to cultivate
their land" due to cultural restrictions on her mobility or
expectations of acceptable roles for women. In Palestinian society
"women don't have all the range of possibilities to have liberty
of movement," Falcione said, "but that's the only job
that they can do."
Falcione added that violence against women seems to be rising in
the Occupied Territories because the conflict has weakened the rule
of law and women's ability to seek and receive justice, a finding
that echoes a 2006 Amnesty International report about Palestinian
women and violence.
Since October 2006, the Israeli nongovernmental organization Isha
L'Isha-Haifa Feminist Center has held a number of workshops and
a conference in Haifa to foster alternative dialogues about women,
peace and security that include the economic and emotional costs
of conflict.
Last year, the group also trained women in Israel for conflict-resolution
negotiations as outlined in United Nations Security Council Resolution
1325, which urges member states to include more women at all decision-making
levels for the prevention, management and resolution of conflict.
Call for Diplomacy
Women break a barrier at a March protest against Israel's separation
wall.
Using another tactic, the International Women's Commission, a body
of prominent Israeli, Palestinian and international women working
for a just and sustainable Israeli-Palestinian peace, has recently
called on Israel and the international community to normalize relations
with the new Palestinian government.
When the Islamist group Hamas won a majority in the Palestinian
Legislative Council in 2006 but refused to recognize the state of
Israel or renounce violence, the United States and many European
countries cut off all funds to the Palestinian National Authority.
In March, Hamas and the secular Fatah--which had previously maintained
power as the ruling party for 12 years--formed a new unity government
in a thus-far unsuccessful effort to end international sanctions.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has boycotted the new government
for the same reasons but is involved in a new round of talks with
moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in an effort to revive
the stalled peace process.
"We believe that without negotiations--without talking to the
Palestinian government--nothing is going to move," said Palestinian-Israeli
Aida Touma-Suleiman, a member of the International Womens' Commission
steering committee.
The commission, formed under the auspices of UNIFEM to implement
Resolution 1325, will hold its first local conference in Jerusalem
on May 13 and 14. The conference will raise two main issues: getting
peace negotiations back on track and integrating women into negotiations,
Touma-Suleiman said.
From: http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm?aid=3146
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