<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[the commune]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[internationalcommunist]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://thecommune.wordpress.com/author/internationalcommunist/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[rachel corrie (1979 &#8211; 2003): internationalism in&nbsp;action]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><strong>by Joe Thorne</strong></p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">Many  people were inside the houses we demolished. They would come out of the  houses we were working on. I didn&#8217;t see, with my own eyes, people dying  under the blade of the D-9; and I didn&#8217;t see houses falling down on  live people. But if there were any, I wouldn&#8217;t care at all. I am sure  people died inside these houses, but it was difficult to see, there was  lots of dust everywhere, and we worked a lot at night. I found joy with  every house that came down, because I knew they didn&#8217;t mind dying, but  they cared for their homes. If you knocked down a house, you buried 40 or 50 people for generations&#8230;</div>
<div style="padding-left:60px;">&#8211; <a href="http://www.gush-shalom.org/archives/kurdi_eng.html" target="_blank">Moshe &#8220;Kurdi Bear&#8221; Nissim</a>, D-9 bulldozer operator during  the 2002 Jenin invasion</div>
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<div>Seven years ago today, roughly a year after the Jenin invasion  described above, Rachel Corrie &#8211; an American volunteer with the  International Solidarity Movement &#8211; was crushed to death by a 50 ton D9  military bulldozer in the Gaza strip.  Last week (10th March), Rachel&#8217;s  parents had their first day in an Israeli court, in an effort to compel  the state to accept culpability for Rachel&#8217;s killing.  At the time, in  2003, a witness described her killing like this.</div>
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<p style="padding-left:30px;">We&#8217;d been monitoring and  occasionally obstructing the 2 bulldozers for about 2 hours when 1 of  them turned toward a house we knew to be threatened with demolition.  Rachel knelt down in its way. She was 10-20 metres in front of the  bulldozer, clearly visible, the only object for many metres, directly in  its view. They were in radio contact with a tank that had a profile  view of the situation. There is no way she could not have been seen by  them in their elevated cabin. They knew where she was, there is no  doubt.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">The bulldozer drove toward Rachel slowly, gathering earth in its  scoop as it went. She knelt there, she did not move. The bulldozer  reached her and she began to stand up, climbing onto the mound of earth.  She appeared to be looking into the cockpit. The bulldozer continued to  push Rachel, so she slipped down the mound of earth, turning as she  went. Her faced showed she was panicking and it was clear she was in  danger of being overwhelmed.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">All the activists were screaming at the bulldozer to stop and  gesturing to the crew about Rachel&#8217;s presence. We were in clear view as  Rachel had been, they continued. They pushed Rachel, first beneath the  scoop, then beneath the blade, then continued till her body was beneath  the cockpit. They waited over her for a few seconds, before reversing.  They reversed with the blade pressed down, so it scraped over her body a  second time. Every second I believed they would stop but they never  did.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">I ran for an ambulance, she was gasping and her face was covered in  blood from a gash cutting her face from lip to cheek. She was showing  signs of brain hemorrhaging. She died in the ambulance a few minutes  later of massive internal injuries. She was a brilliant, bright and  amazing person, immensely brave and committed. She is gone and I cannot  believe it.</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">The group here in Rafah has decided that we will stay here and  continue to oppose human rights abuses as best we can. I want to add  that more than 10 Palestinians have died in the Gaza Strip since Rachel.    (<a href="http://electronicintifada.net/v2/article1263.shtml" target="_blank">Electronic Intifada</a>)</p>
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<p>One of those ten Palestinians was killed a few hours after  Rachel.  A street cleaner, described by his family as &#8220;a simple man&#8221;,  Salim an-Najar was sitting on his porch, smoking a pipe, when a sniper  shot him through the head.  There were no warning shots, and no one ever  expected his murder to be reported or explained, still less justified.   Few outside Rafah remember Salim&#8217;s story, yet if any death characterises  the unaccountable, sporadic violence by Israel toward Palestinians, it  is surely his.</p>
<p>The same eye witness quoted earlier continued:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">If you&#8217;re wondering about  Rafah: in the southern Gaza Strip, next to the Egyptian border. Apart  from suffering in excess from the problems all over Palestine: Israeli  manipulation of the water supply, economic strangulation, regular  shootings and army operations, Rafah is afflicted by the building of an  extra border wall. It has caused hundreds of homes to be destroyed.</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">The house in question, that of a doctor, like dozens of others in the  area is not set to be demolished because of any supposed link to  militants. Only because it lies within 100 metres of the new border  wall, currently in construction. Families receive no compensation from  Israel, and are frequently given just a few minutes warning in the form  of live ammunition being shot through the walls of their house.</div>
<p>Now,  large swathes of the Rafah of 2003 have gone, including the house of  Dr. Samir&#8217;s family, which Rachel was defending.  Rachel embodied a  thoroughgoing internationalism: an internationalism not just of  principle or propaganda, but deep practice.</p>
<p>In remembering in  Rachel, there are at least two mistakes which do her a disservice.  One  is to see her death as the product of an aberrant individual psychology  (in terms of psychopathy or gross negligence), or even as a unique  product of Israel&#8217;s Zionism.</p>
<p>Far from being a one off event, the  unaccountable killing of civilians is a normal and inevitable  consequence of the war.  To focus too much on the minds of particular  perpetrators ignores the way in which psychopathic mental states are  constituted by nationalism and war.  A recent documentary, <em>Rachel </em>by  Simone Bitton, features an Israeli soldier describing how his unit  routinely shot up civilian hot water tanks at night in Rafah.   Apparently it looks &#8216;cool&#8217; through night vision goggles.  One month  after Rachel, Tom Hurndall, another ISM volunteer, was shot through the  head by an Israeli sniper while carrying children to safety &#8211; another  case recorded in detail only due to the nationality of the victim.   Dozens of Palestinians have been killed in protests against the West  Bank wall in the past few years.  For example, last year:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">on the hillside at Bil’in, a Palestinian  named Basem Abu Rahmeh, 31, was  shot with a high-velocity Israeli teargas canister that sliced a hole  into his chest, caused massive internal bleeding and quickly killed him.  Video footage shot by another demonstrator shows he was unarmed, many  metres from the barrier and posing no threat to the soldiers.  (<a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/27/israel-security-barrier-protests" target="_blank">The Guardian</a>)</p>
<p>(Perfunctory  and amateurish lies are the Israeli state&#8217;s default response.  In  Rachel&#8217;s case, the initial state line was that she had been hit by  falling rubble, despite the fact she was more than 10m from the nearest  structure.  Tom was held to have been carrying a gun.  Video disproved  this claim too; but these automatic responses tell us alot about how  seriously to take other official incident reports.)</p>
<p>The soldiers  who perform these acts are not psychological aberrations.  They are the  necessary products of both an extremely nationalist society, and a  modern military involved in repressing an overwhelmingly civilian  population.  From what we know, analogous behaviour or far, far worse is  present in Darfur, Congo, Afghanistan, Tamil Eelam, Iraq, Chechnya, and  no doubt many other places besides: Rachel&#8217;s killing signified not only  an Israeli problem, but an international, world-historical one.  Nor,  in fact, can Rachel&#8217;s death be understood merely as a product of  national conflict.  To isolate it in this way abstracts those conflicts,  and the killing of activists such as Rachel, from the economic factors  which produce the conflicts (particularly control of resources), but  also from the political factors which allow them to continue  unquestioned (such as the shallow, liberal democracy which has nowhere  been superceded).  Thus, to understand Rachel&#8217;s death without  understanding the global processes of which it was a product is not to  understand it at all.</p>
<p>The second mistake is to place Rachel on a pedestal, to make of her  an exotic hero in a foreign land, or some sort of super-activist.  This  is the last thing we should do.  <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/mar/18/usa.israel" target="_blank">The writing that Rachel left behind</a> (some of which  is contained in the play <em>My Name is Rachel Corrie</em>) speaks of a strong  and profound mind.  But they show that most of Rachel&#8217;s activism was not  only expressed through grand human gestures such as that which  eventually killed her, but in ways which are sometimes, wrongly  considered &#8216;smaller&#8217;, such as at a community mental health program.  She  later recalled 11 September 2001:</p>
<p style="padding-left:30px;">&#8216;Someone bombed the World Trade Center?&#8217;</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">
<p>&#8216;Airplanes.&#8217;</p>
<p>Colin  and I sat on the sidewalk beneath the payphone.  We thought it might be  World War III.  I called my dad.</p>
<p>I figured that if it was World  War III, being &#8216;drop-ins coordinator&#8217; was a damn fine situation to go  out in.</p>
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<p>Precisely because deaths such as that of Rachel are mandated by a total international system, the movement against such deaths must be equally total and international.  None of this is to say that participating in internationalist activism on the ground in occupied Palestine is impossible or undesirable: the opposite is the case.  There have been no fatalities, but two serious injuries, amongst international ISM activists in the West Bank.  (Two Palestinian ISMers  have been killed in the West Bank; one in Nablus by the IDF, another in Jenin by Islamic Jihad.)  But overwhelmingly, ISM activists contribute unscathed to the most serious and rewarding project based on direct  international solidarity anywhere in the world.  <a href="http://www.ism-london.org.uk/training" target="_blank">ISM London</a> runs regular training sessions  for those considering joining the movement on the ground.</p>
<p>In some  ways, the situation in Israel is bleaker than it has ever been: the left  is smaller and more marginalised, and the working class more  nationalist, than ever.  But in one respect, the situation offers a  glimmer of hope.  Groups such as Anarchists Against the Wall (which  includes anyone willing to work in a non-hierarchical way taking joint  direct action with Palestinians in the West Bank) have developed a  practice in which Israelis and Palestinians take action side by side,  just as the ISM allows international activists to join the movement on  the basis of practical solidarity.  One member of AATW I spoke to tells  me that there are now around 200 Israeli activists who regularly spend  time in the West Bank, although the organising core is still much  smaller.  &#8220;We have established joint struggle as the indispensable  condition of the movement&#8221;.  In many ways, this is an advance on prior  practice.</p>
<p>In occupied Palestine, the situation is analogous.  The  second intifada, as a project based largely (but not entirely) on  killing random Israeli civilians, ran out of steam long ago.  Fateh and  the Palestinian Authority are now effectively <em>jessous </em>(collaborators):  &#8220;The PA is finally doing the one thing that Arafat, whilst he was still alive,  refused to do: turn itself into a colonial police force for the  Israelis&#8221;  (<a href="http://www.schnews.co.uk/archive/news627.htm" target="_blank">SchNEWS)</a>.  Hamas,  while not yet as corrupt as Fateh, have proved unable to take state  power in Gaza and remain clean.  The talk now, and perhaps it is just  talk, is of a third intifada.</p>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">“If the situation remains at this level,  regardless of whether we take the decision or not, [a third intifada]  is coming. If Israel continues these practices, it is coming.”  (<a href="http://www.jpost.com/Israel/Article.aspx?id=171085" target="_blank">Jerusalem Post</a>)</div>
<div style="padding-left:30px;">But the new intifada, [Fateh officials]  said, would be different from the first two &#8211;  this time it would be directed against the Palestinian Authority.  (<a href="http://www.almanar.com.lb/newsSite/NewsDetails.aspx?id=117176&amp;language=en" target="_blank">Al  Manar</a>)</div>
<p>The strategy of armed struggle has failed; civil resistance isolated outside the Green Line has failed; terrorism has failed (and was always totally reactionary).  The talk is of resurrecting  the civil resistance of the first intifada, with initiatives such as the  <a href="http://www.popularstruggle.org/" target="_blank">Popular Struggle Coordination Committee</a>.  The added ingredient, this time,  needs to be internationalism.  The strategy of &#8220;<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h0u3yljaMTg" target="_blank">broken bones</a>&#8221; will  likely work again if it can be restricted to Palestinian citizens, or a  very few Israelis.</p>
<p>Internationalists in Israel are few in number and, in no small part due to the pressures of anti-Zionist activity, isolated from the working class.  There are no recipes for  success which can be written from outside, in abstraction from the real  size of the present balance of forces.  But it is clear that the  struggle against Zionist colonialism must not only be the property of  Palestinians &#8211; in which case it is doomed &#8211; but also the property of  internationals and Israelis of good conscience.</p>
<p>In this sense, the future belongs to the idea which Rachel stood  for: internationalism; joint struggle; the expression in action of the  principle she recognised, even at age ten: &#8220;they are us.  We are them.&#8221;</p>
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