Wednesday, December 31, 2014

EAPPI - Advocacy and Action



Tulkarm Team 47 - Spring 2013

Those of you who have been reading this blog post know that I spent the spring of 2013 in Palestine – specifically in the northern Palestinian city of Tulkarm – with the Ecumenical Accompaniment Programme in Palestine and Israel (EAPPI).  As an Ecumenical Accompanier (we refer to ourselves as “EAs”), my “job” was to monitor checkpoints, share in the in the day to day lives of Palestinian people, and support Israelis in nonviolent action for peace.

The reports that my EA team filed with the Jerusalem EAPPI office ultimately found their way into United Nations reports, and studies on human rights, access to education and other issues relevant to the ongoing Israeli occupation of Palestine. 
A woman shares her story

But the time I spent living in the West Bank was only half of the job.  The other half is advocacy. Since returning home, I have maintained this blog post, made presentations to church and community groups, written letters to (mostly) unresponsive politicians and joined with organizations and individuals working at the grass-roots level to end the Occupation. 

Recently, the US EAPPI coordinator asked former US EAs to participate in fundraising efforts in an attempt to recruit more Americans to participate in this very worthwhile program.  While EAPPI is an international program, the United States is woefully under-represented, .  Out of 1,400 volunteers who have served as EAs since 2002, only 27 have been Americans. The reasons for this are largely financial.

Advocacy in Ohio - with Randie Clawson (Team48)
EAPPI was started by the World Council of Churches, which oversees the international organization.  Each of the 21 participating country is administered (and funded) by a church-related organization in that country.  Thus, in Great Britain, the Quakers administer the program; in Sweden it is the Church of Sweden; in Canada the United Church of Canada.  In the United States, Church World Services serves as program administrator but, unlike its counterpoints in the other participating countries, CWS has no funding for EAPPI.

Thus, while my counterparts from Sweden and Great Britain not only had the program expenses (currently about $11,000) covered by their sponsoring church organizations, but received stipends while serving abroad, we Americans had to either fundraise or self-fund our time in Palestine.  The commitment of time and the ability to put one’s life on hold for three months is difficult enough.  Added to this, the ability to raise this kind of money severely limits the number of people who can serve as EAs. 

And yet, American eyes are desperately needed in the Occupied Territories – and American voices are desperately needed at home.  It is, after all, American money that funds the Occupation (to a tune of $3.2 billion a year!) and American politicians whose votes perpetuate the human rights abuses. 
Even donkeys must pass through checkpoints!

I’m not very good at asking for money – but I’m screwing up my courage to add my voice to the cacophony of end-of-the-year requests for donations.  If you are inclined to support this wonderful program, donations of any amount can be made by going to to http://www.eappi-us.org/index.php?page=support.  Thank you! 

Saturday, December 6, 2014

Bethlehem Revisited



“Oh Little Town of Bethlehem, how still we see thee lie…”  It permeates the airwaves this time of year – on the radio, in the malls and, of course, in church, where we visualize that “little town” and pray for “peace on earth, and good will to all.

But, if you are getting your news from anywhere other than the “mainstream media,” you know that “little town” hasn’t been still for a quite a while now.  Bethlehem – and, indeed, all of the town and cities in Palestine – has become a focal point for acts of violence and punishing pogroms that, far from bringing “peace on earth,” are moving the Holy Land farther and farther from the vision that the Christmas story suggests.

Church of the Nativity (Diana Fisher photo)
My most recent visit to Bethlehem was in October.  I stayed in an apartment just down the hill from Manger Square – and even attended a Sunday service in the Church of the Nativity. But even in that beautiful setting, the postcard view is marred by the bullet holes in the exterior walls – left by Israeli soldiers who killed eight Palestinians and injured dozens more who had taken sanctuary there during the Second Intifada.

Moving away from Manger Square, the last (and only) vestige of tourism left in a Bethlehem that is now virtually surrounded by the “Security” Wall, one sees few remnants of the once-vital city that remains the unofficial “Christian Capital” of the West Bank (by law, Bethlehem’s mayor must be a Christian).  The market, once thronged with tourists has been decimated, leaving the remaining merchants to compete vigorously for the few remaining visitors who dare to defy warnings that Bethlehem is a “dangerous” place to visit.  For the most part, tourists in their big busses come only to see the church – and leave without seeing anything else or talking to a single Palestinian!

Our next stop was at the infamous Checkpoint 300, the closest checkpoint between Bethlehem and Jerusalem.  This is the point through which Palestinian workers must pass to get to their jobs, the ill or injured must pass to reach medical treatment and worshippers must pass to reach mosques and churches.  And that, of course, assumes that they are fortunate enough to have the proper permit!  Up to 8,000 people will pass through this checkpoint on a busy work day, under conditions that the average tourist will never see – and cannot imagine!
Aida Camp (Diana Fisher photo)

A visit to the Aida Refugee camp, within walking distance of Checkpoint 300, gave us the opportunity to meet third-generation refugees of the 1948 Nakba, who live in tiny cement block houses and send their children to UN-supported schools.  “No room at the inn” for these folks!

Life in the villages surrounding Bethlehem isn’t much better.  In Wadi Fouquin, just a short drive away, the village has been the recipient of sewage dumping from the neighboring settlement for several years.  Worse, the residents of the settlement, ultra-Orthodox “religious” settlers, use the village’s fresh water ponds for their “purification” baths.  And Israel recently announced that it is “annexing” another 1,000 acres of Wadi Fouquin’s agricultural land for settlement expansion!  Still, we spent a pleasant morning picking olives there – and were told that several villagers were traveling to the US to testify before Congress in November.

Olive picking in Wadi Fouquin
At Cremesan, a Roman Catholic monastery, school and winery, the path of the Wall will divide the vineyards from the winery – and the students from the school.  Weekly prayer vigils give voice to those who would object – but the objections fall on deaf ears.

Perhaps, though, the lyrics to the song aren’t as antiquated as they may first appear.  Remember, the closing line: “The hopes and fears of all the years are met in thee tonight…”