Can any body answers Ghassan Abdullah?
Why is Israel separating me from my wife? asks Ghassan Abdullah
Date: 07 / 12 / 2006 Time: 15:58
Originally published on The Electronic Intifada
6 December 2006
Israel has decreed that my wife and I can no longer live together. I am
Palestinian and she is Swiss and we have been married for 28 years. She
was recently given two weeks to leave the occupied Palestinian
territory. The Israeli Ministry of Interior wrote on her Swiss passport:
"LAST PERMIT." We have been living together in Ramallah for 12 years. We
came in 1994, when, after the Oslo Agreement, we were encouraged to move
to the West Bank by the prospect of 'peace' and development.
My wife Anita speaks Arabic, likes the landscape, cooks Arabic meals,
and she cares for my grandfather's village house -- an old stone
building and the plants around it -- more than I do. She votes in
Palestinian elections as the spouse of a Palestinian. She is active in
serving the local society in public health. She has numerous friends
here and considers it home. She still has her valuable European element
and contacts, but she doesn't want to be separated from this environment
or from me, and I certainly do not want to be separated from her. Our
children are grown up and work abroad, but they are also not sure they
will be allowed to visit us here. On her way to visit us in Ramallah a
few months ago, our daughter, who has a Swiss passport, was delayed for
six hours at Tel Aviv airport and grilled when she landed. She was
lucky. Others are deported to where they took off from, often spending a
night or more at the notorious detention 'facility' at the airport.
For the past 12 years, Anita has managed to stay here by diligently
renewing her permit or leaving and coming back every three or six months
to comply with the Israeli 'law' that applies in the occupied
Palestinian territories. She is fighting now to stay here by going to a
lawyer and to the Israeli courts, hoping for an injunction to be able to
stay until a verdict is reached. She is also in touch with her embassy,
and she has joined others in the same predicament in addressing the
European Union and the American consulate, and in talking to human
rights organizations, both Israeli and Palestinian, and the media.
We don't know what to do. But whatever it is, we have to do it quickly.
What do we do about our shared life, our papers and accounts, the
hundreds of little things that we have grown to share? What do we do
about the new apartment that we made the 'mistake' of purchasing at the
wrong time? She was keyed up about what tiles to choose and how to model
the kitchen. We can't believe, or accept, that we are going to be
separated. We believe it though, when we are reminded by other 'mixed'
couples or families around us who have, and are being, separated.
Since last spring, the Israeli occupation authorities have been
increasing the squeeze on holders of foreign passports by denying them
entry into the Palestinian areas. Those affected include Palestinians
with foreign passports or foreign wives, husbands, children, parents and
other relatives. They also include foreign nationals, who come to teach
at universities, work or volunteer with local or foreign
non-governmental organizations, experts with various projects often
funded by European countries, sympathizers or human rights activists.
Bitakhon is the magic word in Israel. In the name of bitakhon, or
security, Israeli authorities can take any illegal, inhuman, immoral or
aggressive measures against the Palestinian population under military
occupation. They can throw the word bitakhon at any European or foreign
diplomat who questions any of their measures, even when those measures
go against human rights, international and humanitarian law, or the
Fourth Geneva Conventions which govern the conduct of occupying powers
towards the occupied population. It seems sometimes, to Palestinians,
that a third rate official at any Israeli ministry can frighten the
whole of the European Union and its officials by invoking the 'security'
of Israelis, or by hinting at what Europe did to the Jews.
My wife is not the only one to have been given an ultimatum this last
week. Dozens of other wives, husbands and children who have been living
in the West Bank for years, renewing their Israeli-issued 'visitors'
permits every three months, have been given short extensions, none of
which exceed the end of this year. Children will have to be taken out of
schools and will be separated from their parents. Mothers, fathers,
sisters, brothers and grandparents of the cherished local extended
families will be torn apart. Hundreds of others are also waiting their
fate in the coming days and weeks. Thousands have been denied visits
this last summer to their families and homes and roots. Summer is often
the season for marriage of Palestinians divided by different passports
or IDs and festivities used to fill the summer nights with music and
dance. Not in the summer of 2006.
The Israeli occupation does not stop at confiscating the land. I feel
occupied in my shirt pocket. My 'Palestinian' identity card is issued by
Israeli authorities. They control the Palestinian civil population
registry. Every birth, death, marriage, travels in or out, is controlled
by Israel -- even in Gaza, disengagement withstanding. Of course, they
control the water, the roads and the movement of people within the West
Bank through hundreds of barriers and checkpoints. They uproot all the
trees that they decide are in their way, that are in the way of the
Apartheid Wall cutting its way into the flesh of our land, or in the way
of their colonial settlers who decide to take over yet another spot of
land or hill top that pleases them.
Why are the Israelis attacking mixed marriages of Palestinians? Before
people fall in love in Palestine now, they ask about what ID each holds
and from where it is issued. They do not want to build a life at risk of
being torn apart from the start.
-----------------
Ghassan Abdullah is a computer adviser in the West Bank city of Ramallah
Date: 07 / 12 / 2006 Time: 15:58
Originally published on The Electronic Intifada
6 December 2006
Israel has decreed that my wife and I can no longer live together. I am
Palestinian and she is Swiss and we have been married for 28 years. She
was recently given two weeks to leave the occupied Palestinian
territory. The Israeli Ministry of Interior wrote on her Swiss passport:
"LAST PERMIT." We have been living together in Ramallah for 12 years. We
came in 1994, when, after the Oslo Agreement, we were encouraged to move
to the West Bank by the prospect of 'peace' and development.
My wife Anita speaks Arabic, likes the landscape, cooks Arabic meals,
and she cares for my grandfather's village house -- an old stone
building and the plants around it -- more than I do. She votes in
Palestinian elections as the spouse of a Palestinian. She is active in
serving the local society in public health. She has numerous friends
here and considers it home. She still has her valuable European element
and contacts, but she doesn't want to be separated from this environment
or from me, and I certainly do not want to be separated from her. Our
children are grown up and work abroad, but they are also not sure they
will be allowed to visit us here. On her way to visit us in Ramallah a
few months ago, our daughter, who has a Swiss passport, was delayed for
six hours at Tel Aviv airport and grilled when she landed. She was
lucky. Others are deported to where they took off from, often spending a
night or more at the notorious detention 'facility' at the airport.
For the past 12 years, Anita has managed to stay here by diligently
renewing her permit or leaving and coming back every three or six months
to comply with the Israeli 'law' that applies in the occupied
Palestinian territories. She is fighting now to stay here by going to a
lawyer and to the Israeli courts, hoping for an injunction to be able to
stay until a verdict is reached. She is also in touch with her embassy,
and she has joined others in the same predicament in addressing the
European Union and the American consulate, and in talking to human
rights organizations, both Israeli and Palestinian, and the media.
We don't know what to do. But whatever it is, we have to do it quickly.
What do we do about our shared life, our papers and accounts, the
hundreds of little things that we have grown to share? What do we do
about the new apartment that we made the 'mistake' of purchasing at the
wrong time? She was keyed up about what tiles to choose and how to model
the kitchen. We can't believe, or accept, that we are going to be
separated. We believe it though, when we are reminded by other 'mixed'
couples or families around us who have, and are being, separated.
Since last spring, the Israeli occupation authorities have been
increasing the squeeze on holders of foreign passports by denying them
entry into the Palestinian areas. Those affected include Palestinians
with foreign passports or foreign wives, husbands, children, parents and
other relatives. They also include foreign nationals, who come to teach
at universities, work or volunteer with local or foreign
non-governmental organizations, experts with various projects often
funded by European countries, sympathizers or human rights activists.
Bitakhon is the magic word in Israel. In the name of bitakhon, or
security, Israeli authorities can take any illegal, inhuman, immoral or
aggressive measures against the Palestinian population under military
occupation. They can throw the word bitakhon at any European or foreign
diplomat who questions any of their measures, even when those measures
go against human rights, international and humanitarian law, or the
Fourth Geneva Conventions which govern the conduct of occupying powers
towards the occupied population. It seems sometimes, to Palestinians,
that a third rate official at any Israeli ministry can frighten the
whole of the European Union and its officials by invoking the 'security'
of Israelis, or by hinting at what Europe did to the Jews.
My wife is not the only one to have been given an ultimatum this last
week. Dozens of other wives, husbands and children who have been living
in the West Bank for years, renewing their Israeli-issued 'visitors'
permits every three months, have been given short extensions, none of
which exceed the end of this year. Children will have to be taken out of
schools and will be separated from their parents. Mothers, fathers,
sisters, brothers and grandparents of the cherished local extended
families will be torn apart. Hundreds of others are also waiting their
fate in the coming days and weeks. Thousands have been denied visits
this last summer to their families and homes and roots. Summer is often
the season for marriage of Palestinians divided by different passports
or IDs and festivities used to fill the summer nights with music and
dance. Not in the summer of 2006.
The Israeli occupation does not stop at confiscating the land. I feel
occupied in my shirt pocket. My 'Palestinian' identity card is issued by
Israeli authorities. They control the Palestinian civil population
registry. Every birth, death, marriage, travels in or out, is controlled
by Israel -- even in Gaza, disengagement withstanding. Of course, they
control the water, the roads and the movement of people within the West
Bank through hundreds of barriers and checkpoints. They uproot all the
trees that they decide are in their way, that are in the way of the
Apartheid Wall cutting its way into the flesh of our land, or in the way
of their colonial settlers who decide to take over yet another spot of
land or hill top that pleases them.
Why are the Israelis attacking mixed marriages of Palestinians? Before
people fall in love in Palestine now, they ask about what ID each holds
and from where it is issued. They do not want to build a life at risk of
being torn apart from the start.
-----------------
Ghassan Abdullah is a computer adviser in the West Bank city of Ramallah
1 Comments:
Yes, the ongoing tyranny of aparthed 'israel' goes on with this one more slice of "democracy". Meanwhile in North America, you would never here a true story such as this one. Instead, all we here is how wonderful that at least 'israel' is the only democracy in the M.E. I am sick of this lie.
The zionists are hard at work taking off truthful posts from several blog sites that counterclaim their fabrications of 'israel' as a democracy..........one day. The world will know the truth about this thing called a "country".
By Rhiannon, at 12/20/2006 8:35 PM
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