Israel/Palestine: Israeli women monitor human rights violations at checkpoints
Curfews, border closures, and the wall
The Hebrew word "Machsom" (barricade or control point) is the term used for the checkpoints dotted along the border with the West Bank, which severely restrict Palestinian freedom of movement.
The Israeli roadblocks, checkpoints, and terminals - some of which are staffed by soldiers, some of which are unstaffed - have separated neighbouring villages and have carved up villages, cities, and whole swathes of land within the Palestinian territories. The situation is exacerbated by curfews, border closures, and the wall, which not only separates Israelis and Palestinians, but also keeps Palestinians apart.
Only those who have gone through a complicated application procedure and been granted a permit are allowed to pass. Human rights violations and degrading treatment are par for the course. All of this combines to create a system that allows the Israeli army to exercise arbitrary control over the Palestinian population.
By forcing them to stand in line and wait day in, day out, this system is robbing the Palestinians of a precious, irreplaceable resource: time.
This is how Yehudit Kirstein Keshet describes the situation in her book CheckpointWatch. The author is one of the founding members of MachsomWatch. In February 2001, five women set out to see for themselves what was going on at the checkpoint in Bethlehem. What they saw beggared belief: pregnant women forced to give birth on the side on the road because soldiers would not allow them to pass.
Humiliation at the checkpoints
Today, about 500 Jewish Israeli women regularly observe what goes on at the checkpoints. Most of them are middle-aged, educated, left-wing liberals, members of the middle class who emigrated from Europe and are employed. Many of them have been shaped by the holocaust and are concerned about both the dignity of the Palestinians and the moral state of Israeli society.
According to Yehudit Kirstein Keshet, they have set themselves the task of bearing witness to the humiliation and oppression at the checkpoints so that they will also be able "to testify at future war crimes trials and to make our contribution to the construction of a collective memory."
Heightening awareness of human rights violations and anchoring these abuses in the collective memory of Israeli society is the hidden theme of Keshet's book.
The MachsomWatch women have not restricted the public relations work that is so central to achieving this goal to Israel alone. Roni Hammermann, who has been with the group since day one, regularly lectures interantionally on the checkpoint system.
"When we began our work six years ago," she says, "no-one apart from us and the military knew what was going on there. Today, everyone in Israel knows that a checkpoint is a bad thing."
However, most Israelis believe that the checkpoints are essential for their country's security. "We always invite the public to spend three hours of an afternoon with us at a checkpoint so that they can see for themselves what is happening in their name," says Hammermann, "so far, not one single person has gone away unmoved."
Trivializing the occupation?
Since its inception, MachsomWatch has been the exclusive reserve of women. In Israel's militarised society, it is easier for women to confront soldiers at the checkpoints. Hammermann also says that women are more patient: "We have taken men with us to the checkpoints in the past and on occasion, brawls have broken out between them and the soldiers within two minutes."
Is what the MachsomWatch women are doing humanitarian aid, an attempt to make conditions at the checkpoints more bearable, thereby trivializing the occupation? Or is it political involvement and a criticism of the system? This is a hotly debated issue within the group itself.
Some of the women are involved primarily out of concern for the morals of Israel's sons, the young soldiers at the checkpoints; as mothers, these women feel particularly entitled to voice criticism.
For radical left-wingers and feminists like Yehudit Kirstein Keshet and Roni Hammermann, on the other hand, it is all about human rights and showing political solidarity with the Palestinians. They hope that their work will build "not only a shield to protect against even worse abuses, but also a bridge for future reconciliation."
By: Beate Hinrichs
Translated from the German by: Aingeal Flanagan
11 October 2007