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Monday, November 9, 2009

Dutch NGO funds "No Jews allowed" event in the name of "Peace"

http://news.zionism-israel.com/2009/11/dutch-ngo-funds-no-jews-allowed-event.html

This is quite difficult for theoretical advocates of "dialogue" to comprehend - that foreign "peace" NGOs will go along with and perhaps encourage a "No Jews need apply" policy in a "peace" event.
 
It is all very well to preach about dialogue, but the reality is quite a different matter. Where are the outraged proponents of coexistence?
 
Ami Isseroff
 
 
There aren't too many English-language journalists who have covered Arab Jerusalem as I have for In Jerusalem in recent years - reporting on everything from a home in Anata built and demolished four times and now facing a fifth demolition order, to the first shopping mall along east Jerusalem's main drag Salah a-Din Street, which received a building permit after 42 years of bureaucracy; from the al-Mamal Foundation for Contemporary Art inside the New Gate, to a conference on Palestinian refugees at al-Quds University in Abu Dis. These are all stories I have reported in an objective manner.
 
Artistic director Merlijn Twaalfhoven: "Our team [of 12 Dutch activists and eight artists] had to promise that we would not allow peaceful Israelis to come."
 
Thus it was that last weekend I duly RSVP'd to a guests-only invitation to the Al-Quds Underground, touted as an unconventional festival with more than 150 small shows in private spaces in the Old City. Performances included music, storytelling, dancing, short acts and food. Locations were living rooms, a library, courtyards, gardens and more unique places. My expectation of a celebration of Jerusalem's diversity was dashed, however, when I arrived late Saturday afternoon at the Damascus Gate meeting point. Politely asked in English by Jamal Goseh, the director of the a-Nuzha Hakawati Theater near the American Colony Hotel, "Where do you live?" I responded in Arabic that I live in Jerusalem. From my accent and appearance, he discerned that I am an Israeli.
 
Al-Quds Underground's artistic director Merlijn Twaalfhoven of Amsterdam then told me, along with some Israeli peace activists who had arrived, that we were not welcome. My reply that I had been invited was to no avail, nor was my guarded threat to pen an expose of their racism.
 
And so here it is.
 
For the sake of fairness, I met Twaalfhoven the next day to allow him an opportunity to explain… or dig himself a deeper hole. (Goseh declined my request for an interview.) "We want to bring art to the world," he began. "I sometimes break through the boundaries between art and life. That is the core of my work."
 
A visionary creator of art happenings such as a dance performance at the Jalazoun refugee camp near Ramallah and the Long Distance Call concert on the rooftops of the Turkish half of the divided Cypriot city of Nicosia, Twaalfhoven said he had vaguely heard that the Arab League had chosen Jerusalem as Al-Quds 2009 Capital of Arab Culture and that the Israeli government had banned the festival as a political event forbidden under the Oslo Accords. "I don't know the details. I thought it was a good idea to bring people together."
 
Twaalfhoven then added, "The local people told me months ago that Israelis cannot go. Our team [of 12 Dutch activists and eight artists] had to promise that we would not allow peaceful Israelis to come."
 
Apologetic over what had happened, he then spilled the beans. The €50,000 project was funded by the European Union through the Dutch charity Cordaid and the Alexandria-based Anna Lindh Euro-Mediterranean Foundation for the Dialogue between Cultures. To have said no to racism would have meant to scuttle the budget.
 
Al-Quds Underground's no-Israelis rule is part of a larger policy set by the Palestinian Boycott Divestment and Sanctions National Committee. This BDS movement, founded in 2005, can take credit for the cancellation of Leonard Cohen's September concert at the Ramallah Cultural Palace.
 
Similarly in 2007, BDS activists succeeded in getting Canadian rock 'n' roll star Bryan Adams to pull the plug on back-to-back concerts in Jericho and Tel Aviv. Organized by the New York-based One Million Voices, the concerts were intended to promote a two-state solution to resolve the festering Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
 
BDS activists in Europe and elsewhere aim to isolate and discomfit Israel just as South Africa's apartheid regime was targeted in the 1980s. This rejection of normalization of relations is a historic and strategic mistake based on the false analogy between apartheid and Zionism.
 
Never mind the snub I received Saturday. On a broader level, the BDS movement is missing the point that peace is best promoted at a grassroots level, person to person, Jew to Arab, and Arab to Jew.
 
Those who think Israel can be pressured into coexistence are mistaken. Two states for two peoples will be embraced when enough people demand it. BDS fosters the illusion that Palestinians can achieve their goal of statehood without ever accepting Israel and Israelis.
 
Boycott, divest and sanction? I respond, Embrace, invest and encourage. Peace starts among people. Anyone unprepared for honest dialogue with the other is suffering from acute xenophobia. As Black Panther activist Eldridge Cleaver once remarked, "You're either part of the solution or you're part of the problem."
 

 


Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors. Originally posted at http://news.zionism-israel.com/2009/11/dutch-ngo-funds-no-jews-allowed-event.html. Please do link to these articles, quote from them and forward them by email to friends with this notice. Other uses require written permission of the author.

1 Comments:

  • Dear people,
    I have to inform you that Gil Zohar quoted me wrongly and that the festival did not intend to refuse Israeli guests. After an incident on Fridaynight, where Israeli guests disturbed a performance and did intimidating political statements, we asked six Israeli guests on Saturday not to participate because of the situation of tension and fear that was created.
    We regret that this happened and will do everything to avoid such a situation in the future. The quote in the Jerusalem Post: “The local people told me months ago that Israelis cannot go” was not correct. It was based on the explanation that we decided already months ago we would not announce the events publicly or invite Israeli artists to participate, because the situation in the Old City is so tense.
    Gil Zohar writes that he himself received an invitation, as many other Israelis did.
    It is a project of dialogue between cultures that are part of the society in the Old City such as Christian, Armenian, African and various Muslim communities. To include Jews would be something very good, we hope that this can happen in the future.
    Please help us to create more openness and contact among the people that live in fear and frustration in Israel/Palestine.
    Merlijn Twaalfhoven

    By Blogger Al Quds Blog, At November 30, 2009 2:48:00 PM GMT+00:00  

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