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ARTICLES
Jews,
Arabs Turn
Conflict to Dialogue at U.C. Forum On a TEACHERS
GREET 'THE ENEMY' Eetta
Prince-Gibson This
is an abbreviated version of the original
article in the Jerusalem Post Magazine,
April 3, 2003, where Israeli
teacher Miki didn't think she wanted to talk. Palestinian teacher
Ibrahim
didn't think he wanted to listen. But in spite of their mutual
distrust, both agreed
to be part of a group of about 80 educators that went to Afterward
Miki said, "I didn't know it then, but I really wasn't ready for any
kind
of dialogue. In my heart, I wanted to prove to the Palestinians that
they are
wrong, that they are terrorists, and that we, the Jews, are right." Ibrahim
said, "As a Palestinian, I really didn't want to hear how the Jews have
suffered. I didn't want to hear that people they love have died, or
that they
are afraid." Kobi stood
off to the side, reading a mystery novel. Until almost the very last
minute, he
wasn't sure he would come. "I
was a combat soldier, and I've done reserve duty during this intifada.
Friends
of mine have died fighting Palestinians. I didn't know what I wanted to
say,
and I didn't know what I wanted to hear." But his
school adopted the "Pathways to Reconciliation" project, and he
wanted to be part of it, so he had to come. Ibrahim, a
Palestinian educator from a village near Jenin, stood with the other
Palestinians. They have different passports and had to go through a
different
security check. His attitude was a mixture of angry defiance and an
almost-submissive fear. This group
of Jewish Israeli, Arab Israeli, and Palestinian teachers from the West
Bank
spent five days in Antalya at a conference entitled "Continuing
Dialogue
in Times of Crisis." These
educators will be implementing "Pathways to Reconciliation," a peace
education program now in its seventh year in 60 Jewish and Palestinian
high
schools, sponsored by the Israel/Palestine Center for Research and
Information
(IPCRI). For many
of the Jewish participants, it was the first time they had met a
Palestinian
who was their social and professional equal. For many Palestinians, it
was the
first time they had met an Israeli Jew other than a soldier. "This
is the first time I ever felt equal to Jews," said Ibrahim. "Most of
the Jews I know are soldiers, and they are more powerful than me. They
have
guns and they rule my life. They decide if I can pass through a
checkpoint or
if they will shoot me. In the discussions, I felt equal, so after a
while, I
felt less angry." But
equality is difficult. "One
of our roles as facilitators," said Fakhira Halloun, an Arab from
northern
Israel, "is to help the participants realize how complicated these
issues
are. Both sides feel powerless, and both sides have power, but it's
hard for
them to acknowledge this." Explained
Michal Levin, who co-facilitates with Halloun: "Without facilitation,
Israelis and Palestinians will just reproduce the usual kinds of power
relations, with endless cycles of mutual blaming and attacking. I
believe that
people want an opportunity to experience themselves in a different way,
but
they are also afraid. Our job is to help them, sometimes despite
themselves." It wasn't
easy. Noah Salameh, a Palestinian facilitator from Bethlehem, is
director of
the Center for Conflict Resolution and Reconciliation. During the first
intifada, he was arrested and spent 15 years in jail. Because of
security
restrictions, he is the only participant who wasn't allowed to come
through "Facilitation is demanding,
draining, and rewarding,"
Salameh
said. "As a facilitator, I have to neutralize my own feelings and
experiences in order to create an atmosphere in which the group members
can
express theirs. It is very hard but, if in the end they have learned
something,
if they have grown in their ability to listen to each other and promote
peace,
then I feel rewarded and satisfied." It didn't
take long before conflict appeared, as people introduced themselves by
telling
about their personal pain and suffering. Jews talked about fear of
terrorist
attacks, their disappointment that there really isn't "anyone to talk
to" on the Palestinian side. Palestinians talked about the checkpoints,
the degradation and humiliation, and the disruption of all normal life
in the
territories. Everyone talked about death, destruction, and loss. Halloun
observed: "There is always a paradox here. On the one hand,
participants
say they want to hear the truth from each other. But the truth is
painful, and
so they start to feel guilty, and don't want to listen. It is a
struggle." By the
middle of the fourth day, members of the group were ready to try to
solve
problems. But first they had to learn to look at conflict in a
different way -
in terms of needs, not in terms of demands, positions, or stands. Said
Levin: "When you learn to restate a problem in terms of needs, not in
terms of positions, it is very liberating. People learn that their
position is
merely one way of trying to meet their needs - and it may not be the
best one." Some were
able to reach agreements so creative they would impress official
Palestinian
and Israeli negotiators. Others were stymied and frustrated. Not
everyone
learned to be empathic, not everyone could listen, and, even after four
days of
dialogue, not everyone wanted to. Yet on the
last night the mood suddenly became fun and festive, almost manic.
Despite the
reality that they were about to return to, many of the teachers began
to dance
debkas and rock together. But then
they returned to reality. When they entered
'The
meetings changed my life. I met the Israeli enemy, and I know that we
share a
common humanity. I hope I will be able to pass this experience on to my
students and my family," reflected Ibrahim, a Palestinian teacher, two
weeks after returning from the conference. The cost
for the five-day conference came to well over $60,000, sponsored by a
grant
from the US State Department. These programs are funded as part of the
"People to People (P2P)" project. P2P was
created under the 1995 Interim Agreement of the
Oslo Accords,
based on the idea that "politicians can sign the peace agreements, but
the
people have to make peace happen." "Pathways into
Reconciliation," IPCRI's peace-education
program, is one of the larger P2P programs. Introduced seven years ago,
it now
operates in 60 schools (30 in According
to Maya Kahanoff, of the Less than
5% of Israelis and Palestinians ever actually participated in
peace-related P2P
activities. Yet, she maintains, even small numbers of P2P participants
can have
a positive effect on the region. "Each
year a few hundred teachers influence several hundred students. And all
of them
influence their families, friends, and communities. Eventually, the
positive
effects of these meetings will proliferate, even if it takes much
longer than
we had hoped." These articles and opinions of
the authors do not constitute the endorsement of Nonviolent Change nor
its publisher, Organization Development Institute, or any of its staff,
nor of CirclePoint which is housing the Nonviolent Change Journal. Permissions: Reposting and reprints are encouraged, as long as proper source acknowledgement is given. As a courtesy, please let us know that you are reprinting or electronically reposting. It helps us know of the interest level. Thank you. |