Monday, May 11, 2009

"Rafah Crossing Closed: CW Peace Team Will Attempt to Enter Gaza in the Morning" first report from CW Peace Team in Gaza

From: Scott Schaeffer-Duffy

Sun, May 10, 2009

 

Rafah Crossing Closed: CW Peace Team Will Attempt to Enter Gaza in the Morning

 

Arish, Egypt

May 10, 2009

 

We prepared last night to get an early start this morning. Our

Catholic Worker Peace team – Scott Schaeffer-Duffy, Brenna Cussen,

Mark Coleville, Colin Gilbert, Beth Brockman, and Jenny Thomas – had a

common goal of proceeding to the Rafah border, crossing into Gaza,

traveling to the Rachel Corrie Center to give out toys and letters

brought with us from American children, and delivering six large

suitcases of medical supplies to the al Shifa Hospital in Gaza City.

Before we slept, we met with our Egyptian contact, who had arranged

drivers and logistics for us, and who told us of the difficulties we

may encounter in our attempt to cross the border.

 

Our driver and translator arrived promptly at 7 AM to load the

supplies into the van and take us to the American Embassy to get our

necessary paperwork. We arrived at the Embassy before its scheduled

opening at 8 AM and were first in line. At the Embassy, after

temporarily relinquishing our passports, the sub-Consul had each

member of the team sign an affidavit stating that we understood that

the U.S. Embassy “does not recommend…travel to the Gaza Strip,” and

that the Embassy “cannot provide…consular services in the Gaza Strip.”

 

After purchasing water, bread, cheese, and dates for sustenance on

our journey, we headed north toward Arish, crossed the Nile, and took

the Mediterranean route toward Rafah. Together, we rehearsed the

hurdles we would encounter: three checkpoints, at any of which we

could be denied passage. At the first checkpoint, we passed freely,

barely slowing the van to be waved on.

 

The landscape grew less urban; we saw groves of date trees, then

smaller dwellings more sparsely situated on the desert plains. There,

the dwellings appeared less frequently, and the ones we did see were

also more simply built; made of brick and stone, and occasionally from

a type of thatch. Many houses were unfinished, some with partial

walls, and some with room for another storey to be built.

 

The poverty of the occupants this far north was obvious to several

team members. Colin Gilbert, a twenty-three year-old religion teacher

who has traveled extensively throughout Latin America, commented, “It

made me wonder what it would be like to see life through the eyes of

these people in their poverty.” Still, the landscape was full of lush

plantings in small gardens and drip-irrigation hoses lined and

transversed the garden paths. The arid desert was broken with green

plots and rows of trees separating properties, evidence of hard and

determined efforts to make the “desert blossom as a rose.”

 

The second checkpoint, as anticipated, was a taller hurdle. Egyptian

security stopped our van at the side of the road and asked us where we

intended to travel after leaving Arish. Not wanting to arouse

suspicion by saying “Gaza,” one of our group told them we were

eventually heading to Israel. This response, unfortunately, seemed to

raise a red flag.

 

As our group was detained, Scott appealed to the guards at the

checkpoint, explained our mission, and showed our letters of

invitation from inside Gaza. The guards expressed support for our

effort, and offered their services. After about forty minutes of phone

calls, told us they would give us a police escort all the way to the

border crossing at Rafah. Unfortunately, by the time our van and

escort arrived in Arish, the police informed us that the border

crossing was closed for the day. They facilitated a driver to take the

team to the Rafah Crossing by 6 AM Monday morning.

 

The Peace Team spent the late afternoon walking to the nearby shores

of the Mediterranean. We made our way around Arish, enjoying local

food and meeting a variety of people. Colin and Jenny were invited to

a family’s house for tea and supper. Each family member greeted them

warmly and were eager for conversation. All of us returned to the

hotel to compare stories, eat fresh fruit, and get an early start for

what proves to be an exciting day as we head for Rafah and try to enter Gaza.

 

Each team member expressed some level of frustration for not having

made it into Rafah tonight.  “It is completely unjust that it is so

difficult for journalists and aid workers carrying medical and other

supplies to travel in and out of Gaza, let alone the injustice of the

absolute restriction on travel for Gazans themselves,” stated Brenna Cussen.

 

 Still, all in the group expressed hope that we could cross tomorrow,

and many remarked that the results of our trip are ultimately in God’s

hands. As Beth Brockman commented, “Being in the moment takes away apprehension.”

 

For more info contact:

 

Saints Francis and Therese Catholic Worker House

52 Mason St., Worcester MA 01610

508 753 3588

theresecw2 at gmail.com

------------------------------------------

Sunday, May 10, 2009, New Haven Register

Working to give a peace a chance in a place that only knows conflict

 

By Randall Beach, Register Columnist

 

http://www.nhregister.com/articles/2009/05/10/news/beach10.txt

 

When Mark Colville sat down with his wife and their kids to tell them

he was going to Gaza and Israel on a peace mission, a dialogue ensued

on the importance of taking personal risks.

 

³The kids are worried because they¹re aware of the violence of the

situation,² Colville said as we sat at his kitchen table Tuesday,

three days before he began his journey. ³It¹s been a rough go, trying

to get my family together on this.²

 

His five children, aged 6 to 20, and his wife, Luz Catarineau,

supported Colville¹s previous peace outings, including an unsuccessful

attempt to get into Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba and opposing

paramilitary occupations in Colombia.

 

Although they also support his latest effort, they are more concerned

than ever before about his safety.

 

³We had to do a lot of talking about the risks,² Colville said, ³and

why take the risks.²

 

This was his answer: ³We¹re Catholics here, trying to be Christians,

to imitate Christ. You have to take some personal risks, that put

yourself where Christ might have been. We have the freedom to do this;

it¹s important to use that freedom.²

 

Colville, 47, and his family live at the Amistad Catholic Worker House

on Rosette Street in the Hill neighborhood of New Haven. They run a

community soup kitchen there.

 

Colville is going to the Middle East with five other members of a

Catholic Worker peace team. They have the backing of Nobel Peace Prize

winners Mairead Maguire and Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, as well

as actor Martin Sheen, who is helping pay for a driver and translator.

 

But Colville admitted, ³We don¹t know exactly what to expect. The six

of us are all experienced in nonviolent conflict resolution. We¹ll go

in that spirit. But we expect conflict and confrontation from

authorities on all sides.²

 

Colville has never been to the Middle East before and does not speak

Arabic. Compared with his past trips, ³This is a little more unknown.²

 

Their schedule called for them to land in Egypt Friday and attempt to

enter Gaza. Their 10-day itinerary also includes Israel.

 

They hope to deliver $20,000 in medical supplies to victims of

bombings committed by both Israel and Hamas, the Palestinian governing

body. Colville said his group wants to speak with victims on both

sides of the conflict.

 

³Telling the story from the victims¹ perspective is the most important

thing,² he said. ³We want to bring back that personal history.²

 

Colville explained the person-to-person approach that is the Catholic

Worker tradition. ³In areas of poverty, war and violence, these people

need to be personalized. You go to the person who¹s affected and open

yourself to sharing that person¹s fate. You build relationships and

humanize the situation.²

 

Colville was careful to say, ³There is no justification for launching

bombs at civilians,² no matter whether the bombs are made by U.S.

military suppliers to Israel or by Hamas members in their basements.

 

But he also said, when I asked him how the conflict originated, ³The

occupation (of Gaza by the Israeli government) is the cause of the

violence.²

 

³These are people who are besieged, surrounded, blockaded, starved,²

he said. ³It¹s a slow strangulation.²

 

These are some of the people he wants to interview. ³It¹s a war zone

and these families are caught in the middle, with no way out.²

 

Colville stressed his group also hopes to interview Israeli civilians

in Sderot, where many Hamas bombs have landed.

 

But he said he was enraged and joined protests in New Haven last

December when the Israeli government launched missile attacks on Gaza

which reportedly killed about 1,400 Palestinians. (Israel was

responding to missile attacks from Gaza that killed Israeli civilians.)

 

Colville noticed while doing fundraising for his trip that this is a

polarizing issue. ³The general mood around our country is, we stop up

our ears when the discussion comes up about Palestinian rights.²

 

But he said he cannot accept his government giving $2.5 to $3 billion

every year in unrestricted military aid to Israel.

 

Colville said he had been doing a lot of praying, asking that his

group be allowed to make contact with the many victims of violence.

 

³Many religions share that belief in reaching out to others. That¹s

the core of Christianity, Judaism and Islam. All of us need to get

back to the core morality of these great faiths.²

 

Here¹s the final thing Colville said at his kitchen table: ³My intent

is not to come back with a certain political line. The ultimate goal

is, the violence has to stop. Justice and peace have got to come to

that area.²

 

Randall Beach can be reached at rbeach@nhregister.com or 789-5766.

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