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Israeli and Arab Mothers Tour U.S. for Peace http://onearabworld.blog.com/566286/ |
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New York 16 February 2006 |
Phillips Report - Download RealAudio (675 KB)
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The classroom at New York's Columbia University was packed earlier this month (February 9) with students for the Mothers for Peace event. It was the fourth stop in a six-city tour co-sponsored by a pro-Israel education group called The Israel Project and by a student organization called Pro-Israel Progressives. The two mothers on tour are Nonie Darwish. an Egyptian who grew up in Gaza and moved to the U.S. over 25 years ago, and Miri Eisen, a recently retired colonel in the Israeli Defense Forces, where she worked for 20 years in Army Intelligence. Each woman is the mother of three.
Eisen nods respectfully. "I think the fact that we stand there together makes a huge difference for the public and for ourselves," she says. "This isn't a publicity stunt. It's something that we're doing as part of a dialog that we hope will go further." Their joint tour culminates a long inner pilgrimage for both women. Darwish is the daughter of an Egyptian military officer who she claims was assassinated in Gaza by Israeli operatives. She says she was brought up to hate and fear Israelis and Jews.
Darwish never questioned that attitude as a girl. Then, one day, when she was 21, she was sitting on a hilltop with a Christian friend within earshot of a hate-filled sermon issuing from a loudspeaker atop a nearby mosque. "Every prayer ended with a cursing of the enemies of Islam," she recalls. "My Christian friend actually looked scared. And when I saw her eyes in fear, that's when it struck me 'I am embarrassed… by the way my religion is being taught.'" Darwish calls that incident "the first seed," because it marked the beginning of her interest "in knowing the history from the other side."
"And, in that sense," she says, "I'm a realist." But Eisen believes it is a good start to encourage people on each side to try to understand history from the other's point of view. "Both sides have different histories, and they don't look the same or sound the same. But I can understand their history," she says. "I can go out of my way to read their history and look at their perspective, and I don't have to agree with it. But by opening my mind to look, and realizing that they have a different story, we may be able to arrive at a livable community."
Miri Eisen agrees. However, she believes that most people on both sides are going to be very unhappy with whatever solution is arrived at. Still she cherishes the hope that "by listening, through that tolerance, we can achieve a situation where [most people] are willing to accept a compromise."
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