• Published 10:22 22.07.10
  • Latest update 10:22 22.07.10

Pro-Palestinian group sees its struggle as 'Vietnam of our day'

Activists of the International Solidarity Movement have been feeling a sense of victory of late, flush with volunteers keen on breaking Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip.

By The Associated Press Tags: Israel news Palestinians Gaza Hamas

Activists of the International Solidarity Movement have been feeling a sense of victory of late, flush with volunteers keen on breaking Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip.

Members of the pro-Palestinian group first sailed to Gaza in summer 2008 to challenge the siege of the Hamas-ruled territory; an offshoot of the same group organized the Gaza-bound flotilla that led to Israel's deadly May 31 raid that killed nine activists.

Pro-Palestinian protesters picketing outside the Port of Oakland

Pro-Palestinian protesters picketing outside the Port of Oakland.

Photo by: AP

The fact that the international outcry prompted Israel to ease its 3-year-old blockade and let more goods into Gaza has the activists feeling that their movement is successful.

"Around the world, we motivated people who were frustrated but didn't know what to do, said Huwaida Arraf," 34, co-founder of the ISM and its naval spinoff, the Free Gaza Movement, which organized the May flotilla.

Since the movement's ships began, other groups have joined them or imitated them with their own ships trying to reach Gaza's shores - some of them successfully.

IDF soldiers scuffle with ISM activists

IDF soldiers scuffle with ISM activists in the West Bank

Photo by: AP

Israel is trying to crack down harder on ISM, and the group has also come under criticism for putting volunteers in danger.

Still, more people are volunteering.

Palestinian activist Hisham Jamjoum says the since the May flotilla, 10 recruits a week have attended his workshop, required for ISM volunteers - double the average.

The ISM was launched in 2001 for sympathetic foreigners to help Palestinians throw off Israeli rule. Its founders are a mix - Arraf, a Palestinian who is a dual Israeli-U.S. citizen; her husband, Adam Shapiro, an American Jew; Neta Golan, an Israeli, and Ghassan Andoni, a Palestinian from the West Bank.

Some 7,000 people - a third of them Jews - have participated since, mainly serving as peaceful, but provocative buffers between Palestinians and Israeli forces, mostly at protests. The group was first noticed in 2002 when its activists rushed past Israeli tanks to shield the besieged Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in his West Bank headquarters.

The chance to participate in a compelling conflict is popular with college-age students on summer breaks. For many Jews, it's a chance to understand the conflict from a radically pro-Palestinian perspective.

But while most activists read about Mideast politics, volunteers can be clueless about conservative Palestinian culture. That's led to tensions, including sexual harassment. Some Palestinians assume female activists are permissive because they don't behave like conservative Palestinian women.

During last week's workshop, Jamjoum, 52, laid the rules out. He asked women to cover their arms and legs. For men: long pants only. Another volunteer explained how to dodge sexual harassment.

Jamjoum taught the volunteers Arabic phrases, including please, thank you, and I'm a vegetarian. Activists don't realize they are offending Palestinian housewives when they don't eat their chicken dishes, he explained.

Noting a Palestinian stereotype about unwashed hippie activists, Jamjoum told the girls makeup was OK. "Some people think to show solidarity with Palestinians, you have to wear ugly clothes. No. We like you nice and clean."

Upon graduation, an ISM dispatcher sends activists to demonstrations in coordination with Palestinian protest leaders. They distribute footage of clashes on YouTube, blogs and Facebook.

One ISM veteran - a 23-year-old American calling herself Saegan - highlights an activist's life. Like other volunteers, she would only identity herself with a pseudonym. During her 6 months with the group, she has been battered by tear gas alongside Palestinians, but also fended off a Palestinian man who tried to rape her while she slept in a West Bank village.

On a routine day, she joined a demonstration in the town of Beit Jala against Israel's West Bank separation barrier in June. The barrier protects Israel against militants - but also swallows chunks of Palestinian land.
Some 20 Palestinian youths and activists scrambled down an olive grove, where

Israeli soldiers guarded a crane clearing land for the barrier. Soldiers fired tear gas. Palestinian youths hurled rocks. Saegan stood close Israeli soldiers. "You are stealing Palestinian land," she said.

To Israeli officials, the activists are misguided idealists and troublemakers.
This year, Israeli forces stormed ISM offices three times, seizing equipment and arresting activists. In March, military officials broadened the definition of who is an infiltrator, allowing them to speedily deport foreign activists.

The ISM takes its own measures: They don't keep databases, and activists use pseudonyms. Hardcore activists legally change their names to dodge an Israeli blacklist of ISM volunteers.

Stepping into confrontations can be dangerous. In 2003, Rachel Corrie, 23, of Olympia, Washington, was crushed to death by an Israeli army bulldozer while trying to block it from demolishing a home in Gaza, while British activist was killed by an Israeli soldier in Gaza. A Palestinian ISM activist was killed by a Palestinian militant in the West Bank town of Jenin.
And the May flotilla went lethally wrong.

Israel says it responded with deadly force when activists on the ship - from a
Turkish group that joined the ISM's flotilla - attacked commandos with iron bars. ISM activists weren't involved in the violence, but Arraf told Israeli naval officials that everybody was unarmed.
They have become the useful idiots of Islamic extremists, said Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor.

Palestinians have mixed views about their foreign friends.

Bassam Tamimi, a protest leader, complained activists often pressured Palestinians to stop hurling rocks at Israeli soldiers. Another leader, Shady Faraghwa said volunteers boosted morale.

The volunteers say the Palestinian conflict is their emblematic issue - as explained by a 24-year old fromDenmark who calls himself Carl: "This is the Vietnam of our generation."

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  • 11. 0 1
    Just a game.
    • Misha
    • 22.07.10
    • 17:30

    Israel is in state of permanent war since it inception. All the democtatic goverments in the history had suspended rule of law during the wars. There are to many to count, I will point out just 2, hebius corpus during American civil war, American Japanise detention, incarceration, and property confiscations during 2WW. I am sure that GB had its share of violations of human rights, there to many to count for Vishy regime in France. Comperebly, Israeli violations are mild and insignificant. The virulent antisimitism and exagerated nonfulfiled expectations from self hating jews, defenetly a contributing factors, behind amplification of the so called systemic human right violation by Israel.

  • 10. 3 0
    Bravo ISM!!
    • Jen
    • 22.07.10
    • 16:39

  • 9. 0 0
    they shoudl seriously consider going to africa
    • dave
    • 22.07.10
    • 15:51

    as someone who is too well versed with africa, it is beyond me how so much energy is wasted by those morons on such an irrelevant issue. i mean. do they even understand that their actions OUTCROWD the media focus on areas like africa? if i were to blame anyone for a distorted international system, it is them.

  • 8. 0 0
    They think its 1968!
    • yeshua
    • 22.07.10
    • 12:57

    When I was a child I wanted to live in the 1960's because I thought it was cool. When you grow up you realize how childish you were. You cannot compare one conflict to another, Vietnam was its own war, Israel is its own war. All these ISM activists will turn into bank managers before long.

  • 7. 46 0
    Same moronic types who yelled about Vietnam then shut up about Pol Pot
    • PETER SM
    • 22.07.10
    • 12:55

    Same moronic types who have not got the guts to got to stand up to real genocide as in Darfur or Zimbabwe

  • 6. 0 50
    Pathetically Misguided
    • Max of USA
    • 22.07.10
    • 12:12

    These pathetically misguided people are looking for something missing but desparately needed in their lives. They've stumbled on a "red hearing" in the Palestinian cause which they fail to understand. They would do much better to take on the cause of preventing Islamic violence throughout the world, but that is a little to big for them to embrace. I propose they take up the cause of Islamic/Arabic persecution of women, but that's not exciting enough. Maybe they should take up the cause of indoctrination of Palestinian children to hate Jews, but they don't have free access to that info unless they read Arabic. Then perhaps they should seek out another great promoter of the Palestinian cause for advice, Osama Bin Ladn. That should make for an ending they deserve.

  • 5. 0 0
    This is the Vietnam of our generation?
    • David Nigel Braham
    • 22.07.10
    • 11:54

    They have no idea what the Vietnam war was. The IDF are not Vietnamese and they are not American Marines.They are just a nuisance to the Palestinians and themselves and above all to the IDF.

  • 4. 45 59
    ISM really stands for "I Support Murderers."
    • Chafeeka
    • 22.07.10
    • 11:45

    period!

  • 3. 1 66
  • 2. 1 83
    ISM Idiots
    • Gianni
    • 22.07.10
    • 11:23

    These misguided morons are a kook fringe of anarchists. Their lives are void, unable to be reasoned with. They would be unable to grasp any of Israel's rights in the Middle East, so long as their hatred involves Jews. Many of these miscreants couldn't care less about Palestine of Arab citizens. More of anti-Jew, anti-establishment. Rachel Corrie, an ignorant girl, knew nothing about what was being fought over, the terror inflicted by the Arabs was meaningless. Her life was snuffed out, ironically the Arabs she sought to align with could care less about her. What kind of parents raise nuts like this for kids??

    • 0 1
      hear hear!
      • daniel
      • 22.07.10
      • 14:16

      no s*#@. these people have little to no grasp of reality and are, as outsiders, picking sides without showing sympathy for another. israel is the enemy of peace, while the arab people's have yet to have any collective movements for women's rights, human rights or any things that these people should be standing for. by their actions, they are against freedom, democracy or anything that humanity has strived to achieve through millennia of countless wars and bloodshed. "peace means the destruction of israel"

  • 1. 0 66
    Ignoramuses and virulent anti-Semites
    • jack
    • 22.07.10
    • 11:01

    I have personally met some of these so-called "peace activists." They were shockingly ignorant of the Middle East (didn't even know Jordan illegally held the West Bank before 1967), blindly hate Israel and what's worse, they were horrific and belligerent Jew-haters on par with their Jihadist allies. Some of them were fellow gay men and women who idiotically support jihadist regimes and movements, under whose rule they would be tortured and killed, yet they still support the Islamo-fascists and the latter use them for political purgain. ISOers are blinded by an irrational hatred of Israel and Jews, whom they equate with America (whom they hate) & the capitalist bloc (which has always been the case among Leftists and communists ever since the 1st Comintern). Ultimately, the ISO should be banned for supporting terror, just like the Turkish IHH and CAIR.

    • 75 1
      "A THIRD OF THEM JEWS"
      • Pal in Diaspora
      • 22.07.10
      • 11:55

      Please read the article before you comment. As the article states, a third of ISM members are JEWS... What nerve do you have calling them "belligerent Jew-haters"

    • 0 44
      dumb kids
      • daniel
      • 22.07.10
      • 14:17

      there are antisemites, then the jews who feel that antisemitism will subside if "we just eliminate the reasons they hate us". didn't work then, won't work now.

    • 0 51
      to Pal in Diaspora
      • MK
      • 22.07.10
      • 14:35

      Unfortunately, self-hatred is quite characteristic of Jews - both in Israel and in Diaspora.