Karen R Shevet Dinah
351 West Wilson Street No 1
Madison WI 53703-3676
608.257.1835
06 May 2004
Dear Editor
With
reference to the Isthmus report by “Watchdog” Mayor Spurns Sister (4/30/04):
After
reading the criticisms of the MadisonRafah Sister City Project (thedailypage.com),
I thought some
opinion from Israel might be insightful.
Since Israelis live closer to Rafah than Madisonians they’re
likely to be more knowledgeable about how dangerous Rafah is and whether what
claims to be a Palestinian humanitarian organization (al Mezan) is really an
integral part of radical terrorist organizations. So a friend and I e-mailed and phoned Israelis we know. We described the Madison-Rafah Sister
City Project and asked specifically what they knew about al Mezan. Four people responded. A summary of their responses follows:
One woman
wrote, “I would like to tell
you how much I appreciate your courageous action. . . . El Mezan is an NGO
founded in 1999 by a member of The Palestinian Council. The activists are all volunteers . . .
.They are not affiliated to any of the political groups; they focus on human
rights, and because of the difficulties many people face in the Gaza Strip,
they also do a lot of welfare work. . . . Gook luck with your project . . . if
I have helped the people of Rafah even just a tiny bit through you, I shall be
so very pleased and happy.”
Zvi Shulman
of B’Tselem, The Israeli Center for Human Rights wrote, “Al Mezan
is not linked with Hamas, and it is a legitimate human rights organization.”
Gila
Svirsky of the Coalition of Women for Peace in Jerusalem wrote,
“You’ll have to work hard to get information about al-Mezan, since
Gaza is closed to all Israelis (except settlers, of course!) . . . . You
certainly can use an endorsement from me.
Good Luck with this!”
By phone Rabbi Arik Ascherman,
Executive Director of Rabbis for Human Rights, also based in Jerusalem, had a
positive reaction to the sister city relationship with Rafah and “was also happy to hear that adopting an Israeli
community was also being considered.”
Like most Jews I have a deep love
for Israel and am strongly committed to the survival of Israel as a Jewish
state. However, the policies of
the Israeli government towards the Palestinian people have often been and continue
to be despicable. These policies
haven’t been good for Israelis or diaspora Jews either.
I’ve
always believed grass roots, people-to-people relationships were important
additions to official international policies. Given the general tenor of the larger Middle
East area and of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in particular,
locally-centered, city-to-city relationships such as the Madison-Rafah project
are an obvious necessity, perhaps even a replacement for continually
unsuccessful governmental strategies.
Madison is
a wonderful place because people here understand the complex inter-relatedness
of international, national and local issues. Many of us work to make our
immediate community and the wider world
better and more humane. We
understand that in today’s small world, humanitarian efforts which reach,
seemingly far beyond our city limits, benefit us. In today’s tiny world one could easily consider Rafah
our next-door neighbor. Relating
to one’s next door neighbor in a kind way is basic common sense.
Sincerely,
Karen
Shevet Dinah