First a note of remembrance: a gentle lady walked gently unto that good night last week. Mrs Meherbanoo Kekobad Marker passed away at the age of 102 years and 5 months. I knew her for half those years, the duration of my friendship with her son Jamsheed, a friendship that has remained on a steady course though our careers took different roads.
Mrs. Marker was a remarkable lady not for the long years she lived but for the manner she lived those long years with a heart big enough to share out her goodness in equal measure to all whose lives she touched. For me, it was a privilege to have known her. In her latter years, she was bed-ridden and she could have been forgiven had she failed to put all the pieces together.
Not a bit. There was a warm smile of recognition as if to say that she was glad to see me and it made me feel special. Dignity is the word that comes to mind. Mrs. Marker had dignity and it is a rare gift when it is combined with compassion. I received nothing but kindness from her and I am thankful for it.
Now to other matters, less gracious and more hard-nosed and I turn not to Iraq but to Zimbabwe where Tony Blair's government is leading the charge to bring about a regime change and getting rid of that no-good Robert Mugabe.
Tony Blair has not yet accused Zimbabwe of having weapons of mass destruction that pose an imminent danger to Britain and there are no plans that we know of that a military invasion is planned but plenty is happening that would qualify as interference in the internal affairs of Zimbabwe by both overt and covert means and which would be considered as an outrage if the shoe had been on the other foot. But the most intriguing of these acts of subversion is the use of cricket!
England is due to tour Zimbabwe later this year and it will be damned if it will do so despite a binding commitment to the ICC. After 9/11 it became fashionable to get out of one's commitments by citing security concerns. The terrorists were hell-bent on targeting cricket teams, at least, that was the perception though why not soccer or Wimbledon or baseball's World Series is anybody's guess. Now a new element has been added - human rights and it is England that is leading the pack.
Mr Des Wilson who is the corporate affairs chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has drawn up a report on the Zimbabwe tour and he says that concerns over Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe's human rights record could and should be taken into account when the board decides on January 29 whether to proceed with the November tour.
"Can we tour this country knowing what we do about its stance on human rights and the suffering of its people?" he asks, sanctimoniously, his piety oozing out of every pore of his body. "The safety and security of a touring party can in today's circumstances no longer be the only factor in deciding whether or not to proceed with a controversial tour," he says.
The Zimbabwe Cricket Union chairman, Mr. Peter Chingoka has responded with impeccable logic:" Having honoured our word that we would tour the UK we naturally expect England to reciprocate by touring Zimbabwe. " The ECB stood to lose a lot of money if Zimbabwe had refused to tour England last year in retaliation for England's refusal to play its World Cup 2003 match in Zimbabwe.
But Zimbabwe could have made an even more compelling case for not touring England than Des Wilson has made about human rights. Zimbabwe could have said that an illegal invasion of a sovereign country was a violation of international law. That the reasons given for this war turned out to be a tissue of lies.
That the evidence of weapons of mass destruction had been fabricated, that there was no link whatsoever between Iraq and Al Qaeda, that Iraq had no hand, open or hidden in 9/11. That in pursuit of the war in Iraq, human rights of Iraqis are being violated apart from thousands of them being killed. Saddam Hussain was a horrible man, so too, probably, is Robert Mugabe. Is Tony Blair a saint? When we invoke a moral argument, we must make sure that our own hands are clean.
If democracy works at all, it is in Britain. There were massive anti-war protests, proof that the government was out of sync with the instincts of the people. Britain knows something about war. Its cities were blitzed during World War-2 as it awaited a German invasion. It was rallied by Winston Churchill but it was business as usual in the House of Commons and Churchill was not spared the barbs of Nye Bevan and when the general elections came around, the British people decided to vote in Labour and boot Churchill out. The British did not practise democracy in their colonies but at home it was never made hostage to real or imagined security threats.
There is now danger that Britain too wants to get into the regime-change business but to use cricket is a bridge too low. Once politicians start making the rule in sports, start laying down pre-conditions, we can wave good-bye to international sport including the soccer World Cup and the Olympic Games. By the logic of Mr. Des Wilson, almost all the countries should be disqualified.
It would be best that Britain's quarrel with Robert Mugable not be allowed to damage the cricket world and if England does not want to tour Zimbabwe, let it not but spare us the moral humbug. Even Australia is not too impressed with the moral argument. It prefers the catch-all security concerns. But it did play in Zimbabwe in the World Cup 2003 and is now hosting Zimbabwe in the on-going triangular cricket series. England should play cricket and not play moral policeman.
A campaign for non-violence
By Zehra Imam
According to a recent poll on the Geneva Accord, one finds that "53 per cent of the Israelis and almost 56 per cent of the Palestinians support it" (Haaretz Daily). This clearly indicates a strong desire from both sides for a resolution which will end the on-going conflict.
Unfortunately, one does not come across such reports often because they are not deemed media-worthy. Images of violent acts by Palestinian suicide bombers and Israeli soldiers are more eye-catching and controversial. Since the media portrays a predominantly negative image of the conflict, there appears to be no alternate option except violence.
Therefore, expressions like 'non-violent protest' within the Israeli-occupied territories seem out of place. While Israelis and Palestinians practise non-violent solutions, the media focuses mainly on their violence, which intensifies group polarization. The media plays a significant role in forming and, later, swaying public opinion.
The Palestinians first tried the option of non-violence in 1983 when an American-educated Palestinian named Mubarak Awad returned to Jerusalem. Awad, with his doctorate in counselling, he began an experimental non-violent movement in the first Palestinian intifada. The intifada is the Palestinian uprising that began in 1987 against the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Awad, now the founder and director of the organizations 'Non-violence International' and 'Palestinian centre for the Study of Non-violence' writes:
It is important for Palestinians to focus on non-violent struggle. Large masses of Israelis, who truly yearn for a just peace, can be enlisted in this non-violent struggle against occupation and settlements, whereas there is almost no chance of enlisting them in any armed Palestinian activity. Palestinians will choose non-violence only if they are convinced of its efficacy. The Israelis know well how to fight an armed antagonist, but they have little understanding of how to deal with massive non-violent resistance. They expect and, in fact, need the Palestinians to be either submissive or violent.
Currently, both Israelis and Palestinians prefer the non-violent option. A poll conducted by the American nonprofit group 'Search for Common Ground' shows that "72 per cent of Palestinians are willing to embrace non-violent resistance to the Israeli occupation".
Similarly, "72 per cent of Israeli Jews would accept a Palestinian state based on the 1967 borders."Another Palestinian peace activist, Ghazi Briegieth, recently gave a tour with the organization 'Israeli-Palestinian Bereaved Forum for Peace'. Bregieth has experienced personal loss because of the conflict: Israeli soldiers killed two of his brothers.
The organization, he joined, however, advocates the slogan "No to revenge. Turn the other cheek. Peace over pain." The organization also encourages striking actions and for people to donate blood to 'enemy' victims. They want to initiate a dialogue between the two sides and have sponsored a telephone hotline so people can "Stop Killing and Start Talking."
The non-violent protest is, by no means, one-sided. There are impressive demonstrations of non-violent protest by former Israeli military conscripts and reservists who have first hand experience in the occupied territories. Moti Kimtel is one example of such a soldier, who now instructs Palestinians about farming techniques.
Ironically, he returned to help the very people whom he patrolled in the Gaza Strip merely three years earlier. Mr Kimtel commented on this change, "I don't have the answers to all of Israel's problems, but I was in the occupied territories as a soldier and now I am here as an activist. It feels like I am doing much more good here as an activist."
Another surprising action taken by Israeli soldiers was when they filed a petition to Israel's high court on September 30, 2003. Yesh Gvul, a movement of soldiers who refuse to serve in the occupied territories, filed the petition demanding the Israeli High Court to investigate the air strike in the Gaza Strip last year which killed "fifteen Palestinians... including 12 civilians, nine of them children, when an Israeli F-16 fighter jet dropped a one-ton bomb on a residential building in Gaza City."
Defying military orders is extremely difficult; the fact that part of the younger generation does this is highly commendable. An example of this is a young Israeli, 21 years of age, who refuses to serve. He had to serve a jail sentence for his refusal to serve, yet after his jail sentence, Ariel joined "Ta'ayush (Arabic for "life in common")" which is a peace organization. Currently, he camps in front of a Palestinian village to defend it from being bulldozed.
It is not just Israeli soldiers, but also religious clergy who are resorting to non-violence. The rabbis from the peace group called Rabbis for Human Rights (RHR) demonstrate this through their efforts. These rabbis put their lives at stake to defend Palestinian lives.
In fact, Rabbi Arik Ascherman, executive director of RHR, uses religion to justify his defence of Palestinian civilians. He feels "anger and embarrassment towards the settlers" when he sees them, for they believe that "their Torah tells them to vandalize land and abuse Palestinian people."
In an incident that took place on November 24, 2003, the rabbis "went to show solidarity with Palestinian villagers who were preparing to harvest their olives in a few weeks." Five armed settlers confronted them, "shouting at [them], throwing insults, kicking [them] and throwing stones."
The most unfortunate part about this incident is that the armed settlers comprised young Israelis; this indicates that "the first wave of settlers have brought their children up to hate." People such as Rabbi Ascherman, however, offer hope with their means of constructive protest against unjust laws.
Rabbi Arik Aschermans speaks out in another article, sharing his accounts of what he feels people's views are in Israel. He finds most Israeli secular in their beliefs. They believe in the genesis that, "all human beings are created equal in God's image" and, therefore, cannot practise discrimination against Palestinians.
The olive branch has become symbolic as this conflict continues. Yasser Arafat, the Palestinian leader, pleaded with the international community, "I have come bearing an olive branch and a freedom fighter's gun. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand." Non-violence is something to which a significant number of Palestinians and Israelis are turning because it seems much more logical than the violent means that are clearly not working.
It is obviously the more difficult alternative and requires much patience because the results are not immediately realized. Writer Louisa Morgantini makes a powerful comment regarding this: "I think that the Palestinian people are a miracle. I don't understand how they can continue to resist such aggression - how do they not explode." The same applies to Israeli settlers and former soldiers who continue to show solidarity by engaging in non-violent protest, wishing always for the turmoil to end.