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The Jordan exhibition is the most extensive one organized by the Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign outside the West Bank. Nazzal's Spanish colleagues held a photography exhibition on the wall in their country last year, and Japanese supporters plan to organize one in Osaka next month. Huge concrete slabs dominate the exhibition hall. They are intended to give visitors a glimpse of the wall's breadth, even though the slabs stand at half the size of the eight-meter high walls in the occupied West Bank, a three-hour drive by car from Amman. Visitors can peak through small openings between the gray slabs to view images of Palestinian life continuing behind the wall. On display are 100 photographs, all from the collection of the Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign, documenting the wall and its destruction of life and property. Among the striking images are those of a young school boy, his black eyes desperately gazing through the iron bars of a closed yellow gate, of old Palestinian women squeezing themselves through the temporary wall in occupied Jerusalem, and of aging men clinging to their farmland while Israeli bulldozers uproot 700-year-old trees from their olive groves. In the background, visitors hear heart-wrenching personal testimonies of Palestinians, interrupted by the unnerving noise of bulldozers flattening homes, Israeli soldiers ordering residents to vacate their homes, demonstrators shouting pro-Palestinian slogans, sirens of ambulances wailing, and deafening cries of children. "I do not care any longer," said the sad voice of a man in a recorded message. "Either I live, or I die." A large map of the West Bank, detailed with the present and future route of the wall, is also featured in the exhibit."It is imperative that people digest the map. It is frighteningly clear that if completed, Israel will entirely enclose every single Palestinian village with walls, electronic fences, check points, and so on," Nazzal said. "Incongruous Palestinian towns, huge Israeli colonial settlements, and Jewish-only roads that are featured in the map, illustrate the wall's strategic goal."

A hand-made model of the West Bank village of Qalqiliya, rich in farming land and water and fully encircled by the wall, exposes the horrific effects of a completed barrier under phase one of the wall project. The thick barrier runs deep into occupied territory, to provide protection to residents of the nearby Alfei Manashe, one of the largest Israeli settlements. As a result, a total of 36 Palestinian water wells are now under full Israeli control. "This model is representative of the rest of the Palestinian villages and towns that are going to become enclaves, and completely ghettoized with fences and walls É this is the Zionist goal," said Nazzal, pointing to figurines of Palestinian women made from tiny shreds of her childhood collection of colorful ribbons. "There, they have also annexed a lot of Palestinian land, and the people aretruly suffocating and it is a form of quiet transfer because already 20 percent of population has left." By now, the story of the separation wall has become clear. The feeling of isolation is overwhelming, as the barrier will affect a total of 206 villages and town, inhabited by 875,000 Palestinians, or 38 percent of the West Bank population. Families will be separated from each other, peasants from their lands, and children from schools while Israel soldiers control the entry and exit of any individual. Economically, the barrier to trade will also seal the fate of the Palestinian communities in the West Bank, further aggravating record high unemployment rates soaring since the intifada began in 2000.


Israel, which began constructing the wall almost two years ago, says it is vital to protect the Jewish state from attacks by Palestinian resistance fighters. But Palestinians say the wall is part of long-term Zionist expansionist plans annexing Palestinian land, encouraging population "transfers," and pre-empting the borders of an independent Palestinian state. The exhibition in Amman could not have been more timely, given the battle at the Hague-based International Court of Justice (ICJ), which is set to rule on the legal consequences of the barrier later this month. Ironically, Jordan, which signed a controversial peace treaty with Israel in 1994 and angered many in the region because of its overtures to Israel over the past five decades, is leading Arab opposition against the wall. It has pressed for the immediate destruction of the barrier in a legal dossier it presented to the ICJ in late January. Jordan, which ruled the West Bank from 1950 until it lost it to Israel during the 1967 war, deems the wall a threat to its national security. It says the separation barrier ends any prospects for Middle East peace based on a two-state solution, and could ultimately encourage a transfer of Palestinians to Jordan, harming the delicate demographic balance and further depleting scarce natural resources. Half of Jordan's 5.2 million population is of Palestinian origin, mostly refugees from Israel's creation on parts of British Mandate Palestine in 1948 and the 1967 war. "This wall issue for me is as significant as 1967 and 1948," said Nazzal. "It has shaken up everyone. It is just so huge É it is the most significant change on the groundmsince 1967." The wall offers a valuable chance for Palestinians to promote their cause to the world, putting a human face to their daily suffering at the hands of their occupiers, instead of talking in abstract terms about seizures and curfews, concepts that remain alien to average Westerners, according to Arab and foreign political activists. These activists could also capitalize on the dialogue that the wall has stirred among Israelis as to whether it is really needed. "The wall also evokes images both of the Berlin Wall that was heroically torn down, and images of apartheid for people who really understand what it really was," said Nazzal.

 

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Rana Sabbagh-Gargour
Special to The Daily Star

Rana Sabbagh-Gargour
Editor In Chief,
Free Media Resources International
AMEX FMRI


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