There is definitely a living public
peace process of Dialogue in the Middle East. Here is one example.
--------------------------------
Under the banner of "The Day After -- Issues and
Opportunities for Building Trust," fifty Palestinian and Israeli
citizen-leaders successfully met in Italy.
These influential women and men represented a
"cross section of civil society from both communities, including prominent
academics, lawyers, journalists, businessmen, political strategists,
governmental advisers and other such figures."
"On the Israeli side, participants included
people from the right and the left, secular and religious."
"We somehow are fed up with the violence, on both
sides, and with the inability of the politicians to find a solution," said
Haifa Baramki, the Palestinian director of the center of continuing education
at Bir-Zeit University in the West Bank.
An Israeli businesswoman said: "Some people
had never met before, but we all came with an open heart. We all have
different ideas, and it went deep. Some cried; some laughed. There
were amazing moments. But no one left the discussion. This in
itself is a great success."
"It was very important for us to understand that
there are people on the other side who are ready to listen," said an
Israeli factory owner.
Said Haifa Baramki, "Before coming, we didn't
know what to expect, but now we know that this is the solution. We have
to empathize, we have to put each other in the skin of the other."
Rabbi David Rosen concluded: "Any kind of
human encounter that can overcome stereotypes and the barriers of mistrust
between the two peoples is a blessing."
There is more Dialogue then is visible. And it
is so necessary for authentic change. --L&L
===============================
Pulished by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) -- June 10, 2002
http://www.jta.org/page_view_story.asp?intarticleid=11413&intcategoryid=1
Israelis, Palestinians hope retreat helps
awaken peace from its slumber
By Ruth E. Gruber
ROME, June 10 (JTA) -- According to one school of thought, the most important
work at seminars and conferences takes place during the breaks.
This was the driving concept behind a three-day
brainstorming session by an influential group of 25 Israelis and 25
Palestinians that took place over the weekend at a secluded villa in Rome.
"There was no agenda, no papers, no speakers,
just a theme and 50 people," said Nicoletta Gaida, president of the Centro
Dionysia, the Rome-based cultural group that organized the retreat in
association with the Italian Foreign Ministry and the Dutch-based Education for
Life organization.
"In three days, what happened is something that
doesn't usually happen -- an exchange of honest, down-to-earth, painfully true
feelings about what the situation is and what can be done to get out of
it," she said.
The encounter took place behind closed doors -- or,
rather, behind the closed gates of the elegant, 15th-century Villa Piccolomini
near the Vatican, where the Centro Dionysia is headquartered.
A full list of participants was not made public, but
attendees represented a cross section of civil society from both communities,
including prominent academics, lawyers, journalists, businessmen, political
strategists, governmental advisers and other such figures.
On the Israeli side, participants included people from
the right and the left, secular and religious.
"We came and spoke as individuals," said
Orli Shani, a businesswoman whose husband was a former adviser to Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon and who coordinated the Israeli group.
"Some people had never met before, but we all
came with an open heart," she said. "We all have different
ideas, and it went deep. Some cried; some laughed. There were
amazing moments. But no one left the discussion. This in itself is
a great success."
Participants proposed topics they wanted to explore
and then broke into discussion groups, which continued through mealtimes.
"The talking never stopped," one participant
said. "It was particularly amazing to see the intensity of people,
Palestinians and Israelis, sitting elbow to elbow around the circular lunch or
dinner tables and talking and talking. Among other things, it was the
first time the Palestinians had met people from the right and religious
Israelis and heard clearly what they had to say."
The theme of the retreat was "The Day After -- Issues
and Opportunities for Building Trust." This represented an anticipation
that, sooner or later, there will be a "day after" the current
conflict and bloodshed and that Israelis and Palestinians must start forging
links to work toward that day.
The aim was not to arrive at decisions or even
agreement on anything. Rather, it was to hear, firsthand, the concerns of
individuals from the other side -- and to recognize that many of the concerns
are mutual.
"We somehow are fed up with the violence, on both
sides, and with the inability of the politicians to find a solution," said
Haifa Baramki, the Palestinian director of the center of continuing education
at Bir-Zeit University in the West Bank. She attended the encounter with
her husband, a former president of Bir-Zeit.
During the three days in Rome, she struck up a
friendship with Chana Levitan, principal of the Hebrew University's secondary
school. The two said they planned to stay in touch, by phone and e-mail,
when they return.
"Both of us work in education," Baramki
said. "It is a crime to see the young people who are killed -- and
to see the way those who are not killed are affected by the violence. The
traumas of the young generation are tremendous -- but they are our
future."
Both Israeli and Palestinian participants said one of
the most important aspects of the encounter was to recognize that they share
needs and feelings with people on the other side.
"It was very important for us to understand that
there are people on the other side who are ready to listen," said one
participant, an Israeli factory owner.
Said Haifa Baramki, "Before coming, we didn't
know what to expect, but now we know that this is the solution. We have
to empathize, we have to put each other in the skin of the other."
Organizers and participants said they hoped somehow to
continue the contacts.
At the close of the three days, Rabbi David Rosen, the
international director of interreligious affairs of the American Jewish
Committee and one of the conference participants, performed a wedding ceremony
for a young South African couple on the tree-shaded grounds of the villa.
Rosen carefully explained each step of the ceremony
for the benefit of the Palestinians. One of the Palestinian participants,
a prominent businessman, smilingly held one of the posts of the chupah, or
wedding canopy.
"Any kind of human encounter that can overcome
stereotypes and the barriers of mistrust between the two peoples is a
blessing," Rosen said after the ceremony.
"I'm hopeful, because such a remarkable gathering
of an Israeli-Palestinian cross section of civil society gives the possibility
that there will be an outcome of more consequence than just personal
encounters," he said.