[R-G] 'Color Purple' author: Catastrophe has befallen Gaza
Sid Shniad
shniad at sfu.ca
Thu Mar 12 17:17:14 MDT 2009
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1070313.html
Haaretz 11/03/2009
'Color Purple' author: Catastrophe has befallen Gaza
By The Associated Press
Pulitzer Prize-winning U.S. author Alice Walker says a catastrophe has
befallen the Gaza Strip and that she hopes she and others can make
President Barack Obama more aware of it.
Walker, best known for her novel The Color Purple, toured Gaza this
week, including an area destroyed in Israel's recent war on the
territory's Islamic militant Hamas rulers.
Several neighborhoods along Gaza's border with Israel were leveled by
the Israel Defense Forces during the three-week offensive, which ended
Jan . 18. Israel says Hamas is to blame for the destruction because its
fighters used civilians as shields and operated from crowded areas.
About 15,000 houses were destroyed or damaged, displacing thousands of
Gazans.
Walker, 65, said in an interview Tuesday that she encountered widespread
devastation.
"Lots, and lots and lots of houses of just ordinary people have been
completely and utterly destroyed, and people are living in the rubble,"
she said, speaking in the garden cafe of her Gaza City hotel. "Some of
them are struggling in tents, and some are just sitting in what remains
of their homes."
Walker said her decision to visit Gaza, along with members of the U.S.
anti-war group Code Pink, was spurred by the recent death of an older
sister. She said she felt a connection to Gazans who lost loved ones in
the war. "I wanted very much to be with them and to bear witness to what
is happening to them, this horrible, catastrophic, terrible thing," she
said.
Israel says it launched the Gaza offensive to halt rocket fire from Gaza
at Israeli border towns. Some 1,300 Gazans were killed in the war,
according to Gaza human rights groups and medics. Thirteen Israelis also
were killed.
Walker said she believes Americans have mostly been exposed to the
Israeli narrative since the establishment of the Israel in 1948 and know
little about the plight of the Palestinians. Hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians fled or were expelled their homes at the time.
"We were indoctrinated to the song in that film Exodus, you know, 'This
land belongs to us, this land is our land,' meaning the Israelis, the
Jews, and for so long, we were told that nobody lived here, that it was
a land without people, for a people without land," she said.
Walker said she hopes she and others can make Obama more aware of the
plight of Gaza.
"Believing that he [Obama] is a decent person, and I do believe this,
our job then is to help him see what we see, and then he can decide how
he will behave and it's on his soul, it's not on my soul."
Obama's secretary of state, Hillary Rodham Clinton, visited Israel and
the West Bank last week. Clinton said she would work vigorously for a
peace agreement that includes the formation of an independent
Palestinian state, but gave no indications she would try a new approach.
Many Palestinians and other Arabs view U.S. policy as lopsided in
Israel's favor.
Walker did not respond directly when asked whether Hamas - classified as
a terrorist group by the U.S. and Israel - should be held responsible
for Gaza's hardships.
"I think all of us have an opportunity here to just say what we believe,
which is we think killing is wrong, we think stealing land is wrong, we
think abusing people is wrong," she said.
Gaza's borders have largely been sealed by Israel and Egypt since June
2007, when Hamas seized control of the territory by force, ousting
troops loyal to moderate Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas.
Walker, who is black, grew up in segregated Georgia, an experience
reflected in some of her work. She won a Pulitzer Prize and a National
Book Award for her 1982 novel The Color Purple, which was later turned
into a movie and a musical.
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