This is the second post from Mike Godbe, who is on a Birthright tour of Israel (the first is here). Mike is a 2009 graduate of Vassar College, who has been working with Peace Action West in Oakland, CA. He has a thoughtful take on the way that young Jews like himself are introduced to the history and issues of Israel / Palestine on these tours, that are provided free to any first time Jewish visitors to Israel who are aged between 18 and 26. [Originally posted under Dave Belden’s name, now under Mike’s so all his posts can be accessed together.]

Thursday March 11th, 2010.
We began the day with a wonderful hike down the cliffy mountainside of the Arbel. We explored a stunning centuries-old castle built into the hillside and avoided some cows as we made our way down to the bus with the Sea of Galilee barely visible in the distance through the haze.

Next we visited a Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu, a large and unique kibbutz that was founded in 1939. While many of Israel’s kibbutz’s have strayed from their hard-line socialist and agricultural ideals over the years, Sde Eliyahu remains completely cooperative with every member getting equal pay, and completely agricultural . . . and organic too. They have a whole host of organic solutions to common problems faced by large agricultural productions ranging from owls to donkeys to rotational planting. I almost ate too many of their delicious dates before a new friend reminded me of the undesirable effect that eating too many dates can have.

We then visited our guide Danny’s kibbutz for a different kibbutz experience. Danny’s kibbutz decided to privatize 9 years ago, so while there is still a strong sense of community facilitated by a kibbutz school for the youngsters and many planned community events, members are financially independent and much more responsible for themselves. While the sense of community was generally appreciated and revered throughout the group, the kibbutz lifestyle in total was not something that appealed to anyone in the group very strongly as far as I could tell.

As the sun set, we took a relatively long bus ride to Jerusalem and eventually landed at the Park Hotel. We ate some dinner and then with almost no warning found ourselves being implored to swab our inner cheeks and sign up to be a potential bone marrow donor for Leukemia patients until we are 60 years old. It’s certainly a good cause and I have no problem with it, but the whole completely-without-warning nature of the thing made the experience almost comically jarring for me. However, many in our group did sign up to be potential donors, so all awkwardness aside, something good was accomplished.

After the Gift of Life people were done with us, we got to hear from two young Israeli friends (Americans who made Aliyah) of one of the three staff members. This was not on the schedule or planned through Birthright, but was set up informally through the staff. Both of them happen to work for the army’s relatively small spokespersons unit. As one of them put it, “if something in the news makes Israel look good, I probably had something to do with it.” One of them described the job of the spokesperson’s bureau as “representing the positive side of Israel’s army,” and one example she gave was countering the Goldstone report, which according to her says that Israelis “are barbarians” (The Goldstone report is the UN report released this past summer that accuses Israel, as well as Hamas, of committing war crimes during Operation Cast Lead in late 2008 / early 2009 – during which over 1400 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip and 13 Israelis were killed. It was chaired by Richard Goldstone, a self proclaimed Zionist, who also oversaw international war crimes trials after the horrors of Rwanda and Bosnia. Israel dismisses the report as biased and claims that it is deeply flawed, though to my knowledge Israel has never actually specified the ways that the report is flawed).

By the time our two IDF spokespeople finished their stories, it was late and the group was fairly exhausted, and as a result didn’t have too many questions. I spoke with one of them for about fifteen minutes after the presentation about the IDF’s official justification for the demolition of Palestinian homes. As an IDF spokesperson, he only has to respond to questions regarding decisions made by the IDF, and as house demolition decisions are usually made by an Israeli civil authority, he rarely has to speak to this issue. Furthermore, according to him, demolitions in East Jerusalem, as opposed to the West Bank, are carried out by municipal police and not the IDF. He was quick to say that personally, he did not agree with the policy of demolishing Palestinian homes whether based on permit issues or security threats (He never directly answered me when I asked how the IDF could claim the demolition of a home in the name of security), though he was then quick to turn around and defend the IDF, saying that usually the homes that are demolished belong to terrorists. He then also added, regarding the Rachel Corrie case currently unfolding in Israel, that due to the design of the Israeli modified D-9 Caterpillar bulldozers, the driver could not have seen Rachel in his path and that her death was an accident (Rachel Corrie was an American who was killed by an Israeli bulldozer seven years ago in the Gaza strip while protesting the demolition of a Palestinian home; her parents are currently in Israel seeking justice through the Israeli courts).


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