The Electronic Intifada

The Crimes of War: Between Al-Zeitoun (Gaza) and Rafah


Tamar Gozansky is an former member of the Israeli Knesset and a member of the political bureau of the Israeli Communist Party. She visited Gaza on 19 May 2004: “Attention is now drawn to the Israeli war crimes committed by the IDF in Rafah on May 19; especially to the numerous victims of the shelling by Israeli tanks of a civilian demonstration, mostly youth and children, at high noon. I watched the horrific live TV images of wounded children, youth running for shelter and smoke rising from the shelled location, in the company of the head of the Palestinian Internal Security in Gaza City, Rashid Abu Shbak, alias Abu Khatem.” 

Madonna pushes her fears over the borderline, cancels Israeli concerts


Citing security concerns, the Queen of Pop last week abruptly canceled an eagerly awaited series of concerts set for this September in Tel Aviv, Israel’s largest city, which would have included a televised concert on September 11. It is reported that Madonna’s “Re-Invented Tour” will include video footage of a Palestinian boy and an Israeli boy walking arm in arm. The last time Madonna played in Israel was on 4 October 1993 at Tel Aviv’s Hayarkon Park. Read Victor Kattan’s commentary on the irrationality of Madonna’s fears, and why more celebrities should perform in the Palestinian territories. 

Why I Burned My Israeli Military Papers


Although I am a Jewish American, born and raised in the United States, I am also a citizen of Israel by virtue of my father’s birth in that country. Israel’s laws automatically confer citizenship on the children of citizens regardless of their place of birth. Like all other Jewish citizens of Israel, I am required to serve in the Israeli army. On Thursday I set fire to my Israeli military deferral papers across the street from the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC. This act of civil disobedience took place during a protest organized by a Jewish American peace organization against the atrocities that Israel is committing in the occupied Gaza Strip. Josh Ruebner explains why. 

Photostory: Israel's destruction in Brazil refugee camp


Johannes Abeling, graduate of the Royal Art Academy in the Hague and a freelance Dutch photojournalist, is back in Palestine shooting photos. On 19th May, Johannes found himself in Rafah in the middle of the peaceful protest march by local residents that ended when Israeli combat helicopters and tanks opened fire on the demonstrators, killing at least 8 people and wounding about 50, including many children. This series of photographs is from the Brazil neighborhood in Rafah, which has seen many homes demolished during Israel’s ongoing “Operation Rainbow”. 

After Rafah, Europe, Arabs have no excuse for inaction


Things must be bad in Palestine when the United States allows a resolution to pass in the UN Security Council, as it did late on 19 May condemning Israeli actions. The resolution is a moral victory for Palestinians, but there is no reason to take comfort from it as Israel intensified its attack on the Gaza refugee camp. Unless the other members of the Security Council and the wider international community act immediately to halt Israel’s assault, we can conclude that the UN Resolution was designed only to absolve them from any further action. EI co-founder Ali Abunimah names some specific actions the international community must take. 

Photostory: Israel's Rafah operation and its May 19th attack on a peaceful march (graphic content)


Johannes Abeling, graduate of the Royal Art Academy in the Hague and a freelance Dutch photojournalist, is back in Palestine shooting photos. Just a few days after he arrived, Johannes found himself in Rafah in the middle of a peaceful protest march by local residents calling for the Israeli army to cease “Operation Rainbow”, a military operation to destroy hundreds of Palestinian homes along the Gaza-Egyptian border. Israeli combat helicopters and tanks opened fire on the demonstrators, killing at least 8 people and wounding about 50. Abeling’s series of photos are chilling and graphic, and EI publishes them here to give readers a rare but necessary opportunity to see life during wartime in Rafah. Warning: Some of the images are extremely disturbing. 

Assume the position: a play about prison is followed by arrests


“Nidal played the hero of the play who did not confess anything to the interrogators. He said that the play taught them about what to expect if they were ever arrested, and how to avoid giving up information even when manipulated. ‘Now,’ he said, ‘three of the actors are living the play in real life.’ Muhammad, who played an interrogator in the play, is lonely these days, having lost many in his circle of friends. With a forlorn air that almost suggested he only spoke to journalists because there was no one else to talk to, Muhammad said, ‘Before the arrests, there was movement in Aida, I could find people to chat with. Now, there is no one’.” Amahl Bishara and Nidal al-Azraq report on life imitating art in one West Bank refugee camp. 

Who really smuggled weapons to Rafah?


Israel’s ongoing assault on human lives and property in Rafah is, according to Israeli spokespersons, “aimed at preventing a huge shipment of arms being smuggled.” The past four days, Israeli forces have killed 39 Palestinians. Its military assault on Palestinians in Rafah includes extensive house demolitions and other human rights abuses. The question should be asked, who supplies Israel’s military occupation of the Gaza Strip. Both the U.S. and EU are the main suppliers of arms with which Israel has forced Palestinians to live under military occupation for decades. 

"oh rafah, aching rafah" - A poem from the journal of Rachel Corrie


oh rafah. aching rafah. aching of refugees aching of tumbled houses bicycles severed from tank-warped tires and aching of bullet riddled homes all homes worm-eaten by bullets and then impregnated through bullet holes by birds. Read the journal entry of peace activist Rachel Corrie, who was living in Rafah when she was crushed to death by an Israeli-operated bulldozer while defending one of the many homes that have been destroyed by the Israeli military in Rafah. 

Pictures of war: Conflicts and dates may change, but the imagery and inhumanity stay the same


When I saw the images of Iraqi prisoners being humiliated by U.S. troops in Abu Ghraib, I felt as though I had already visually experienced it in the visceral work of American artist Leon Golub. Similar to what I sensed when first seeing the now infamous Abu Ghraib photographs, the even more recent images of house demolitions and death in Rafah incited an all too familiar feeling of dread — the feeling that we have seen this all before, and how horrible are we for letting it happen again.