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Irrepressible Palestinian children... But smiles of happiness may turn to tears of frustration when they grow up to find their dreams dashed in a country ravaged by decades of military occupation... where lands and resources have been stolen, education curtailed, freedom cancelled and travel made almost impossible...
Former CIA analysts Kathleen and Bill Christison, writing in Counterpunch in January 2005, described Bethlehem as a dying little town now partially encircled by the Wall and cut off from Jerusalem, its religious and cultural twin. "Already surrounded by nine Israeli settlements. by a network of roads restricted to Israeli use...
For daring to be a 'fortress' against foreign aggression and a centre of resistance Jenin has been made to suffer dreadfully. In 1938 the British army blew up about 150 houses. An eye-witness wrote to his girl-friend: "It's insupportable, a British terrorism worse than terrorism itself.
Contents
Radio Free Palestine
A Wake-up Call
A Story of Betrayal
One Land, Two Peoples, Three Religions
Jerusalem
Galilee
Bethlehem
University of Bethlehem
Jericho
Jenin
Nazareth
Aboud
Other Arab Towns and Villages
Ramallah and the Qalandiya Checkpoint
Gaza Strip
Israel: a Law unto Itself
The Evil of the Wall
Hamas: an Unholy Terror?
No Morals, No Respect
Arrest & Execution
Right of Return
Pushed to the brink
Postscript
Sample Chapter - A Wake-up Call

Irrepressible Palestinian children... But smiles of happiness may turn to tears of frustration when they grow up to find their dreams dashed in a country ravaged by decades of military occupation... where lands and resources have been stolen, education curtailed, freedom cancelled and travel made almost impossible.
How will they build a career or raise a thriving family? Separated from friends and relatives, amenities and opportunities by encroaching barriers, roadblocks and checkpoints, excluded from their Holy City, and stripped of heritage, economic prosperity and even healthcare, they seem destined for a life of despair in what Chomsky calls "the dungeons that are left".
This is not an academic book. It's a wake-up call, a snapshot of the situation in Palestine through ordinary westerners' eyes. Our reasons for writing it were fourfold...
This horror story needs to be told.
The British and American public seem to know little about the Arab-Israeli conflict even though it is central to world peace.
Palestinians hope visitors to their tortured land will speak to the outside world on their behalf.
And the trampling of human justice in the Holy Land, of all places, is an affront to civilised people.
"I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today -- my own government." - Martin Luther King Jr
Having begun, a fifth reason soon made itself felt: the indifference of the West's political élite and media. They avoid honest debate and suppress the truth, even to the extent of burying a critical Foreign Office report. Many seem to regard Israel as exempt from normal standards of behaviour. Worse, they turn the sanctions screw on an already abused and impoverished Palestinian people, pushing them to the edge of a humanitarian crisis and collapsing their fragile economy.
There's no such thing as Radio Free Palestine, as far as we know, except on the other side of the world in California. But there ought to be. Somewhere in the Middle East or Europe a 'Free Palestine' station should be broadcasting its heartrending message, its cry for justice... loud and clear... to the so-called civilised world.
The Occupation - and resistance to it - has to be seen in historical context... how the real trouble started in 1897 when Theodore Herzle organised the first Zionist Congress with the express aim of establishing Eretz Israel, a Jewish homeland, in Palestine. And how Zionist leaders like Chaim Weizmann canvassed British politicians, who were persuaded to the idea.
How, after World War One, Britain the occupying power and the mandated government in Palestine, made free with Arab lands and paved the way for a Zionist takeover that has infuriated Arabs and blighted East-West relations ever since. And how, in 59 years, the Israelis have become pastmasters in the art of land theft, ethnic cleansing and subjugation, perversely earning the approval of western leaders in the process.
What I saw during my visits to the West Bank in 2005 and 2006 made me angry. What has happened back home is even more disturbing... US, British and EU politicians ganging up to cut off aid to the Palestinian Authority and collectively punish the people, while still at pains to sidestep their responsibility to call Israel to account.

There cannot be peace under occupation. - Kaled Mashaal, Chief of Hamas Political Bureau
And the contemptible spectacle of Israel's high-tech military machine venting its fury on the helpless citizens of the Gaza Strip, smashing their infrastructure and reducing their lives to an even deeper shade of hell... all because Israeli leaders cannot accept that hardline Hamas is now the Palestinians' chosen government.
We are accustomed to the White House aiding and abetting Israel's unlawful expansionism and shielding them from criticism. Now EU ministers inexplicably reward Israel with trading privileges while the Separation Wall steals another 10% of Palestinian territory, including the richest agricultural land and nearly all the water.
In short, Britain has joined the US and Israel in a conspiracy of injustice. No-one I have met, knowing the situation on the ground, agrees with the idea that "recognising" a brutal, armed occupier is a right or proper precondition for receiving aid. Israel exists; and one has to accept the fact. But "recognition" must be earned, usually by good conduct. And when has Israel ever "recognised" Palestine? The question on most people's lips is, why won't the civilised world put pressure on the Israeli regime to comply with UN resolutions and international court rulings and withdraw to its pre- 1967 borders?
So far, the Israelis' definition and their pretence that the Occupation is for security reasons have been allowed to prevail. Now, at last, there are calls for the situation to be re-framed in terms that reflect the truth.
Most people in the west, who readily identify with Bethlehem, would have been appalled to hear the organisation Open Bethlehem reporting that over 70% of its population now live below the poverty line and unemployment has soared to more than 60%. "Once a prosperous middle class town, Bethlehem has been economically suffocated and the postelection sanctions have brought the local population to the brink of disaster."
This chilling warning from The Economist only added to the sense of foreboding: "After millennia of violent conquest and reconquest, Jerusalem, centre of pilgrimage, crucible of history and the world's oldest international melting-pot, is changing hands once more, but with a slow and quiet finality."
A girl who worked for the Palestinian National Authority in Ramallah emailed me: "Our daily life and work, believe me, is getting worse. We haven't been paid for months... Some of my colleagues can't come to work anymore because simply they don't have money for the transportation. On Thursday we made a protest in front of the entrance of our ministry demanding the international community to end up this isolation and asking for our salaries. The mothers are bringing their babies and kids to work everyday because they can't pay for the kinder yards or the baby sitters. I don't have kids but both my parents work also in the PNA...."
A few weeks later her emails stopped. A knock-out blow, then, for this family and heaven knows how many others. Her words, on top of all the other distress calls, were the spur to finishing the book as quickly as possible.
On a photographic note: I prefer shooting pictures on 35mm film, and could happily spend months in Jerusalem and the West Bank doing just that. But given the everpresent risk of Israeli X-ray checks and security searches I thought it best, for this exercise, to use an unobtrusive digital compact camera.
About the Authors
In 2005 poet Phillip Vine and amateur photographer Stuart Littlewood were invited to visit the Occupied West Bank and "do a book". Both were deeply moved by the experience and this is the result.
Stuart worked on RAF jet fighters and began his business career in petroleum and electronics. He is now a freelance industrial marketer, writer and sometime newspaper columnist. A political activist for many years, he also served as a county councillor.
Phillip read History at Cambridge before broadening his education as a trade union shop steward. Later he worked as a teacher, as a ghostwriter and as secretary of a professional football club. He has edited the magazine Words International and published a volume of poetry, The Long Frosts of Cromwell. In his spare time he manages children's nurseries, runs marathons and publishing businesses.
Radio Free Palestine http://www.radiofreepalestine.co.uk/index.html