Israel
Sends IDF Humanitarian Officers to Front Lines 
20,000 Palestinians pass
through the Kalandia (Qalandiya) IDF security checkpoint daily. This Palestinian
women who had problems with her ID papers speaks with an IDF Humanitarian Officer.
Minutes after this photograph was taken she passed through Kalandia to visit her
family.
Photo: Turkish News Agency
Exclusive
by Joel Leyden
Jerusalem-----January 29
A grey, blustery sand storm rolls fiercely
into Kalandia. The sky turns a dark brown over this Israeli checkpoint bordering
Jerusalem and Rahmallah. The dust burns your eyes as you focus on a Palestinian
family approaching the cement block which serves as your desk. They wear red and
white scarves over their faces, protection from the freezing, relentless winds.
They reach for their identity cards, but you know that it could be a gun or a
knife. You are half Mr. Nice Guy and half combat soldier. You must be able to
go from a warm smile to loading your M-16 in half a second. You are an IDF volunteer
who the Palestinians and Israeli soldiers refer to as a Humanitarian Officer. In
September 2000, a small group of Israeli reserve officers created and implemented
the concept of "softening" one of the few contact points between Israeli
and Palestinian societies. The program, entitled "Volunteers of Hope",
was fully embraced by both the Prime Minister and the Chief of Staff. They took
terse and angry checkpoints throughout Israel and inserted a mature, rational
and non-combative approach to Israeli-Palestinian relations. Their objective was
to make the best out of a bad situation. These reserve officers knew quite well
that they were not going to solve the Israeli Palestinian conflict but in the
interim they were determined to ease tensions and illustrate to both cultures
that coexistence was possible. Working
out of a small office in Tel Aviv, program director Col. Triber Bezalel is constantly
on the telephone. He supervises all of the Humanitarian officers who are posted
in Jericho, Kalandia (Qalandiya), Bethlehem and Ariel. "Many
people in Israeli society have discovered how important this program is,"
Triber tells The Israel News Agency. "One of the very few points of
contact between the Israeli and Palestinian populations is at our check posts.
| Triber
states that the success of the program can be seen in the smiling faces of the
children who pass these harsh check points. Both the Palestinian children and
their parents are able to see a human and warm side of Israel as opposed to the
hateful and violent propaganda they are taught. |
"We can't allow
a young 18-year-old soldier who has no understanding and experience of family
and business obligations to set policy at these check posts. We get some very
special and mature volunteers coming here to serve and they come not only from
Israel, but from North America and Europe," said Triber. "Our
volunteers leave the safe, warm environment of their homes for a very dangerous
but rewarding mission on our borders. They assist our young soldiers with security
and provide an understanding, helping hand to the Palestinians. Their job is to
make life easier for those who cross the borders. To assist women who are holding
babies and children, aid the elderly and sick and provide an open ear to Palestinian
professionals who have special problems. These are Israel's ambassadors to our
Palestinian neighbors and they perform brilliantly." Triber
states that the success of the program can be seen in the smiling faces of the
children who pass these harsh check points. Both the Palestinian children and
their parents are able to see a human and warm side of Israel as opposed to the
hateful and violent propaganda they are taught. Both Israelis and Palestinians
are offered a rare personal glimpse of hope for the future of these two societies.
I witnessed this
IDF program during the summer of 2002. These soldiers with their compassionate
and dedicated approach impressed me deeply. As I applied for the program they
informed me that the age limit was between 30 and 70. That English and or Arabic
were required in addition to Hebrew. And that you must have served in the IDF.
The age requirement was perhaps the most important factor. How can a 18 or 19-year-old
soldier access medical, financial and family problems? They can't. How can they
identify with a mother carrying a baby for an hour or an unemployed man with few
twisted teeth and ripped clothes seeking employment? As
for language, almost a third of the Palestinians who are stopped and asked to
show their Israeli blue identity cards request to speak English. The remaining
crowd is proud of their Arabic origins and will not speak Hebrew. Many diplomats,
journalists and non-profit organizations are among the 20,000 people that pass
through Kalandia on a daily basis. And
the last or perhaps the first requirement is that you have served in the IDF.
It is not so much a demand for security as much as it serves to say: "this
ain't gonna be easy." The
dust storm blows off to the East leaving cold, blue skies and puddles of water.
The blue and white Israeli flag appears a bit frazzled. A black dog which is half
wolf shivers between the concrete blocks desperately trying to stay warm, to stay
alive. Two rusty and white furred cats come out seeking food and a human touch.
All of the elements of nature pour out, the good, the bad and the evil at Kalandia.
A day before my group
arrived a Palestinian woman tried to plunge a sharp kitchen knife into a female
soldier. She was grabbed before any blood spilled and was rushed off to prison.
Perhaps that was her wish; perhaps she had no money for food or for her children.
Occasionally a young Israeli soldier would point their rifle at Palestinians approaching
the checkpoint. "Why are you pointing your rifle," I would ask. "I
want them to be afraid of me," one soldier replied. "You don't need
to point your rifle to gain respect here, nor do you need to hit anyone. Authority
comes from your voice and from your eyes," I said. "These people are
not at war with you, nor are we at war with them. It is the terrorists for whom
we seek." The young soldier was not quite convinced with this perspective.
But then again if I had been trained only for combat situations at the raw age
of 18, I would probably say the same. We are here for these young soldiers as
much as we are for the Palestinians. We know that these fresh high school graduates
are tired and subjected to tremendous political, military and emotional pressures.
We are here to stand beside them, with them and say "kolakavoud" - good
for you for being here and defending our tiny nation. We eat, sleep and train
on the same bases. We
never look at our watch during our first few days as IDF volunteer humanitarian
soldiers. We don't have the time. The insurance agent from Haifa, the truck driver
from Afula, the former Lt. Colonel from Acco and the journalist from Jerusalem
spends hours in intense combat and arms training. You shoot dozens of rounds from
your M-16, listen to lectures on how bombs are made and hidden and learn who can
and who can't pass from your security checkpoint. But one issue is made very clear,
humanitarian considerations rise above all else in the IDF and you are expected
to make wise and rapid decisions as to who is innocent and who could be a terrorist.
You always take the side of security, for you don't want it on your conscious
that you have allowed a terrorist to enter Israel. You don't dare think that if
a bus or restaurant is blown up - that the terrorist responsible for that barbaric
atrocity came into Israel with a wave of your hand. We
spend our first few nights in tents as we train and keep our ears open. Finally
we are driven to our army base where again we receive specialized lectures and
instructions regarding security and special cases which deserve humanitarian consideration.
They waste no time placing us at the Kalandia, Bethlehem or Nablus checkpoints
under the temporary supervision of those who have already served there. No mistakes
are tolerated. Everyone is looking at you - the Palestinians, the Israeli soldiers
and your fellow volunteers. You have journalists and the ladies of Machsom Watch
observing your every movement. But you soon learn that their job is obsolete.
They can only monitor as you - the IDF volunteer have the sole authority to allow
an honest, sincere and peaceful Palestinian through the maze of fences and cement
blocks. It is you - the volunteer soldier who must decide which person and which
car is authorized by law and by humanitarian consideration to move from North
to South. After an exhausting
8 hour shift with no break except to quickly down a cold meal you drop into bed
only to be awakened 5 or 6 hours later for your next shift. You find yourself
amazed at how resilient one can be. You even actually embrace coming to your tall,
metal chair at this barren and dusty checkpoint - you know that someone will need
your patience and understanding.
| We
wake up before sunrise and finish our shifts before midnight. We find that our
best friends are a M-16 and a warm cup of coffee. |
As a father of three small
children, I keep an eagle's eye out for mothers carrying babies and children.
I know how this precious weight feels. I know the child needs warmth and a smile.
Sometimes I escort these mothers with their carriages passed dozens of others
and wave bye, bye to the smiling wide-eyed child. I do so without a helmet and
without full combat gear. These protective items only serve to alienate and create
a hostile feeling at the roadblock. We make this sacrifice of personal safety
as all of the IDF volunteers do. We place our lives at extreme risk for the sake
that perhaps a few Palestinians will go home knowing that we too seek a peaceful
compromise to the nightmare that Arafat, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah have
created for both peoples. "Wahad,
wahad," you find yourself saying as hundreds pour through the thick cement
and fence structures. One by one you repeat in Arabic - you must keep the human
flow going but you must also examine each face and each ID. Many Palestinians
will find any excuse they can to get through this border. Dozens of forged medical
notes written in broken English describing back and stomach pains, notes from
dentists and fake press credentials pass through your hands. You must be able
to differentiate non-fiction from fiction. One woman complained to me of severe
hand pain as her doctor's note described her only ailment as nasal congestion.
She was told to go back and get another note. They buy these medical notes for
5 shekels (one dollar). It is not the documents that we really evaluate - rather
it is their faces and the bags they carry. We know that as each and every Palestinian
approaches, that they may be a walking bomb waiting to make tomorrow's headlines.
But I estimate that over 80 percent of these Palestinians are good people, innocent
victims of extremist Islamic politics who truly desire peace for their children
and just want to go to work or visit their families. We
wake up before sunrise and finish our shifts before midnight. We find that our
best friends are a M-16 and a warm cup of coffee. We cherish the 5 or 6 layers
of clothes, the wool hat and fleece gloves we wear. We leave Kalandia and the
other security checkpoints with a blue hat and a small paper certificate of thanks.
But most of all we leave the outskirts of Rahmallah, Bethlehem and Nablus knowing
that we have made a small difference between two very polarized and distant but
yet similar cultures. We return to our soft and comfortable homes, our families
and friends knowing that we have experienced a very special opportunity. That
we Jewish, Islamic, Christian and Druse IDF volunteers coming from a rainbow of
political right and left wing thought have projected a rare, and golden expression
of humanity. Offering hope of a real and lasting peace illustrated by too few
smiles, handshakes and the soft words of salam, shalom through that cold, windy
and narrow passage we leave behind. ISRAEL
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