Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, May 2004, pages
48-49
Special Report
People Around the World Pay Tribute to Rachel
Corrie
By Patricia Lynn
Morrison
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| More than 60 demonstrators protested the
murder of Rachel Corrie in front of the Los Angeles Israeli
Consulate on March 16, the anniversary of her death (staff photo
S. Twair). |
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WHEN, ON MARCH 16, 2003, Rachel Corrie
put on a fluorescent orange vest, took a megaphone in hand and
begged an Israeli military bulldozer operator not to demolish
the Palestinian home up the hill behind her, she never expected
to
die. She also never expected that, a year later, thousands of
people around the world would be gathering in colleges, churches
and parks
in at least 27 U.S. cities to remember her—and to continue her
nonviolent protest.
Corrie, a native of Olympia, WA, had traveled to Rafah at the
southernmost edge of the Palestinian territories, near Egypt, in
January 2003. She was a member of a 10-person team deployed by
the International Solidarity Movement (ISM) to practice nonviolent
resistance while supporting the Palestinian people. Living with
local families in the Gaza Strip, Corrie and fellow ISM team members
not only placed themselves in front of Israeli bulldozers intent
on demolishing Palestinian homes. They slept in the fields to guard
water supplies from destruction by the Israeli Defense Force and
became human shields against IDF gunfire, encircling Palestinian
municipal workers who tried to repair their damaged wells and homes.
The ISM was founded in 2001, after the U.S. vetoed a United Nations
proposal to send international peacekeeping forces to Israel and
the Palestinian territories in an effort to stop the violence and
to monitor human rights abuses.
Corrie, who was active in numerous peace and justice causes at
Evergreen State College in Olympia, signed up. In Rafah, she worked
with the children, teaching and playing with them in their refugee
camp that had no books, no crayons, and nothing resembling a normal
existence. Her dream was to establish a sister city relationship
between Olympia and Rafah.
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(L) A protest march in
Ames, Iowa in memory of Rachel Corrie’s life and work
(photo Michael Gillespie). Protesters in Washington, DC braved
the cold for hours in remembrance of Corrie’s
fatal attempt to defend Palestinian homes (staff photo S.
Powell).
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Rachel Corrie died last March 16 of injuries she sustained after
she had been run over by an Israeli bulldozer demolishing a Palestinian
home in Rafah. Israeli and U.S. government accounts of the incident
claim variously that the bulldozer operator did not see Corrie,
because she fell under the blade and was crushed when the bulldozer
then ran over her; at least one “official” account claims she was
not run over by the machinery. Eyewitnesses, both Palestinian residents
of Rafah and Corrie’s ISM team members, state that the equipment
operator had to have seen her but never stopped—even when Corrie,
in her bright orange vest, disappeared from his line of vision.
According to their testimony, after running over her at least once
the bulldozer operator never got out of the cab, and simply backed
the equipment off the area. Later, witnesses claim, IDF forces
tried to prevent a Palestinian Red Crescent ambulance from getting
to the critically injured Corrie, who still lay at the site, and
from transporting her to the hospital. She died of her injuries
later that night.
One of the eyewitnesses to Rachel Corrie’s death was Joe Carr,
a 21-year-old fellow Evergreen State College student who was also
a member of the ISM team in Rafah. Carr, a performing artist and
peace activist, had first met Corrie on campus, when she asked
him to help her make some large puppets—doves—to use in peaceful
demonstrations.
Carr and two members of Corrie’s family were in Kansas City,
Missouri for an evening of remembrance and a candlelight vigil
on the first anniversary of her death. An interfaith audience
attended the event, which was hosted by All Saints Unitarian Universalist
Church and co-sponsored by several Kansas City peace and justice
groups, the National Lawyers Guild, and the Muslim Student Association
of the University of Missouri at Kansas City.
Carr was the main speaker at the event, and also performed
several poetic and musical pieces composed in Rachel’s honor, including
his original hip-hop theme, “The Dove’s Last Song.” With images
of Corrie, and the people and destroyed homes of Rafah, projected
on the wall behind him, Carr also read a poem Corrie had written
and shared excerpts from her letters.
Before the evening’s memorial tribute began, Carr updated the
audience on the situation in Palestine, specifically Rafah. He
described Rafah as a place of desperate existence, where 65 percent
of the residents are refugees and 80 percent are unemployed. Business
of any organized kind has ground to a halt, he said, there are
no schools, and the buildings that remain are pock-marked by bullets
and bombs. Since 2001, more than 300 people have been killed in
Rafah alone—an average of one person dead every four days. Of these,
Carr noted, 50 were children. More than 2,350 Rafah residents have
been injured, and over 1,100 homes have been destroyed by Israeli
forces—aided by U.S.-made Apache helicopters and Caterpillar tractors
and bulldozers that have been specifically modified in the U.S.
for Israeli military use in home demolitions.
It is not enough to remember Rachel Corrie simply with memorial
services, Carr told the audience. The peace movement needs “to
educate the American people on what the U.S. government’s role
is in Israel,” he said, and “how U.S. dollars are funding human
rights violations” carried out by Israel against the Palestinian
people.
“I want people to remember Rachel,” Carr said later in an interview
with the Washington Report, “but I know she would also want
people to realize she is only one representative of all the thousands
of civilians who have been killed” in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.” Carr
said he also believes Corrie would want Americans to know that “the
occupation wouldn’t be possible without U.S. financial support
of Israel. We as a people need to keep questioning that,” he emphasized,
and calling our government to accountability for our tax dollars.
Those thoughts were echoed by two of Rachel Corrie’s aunts, Collette
and Cheryl Brodersen, both of whom braved snowstorms in Iowa to
travel the 300-plus miles to Kansas City for the evening’s events
and others in her memory.
Cheryl Brodersen, of Denison, Iowa, described herself as a newcomer
to peace activism. “When I first heard of this International Solidarity
Movement,” she said, “I wasn’t at all sure I liked what it was
about, and not sure I liked our Rachel getting involved in it...
But then I learned what’s been going on. And it changed me.”
Brodersen is now spearheading a campaign on Capitol Hill to pass
a congressional resolution calling for a thorough investigation
into Rachel’s death. A current report sponsored by the House International
Relations Committee mentions Rachel Corrie in a paragraph, and
states that Israeli investigations and reports show there was no
negligence on the part of the bulldozer operator.
Brodersen wants Americans to call for a fuller and independent
investigation. The last time she saw Rachel, she recalled, was
at a family wedding. The image that remains with her, she said,
is her niece reaching out her hand inviting her aunt and others
to dance. “I’m here tonight,” Brodersen said, “asking all of us
to reach out to take Rachel’s hand and Joe’s hand and approach
the government of the United States and say, ‘We want justice.’“
Following the candlelight vigil, both Cheryl and Collette Brodersen
spoke with the Washington Report. Collette Brodersen, who
traveled from her home in Iowa City, said she recalled Rachel’s
words in a letter, calling for Americans to exercise “critical
thinking.”
“I would hope that we Americans might think more critically,” Collette
said, “take time to really learn what our foreign policy is, especially
in regard to Israel....I think people would be amazed if they knew
that our tax dollars are going to destroy people’s homes, and their
lives.”
Asked what she hoped would come from her niece’s sacrifice, Cheryl
replied, “Peace in the Middle East. And I do think it’s possible—one
step at a time, one person at a time.”
Patricia Lynn Morrison writes from Overland Park, Kansas. |