Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion Univeristy - Neve "SLAPP SUIT" Gordon (Dept
of Political Science), who illegally interfered with IDF anti-terror
operations, defends the right of terrorist-accomplice Rachel Corrie
to do the same
Defends the harassment suit by her parents
against Israel, and condemns the judge who tossed it out. Questions
Lee Kaplan's journalistic
integrity and dismisses any responsibility that Rachel Corrie had in
her own death that Kaplan's photos implicate.
In the days leading up to the ruling, I wondered how the state
was going to make the case that Corrie was to blame for her own
death; I therefore read the 145-page summation submitted by the
defense. The document appeared convincing at first. Indeed, if read
on its own—ignoring the political context and the plaintiff's
summations and response—one might easily be persuaded that Corrie
was a reckless human being who was fully responsible for her own
demise.
…
Let's consider the photographs, since they were brought forth as
markers of unadulterated truth.
Corrie's face is directed upwards, mouth wide open; she is
screaming as she looks at a piece of burning paper held with both
hands against the sky. She is portrayed here as the paradigmatic
extremist whose fanatical behavior is influencing a group of young
children huddled around her. The caption for this photo reads:
"The deceased, Rachel Corrie, burning an American flag during a
protest in Rafah."
Directly under this photo of Rachel is a picture of four people,
three of whom are holding guns and one wearing a uniform without a
gun. The two standing figures appear to be foreigners, the person in
uniform appears to be Palestinian, while the face of the second
person sitting is intentionally blurred. (Why? We are not told) The
title of this photo and of another one next to it (with several
people posing in a similar manner, two with guns) reads,
"Photographs of organization members holding guns, disclosed by the
American journalist Lee Kaplan."
Let's set aside the question of whether the so-called journalist
Lee Kaplan—whose claim to fame are [sic] articles he writes for the
academic monitoring website
IsraCampus—is trustworthy and think about what these images are
meant to prove.
The fact is that we are not told where and when the two
additional photos were taken, who the people in the photographs are,
whether Corrie knew them or what their affiliation is. Yet this
uncertainty is obscured by the placement of these suggestive photos
adjacent to the one of Corrie. Through this crude juxtaposition, the
state attempted to impute guilt by association.
…
Due to a deeply ingrained institutional bias that has been
documented by law professor David Kretzmer of Hebrew University,
the judge did not ask the defense team such questions. He was not
disturbed by the fact that the state failed to produce a military
order declaring the region a closed military zone, or by the fact
that the state's expert witness had been the IDF spokesperson at the
time of Corrie's death, or by the fact that several minutes were
missing from the military tapes that recorded the incident. Nor was
the judge at all disturbed by the state's twisted presentation of
the political context in which Corrie's killing took place.
The defense team used these statistics against Corrie, claiming that
she put herself in harm's way, but one could, more persuasively I
think, say that she was an incredibly courageous human being who
believed that all people should enjoy basic rights, such as freedom,
self-determination and security. And Rachel was willing to struggle
for such rights.
Haifa District Court Judge Oded Gershon showed no
empathy toward this line of thinking, and on August 28 handed down
his verdict: the State of Israel and the Defense Ministry were not
responsible for Rachel Corrie's death.
Tragically, the judge's dismissive attitude mirrors the
attitude of the US State Department from the time of Rachel's
killing up to the verdict.
http://www.thenation.com/article/169688/no-justice-rachel-corrie
No Justice for Rachel Corrie
Neve Gordon
The Nation
August 31, 2012
Twenty-three-year-old Rachel Corrie traveled to
Gaza at the height of the second intifada intending to initiate a
sister city project between Olympia, Washington, her home town, and
Rafah as part of her senior-year project at Evergreen College. After
a two-day seminar in the offices of the International Solidarity
Movement in the West Bank, she continued on to Rafah to join ISM
members, who were demonstrating against the Israeli military's
massive demolitions of houses on the Egyptian border. Less than two
months after her arrival, on March 16, 2003, Corrie was crushed to
death by a Caterpillar D9R Israeli military bulldozer.
Following the tragic event, Corrie's family filed two lawsuits.
The first was against Caterpillar Inc. The Corries claimed that the
corporation was liable for Rachel's death because it sold Israel
bulldozers knowing that they would be deployed in violation of
international law. The case was dismissed by a federal district
judge in November 2005 for lack of jurisdiction. That same year, the
family filed a civil suit in Israel against the State of Israel and
the Defense Ministry. The objective of this suit was to illustrate,
in Rachel's
mother's words, "the need for accountability for thousands of
lives lost, or indelibly injured, by [Israel's] occupation.... We
hope the trial will bring attention to the assault on nonviolent
human rights activists (Palestinian, Israeli and international) and
we hope it will underscore the fact that so many Palestinian
families, harmed as deeply as ours or more, cannot access Israeli
courts."
The suit's first testimony was heard in the Haifa district court
in March 2010—the seventh anniversary of Rachel's death—and after
fifteen sessions and twenty-three witnesses, the closing remarks
were heard on July 10, 2011. While the plaintiff and the defense
team did not see eye to eye on the vast majority of the issues
pertaining to the suit, they did agree on the basic facts: Rachel
Corrie had been crushed to death by a Caterpillar military bulldozer
while nonviolently protesting with fellow ISM members.
Given these indisputable facts, the central question the court
then had to adjudicate was whether or not the state was responsible
for Rachel's death.
In the days leading up to the ruling, I wondered how the state
was going to make the case that Corrie was to blame for her own
death; I therefore read the 145-page summation submitted by the
defense. The document appeared convincing at first. Indeed, if read
on its own—ignoring the political context and the plaintiff's
summations and response—one might easily be persuaded that Corrie
was a reckless human being who was fully responsible for her own
demise.
The defense team introduced a series of arguments to persuade the
court, two of which were pivotal for their case.
The first had to do with who Rachel Corrie really was.
Underlying the state's reasoning is an Aristotelian syllogism,
bolstered by photographs, graphic figures and authoritative
references. The claim is straightforward:
1) the ISM is an anti-Israeli organization that supports violence
and terrorism
2) Rachel Corrie was an ISM member, therefore:
3) Rachel Corrie supported violence and terrorism
The second argument was similar:
1) during the period in question, Rafah was a war zone and a
closed military area
2) Rachel Corrie chose to be an activist in Rafah, therefore:
3) Rachel Corrie willfully (and illegally) subjected herself to the
rules of engagement that apply in a war zone
If one accepts these conclusions and is convinced by the claim
that the Caterpillar driver did not see Corrie despite the fact that
she wore a brightly colored reflective vest, then it can indeed be
inferred that she carries the blame for her own death.
What is amazing about the summations, however, is not their
logic, but the way the state went about demonstrating its claims.
Let's consider the photographs, since they were brought forth as
markers of unadulterated truth.
Corrie's face is directed upwards, mouth wide open; she is
screaming as she looks at a piece of burning paper held with both
hands against the sky. She is portrayed here as the paradigmatic
extremist whose fanatical behavior is influencing a group of young
children huddled around her. The caption for this photo reads:
"The deceased, Rachel Corrie, burning an American flag during a
protest in Rafah."
Directly under this photo of Rachel is a picture of four people,
three of whom are holding guns and one wearing a uniform without a
gun. The two standing figures appear to be foreigners, the person in
uniform appears to be Palestinian, while the face of the second
person sitting is intentionally blurred. (Why? We are not told) The
title of this photo and of another one next to it (with several
people posing in a similar manner, two with guns) reads,
"Photographs of organization members holding guns, disclosed by the
American journalist Lee Kaplan."
Let's set aside the question of whether the so-called journalist
Lee Kaplan—whose claim to fame are articles he writes for the
academic monitoring website
IsraCampus—is trustworthy and think about what these images are
meant to prove.
The fact is that we are not told where and when the two
additional photos were taken, who the people in the photographs are,
whether Corrie knew them or what their affiliation is. Yet this
uncertainty is obscured by the placement of these suggestive photos
adjacent to the one of Corrie. Through this crude juxtaposition, the
state attempted to impute guilt by association.
Just a few pages earlier, the defense team offers the judge a key
as to how to decipher the photos. One of the state's expert
witnesses, an Israeli reserve general—who incidentally was the IDF
spokeswoman when Rachel Corrie was killed—is quoted as saying that
the ISM carries out "illegal and violent" activities by "occupying
terrorists' homes to prevent their destruction, providing shelter to
terrorists and terrorist operatives, taking an active part in
clashes with soldiers, and serving as human shields for wanted
people or for the homes of Palestinians."
The prime incident mentioned by the state to back these
accusations involved two ISM activists, who were, according to the
defense, caught in the ISM offices in the West Bank city of Jenin
hiding an Islamic Jihad leader who possessed a handgun and a
Kalachnikov assault rifle. The Palestinian, we are told, was
subsequently sentenced to thirty years in prison for terrorist
activity. And yet, as the plaintiff's attorney pointed out in his
response, the absence of any record of the ISM activists being
charged with "abetting a leading terrorist" or any other allegations
is extremely mysterious.
A number of pages after the presentation of these images, the
defense team concludes this part of the argument:
The members of the organization,
including the deceased, were willing to risk their lives for the
sake of advancing their agenda…. They lay down in front of weapons
of war, entered fire zones where life-threatening live fire was
deployed, and served as 'human shields' for leading terrorists in a
way that endangered their lives.
The deceased also knew that the death
of an American citizen would create a pronounced media/political
outcry around the world, far beyond the death of a local
Palestinian, in ways that would advance the organization's agenda.
Therefore, although there was mortal danger in the Gaza Strip and
along the
Philadelphi route in particular, the deceased chose to risk her
own life, and she prepared herself in advance for this risk.
Rachel Corrie's death, in other words, was suicide.
In order to strengthen this claim, the state also averred that
Corrie illegally entered a war zone. In his response to the state's
summation, the attorney for the Corrie family, Hussein Abu Hussein,
claimed that the state had failed to produce a written military
decree, published by a commanding general, which would prove that
the area had indeed been a closed military zone. Without a written
decree, he convincingly argued, Corrie's activities in the area
cannot be considered illegal. Furthermore, he maintained that the
precise meaning of the term "war zone" is disputed, and that Rafah
at the time was not a war zone.
In his summation Abu Hussein mentions another line of argument.
If one concedes to the defense that the area was a closed military
zone and that at the time Rafah was indeed a war zone, then a
crucial question emerges: Why didn't the soldiers simply arrest
Corrie, put her on a plane and send her back home?
The IDF has done this on numerous occasions with other activists.
Indeed, in 1989 I was detained and held in prison for five days,
together with twenty-nine other Israeli activists, for entering a
closed military zone. Given that the defense team admitted that on
that fateful March day before Corrie's death, the soldiers and
Corrie played a game of cat and mouse for several hours, whereby
they would try to bulldoze an area and she would try to block them,
detaining her does not seem like it would have been much of a
problem. Indeed, if one were to accept the defense team's narrative
that Corrie was a crazy fanatic, why did the military allow her to
protest illegally and unhindered?
Due to a deeply ingrained institutional bias that has been
documented by law professor David Kretzmer of Hebrew University,
the judge did not ask the defense team such questions. He was not
disturbed by the fact that the state failed to produce a military
order declaring the region a closed military zone, or by the fact
that the state's expert witness had been the IDF spokesperson at the
time of Corrie's death, or by the fact that several minutes were
missing from the military tapes that recorded the incident. Nor was
the judge at all disturbed by the state's twisted presentation of
the political context in which Corrie's killing took place.
Whether or not Rafah was a war zone may be debatable, but it was
clearly an arena of dangerous and often lethal confrontation.
Human Rights Watch reports that during the first four years of
the second intifada, the Israeli military demolished 1,600 houses in
Rafah, a densely populated town and refugee camp located on the
border with Egypt. Aerial photos depicting the way the terrain
changed between
April 2000 and
December 2003 reveal the degree of destruction. As a result of
these demolitions, 16,000 people—more than 10 percent of Rafah's
population—lost their homes, most of them 1948 refugees who were
being dispossessed for a second or third time. Rachel Corrie came to
the area to try, in her own humble way, to help these people.
"I
feel a lot of horror," Corrie said in an interview only days
before her death, describing the situation as "a systematic
destruction of people's ability to survive." She knew that joining
the people of Rafah was dangerous, and she wrote to her family that
she was often scared. Indeed, according to the Israeli military,
between September 2000, when the second intifada erupted, and
Rachel's death in March 2003, close to 6,000 grenades were thrown at
the IDF in the region, there were 1,400 shooting incidents between
the IDF and Palestinians, and 150 roadside bombs were detected.
Writing for Haaretz, Amira Hass reveals that bullets were
fired in both directions. From August 2002 until March 2003, 101
Palestinians were killed in the region, forty-two of them children.
One Israeli soldier was also killed during the same period.
The defense team used these statistics against Corrie,
claiming that she put herself in harm's way, but one could, more
persuasively I think, say that she was an incredibly courageous
human being who believed that all people should enjoy basic rights,
such as freedom, self-determination and security. And Rachel was
willing to struggle for such rights.
Haifa District Court Judge Oded Gershon showed no
empathy toward this line of thinking, and on August 28 handed down
his verdict: the State of Israel and the Defense Ministry were not
responsible for Rachel Corrie's death.
Tragically, the judge's dismissive attitude mirrors the
attitude of the US State Department from the time of Rachel's
killing up to the verdict. This was blatantly obvious right after
the verdict, when the US ambassador to Israel noted that the IDF's
investigation was unsatisfactory. The State Department
immediately retracted the statement and backed up the Israeli
government. The State Department's approach is part of a long
tradition of close US-Israeli cooperation in the repression of
Palestinians, which, as the Corrie case reveals, is carried out even
at the expense of US citizens.
While the court did not do Rachel Corrie justice, I would like to
believe that her memory can help advance her cause. Several years
ago I wrote about the civil suit for
The Nation, and at the time I ended the piece with
Rachel's
last words to her mother. I cannot think of a better way of
remaining optimistic after this terrible and unjust verdict than by
invoking this brave woman's own words once again: "I think freedom
for Palestine could be an incredible source of hope to people
struggling all over the world. I think it could also be an
incredible inspiration to Arab people in the Middle East, who are
struggling under undemocratic regimes which the US supports…."
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