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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, February 29, 2020
One Palestinian group is running to restore freedom of movement
Diala Isid, the head of the Right to Movement campaign.
Reading, research and short trips are simply not enough for visitors to
Palestine to understand how difficult it is for those living under
occupation with restrictions imposed on their movement as they go about
their daily lives. Palestinians are caged in by a forbidding wall,
and have to negotiate permanent and temporary Israeli military
checkpoints almost everywhere that they need to go, whether it be to
work, school, university, hospital or simply to visit relatives and
friends.
“People take human rights for granted until they are no longer there,”
Diala Isid told me. “In Palestine, we are deprived of basic human rights
like freedom of movement. To highlight the restrictions imposed on us
and our right to free movement, we decided to start a running campaign
so people can join in and run with us here in Palestine.”
The Right to Movement campaign was born. Runners who participate in the
campaign’s marathons, explains Diala, experience a taste of the daily
reality of living in Gaza and the occupied the West Bank.
Travel permits in occupied Jerusalem and the West Bank are issued by
the Israeli occupation authorities, and are often refused arbitrarily.
Runners can explore the infrastructure that sustains the occupation and
meet the people most badly affected in refugee camps along the way.
Restricting their movement is a major tool employed by Israel which has a
devastating effect on Palestinian lives.
Twenty-nine-year-old Diala is the head of the Right to Movement campaign. She described her trips to visit her parents in Bethlehem:
Unable to travel directly from Ramallah through Jerusalem, she has to
take a much longer route. “A 30-minute drive from Ramallah to Bethlehem
turns into a one-and-a-half-hour journey because of the checkpoints that
I have to pass through with my Palestinian ID.” Identity cards are also
used as a weapon of the occupation to fragment the local population,
she pointed out.
The idea for the campaign came in 2012 when Palestinians in Bethlehem wanted to organise a marathon but found it impossible to map the full route without hitting obstacles.
We don’t even control a 42.2 kilometre stretch of road in the West Bank. Runners have to use the same circuit four times in order to finish the traditional marathon distance.
“It’s the only road that we can close to traffic because of the Israeli
occupation. We have no choice but to settle for a 10 kilometre route.”
That route begins in Bethlehem’s Nativity Square, runs along the
Separation Wall and passes through two refugee camps before finishing at
the Church of the Nativity. It is an effective way to draw attention to
the constraints faced by Palestinians in their daily lives.
“The fact that we can’t even run a full marathon properly illustrates
the limitations that we face. Hence, we all have a responsibility to do
all we can to raise awareness.”
In December 2016, to demonstrate that the journey of Biblical Mary and
Joseph would be even more difficult in present-day Israel, Diala
organised 22 Palestinian relay runners, 11 men and 11 women dressed as
“Mary and Joseph”, to create a contemporary nativity play called “Mary
can’t move”.
Starting from Nazareth, they headed for Bethlehem. The first major
checkpoint appeared at the border of the West Bank through the
eight-metre-high Separation Wall.
“It took us 12 and a half hours of running, passing through six Israeli
checkpoints and multiple illegal settlements all over the West Bank. And
we couldn’t access Jerusalem because some of the runners weren’t
granted the required permit. This project showed the world that despite
living under torment, we can get our message across in a peaceful way;
that’s how we want to live, in peace.”
“Mary can’t move” reminded everyone that the conflict in the Holy Land
has nothing to do with religion — there are Palestinian Christians as
well as Muslims — and everything to do with freedom and
self-determination.
With US President Donald Trump’s “peace plan”
allowing Israel to annex a huge portion of the occupied West Bank, the
situation looks set to get even more restrictive for the people of
Palestine. The Israeli settlement blocs are home to more than 400,000
illegal settlers, serviced by a network of roads for use by Jews only
and checkpoints that restrict the movement of the Palestinians. Trump’s
vision for a Palestinian state is a series of non-contiguous enclaves.
“The plan gives Israel what it wants and doesn’t serve us Palestinians. They want to legalise the Israeli settlements, annex the Jordan Valley and
steal more of our land,” said Diala. “The right to freedom of movement
remains a dream and the so-called peace plan will make restrictions
permanent. The West Bank cities will even be more cut-off than before.”
Runners from the Right to Movement campaign have taken their message to
races as far away as the San Francisco marathon. Last year, the group
joined UNWRA in a relay from New York City to Washington DC, aimed at changing US policy on funding cuts.
Despite its obvious objectives, the campaign has not been entirely
trouble-free. It has, for example, faced objections from
socially-conservative Palestinians concerned that running is not a
suitable activity for women and girls. This was a hurdle that Diala
sought to break one step at a time — literally — by starting training
sessions indoors to avoid complaints. “Women running in the streets
wasn’t culturally acceptable. When we first began, we used to be judged
and had a lot of adverse comments thrown at us, so we worked a lot on
creating a good running atmosphere for females.”
This entailed running off-road, where people weren’t around, as well as
the indoor workouts. “It encouraged many people to join us until we were
comfortable as a group to go running in the streets. In time, it became
acceptable.”
Along with its political objectives, the running group has helped to
bring about social change, including improved fitness for the women
taking part. Running has changed their lives, and nobody is thinking
about stopping.
“It wasn’t easy, and isn’t easy, but I can say now that I have three
female leaders in the group. And they are all inspiring leaders
encouraging more females to join and it’s so nice.”
The initiative has come to the attention of prominent figures such as Democratic
representative Rashida Tlaib, British politician Jeremy Corbyn and American model Anwar Hadid.
The son of Nazareth-born Mohammad Hadid met with the founders of the
Right to Movement campaign during a visit to Ramallah in December. An Instagram post shows
Anwar Hadid with a campaign t-shirt and the caption that he “supports
Right to Movement and believes that young people are the change makers
of Palestine”.
Connecting with prominent personalities such as Tlaib and
Hadid is important, believes Diala. “They show great interest in the
story of Palestine because it’s coming directly from us Palestinian
runners who are facing these harsh realities, not the media. Running is a
universal activity, and anyone can relate to it because it’s not
difficult to understand. We runners are experiencing it together,
carrying the Palestinian flag.”
Running to restore freedom of movement is an objective that many people
in the West may not fully appreciate. For the Palestinians, however, it
is a struggle to restore a basic human right, and that should be
something that everyone should value and support.