Soldier to Soldier
By Tali Shapiro at Jun 14, 2009 |
|
As those of you, who have been following this blog, know - I was a soldier. I was stationed at Gaza, between 2001-2003, in what used to be a huge army base. I don't know for sure, but I can assume it's been dismantled in 2005, with the rest of the "disengagement". Luckily, I was a secretary, which is one of the most menial jobs in the Israeli army. Girls like me



By Quebeq, Mimi at Jun 20, 2009 09:15 AM
Wow Tali! Its been a long time since I last commented.
Its cool to see that you've been joining protests but stay safe. Israelis have been harmed before and I'd hate for that to happen to you.
The pics were pretty cool, btw.
Im thinking of writting an article about Israel and Apartheid and wanted to know what the exact translation of 'gader hafrada' meant in relation to the West Bank.
Also, do you think Israel is practicing apartheid in the occupied territories?
Thanks
Amyro
Reply this comment
Re:
By Shapiro, Tali at Jun 21, 2009 02:59 AM
Always great to hear from you Amyro :)
I keep as safe as possible, under the circumstances. Basically I don’t get into any more danger than the Palestinians do.
“Gader hafrada” literally means separation fence. In context with the Bank it means the same thing. Zionists are full of contradictions- they say there’s no apartheid, and in their own words call it a separation fence.
I think the similarities between Israel and other historic events (South Africa apartheid, racial segregation in the US, Native American genocide, Nazi Germany, etc.) are important to note. The equation with South Africa is very precise, as we have a people that came from outside into a country, created their own institutes and separated themselves from the natives by means of oppression. The one difference, is that unlike other colonies with a home-base in other countries, the Zionists moved all their leadership to the colonized country, thus rendering themselves orphans (i.e. “victims”). That’s made them very successful in finding adopting parents (i.e. Daddy US).
Always a pleasure :)
Reply this comment
Re: Re:
By Quebeq, Mimi at Jun 22, 2009 20:26 PM
thanks Tali.
Reply this comment