On Sept. 28, 2010 the Israeli military intercepted an aid ship heading for Gaza. Among the arrested included 82-year-old Holocaust survivor Reuven Moskovitz. “It is a sacred duty for me, as a [Holocaust] survivor, to protest against the persecution, the oppression and the imprisonment of so many people in Gaza, including more than 800,000 children,” he  said in a BBC interview prior to his arrest.

Also arrested was 60-year-old Rami Elhanan, an Israeli who lost her daughter Smadar when a suicide bomber detonated his explosives in a Jerusalem shopping mall in 1997. “Those 1.5 million people in Gaza are victims exactly as I am,” he said in the same article. 

And yet, the Israeli government and its principle backer, the United States, practice a policy of economic and political isolation with regards to the people of Gaza.

To be sure, there are radical elements within Hamas that call for the use of armed resistance against the ongoing military occupation of the Palestinian West Bank and East Jerusalem. 

However, Article 1, Paragraph 4 of the Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts, specifies that groups are justified in resistance “against colonial domination and foreign occupation.” Not that I am endorsing armed conflict,  I am simply attempting to reframe the issue.

Currently, the United States, Israel and three other countries recognize Hamas only as a terrorist organization. 

But the current round of peace talks is hitting a major obstacle aside from renewed Israeli settlement building — Nearly 1.5 million people in Gaza are not being represented at the table. How can this be? How can an agreement exclude such a large number of the people it will affect the most?

The United States and Israel have nothing to gain from continuing their policies toward Hamas. After all, there may well be a player within Hamas that advocates  purely  nonviolent struggle. In fact, The Wall Street Journal and other publications have already highlighted many such instances. 

But they need our help. The  occupation of Gaza until 2005 made it possible for these radical elements to take power, showing that in times of desperation people turn to fundamentalism. Let’s  start by making sure that the 1.5 million civilians living in the open-air prison of Gaza have sufficient resources.



Don’t forget the occupation of the Gaza Strip

For graduated senior Helen Jackson, who hadn’t been able to go home for breaks for the past two years, these last few months have been a much-needed break. “I’m moving halfway across the country in July for my PhD program, so I probably won’t be able to come home very often after this,” she said. Read More

Don’t forget the occupation of the Gaza Strip

The first realization of my own age hit me in the months before I started college. I was helping my dad clean the small office he’d occupied in Rush Rhees longer than I’d been alive. The walls of which boasted childhood drawings that my sister and I had crayoned. Even though I was looking at my distant past, I realized I would soon be starting a new page of my future. Read More

Don’t forget the occupation of the Gaza Strip

they could amicably share Daisy’s territory so long as Count Kipper (heretofore known as Lord Kipper of House Daisy), swore total fealty and obedience to Daisy’s cause. Read More