Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Israel's nuclear whistleblower to enjoy his first Christmas as a fre

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Israel's nuclear whistleblower to enjoy his first Christmas as a fre

    Israel's nuclear whistleblower to enjoy his first Christmas as a free man

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 23, 2004 Thursday 4:58 AM GMT

    JERUSALEM Dec 23 -- After 18 years of spending Christmas within the
    four walls of an Israeli jail cell with nothing more than a television
    for company, Mordechai Vanunu is about to celebrate his first Christmas
    as a free man.

    "For me, this is a very big Christmas. It's my first Christmas after
    18 years in prison," says the nuclear whistleblower who was released
    in April after serving a lengthy prison term for leaking top-secret
    details about Israel's nuclear programme to Britain's Sunday Times.

    "In terms of my faith, it's the first time I'm celebrating a real
    Christmas among friends. I hope this Christmas will be a new beginning
    for peace and non-violence, and for following the way of Jesus,"
    he told AFP.

    Widely reviled as a traitor throughout Israel, Vanunu has also incurred
    the wrath of the Jewish public for converting to Christianity shortly
    before he was kidnapped and subsequently jailed in 1986.

    "I was baptised in Sydney and a month after that, I was kidnapped,
    so I have never celebrated Christmas before."

    Since his release on April 21, Vanunu has taken refuge in St George's
    Anglican cathedral in occupied east Jerusalem, where he is free to
    practise his faith.

    For a man whose only link to Christmas has been watching the Bethlehem
    midnight mass on Arabic television in his prison cell, there is
    an almost childlike excitement in seeing the dazzling display of
    Christmas decorations at the plush American Colony hotel just down
    the road from the church.

    "It's the first time I've ever seen a Christmas tree in real life,"
    he admits with a grin.

    "We're going to decorate the tree in the cathedral a week before
    Christmas and we're also planning to go to Bethlehem for midnight
    mass," he says, while admitting it is unlikely he will get there
    given Israel's heavy restrictions on his movement.

    "When I was in prison, I used to celebrate with tapes of Christmas
    music. People would send me thousands of Christmas cards and I would
    watch the midnight mass on Arabic television.

    "From the start, my faith was very strong and I used it to protect
    myself from the Israeli psychological warfare," he said. "I survived
    in prison by proclaiming my faith."

    Although Christmas is not celebrated in the Jewish state, Palestinian
    Christians in Arab east Jerusalem and the Old City have made an effort
    to enter the festive spirit, despite the ongoing economic depression
    brought on by more than four years of intifada.

    Through the largely empty streets of the Christian and Armenian
    quarters, local residents have done their utmost to enter into the
    Christmas spirit. Shops and restaurants are aglow with tinsel and
    fairy lights, the strains of Nat King Cole's Christmas Song filtering
    onto the rain-swept alleys.

    And the few shops selling glittering Christmas ornaments and artificial
    trees appear to be doing a brisk trade with a colourful array of
    customers, among them monks, nuns and foreigner workers.

    Yet ask Vanunu what he most wants for Christmas and his answer
    is simple: complete freedom -- preferably abroad, far from the
    ever-watchful eye of Israel's powerful security services.

    Since his release, Vanunu has been subjected to a series of sweeping
    restrictions, including a ban on travelling abroad as well as holding
    unauthorized meetings with foreigners, particularly journalists.

    "All I want for Christmas is for them to set me free. I don't feel
    safe and I'm not enjoying total freedom. My existence is like being
    under occupation, I feel like a Palestinian," he admits.

    "At the end of the day, the real end to 18 years in prison will be
    when I get out of Israel's power."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X