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  • Palestinians Join Israelis In Beauty Pageant

    PALESTINIANS JOIN ISRAELIS IN BEAUTY PAGEANT
    By Jonathan Saul

    Reuters
    09/21/05 11:08 ET

    JERUSALEM, Sept 21 (Reuters) - In skimpy swimsuits and high heels,
    Israeli, Palestinian and Armenian women came together in a Jewish
    settlement for a beauty pageant billed by its Israeli organiser as
    a bid to cross Middle East barriers.

    It was staged on Tuesday night in Gilo, which Israel calls part of
    Jerusalem but which is deemed a settlement under international law.

    The venue -- on land captured in a 1967 war and annexed in a move
    only Israel recognises -- failed to impress Palestinian officials and
    most Palestinian women, required by Muslim piety to dress modestly,
    would shun any scantily clad pageant.

    Last year, eight Palestinians from nearby Bethlehem and Beit Jala in
    the West Bank dropped out of a similar pageant in Gilo after receiving
    death threats from Palestinian militants.

    But this time, two Palestinian girls from Beit Jala, a centre of
    the minority Christian community in the mainly Muslim Palestinian
    population, took part along with 17 Israelis and an Armenian from
    Jerusalem's walled Old City.

    The winner was an Israeli, Shira Fadida, and Mary Farah, a Palestinian
    from Beit Jala, was runner-up.

    "We need peace and we really need to stop killing each other,"
    Farah, 19, told Reuters. "This event is not really about beauty of
    the body, but a way to bring out the beauty between us (Israelis
    and Palestinians)."

    "I hope next year more Palestinians will take part. This is really
    about forging co-existence," said organiser Azi Nagar.

    A Gilo businessman, he has promoted other projects with Palestinian
    participation such as football tournaments and public discussions.

    GAZA PULLOUT

    Last month, Israel withdrew all settlers from the Gaza Strip and
    pulled out military forces last week in a step diplomats hope will
    improve the atmosphere for Middle East peace talks.

    Gilo came under fire from militants from the nearby West Bank town of
    Beit Jala in the early part of a Palestinian uprising that erupted
    in 2000. But the area has been largely calm for three years and a
    ceasefire took effect in February.

    "What better place to foster peace than Gilo," Nagar said.

    But Israel continues to expand larger settlements in the West Bank,
    a policy Palestinians say is destroying peace prospects.

    The pageant, called "Miss Seam Line", was named after Israel's
    controversial barrier being built inside the West Bank.

    Israel bills the barrier as a security bulwark against suicide bombers
    reaching its cities. Palestinians call the barrier a land grab as
    it is being routed to take in settlements, particularly those around
    Jerusalem, that Israel intends to keep under any future peace treaty.

    "Next time, if they really want to have a beauty pageant and talk
    about equality (of contestants), they should have it in a place where
    Palestinians and Israelis are genuinely treated as equals and not
    on occupied territory," said Diana Buttu, an adviser to Palestinian
    President Mahmoud Abbas.

    "To call it a 'seam line pageant' seems like a bid to legitimise this
    barrier. It's not a seam line since Gilo is clearly a settlement,
    where Israel is trying to create border on occupied land that should
    be part of a Palestinian state."

    Israelis taking part in the beauty contest live in what they call
    "seam line communities" encompassed by the barrier, including Gilo,
    that are considered settlements abroad.

    An Israeli Arab musical troupe, Sounds of Peace, played at the pageant
    and one of its members said Israel's handover of Gaza, which it also
    captured in 1967, to Palestinian rule was a positive step towards
    peace.

    "Everyone must clear out their hearts. We want to live out our
    days quietly," said musician Shaban Nasser, 35, a Palestinian from
    Jerusalem's Old City.

    (Writing by Jonathan Saul and Mark Heinrich)
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