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On growing up in Ferguson and Palestine

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  • On growing up in Ferguson and Palestine

    Washington Post
    Aug 28 2014


    On growing up in Ferguson and Palestine


    By Naomi Shihab Nye , Chancellor of the Academy of American Poets.

    grew up in Ferguson, Mo. No one ever heard of it, unless you lived
    elsewhere in St. Louis County.

    Then my family moved to Palestine - my father's first home. A friend
    says, "Your parents really picked the garden spots."

    In Ferguson, an invisible line separated white and black communities.
    In Jerusalem, a no-man's land separated people, designated by barbed
    wire.

    * * *

    My father and his family became refugees in 1948, when the state of
    Israel was created. They lost everything but their lives and memories.
    Disenfranchised Palestinians ended up in refugee camps or scattered
    around the world. My dad found himself in Kansas, then moved to
    Missouri with his American bride. He seemed a little shell-shocked
    when I was a child.

    Ferguson was a leafy green historic suburb with a gracious red brick
    elementary school called Central. I loved that school, attending
    kindergarten through sixth grade there. All my classmates were white,
    of various derivations - Italians, French-Canadians, etc. My father
    was the only Arab in Ferguson. But he ran for the school board and
    won.

    At 12, I took a berry-picking job on "Missouri's oldest organic farm"
    in Ferguson. I wanted the job because I had noticed that the other
    berry-pickers were all black boys. I'd always been curious about the
    kids living right down the road whom we hardly ever got to see.

    We had contests to see who could pick the most in the searing
    humidity. I had obliterated Ferguson's "line." I felt a secret pride.

    My mom often warned, "Be your best self." This seemed odd.

    It would be 1968 before the Supreme Court ordered U.S. states to
    dismantle segregated school systems and Ferguson began mixing it up.
    We were gone by then.

    * * *

    In 1966, my father took our family to the West Bank. I was the only
    non-Armenian attending the ancient Armenian school in Jerusalem's Old
    City. It was fine to be "the other" for a change, but I wished we
    could have Jewish friends too. And I wished the Jewish Israelis we
    weren't seeing across that line could know the families of Palestine
    as we did, sharing their humble parties under blossoming almond trees.

    Our father said that, when he was a boy, Jews and Arabs had been
    mixed together, neighbors. Now there was power and domination at
    stake.

    Dominate - to exercise control over. Black kids in streets. Thousands
    of Palestinian families.

    In 1967, with the Six Day War brewing, my family left Jerusalem. We
    settled in San Antonio, a majority Latino city, which felt like a
    relief. White and black people were minorities. There weren't any
    lines. Maybe in the air, and in history. But people kept crossing
    them.

    My father, a newspaper journalist, eventually left San Antonio for
    another paper, I ended up attending college here and have remained
    until now. We have our first African American female mayor in history.

    Back in Israel/Palestine, nothing improved for the Palestinians and
    they were always blamed for it. A gigantic ominous "Separation Wall"
    was built. Americans elected a half-and-half president twice, which
    gave many of us great hope.

    Summer 2014, the news exploded.

    Massacres in Gaza - not the first time - people who looked exactly
    like our Arab families. Regular people. Kids. Sleeping kids. No tanks,
    no army, no due process of any kind, but they were blasted out of
    their lives.

    Was anyone civilized? A Jewish friend sent me a one-word message that
    he seemed to be sending out to everyone he knew: STOP!

    What could we do?

    Of course, we wished Hamas would stop sending reckless rockets into
    Israel, provoking oversized responses. Why didn't the news examine
    those back stories more? Oppression makes people do desperate things.
    I am frankly surprised the entire Palestinian population hasn't gone
    crazy. If the U.S. can't see that Palestinians have been mightily
    oppressed since 1948, they really are not interested in looking, are
    they? And we keep sending weapons and money to Israel, pretending we'd
    prefer peace.

    We send weapons to Ferguson, too.

    After unarmed teenager Michael Brown was shot, quiet old Ferguson took
    over the news. Citizens marching, chest placards, "I'M A MAN TOO"
    "DON'T SHOOT." It's easy to see how delusions of equality in Ferguson
    - where a white officer might raise a gun against an unarmed black kid
    - are simply wrong.

    Why is that harder for people to see about Gaza?

    People in Gaza actually sent messages of solidarity to Ferguson -
    Internet petitions signed by Gazan citizens. I thought I was
    hallucinating. What if they could all march together? 1.8 million
    Gazans would really clog old Florissant Avenue.

    To my knowledge, Israelis have never yet been called militants by the
    American press, even when they blast whole families to oblivion. It's
    just "defense." A newscaster described Ferguson as "a series of stings
    and hurts." Try the open-air prison enclave of Gaza for stings and
    hurts.

    On the news, a Kuwaiti running a Ferguson grocery says his store has
    been looted. I think, "He's the Arab there now."

    Things will change again in Ferguson. Historic inequities in that
    community will be reexamined, no one will be able to pretend they
    don't exist. But will we examine them in other communities too?

    Will things change for Gaza? If they don't, this nightmare of worst
    selves will keep happening and happening. Look, it already has. And
    what gets better? Will the United States ever speak out in solidarity
    with scores of exhausted people burying their dead, staring up with
    stunned eyes, mystified?

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/08/28/on-growing-up-in-ferguson-and-gaza/




    From: A. Papazian
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