Where Xutos meets members of a purported terror group and brings home a kinda cool t-shirt

Meeting Hezbollah in Beirut

By Nathaniel Hoffman, 12-05-06

 
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Lebanon nathanieljudd's Lebanon photoset
Story first posted on Alternet.org

Ghosts of buildings flit in and out of view as our minibus picks its way through the narrow streets of Haret Hreik, the Hezbollah neighborhood in Beirut’s southern suburbs. First a broken building appears. Then, around a corner, an apartment block missing its top half. Then a towering complex, its concrete sloughed off to the side as if just poured.

A man on a scooter zooms around the bus, forcing us to the side. What are we doing here, a bus full of six American reporters and six Middle Eastern reporters. A Syrian and an Iranian. A Jew. A Palestinian.
……

We are in the heart of Hezbollah territory. The name, as it staggers off our president’s tongue, is synonymous with terrorism. It often comes with other names.

Hamas. Taliban. Bin Laden. Al-Qaeda. Names or ideas meant to strike fear in Americans.

But here we are in Beirut’s southern suburbs, driving past barber shops and pastry shops. Music blares out of car stereos. Girls walk hand in hand, some with heads covered, some in tight pants. They bow their heads, or stare intently into the bus, sometimes meeting my blue eyes even if just for a moment. Old men stand outside shops sipping from pink plastic espresso cups.

And then the buildings appear.

Israel laid waste to a dozen city blocks around Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah’s former home, once the administrative hub and “security zone” for the group.

A large tent is now used to greet reporters and other visitors.
I step into the tent and am drawn to a series of political cartoons posted on its walls.
They caricature America’s policies in the Middle East and Israel’s perceived defeat in the month-long summer war. A mini George W. Bush marches roughshod across the globe, “democracy” stamped on the bottom of his combat boot. A ferocious Condoleezza Rice, with caricatured lips, delivers a bomb to Lebanon. Sobbing Israeli soldiers walk off the battlefield, their pants soaked in piss.

These pictures momentarily confuse me, but my Arab colleagues are unfazed. I understand that this powerful propaganda is just a mirror image of our own. But still, I feel somewhat alone, an American in Hezbollah’s tent.

A few months prior this very spot was bombed by Israeli jets in a war that America ignored for weeks. A war that my country sanctioned, if not actively supported.

Now we, as journalists yes, but as Americans too, stand on this very ground. The rubble has mostly been cleared, or combed into neat piles.

But the ghosts of buildings remain.

I quietly digest the cartoons. I feel parched.

……

Like any other office, this Hezbollah press center/volunteer coordination tent is graced with a water cooler.
I ask a man standing around the water cooler for a cup. Drink a few sips.
So, I say, warming into pidgin Arabic, you work here?

He smiles, pours coffee. He is helping coordinate the rebuilding effort.

Ahlan wa sahlan, he says. Welcome.

I greet another, younger man. Where are you from, he asks. America, I say.

The man is bemused. He dials a cell phone and hands me the receiver.

Who’s there?

It’s his brother in Detroit.

I am standing in the Hezbollah volunteer center talking to a Lebanese guy in Detroit who is not happy to be on the phone. It’s 5 a.m. in Detroit.

I tell him I’m from Boise. Nice talking to you.

…..

It’s always been a slightly unnerving exercise. A yogic workout for my journalistic mind.

As I child I learned that Israel was surrounded by enemies.

So when I went there in my college years I set about meeting these supposed foes.

I toured Gaza City in a United Nations van and only at the end of the tour, as we observed open sewers running into the Mediterranean, did our Palestinian guide ask me about my T-shirt.

It was a well-worn memento of the Jewish olympics in Baltimore.

I turned the shirt inside out, but that was the last time I denied my heritage in Arab lands.

A few months later I found myself explaining to a group of rural Egyptian lawyers that I was both Jewish and agnostic and believed that we evolved from monkeys trying to reach apples higher on the trees.

They hooted and hollered at the notion and bought me lunch.

I later explained my roots to Palestinian mothers, in their living rooms, photos of their AK-47-weilding children peering down at us from the mantelpiece.

Sure I’m Jewish, my mother is Jewish. My intense questioning derives from childhood Torah study. Flirting with the Talmud.

After a failed venture into Syria in 1998, I found myself in front of a squad of Jordanian police, explaining that I could not share in the bread they were offering because it was Eid al-Pesach, a holiday commemorating the Jewish escape from Egypt thousands of years ago.

They offered me yogurt and a spoon.

In all my travels in the Middle East I have repeatedly received the same welcome response. It is one of two Koranic phrases I have memorized.

Lakum dinakum wa ana diin. Roughly, they have their mitzvahs, and I have mine.

I don’t pretend to understand the context or interpretations of this phrase, but my entire understanding of Islam, of the Arab world starts here.
…..

For a moment I thought I had gone too far coming to this Hezbollah stronghold.

As dusk settles in over Haret Hreik, we walk a few blocks over to the former headquarters of Al Manar television, which the Israelis flattened toward the end of the war.

I hang behind the group, Hezbollah spokesman Ibrahim Zarakat strolling to my right. A prominent Lebanese journalist, who is part of a our group, strolls to my left.

The question I have been waiting for comes.

Nathaniel. That’s a Jewish name, right. You’re Jewish?

Sure it’s a Jewish name. I wait for a sign. Is that going to be a problem, I ask.

…..

Hezbollah leaders have a reputation for slow deliberation, so I let out a deep breath as I wait for a response.

Jews lived among Arabs for thousands of years and even Hezbollah, a sworn enemy to Israel, has not forgotten this.

Minutes earlier, Hezbollah senior political advisor Hassan Ezz Eddine had recalled for us fondly the Jewish neighborhood in Beirut, Wadi Abu-Jamil.

Hezbollah exists for the official purpose of defending Lebanon from “Israeli aggression,” a mission for which wide swaths of the Lebanese population are now quite appreciative.

Zarakat, and my Lebanese journalist colleague assure me they have no problem with my religion. They point around at the destruction and ask me who the terrorists are. They recall a delegation of rabbis that visited Haret Hreik some years ago.

In Lebanon and across the Middle East, journalists and experts are too eager to point to sectarian divisions – Sunni vs. Shia, Christian vs. Muslim – as causes of conflict. In the Middle East I know, in the very heart of Jerusalem even, people from every religious background lived as neighbors for centuries.

The Muslim attorneys in Egypt called out to a priest as he walked by and told him about this Jewish American who thinks people were once monkeys. The priest shook his head and kept walking.

Countless Lebanese told me about their “other-sect” wives.

And even as a brilliant sun set on buildings bombed by Israel just a few months prior, members of a group that the United States deems “terrorist” all around me, I, an American Jew, was taken at face value. I was treated as an individual.

This is a skill that many Americans lack. And the more time I spend on U.S. soil, the more I tend to group people into huge categories.

When President Bush condemns Hezbollah or Islamo-facism or however he puts it, despite my better judgement, an image of thousands of Lebanese villagers gearing up for our slaughter is unfortunately conjured in my head. It is an image I know to be false, an image quickly dispensed with by visiting the villages.

But it creeps into my mind anyway.

…..

As we pull away from the ruins of Haret Hreik I am struck by the absurdity of this conflict. How does the bombing start when we can we stand here chatting politely, drinking coffee, asking questions about Israel and Lebanese politics? Who are the people who start the bombing? Who are the kidnappers and the killers? And why can’t they talk a little more first?
On the bus ride home I suggest to another Lebanese journalist that one day he’ll be able to drive a few hours south to Tel Aviv to hit the beach.

No, he says. We are in a state of war with Israel. It is impossible.

There are a few moments of silence. He looks my way again.

How many hours away is Tel Aviv, he asks.

[End of article]
Comment By Jean Brooks, 12-05-06

I am just stating that I lived and worked for 4 years in Abu Dhabi and 6 years in Riyadh. I feel that I know somewhat the people of these countries. I visited Lebanon twice. I know enough to know this war is cruel and stupid. Why didn't anyone talk with anyone who knows what the people are like? The Insane Clown Posse that is running this show should be ashamed of themselves. They need to be put away where they cannot hurt people.

Comment By Dan Sarago, 12-06-06

Thanks, Nathanial for putting a human face on such a tragic and senseless war. You're ability to infuse the facts of this madness with your jewish american identity makes it all the more compelling and humanistic of a story.
Really now, we're all "just kin"... trying to reach apples higher on the trees...

Comment By justaguy, 12-06-06

Good stuff Nathaniel. There should be more of this in the MSM in America. Unfortunately the bias, the filters and the lobbies will always work to suppress the arab/muslim narrative because it doesn't serve the interests of those promoting war and conflict.

It is all about money, oil and Israel unfortunately. The arabs are just stuck in the middle and paying the highest price of all.

Comment By Bernice Youtz, 12-06-06

Thanks, Nathaniel, very much for your report. I lived in Beirut 1953-56 (ancient history!), three happy years. I felt pain and heartbreak during the Israeli invasion of '82, the civil war, and the 2006 summer war. You did well in a brief visit in understanding the human side of this conflict. I am not Jewish, but I do have many Jewish friends, including Israelis. I have traveled in Israel. I understand too well the conflict, feel plagued by knowing too much about both sides. Nonetheless, Hezbollah--for better or worse--would not be an influence in Lebanon had Israel not invaded in 1982: a brutal invasion followed by 18 years of brutal occupation. The Israelis blew it. They had a chance to befriend the Shia of southern Lebanon--long snubbed by the ruling Maronite and Sunni cliques--and secure for themselves a safe border, but to Israel, Arabs were Arabs, all enemies to be treated harshly. I made a return trip to Lebanon in 2002 and found sophisticated Beirutis, professionals, many Christian, some US citizens who pragmatically saw Hezbollah as their "security system" keeping the Israelis out of south Lebanon and making it once more safe for the tens of thousands who had fled to Beirut to return to rebuild villages and farms. "It's the cost of doing business," they told me, a totally Phoenican attitude (and the Phoenicians were in the area before the Hebrews). When I first lived in the Middle East, Arabs were crazy about Americans: we had never been a colonial power, in fact, we had once been a colony ourselves, had thrown off the master and gone on to prosper like no one else in history. They wanted to be like us. We had friendship in the Arab world, had it, ignored it, abused it, and pretty well lost it. That there is a bit left leaves me humbled. Thanks for making that trip and writing about it.

Comment By Lillian Adelman, 12-08-06

As an 81 year old, Jewish woman, with a background of left, political activism, I ask: what is it that I can do NOW; and I do not mean, "writing letters." I am, of course, "retired" from such activism, but it does not mean that I care less. We are ALL sisters and brothers, like it or not. Thank you, Nathaniel West(not to be confused with THE Nathaniel West?).

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