Trying to get by...
Saturday, October 15, 2005
Rachel Corrie
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1587540,00.html
Guardian
October 8, 2005
Rachel was bulldozed to death, but her words are
a spur to action
It is disturbing to see our daughter played on stage,
but it drives home the impact she has had since her
killing in Gaza
By Cindy and Craig Corrie Saturday
When our daughter Rachel Corrie was killed by
an Israeli bulldozer in the Gaza strip on March 16
2003, an immediate impulse was to get her words out to
the world. She had been working in Rafah with a
nonviolent resistance organisation, the International Solidarity
Movement, trying to stop the demolition of Palestinian homes and wells.
Her emails home had had a powerful impact on our family, making us think
about the situation in the Middle East in ways we had never done before.
Without a direct connection to Israel and Palestine, we had not
understood the devastating nature of the Palestinians' situation. Coming
from the US, our allegiance and empathy had always been with the people
of Israel.
After Rachel died we realised that her words were
having a similar effect on others whose lives were
being changed, as ours have been - not just by Rachel's
death, but by the window her writing provided on the Palestinian
experience and by her call to action.
Earlier this year, when a play created entirely from
Rachel's emails and journals first opened in London, we
saw in a very immediate way the impact that Rachel's
words can have on others. Theatre can reach people in a different and
deeper place than reading a news article or listening to a speech: there
is an emotional aspect that for some people can be more long-lasting and
motivating.
Theatre humanises; all art humanises. It takes us away
from the merely logical and rational. In the Israel-
Palestine conflict there is often a very logical
calculus of death and war - and you must step out of
the constructs of that logic in order to construct a
logic for peace.
The play, My Name Is Rachel Corrie, is not just about
how Rachel died, even if that is why she is known and remembered. It
also illuminates her humanity, tracing her evolution from typical
teenage self-exploration through to her search for a political voice.
The play includes some of her writing that might be considered
uncomplimentary to us, and even to her. Far better that, though, than
being a symbol of one dimension.
It is disconcerting, but also comforting, to watch an
actor who looks much like Rachel - Megan Dodds - play
our daughter on stage. In the opening scene, when
Rachel awakens in her messy bedroom, the resemblance is
almost too much. But Megan lives Rachel's words in ways
that are sometimes familiar but also sometimes
surprising, so that we learn from her what Rachel may
have been thinking. At several points in the play,
Megan enacts receiving emails from us - real emails
that we actually sent to Rachel. We had never before
imagined our daughter's reactions to receiving our
messages until we saw them on stage.
Rachel was a real human being. Sometimes, when people
idealise her, we feel vulnerable for her. Knowing the
complete human being, would they feel the same? Through
My Name is Rachel Corrie, people can know a more
complete Rachel.
Clearly, our daughter has become a positive symbol for
people. Her story and her words seem to motivate others
to do something, not just sit and talk about the
world's situation in their living rooms and feel
unhappy. The weekend after Rachel was killed, we
discussed with old friends what we should do. We needed
to find a response. In some ways we may have been more fortunate than
other parents who have lost children, for the response in our situation
was apparent. With her efforts to educate and to build permanent
connections with Palestinians in Rafah, Rachel provided us with a path.
In an email from Rachel to her friend Todd, she tells
him 10 times over that he must come to Gaza. "Come
here!", she repeats over and over. That is what Rachel
would have wanted us to do, too: to try to carry on
what she started.
We recently spent time in the US with members of the
family who were behind the wall of the home Rachel
stood to protect. For a month we ate, played and
travelled with 15-month-old Sama. What future does she
have, living in what now amounts to a mass prison in
Gaza?
The recent disengagement may provide some relief for
Gazans at the most obvious level. But it is hard not to contrast the
media coverage afforded to the Israeli settlers' leaving, with that
given to the many Palestinian families who have lost their homes to
demolition in Gaza. What has been happening in the West Bank under cover
of the disengagement - the building of the wall and the expansion of
settlements - is also very worrying.
And when the Israeli prime minister's close aide Dov
Weisglass said that the real intent of the Gaza
disengagement was to place the peace process in
formaldehyde, we have to take him at his word. We must
keep insisting on a peace process and work towards a
viable Palestinian state that will benefit
Palestinians, Israelis and the rest of the world.
Meanwhile, we are still asking our government for a US-
led investigation into Rachel's killing. The US state department is on
record saying that the report of the Israeli military police does not
reflect an investigation that was "thorough, credible and transparent",
despite that being promised to President Bush by Ariel Sharon. In March
we initiated a lawsuit against the Israel Defence Force and the
government of Israel, to seek justice for Rachel and also information.
We still would like to know what happened on March 16 2003, and why the
international eyewitness reports differ so radically from the statements
of the soldiers involved.
Unfortunately, the Israeli parliament, counter to
international law, has passed retroactive legislation
making it impossible for most Palestinians and others
to file suit against the IDF for injury that occurred
in the occupied territories after September 2000.
In the US we have taken legal action against
Caterpillar Inc, which manufactured the D-9R bulldozer
which killed Rachel. Under existing US law,
corporations can be, and are being, held responsible
when they knowingly continue to provide goods and
services that are used in a pattern of human-rights
violations.
The month before she was killed, Rachel wrote the
following in an email to us: "I look forward to seeing
more and more people willing to resist the direction
the world is moving in, a direction where our personal experiences are
irrelevant, that we are defective, that our communities are not
important, that we are powerless, that our future is determined, and
that the highest level of humanity is expressed through what we choose
to buy at the mall." Action has already flowed from her words.
. My Name Is Rachel Corrie is at the Royal Court
Theatre in London from October 11 to 29. Box office 020
7565 5000
rachelsmessage@the-corries.com Guardian Unlimited (c)
Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005
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