It was ten years
ago today on March 16, 2003 that Rachel Corrie, a 23 year old American volunteer with the
International Solidarity Movement (ISM) was killed by an Israel Defence Forces (IDF) armored
bulldozer as it attempted to destroy the home of a Palestinian doctor in the Rafah refugee camp in
Gaza. The Palestinians
she died protecting are under even greater siege today with village after
village targeted for leveling to make way for new settlements, waves of mass
arrests, and daily battles between stone throwing youths and heavily armed
security forces.
Eye witness
members of her ISM team say that Corrie, wearing a bright orange vest, was
clearly visible to the driver of the bulldozer before she fell off the mound of
earth it was pushing up and was crushed underneath the debris and the tractor,
which they said ran over her twice.
The IDF and
Israeli government have disputed that and claim that her death was an accident
in which the driver never saw her and the tractor never touched her. Despite promises, the official autopsy report
and the results of an official investigation have never been released.
While Corrie’s
death stirred up international outrage, she was painted by right wing Israeli
media as, at best, a naïve dupe of terrorists and more likely an active
accomplice who deserved her fate.
Corrie was born
to middle class, politically liberal parents in Olympia Washington. She
attended her hometown school, Evergreen
State College, long known as hot bed of activism. She wanted to be an artist and writer. She studied and was deeply moved by the
writings on non-violence by Gandhi and
Martin Luther King. In her senior year she devised an
independent study program that included service with the ISM in Gaza. She had already organized a pen pal program
between children in Rafah and
Olympia youngsters.
She arrived in
Israel on January 22 and received two days of training in nonviolent tactics at
ISM headquarter on the West Bank
before being posted to Rafah. It was an
intense period of the Second Intifada with
regular clashes between Israeli troops and Palestinians.
Corrie spent
much of February at the Canada Well,
a water facility built by the Canadians that had been damaged by the Israelis. She protected Palestinian workers trying to
do repair work. She and they came under
fire.
On February 15
she was present at a demonstration and was photographed holding a burning paper
replica of the U.S. flag. American right
wing commentators would use that photo later to claim she was a traitor to her country.
The IDF was in
the midst of a massive campaign to clear hundreds of homes and farms from a new
buffer zone by the Egyptian border. ISM
observers routinely interceded by placing themselves in front of bulldozers to
prevent demolitions. Although there had
been violent incidents and camps where Corrie and others stayed were subject to
harassing arms fire at night, tractor drivers had always stopped before harming
the volunteers. Until the day Corrie
died.
In April two
other ISM volunteers were severally injured by the IDF. American Brian
Avery was shot in the face while protracting Palestinian medical workers
and Briton Thomas Hurndall was shot
in the head. He was declared brain dead
and finally died on 2004. About the same
time an experienced British news cameraman was killed by IDF fire despite
wearing clearly marked press identification.
There was
speculation, never proven, that Israeli authorities may have decided to target
Western witnesses to their activity in Gaza.
After she died
her family released letters and e-mails she had sent from the Gaza. Articulate and moving they were published
posthumously as Let Me Stand Alone in 2008.
The material was also used to create the play My Name is Rachel Corrie
which opened in London in 2005 to
good reviews and strong audiences. An
attempt to mount an American production initially fell through with the British
producers alleging interference by pro-Israel forces. It eventually opened off-Broadway. The play has been produced successfully
around the world, including, finally, in Israel.
Corrie’s life
and death have also been celebrated in a cantata and songs by over 30
artists.
Meanwhile a
counter industry in anti-Corrie books and magazine articles has also sprung
up. As her death is commemorated today
by those who knew and loved her and by those who admired her, she will be
reviled, in often lurid terms, by bloggers and commentators in the U.S. and in
Israel.
All of that—the
good and the hateful—will be dredged up today.
I, for one,
just try to remember a lively young woman who dared put her life on the line
for others.
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