الخميس، 13 سبتمبر 2012

Block busted

The new Eid film releases offer nothing in particular, Soha Hesham finds out

While the annual crop of holiday season films ?ê" released in time for Eid Al-Fitr ?ê" is usually far from the best being made, this year's fare must include some of the worst. Four new features ?ê" Teta Rahiba (Grandma Horrible), starring Mohamed Heneidi, Emy Samir Ghanem, Samiha Ayoub and Bassem Samra, written by Youssef Maati and directed by Sameh Abdel-Aziz; Mr and Mrs Owaiss, starring Hamada Hilal and Boshra, Loltfi Labib, directed by Akram Farid; Al-Bar (The Pub), starring rising actors such as Mona Mamdouh, Mohamed Ahmed Maher, Ali El-Tayeb and directed by Mazen El-Gabali; and Baba, starring Ahmed El-Saqqa, Dorra, Salah Abdallah and Hanaa El-Shorbagi, and directed by Ali Idris ?ê" offer variation but no satisfaction.

The latter, Baba (Dad), is Ahmed El-Saqqa's new comedy flick, in which the action star relinquishes his genre of choice after his last film, Al-Maslaha (The Benefit), directed by Sandra Nashaat (his last comedy was Ibn Al-Qounsul, directed by Amr Arafa in 2010). In Baba, El-Saqqa plays Hazem, a famous gynecologist who specialises in test-tube babies, recently married to Farida (Dorra) who works as an interior designer; it seems screenwriter Zeinab Aziz didn't bother to build very viable characters.

Hazem, for example, is unnecessarily clumsy; there is no dramatic reason for all his premarital relationships. Likewise Farida, who after a two-minute conversation with a divorced friend recently back in Egypt with a child develops the obsessive belief that a child is the most important thing in marriage: why she insists on having a test-tube baby when there is no need for it is never explained. The comedy centres on the clinic: the experiences of Hazem's friend (Edward) and his wife; those of a fundamentalist couple (the man is played by Khaled Sarhan) and a man with four wives (Lotfi Labib) who asks for four separate sperm sample jars ?ê" and later delivers all four of them. Obscenity galore: two women are trying to seduce their husbands to obtain sperm samples; each prays in a different way since one is Muslim and the other Christian.

After the failure of Farida's operation, she has an unreasonable quarrel with Hazem, blaming him for not having a child, and heads to her parents' house in a huff ?ê" the silly excuse for Hazem to accidentally reunite with a former girlfriend (a cameo by Nicole Saba) during a conference in Lebanon. The next day Hazem wakes up to find a little boy telling that he is his father and a letter from his said girlfriend. Farida finally follows her husband to Beirut to discover the boy - who will finally turn out not to be Hazem's son, of course ?ê" and, as the couple return to Cairo, Farida finds herself pregnant.

***

Likewise Mohamed Heneidi's film Teta Rahiba (Grandma Horrible), which tops the Egyptian box office following four years during which Heneidi was absent from the silver screen after his last film, Amir El-Behar (Prince of the Seas), especially since he stars alongside major actors: the veterans Samiha Ayoub and Abdel-Rahman Abu Zahra and the young talents Emy Samir Ghanem and Bassem Samra. A brief account of its storyline, which is already confused, will give an idea of how disappointing it was.

Raouf (Mohamed Heneidi) is a 40-year old man living with his grandfather (Abdel-Rahman Abu Zahra) after a terrible childhood spent with his grandmother (Samiha Ayoub), who has since moved to Germany. Screenwriter Youssef Maati and director Sameh Abdel-Aziz manage to tackle the issue of how the police treats civilians in a scene in which Raouf driving his grandmother's old car is stopped at a checkpoint by a police officer (also played by Khaled Sarhan) who ends up beating up Raouf - and is videotaped while doing it, only to be apprehended by his superiors and treat Raouf with (hilariously exaggerated) politeness the next time he sees him, singing "Happy birthday to you" along with his guards when he finds out it's Raouf's birthday. After the death of his grandfather, Raouf decides to marry his colleague at one of the big chain supermarkets, when suddenly his grandmother decides to return to Egypt to live in the same house. Heneidi's long hair and round glasses are supposed to underline the confused childish character of Raouf, whose grandmother controls. The dose of social preaching usual in Heneidi's films in the last scene is delivered by his grandmother in the court room, when they confront each other in an attempt to divide the apartment between them.


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Polo-like kinase is required for synaptonemal complex disassembly and phosphorylation in mouse spermatocytes

Advance Online Publication August 1, 2012 doi: 10.1242/?jcs.105015 PW Jordan, J Karppinen and MA Handel*?*Corresponding author: The Jackson Laboratory, 600 Main Street, Bar Harbor, ME 04609, maryann.handel{at}jax.org, Tel: 207-288-6778, Fax: 207-288-6073 During meiosis, accurate coordination of the completion of homologous recombination and synaptonemal complex (SC) disassembly during the prophase to metaphase I (G2/MI) transition is essential to avoid aneuploid gametes and infertility. Previous studies have shown that kinase activity is required to promote meiotic prophase exit. The first step of the G2/MI transition is the disassembly of the central element components of the SC, however the kinase(s) required to trigger this process remains unknown. Here we assess roles of polo-like kinases (PLKs) in mouse spermatocytes, both in vivo and during prophase exit induced ex vivo by the phosphate inhibitor okadaic acid (OA). All four PLKs are expressed during the first wave of spermatogenesis. Only PLK1 (not PLK2-4) localizes to the SC during the G2/MI transition. The SC central element proteins SYCP1, TEX12 and SYCE1 are phosphorylated during the G2/MI transition. However, treatment of pachytene spermatocytes with the PLK inhibitor BI 2536 prevented the OA-induced meiotic prophase exit and inhibited phosphorylation of the central element proteins as well as their removal from the SC. Phosphorylation assays in vitro demonstrated that PLK1, but not PLK2-4, phosphorylates central element proteins SYCP1 and TEX12. These findings provide mechanistic details of the first stage of SC disassembly in mammalian spermatocytes, and reveal that PLK-mediated phosphorylation of central element proteins is required for meiotic prophase exit.


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Squaring up on Syria

With Egypt stepping into the Syrian quagmire, Shia-Sunni rivalries are increasing as a result of the Syrian civil war, writes Salah Nasrawi

With Syria's civil war degenerating into a sectarian showdown, tensions are building across the Middle East over its fallout, with growing signs that key regional players are increasingly taking sides in the conflict.

Regional rivalries over Syria's protracted war, which is pitching the country's Sunni majority against the minority Alawite-dominated regime of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad, is complicating the conflict and raising alarms about its potential for Middle East instability.

New signs have emerged that Iraq and Iran are now teaming up to increase their help to the embattled Al-Assad regime, in stark contrast with Egypt, whose newly installed Islamist leadership is joining other Arab Sunni governments in seeking to get rid of the Syrian regime.

Last week, the Iraqi Shia-led government and Iranian leaders renewed pledges to support Al-Assad, who is facing a mostly Sunni uprising backed by Sunni governments in Turkey and the Gulf.

The new development came after Egyptian president Mohamed Mursi announced that Al-Assad had "lost legitimacy" in his fight to crush the 17-month-old revolt and bluntly called on him to go.

Mursi, a senior leader of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood, the Muslim Sunni world's most powerful Islamist organisation, stunned his Iranian hosts at a Non-Aligned Movement summit in Tehran last Thursday by likening the uprising in Syria to the struggle of the Palestinians.

That contradicts the line put out by Iran and Iraq, who have resisted efforts to oust Al-Assad and fear that the fall of the Alawite-dominated regime in Syria would embolden the country's Sunnis and upset the region's shaky sectarian geopolitics.

In response, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose Shia nation is Al-Assad's main ally, described the anti-Assad uprising as "a proxy war" waged by governments that "provide money and arms to irresponsible groups."

Syria and its allies accuse Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey of giving financial support and arms supplies to the armed insurgent groups on the ground in Syria. The three countries are reportedly running a clandestine base in Turkey that is working to topple Al-Assad.

Khamenei, who appeared to criticise Mursi for being too harsh on Al-Assad, said the Syrian uprising was led by the United States "with the aim of serving the interests of the Zionists against the resistance in the region."

In a meeting with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Al-Maliki who had traveled to Iran to participate in the summit, Khamenei said Iran, which has assumed the presidency of the Non-Aligned Movement, and Iraq, which holds the presidency of the Arab League, can play effective roles in resolving regional issues.

In addressing the summit, Al-Maliki submitted a plan to end the conflict in Syria based on a halt to the violence and the formation of a national unity government that could include Al-Assad.

Under the plan, the Syrian regime would negotiate with opposition groups and elections would take place under international and Arab League supervision.

The proposal rejected foreign military intervention, included an agreement by all parties in Syria to end the violence, and incorporated calls for all countries to "stop interfering in Syria's internal affairs."

Iraq, which shares a 375-mile (600-kilometre) border with Syria, has repeatedly cautioned that the crisis in Syria could spill over into other regional and neighbouring states if they do not work seriously to stop the violence and promote talks.

Last month, Iraq's military dispatched additional troops to tighten border controls with Syria in an attempt to staunch the spillover from the Syrian crisis. Thousands of Sunni Muslim fighters, including Al-Qaeda jihadists from Iraq, are believed to be fighting alongside the rebels in Syria.

They are widely expected to turn their guns against Shia-ruled Iraq once the Al-Assad regime has been removed in Syria.

Fearful of the potential rise of a hard-line Sunni regime next door, Iraq's Shia groups are reportedly rearming in southern Iraq. Reports in the local media suggest that Iraqi Sunni groups are setting up a "Free Iraqi Army" that would be ready to operate following Al-Assad's downfall.

Several top Shia religious leaders have also issued fatwas, or religious rulings, banning their followers in southern Iraq from selling their weapons after local media reports said there have been massive transfers of weapons to Syrian opposition groups throughout the area.

These are unconfirmed reports, but they send chilling signs of how ugly the Syrian conflict could turn out to be.

The new wrangling that involves Iraq, Iran and Egypt shows how sharply different visions of Syria's future could increase polarisation and fan the flames of religious tension in the region.

For now, the row could forestall proposals made by Mursi earlier to end the conflict in Syria that would include Iran together with Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.

The quartet idea was seen as a good option for resolving the conflict, as it seemed to transcend the regional sectarian divide. However, it is far from guaranteed to succeed because both Al-Assad and his opponents see victory as the only desirable outcome in Syria.

Though it was hazy on many details, the idea meant that Mursi should have worked much more actively in order to win Iran's cooperation in mediating an end to the Syrian crisis that would avoid terrible sectarian conflict in the region.

Moreover, Mursi's efforts were hoped to bring the region's crucial Sunni and Shia players together as events in Syria unfold, especially with a view to the aftermath of the crisis.

The initiative was hailed by many inside and outside Egypt as a major diplomatic bid by Egypt's first elected president and first Islamist leader to recapture Egypt's leadership that many believe had been ceded to Saudi Arabia and even the tiny Gulf emirate of Qatar.

Now Mursi has backed himself into a corner in Syria, and there are few good options for a breakthrough as regional and international diplomacy scrambles to contain the violence and keep the conflict from spilling across borders.

Given that his plan for regional mediation had little chance to succeed, it's hard to know whether by annoying Iran and Iraq in his Tehran speech Mursi has changed his calculus on Syria.

By slamming Al-Assad and berating Shia Iran for its support of the regime, Mursi seems to have been appeasing many of his own sceptics. Turkey had been cautious about his overture, apparently for fear that it could undermine its own assumed leadership role in the crisis.

It was also always doubtful that Saudi Arabia would sit down with its arch enemy, Shia Iran, while Washington had killed off a previous bid to involve Iran by the UN's former Syria envoy Kofi Annan.

Inside Egypt, Sunni Muslim Salafis who do not hide their hatred of Shias and staunchly support efforts to oust Syria's Alawite regime were quick to welcome Mursi's denunciation of Al-Assad.

Whatever the calculations may be, Mursi seems to have shot down his own Syrian initiative and probably lost his chance to reassert Egypt's role as a key Middle Eastern player.

That could give a new push to regional polarisation. Some Iranian officials have warned that Tehran, which has signed a military cooperation pact with Damascus, will do what ever it takes to prevent Al-Assad's downfall.

By floating his spoiler plan that includes Al-Assad in the resolution of the Syrian conflict, Iraq's Al-Maliki is showing his solidarity with Al-Assad. Lebanon's Shia group Hizbullah has also showed strong backing for the Syrian leader.

In the meantime, Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar continue to fund arms for the Syrian opposition. None of this augurs well for a breakthrough in the standoff in Syria, or for Middle Eastern sectarian harmony.

With each camp throwing its weight behind one of the warring parties in Syria, the region looks to be plunging into a sharper divide than ever along sectarian lines.


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Spawn

A writer is not born but made: Mai Samih finds out if that's true

Linda Cleary, a British poet, artist, writer and performer living in Egypt, is currently holding a workshop to teach creative writing. The four-week course started on 27 August and is being held in the Maadi and Heliopolis branches of the Diwan bookshop. Over the course of the month, students attend one weekly session. The sessions are held in the evening and last for two hours from 7:30 pm to 9:30 pm. Courses are held on Tuesdays in Heliopolis and on Mondays in Maadi.

Cleary usually starts each session with a warm-up exercise, asking students to write a paragraph beginning with a sentence such as "In another life I'd be?ê?" or a trigger word -- "bubble" -- within the allotted short period of time, perhaps two minutes. Students are then encouraged to read out and hear comments on their work. Cleary listens to the problems her students face in their attempts to write, and gives them tips. She follows this with exercises to develop a word bank.

Cleary aims at establishing a community of writers in English who will be ready to communicate and share their work.  The course is an attempt to provide students from the age of 17 to adulthood with the opportunity to explore and improve their writing skills. She is bringing together people from different backgrounds with different writing experiences, but all willing to "open up their writing". She gives them the tools to tap into "the inner writer", and express themselves creatively.

"They are able to witness themselves as writers and know what they want to write about," Cleary says. From her perspective it is a matter of training with a view to letting it all out; and she tries to dismiss all manner of myths that have been woven around creative writing. "Some," for example, "think that they can't write without that sudden shining light of inspiration ?ê" which is not true in most cases," she says. Some students have taken the course more than once to provide themselves with greater practice. "I'm seeing so much worthy work, valued voices that need to get out there," Cleary says. "So I am aiming to create a publishing house so that people writing in English have somewhere to publish [their work]."

Cleary, who began writing as a child, finished an academic study in recreational arts from Manchester University in 1991 and has been conducting workshops in her community ever since. She has also worked in Holland, the Czech Republic, Australia and now Egypt, where she has lived for two and a half years. It was her contact with the artistic community here that inspired her to set up her workshops in Cairo.

With a blend of skills acquired from her extensive studies and her personally designed exercises, Cleary teaches several levels of writing skill. "In the first level I try to hand over the building blocks; opening up description," she says. "In another level, I work specifically on atmosphere, character and short stories. I have another course which aims to provide knowledge and training on how to develop monologue and to write a short play."

Cleary is impressed by her Arab students, who give her absolutely no trouble, despite the diversity of cultures. "About 95 per cent of my students are Egyptians writing in English. The amount of talent and skill they boast are amazing." Students find English a tool to express their feelings and in the age of Twitter and Facebook it is also a chance for them to share their work, she noted.

"Since the revolution there has been even more expression; more people are keen to express themselves."  Cleary puts the three main components of a good writer in a nutshell: "Ideas, technique, and motivation; these are what makes you a writer."


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Limitation of individual folding resources in the ER leads to outcomes distinct from the unfolded protein response

Advance Online Publication August 1, 2012 doi: 10.1242/?jcs.108928 Davide Eletto, Avinash Maganty*, Daniela Eletto, Devin Dersh, Catherine Makarewich¶, Chhanda Biswas#, James C. Paton, Adrienne W. Paton, Shirin Doroudgar, Christopher C. Glembotski and Yair Argon‡?‡To whom correspondence should be addressed at: 816B ARC, 3615 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104. Tel: 267-426-5131 Fax: 267-426-5165 Email: yargon{at}mail.med.upenn.eduER stress leads to upregulation of multiple folding and quality control components, known as the unfolded protein response (UPR). Glucose Regulated Proteins 78 and 94 (GRP78/BiP and GRP94) are often upregulated coordinately as part of this homeostatic response. Given that ER chaperones have distinct sets of clients, we asked how cells respond to ablation of individual chaperones. The cellular responses to silencing BiP, GRP94, HSP47, PDIA6 and OS-9, were distinct. When BiP was silenced, a widespread UPR was observed, but when GRP94 was either inhibited or depleted by RNAi, the expression of only some genes, notably BiP and protein disulfide isomerase A6 (PDIA6) was induced. Silencing of HSP47 or OS-9 did not lead to any compensatory induction of other genes. The selective response to GRP94 depletion was distinct from a typical ER stress response, both because other UPR target genes were not affected and because the canonical UPR signaling branches were not activated. The response to silencing of GRP94 did not preclude further UPR induction when chemical stress was imposed. Importantly, re-expression of wild-type GRP94 in the silenced cells prevented the up-regulation of BiP and PDIA6, while re-expression of an ATPase-deficient GRP94 mutant did not, indicating that cells monitor the state of activity of GRP94. These findings suggest that cells are able to distinguish among folding resources and generate distinct responses.


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The Anne Frank and Rachel Corrie stories

US activist Rachel Corrie was brutally killed defending the rights of the Palestinians in Gaza. She would have been admired and defended by Anne Frank as a result of her universal call for justice in the face of war and terror, writes Jennifer Loewenstein

Sixty-seven years after the end of World War II, a team of researchers and cameramen from the Anne Frank House in Holland showed up at the Capitol Lakes retirement centre in Madison, Wisconsin, in the US to interview my father-in-law, Fritz Loewenstein. Fritz is the only person still living known to have been boyhood friends with Anne Frank's "secret annex" companion, Peter van Pels, known in the Diary as Peter van Damm.

The oral account Fritz gave lasted over two hours, the interviewers, including Teresien da Silva, head of collections at the Anne Frank House in the Netherlands, who travelled to Madison personally, asking probing and thorough questions about every aspect of his life before his family fled Germany in the 1930s, especially insofar as it intersected with the life of Peter van Pels.

For Fritz, this meant recalling many unwanted ghosts of his own past and what it was like for him as a Jewish schoolboy growing up under the darkening cloud of Nazism in 1930s Germany. There is no question that Anne Frank's life and death, and all who played a part in it, still capture the imagination of millions long after her senseless killing. Fritz's account of his childhood friendship with Peter will be featured prominently in new documentary footage on Anne Frank that will become available at the Anne Frank House later this year. Over a million people visit the Anne Frank House in Amsterdam annually to see for themselves the place where Anne lived with her family and the van Pelses in hiding from the Nazis for more than three years.

Fritz Loewenstein's father was a doctor in the German town of Osnabrueck in the 1920s and 1930s. Germany had been their family's home for generations, and they had lived successfully there, as cultured and upstanding German patriots, for decades. The Loewensteins hoped very much to be able to weather the worst of National Socialist rule, but as time passed it grew clearer and clearer to Fritz's father and mother that they would have to get their family out.

Fritz recalls his own, personal anti-Hitler campaign: washing the swastikas off the door of his father's clinic each morning. That was in the spring of 1937 as it grew increasingly difficult for Jews to leave Germany. The Loewenstein family, at least that part of it, was fortunate: they were able to get out with some of their belongings and immigrate to the United States, the first choice of many Jews fleeing the horrors of the Nazi regime. They ended up in Binghamton, New York, where my husband, David Loewenstein, grew up.

Throughout the interview with the crew from the Anne Frank House, David marveled at what an iconic figure Anne Frank has become. People of all ages the world over still read Anne's remarkable Diary of her incarceration and visit the place where Anne hid from the Nazis with her family after the Germans invaded and occupied Holland. I remember reading Anne Frank's Diary when I was 12 years old, utterly absorbed in the world of this creative and eloquent child despite the fact that she and her family were caught and deported to concentration camps where everyone but Anne's father, Otto, ultimately perished.

She nevertheless remains a beacon of hope and perseverance to victims everywhere who have suffered persecution. Although some have tried to claim that Anne's life and death were uniquely Jewish experiences, fully comprehensible only to other Jews, I maintain that the source of Anne's appeal is universal. In both her life and death, Anne Frank embodies the human will and desire to live and resist some of the worst odds imaginable. We recognise in Anne a child wrestling with the circumstances of a nightmarish human condition.

On 28 August, 2012, in Israel, judge Oded Gershon issued a verdict in the civil trial of US activist Rachel Corrie. Unsurprisingly, the Israeli state and military machine exonerated itself from all responsibility for Rachel's killing. I expected this. In the nine years since she was crushed to death by a D-9 armoured Caterpillar bulldozer out doing routine -- read, illegal and unconscionable -- work destroying the landscape and the lives of tens of thousands of people from Rafah, Gaza, Rachel has been virtually unknown to the vast majority of the educated US public. Unlike Anne Frank, whose life has been immortalised by the circumstances of her death, Rachel's name, life and death have been virtually blacked out of US official history, like the news out of Palestine more generally. She remains unknown, obscured, or distorted by deliberate disinformation.

The cause Rachel died defending, and the people she stood up for -- people whose voices have yet to receive equal validation as credible and legitimate voices bearing witness to their own suffering and ruin -- are still waiting to receive the long overdue recognition they deserve as the indigenous inhabitants of historic Palestine against whom a crime of unimaginable brutality and magnitude was committed. These are the refugees and their descendants who fled, were dispossessed of their land, expelled, threatened, and killed or massacred by the invading Zionist armies determined to create the Jewish state of Israel out of historic Palestine.

Until Israel acknowledges, offers reparation, and honours international law and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and until the Israeli state can publicly apologise for the enormous historic injustice committed against the indigenous people of Palestine, the wound it has created will continue to fester and spread, as it already has, across the Middle East and into the four corners of the world, casting modern-day Israel into the role of a pariah state. Its status as such has been increasingly recognised, even by western powers that understand Israel can continue to act with impunity only as long as it remains under the protective umbrella of US military power.

Rachel was a resilient, articulate and defiant 23-year-old college student who went to Gaza with others members of the International Solidarity Movement to bear witness to Israel's ruthless and deliberate objective of erasing, to the best of its ability, anything that remained of a coherent Palestinian national life, history and culture. Because Rachel stood up for the voiceless victims on the wrong side of US-Israeli Middle East policy, her name and legacy have been blacked out of official historical records like classified information. She exists in whispers only, a shadow in the halls of power and in the mainstream media where the official version of modern political-historical events are authorised and spun and where US support and complicity in Israel's regional hegemonic goals help sustain the necessary illusion of Israel's overall benevolence.

If our nation's authorities have managed so far to relegate Rachel to the dustbin of American history, a white American girl from an upstanding family of Christian origin whom nobody would have deliberately stopped to search at an airport, or questioned at a checkpoint beyond the Mexican border, and if official America has so far successfully committed to the black hole of US foreign affairs the life and death of a courageous white heroine who nevertheless chose to fight for justice on the "wrong" side of American policy, what does this say about the overall status and credibility of Palestinians and other Arabs and Muslims trying to make their voices heard or to get their cases re-opened and examined by a government unconditionally supporting its Israeli client while busy slaughtering civilians and "suspects" with manned aircraft and pilotless drones in its own overseas battlegrounds?

How many Palestinian Rachels have left diaries and records of the abuses their people have suffered at the hands of colonial and imperial powers and their supplicants over the last century?

The occupation, ethnic cleansing, dispossession, fragmentation and wholesale colonisation of Palestine have been essentially reclassified and defined in language used to render legitimate the tactics and goals of modern Israel. Its overtly racist framework and raison d'être and the methodologies used to perpetuate policies in order to maintain the Jewish majority of the state have been recast, in the US and Israeli narratives, as the necessary social and political preconditions all Palestinians must accept before "peace" talks can begin again. In plain English, only a total capitulation of sovereignty over the land, including sacred religious sites, and the renunciation of Palestinian nationhood will satisfy Israel's leadership, which has the audacity to insist that the Palestinian leadership "come to the negotiating table without preconditions."

Transfer, ethnic cleansing, the silencing of all protest, the right to resist the illegal expropriation of land and resources, a collective denunciation of Palestinian spiritual and historical legacies, and the geographical fracturing of any remaining indigenous lands such that any territorial contiguity or unified national policies are no longer possible have become the "rational" and indispensable preconditions for the survival of the Jewish state. The Israeli "neighbourhoods" in "Judea and Samaria" that are "developing" as a result of "natural growth" serve as one example of life on Israel's terms, just as the "separation barrier" functions to guarantee the "security" and "well-being" of the Jewish-Israeli public.

With the exception of a heavily monitored border between Egypt and Gaza in the city of Rafah, the boundaries of Israel have been redrawn so that what remains of Palestine is entirely encircled, monitored and controlled by Israel and its US backer.

Had she lived, Rachel would likely have gone on to document with precision what this meant in real terms for the people of Gaza day after day. As it is, too few organisations and individuals have systematically described the totality of these policies on the lives of a million-and-a-half Gazans -- before and after the Israeli "disengagement," Hamas's 2006 election victory, the total blockade of Gaza (only acknowledged officially after the "civil war" of 2007), Operation Cast Lead, and the repercussions of the Arab Spring for Palestinians across the region.

Rachel saw for herself how the destruction of Palestine was being engineered and implemented in the Gaza Strip. With clear eyes, keen perception and a conscience too rare in today's world, Rachel described in her diary and in letters to her mother the unspeakable misery Israel's routine procedures had on even the most trivial aspects of Gazan life: everyone and everything was affected by the checkpoints, settlements and settler roads, the curfews and the closures. No one could escape the soldiers with their guns, bombs and tanks. No one could avoid the sadistic and gratuitous actions and their consequences that resulted directly from carefully crafted strategies intended to inflict pain and permanent psychological damage on the lives of children and adults alike. No one could flee the arbitrary humiliations endured day after day; the water shortages and electricity blackouts; the shortages of food, medicines, and the materials to allow the construction of buildings and repair of roads; the ever-present awareness of one's virtual imprisonment -- all of which defined Gaza long before it entered the consciousness of activists or the pages of the alternative western news media.

Rachel's death occurred during a time of great violence during the second Palestinian Intifada (uprising) and -- in the United States -- just days before the Bush administration began its war on Iraq. The timing and pretexts used to justify more land theft and natural-resource appropriation could not have been better. America's "war on terror" was about to peak with the beginning of the "shock and awe" campaign over Baghdad. The then Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, had skillfully linked his administration's policies to the psychopathic US obsession with "terror" and "terrorists" initially concocted by conservative and neo-conservative politicians and corporations devising ways to expand and consolidate US hegemony over a region saturated with oil and natural gas resources.

It required very little effort to portray Palestinians as partisans of the "other" in the "clash of civilisations;" like the mercurial and fanatical members of Al-Qaeda, Palestinians were portrayed as part of the vanguard of the war against the West and its "freedoms". They led the war against Israel and the Jews and provided ready ammunition for anyone who might suggest that theirs was a struggle for freedom and self-determination much like the struggles of other colonised peoples determined to live on their own land and rule themselves. To have suggested that the Palestinian cause was just and an inspirational popular resistance movement carried forward by an oppressed, exploited and weak David against a monstrous and cruel Goliath to gain freedom and independence was to invite vehement and vicious attacks upon oneself and others who dared to speak this truth.

The violent context of the Second Intifada exacerbated the most racist and sanctimonious assertions by those who claimed that Israel was defending itself against terrorist-infidels and that Sharon's crusade was a necessary and vital component of the United States' battle against evil. Little, if any, effort was put into US reporting from the Palestinian side because it was understood -- part of the accepted canon -- that Israel was fighting for its survival.

Like many who bear witness to criminal regimes that oppress, dispossess and kill people under their rule, Rachel was deeply troubled by what she had been witnessing in Gaza -- in a landscape that defied description. On the day she was crushed to death, Rachel stood between a bulldozer and a family home to protest one of the infinite number of indignities and crimes hurled like grenades at a population of overwhelmingly poor and defenseless refugees trying each day to find new ways of surviving without going mad. According to the Israeli courts, Rachel's death was a "regrettable accident". Rachel had put herself into a dangerous situation in the middle of a war zone. She was to blame. The victim was responsible for her own murder; the stateless, poor and dispossessed were to blame for their status as refugees and for their relentlessly miserable treatment, imprisonment, dehumanisation and occupation.

Rachel left a diary, letters and a legacy of courage and steadfastness that mirrored the courageousness and determination of the people around her. She refused to move when the bulldozer came closer, and, after a certain point, she was trapped and unable to escape. Her death, like her life, reflected the outrage of a young woman who knew she was too weak to prevent the demolition of homes and the creation of a "closed military zone" in an area earmarked for destruction long before she had arrived in Rafah.

In another age, Rachel's diary would be the iconic classic of a young woman living a great adventure and one determined to survive and fight for what she believed was right. In another time, Rachel's story would be read by school children around the world and millions of people would visit the place where she stood alone facing an armoured bulldozer to say with her body, "this has to stop!"

In our day, she is an unknown martyr in the annals of official history. Her courage has been decried and condemned, her name sullied and vilified. But I believe that Anne Frank would have admired Rachel. She would have recognised the universal call for justice in the face of war and terror, the dangers inherent in the dehumanisation of an entire people and the brutal occupation of their land. She would have verified the violence that a silent and indifferent world bestows upon the victims of nations bloated with power and a righteous sense of their God-given destiny, nations determined to avenge their past, and licensed to kill.

Equally, I believe she would have been mortified by the way her own Diary and the death she was subjected to have been used as moral justifications for the actions of a state defined by blood and soil, and by the way her own popularity has been buoyed by an ideology she would most probably have found repugnant and contrary to the lessons she herself had learned and the horror she had experienced. I believe Anne Frank would have agreed with Rachel's mother, Cindy, who -- when asked if she thought Rachel should have moved away from the bulldozer -- replied, "I don't think that Rachel should have moved. I think we should all have been standing there with her."

The writer is faculty associate of Middle East Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the US.


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