Excerpts from keynote address by Nobel Laureate
Archbishop Desmond Tutu at the Conference on
Ending the Occupation.
The conference
was co-sponsored
by Sabeel, a Palestinian ecumenical liberation
center in
Jerusalem, and
by the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts.
April 13, 2002
Thank you for how
you cared for us in
South Africa
during the apartheid regime. You showed so
much solidarity with
us, supporting us and supporting sanctions
against the regime. You know we are free in
South Africa
because of people like yourselves [addressing
the audience], people who cared. You cared even
when it looked totally
impossible. So I want
to thank you for that, and for being here.
God is weeping
over what He sees in Middle East.
God has no one except
ourselves, absolutely no one. God is
omnipotent, all-powerful, but also impotent. God
does not dispatch lightening bolts to remove
tyrants, as we might have hoped he would. God
waits for you for you to act. You are his
Partner. God is as weak as the weakest of his
partners, or as strong as the as the morally
strongest.
The title of my
topic is "Occupation is Oppression." I would
like to change that to "Give Peace a Chance; for
Peace is Possible" for we are bearers of hope.
God‘s people, Israeli Jews and Palestinian
Arabs, we want to say our hearts go out to all
who have suffered; violence of suicide bombers
and of military incursions. I want to say to
all, peace is possible. These two people‘s are
God‘s chosen and beloved, with a common ancestor
in Abraham. I give thanks for what the Jews have
given us. During Apartheid
we told our people God has heard their crying.
And God will deliver
us as God delivered
Israel from
bondage. God intervened (stories from Old
Testament); this God never abandoned us through
tribulation and suffering.
Comparison: Apartheid to Occupation
In our struggle against Apartheid, the
great supporters were the Jews. Jews almost
instinctively had to be on the side of the
disenfranchised, of the voiceless ones, fighting
injustice, oppression and evil. I have continued
to feel strongly with the Jews. I am patron of
holocaust center in
South Africa. I
believe Israel
has right to secure borders. What is not so
understandable, not justified, is what it did to
another people to guarantee its existence. I‘ve
been very deeply distressed in my visit to the
Holy land;
it reminded me so much of what happened to us
blacks in SA. I have seen the humiliation of the
Palestinians at checkpoints and roadblocks
suffer like us when young white police officers
prevented us from moving about. They seemed to
derive so much joy from our humiliation.
Collective punishment.
We know of the horrific attacks on refugee
camps, towns, villages, and Palestinian
institutions. We don‘t know
the exact truth because Israelis won‘t let the
media in. What are they hiding? Perhaps more
sinister, why is there no outcry in this country
about the Israeli siege in the West
Bank. You do see the harrowing
images of what suicide bombers have done,
something we all condemn, but we see no scenes
of what the tanks are doing to Palestinian homes
and people.
On one of my
visits to the Holy
Land I
drove to a church with the Anglican Bishop of
Jerusalem. I could hear
tears in his voice as he pointed to Jewish
settlements. I thought of the desire of Israelis
for security. But
what of the Palestinians who have lost their
land and homes. Desperation.
I have experienced Palestinians pointing to what
were their homes, now occupied by Israeli Jews.
I was walking with Canon
Naim Ateek
(Head of Sabeel). In
Jerusalem
as he pointed in a direction and
said "Our home was
over there." We were driven
out of our home; now occupied by Israeli Jews.
My heart aches. I say why
are our memories so short. Have our
Jewish sisters and brothers forgotten their
humiliation? Have they forgotten the collective
punishment, home demolitions, and their own
history so soon. Have
they turned their backs on their profound and
noble religious traditions.
Have they forgotten that God cares deeply about
the downtrodden.
Israel will
never get true security and safety through
oppressing another people. A true peace
can ultimately be built
only on justice. We condemn the violence of
suicide bombers, and we condemn the corruption
of young minds taught hatred, but we also
condemn the violence of military incursions in
the occupied lands and the inhumanity that won‘t
let ambulances reach the injured.
The military
action of recent days, I predict with certainty,
will not provide the security and peace Israelis
want; it will only intensify the hatred. Israel
has three options: revert to the previous
stalemated situation; exterminate all
Palestinians; or, and I hope this will be the
road taken, to strive for peace based on
justice, based on withdrawal from all the
occupied territories, and the establishment of a
viable Palestinian State on those territories
side by side, both with secure borders.
We in
South Africa
had a relatively peaceful transition. If our
madness could end as it did, it must be possible
to do the same everywhere else in the world.
South Africa is
a beacon of hope for the rest of the world. If
peace could come to
South Africa,
surely it can come to the Holy Land.
My brother Naim
Ateek has said what
we used to say. "I am not pro- this or that, I
am pro-justice, pro-freedom,
I am anti-injustice, anti-oppression."
But you know as well
as I do that somehow the Israeli government is
placed on a pedestal, and to criticize it is
immediately dubbed anti-Semitic as if they
Palestinians were not Semitic. I am not even
anti-white despite the madness of that group.
And how did it come
about that Israel
was collaborating with the Apartheid government
on security measures?
People are scared
in this country [USA],
to say wrong is wrong because the Jewish lobby
is powerful, very powerful.
Well, so what? This is God‘s world. For
goodness sake, this is God‘s world. We live in a
moral universe. The Apartheid government was
very powerful, but today it no longer exists.
Hitler, Mussolini, Stalin, Pinochet,
Milosovik, and
Idi
Amin were all
powerful, but in the end, they
bit the dust.
Injustice and
oppression will never prevail. Those who are
powerful have to remember the litmus test that
God gives to the powerful. What is your
treatment of the poor, the hungry?
the voiceless? And on
the basis of that, God passes God‘s judgment. We
should put out a clarion call to the government
of the people of
Israel, to the
Palestinian people and say: peace is possible,
peace based on justice is possible, and we are
meeting today, and we will continue. And we will
do all we can to assist you to achieve this
peace, because it is God‘s dream and you will be
able to live amicably together as sisters and
brothers.
Archbishop
Desmond Tuttu is a
1984 Nobel Prize Laureate, Former General
Secretary of the South African Council of
Churches, Leader of South Africa‘s Truth and
Reconciliation Commission 96-98.