Tuesday, February 26, 2008

So...the roadtrip was great

We just got back from a roadtrip to/from Michigan; its was 12 hours each way. Hanging out with the cousins...building snowmen, sledding, snowmobiling and visiting with grandma and grandpa on the back forty; watching the lunar eclipse...playing with the dogs...we missed getting to Ann Arbor but being out in the country was great. We love you, Golda...

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

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2 Boys, 2 Sides, 2 Beds in an Israeli Hospital Ward

Published: February 13, 2008

TEL HASHOMER, Israel — Two small boys lay sedated in a hospital ward in this Tel Aviv suburb on Tuesday, unaware of each other or of the growing commotion around them.

Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times
Yakoub Natil, 6, of Gaza, being treated Tuesday at Chaim Sheba hospital near Tel Aviv.

Dan Bality/Associated Press
Osher Twito, 8, of Sderot, in Ashkelon, Israel, before being moved Sunday to Chaim Sheba.

One was Osher Twito, 8, an Israeli boy from the town of Sderot, who was seriously wounded Saturday by shrapnel from a rocket fired by Palestinian militants from Gaza. The other was Yakoub Natil, almost 7, a Palestinian who was brought here three weeks ago from Gaza City after he was badly hurt by shrapnel from an Israeli Air Force strike on Jan. 18.

Sderot is less than two miles from the Gaza border, making it a prime target for the crude and inaccurate rockets that have killed 13 Israelis over the past seven years. Now Osher and Yakoub lie in booths across from each other a few paces apart in the pediatric intensive care department of the Chaim Sheba Medical Center at Tel Hashomer.

Here, the conflict’s pain has been compressed into an improbable intimacy. There is pathos. “The Palestinian boy on one side, Osher on the other — it’s something that gets to your heart,” said Prof. Gideon Paret, the director of the department.

But there is anger and repudiation as well, and the proximity of the two boys has not brought reconciliation. Osher’s parents, Iris and Rafi Twito, are outraged at the thought of comparing the boys’ cases. They refuse to allow them to be photographed together.

“The Palestinians aim to hurt our sons and rejoice at their injuries,” they said in a statement issued Tuesday, “while neither we, nor our army, intended to hurt them.”

The statement, relayed through a hospital spokeswoman, continued: “The State of Israel took the decision to treat the boy,” meaning Yakoub. “That is its right. We protest the fact that he is lying here by our son and his brother.” Osher’s older brother Rami, 19, is being treated in another wing of the same hospital.

Many major hospitals in Israel regularly treat Palestinians and are no strangers to such mixed feelings or incongruous scenes. Here at Sheba, the anomalies are cast in sharper relief.

This was a military hospital from 1948, when Israel fought its war of independence, until 1953. It has since operated as a civilian hospital that works in special cooperation with the Army, treating many of its soldiers and charged with educating its medical corps.

“It’s like a theater of the absurd,” said Prof. Zeev Rotstein, the chief executive officer and director of the hospital. “You have army doctors in white gowns alongside Palestinian doctors who are being trained, at the same time treating Israeli casualties of terrorist attacks and Palestinians who may have been hurt in army actions.”

Yakoub was hurt when Israel bombed an empty, half-ruined Palestinian Interior Ministry building that had been used by Hamas. He was at a wedding party with his family next door. The army said that it had meant to hit the ministry building and that the raid was a response to days of increased rocket fire, mostly aimed at Sderot.

Osher and Rami were hit in the street. They had gone out to buy a birthday present for their father when the rocket crashed down.

Yakoub’s grandmother, Amira Natil, 52, was at the boy’s bedside on Tuesday. She and Yakoub came here with Israeli permission three days after the airstrike from the more basic hospital Al Shifa in Gaza City. “Thank Allah, the lord of the universe,” Mrs. Natil said, kissing her hand and placing it on her brow in a gesture of religious reverence.

Mrs. Natil had not met Osher’s parents and was speaking shortly before they issued their statement, unaware of its contents. About the Israeli boy, she said: “They are children. Haram,” using an Arabic word that denotes something shameful, forbidden or taboo.

The story of the Twito brothers has particularly moved Israelis, in large part because of their youth. Osher, described by his family as a keen soccer player, has had his left leg amputated from the knee down. The doctors are still battling to save his right leg. Rami suffered damage to his legs, too. Both boys were transferred to Sheba on Sunday from Barzilai hospital in Ashkelon, a city north of Gaza that has come under rocket fire.

Yakoub was wounded in both legs and his spine. He suffered renal failure but is said by the hospital staff to be getting better. “This is the best day he’s had,” his grandmother said.

It is not clear who will pay for Yakoub’s treatment. “To date we are treating him without any financial commitment from the Palestinian authorities or anyone else,” said Ulrike Haen, a spokeswoman for Sheba.

In similar cases, she said, money has come from the Israeli Ministry of Defense; or from the Peres Center for Peace, a nonprofit organization founded in 1996 by Shimon Peres, the current president of Israel; or from the Palestinian Authority, with supplements from the hospital.

Since Hamas took control of Gaza last June after a brief but bloody factional war, the issue of Gaza residents’ access to medical treatment in Israel has become increasingly charged. Israel refuses all dealings with Hamas, whose charter calls for the destruction of the Jewish state, and has recently blockaded the area in response to the intensified rocket fire.

In an article published in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz on Tuesday, Ahmed Youssef, an adviser to the Hamas government in Gaza, wrote that “30 people have died in the last month for lack of medical care brought on by the embargo.”

According to recent statistics from the Israeli Coordination and Liaison Administration, more than 7,000 permits were issued for Palestinian patients from Gaza in 2007, along with nearly 8,000 permits for their escorts, representing a 50 percent increase over 2006. Shadi Yassin, a spokesman for the Coordination and Liaison Administration, said Tuesday that medical patients were still leaving Gaza every day to receive treatment in Israel.

But Yakoub is the exception, not the rule. “We know of others who can’t get out and die there,” said Professor Rotstein of Sheba’s pediatric intensive care department. “It is so complicated now.”

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Hillary's Struggle

After reading Maureen Dowd's column, "A Flawed Feminist Test," which includes a rude joke by Penn Jillette, I think it's time that Hillary pulls out her own genealogy. She's no "white bitch." She has Native American ancestry and should battle Obama for the expansiveness-of-ethnicity cloak. Many midwesterners--myself included--are of this multicultural background, and are proud of it.

HRC is more than she seems and just because her husband is a liability doesn't mean she deserves disrespect. In my opinion she would make a better president than the previous Clinton.

That said. I think it's unfair of the misogynistic leanings of some in power to try and denigrate her because she is not Obama. She is her Self and has a lot to offer at that. So long as she doesn't go negative.

Check it out:
www.nytimes.com/2008/02/13/opinion/13dowd.html?ref=opinion&pagewanted=all

Sunday, February 10, 2008

What's Being Said @ Barack & Hillary

With regards to Senators Obama and Clinton's presidential campaigns, check out the following:

www.lohud.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080208/OPINION/802080340/1076/OPINION03

www.nytimes.com/2008/02/08/opinion/08brooks.html?em&ex=1202792400&en=f075db3694fe9a57&ei=5087%0A

It's quite interesting that he's a challenge to both other candidates.

I'd like to vote for a female president, but I really can't stand the way that HRC, and especially her husband, have attacked Obama. She needs to co-opt his "unity" message--which she probably could do since she herself comes from a diverse background. She's got to get the vision and show a better path for all. She needs to become her potential, not in light of her husband, but as her Self. BUT, she has to go POSITIVE; why should I vote for her if she's negative?

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Transforming Things

Last week I worked for the Obama for President phonebank in Katonah--one town North of Chappaqua. It was basically a grassroots organization since not a lot of money/focus was put on New York, being Clinton's "home" state. I reminded people to get out to vote and was impressed that an equal number of people on the list supported each candidate.

So...last night I remembered why declaring myself an "independent" in New York is different than in Michigan where there are open primaries. I couldn't vote. How annoying.

After being turned away at the polls in Croton Falls despite a friendly discussion with local officials, I drove to every former polling place I had voted in during the past seven years (prior to our move to MI) just in case I was still listed on the rolls.

To no avail; the lists had been updated--which is good when you think of it. I couldn't cast my vote but am glad the race is still on.

The following is worth checking out:



Healing and transforming sound like the way to me.

Did you get the subliminal "chosen" instead of "choice...."

Saturday, February 2, 2008

From Battleground to Higher Ground

I like what Rev. Jesse Jackson said recently on Linda Douglass' National Journal (1/28/08) about the issues in our country:
Everyone talks of racial reconciliation, but racial justice precedes reconciliation. You can't heal a sore with glass in it; you got to heal the wounds. You have to take the glass out. You have to make a commitment to close those gaps. But let's go a step further: It's not just race gaps, it's class gaps. In South Carolina, 62 percent of all working people have no health insurance. Most poor people are not black, by the way. They are white, they are female, they are young, where the white, black and brown hunger hurts. So I would think this is a great moment to move from racial battleground to economic common ground, to moral higher ground....

There's a lot of social maturation taking place, so some of the edge off of some of the outer layers of race reaction have changed. And so, to that extent, America is getting better. There is still the underlying challenge, however, of structural inequality. It's not enough to, as Dr. King would say, for us to embrace socially and not still have equality and access to education, health care, capital industry and technology. And I think that this campaign... I look at the scene in New Hampshire -- that night with Bill Richardson, the Hispanic; John Edwards, a populist from the South, South Carolina, indeed; Barack Obama, a black; and Hillary Clinton, a woman -- the four of them in that one camera shot; the backdrop of New Hampshire, discussing the great issues of our time. That's development.

We've not always been there as a nation. And I would hope that in the remaining days of the campaign, that the campaigns can focus on the issues that matter, not get caught sniping at each other. I mean, let's focus on issues that matter and come out of this and allow all people to be winners.