Children from Tulkarm, and a birthday party

This morning went to take pictures of the art workshop for the kids from Tulkarm – most of them are from the refugee camp. They arrived yesterday, and their main activity was to create some paintings, together with children from the WAS-NS school.

Roos, A woman from the Dutch Embassy, which sponsored the project, came along. As we watched the children painting, I asked Roos if she thought these could be Dutch children. She said “sure!” I remarked that the children in our region are known to be cheeky and undisciplined, but she said this was true also of Holland. Anyway, as we talked the children were fairly quiet and focussed on their work.

Children are children everywhere. It was hard sometimes to see which were the refugee kids and which were ordinary pupils at our school. But we know that the Tulkarm children come from very difficult conditions – the overcrowding and poverty of the refugee camp. Tulkarm is virtually a prison, blocked off by the separation barrier and army checkpoints. Although the children live close to the sea, they have never visited it, and for most of them this was their first trip beyond the narrow confines of military occupation. Some of their paintings showed explosions and people being shot and killed by the army. The military vehicles they drew were not the stereotyped tanks such as any child might draw, but armored personnel carriers, which they had obviously seen themselves.

In the afternoon, they visited the swimming pool. None of them can swim, but they had lots of fun in the water. One girl said she wanted to stay and go to our school. And that leads to the inevitable question about whether it is kindness or cruelty to take these children out for a day.

In the evening we went to Ruti’s birthday party. I sat next to Rabiah, an Arab woman who works at the hotel. She has a similar diet to me: vegetarian, with a dislike for garlic and eggs – basically a yoga diet, though she came to it naturally.

Having left her husband, Rabiah raises her three children alone. The youngest in high school, though Rabiah herself is quite young, having married early. During the meal the conversation turned to Hezzie’s surprise at meeting one of his former pupils, who is already married and pregnant, at the age of 15. Rabiah explained that in the village in which this girl lives it is the custom to marry young, illegal though it might be. They get the qadi to marry them, then wait for a few years to register the marriage with the civil authorities. In the adjoining village, where Rabiah lives, the attitude is different – with men and women often waiting until their late 20s before getting married.

Another subject of conversation was an Israeli-Palestinian encounter workshop that Norit had suffered through. She had found herself in a situation where her views diverged widely from those of the other Jewish participants. These were mostly moderate leftists, who weighted every statement in favour of peace and justice with strong “buts”, as Norit put it. She mentioned a former soldier who had talked about patrolling the streets of Hebron. He said that despite his armour and weaponry, he had felt more scared and confused than the Palestinians around him.

Norit said that she had an easier time with determined right-wingers than with these leftists. By agreeing with many of the statements of the Palestinians about Israel and the occupation, she managed both to alienate the Jewish participants and to irritate the Palestinians, who wanted someone they could argue with.

Norit said that the most memorable statements for her had been those of a Palestinian participant who, like her, was regarded as a traitor by his own group. He had praised a mukhtar of an Arab village who, in the 1948 war, had chosen to surrender to the Jewish side. As a result, the village had been spared, and is still there today, whereas otherwise it would have been wiped out and its citizens killed or forced into exile. “Sometimes the bravest decision is to surrender,” she said.

Hello wordpress!

Today I started a new version of the hieronymouse blog under WordPress.  My purpose in changing the blog over from the SPIP CMS was to enable some additional features I’d been missing, like writing through third-party software.

There is no auto-magical way of importing the old material from SPIP so, in the meantime, that will coexist at http://blog.hieronymouse.com.  I’ve also been blogging at myopera.com and other places, to add to the chaos.

Actually, I think that non-networked blogs are becoming a little passé in the world of social networks.  I will be importing posts from hieronymouse.com into Facebook Notes, and possibly other places.  However, I don’t feel totally comfortable about surrendering control of personal data to such services.  A better solution may be to store original material on a self-hosted site, and just link to that through RSS or other techniques.

As before, this blog is hosted at Ouvaton.coop, the French web cooperative that is possibly the only noncommercial hosting service on the internet.  If you find another, let me know.

Writing, and Writers’ programs on Linux

Daughter Ella left for Barcelona this afternoon, to meet up with the Rainbow gathering, currently near the town of Leon.  Doesn’t seem like long since she came home from India. Europe will be different for her. During her year in Sicily, she didn’t travel very much – now it’s another phase in her life.

One of her deliberations was whether to take a camera. Eventually she decided on her old Rebel – a film camera. When I first traveled to India, I didn’t take a camera. I wasn’t sure about preserving memories, or maybe it was about preserving them by mechanical means – hard to remember one’s ideologies of thirty years ago.

Lately I’ve been thinking that not taking travel pictures might encourage me to do more writing. I found a couple of writing programs that work under Linux. There’s yWriter 4, by Spacejock. That’s a free program that runs under Wine / Crossover (Windows emulators for Linux). At least it’s supposed to run. I didn’t managed to get it to work properly. You type and nothing appears on the page. Like a mechanically induced writers’ block, or the machine version of those nightmares where you scream but are unable to produce sound. Perhaps now, after reinstalling under Crossover 8 / Wine 1.0 it will work better.

However, the other program I discovered looks good too. This is a multi-platform suite called Writers’ Cafe. It isn’t, unfortunately, a free open source program (though the Mac version is free).

The most convenient computer for writing, of course, is my ageless Psion. Its AA batteries last a month and the thing clips neatly onto my belt.  Not so inspiring to type on the small keyboard and grey screen but when the spirit moves me these details are forgotten.  Perhaps now, with the emergence of a line of computers like the Ee PC, we are moving back again towards convenient handhelds.

Touring nearby villages

One of the things I like about my job is that I never know exactly what I’m going to be doing on a particular day. But today I did, since Ahmad had asked me the evening before to escort a guest, who is here in order to represent a family foundation, to various places from which children come to our school. That’s over twenty towns and villages in the area, though fortunately we didn’t have to go to all of them. She wanted to concentrate on a few from which she had interviewed children, whose daily travel expenses the foundation will help to support.

So we started with various moshavs (semi-collective villages) in the area. Since she spends much of her time in India, she was surprised to learn that some of these nearby moshavs are populated by Jews from Kochin, in Kerala. One of these, Messilat Tsion, even has streets named after the old country. I told her about efforts to preserve the cultural heritage of these Kochini Jews that had been made by the Hebrew University (collection of old songbooks, formation of a choir, production of a disk). We also visited larger towns, like Beit Shemesh, Modi’in and Abu Ghosh, and a couple of kibbutzes. During this long journey we had the opportunity to discuss many things, from contemporary politics to spiritual influences. She had once been a professional dancer, and a student of classical Indian dance. Today she maintains a connection with her spiritual teacher, Satya Sai Baba, and is involved in working with orphans in Orissa. She was interested in what I could tell her about the founder of our village, Father Bruno Hussar.

Tomorrow our guest flies back to India and, in the afternoon, I made the first stage of preparations for my own trip there, planned for later this summer: a visit to the Travelers’ clinic in Lod. That involved a battery of vaccinations – two in each arm, and prescriptions for more drugs against dysentery and malaria. The doctor said one of the side effects of the malaria drug can be nightmares. Ella’s friend didn’t recommend – she says it “plays with your head” too much.

Meanwhile I’ve been reading Shantaram, a 900 page novel based on the adventures of an Australian ex-convict in Bombay / Mumbai. Quite a story.