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                      Christina Gibbs is hopeful 
                        Harmeet Sooden, pictured, taken hostage in Iraq, is 
                        alive. Photo supplied. 
                         
                       |   ISRAEL’S conflict-stricken West Bank 
                  may seem an unlikely place for a New Zealand pensioner in her 
                  mid-70s, but that’s exactly where Christina Gibb has spent two 
                  tours as part of a Christian Peacemaker Team (CPT).
  The 
                  Dunedinite, who is talking in Howick tomorrow night, was 
                  inspired to join the CPTs after meeting a dedicated member in 
                  2003. As a Quaker, she was committed to pacifism and keen to 
                  put her beliefs into action.
  Ms Gibb first visited 
                  Hebron, south of Jerusalem, as part of a two-week CPT 
                  delegation. She saw the building of the controversial security 
                  wall segregating the city’s Israeli settlers from the rest of 
                  the Muslim Palestinian inhabitants.
  After training in 
                  Chicago Ms Gibb returned to the West Bank in 2004 to begin the 
                  first of two three-month postings in Hebron. CPT members, in 
                  the city by Palestinian invitation, work with peace groups 
                  from both sides in the cause of “violence reduction” and human 
                  rights.
  One duty is accompanying Palestinian children 
                  to school through Israeli military checkpoints and settler 
                  quarters — and interceding when embattled soldiers lean too 
                  heavily on Palestinian residents.
  “Sometimes we 
                  physically get in the way and sometimes we try to negotiate 
                  with the soldiers. We document any human rights abuses we 
                  see,” says Ms Gibb.
  “The Israelis are quite 
                  heavy-handed, the occupation impacts heavily on all aspects of 
                  life for all Palestinians all the time.”
  She has never 
                  been injured or felt her life threatened. But she was once 
                  briefly detained by Israeli police and avoided their tear gas 
                  only through a fortuitous change in wind direction.
  And 
                  while the violence showcased by the news media remains 
                  unfortunately typical for Hebron, Ms Gibb says most of the 
                  resistance offered to the Israeli occupation forces is 
                  passive.
  “There’s still a tendency by the media to 
                  treat Palestinians as terrorists, but in our experience the 
                  vast majority are engaged in peaceful resistance – the kind of 
                  resistance of being absolutely determined to stay where they 
                  have always lived, and not to be squeezed out and to carry on 
                  with their every day lives under increasingly terrible 
                  conditions.”
  Conditions she says are only exasperated 
                  by the wall and increasingly tight security.
  “The 
                  everyday human contact where you get to know people as people 
                  is now very difficult for Palestinians and 
                  Israelis.”
  Ultimately she considers the conflict the 
                  product of extremists, saying: “There are many people, 
                  Israelis and Palestinian, longing for peace with justice for 
                  everybody there. This conflict is not primarily between 
                  Israeli and Palestinian per se, or between Muslims and Jews; 
                  it’s between those who want peace with justice for everybody, 
                  and the extremists on both sides who don’t.”
  Ms Gibb is 
                  part of a CPT Middle Eastern effort that recently made 
                  headlines after Auckland resident Harmeet Sooden was kidnapped 
                  by Iraqi resistance group, the Swords of Truth.
  While 
                  training in Chicago, Ms Gibb met another of the hostages still 
                  held with Mr Sooden, American Tom Fox.
  She reserves 
                  hope for their safety and was heartened by the latest of three 
                  video messages aired on Arabic TV news channel, 
                  Al-Jazeera.
  She views her fellow peace-makers’ 
                  imprisonment as no different from that of other innocent 
                  detainees held without trial at Guantanamo Bay and other 
                  United States detention camps and hopes they’ll all be 
                  returned home soon.
  Ms Gibb speaks of her experiences 
                  amid the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at a public meeting 
                  sponsored jointly by All Saints’ Anglican Church and the 
                  Society of Friends on Friday at 7.30pm, in the Haseler Hall, 
                  below All Saints’ Church, corner of Selwyn Rd and The Glebe, 
                  Howick. Phone inquiries to 534-6864.
 
  
                   
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