Permeable walls? Limits and opportunities of Israeli-Palestinian forms of solidarity

Authors

  • Alexander Koensler

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14672/ada2015302%25p

Keywords:

Anthropology, Ethnography, War, Borders, Israel, Palestine

Abstract

In wars and violent conflicts, the potential of cross-cutting alliances of solidarity across frontlines are often overseen. The ethnographic perspective, I argue in this article, can contribute to a more detailed understanding of these alliances, which have always existed in wars. Based on fieldwork about rights and justice activism, I investigate activism that crosses lines both at the ‘border’ between Israel and Palestine, and at the ‘internal frontier’ between Arab-Bedouin citizens and the authorities, in Israel’s southern Negev desert. I describe the surroundings of a meeting between Arab-Palestinian families and Israeli activists in the partially destroyed Palestinian city of Al-Khalil (or Hebron), occupied and inhabited by both settlers and the Israeli army. The second event investigates significant moments of a peace march based on the methods of Gandhi. In the cases presented here, Israeli-Palestinian collaboration, friendships and solidarity, have been crucial in creating detailed knowledge about violence and right violations.

Author Biography

Alexander Koensler

Alexander Koensler é assegnista di ricerca presso la Queen’s University di Belfast. È autore di “Israeli-Palestinian Activism: Shifting Paradigms” (2015, Ashgate) e curatore, con Amalia Rossi, “Comprendere il dissenso. Etnografia e antropologia dei movimenti sociali” (2012, Morlacchi).

igene nella regione dell’Orinoco colombiano, in relazione all’entrata in questi territori delle multinazionali del petrolio. Oggi vive nella Sierra Nevada di Santa Marta (Colombia) dove lavora come ricercatore e guida in luoghi di grande interesse antropologico e archeologico.

 

Published

2015-03-16

Issue

Section

Articles