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  • Interview with David Boyajian on Armenia

    Interview with David Boyajian on Armenia
    and Vivien Sansour, Palestinian poet

    Raising Sand Radio

    Host Susan Galleymore brings a unique perspective to this weekly
    show. Born in apartheid South Africa, she continues to visit that
    country regularly, lived in Israel for two years in the late 1970s,
    and has lived in California's San Francisco bay area for thirty
    years. She is author of Long Time Passing: Mothers Speak about War and
    Terror, founder of Motherspeak, a "military mom" and a GI Rights
    counselor who also works in the technology fields.

    KZSU Radio FM 90.1
    Stanford University
    Stanford, CA 94309
    USA
    www.RaisingSandRadio.org

    Air Date: October 19, 2009
    [pre-recorded]

    Length: 60 minutes

    To listen: http://www.radio4all.net/index.php/program/36567

    David Boyajian is an Armenian American writer and activist commenting
    on the recent protocols signed - but not yet ratified - between Turkey
    and Armenia. He reviews the Caucasus and Caspian regions and the
    geopolitics behind US, Russian, EU, and NATO interest in the region as
    well why Armenians around the world are outraged by the protocols.

    Vivien Sansour is a poet, theater director, and activist who shares
    her poetry and as well as what stimulates her to write, create, and
    act for justice.


    TRANSCRIPT:
    [MUSIC]


    INTERVIEWER: Welcome to another edition of Raising Sand Radio. I'm
    your host, Susan Galleymore, with Dave Rovics and `Who Will Tell the
    People' to introduce this week's show. We will talk with David
    Boyajian, an Armenian-American writer and activist on the latest
    agreements between Armenia and Turkey, and why the Armenian people
    feel betrayed by them. During the latter part of the show, Vivien
    Sansour will share her poetry and theater arts. Vivien Sansour has
    lived in the United States since 1996, when she departed her village,
    Bejala, near Bethlehem and Jerusalem. I have David Boyajian on the
    phone, and with me from Boston. Welcome, David, it's good to have you
    back on Raising Sand Radio.


    BOYAJIAN: Thanks, Susan. It's always great to be on your show.


    INTERVIEWER: Well, there's all sorts of interesting things going on
    now, and I'm going to refer our listeners to Raising Sand Radio's
    website, where they can find earlier shows you've done with us on
    Armenia and Turkey to get a deeper understanding of the region. But
    let's start today's show with a brief layout of the land in the
    Caucasus Caspian region for listeners who may not be familiar with the
    area and how the US has been involved there for over two decades,
    since the breakup of the USSR.


    BOYAJIAN: Right, well, of course, the Caucasus consists of three
    countries, Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan. Then just to the west of
    those countries is Turkey, a NATO ally, and to the right, over towards
    the east is the Caspian Sea, which is extremely rich in oil and gas.
    Georgia and Armenia themselves, if one were to look at a map, form a
    kind of physical wall between east and west. Now, the US, what the US
    and NATO have wanted to do since the breakup of the Soviet Union
    nearly 20 years ago, is to get into that region via Turkey and tap the
    oil and gas and pump it west.

    And the US and Europe have largely succeeded in that. They've
    established pipelines running from Azerbaijan through Georgia into
    Turkey and on to the west. By the same token, Russia has thought of
    the Caucasus as its traditional sphere of influence.

    It wants to monopolize the oil and gas in the Caspian and Caucasus
    region.

    It wants that oil and gas, if it's to flow out of that area, to be
    under its control, to have the pipelines go through Russia. And so
    that's kind of the great game that's been taking place over the last
    20 years.

    Georgia and Armenia, as I say, form a kind of physical wall between
    east and west. In order for these pipelines to go from the Caspian
    west to Europe through Turkey, they have to pass through either
    Georgia or Armenia.

    Now, Georgia has been open - its borders have been open, so the US has
    been using the Republic of Georgia for these pipelines. Armenia's
    borders have been closed. And that's because Armenians and Azerbaijan
    fought a war over a disputed area of Karabagh an Armenian populated
    area inside Azerbaijan. And that has caused Armenia's eastern border
    with Azerbaijan to be closed, and Turkey, sympathizing with its Turkic
    cousins in Azerbaijan, has shut its border with Armenia.

    So Armenia's borders are blocked on the east and west, and it's unable
    then to be a pipeline transit route for the United States. So the US
    has been looking to Georgia for that role. So basically what we have
    is the Caucasus is - I like to call it - ground zero for the new Cold
    War between Russia and the United States.


    INTERVIEWER: And not to mention China in there, too.


    BOYAJIAN: That's right.


    INTERVIEWER: So let's talk about what's new in the relations and
    agreements between Turkey and Armenia that's made so much news just in
    the last few weeks.


    BOYAJIAN: Yes. Well, of course, I suppose most people know that from
    1915 to 1923 Ottoman Turkey committed a genocide against its Armenian
    population and has since denied that that occurred.

    It took over - after this ethnic cleansing that it committed in 1915 -
    it took over Armenian historical land on what's called the Armenian
    Plateau, which is now part of Eastern Turkey.

    So this has been a grievance of Armenians ever since. Now, fast
    forward to 1993 when the war between Azerbaijan and Armenians broke
    out, actually in the late 1980s, Turkey had recognized the newly
    independent government of Armenia. I should mention, let me go back
    just a moment. Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan are all ex-Soviet
    republics that became independent after the breakup of the Soviet
    Union around 1991.

    In any case, [in] this war between Armenia and Azerbaijan, Turkey
    closed its border with Armenia in 1993 out of sympathy with
    Azerbaijan. So since that time, the border's been closed. Armenia
    has offered for the last 16 years to establish normal diplomatic
    relations between itself and Turkey with no preconditions.

    Turkey wouldn't even have to acknowledge the genocide. There would be
    no preconditions at all. Turkey has set a number of preconditions.
    Armenia has to stop pushing for genocide recognition.

    Armenia has to give up all land claims against Turkey, even though it
    hasn't put forth any formally, and Armenia must come to an agreement
    over the disputed area of Karabagh with the Republic of Azerbaijan.
    So you ask what's new now? Well, things have changed a little bit in
    the last year, because as I mentioned before, Georgia is an important
    pipeline route from east to west for the United States and NATO. But
    there was a war last year between Russia and Georgia, and that cast
    doubt on the stability of Georgia and on the ability of Georgia to
    continue to host western-bound pipelines. So as I mentioned before,
    the other country that could be an alternative to Georgia for NATO's
    western pipelines is Armenia, if its borders open. So the United
    States has been pushing, especially since the Georgian-Russian war of
    last year for Turkey and Armenia to come to some sort of an agreement,
    and for Turkey to open the border.

    It's Turkey that closed the border, so it's Turkey, really, that has
    to open it again. And there is a sort of preliminary agreement
    between Armenia and Turkey now, which evidently has, and strangely
    enough, has the backing not only of the United States and the European
    Union, but Russia, too.

    And this agreement is called the Protocols. And it has a couple of
    problematic sections in there, clauses that Armenians consider
    generally very negative, but which it appears that Armenia is going to
    push ahead with.

    The Protocols that I mentioned between Turkey and Armenia have not
    been ratified yet. They've been signed by the presidents of Turkey
    and Armenia, but they have not been ratified by the parliaments, and
    for them to take effect they need to be ratified by parliament.


    INTERVIEWER: And does it look as though parliament is going to do
    that?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, on the Armenian side, the government there, the strong
    man, Serge Sargsian, appears to have the political apparatus in the
    parliament in his grasp.

    So the answer to your question is, yes, it looks like Armenia will
    ratify the Protocols. Now, on Turkey's part, it says it is going to
    ratify the Protocols, but it also reserves the right not to in case
    the Karabagh issue between Armenia and Azerbaijan is not solved, and
    it hasn't been solved yet. Now, if the Turkish Parliament goes ahead
    and ratifies these Protocols, according to the text of the agreement,
    Turkey would have to open its border with Armenia within two months of
    ratification. However, it has - as I said - Turkey has said that it
    will not go ahead with ratification unless an agreement between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan is signed. So the Turkish ratification is
    somewhat problematic at this point.


    INTERVIEWER: And how is the EU and NATO, along with the US, involved
    in this? And how does Armenia fit into that?

    BOYAJIAN: Yes, in terms of the US and NATO, they have been trying to
    push into the area of the Caucasus and the Caspian in order to get at
    the oil and gas, and in order to bring the countries in that area -
    which have traditionally been under Russian influence - they've been
    trying to bring them under Western and European and NATO influence.
    And they've gone a long way in that. Basically, Georgia is definitely
    oriented toward NATO now, Azerbaijan not quite as much. They're under
    a little more Russian pressure, and they're a little bit further east.
    So what the United States would like to do is open the border, is have
    Turkey open the border with Armenia, and it would like to see the
    Karabagh issue solved between Armenia and Azerbaijan, because here's
    what that would do. That would give the United States and NATO a
    straight shot from west to east right into the Caspian Sea. It would
    go, Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Azerbaijan is right on the
    Caspian Sea. If the borders were to open, the United States would
    like to put oil and gas pipelines through there, as I say, especially
    now because Georgia's ability to host present and future pipelines has
    been called somewhat into question because of the war last year
    between Georgia and Russia. I should mention, though, that for its
    part, Russia would like to keep that region under its domination. So
    the real question here is, why is Russia in favor of these Protocols,
    which would seemingly give the United States a new opening into that
    region? We don't really know the answer to that. But Russia has
    Armenia very much under its, shall I say, quasi control. Russia owns
    a lot of the industry, especially the vital industry, in Armenia. It
    has great influence upon the political system in Armenia and also the
    army in Armenia. It appears that Russia thinks that because Russia
    supplies most of the natural gas to Turkey, that it feels that if
    Russia establishes a relationship between Turkey and Armenia, that
    somehow Russia can control that, that somehow Russia does not have to
    worry about Turkish penetration, not only because it has natural gas
    leverage over Turkey, but because Russia owns so much of Armenia's
    vital industry. So really, it's a game here. It's rather strange
    that both Russia and the United States should want the same thing in
    this region. But I think what they're doing is, they're each
    jockeying for superior position, believing that they are the ones that
    are going to come out on top.


    INTERVIEWER: Let me take a moment and remind our listeners that we're
    talking with David Boyajian, who has been with us before, on the topic
    of Armenia and the region around the Caucasus and the Caspian. And
    again, those shows are available on the website, RaisingSandRadio.org.
    David, we have a president now who is very pro-recognizing the
    Armenian genocide during the election. Since then he has not done so.

    And we have Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. Talk about the
    two of them together and how they are viewing the Protocols and the
    genocide.


    BOYAJIAN: Well, you're right. President Obama very much promised many
    times to Armenian-Americans that if he got in office, he would
    explicitly recognize the Armenian genocide, using the word genocide.
    He has not done so. He's broken his promise. Hillary Clinton, the
    Secretary of State, was very much in favor of an Armenian genocide
    resolution in the US Congress when she was US Senator.

    However, now that she's become Secretary of State, she has not used
    the word genocide. So Armenian-Americans feel very much betrayed by
    the Obama Administration. A noted genocide expert who now works in
    the National Security Council for the administration, Samantha Power,
    - former Harvard professor - she's an expert on genocide. During the
    campaign, she said Obama has read her book, he knows all about the
    Armenian genocide, and he will definitely recognize it. Well, Obama
    did not recognize it and probably won't.

    And Samantha Power has not been heard of since she joined the
    administration. So that's a disappointment. Of course,
    Armenian-Americans aren't the only ones that are disappointed with the
    promises this administration made, but there is a considerable amount
    of disappointment there nonetheless.


    INTERVIEWER: David, I've talked with folks in Turkey, and interviewed
    American professors working in Turkey, and I was surprised to hear
    some of these folks say that they thought that dealing with a topic
    like the genocide should be something that happens within a country.

    And in fact what I've since and subsequently learned, and I'd like
    you to verify if this is true or not, is that there is a law in Turkey
    that makes it illegal to quote `insult the Turkish nation' and how
    that is used, and that law is used to prosecute those to speak
    truthfully about the genocide within Turkey.

    So talk a little bit if you can about the Turks themselves and how
    they view this.


    BOYAJIAN: Increasingly, Turkish academicians, especially those working
    in the United States where they can speak freely, have actually been
    recognizing the Armenian genocide, and more Turks, even within Turkey,
    have been learning about the Armenian genocide. However, it is still
    largely illegal to bring up the subject of the Armenian genocide in
    Turkey. The award winning author, Orham Pamuk, was originally
    indicted some years ago for bringing up this subject. Now he's being
    brought into court again because he said this a few years ago.

    I guess they're somehow reviving the case. You do run the risk of
    being prosecuted or being politically ostracized or worse if you bring
    up the subject of the Armenian genocide in Turkey. So I should
    mention here, I did allude to two sections of these proposed Protocols
    between Armenia and Turkey that were problematic. One of them
    involves recognizing mutual territorial integrity between Armenia and
    Turkey, because although Armenia itself has never formally had
    territorial or reparations claims against Turkey due to the genocide,
    those have always been in the background for the last 90 years.

    But what I want to mention is, these Protocols contain a provision
    that would establish some sort of joint historical commission between
    Armenia and Turkey, probably on the matter of genocide. The Protocols
    don't explicitly use the word genocide. They use the term `historical
    dimension.' But it's felt that that really is an allusion to the
    Armenian genocide.

    Now, Armenians have a lot of problems with this. The International
    Association of Genocide Scholars has said explicitly that all of the
    studies by neutral parties of the 1915-1923 killings have concluded
    that they were definitely an act of genocide by Ottoman Turkey.

    So it looks like this joint commission that the Protocols would
    establish is a demand of Turkey to kind of throw doubt on the veracity
    of the Armenian genocide and make out like it's something about which
    we need to study more in order to determine why it happened. Now,
    it's a funny thing, because as you mentioned, it's not easy to even
    discuss the Armenian genocide in Turkey.


    INTERVIEWER: Exactly.


    BOYAJIAN: So one wonders, how is Turkey, which is going to be a member
    of this commission, going to study the Armenian genocide or the events
    surrounding it objectively? And I don't think it can be done, and
    Armenians around the world really are quite outraged that Armenia
    would agree to such a thing.


    INTERVIEWER: And do they view the Armenian government as legitimate
    and honest enough to sign these documents?

    BOYAJIAN: In general, no. In Armenia itself, all the opposition
    parties - nearly all the opposition parties -have come out against
    President Sargsian's signing of them, and some have also demanded his
    resignation. The Armenian government, it's been struggling in the
    post-independent era, like most of the newly independent nations of
    the ex-Soviet Union.

    The current government got in power through ballot stuffing,
    censorship of the media, and keeping some candidates out of the
    electoral process.

    In general, Armenians - politically involved, active Armenians,
    especially in the Diaspora, but also in Armenia - do not regard this
    government as legitimate enough to sign these weighty Protocols. And
    there have been huge demonstrations around the world, Paris, Lebanon,
    New York, Los Angeles, and also in Armenia itself. But the current
    government in Armenia really has a kind of stranglehold on the
    country, and that's unfortunate.


    INTERVIEWER: I'm going to go on to ask you why Americans should care.
    But before I do that, I want to mention that the LA Times just had a
    very interesting article by a man named Karnig Dukmajian.

    It's called `Why Armenians cannot `get past' the genocide.' And I'm
    going to actually try and draw some parallels here, if you'd give me a
    moment to quote him:

    `Suppose Israel and Germany share a common border, as Armenia and
    Turkey do. Suppose also that Germany has not recognized that the
    Holocaust took place, that Germany admits only that some Jews died in
    quote unquote civil unrest during World War II and that Germany claims
    that Jews also killed many Germans.'

    He goes on: `Suppose West Germany did not pay 3 billion marks in
    reparations to Israel (which it did in the `50s and `60s) renovate
    deserted Jewish synagogues across Germany or establish memorial parks
    where concentration and extermination camps once stood. Suppose then
    that 16 years ago, Germany unilaterally decided to shut its common
    border with Israel in solidarity with a third country, with which
    Israel went to war, and that its stated purpose of such action was to
    cause Israel economic strain. And finally, suppose that after much
    international pressure, Germany has decided it will reopen the border,
    but only if Israel agrees to make several concessions, including
    partaking in a commission to study whether the Holocaust actually took
    place, and making territorial concessions in its unresolved conflict
    with the third country.'

    What do you think of this? Is this a good way of summing up some of
    the issue?

    BOYAJIAN: Oh, it's a wonderful article. I've read it. It's making
    the rounds of the Internet. You know, Susan, it's so wonderful that
    we Armenians - we feel sometimes we don't have a voice. And I know
    that actually we have a voice that is able to get out there more than
    a lot of other small national groups. So we're appreciative of that.
    And I'm particularly appreciative that you allowed me to come on your
    program to talk about these issues, because during the last several
    weeks, when the issues of these Protocols between Turkey and Armenia
    have come up, a lot of the articles that have been printed have not
    really asked Armenians in Armenia or elsewhere what they think. It's
    as if these things are taking place, and we Armenians around the world
    have nothing to do with them. So I was very happy to see that in the
    LA Times. And yes, the analogy is quite right. Turkey has not
    admitted to genocide. It's next door to Armenia. What is Armenia
    supposed to think? Well, Armenia feels endangered by Turkey, and this
    brings up the subject of a double standard about genocide, too. You
    know, Obama and Hillary Clinton, they recognize the Holocaust. Jews
    and Israelis have gotten reparations for it. The parties involved in
    some other genocides - there have been trials - Rwanda and so forth,
    but for Armenians, there has been no closure to this. And I think the
    analogy with the Holocaust is a very damning one. And I'm just glad
    the LA Times printed it.

    But you know, we Armenians are still trying to get out there and
    explain what's going on.


    INTERVIEWER: And then we recently saw after the bombardment of Gaza,
    and you and I actually did a show on this earlier, the Turkish [Prime
    Minister] Erdogan disagreeing publicly with an Israeli diplomat, which
    caused a bit of a break for a while. But those two countries are very
    close, too, aren't they?

    BOYAJIAN: They are very close. Turkey and Israel are basically allies
    at the military, military intelligence, and economic levels. Now, the
    Islamic party, the AKP that's now in power in Turkey, has been
    criticizing Israel for various of its actions. It has accused Israel
    of genocide, and Israel actually suddenly kind of struck back against
    the charge of genocide, because Israel has not acknowledged the
    Armenian genocide. So basically Israel said to Turkey: `you'd better
    watch about, you'd better be careful about accusing us of genocide
    because you, Turkey, committed genocide against Armenians, and we've
    been supporting you by not acknowledging that. So you'd better watch
    out, because we might retaliate against you.' Turkey, though, still
    does have this alliance with Israel, and, to some extent, the Islamic
    party in Turkey is kind of playing to the Muslim street. Yes, it
    criticizes Israel. On the other hand, it has a very strong
    relationship with Israel, and it has not done anything substantive to
    sever that relationship.


    INTERVIEWER: I'm actually going to, at the second half of this show,
    as I mentioned, we're going to be talking with Vivien Sansour. I'm
    actually going to complicate that whole quote that I just read by
    asking listeners to think about Palestine and the Palestinians in
    terms of the Armenians, also. But before we do that, David, I want to
    ask you, why should Americans care about this at all? I mean, this is
    so far away, and Armenian-Americans have quote unquote assimilated.
    Why should we worry about this?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, I think as Americans we should care about any place in
    the world where Americans have soldiers stationed.

    US has soldiers stationed in Georgia, training Georgian troops. The
    United States supplies a certain amount of weaponry to both Georgia
    and Azerbaijan, as does Israel, by the way. So US soldiers over there
    are in harm's way.

    The US is committing a lot of political capital and money to building
    these pipelines, and the US is really kind of setting itself up, or
    has been, in a confrontation with Russia over the area of the
    Caucasus, and it's mainly over oil and gas and NATO penetration.

    So Americans need to know where else we're involved. We're not just
    involved in Iraq. We're not just involved in Afghanistan. No, we
    have soldiers, not necessarily combat troops, but we have soldiers and
    military advisors in the Caucasus, and there is this big clash taking
    place between Russia and the United States, a kind of new Cold War.

    So any place where the United States is committing its resources, I
    think we Americans need to know about and be concerned about.


    INTERVIEWER: And I really appreciate you taking the time, David, to
    lay this out for us, because again, I think this doesn't really get
    around - this news, this information doesn't appear too much in the
    mainstream media. So we're really happy to bring it to our listeners,
    and you're a huge part of that.


    BOYAJIAN: Thank you. Thank you very much, Susan. I might also add,
    there's another reason that we should be concerned about US
    involvement in that area, and that's because of human rights and
    morality. Virtually all the countries in that region of the world,
    Turkey, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, have very serious human
    rights deficiencies, and yet America is very much involved there, and
    it's not involved for human rights reasons. It's involved for oil and
    gas and military reasons, and that's wrong.


    INTERVIEWER: And that's the same thing, really, that we're seeing in
    Iraq. We just saw Vice President Biden there urging the Iraqis to
    accept a smaller amount of payment for the oil. And the same in
    Afghanistan. All of this pipeline really hinges upon the situation in
    Afghanistan being pacified somewhat, doesn't it?

    BOYAJIAN: Well, yes, absolutely. One of the reasons, and I don't
    think it's the only one - certainly the Taliban, 9/11, and Al Qaeda
    have to do with why the United States went into Afghanistan - but even
    before 9/11, the United States was trying to put natural gas pipelines
    from Turkmenistan, which is just to the north of Afghanistan, down
    through Afghanistan, through Pakistan. So I believe that oil and gas
    are one of the reasons why the United States is currently in
    Afghanistan and may not leave for a long time. So I think Americans
    really have to know more about this oil and gas angle.


    INTERVIEWER: David, I want to thank you for being with us. And how
    can listeners get in touch with you? Can they get in touch with you?
    Can they find your writings?

    BOYAJIAN: They can find my writings if they go to Armeniapedia.org and
    search for my name, David Boyajian. They will see my writings there,
    and I would recommend another site, too.

    It's called NoPlaceForDenial.com. That has to do with how the
    Anti-Defamation League has denied the Armenian genocide and works with
    Turkey to stop the passage of [Armenian] genocide resolutions in the
    US Congress.

    I'd recommend both of those to people.


    INTERVIEWER: Thanks, David.


    BOYAJIAN: Thanks so much, Susan. I'm very grateful.


    INTERVIEWER: That was Armenian-American writer and activist David
    Boyajian, whose other interviews you can find on our website,
    RaisingSandRadio.org. We also have transcripts of our earlier shows
    on Armenia, thanks to David Boyajian, and you can download them from
    the website.

    Susan Galleymore, host of Raising Sand Radio on KZSU, FM 90.1 at
    Stanford University. You can contact me at
    [email protected]. If you're interested in attending the
    annual gathering at the Gates of Fort Benning, Georgia, to call for
    the shutdown of the School of the Americas, go to www.soaw.org, that's
    School of the Americas Watch dot org, to find out how to do that.
    This year's event will be held just before Thanksgiving, and just two
    weeks ago we aired a presentation by Lisa Sullivan, who has been
    involved with the School of the Americas Watch for some time, and it's
    a very interesting and informative interview. You should certainly
    know more about School of the Americas, and Lisa Sullivan goes into
    detail.


    [MUSIC]

    INTERVIEWER: It's my great pleasure to welcome Vivien

    Sansour. Welcome, Vivien.


    SANSOUR: Thank you, thank you, Susan.


    INTERVIEWER: Well, I first met you in Los Angeles when you were
    actually part of a book event that I was doing for my own book, and
    you were such a wonderful addition because you shared some of your
    poetry. And you were originally born in Bethlehem in Palestine and
    came to the United States in 1996. And we're going to hear some of
    your poetry today. But first I'm going to ask you to tell our
    listeners a little bit about your life in Bethlehem before you came to
    the United States.


    SANSOUR: Well, I was actually born in Jerusalem, but I grew up in the
    Bethlehem district in a small town called Bejala, which is pretty much
    Bethlehem, especially these days, with Bethlehem being completely
    surrounded by the Israeli apartheid wall.

    Bethlehem and the surrounding little towns have all become kind of one
    giant open air prison camp. And it's people building on top of each
    other. But my life there was a combination of basically living a life
    full, very much full of life, actually. Because I grew up in the
    small town, and it's mostly a farming community. So I grew up
    basically playing in the fields, working with my grandmother in the
    fields, and it was really exciting, except for when it wasn't. For
    example, when we would have curfews, which were very, very terrifying,
    and all kinds of limitations to your imagination as a child of what
    you want to be, because you knew that you would grow older, and there
    was no way for you to pursue your dreams.

    For example, I wanted to study theater, actually, and the only theater
    school was in Jerusalem at the time, and actually, I think until now,
    and I couldn't get a permit to go to Jerusalem.

    And so it was easier for me to find a way to get out of the country,
    to come to the US, rather than to go to Jerusalem, which is where I
    was born. And so that's how I basically came here.


    INTERVIEWER: And then you have followed your dream, haven't you? You
    do theater these days. You're a performance artist and a poet.


    SANSOUR: Yeah, I do, I do, not as, I got really caught up, because
    when you are born and raised under occupation, politics is kind of not
    a choice. It's imposed on you. And so particularly when I came to
    the United States, and I was really shocked at how little people knew
    about us and about our experience.

    I got really involved in politics, and I ended up actually studying
    political science, and later I did my masters in international
    studies.

    But I always had a focus, I always had a side gig of some kind of
    theater activity, mostly community theater. And when I moved to LA, I
    met, who is now my partner, Hector Aristizabal and we started an
    organization called ImaginAction, where we focus on theater of the
    oppressed. And so the purpose of the theater we do is purely on
    creating alternatives to violence and to working with communities to
    find solutions to very difficult problems. And so one of the things
    we did last year, for example, is we actually took 14 artists,
    including ourselves, to Palestine, and with a project called the Olive
    Tree Circus, and people can find it on YouTube.

    And we worked with the farmers in Palestine who cannot access their
    olive groves. And we walked with them using giant puppetry and
    walking on stilts and music. We walked with the farmers through their
    olive groves because, as you know, most farmers cannot access their
    olive groves because of the apartheid wall and Israeli settler
    activities.


    INTERVIEWER: Vivien, I want to interrupt for one second and say,
    actually, I'm hoping that Hector will do an interview with us, too,
    because he also works, I'm assuming now that you do, with the School
    of the Americas Watch, which is coming up, and we're going to be doing
    a show on that.


    SANSOUR: Oh, yeah. We actually go every year, and this year we are
    going again. And we work with a group of puppetistas about creating a
    street show called the Return To Life, which as you know at the School
    of the Americas there is the vigil where we remember the dead, but
    then we decided a few years ago that we have to come back to life
    after we remember the dead. So we designed this street show with a
    few other people. And they come from all over the place. And
    actually, this is where the Olive Tree Circus idea was born.


    INTERVIEWER: That's great.


    SANSOUR: Yeah.


    INTERVIEWER: Nice circle of events there.


    SANSOUR: Yes, yes. And actually now Hector just left Afghanistan
    where he was doing theater of the oppressed there, and I'm sure your
    audience and yourself would be very interested in his experience.


    INTERVIEWER: We will, in fact. Thank you for letting me know that.
    In fact, I went to Iraq with a woman named Kayhan Irani - we've done a
    show with her, and she works with a theater of the oppressed in New
    York.

    So the using the arts, using theater, and those talents is a really
    wonderful way to reach an audience that might not otherwise hear the
    message that you have to share.


    SANSOUR: Right. And for us to discover, I mean, we don't go in
    communities and tell people what to do. We work together with
    communities to discover what it is that we want in terms of
    challenging what's happening, or whether it is just discovering what
    are really the problems in our community.


    INTERVIEWER: And I actually just quote unquote friended you on
    Facebook without really realizing that it was you. But I friended the
    Al Hara Theater in Bejala.


    SANSOUR: Oh, great.


    INTERVIEWER: Yeah, talk a little bit about that.


    SANSOUR: Al Hara Theater is a community theater in Bejala, and
    actually I am a founding member. We originally started years ago
    under a theater called the In/Out Theater. But then it was 2005, I
    believe, or 2004 that we basically reformed, and we became called Al
    Hara Theater. And Hara means the neighborhood. And we basically do a
    lot of workshops with people in the West Bank. There's a big focus on
    the young generation, because the young generation finds little outlet
    for their creative energy. And so we work with them, and we try to
    basically find what it is that they want to talk about. What are the
    issues they're facing? And the youth themselves, with the help of
    theater, create their own plays and stories. And then they tour with
    them all over the West Bank, and actually all over Europe recently.
    So it's very exciting.

    And it's very much a community theater. It's not the most
    professional piece of work. It's really designed to help people
    express themselves.


    INTERVIEWER: Vivien, before we go on and have you read, share a poem,
    would you give the websites for ImaginAction?

    SANSOUR: Sure. Our website is www.imaginaction.org

    Contact us through the website.


    INTERVIEWER: And then the Al Hara Theater, as I say, is on Facebook.
    What's the best way for people to become fans of that?

    SANSOUR: They can just find them on Facebook, Al Hara on Facebook.


    INTERVIEWER: OK, great. Would you share one of your poems with us?

    SANSOUR: Sure. You know, I have several thoughts, but you've
    expressed that you'd like a specific one, so I'm going --

    INTERVIEWER: Actually tell the story of that before you do it.


    SANSOUR: It was a letter from an Israeli soldier to his mother. And
    this poem was inspired during the really horrible attacks that
    happened in Gaza, oh my God, almost a year ago now. And the attack on
    Gaza has stopped, but it was in the midst of the shelling, and I was
    in a conversation with an Israeli woman who told me that her son is in
    a tank going to, into Gaza. It wasn't her son. It was her friend's
    son. And so I was really shaken by that, to be that close, kind of.
    And so I tried in some way to understand what happens to somebody who
    decides to do that.


    INTERVIEWER: And this is actually the poem that you shared the first
    time that I ever heard you do a poem, was this poem, and you shared it
    at the LA event, as I mentioned earlier.


    SANSOUR: It's called A Letter From An Israeli Soldier To His Mother:

    `Moving into Gaza, no fighters here. A loud question bursts in my
    chest. What am I doing here? They say I must fulfill my duties to
    protect my people.

    My people are at a shopping mall consuming, consuming the new opium of
    the masses. No fighters here. I am panicked. I have never seen
    their faces before, Palestinians, those creatures behind the wall. I
    have never seen their faces before. What do I do here? The little
    girl paralyzed, stuck to the ground like a wounded rabbit. I looked
    at her. I just killed your mother, your father and your brother's
    son. What am I doing here? I wonder as I celebrate our triumph in
    the Gaza Strip, her eyes haunt me, the little girl. I don't know her
    name. Better not to. It would be worse if I did. I must celebrate.

    I must celebrate. My commander is here. He says, God of your hard
    work, whom Almud assures me, we will protect each one of you from such
    allegations, war crimes nonsense. No war crimes here. No war crimes
    here, just a polite request. Lady with the ten children, we have come
    into your home.

    Choose which five of your children you want to give as a gift to
    Israel. You don't want to choose? We will choose for you. I chose
    two, and Yosi chose the other three. We shot them dead in front of
    her eyes. No war crimes here. Good job. We are proud of you. And
    the question keeps trying to pass through the checkpoints of my mind,
    the security walls of my heart that shot a child. What am I doing
    here? We are only defending ourselves. These children grow up to be
    suicide bombers. I am just following orders. No war crimes here.
    And the lingering question, what did I just do there? What am I doing
    here? The sound of a woman crying, a moving limb from under the
    rubble, and a dead human body made dinner for dogs, white phosphorous
    and nerve gas.

    No war crimes here. I am just protecting my people from Arabs who eat
    with their hands. No war crimes here, mother. I just killed a woman,
    and her child won't stop crying.'

    INTERVIEWER: Thank you.


    SANSOUR: Thank you.


    INTERVIEWER: We have, with the Goldstone Report just coming out
    recently, there's a lot more scrutiny about what's going on over
    there, and yet at the same time, there's a lot of push back on the
    Gladstone Report, isn't there?

    SANSOUR: Yes, unfortunately. With Obama pressuring Mahmoud Abbas, and
    Mahmoud Abbas being a puppet for the American and Israel governments.

    It's very sad, because all the work that the Palestinians and
    Palestine have been doing, all the activists across the country here
    and everywhere have been doing, has been undermined by these
    pressures. And it's very unfortunate. So it's more reason for us to
    keep our working to make the truth be heard.


    INTERVIEWER: To bring it out, yeah. Do you have another poem you'd
    like to share?

    SANSOUR: Sure I have. Do you want a softer one?

    INTERVIEWER: No, it's up to you. I want you to choose the one that's
    closest to your heart with the conversation that we're having.


    SANSOUR: With the conversation we're having, I want to highlight
    something that a lot of times gets a little dismissed, or not
    dismissed, because it's not talked about.

    And that is, other than the physical attack that has happened to my
    people, I feel that for me, very, very painful attacks have been on my
    identity and who we are, particularly like I just shared in the
    beginning of this conversation, I grew up with a very strong
    connection to the land. And that is slowly really going away in
    Palestine, particularly because as the wall has been built, as Israel
    has confiscated most agricultural land, we have, our culture that is
    very much based in agriculture has been disappearing, and that is
    very, very painful for me. And another painful aspect is that a lot
    of our culture and our cultural symbols are being also stolen, such as
    our food. And now it's served in different restaurants as Israeli
    food.

    And for me, that's very painful.

    So I, actually, I've never read this poem before, but I really want to
    read it. It's a short poem, and it happens, it was inspired when I
    was at a gathering, and this woman offered me Israeli food, and she
    said, ah, we've got this delicious food. And it's from the Israeli
    store. And I looked, and it was all Palestinian food. So this poem
    is called, This Is Not Israeli Food:

    `This is not Israeli food. Do not insult my grandmother's hand that
    dried the eggplant seeds and planted them just for the babaganush.
    These seeds are for making mashi. Those are for making intempel. She
    knew every strand of eggplant, spent the day in the kitchen with my
    mother roasting them until they reached the perfect tenderness.

    Then they peeled them with their hard working fingers. I couldn't
    tell the difference as she was peeling between her wrinkled skin and
    the skin of the vegetable, wrinkles, years of working this land.
    Don't tell me this is Israeli food.

    Babaganush, the name you stole, has other sisters. Intempel for when
    we add the pennyay. You serve me Israeli food, my food, with an
    Israeli label.

    A stone got stuck in my stomach.

    I couldn't fully swallow. My silence when you said it hurt me more
    than your words. This is not Israeli food. I decided not to touch
    the hummus laying on the table. I will not taste intempel, AKA
    babaganush, not until you respected its ancestors.

    But I ate some olives, one olive at a time. They are my olives. You
    can call them Israeli food, but I know which trees they came from, and
    they know the smell of my hands that dig them from the earth into
    buckets to be washed, to be salted, to be pressed, to be pickled. I
    ate one olive at a time to honor their sister trees, a million of them
    that were forced out of their soil, Israeli food. In the last four
    years alone, Israel has uprooted one million olive trees. I will
    leave you with that thought as you tell me this is Israeli food.'

    INTERVIEWER: The other piece about the indigenous Palestinians is that
    they actually know how to work with the land that they have been on
    for so long, and they're able to coax water where the Israelis have
    not been able to do that, since they are really foreigners to that
    land. They don't feel the world. They don't feel the earth in the
    same way. And so I understand that a lot of Palestinians have been
    recently, not a lot, but Palestinians are being hired to teach the
    Israelis how to actually work the land. Have you heard that?

    SANSOUR: I haven't heard about that, but I wouldn't be surprised. I
    mean, one thing that, again, also is very painful, aside than the
    human crime, is the environmental crime that the Israeli government
    has been committing. Particularly like, for example, the Jordan River
    has been derailed, basically, to irrigate the desert. I mean, bananas
    are not supposed to grow in the desert, and Israel has been celebrated
    in the world of agribusiness as, you know, the hero of agribusiness,
    which as we know now it's not a sustainable way to live. But also
    like when we took the Olive Tree Circus, and we were walking with the
    farmers through the land. I mean, the farmers know exactly every
    stone, every plant, what it does, whether they can eat it or not. And
    you know, we have to walk through these terraces.

    And some of these terraces are ancient. I mean, some terraces where I
    come from are some of the oldest in the world, and they're used to
    preserve the soil and the earth and all of that. My grandmother would
    be building terraces with my grandfather [UNINTELLIGIBLE] preserve the
    soil. Anyway, and so these bulldozers come, and they just take down
    these ancient terraces and destroy the land. But the settlers also
    that come, they come in, and they build these concrete homes on top of
    this really nice land. And they don't know the plants. They don't
    know anything. And they really destroy the soil. And so that is a
    tragedy, not just for the impact on the farmer and his family. It's a
    major tragedy because of what we're doing to the earth. And that's
    really, I view, I don't if you've heard or noticed, but there's a lot
    of research also about how the Dead Sea has shrunk completely. I
    remember when we used to be able to go to the Dead Sea. It used to be
    this sea. I mean, it's a sea. It was huge. Now it's like a little
    oasis. It's very, very pathetic looking and very sad, not to mention
    that people who grew up around the Dead Sea, the Palestinians, are not
    allowed to go to the Dead Sea. And I actually would like to take this
    opportunity to mention to people a great campaign that Code Pink has
    been launching against Ahava, which means love, ironically, and it's a
    cosmetic, Israeli cosmetic company, and its facilities are based on
    Palestinian land. And they make cosmetics from the Dead Sea, and they
    sell them. And it's really, if people want to be active and boycott
    something very simple, I mean, you see them, particularly in
    California everywhere in malls.

    They have these booths.

    They're trying to sell you Israeli cosmetics from the Dead Sea. Don't
    buy them. I mean, the facilities are on confiscated land. It goes
    through supporting apartheid regime, and you just don't want to be
    part of that. And it's a simple thing of boycotting a lotion.


    INTERVIEWER: Thanks Vivien. And I want to remind our listeners that
    we're talking with Vivien Sansour.

    You can go to ImaginAction.org to learn more and to find out more
    about the theater that ImaginAction does.

    Also, go to Facebook and look for Al Hara Theater, and you can become
    a fan. Vivien, it's been wonderful to have you. Do you have a final
    little poem that you could share?

    SANSOUR: You know, this poem actually doesn't have a lot to do with
    Palestine.

    Well, it does a little bit, but I like it because it's short, and it's
    for the California listeners. It should also be relevant. And also
    it connects basically all the human struggles together. It's called A
    Cup of Coffee:

    `The day begins with revolution, when you put your arms around me, and
    you insist. Today we will conquer the world with our bodies. Today
    we will make a cup of coffee that will declare our pregnant, dark,
    thick coffee, rooting in our veins, telling the story of a man selling
    flowers in the California heat, cherries, flowers, flowers, sliced
    mangos and santa quitos. He really hates standing in the sun, hates
    begging for you to buy his field coconuts. He hates piercing straws
    into it so you can drink its juice. But life has it that we sit in
    our cars with our A/Cs blasting, and we buy his flowers, charity. I
    go home feeling better about myself.

    I liberated him from another half an hour in the street. I gave him
    the five bucks to eat. And then in the morning, I say, the revolution
    begins with our cup of coffee.

    I will not drink Starbucks, but I will drive my car to the Peet's
    rally. I will boycott Israeli products, but I will pay my taxes.

    And it takes me some time to realize the seeds of my first garden have
    not sprouted, and the soil is not yet clean. Pesticides run in the
    rivers of my body, heading straight to my heart, a blocked artery, a
    failed surgery, and a revolution not in the making. The man is still
    selling sliced mangos, standing in the sun.

    He is strip searched by Los Angeles police, lest he forget he is
    illegal.'

    INTERVIEWER: That was Vivien Sansour, poet, theater director and
    activist. You can contact Vivien through ImaginAction.org:
    I-M-A-G-I-N-A-C-T-I-O-N dot org.

    And that's our show for this week. As usual, all views expresses are
    those of the host and guests and not KZSU or Stanford University. You
    can find all our archived shows at RaisingSandRadio.org and download
    any of them. Tune in again next week. We air and are streamed from
    2:00 to 3:00 pm Pacific time, or you can download any of our shows
    later, as I say, at RaisingSandRadio.org.


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