In
September
2000, I
decided
to do my
part to
bring
peace to
the
Middle
East. As
a
Canadian
attorney
of
Palestinian
origin,
I
believed
I could
use my
legal
skills
to help
broker a
peace
agreement
between
Israel
and the
Palestinians.
Naive?
Perhaps.
I left
my
comfortable
life in
California
and
moved to
the West
Bank.
Moving
there
was not
easy: I
did not
know
what
life is
like
under
military
rule. My
Western
upbringing
left me
unprepared
for life
without
freedom.
Seven
years
later, I
am still
not used
to it.
As a
lawyer
for the
Palestinian
peace
negotiating
team, I
met
presidents,
prime
ministers,
Nobel
laureates,
secretaries
of state
and
other
important
figures.
But none
of these
individuals
hit me
with the
same
emotional
wallop
as a
young
woman
named
Majda.
Like me,
Majda is
in her
thirties.
Like me,
she
enjoys
classical
music,
theater
and
books.
But
unlike
me,
Majda
has
never
lived a
day as a
free
human
being,
for she
was born
Palestinian
in the
Israeli-dominated
West
Bank.
One day,
Majda
approached
me
saying:
"Ms.
Buttu,
my son
does not
believe
that
Palestine
is on
the sea.
He has
never
seen it
and no
matter
how many
times I
tell
him, he
doesn't
believe
me. You
are
allowed
to
travel.
Please,
take
some
pictures
of the
sea. I
need my
son to
know
that
Palestine
is
bigger
than
just our
town and
a few
checkpoints."
I took
the
camera
in
disbelief:
Majda
lived
less
than 10
miles
from the
sea.
"Have
you been
to the
sea,
Majda?"
I asked.
"No. I
have
made
requests
to the
Israeli
authorities,
but they
have
always
been
denied."
I
traveled
that
weekend
to the
sea with
Majda's
camera.
As I
looked
around,
I tried
to make
sense of
her
life.
How is
it
possible
that a
young
woman
has
never
been to
the sea?
How is
it
possible
that I,
a
Canadian,
can see
Palestine
and yet
a
Palestinian
cannot?
As I
took the
photos,
I faced
a
dilemma:
Should
the
pictures
include
children?
If they
include
children,
will her
son feel
deprived?
In the
end, I
took 30
photos.
Most of
them
were out
of focus
as the
tears
streamed
down my
face.
The next
week I
handed a
smiling
Majda
her
camera.
"Thanks,
Ms.
Buttu.
My son
will be
so
happy!"
My once-naivete
has
since
been
replaced
by
realism:
Peace
will
never
come to
this
region
until
the
Palestinians
are
granted
their
freedom.
It has
been
just
more
than 40
years
since
the
start of
Israel's
military
rule
over the
Palestinians.
Every
day I
wonder
whether
Majda
and her
son will
ever
enjoy a
day of
freedom
-- or
even
visit
the sea.
I
believe,
deeply
believe,
that
Palestinians
and Jews
ought to
be
equals
in this
holy
land. I
believe
more
Americans
would
act on
behalf
of
Palestinians
if they
were
aware of
discriminatory
Israeli
policies.
I
believe
the
inability
of
Majda's
son to
travel
to the
sea in
his
homeland
smacks
of Jim
Crow and
apartheid
and that
it is in
everybody's
interest
to right
this
wrong
without
further
delay.
This, I
believe.
Diana
Buttu is
a
Palestinian-Canadian
lawyer
residing
in
Ramallah,
Palestine.
From
2000 to
2005 she
served
as a
legal
advisor
to the
Palestinian
negotiating
team.
This
piece
originally
appeared
on
National
Public
Radio's
This I
Believe
website
and is
republished
with the
author's
permission.