Links Join MPAC Volunteer Tell A Friend About MPAC Submit Your Article Contact Us Search
   

   Home
   About MPAC
   Media
   Community
   MPAC Issues
   Archive
   MPAC Projects
   Donation
   Matrimonial




 
Rachel Corrie's Words
By James Zogby


Prominent voices in New York's artistic community have been shocked by the efforts to deny freedom of expression to 'My Name is Rachel Corrie.' Three years ago Rachel Corrie, a 23-year-old American peace activist was murdered. She sat down in front of a Palestinian home in Rafah attempting to stop its destruction by an Israel bulldozer. The bulldozer's driver crushed Rachel, brutally ending her life. As quickly as news spread about Rachel's death, websites began publishing selections of her writings: emails to her parents and journal entries that included observations about her life and experiences. Especially powerful were her vivid portrayals of daily life in Gaza. Those who read Rachel's words were moved by the suffering she depicted, the fierce determination and passion for justice she displayed, and the hope she inspired.

It was not surprising, therefore, that a British theatrical group found merit in Rachel’s life and writings. They edited her emails and journal entries into a one-woman play, “My Name is Rachel Corrie,” which has, since 2005, had two critically acclaimed runs on the London stage.

“My Name” has yet to appear in the US and given recent developments the play may never be performed on a major US stage. The New York Theatre Workshop, a progressive group long committed to producing innovative and controversial material, bid for, and won the rights to produce Rachel’s play in the US. It was to have opened on March 22, but submitting to unnamed “pressures,” the Workshop announced an indefinite postponement.

A few investigative press accounts have made it clear that the “pressures” that caused the Workshops to back off came from “pro-Israeli” sources. The explanations offered by theatre group officials have been either unconvincing or farcical.


Rachel Corrie before the 'accident' (International Solidarity Movement)


After the 'accident' (International Solidarity Movement)


Rachel Corrie laid dying....or dead.



Rachel later in the morgue

At one point, for example, it was suggested that given Sharon’s illness and Hamas’s victory it would have been insensitive to perform “My Name.” On other occasions, Workshop officials said that given the controversial political nature of the play that they felt a need to either rewrite(!) “My Name” to provide a more balanced context or to hold off on performing it until they could present it alongside another yet to be written piece that focused on testimonies of Israeli victims of terror.

Prominent voices in New York’s artistic community have been shocked by the Workshop’s efforts to deny freedom of artistic _expression to “My Name is Rachel Corrie.” They have expressed outrage at this awkward but still heavy-handed display over censorship.

In response, an outstanding group of artists and activists convened on March 22 at New York’s Riverside Church to protest the cancellation of the play. I was proud to have been asked to co-host the event with Amy Goodman, whose popular national radio program “Democracy Now” has long championed free _expression. The program, entitled “Rachel’s Words” was attended by over 2000. The evening featured a number of prominent US artists reading from Rachel’s works.

The night was inspirational. Rachel’s insights remain poignant and powerful. The suffering that tormented her and the responsibility she felt to stop the brutality of the occupation continue to present a moral challenge. In one entry, for example, Rachel wrote about “watching a father lead his two tiny children, holding his hands, out into the sight of tanks and a sniper tower and bulldozers and Jeeps because he thought his house was going to be exploded.”

“This is the area,” she continued, “where Sunday about 150 men were rounded up and contained with gunfire over their heads and around them while tanks and bulldozers destroyed 25 greenhouses—the livelihoods for 300 people.”

Rachel's response was to stand between the father and the tanks to offer them protection. Why would she do so? Rachel explained that “Coming here is one of the better things I've ever done. . . . I'm in the midst of a genocide which I [as an American] am indirectly supporting and for which my government a largely responsible.”

“It is,” she concludes, “a good for us all to drop everything and devote our lives to making this stop.”

The night was also disturbing. Rachel was murdered trying to make it all stop. And yet the suffering of Palestinians continues. Hanging heavy over the entire evening was the knowledge that Gaza is starving. The Wall continues to be built. Palestinian land continues to be raped by bulldozers planning new settlements and roads. The brutality of the occupation continues to take its toll on the lives of millions.

Political pressure silenced the few Congressional voices who asked for an investigation into Rachel's death. And now, that same pressure has sought to silence “My Name is Rachel Corrie.”

But if our night at Riverside Church made anything clear at all, it is that Rachel's words will continue to live and inspire and disturb. That is why some remain so afraid of the power of this young woman's words. I urge you to  read them.


Resources

We have got to understand that they dream our dreams, and we dream theirs. We have got to understand that they are us. We are them.


-Rachel Corrie, aged 10
Read More

Many of us see wrong in the world; too few of us set out, like your daughter, to right them. In her gentle and compassionate heart was a courage that compelled her to actions that shame those of us who look with horror and apathy on crimes for which we in the United States bear so great a measure of responsibility; crimes that continue day after day. Year after year, generation after generation.


-Sheik Hamza Yusuf. Letter to Rachels parents, Cindy and Craig Corrie.

 

 

Campaigns
 

matrimonialforumecardsnewslettergallery
Copyright MPAC-NG 2004-2010, All Rights Reserved

Disclaimer:
Articles, cartoons and other elements on the Opinion & Analysis and other view section of this website do not necessarily reflect the editorial position of the MPAC, nor can the MPAC be held accountable for these views.

Fair Use Notice: The MPAC website may occasionally contain copyrighted material the use of which may not always have been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. The MPAC is making such material available in its effort to advance understanding of humanitarian, education, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as such (and all) material on this site is distributed without profit. If you wish to use any copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.