
One-man play by U.N. official
draws ire in Israel
By Dion Nissenbaum | McClatchy Newspapers
JERUSALEM _The United Nations has never been
especially beloved in Israel, where the international body is often
viewed as biased and pro-Palestinian. Vandals in certain religious
Jerusalem neighborhoods have been known even to deface U.N. cars by
adding certain vowels around U.N. stickers to create a vulgar curse
word.
Now the United Nations relief agency serving
Palestinians is raising new controversy with a one-man show in which the
agency's chief spokesman depicts the final days of the U.N.'s central
warehouse in Gaza City, which was destroyed in January by Israeli
military fire.
The spokesman, Chris Gunness, says the effort is
intended to improve the U.N.'s image by showing Israelis that they share
values and history with the organization.
"Using the symbolism of the warehouse burning down
really touches a nerve for a lot of Israelis," said Gunness, a
49-year-old former BBC reporter who once covered the United Nations in
New York.
But that touch isn't always pleasant. One man stood
up at the debut performance in Tel Aviv to try to shout Gunness down.
The play's scheduled two-night run in Acre was abruptly cancelled after
the festival director came under pressure.
Relations between Israel and the United Nations,
never good, have become especially strained since Israel's Gaza
offensive last winter.Aimed at hobbling Gaza's hard-line Hamas rulers
and deterring Palestinian militants from persistently firing crude
rockets at southern Israel, the offensive took a big toll on U.N.
schools, health clinics, and convoys. Several U.N. staff members were
killed, as were dozens of Palestinian civilians who'd sought refuge from
the fighting.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued a
highly critical report that accused Israel of "negligence or
recklessness" in failing to avoid hitting U.N. compounds. Ban also
established a special committee that is expected to release a critical
report in the coming weeks on Israeli and Hamas actions during the
fighting in Gaza.
During the Israeli offensive, Gunness repeatedly went
on television to challenge Israeli claims that Hamas fighters were
seeking refuge in U.N. buildings.
The Israeli strike on the central UN compound in Gaza
City during the waning days of the conflict was one of the most
contentious.
Hundreds of refugees had sought shelter in the
compound run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, better known
as UNRWA.U.N. workers said they repeatedly called the Israeli military
and asked them to redirect their attacks because they were hitting their
compound.Despite the appeals, Israeli white phosphorus shells eventually
ignited the main warehouse. U.N. workers rushed to prevent burning white
phosphorus from igniting trucks filled with diesel.
"It's a tragic piece of symbolism that the very
pallets that we deliver humanitarian assistance on are on fire in Gaza,"
Gunness told the Democracy Now! radio show on the day the warehouse was
set ablaze.It wasn't long before Gunness transformed that symbol into a
one-man show.
The inspiration came from Tamar Berger, a teacher at
Israel's Bezalel Academy of Art and Design who'd asked Gunness to speak
as part of a Tel Aviv presentation on storage space that included
archeologists, planners, doctors, and even someone from the Israeli
military.
Gunness decided to become the embodiment of the Gaza
City warehouse in a piece now titled "Building Understanding: Epitaph
for a Warehouse."The show begins with a video montage from Gaza. A
spotlight hits Gunness, sitting on a barstool: "Shalom, marhaba," says
Gunness, using Hebrew and Arabic words for "hello." "I am a warehouse...
What you saw were my final, terrifying days."For about 45 minutes,
Gunness uses video interviews with U.N. staff members who were in the
compound and footage of the fire to tell his story.
Gunness doesn't accuse Israel of war crimes in the
show.But, during the first performance in May, a man in the audience got
up to disrupt the show and accuse Gunness of distorting the facts.Berger
said the show generates a strong reaction from Israelis, most of whom
serve some time in the military. Many are jarred by the images."People
can't face reality and, once they do face it, it's realizing that a lot
of what you have been taught to believe is true (isn't) necessarily
true," she said. "All your truths collapse — and this is something very
difficult to face."
The following month, Gunness took the show to Sderot,
the southern Israeli town hardest hit by years of Palestinian rocket
attacks from Gaza.At the request of a teacher, Gunness performed his
show at Sderot's Sapir College, where one of the students was killed by
a Gaza rocket last year.Gunness was set to perform earlier this month as
part of a theater festival in Acre, the mixed Arab-Jewish city on
Israel's coast that was the scene last year of violent clashes.
Hours before he was to go on stage, Gunness got word
that the Masrachid Festival director, Roby Firas, had pulled the plug.
Firas said that festival board members had approached him days earlier
and essentially told him to cancel the show.Mony Yosef, a founder of the
Masrachid Festival, called the play "amateur" crap and accused Gunness
of trying to use the festival's reputation to promote the U.N."We don't
want to make PR for UNRWA," said Yosef.
Reem Hazzan, an Acre activist who helped Firas with
the show, said that the director received direct political pressure from
Acre's city government."If you hold the UNRWA program, you can forget
about funding for the whole Masrachid festival," Hazzan said the group
was told.But the cancellation led to several invitations from other
theaters in Israel. Gunness now plans to perform the show on Oct. 22 in
Jaffa, the mixed port city south of Tel Aviv. Firas said he wants to
bring Gunness back to Acre for a weeklong run.
Despite the contentious reception, Gunness said the
piece is not meant to be political. It's meant, he said, to show
Israelis what happened to the U.N. in Gaza — and to open a dialogue with
Israelis who remain skeptical of the international body."The UN was born
of the ashes of the Holocaust and so was Israel," said Gunness. "The
piece says we have a lot in common and I think it challenges some
perceptions."
"Building Understanding" is going on at HaSimta Theatre in Jaffa
on 22 October
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