Three women, one voice for peace: Group seeks to bridge Israeli-Palestinian divide

By: QUINN EASTMAN - Staff Writer | Saturday, April 28, 2007 12:04 AM PDT

POWAY -- A trio of young women represent both Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization challenged a Jewish audience in Poway on Friday night with the question: "What are you going to do to end the conflict?"

Representatives from an international group representing both the Israelis and Palentistinians called OneVoice visited Temple Adat Shalom to appeal for help fighting "violent extremism" in Israel.

"Our goal is to end the conflict with a negotiated two-state solution," said Adee Telem, OneVoice's outreach director for the western United States.

OneVoice has close to 300,000 members, almost equally divided between Israeli and Palestinian, and is in the middle of a campaign to revive comatose peace negotiations, Telem said.

The campaign will culminate with worldwide demonstrations in September, she said.

"We are not a peace and love group," Telem said. "We are making an appeal to nationalistic self-interest on both sides."

Michal Blinder, from Jerusalem, and Aya Hijazi, from Ramallah, both said their experiences with violence drove them to join OneVoice, even though they were tempted to become bitter and give up.

Blinder, 27, said she was working as a waitress in Jerusalem in 2001 when a suicide bomber struck a Sbarro restaurant across the street, killing 15 and wounding 130.

She described the horrible scene as a "reality check" after returning from travels in Central and South America she embarked on to recover after her service with the Israeli Air Force.

Blinder now works on a OneVoice program where Israeli and Palestinian young people exchange video diaries, she said.

Hijazi, a 21-year-old university student, said that when the Israel military invaded Ramallah in 2002, her father had to pull her to the floor to protect her from bullets going through their house. Soon after, a friend was beaten to death by an Israeli soldier while trying to protect his mother, she said.

Rather than protest in the street or blow herself up in response, she became a legal aid worker for Palestinians in Israeli jails, she said.

The trio's visit was part of the temple's annual "social action" Sabbath service, temple administrator Jane Friedman said.

The temple's social action chairwoman, Rayna Colton, said she was inspired to ask OneVoice to visit after hearing about the group from the sister of its founder, entrepreneur Daniel Lubetzky.

Colton said she was pleased with Friday's turnout of roughly 200.

After the speeches, the OneVoice trio were deep in conversation with temple members of the same age.

"We want to expand our presence in California," Telem said. "It's important for us to get backing in the diaspora [Jewish people living outside Israel]."

For an organization that describes itself as "grass roots," OneVoice has an impressive list of backers and advisers, such as Irwin Jacobs of Qualcomm, Craig Newmark of craigslist and Dennis Ross, a former State Department negotiator.

More information is available at onevoicemovement.org.

-- Contact staff writer Quinn Eastman at (760) 740-5412 or qeastman@nctimes.com.

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HELP wrote on Apr 30, 2007 10:13 AM:We need "ONEVOICE" activity here in ESCONDIDO where the low income Whities with their multi million dollar city council leader are continually blackballing bludgeoning and hate mongering Escondidos WORKING low income Hispanic poor.

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