Tuesday, August 29, 2006


The Beginnings of COME ON-SUSSMAN’S SERMON

I suppose the easiest thing about a blog is to design it and set it up, the hard thing is to keep on going at it, to maintain it with information that will not only excite the author but also those kind folk who wish to receive it.

I have always been someone with much to rant and rave about, someone who loves to document and record experiences and events for my own enjoyment, for the enjoyment of others and the very least for the sake of posterity.

My maxim in recent weeks has been to know where you are going , you have to know where you come from.

I see this blog as not just focussing on the current and the future, but also my past, it will look at what I get up to, what I aspire to get up to and what I have gotten up to.

My good friend, and blogger evangelist Dovi Myers( dovimyers.blogspot.com ) has been hassling me for weeks to start my own blog, I started it, when I read on his that Iranian President Ahamdeninjad had already started his own and that George W Bush was about to launch his, I realised that I had no time left to not finish it. Here it is.

Come on-Sussman’s Sermon promises to be my take on the world and on myself. I don’t intend for it to be generic or superficial, but rather original.


Comrades

My weekly exploration of London took me to the Western section of Highgate Cemetery, took me to the tombstones of notables such as author George Eliot whose real name was Mary Cross, her grave has both names on it.

However, it is the final resting place of Karl Marx.

Judging by the flowers, alot of people still pay homage to the man, and by the stones on the tombstone, alot of people have not forgotten that he was ofcourse of Jewish descent.

It is a hulking bust of the man and his tombstone overshadows most (not all) tombstones in the cemetery. A lot of communists are buried near him.

These include Jim Cronin, who one must assume is a relation if not the father of Jeremy Cronin, Yusuf Daddoo who was head of the Communist Party in SA, Sello Moet, and a very interesting tombstone for David Cohen, which is in English and Arabic.

If you want close ups of any of the text on the Marx stone or of other communists buried there just ask.

The suburb of Highgate itself is amazing, used to be a village, but because of the modern delights of urban sprawl it is now part of the city, but still has a unique, small town feel to it.

Wayne


Northern Exposure

9th August 2006
Dear All,

I write this from the plush peaceful, sanitized Sheraton Hotel in Ramat Gan, I have rejoined all the olde fogies on the Solidarity Tour and have bid farewell to Zev Krengel who traveled with me to the North.

An observation made by Zev was that where ever you go, the residents there believe that they are not in danger, but if they hear that you are going to visit another place, you are mad, because they think that is where the Katyushas will fall.

We rushed off and after Paula Slier and her cameraman to Metulla (on the border). Zev remarked that he had hardly slept because of the persistent booms the night before.

Driving to Metulla, a beautiful scenic village, which is usually full of tourists at this time. 75% of residents had left! Only some men were left, as we entered a siren went off and we ran into the clinic and met an MDA volunteer who was ex PE.

After the all clear we went to The Alaska Inn to see where Paula Slier (ex-SABC) was broadcasting from with a perfect view from Lebanon. There were quite a lot of journos there.

We were then met by two farmers (the one a 3rd generation Metullan). They took us to their apple orchards. They have lost $6 million of business. All their Thai workers have absconded, and the Arab workers hardly ever show up. Their fields have been damaged by rockets, tanks clearing space and by lack of attention. The entrance to Lebanon was in front of us.

I saw a house on the other side which had been hit. All workers carried a gun in the one hand and a hose or shovel in the other. Lying on the floor all around us were soldiers who could not been seen with the naked eye, bedecked in camouflage. The farmers became shifty and wanted to get out of there, straight in front of us was a key entry point to Lebanon, I could have walked further but did not want to risk.

On the way back to Metulla we entered a militarized zone where the army police flipped out when we wanted to take photos.

We then said good bye to Paula's cameraman Yonni who was weraing his helmet and bullet proof vest to go to Menara a kibbutz on the periphery of Israel, but on a fault line of the current conflict.

We passed the turn off to Kfar Giladi where 11 soldiers had been killed the day before,

We went further up, lots of tanks on the field firing above us, the higher we went the more damage we saw, the louder the cacophony of noise became.

We saw rockets land below us.

We arrived at Margaliyot as we took a wrong turn we saw three men gesticulating at us, pointing out that we were mad. We went into the shelter for a code red! There were Kurdish Jews, one was amazed that Zev was dati-religious.

At one stage when we ventured out, the one guy panicked and literally pushed Paula and Zev into the shelter.

We eventually got the all clear from them and went up to Menara

I shat myself, the roads were steep and the Katyushas were landing below us, we past a militarized zone. The soldiers thought we were mad. The eventually allowed us and we visited lonely Peter Kurland, formerly from PE. He was so happy to see us, it was clear that the constant rattling had affected Peter's sleep patterns, and he was visibly stressed. Toda a lonely, isolated almost forgotten man, on the border.

He took us for walks, oblivious to persistent fire power, he took us to the cable car which had not been used for the entire holiday period. The kibbutz was already financially unstable.

When we left we chatted to young soldiers, and soon another code red, this time two bulking tanks drove past us and into battle...

We drove back down Margaliyot, and on our way out we were hauled in, the fire got louder. This time by Kurdish, Iranian and Iraqi Jews. We stayed in and out of the shelters for 45 minutes, the local cop started telling us what we could and could not do, we spent most our time in the bunker. We were taken to vantage points and we saw the clear destruction and devastation and the smoke rising from falling Katyushas.

Things then went scary and surreal.....


We heard that Yossi Sarid (Former Head of Meretz, and Minister of Education) was on the Kibbutz, here was an intellectual, supposedly bourgeois Ashkenazi living among simple Sephardi farmers. Every night Yossi addresses the residents on the days events-one of the only forms of entertainment for these people.

Accompanied by the police van we went to go meet the man. As we arrived at the chicken coop to meet Yossi Sarid, he was there because in between writing columns for Haaretz and appearing on TV, he primarily collects eggs and helps the Kibbutz, because all Thai workers have absconded.

As we got out Zev jumped back a Katyusha landed 80 metres from us. I crapped myself, the guards panicked and ordered us back, I was non-plussed, I did not come this far not to meet him.

Out walked Yossi, not phased

Yossi Sarid-Nice to meet you (monotonous tone)
Wayne-Shalom, what an honour
Zev-Can we have a picture
Sarid-OK
The Policeman-Are you not coming with us to the shelter
Sarid-No, Im busy

He walked back to collect his eggs, this was surreal, we thought he was unfriendly, but for me this was Zionism, here is someone who gets called a leftist, a non-Zionist, who unlike many other public figures and leaders and politicians who left the North and just come back for the odd photo op, Sarid has stayed to help the economy, help his brethren, help his Moshav by collecting eggs.

He is not leaving his people and he is not letting the Katyushas prevent him from collecting those eggs,

We in turn had rushed back to the shelter. We stayed and soon, these people who did not even know us or who we could hardly converse with started giving us lunch.
An amazing Kurdish meal, however we had to leave also and run the gauntlet to miss the usual 3oclock afternoon boom show. We went down, and in the area where tanks were earlier in the day, lay 2 or 3 tanks, the rest had gone into battle.

There were less civilian cars, and more army cars going up into battle, there was more scorched earth and less people in Kiryat HaShmona, there were more stressed journalist at Kibbutz Hagoshrim and less provisions in the shop and there were more buses with soldiers coming in and less people in houses in the area.

2 and a bit hours later we were back in sunny, beautiful Tel Aviv, beaches were packed and life goes on.

As I saw good night, I wonder how many nights Peter Kurland will spend at Menara, what will it take for him to leave, on our way to Maayan Baruch, I spoke to a former SA Family, who were fleeing to Tel Aviv, for them it was one Katyusha too many,

My adrenalin rush has subsided, I am bored now, however, I will sleep well tonight, as rockets wont land here, I find the quietness in my hotel quite eerie,,,,


Wayne Sussman
Ramat Gan


UP NORTH 8TH AUGUST 2006

Shalom All,

Just a quick update.

Yesterday Zev Krengel and I temporarily left the SA Solidarity mission with Israel. We decided to head up north and go and meet the South Africans affected by the conflict. We are doing a documentary on how they are affected by the conflict.

Yesterday afternoon we went to go meet Anna Ben David and her 3 children in their bunker in Haifa. When we got there, we found the kids playing under the entrance to the flat, but while we were there 3 sirens went off. It was amazing to see how the kids just knew what to do.

Luckily all 3 were false alarms.

We saw where CNN broadcasts from etc.

We then ventured further north to Kfar Vradim, a beautiful village where some ex South Africans live.
We visited Avi Hirschfield, a guy who is a professional photographer who has been dealing with all the attacks in his village, 90 minutes before we arrived a big Katyusha landed and hit a field near by.

The picture below shows Avi with the left over number plate of a car which had been destroyed 70 metres from his house.

A lot of people had left this village.

We then got into contact with Paula Slier and arranged accommodation on Kibbutz Hagorshim, past Kiryat Ha Shmona.

We were told to drive with our windows open, for two reasons

1) To hear echoes which precedes the rockets falling
2) If the rocket were to land nearby to prevent glass from shattering.

We drove past Kiryat Hashmona which was like a ghost town.

Eerily quiet, one or two shops open, we missed our turnoff to the Kibbutz and soon, all what we smelt was burnt forests and all what we saw were military vehicles and some firls on fire, all we heard was boom, boom, boom. we did a hasty about turn and finally found the Kibbutz where we met Paula (Slier used to be a journo for SABC) she now works for a Russian English Language Station. Most journalists stay here.

We spoke to her and a few other journalists. It was very interesting. In the other photo, is Zev, Paula, a soldier who had just returned from a mission, and me.

Today, we will go to Metula to meet an SA reserve soldier, meet a worker who refuses to leave his land and go visit South Africans on Kibbutz Maayan Baruch, Kfar Blum, Merana, Kfar Hannassi etc.

The people are amazed that we are here, they think we mad.

Last night when laying my head down I just heard boom, boom, boom,

Sadly it becomes part of the monotony and I fell asleep.

At this moment the journos are heading out for that big story, we will accompany Paula to Metulla to do a story.

Have I felt threatened or scared?

Yes, when we got last night, I crapped myself. However, writing from the Kibbutz, irrationally I feel immune.