Sitting shoulder to shoulder on
a beige L-shaped couch, members of Ottawas Jewish and Arab
communities chat and tell jokes as they pick at the food on paper
plates. Others mill about the basement, hovering near the marble
countertop where traditional delicacies lie waiting under cellophane
wrap.
Dr. Qais Ghanem, a soft-spoken man with neatly combed greying
hair, wanders around the room, weaving his way around people
and chairs.
I never get to enjoy the food as much when this is at my
house, Ghanem confides, adding hes too busy looking
after his guests.
An advocate for human rights, the Yemen-born neurophysiologist
founded Potlucks for Peace in 2002. It brings Jews and Arabs
together in Ottawa to share food and talk about resolving the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
The group meets monthly and has seen its membership grow from
a handful to nearly 60 today. For them, Ghanems courage
and devotion is a beacon of hope for the future.
Ghanem, an Arab, was inspired to form the group after listening
to a panel discussion about the Middle East on Parliament Hill.
What he had hoped would be a respectful and meaningful discussion
soon turned into a heated debate.
It was tense. It was an exchange of blame, which is often
what happens at meetings like this, he recalls. They
didnt go into solutions, which is what I was hoping. They
went back into what they perceived were the mistakes committed
in the past.
But during a break in the debate Ghanem saw something that moved
him a Palestinian and a Jewish woman who were speaking
like close friends. So he approached them and from there the
idea of Potlucks for Peace was born.
The first meeting was very stiff and suspicious,
he recalls. It was cold. It was just small talk. The food
helps, though, he adds. Because when you break bread
with people you talk about the olives, you talk about the bagels
. . . these are neutral, harmless things you can talk about,
like the weather. Breaking bread is a good way of making friends.
It wasnt until six months later, Ghanem says, that people
began feeling comfortable speaking their minds. From there they
started tackling more difficult topics.
Despite Ghanems efforts to convince people to give the
group a try, not everyone embraced the idea.
Samah Sabawi, a young Palestinian woman with a contagious smile
and penetrating brown eyes, was reluctant to join because she
saw the group as a waste of time.
I was hesitant because I was under the impression it was
just a social where Arabs and Jews would get together and eat
something and have a good time and go home and pat themselves
on the back and say, Were not racist. We spoke to
the other and that would be the end of that.
Although Ghanem breaks out laughing at the suggestion that convincing
people to join the group is a pet project, he never tired of
trying to win over Sabawi.
I talked to her about it every time I saw her, Ghanem
says. I said to her, look, Im not even a Palestinian
and Im doing this and you are a Palestinian so it should
be you who is taking this initiative, not me.
Sabawi acknowledges that while he wasnt pushy, he was persistent.
What ultimately made her decide to give Potlucks for Peace a
chance was when several Jewish members came to watch a play she
had produced about the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
I realized that they were open-minded, Sabawi says.
Just the fact that they were there meant that they were
willing to listen.
So she went to her first meeting in 2004 and was amazed at how
eager everyone was to learn about each other and talk about the
conflict in the Middle East.
She is quick to credit Ghanems patience, hospitality and
devotion to human rights for the success of the group.
Hes not doing any of this for anything other than
his own passion for social issues, she says.
But not everyone has such high praise for his efforts, and Ghanem
says it has taken courage to stand up to the criticism.
He remembers the response of a Jewish colleague when approached
about joining the group.
No way. I wouldnt want to talk to them,
Ghanem recalls. Them being we as Arabs.
But much to his dismay, he says many Arab friends who held him
in high regard were no more responsive, particularly Palestinians.
Their attitude was: First of all, this will not get
us anywhere. Secondly, I am a Palestinian. I have been robbed
of my land. Ive been robbed of my olive trees. I am not
allowed to go back to my place of birth. So why am I coming here
to talk to these people? Its as if we were saying I accept
what youve done, he says.
While he says these friendships remained intact, he felt slighted
nonetheless.
It hurt me a bit, Ghanem says.
I thought they would support me . . . But fortunately they
werent the majority and that is why this group is still
here.
Nour El-Kadri is one of Ghanems friends who wont
stand by him when it comes to Potlucks for Peace.
El-Kadri doesnt support it because he says the dialogue
between group members fails to examine the root causes of the
conflict between Palestinians and Israelis. In his eyes the group
overlooks the human rights violations that have taken place against
Palestinians.
We havent seen strong statements from this group
about the wall, about the atrocities, he says. Theyre
not getting to the tough issues at all.
A Lebanese engineer, El-Kadri compares the groups approach
to beginning construction on a building by starting with the
tenth floor.
You have to start at the base, he says. You
have to find the problem. Once you find it, analyze it. See what
are the root causes, and those results should be the fundamental
building blocks, otherwise all other efforts are in vain.
Others are confident Ghanems efforts can make a difference.
Human rights lawyer Lawrence Greenspon, a Jewish member of Potlucks
for Peace, says he sees grassroots movements like this as a way
to help end the conflict.
Quoting well-known American anthropologist Margaret Mead, Greenspon
says, One person with the commitment to follow an
idea through can change the world. In fact, its the only
thing that ever has. It has to come from the people. It
cant be imposed. Weve learned that. It cant
be dictated. Weve learned that. It cant be achieved
through violence. Weve certainly learned that, he
says.
Ghanem also has high hopes for Potlucks for Peace and what it
can accomplish.
He says he hopes to organize a panel discussion with group members
to show the public that the conflict between Palestinians and
Israelis can be discussed without tempers flaring.
I want it to be the exact opposite of what I saw originally.
Once we break the taboo, you will see how things will change,
he says.
What motivates Ghanem is the motto that has always been at the
back of his mind, which he shortened down to an acronym
SCSC. This stands for stop complaining, start contributing.
I hear the Arabs complain all the time, This is wrong,
that is wrong, they did this to us, he says.
I say to them, you always complain, complain, but do nothing
about it. I do things. Im going to take the initiative.I
know Ill have my fingers burnt from time to time, but at
my age I really dont care. |