O 0 Street scene in Gaza City. Palestinian boys on a residential street in Ramallah. Israeli people. Polls show that half believe even more than before that the West Bank and Gaza should be re- tained. The other half say with equal fervor that the territories must be returned to the Arabs. No one in Israel ignores the upris- ing. "We cannot speak for two minutes without talking about it," says one Israeli. The very word "in- tifada" is now an integral part of the Israeli lexicon. Viewed in hindsight, the events that sparked the uprising seem like a car careening down a hill out of con- trol, gaining speed and destructive potential, as bystanders watch with increasing horror. On Dec. 6, 1987, 200,000 American Jews gathered in Washington, D.C., to rally for Soviet Jewry. Few paid attention to the news that an Israeli merchant had been stabbed to death in Gaza City. Two days later, an Israeli truck struck two Arab cars, killing four Palestinians and injuring seven others. Rumors spread through Gaza that the Israeli driver was the brother of the murdered man and was out for revenge. An Israeli inquiry called the crash an accident, but did nothing to calm the bubbling emotions which were ready to ignite into violence. On Dec. 9, a clash took place bet- - ween an Israeli patrol and Palesti- nian youth in Gaza's Jabaliya refugee camp. It left one dead and 16 wounded. Since then, nearly 200 Palesti- nians have died in the violence. One Israeli soldier has been stabbed to death. The intifada has both disrupted and reinforced normal life for Israelis and Palestinians. They continue to live unhindered in their separate communities, coming together to do business, all the while very aware of that other reality. No one quite knows what to do about it. "It's very complicated;' more than one Palestinian and Israeli has said. On this, both peoples seem to be in agreement. In the Middle East, nothing is ever what it appears to be at first. Take the question of fair trials. An Israel television report accus- ed the IDF of allowing arrested Arabs to sit in jail for months before trial. "People say in a decent society people deserve a speedy trial;' com- ments Professor David Ricci of the Israel Defense Forces' Spokesman's Office. "Some say it takes a poet to describe things;' he muses. "In the case of the intifada it would take an anthropologist?' Ricci did a tour, of reserve duty in the Arab city of Ramallah and saw the obstacles placed in the way of the pursuit of justice. In Ramallah, he says, nothing worked. Most of the Palestinians arrested there were charged by the Israelis with throwing stones. All pleaded innocent. "Nobody threw a stone in the West Bank," he says with irony. "If everyone who was given a parking ticket pleaded innocent and demand- ed a trial, nothing would work." That was just the beginning of the problem. The local Arab police force had resigned, following orders of the uprising's leaders. There was no one to take the accused from jail to court. By the time a prisoner had his day in court, the soldier who was witness to the stone-throwing incident was often no longer stationed in Ramallah. The army now had to track him down to testify. "It could take days to find him;' Ricci says. And the soldier's commanding officer would not always agree to release him to travel back to Ramallah. Finally, Ricci says, the charge of stone throwing is difficult to prove. "So what happens is we arrest people. And instead of coming to trial, they sit in jail a couple months and they're released:" Slogans and Hospitality R amallah is a rather prosper- ous looking Arab town north of Jerusalem. Driving from central Jerusalem to Ramallah takes less time than driving between Detroit's two Jewish Community Centers. Around 5 p.m., when a late after- noon hush hangs over the city, a group of residents mingles on Nasser Street. They are picking berries from a tree. There is little else to do in Ramallah. The general strike keeps stores closed all but three hours a day. The strikes are becoming a way of life, says one of the men. He seems amiable. Not everyone is. "Are you a Jew?" asks a woman in the group. "Yes? Well, get out of here." She makes an angry face and a "shooing" gesture with her hands. A few blocks away, a man who once lived in the United States stops to speak. He quickly shifts from small talk to politics. The situation is very bad, he says. Especially for the refugees in the camps. The solution to the problem is for Israel to pull out of the territories and grant the Palestinians a state. The Arab countries are no friends of the Palestinians, he continues. They divide the Palestinians for their own ends. The Arab states are no threat to Israel. In fact, they help Israel against the Palestinians. By this time a group of young boys has gathered. One or two pass by on bicycles and shout, "PLO forever:' but most seem curious to see who I am and why I am in Ramallah. They take me on a tour of the neighborhood. The town is beginning to wake up. Families sit in their backyards. Children appear on the streets. They wear jeans and tennis shoes and T- shirts with English lettering. Signs of construction are everywhere. The white and cream- THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25