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Brian Avery (born 1979) is a former volunteer for the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), who was injured in the face on April 5, 2003 while working for the ISM in the West Bank town of Jenin.
It was reported that Avery, who is American, was "milling with young men throwing rocks at the Israel Defense Forces," while breaking curfew, and was wounded "by the debris thrown up by a warning shot near his feet." [1] Avery said the IDF shot him in the face. [2]
Avery was born in Connecticut, the youngest of three children. His father is a former submarine commander in the U.S. Navy, and his mother a schoolteacher. [3] He attended school in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, and enrolled in the University of North Carolina at Greensboro to study music. He dropped out after a year to play in a rock band for two years, then worked on communal organic farms in North Carolina, France, Spain, and Portugal.
He lived for a year in a housing cooperative in Chicago, and later became associated with the Arab-Jewish Peace Alliance in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where came into contact with the ISM. [4] Shortly afterwards, in January 2003, he travelled to the West Bank to participate in ISM protests against Israel.
In a February 2005 interview, he said:
Avery was taken to an Israeli hospital in Haifa, where he underwent more than three reconstructive surgeries, and spent two months recuperating, then underwent another three operations in the United States. His treatment has allegedly totalled over $1,000,000. He was not charged for his treatment in Israel. [6]
Avery appeared before the Israeli Supreme Court on February 28, 2005 to request a criminal investigation into his shooting. He accused Israeli troops of shooting him without provocation. The court responded by ordering the military to reopen Avery's case. Avery's attorney, Michael Sfard, said that the ruling "shows the military that even internal inquiries should be managed professionally and with care to get testimony from all sides, not just from military," and that it "coerces the military to change its stand on things. This is definitely not usual." [7]
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