Between 1987 and 1994, well more than one hundred thousand Palestinians wer
e incarcerated as "security" prisoners by Israeli occupation forces. The ex
periences of these men presented particular problems of representation. Whi
le the author tried to empathetically write about their human experiences o
f suffering, he discovered that trauma can be appropriated by different gro
ups and invested with different emotional and political meanings. During th
e uprising called the Intifada of the 1980s and early 1990s, the nationalis
t youth described prisoners (often themselves) as a vanguard in the Palesti
nian struggle. After the arrival of the Palestinian Authority in 1994, the
prisoners were recast as victims in need of rehabilitation, and many became
rank-and-file members of Palestinian security. The process of ethnographic
discovery described here suggests that ethnography aimed only at providing
a "native's point of view" is insufficient. Politically engaged anthropolo
gy can and should do more than trying to humanize cultural others who suffe
r.