News From Within
July 9, 2001
By Jeff Halper
At 7:30 this morning (Monday), as I was about to travel with other
members of the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions to the
besieged town of Beit Umar, near Hebron, where tons of produce cannot
be transported to market and are rotting while the inhabitants face
severe hunger, I got a call that six bulldozers accompanied by
hundreds of soldiers were entering the Shuafat refugee camp to the
north of Jerusalem. The ICAHD members proceeded to Beit Umar (a report
on that later), while Arik Aschermann of Rabbis for Human Rights, Liat
Taub, a student and ICHAD staff member, Gadi Wolf, a conscientious
objector who just served time in jail, and I headed for Shuafat,
On the way I had that sinking feeling of powerlessness mixed with
outrage that always accompanied me to events like this - an equal
mixture of responsibility, anger at the injustice, the fundamental
unfairness of it all, and helplessness in the face of an unmoving,
uncaring, cruel and supremely self-righteous system of oppression. On
the way we all worked our cell phones, Arik calling the press, me
calling the embassies and consulates (both the American and European
consulates are very responsive and forthcoming), Liat and Gadi calling
our lists of activists to join us, keeping in touch with our
Palestinian partners as well. Meit Margalit, a Jerusalem City Council
from the Meretz party who has been a steadfast ally, and Salim
Shawamreh, our Palestinian partner who lived in Shuafat before
building a home of his own in nearby Anata, which was demolished three
times, waited for us.
We passed through the familiar and profoundly banal streets of West
Jerusalem, with people all around going about their "normal" lives,
passing the thousands of apartments built for Israelis in East
Jerusalem (50,000 more or less, so that the 200,000 Israelis living in
East Jerusalem today outnumber the Palestinian population), neat
stone-faced apartment blocks framed with trees, shrubbery and lawns,
served by wide streets and sidewalks. Once past the
neighborhood/settlement of French Hill, however, the landscape
changes, though we remain within the city of Jerusalem as defined by
Israel in 1967. The hillsides become barren, strewn with shells of old
cars and garbage. The houses are small, scattered and made of
unattractive cement blocks. No trees, no lawns, no sidewalks,
certainly no parks - just narrow, dusty, pot-holed streets with no
street lights. People, kids walking on the shoulders, competing for
space with mini-vans and old cars. The Third World just a hundred
meters down the road, and in the same city.
And then the soldiers. As we approached the main entrance to the camp,
we saw hundreds of soldiers, Borders Police and regular police, some
mounted on horseback, others in the dozens of military jeeps that
blocked all the entrances to the camp and patrolled its maze of
alleyways. We parked and walked in - careful to stay in touch with
Salim, who sent some people to escort us, uncertain how Israelis would
be received at such a time. We were received well. Walking with our
hosts I was struck by how "normal" life was continuing. Kids played in
the street, men worked in the garages along the roads, women went
about their business. Just a few minutes away houses were being
demolished, the camp was completely overrun by soldiers, yet people
had developed a way to continue their lives no matter what. Sumud,
steadfast, is the Arabic name for it.
We walked through the crowded camp of some 25,000 people, finally
coming out on the top of a hill overlooking the periphery of the camp
and, across the wadi, the narrow valley, the Jerusalem settlement of
Pisgav Ze'ev looming over Shuafat from the opposite hill. Juxtaposed
in this way, the injustice virtually hit you in the face. Here was a
crowded camp, layers of jerry-built concrete homes separated by the
narrowest of alleyways, leading down a slope where the raw sewage of
the camp flowed to the houses where the bulldozers had already started
their demolition work (you could hear the hack-hack-hack of the
pneumatic drills collapsing the concrete roofs), and then, just a
couple hundred meters away, the massive modern housing project of
Pisgat Ze'ev ("Ze'ev's Summit," named after the Likud's founding
father Ze'ev Jabotinsky) with its manicured lawns and trees. And
separating these two world: the stream of sewage down below (Pisgat
Ze'ev has its own closed sewage system, thank you), and the "security
road" where the army patrols at night, guarding the residents of
Pisgat Ze'ev from their neighbors.
In order to avoid the soldiers and police, we walked through the
alleyways and down the slope, sloshing through the sewage to come up
to the scene of the demolitions. The army and police had their backs
turned to us as they guarded the bulldozers and drills from the angry
Palestinian crowd - including the frantic home-owners who were about
to see their life savings go up in dust. We quickly ran to the
bulldozers and lay down in front of them. A symbolic action, to be
sure, but one which created a scene and gave news photographers
something to "shoot." (Because we are Israelis, we have the privilege
of being shot only by cameras\xe1.) For the soldiers our actions are
simply a stupid and incomprehensible, and they cart us away
unceremoniously. We don't bother to argue with them or explain to
them; it is enough that we act as vehicles for getting the images of
demolitions out to the world. Later, when the reporters talk to us, we
can explain what is happening and why it is unjust and oppressive. Our
comments will find their way into official reports (this evening the
US State Department officially deplored the demolitions, and we know
that European and other governments take note). That is our role.
Helplessness in the face of overwhelming force and callousness, yet
faith that all of you, once you know, will generate the international
pressures necessary to end the Occupation once and for all. As an
Israeli, and speaking strictly for myself, I have despaired of ever
convincing my own people that a just peace is the way. Israelis may
passively accept dictates from outside, but a just peace will not come
from within Israeli society.
Arik, Liat and Gadi are hauled away in a police jeep, presumably
arrested. There isn't room for me, so I'm left sitting in the dust, my
clothes torn, just a little bruised from the man-handling and being
hauled over the rocks, but glad to have an opportunity to take
pictures of the demolitions (you can see them at
www.alternativenews.org
today or tomorrow) and to
relay the ongoing developments to reporters. The Palestinians
across the way either watch impassively, helplessly, or when the
bulldozers leave the last rubble heap and approach their homes,
react by climbing to the roof, yelling at the soldiers (women
even dare push them sometimes), occasionally throwing stones.
At these times the soldiers reactions are quick and violent:
high-powered rifles are aimed at the protesters, people are
shoved into police vans, tear gas is thrown (sometimes
inside the houses, though the instructions on the canisters
- produced in the Federal Laboratories in Pennsylvania - clearly state
"for outdoor use only." People often get shot, though that didn't
happen today. The soldiers and police, who just a few minutes before
were joking with each other (from conversations with them over the
years, I haven't encountered any who saw anything wrong with what was
happening, or had any problem blaming the Palestinians for the
demolitions of their own houses, and who refer to what they are doing
as "work"), suddenly become violently enraged. As if the Palestinians
have the chutzpa to resist, as if they are the criminals, as if "we"
now have an opportunity to get even with "them," to extract revenge
for not accepting our Occupation. And one by one the houses are
systematically torn down, this one a shell not yet completed, that one
a four story building intended to provide decent shelter (at last) to
30 members of an extended family (I watch the grandfather crying on
the side, wiping his tears with his kaffiya, trying not to lose his
dignity altogether). Fourteen "structures" (as Israel calls them). By
12:30 the operation is over. The soldiers are in no hurry to leave -
indeed, at least a hundred more arrive in the camp as the demolitions
are winding down. Israel loves to leave the Palestinians "messages."
In the end an army jeep came and I was tossed in the back. We drove up
the security road to Pisgat Ze'ev, where I was told to go home.
Walking over to a bus stop, dirty, smelly from the sewage, my clothes
torn, a woman asks me what happened. Reluctantly I tell her that I was
trying to resist the demolition of some of the homes of her neighbors
in Shuafat, nodding in the direction of the camp. The reaction was
painfully predictable. "Terrorists! They're trying to move their
houses into our neighborhood! Why don't they build with permits, like
we do? They don't pay taxes and expect free houses and services! This
is our country. When I came here from Morocco...") The bus pulls up,
we get on and she tells the driver: "Leave him off in Shuafat. They'll
kill him there." (Though Mayor Olmert declares that at every
opportunity that Jerusalem is a "united" city, there are no municipal
buses to Shuafat or most of East Jerusalem, or street lights, or
sewers, or postal service, or even street names.) An invisible city to
Israelis.
According to LAW, the demolished houses belonged to:
- Mahmoud Al Rifa'ee. 150 m\xee house
- Shaban Al Ajluni. 120 m\xee house
- Sari Abdul Nabi. 120 m\xee house
- Yasir Hamdan. 240 m\xee house
- Arabi Shkair. 250 m\xee house
- Wa'el Alkam. 150 m\xee house
- Abid Musa
- Kamal Faraj
- Lafi Ali
- Jasir Khalaf
Fourteen houses demolished out of 25 that received demolition orders
yesterday (the owners were given no chance to appeal to the courts).
Some 2000 demolition orders outstanding in East Jerusalem alone,
another 2000 in the West Bank and Gaza. 8000 Palestinian houses
demolished since 1967, 500 during the course of the second Intifada,
since September. And WE will not resume negotiations until THEY stop
the "violence."
I wind my way back to Shuafat. Arik, Liat and Gadi made it back before
me and managed to get arrested formally this time (they were released
an hour or so later). I meet up with Salim and Meir and we plan an
"action" for the next day or so - perhaps the rebuilding of one of the
houses, if the Shuafat people are willing. As I head home for a shower
and a change of clothes, I hear Olmert on the radio: "You cannot build
in any city in the world without a permit. They want to build on green
open space that we set aside for their own benefit. The Palestinians
tell me quietly that they support my efforts to fight illegal
building. I don't demolish homes in West Jerusalem because Jews only
build illegal porches, not entire houses. Etc. etc." All lies. But
being one of the few Israelis that ever experiences Palestine, I find
it impossible to convey to my own people, my own neighbors (good
people all, even the Likud and Shas voters), what occupation means,
why they should feel responsible and resist with me. Israel is a
self-contained bubble with a self-contained and exclusively Jewish
narrative. The struggle continues.
In Peace,
Jeff Halper
Coordinator, ICAHD
Jeff Halper is Coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House
Demolitions and Editor of News From Within.