Ramadan Kareem: From the Netanyahu & Obama Admins
Ramadan Kareem: From the Netanyahu and Obama Administrations
Jeff HalperAugust 11, 2010
Yesterday, the day before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan began, at 2:30 in the morning, workers sent by the Israeli authorities, protected by dozens of police, destroyed the tombstones in the last portion of the Mamilla cemetery, an historic Muslim burial ground with graves going back to the 7th Century, hitherto left untouched. The government of Israel has always been fully cognizant of the sanctity and historic significance of the site. Already in 1948, when control of the cemetery reverted to Israel, the Israeli Religious Affairs Ministry recognized Mamilla “to be one of the most prominent Muslim cemeteries, where seventy thousand Muslim warriors of [Saladin’s] armies are interred along with many Muslim scholars. Israel will always know to protect and respect this site.” For all that, and despite (proper) Israeli outrage when Jewish cemeteries are desecrated anywhere in the world, the dismantlement of the Mamilla cemetery has been syst ematic. In the 1960s “Independence Park” was built over a portion of it; subsequently an urban road was built through it, major electrical cables were laid over graves and a parking lot constructed over yet another piece. Now some 1,500 Muslim graves have been cleared in several nighttime operations to make way for…..a $100 million Museum of Tolerance and Human Dignity, a project of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles. (Ironically, Rabbi Marvin Hier, the Wiesenthal Center’s Director, appeared on Fox News to express his opposition to the construction of a mosque near Ground Zero in Manhattan, because the site of the 9/11 attack “is a cemetery.”)
The month-long period between Netanyahu’s July 6th visit to Washington and the start of Ramadan has provided Israel with a window to “clear the table” after a frustrating hiatus on home demolitions imposed by the “old,” mildly critical Obama Administration – although there is no guarantee that Israel will not demolish during Ramadan, especially if it wants to exploit the period until the November elections, knowing that until then Obama will not overtly oppose anything it does in the Occupied Territories. In fact, the process of demolishing Palestinian homes never ceased. On June 6th, for example, a year after the demolition of more than 65 structures and the forced displacement of more than 120 people, including 66 children, nine families of Khirbet Ar Ras Ahmar in the Jordan Valley, totaling 70 people, received a new round of “evacuation orders.” A week later the Israeli High Court ordered the Civil Administration to “step up enforcement against illegal Palestinian stru ctures” in Area C, the 60% of the West Bank under full Israeli control.
And so, on July 13th, upon Netanyahu’s return (Palestinian homes are not demolished without an OK from the Prime Minister’s Office), three homes were demolished in the Palestinian East Jerusalem neighborhood of Issawiya, followed by three more homes in Beit Hanina. The Jerusalem Municipality also announced the planned demolition of 19 more homes in Issawiya this month. In the West Bank, the Israeli “Civil” Administration demolished 55 structures belonging to 22 Palestinian families in the Hmayer area of Al Farisiye in the northern Jordan Valley, including 22 residential tents and 30 other structures used to shelter animals and store agricultural equipment. According to the UN’s Office of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA): “This week [July 14-20, the week of Netanyahu’s return from Washington] there was a significant increase in the number of demolitions in Area C, with at least 86 structures demolished in the Jordan Valley and the southern West Bank, including Bethlehem and He bron districts. In 2010, at least 230 Palestinian structures have been demolished in Area C, forcibly displacing 1100 people, including 400 children. Approximately 600 others have been otherwise affected.” Two-thirds of the demolitions for 2010 have occurred since Netanyahu’s meeting with Obama. More than 3,000 demolition orders are outstanding in the West Bank, and up to 15,000 in Palestinian East Jerusalem.
The demolition of homes is, of course, only a small, if painful, part of the destruction Israel wreaks daily on the Palestinian population. Over the past few weeks a violent campaign has been waged against Palestinian farmers in one of the most fertile agricultural areas of the West Bank, the Baka Valley, steadily being encroached upon by large suburbs of the settlement of Kiryat Arba, in Hebron. Israel already takes 85% of the West Bank’s water for its own use, either for settlements (settlers use five times more water per capita as do Palestinians, and Ma’aleh Adumim is currently building a water park in addition to its four municipal swimming pools and the huge fountains constantly flowing in the city center) or to be pumped into Israel proper – all in flagrant violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which prohibits an Occupying Power from using the resources of an occupied territory.
Accusing the farmers of “stealing water” – their own water – the Israel water company Mekorot, supported by the Civil Administration and the IDF, has in recent weeks destroyed dozens of wells, some of them ancient, and reservoirs used to collect rain water, which is also “illegal.” Hundreds of hectares of agricultural land have dried up as irrigation pipes have been pulled out and confiscated by the Civil Administration. Fields of tomatoes, beans, eggplants and cucumbers are dying just before they can be harvested, and the grape industry in this rich valley is threatened with destruction. “I’m watching my life dry up before my eyes,” Ata Jaber, a Palestinian farmer who has had his home demolished twice, most of whose land lies buried under the Givat Harsina neighborhood of Kiryat Arba and whose plastic drip irrigation pipes are destroyed annually by the Civil Administration just before he can harvest. “I had hoped to sell my crop for at least $2000 before Ramadan, but all is gone.”
(You can see a BBC report on the destruction of
Palestinian reservoirs on YouTube Settlements continue to be built,
of course. The much-trumpeted “settlement freeze”
amounted to no less than a temporary lull in construction.
(Indeed, Netanyahu never used the word “freeze”; in
Hebrew he refers only to a “pause.”) According to the
August report of Peace Now’s Settlement Watch, at least
600 housing units have started to be built during the
freeze, in over 60 different settlements – meaning that
the rate of construction is about half of that during the
same period in an average year when there is no freeze.
Given that the approval process has never been halted –
the Israeli government announced the planned building of
1600 housing units in the settlements when Vice President
Biden was visiting, if you recall – making up for lost
time when the “freeze” ends in late September will be an
easy task. According to Ha’aretz, some 2,700 housing units
are waiting to be constructed. The fact that the
so-called settlement freeze did not really end settlement
construction is obvious. The American government seems ready
to accept lip-service only from Israel, as against overt and
brutal threats towards the Palestinians if they do not
acquiesce to the charade. Palestinian negotiators revealed
last week the Obama Administration threatened to cut all
ties with the Palestinian Authority, political and
financial, if they continued to insist on a genuine freeze
on settlements or even clear parameters on what the sides
will negotiate. (Netanyahu refuses to accept even the
elementary principle of the 1967 borders being the basis of
talks.) Just as destructive of any real peace process,
however, is the fact that the focus on settlement freeze
deflects attention from attempts by Israel to create
“irreversible facts on the ground” which will defeat the
very process of negotiation. Even if Israel did respect a
settlement freeze, there is no demand, no expectation,
absolutely nothing to prevent it from continuing to build
the Wall (the enclosing of the Shuafat refugee camp inside
Jerusalem and the town of Anata is being completed in these
very days, and the village of Wallajeh, some of which spills
into Jerusalem, is losing its lands, ancient olive trees and
homes even as we speak). Nothing is preventing Israel from
continuing to impoverish and imprison the Palestinian
population through its twenty-year economic “closure,”
including the siege on Gaza, having reduced the Palestinian
economy to ashes. Nothing stands in the way of completing a
system of parallel (though not equal in size and quality)
apartheid high ways, big ones, going through Palestinian
lands, for Israelis; narrow ones for Palestinians. Nothing
keeps Israel from expelling Palestinian from their homes so
that Jewish settlers can move in – on July 29th nine
families living in the Muslim Quarter of the Old City,
returning home at night from a wedding, found themselves
locked out of their homes by settlers and prevented from
entering by the police. (Palestinians, of course, have no
legal recourse to reclaiming their properties, whole
villages, towns and urban neighborhoods, farms, factories
and commercial buildings, confiscated from them in 1948 and
after.) Nothing prevents Israel from terrorizing the
Palestinian population, whether by its own army or the
surrogate militia founded by the US and run by the
Palestinian Authority to pacify its own population, whether
by settlers who shoot and beat Palestinians and burn their
crops with no fear of arrest, or by undercover agents, aided
by thousands of Palestinian forced to become collaborators,
many simply so that their children could receive medical
care or so they could have a roof over their heads; whether
by expulsion or the myriad administrative constraints of an
invisible yet Kafkaesque system of total control and
intimidation. Nothing opposes Israel’s boycott of the
Palestinian people, isolated from the world by
Israeli-controlled borders, or policies that effectively
boycott Palestinian schools and universities by preventing
their proper functioning. And nothing, absolutely nothing,
stops Israel from demolishing Palestinian homes – 24,000
in the Occupied Territories sinc e 1967, and counting.
Perhaps this way of welcoming Ramadan comes at no
surprise in terms of the Occupied Territories. It took on an
entirely different cast when, on July 26th, more than 1,300
Israeli Border Police, the shock-troops of the police’s
Yassam “special operations” unit and regular police,
accompanied by helicopters, descended upon the Bedouin
village of al-Arakib, just north of Beer-Sheva, a community
within Israel inhabited by Israeli citizens. Forty-five
homes were demolished, 300 people forcibly displaced. One of
the most grotesque and dismaying parts of this operation was
the use of Israeli Jewish high school students, volunteers
with the civil guard, to remove the belongings of their
fellow citizens from their homes before the demolition.
Besides reports of vandalism and contempt for their victims
the students were photographed lounging in the residents’
furniture in plain sight of its owners. Finally, when the
bulldozers began demolishing the homes, the volunteers
cheered and celebrated. Over the next week, as Israeli
activists helped the residents pick up the pieces and
rebuild their homes, the Jewish National Fund, the Israeli
Land Authority, the Ministry of the Interior and the
“Green Patrol” of the Ministry of Agriculture
(established by Ariel Sharon to prevent Bedouin
“take-over” of the Negev) sent in police and bulldozers
and had the village demolished twice more. Although
al-Arakib is one of 44 “unrecognized” Bedouin villages
in the Negev – of which only eleven have even rudimentary
education and medical services, no electricity, extremely
limited access to water and none have paved roads (see http://rcuv.wordpress.com) – it is
nevertheless populated by Israeli citizens, some of whom
serve in the Israeli army. While demolitions of Arab homes
within Israel is not a new phenomenon – last year the
Israeli government demolished three times more houses of
Israeli (Arab) citizens inside Israel as it did in the
Occupied Territories (the destruction of up to 8,000 homes
in the Gaza invasion aside) – it signifies that the term
“occupation” cannot be restricted to the West Bank, East
Jerusalem and Gaza (and the Golan Heights) alone. The
situation of Arab citizens of Israel is almost as insecure
as that of the Palestinians of the Occupied Territories, and
their exclusion from Israeli society almost as complete.
While around 1,000 cities, towns and agricultural villages
have been established in Israel since 1948 exclusively for
Jews, not a single new Arab settlement has been established,
with the exception of seven housing projects for Bedouins in
the Negev where none of the residents are allowed to farm or
own animals. Indeed, regulations and zoning prohibit
Palestinian citizens of Israel from living on 96% of the
country’s land, which is reserved for Jews only. The
message of the bulldozers is clear: Israel has created one
bi-national entity between the Mediterranean and the Jordan
River in which one population (the Jews) has separated
itself from the other (the Arabs) and instituted a regime of
permanent domination. That is precisely the definition of
apartheid. And the message is delivered clearly in the weeks
and days leading up to Ramadan. It is papered over with fine
words. Netanyahu issued a statement saying: “We mark this
important month amid attempts to achieve direct peace talks
with the Palestinians and to advance peace treaties with our
Arab neighbors. I know you are partners in this goal and I
ask for your support both in prayers and in any other joint
effort to really create a peaceful and harmonious
coexistence.” Obama and Clinton also sent their greetings
to the Muslim world, Obama observing that Ramadan “remind
us of the principles that we hold in common, and Islam's
role in advancing justice, progress, toler ance, and the
dignity of all human beings." Both the White House and the
State Department will hold Iftar meals. But the bulldozers
and other expressions of apartheid and warehousing tell a
much different story. (Jeff Halper is the Director of the Israeli
Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD). He can be
reached at <jeff@icahd.org>.) The Israeli
Committee Against House Demolitions is based in Jerusalem
and has chapters in the United Kingdom and the United
States. Please visit our websites:
www.icahd.org
www.icahduk.org
www.icahdusa.org