Bedouin life destroyed to make room for Apartheid Wall

How would you feel if one morning you awoke to learn that your house was being demolished to 'protect' this . . .

Apartheid WallThe bulldozers came for Hamid Salim Hassan's house just after dawn. Before the demolition began, the Bedouin family scrambled to gather what they could: a fridge, a pile of carpets, some plastic chairs, a canister of cooking gas and a metal bed frame.

Now, with their house a wreck of smashed concrete and broken plastic pipes, Mr Hassan and his family are living in a canvas tent on a neighbour's land. Their possessions are piled outside, along with boxes of supplies, including washing-up liquid, toothpaste, corned beef, wheat flour and tomato paste, provided by the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Driving people away from the land on which they and their ancestors were born and destroying their way of life is a particularly cruel and humiliating crime against humanity that israel - by its very nature - engages in every day.

His tent is small but it affords Mr Hassan a compelling view of the future. Stretched out before him are the hilltops of the West Bank where he and his family, all Bedouin shepherds who fled Israel in 1948, used to live and graze their sheep.

Standing there now is Ma'ale Adumim, one of the largest Jewish settlements which is illegal under international law. Snaking up the hillside towards his tent is the West Bank barrier, also ruled unlawful in advisory opinion by the International Court of Justice.

When complete, the steel and barbed wire barrier, which here will be 50m wide and include a ditch and patrol roads, will surround Ma'ale Adumim, attaching it to a greater Jerusalem.

For the 3,000 Bedouin living here, most from the Jahalin tribe, this presents an imminent crisis. "They came and destroyed my house to protect their wall," said Mr Hassan, 62.

"They really don't have enough land already that they had to come and destroy my house? We've lost everything."

Earlier this month the Israeli military destroyed seven huts and tents belonging to Bedouin living near a settlement in Hebron, in the southern West Bank. Another group of Bedouin living further east in the Jordan Valley have been given two months to leave their homes near an Israeli military base and a Jewish settlement.

In each case the Israeli authorities argue the homes have been built without permits, but Palestinians say they are notoriously hard to obtain.

Bedouin culture has been eroded as a result. Refugees from the Negev desert in Israel who crossed after 1948, their grazing land has been squeezed by the growth of Palestinian towns, the rapid emergence of large Jewish settlements and lately the vast concrete and steel barrier.

Most Bedouin live on land that under the Oslo accords was supposed to be unpopulated farmland where Israel has civilian and military control. Today most live in primitive shacks, many no longer keep animal herds and they have little in the way of formal land ownership documents. They have become one of the most vulnerable Palestinian communities.

Open and free

Mr Hassan, 62, was born in Be'er Sheva, in what is now Israel. His family crossed during the 1948-9 war and moved to land near Azariya, the biblical town of Bethany, near Jerusalem. For years they continued their semi-nomadic existence, grazing their large flock of sheep on the hillside.

In 1975 a group of 23 Jewish families founded the settlement of Ma'ale Adumim, which has grown into a town of 35,000 people. Mr Hassan and other Bedouin were forced off the land. Most set up shacks on another hilltop.

Ten years ago Mr Hassan found the money to buy a plot of land and built a house, giving up his Bedouin existence. "Life changes," he said. "We had no other choice." His seven children, including his daughters, went to school and college, integrating into a new urban life.

Other Bedouin have also changed and work as construction labourers, many even employed in Ma'ale Adumim, building the settlement that has taken the land they once lived on.

How cruel.

It reminds me of American workers who are forced to train off-shore workers who are being contracted to replace them. One young man in California, I think, shot himself dead after training his replacement.

"In the past people envied our lifestyle [And I know who those people are]. The land was open and free. There were sheep and we were rich," said his brother Saeed Hassan Salim, 50. "The occupation put us out of business. The Bedouin life is slipping away." He now lives in a small shack that stands directly in the path of the barrier and is almost certain to be demolished soon.

"It seems the whole presence in this area is about to disappear," said Jeremy Milgrom, 53, a rabbi and human rights activist who has worked with the Bedouin here for 15 years and is mapping their remaining communities. "We are asking why it is this has to happen. Why did the government assume the prerogative that they can absolutely redesign the entire landscape and eliminate the Bedouin?"

That's a damned good question.

The Israeli military's civil administration, which runs the West Bank, says the Bedouin were being offered alternatives. "They came and illegally put up their houses and tents. So we are working against this illegal construction," said its spokesman Captain Tsidki Maman. "We are helping them to find a place where it will be OK for them to settle."

The areas under consideration are all on the other side of the barrier from the Jewish settlements.

Capt Maman rejected the Bedouin argument that they have lived on the land for years. "The Bedouin are travelling all the time. They can't say they've been here for decades. It's not like this," he said.

That logic cuts both ways - Jews have been moving around for 2000 years. By what right do they lay claim to the land that they occupied only 60 yrs ago?

In the late 1990s there was a similar move against the Bedouin around Ma'ale Adumim and several of their homes were demolished. But supported by Shlomo Lecker, an Israeli lawyer, the Bedouin were given a deal under which they would move to a new area, with plots of land, building permits and up to 40,000 shekels (then £7,000) per family [pennies compared to what Gaza settlers got to 'relocate'].

Around 50 families took up the offer, and now live in an area known as the Jebel. However, the deal was not without its problems: the houses are within a few hundred metres of Jerusalem's main rubbish dump and on land that other Palestinians claim as their own.

israelis gave them land that they stole from someone else.

Priceless.

Power and water

The prospect of another move is being hotly debated within the Bedouin community. For some it is an opportunity to upgrade to houses with electricity and running water. Others say they would rather move into Palestinian towns like Azariya but lack the money, while others still want to stay on their land and cling to what is left of their traditional lifestyle.

Mr Lecker, the lawyer, said in reality they will have little choice but to move. "They are being forced. They don't have another option," he said. "All these shacks are built without permits and there is a lot of pressure on them."

Israel defends the barrier on the grounds of security, saying it has drastically reduced the number of suicide bombings. But Mr Lecker said: "There is absolutely no reason to build the wall there. This is to do with taking a huge chunk of land and making it part of a wider Jerusalem. It is the idea of taking the land without the people. Why not give them rights in Israel - identity cards, electricity and water? The land comes with the people and if you take the land and push out the people then what do you call it?"

ETHNIC CLEANSING.

Backstory

Bedouin shepherds have lived a nomadic or semi-nomadic life in the Negev desert for centuries. After the 1948-9 war, when Israel was created, many were forced out or fled. Around 140,000 now live in the Negev, in Israel. Some serve in the Israeli military but around half live in villages not recognised by the state where they lack basic services and building permits.

Those that fled Israel crossed to Jordan, Egypt or the Palestinian territories of Gaza and the West Bank. In the West Bank, around 3,000 members of the Jahalin tribe live next to land taken by the Jewish settlement of Ma'ale Adumim. In the 1990s several Bedouin families were moved to make way for the settlement. Now other homes are being demolished, to make way for the West Bank barrier.

Why???

Why are foreigners allowed to drive native people from their land?

The answer is simple - arrogance, greed, and selfishness - all embodied in Zionism.

Zionism has no place in humanity.

It is - by definition - inimical to it.

Zionism must end for there to peace on Earth.

The 'state' of israel must cease to exist.

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"Zionism must end for there to peace on Earth. The 'state' of israel must cease to exist."

E-X-A-C-T-L-Y.

Zionism is doomed. There will be no mercy for them. Most of the apartheid wall will be torn down, but a section will be allowed to stand as a permanent reminder of how evil these maggots were.

The day is soon coming when no one will dare say, "I am a Jew."

DEATH TO ISRAEL
DEATH TO ZIONISTS
DEATH TO JEWS WHO DO NOT RENOUNCE ZIONISM
DEATH TO ALL THEIR ALLIES
DEATH TO WAR PROFITEERS

Abdul-Alhazred | Wed, 2007-02-28 14:46

Zionist conduct is intolerable among civilized human beings.

But, I have nothing against Jews who respect others as equals.

They should never fear practicing a peaceful version of their religion unmolested.

I was fuming when I first read this article last night.

Now, I am exhausted from my outrage over the young men they murdered in cold-blood this morning.

I don't know how much longer this carnage can go on.

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"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Thu, 2007-03-01 00:54

You wrote, "I have nothing against Jews who respect others as equals."

Unfortunately the carnage in Palestine --and in the Zionist-motivated wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- is now so vast that I condemn all Jews who do not explicitly renounce Zionism.

Am I radical? Take a look sometime at this post I wrote: http://thx1138.wordpress.com/2007/02/25/typical-day-in-palestine/

This kind of thing happens every day over there, as you know.

And then there’s Lebanon, of course.

The Zionist nightmare is so awful that, to repeat, I condemn ALL JEWS who do not explicitly renounce Zionism.

I also condemn Gentile warmongers, evangelical "Christians," and idiot Gentiles who assist in things like the imprisonment of Ernest Zundel.

DEATH TO THEM ALL

Abdul-Alhazred | Thu, 2007-03-01 02:54

"Unfortunately the carnage in Palestine --and in the Zionist-motivated wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- is now so vast that I condemn all Jews who do not explicitly renounce Zionism."

I too condemn them. I differ with you only as to what I condemn them to as under Islam death is reserved for those who have either killed or conspired to kill another.

Although it is reprehensible that people should remain silent as others kill in their name, it is not punishable by death, unless a conspiratorial link can be proven at trial.

Ultimately, we all die. But, death as punishment must be reserved for murderers and not used against cowards.

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"Money" has no value - people do.

qrswave | Thu, 2007-03-01 03:14

"They came and illegally put up their houses and tents. So we are working against this illegal construction," said its spokesman Captain Tsidki Maman.

Bitter hypocrisy.

May the day come when the world throws back this man's words at him, and work against Zion's illegal construction.

MonkeyZerg | Thu, 2007-03-01 04:35

unclesam wakeup

It ain't racism when it's the truth!

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