BATTIR, West Bank (AP) — One of the last Palestinian farming villages that still uses irrigation systems from Roman times says its ancient way of life is in danger as Israel prepares to lay down its West Bank separation barrier.
With construction possibly beginning in the coming weeks, the people of Battir hope a legal battle, backed by recent U.N. recognition of the village's agricultural practices, will help change Israel's mind.
Battir's
6,000 inhabitants live in limestone-faced houses built into a hillside
southwest of Jerusalem. On the lands around the homes, stone retaining
walls have transformed scrubby hills into orderly terraces of olive
trees and vegetable gardens.
Terraces
are a common Palestinian farming technique in the hilly West Bank
terrain. But in Battir, they are unique for their extent — stretching
uninterrupted over nearly 2,000 hectares (800 acres) — and for the
centuries-old network of irrigation canals that direct springwater over
the stepped hills.
The
canal network has been in place for 2,000 years, with residents
continually keeping up the system, said Giovanni Fontana-Antonelli, a
local UNESCO official. Because the area is largely untouched by
construction, it is still possible to see "the form and the shape of the
past generations' work," he said. "In other places you have terraces,
but you also have urban sprawl, roads and settlements."
"The wall as projected so far will interfere with this ancient irrigation system
by cutting part of the irrigation network," he said of the planned path
for Israel's barrier. The integrity of the terraces "will be totally
dismantled."....READ MORE
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