Thursday, May 3, 2012

BBC News: Bethlehem nuns in West Bank barrier battle


When completed, only about 15% of the barrier will be constructed on the Green Line or in Israel

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The barrier Israel has been building in and around the West Bank is set to deprive a Christian community of its land, and appears to have caused an unholy row between some monks and nuns - who could now end up on opposite sides.



In the green Cremisan valley, west of Bethlehem, a goatherd leans against a rock while his flocks graze under the olive and fig trees.

Nearby, a narrow road winds along the hillside to a 19th Century convent and a secluded monastery where monks run the only Palestinian winery.

For the mainly Christian town of Beit Jala, this is the local beauty spot. Residents come here to take a stroll or for a weekend barbecue. Many own small plots of agricultural land.

They also send their children to the convent school and visit the monastery to sell grapes or buy its wine.

That is why an Israeli government plan to build a wall through the valley, cutting off their access to most of it, is causing great alarm...READ MORE

The Salesian Sisters worry that the barrier could close down their school for Palestinian children

Israel may have won the battle of settling into the West Bank, but it has lost the war of making peace with the Palestinians.

"... After I left Sabri’s house, I drove back to Ramallah, riding through tunnels burrowed under the highways that connect Jewish settlements to the rest of Israel. There’s no escaping the new geography of this land, I thought.

And then another thought struck, perhaps one even bleaker. Israel may have won the battle of settling into the West Bank, but it has lost the war of making peace with its closest neighbors, the Palestinians. And they are Israel’s only hope of gaining acceptance in the Middle East."  RAJA SHEHADEH May 3, 2012

Raja Shehadeh, a lawyer and writer living in Ramallah, is the author of “A Rift in Time: Travels with my Ottoman Uncle,” “2037: Le Grand Bouleversement” and “Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape,” which won the Orwell Prize in 2008.

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Sabri Garaib in the village of Beit Ijza, West Bank, in December 2009.Al Haq

by Raja Shehadeh

BEIT IJZA, West Bank — One of the first statements under oath that I took for Al Haq, a human rights organization I helped establish, was from Sabri Garaib, a farmer from Beit Ijza, a Palestinian village ten miles northwest of Jerusalem. I remember sitting on the porch of his house overlooking the garden and the low, undulating hills planted with wheat and barley that spread out on all sides. All 112 acres, I was told, were in danger of being expropriated by the new Jewish settlement of Givon Hahadasha.

It was 1982. In the many years since then Sabri repeatedly fought the settlers in order to hold on to his land. He would go to the Military Objection Committee to counter claims challenging his ownership. He would appeal to the Israeli high court, using every recourse available. He would go to jail for fighting off settlers who tried to stop him from farming or for removing fences they’d put up. But the settlement kept growing all around his house, claiming his land one acre at a time.

Sabri died on April 18. He was 73. It had been several years since I’d gone to his house, and when I visited recently to pay my condolences to his family I was appalled by what I saw. The house was hemmed in on three sides, with only a few yards of space left for a garden between the house and a gigantic steel fence. To get to the front door, I had to pass through a metal gate that is operated from the army camp nearby and walk down a narrow walkway lined with more steel fencing.... READ MORE

My letter to the Washington Post RE Tom Toles' cartoon & an inaccurate image of Israel

April 27 cartoon by Tom Toles

RE:  An inaccurate image of Israel - letter by spokesman for the Embassy of Israel
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/an-inaccurate-image-of-israel/2012/05/02/gIQARvZJxT_story.html

Dear Editor,

Thank you for publishing the letter by yet another Israeli agent (spokesman for the Embassy of Israel) which points out Tom Toles' recent cartoon depicting Palestine as a piece of swiss cheese.  I might have missed Tom Toles' excellent and telling cartoon but for the Israeli agent's complaint. 

Caricatures do indeed convey powerful messages, and if anything Toles' cartoon is far too mild and understated with all those tidy self contained circles: Israel's offensive settlement projects and extensive institutionalized bigotry in the illegally occupied territories is in part sustained by a strangling network of  Jews-preferred roads and checkpoints. A more accurate image would take that into account, to help express how intrusive and unfair and cruel the situation really is for the men, women and children of Palestine as Israel continues to aggressively usurp Palestinian land, life and peace.

Sincerely,
Anne Selden Annab

NOTES
"A quarter-century ago I barnstormed around the United States encouraging Americans, particularly students, to press for divestment from South Africa. Today, regrettably, the time has come for similar action to force an end to Israel's long-standing occupation of Palestinian territory and refusal to extend equal rights to Palestinian citizens who suffer from some 35 discriminatory laws..." Desmond Tutu: Justice requires action to stop subjugation of Palestinians

The Dark Facade Behind the Green Gardens by Julie Holm, for MIFTAH

Jordan warns Israel over E.Jerusalem hotel rooms

Cartoon by Ossama Qassim

Palestinian Christians Against the Occupation

Raja Shehadeh in the New York Times: One group gets more rights, more land and more water while the other’s development is being strangled.

"Independence Day"... alternative views

"The traffic jam is a metaphor of our life stymied under Israeli occupation." ...This Week In Palestine

Unclench your fist...

Born & raised in Palestine

Painting by Palestinian artist Saad al-Helmy

CSM in pictures: Children and Guns

Space, Time, Dignity, Rights: Improving Palestine refugee camps

Israeli Arabs mark 'Nakba' in march


UN Resolution 194 Article 11: [The General Assembly]
Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live in peace with their neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest possible date, and that compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law or in equity, should be made good by the governments or authorities responsible; instructs the Conciliation Commission to facilitate the repatriation, resettlement and economic and social rehabilitation of the refugees and the payment of compensation, and to maintain close relations with the Director of the United Nations Relief for Palestine Refugees and, through him, with the appropriate organs and agencies of the United Nations.

Demolition watch: The Israeli practice of demolishing homes, basic infrastructure and sources of livelihoods continues to devastate Palestinian families and communities in East Jerusalem and the 60 per cent of the West Bank controlled by Israel, known as Area C.

"No Ordinary Place: Writers and Writing in Occupied Palestine," Rima Najjar Merriman: "Displacement, exile, and alienation from the world, but also endurance, ultimately, are at the heart of the Palestinian story. More than 600,000 Palestinian refugees were refused the right of return to their homeland by the newly established Jewish State of Israel in 1948. There are today an estimated 6 million Palestinian refugees, 1.4 million of whom live in fifty-eight recognized refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, the Syrian Arab Republic, the Gaza Strip, and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Over four hundred Palestinian villages were physically erased, and the Palestinians who did manage to stay in what is now Israel proper (about 1.5 million today) continue to be discriminated against and denied basic rights"...READ MORE

UN: Israel displaced 67 Palestinian refugees over the last week (22/04/2012)

The Arab Peace Initiative requests Israel to reconsider its policies and declare that a just peace is its strategic option as well...

"Where, after all, do universal human rights begin?

Daoud Kuttab: Prisoners have the right to see parents and read books... but Israel won't let them

Palestinian Refugees (1948-NOW) refused their right to return... and their right to live in peace free from religious bigotry and injustice.

"The traffic jam is a metaphor of our life stymied under Israeli occupation." ...This Week In Palestine

Thank Secretary Clinton for Standing Up for Palestinian Aid... supporting work for peace and justice in the Holy Land.

Aref Assaf: Gov. Chris Christie should not have skipped Palestine on Israel trip

My grandfather’s key By Hani Azzam


The Kairos Palestine Document: A call to our Palestinian people and to the Israelis
9.1 This is a call to see the face of God in each one of God’s creatures and overcome the barriers of fear or race in order to establish a constructive dialogue and not remain within the cycle of never-ending manoeuvres that aim to keep the situation as it is. Our appeal is to reach a common vision, built on equality and sharing, not on superiority, negation of the other or aggression, using the pretext of fear and security. We say that love is possible and mutual trust is possible. Thus, peace is possible and definitive reconciliation also. Thus, justice and security will be attained for all.


 


The Dark Facade Behind the Green Gardens by Julie Holm, for MIFTAH

Date posted: May 02, 2012
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On a beautiful sunny hike last Friday I realized how I constantly had my body, and my face, pointed in one direction only, making a subconscious effort not to see what was behind me. I enjoyed the silence and the stunning Palestinian nature. On the horizon I could see all the way from Jericho to Jerusalem, the busy cities looking like magical oases glistening in the sun. Focusing on the breathtaking scenery and enjoying the company, I was always, however, very aware that if I turned around and looked behind me I would see something that always makes me cringe and tenses up my entire body. Not much can make me quiet but this sight usually does the trick.

The Israeli settlements in the West Bank provoke me more than almost anything else. According to international law they are illegal, and yet, just last week, the Israeli Prime Minister formalized the status of three settlement outposts, thereby creating three new, illegal settlements.

Driving in the West Bank you cannot help but pass by a settlement. I always think they look fake. Usually located on top of a hill it is a cluster of identical houses, often with white walls and red roofs, lined up one after the other, surrounded by green gardens. If you didn’t know any better, you would think they were some kind of nice, quiet suburb, a wonderful place for kids to grow up. For those of us who do know better, they are anything but.

Once, I had a short drive through one of the largest settlements just outside of Jerusalem. Even from the inside it looked fake, as if the people who lived there were trying really hard to be something they are not. It was lush and green, had trees and flowers, perfect gardens and flawless, quiet roads. There were shopping centers and swimming pools, schools, playgrounds and women in pink training outfits, power walking on the sidewalk. Most of the residents of this exact settlement, Ma'ale Adumim are "economic settlers" finding the settlement a nice, cheap, area to live in just outside Jerusalem. This is the reason I even considered visiting this place, as most other settlements have residents who are far more ideological in their choice of neighborhood, and not that open to having guests.

The fact that many the residents of Ma’ale Adumim do not even really know that they live on Palestinian land, does not change much, however. They are still living there illegally, just like all the other 300,000 settlers in the West Bank. It is not only that they live there illegally, taking up more and more Palestinian land, that makes me depressed whenever I see a settlement. It is also the fact that the pristine houses and gardens are just a cover for what is really going on.

First of all, their green gardens and beautiful flowers, which are such a huge contrast to the surrounding, dry land, are only possible because the already scarce water recourses of the West Bank are diverted from Palestinian communities to the settlements. Furthermore, some of the olive trees adorning the settlements still have marks from heavy machinery and bulldozers. Once belonging to Palestinians, they were uprooted by settlers who replanted them in the settlements, a token of war perhaps. The pillage and destruction of nearby Palestinian villages by settlers happens almost weekly and although the violence they carry out is condemned again and again by human rights organizations, nothing happens. Just like nothing happens when new settlements keep popping up and the ones already built grow bigger and bigger even as the UN and governments all over the world condemn such illegal building on occupied territory. Not least of all, settlements are one of the biggest obstacles to renewing peace negotiations, as the Palestinians – rightfully so – do not want to negotiate with anyone who continuously steals their land and resources.

As we drove out of the parking lot after our hike, a car with four young Israeli settlers pulled in. They stepped out of the car and I noticed that they were armed with machine guns, an almost daily sight I should be used to by now. Yet I thought to myself, just like the settlements, the checkpoints and the wall cutting through the landscape, I will never get used to this sight for the simple reason that this just isn’t the way things should be.

Julie Holm is a Writer for the Media and Information Department at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mid@miftah.org.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Jordan warns Israel over E.Jerusalem hotel rooms

View of the Al-Aqsa (left) and the Dome of the Rock (right) mosques in the old city of Jerusalem. Jordan's King Abdullah II has warned Israel that building hotel rooms in annexed east Jerusalem would increase regional "tension and stability." (AFP Photo/Menahem Kahana)

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Jordan's King Abdullah II on Wednesday warned Israel that building hotel rooms in annexed east Jerusalem would increase regional "tension and stability."

"Israel's continued policies and plans to build settlements and take unilateral measures in Palestinian territories, particularly Jerusalem, will hinder peace efforts and increase tension and instability in the region," a palace statement quoted the king as telling a US congressional delegation.

"The international community has a responsibility to support peace efforts, resolve the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, leading to the establishment of an independent Palestinian state... with east Jerusalem as its capital," said the king, whose country has a 1994 peace treaty with the Jewish state.
Israeli officials confirmed on Tuesday that Israel has approved a further stage in plans to build 1,100 new hotel rooms in a settlement neighbourhood of annexed east Jerusalem.

The hotel rooms are slated for construction in Givat HaMatos, an as-yet unbuilt neighbourhood on the southern flank of east Jerusalem, near the West Bank city of Bethlehem.
Cartoon by Ossama Qassim

Palestinian Christians Against the Occupation

Philip Farah
Co-founder, Palestinian American Christians for Peace
 Posted: 05/ 1/2012

In a recent op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren claimed that Christians in Israel are better off than their brethren anywhere else in the Middle East. Two Sundays ago, "60 Minutes" made clear he attempted to intimidate Bob Simon by going over Simon's head to speak to Jeff Fager, the head of CBS News and executive producer of "60 Minutes," to complain that Simon's story on Christian Palestinians was "a hatchet job" against Israel. In fact, it was a hard-hitting, but honest piece in which Simon helped to expose the terrible harm the Israeli occupation -- not Muslim Palestinians as the ambassador claimed -- is doing to Christian Palestinians in the Holy Land.

I am a Palestinian Christian, now a U.S. citizen, and my own experience and that of my family attest to the falsity of Ambassador Oren's assertion. I was born in East Jerusalem, Jordan in 1952, only a few years after my family and the majority of Palestinians fled from their homes when the newly established Jewish state took over three-quarters of historical Palestine. My family, like almost all the other Palestinians who fled -- Christians and Muslims alike -- became refugees, losing their fields, orchards, homes and practically everything else, to Israel. Israel defied the international consensus and a U.N. resolution calling on it to allow the Palestinian refugees to return.

Had Israel allowed the Palestinians to return, it would not have become a majority Jewish state. Israel's fear of a Palestinian presence within its borders continues to drive its brutal policies of occupation, which victimize Palestinian Christians as well as Muslims. Israel occupied the rest of historical Palestine in 1967, gaining control over a large Palestinian Arab population which many Israelis view as a threat to the "Jewish character" of their country.

There is a simple test of Ambassador Oren's claims: I say to him, "Mr. Ambassador: If your country is so good to Christians, why don't you allow me, my family and thousands of Palestinian Christians to return to our homes in the part of Jerusalem which Israel occupied in 1967 or the western part of the city from which Palestinians were forced out in 1948? Why is it that any Jew from any country in the world can claim full rights of citizenship as soon as he or she sets foot in Jerusalem, while I, whose family roots in Jerusalem go back many centuries, am barred from living with full human rights in my hometown?"...READ MORE 


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Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Raja Shehadeh in the New York Times: One group gets more rights, more land and more water while the other’s development is being strangled.

"... I could also see the separation wall snaking through the hills. Here and elsewhere throughout the West Bank, the wall separates communities — Israeli Jews on one side, Palestinians on the other — subjecting them to different laws and different lives. One group gets more rights, more land and more water while the other’s development is being strangled." RAJA SHEHADEH

Activists demonstrating against the construction of Israel’s separation barrier in the West Bank village of Bilin in 2005.
 http://latitude.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/27/documentary-explores-israeli-legal-system-in-palestinian-occupied-territories/?src=tp

April 27, 2012, 12:30 pm

A Few Good Lawyers

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"Independence Day"... alternative views

via the Institute for Middle East Understanding: According to ISRAELI historians, in 1948 alone, 472 Palestinian towns and villages were destroyed by the newly proclaimed state of Israel. Palestinian churches, mosques, schools, cemeteries, farm, and homes were leveled. Responding to Google's "Independence Day" doodle on Google Israel, Palestinians drew up their own alternative highlighting the Nakba (catastrophe) of 1948 when Palestinians were ethnically cleansed to pave way for a state of Israel. 48 is the year of the Palestinian Nakba, or catastrophe. The key is symbolic of the homes Palestinians fled in '48 to which they are not allowed to return. The map is of historic Palestine. 


Born & raised in Palestine

Ramallah woman -between 1929 and 1946

Painting by Palestinian artist Saad al-Helmy who was born in Aroub Refugee camp in Hebron in 1967

Monday, April 30, 2012

Desmond Tutu: Justice requires action to stop subjugation of Palestinians


A quarter-century ago I barnstormed around the United States encouraging Americans, particularly students, to press for divestment from South Africa. Today, regrettably, the time has come for similar action to force an end to Israel's long-standing occupation of Palestinian territory and refusal to extend equal rights to Palestinian citizens who suffer from some 35 discriminatory laws.

I have reached this conclusion slowly and painfully. I am aware that many of our Jewish brothers and sisters who were so instrumental in the fight against South African apartheid are not yet ready to reckon with the apartheid nature of Israel and its current government. And I am enormously concerned that raising this issue will cause heartache to some in the Jewish community with whom I have worked closely and successfully for decades. But I cannot ignore the Palestinian suffering I have witnessed, nor the voices of those courageous Jews troubled by Israel's discriminatory course...READ MORE 

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CSM in pictures: Children and Guns

Palestinian Imran Karameh looks at an Israeli soldier during a military operation in the West Bank city of Hebron on Feb. 9, 2005. Nayef Hashlamoun/Reuters

Children and Guns

April 23, 2012
(5 of 21)
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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Space, Time, Dignity, Rights: Improving Palestine refugee camps


Photos

Below is a selection of photos to be displayed at the exhibition. Photographers have agreed to reproduction of photos by media outlets for the purpose of this exhibition.

View over Dheisheh refugee camp, West Bank / Armin Linke
Over the last 60 years, Palestine refugee camps have developed from temporary tent cities into complex living environments.

Narrow alleyway in Burj Barajneh refugee camp, Lebanon / Ismail Sheikh Hassan
Many Palestine refugee camps have turned into densely populated, hyper-urbanised settings.
Talbieh refugee camp, Jordan / UNRWA Archives
Children play on a self-made swing in Jordan’s Talbieh refugee camp.
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Space, Time, Dignity, Rights: Improving Palestine refugee camps

Berlin / Jerusalem

Between international politics and everyday life, transition and continuity, waiting room and home. Against the backdrop of these contradictions, today, roughly one-third of the nearly five million Palestine refugees served by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) live in refugee camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.

Over a period of more than 60 years, temporary tent cities have developed into complex living environments, some of which rank among the densest urban environments in the world. Congested and poverty-stricken, they reflect the extraordinary resilience and agency of the refugees who inhabit them. The exhibition, which will be shown at Deutsches Architektur Zentrum (DAZ) from 9 May to 3 June 2012, not only displays the projects of the infrastructure and camp improvement programme of UNRWA, but provides insights into a new culture of joint planning with refugees which has emerged and fundamentally influenced all those involved.

Motivated by a sense of urgency with regard to the extreme poverty, congestion, and deteriorating environment embodied by many refugee camps, UNRWA and host governments met with representatives of refugees and the donor community for the 2004 Geneva Conference in order to target worsening living conditions in camps. UNRWA used the new window of opportunity created by the Geneva Conference to set up the infrastructure and camp improvement programme (ICIP) in order to engage with these issues.

Since 2007, BMZ has supported UNRWA with the development of this programme. This involves improving, in a holistic, methodical and comprehensive manner, the refugee camps’ physical and social environment through the introduction of a participatory, community-driven planning approach. The Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH is advising UNRWA ICIP with this innovative methodology on behalf of BMZ.

The exhibition “Space, Time, Dignity, Rights” includes four installations that give insight into how participants in camp improvement projects in the West Bank, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon seek to balance their refugee identity and political rights with their day-to-day needs as residents of congested and impoverished camps. In this process, they deal with questions such as:
  • Should refugee camps have public spaces?
  • Is the sense of belonging to a street or neighbourhood within a refugee camp an identity worth preserving?
  • How can individual choices be balanced vis-à-vis the interest of the entire refugee community—including the right to refuse to participate in camp improvement?
The result is a radical reconceptualisation of what constitutes a “refugee camp”. Rather than being a space associated with structural discrimination, it is considered a space where inhabitants can and should live with dignity - which goes hand in hand with the international community's continued support of Palestine refugees until their plight is solved in a just and lasting manner, in accordance with UN resolutions.

The exhibition, which will be shown at Deutsches Architektur Zentrum DAZ from 9 May to 3 June 2012, will be officially opened by Dirk Niebel, Federal Minister of Economic Cooperation and Development, and Filippo Grandi, UNRWA Commissioner-General, on 8 May at 7:00 p.m. The event will also include a panel discussion.

On the following day, 9 May 2012, the exhibition’s topic will be further explored during an all-day academic conference, organised in cooperation with the University of Stuttgart, Chair of International Urbanism. Internationally-renowned academics, development experts and representatives of United Nations organisations and the German government have been invited to reflect upon the methodology of the infrastructure and camp improvement programme.

Refugee camp urbanisation in an international context as well as participatory planning approaches will be discussed by experts such as Michel Agier (EHESS), Patrick Coulombel (Emergency Architects), Mannoucher Lolachi (UNHCR) and Dania Rifai (UN Habitat).
This exhibition has been made possible by the United Nations Relief Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) and the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), implemented by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) / Regional Social and Cultural Fund for Palestinian Refugees and Gaza Population. Curatorial director of the exhibition is Prof. Philipp Misselwitz, University of Stuttgart, Chair of International Urbanism. Co-operation partner is the Deutsches Architektur Zentrum (DAZ) in Berlin.

For more information about the exhibition in general, the opening event and the academic conference, please visit: www.space-time-dignity-rights.com