Source: Common Dreams
While the world turns away, “there is fuel in the air” as a record number of Palestinians in and around occupied East Jerusalem lose their homes, either pitilessly razed by middle-of-the-night bulldozers or brazenly seized by jeering Israeli settlers with the so-called laws of occupation on their side. In 2020,Ā 140 Palestinian familiesĀ lost their homes, aboutĀ doubleĀ the number in 2019, a surge in Israel’s ethnic cleansing many see as part of a “100 year Zionist project” to appropriate “Jerusalem whole and united.” The escalation comes amidst a recentĀ wave of violenceĀ against Palestinians who’ve been protesting the closure of the iconic Damascus Gate during Ramadan; hundreds have been injured by mobs of Jewish settlers shouting “Death to Arabs” and “Burn them!” in the name of “restoring Jewish dignity.”
As a result of the multi-pronged assaults on Palestinian rights, the city is “on theĀ brink of explosion”Ā – this, despite theĀ claimĀ by a breathtakingly arrogant, ignorant Jared Kushner that “we are witnessing the last vestiges” of the decades-long conflict, which he terms a “real-estate dispute.” “Kushner regrets nothing,” says one critic, “because he has God on his side.” Israel’s latest surge in forced removals has promptedĀ threatsĀ of retaliation from Hamas and ongoing PalestinianĀ protests,Ā which police have met with teargas, attacks and arrests, further inflaming emotions andĀ giving riseĀ to a young, fearless, leaderless new PalestinianĀ resistanceĀ to “expulsion at the barrel of a gun.” “It is a Nakba,” say Jerusalem residents, some of whom see the theft of homes and land where their ancestors lived and died. “We are seeing our neighborhoods being wiped out in front of our eyes.”
Many of theĀ forced removalsĀ are in the neighborhood ofĀ Sheikh Jarrah, where residents have beenĀ fightingĀ a months-long battle against both Jewish settlers who want their homes and an unjust “settler-colonial court, judge and jury” with little interest in challenging ownership claims by what remain illegal settlers. In the latest clash, an Israeli judge justĀ ruledĀ that six Palestinian families of 27 people fighting eviction have until Thursday to “reach a deal” with the settlers trying to steal their homes, urging Palestinians to concede the settlers’ ownership and pay them rent – a demand they rejected. “These are our homes,” they assert, “and the settlers are not our landlords.”
“All my memories are here – it’s like uprooting me,”Ā saysĀ one resident. “Every stone in this house tells a story about me. My school days were here, my children grew up here, everything is here.” From another, “All the atrocities in the world don’t exceed 10% of what they do to us in order to expel us from our own homes.” Meanwhile, anguished scenesĀ play outĀ on social media. An older Palestinian woman confronts smirking settlers newly ensconced in her house: “This is my house, not yours.” Surly settler behind gate: “I’m here now.” Woman: “This is my house, this is my door, you are a thief.” Settler: “The court gave it to me. This place is only for Jews.” Her plaintive query: “Who do you ask for your rights, when the judge is your enemy?” AcrossĀ Sheikh Jarrah, many older residents have voiced their rage and grief by spray-painting on walls, “We will never leave.” But their powerlessness is palpable. “If this is not an occupation, what is?” asks a pained neighbor of the wide-rangingĀ devastation. Hence the sign of one protester: “Sheikh Jarrah Is Palestine.”
In areas adjacent to East Jerusalem where it’s impossible to get a building permit,Ā +972 MagazineĀ trackedĀ some of the last year’s demolitions of homes lovingly and often legally built under the jurisdiction of the Palestinian Authority because, Israeli officialsĀ argue,Ā homes too near the separation barrier “limit operational freedom” and may “shelter terrorists.”
They destroyed the house Ihab Hassan Ali built for his family in Shuafat Refugee Camp 30 years ago, long before there was a barrier – he served tea in his garden to barrier workers – and sent him a demolition bill equal to the cost of a home: “You buy from them what they destroyed.” They razed the house Ahmad Abu Diab built in Silwan – he and his family moved to a relative’s living room – but he refused to leave the area: “My grandfather’s grandfather is buried here.”
AĀ phalanx of bulked-up, bellicose soldiers – “Let’s start the break in!” –Ā cameĀ with bulldozers toĀ demolishĀ the house Ismayil Abadiya proudly, painstakingly, legally built in Wadi al-Hummus for his five kids: “They came in throwing punches, and tossed us out like garbage.” Video of the chaotic night shows soldiers breaking down the door, pushing crying kids outside, screaming, “Leave this place!” Asks one older son, “Why are you treating us like criminals?” Says a tearful Ismayil, “To destroy this house, to me, it’s like (an) early death.” For his kids, he worries, “It means I am a zero, nothing. I can’t even protect my home.” “This country,” he goes on. “We don’t know how to live with it. I don’t ask for anything…I just need them to let me live, with my family, in my house. It’s a simple request.” The video ends with a searing image: He stands, then sits with one of his grown sons as bulldozer-laden trucks roar past. Ismayil weeps. His son sits staring, seething, stone-faced, fists clenched, remembering.
Abby ZimetĀ has written CD’sĀ FurtherĀ column since 2008. A longtime, award-winning print journalist for newspapers and magazines, she lived in the Maine woods for about a dozen years before moving to Portland in 1983. Having come of political age during the Vietnam War, she has long been involved in women’s, labor, anti-war, social justice and refugee rights issues.
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