MIFTAH
Monday, 29 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

It was undoubtedly one of the worst days in their lives. At the crack of dawn on August 2, two Palestinian families in Sheikh Jarrah, a Palestinian neighborhood of Jerusalem, were forced from their homes by a pack of Israeli riot police. For over 50 years – ironically just a few years after they were last evicted from their homes in 1948 – the Ghawi and Hanoun families have lived in their homes, granted to them upon agreement between UNRWA and the Jordanian government, which had jurisdiction over the West Bank and east Jerusalem at the time.

For the past few decades, however, ideological Jewish settlers from the Nahalat Shimon International settler group have set their sights on the homes, claiming ownership. After years in the Israel Supreme Court, the verdict finally came back. The settlers were the rightful owners and the families were to be evicted. Black-clad Israeli riot police stormed the homes where over 50 people live, breaking down the doors and literally kicking the inhabitants out onto the street. Clashes ensued when the families and their supporters challenged the police, resulting in several injuries among the Palestinians and eight arrests including one Israeli activist.

The final scene was heartbreaking. Children, men and women kicked out, literally with nowhere to go, their belongings – mattresses, chairs, a child's rocking horse – strewn carelessly on the pavement, baking in the hot Jerusalem sun.

It was not long before the Jewish settlers pulled in, completely unmoved by the awful scene. According to eyewitnesses, the settlers actually facilitated the eviction, hauling the families' belongings into trucks so they could swoop in and start their new lives in these homes. They also came with shovels, ladders and drills, most likely to alter the Palestinian home as quickly as possible to a Jewish abode, erasing all remnants of its rightful inhabitants.

This wouldn't be the first time. Just last year, the Kurd family was evicted from their home in the same neighborhood, under the same pretext. The family, along with dozens of supporters, erected a tent on the land right next to the house in protest of their eviction, which Israeli forces have repeatedly torn down. Yesterday, since the police were there anyway, they decided to go for round six of the tent's demolition, just for good measure.

Israel has had a longstanding reputation of evicting Palestinians from their homes, starting with 1948. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians who fled the fighting and fear of massacres or were forcefully expelled during the war were never allowed back, their homes permanently taken over by new Jewish immigrants to the fledgling state of Israel.

Since then, the evictions have been piecemeal, a house here, a few families there. The inhumane policy is multi-purposed - to make room for a Jewish settlement, a bypass road, or in the case of Jerusalem, to allow the steady encroachment of a strong Jewish presence in the eastern sector of the city so as to sabotage any future plans for a Palestinian capital there.

Still, what is mindboggling the most is not the overall Israeli policy of creating Jewish facts on the ground. Politics is a dirty game and governments go to great lengths to realize their political goals. What is so abhorrent is the Jewish settler families who sat coldheartedly and watched as families very similar to their own were kicked out of their own homes, their belongings thrown out behind them. What's worse, they moved the process forward, loading clothes, blankets, chairs, books and kitchen utensils on trucks so they would not be inconvenienced with waiting outside too long, and of course, just to rub salt into the wound. They watched as guiltless children cried as they clung to their mothers and fathers who stood helpless before the injustice.

The dichotomy is almost schizophrenic. It was only a few days ago that average Israelis were shocked and saddened by a shooting at a center for gays in Tel Aviv, which resulted in the deaths of two Israelis. “Horrible”, “hate crime”, “just like Palestinian terror” were some of the remarks Israelis and others made in response to articles written on the subject. For Israelis, this was a terrible reflection on their own humanity, which they consider intact. Israelis do not go around murdering others simply because they think differently or look differently. They are a society based on openness, democracy and freedom. So, a shooting spree in a gay center came as a shock to many Israelis who do not want to be portrayed in such an undesirable light.

That is, until it comes to the Palestinians, who must be of an entirely different species. While it is only fair to acknowledge those Israelis who do understand the depth of the injustices being done to the Palestinians, this Sheikh Jarrah eviction one of the most jarring, the majority of Israelis will not bat an eyelid at the news. This is what is so shocking and sad. For an Israeli, settler or not, to be able to watch as a family is wrenched from their only home, with nowhere else to go and callously take over before their footprints have even disappeared from the front porch, means only one thing. In their eyes, the Palestinians are an inferior people, a group not deserving of empathy or compassion. This is the only explanation because if they did see us as equal human beings, there would be no way that their hearts or minds could accept the inhuman scene before them.

Politically, it is outrageous as well. “Deplorable” is what UN Middle East envoy Robert Serry described the incident. Everyone from the Americans to the Europeans to Israeli rightist organizations understands the atrocity committed on Sunday. Ir Amim took a more legal standpoint against the move, which is also completely valid and shows the lopsidedness of Israel’s justice system. “Israel must consider the future implications of the move, which allows Jews to claim rights over property dating back to before 1948, but prevents the execution of the same rights by Palestinian residents,” a statement from the organization read. In other words, if all properties were to be returned to their so-called rightful owners, there are scores of Palestinians with far more legal and recent deeds to homes in west Jerusalem as opposed to some shady Ottoman-era 1880s deed of ownership the settlers are pulling out of their bag of tricks.

In any case, the reality right now is that these settlers, whoever they are, are directly responsible (along with their acquiescing government and judiciary) for the displacement of over 50 people without the least bit of remorse or compassion. The Ghawi and Hanoun families’ future is unknown, the support of family and friends their only refuge. As one member of the Ghawi family so eloquently put it, “Now the skies are our blanket and the earth is our bed."

Joharah Baker is a Writer for the Media and Information Program at the Palestinian Initiative for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy (MIFTAH). She can be contacted at mip@miftah.org.

 
 
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