As residents of the Khan al Ahmar prepare for demolition, community leader Eid Khamis reflects on Israel’s attempt to destroy not just a village, but the possibility of a Palestinian state.
In 1975, the Israeli army expropriated the area and declared it a closed military zone for the establishment of illegal settlements nearby.
The army has demolished many structures, including homes, over the years and made our lives increasingly difficult, in hopes of coercing us to flee.
Today, after more than eight years of a legal battle – with lawyers, court sessions and submissions of master zoning plans – the Israeli High Court of Justice decided on 5 September that the village must be demolished and rejected all of our suggestions.
Israel wants our land for two reasons. Firstly, Israel has already blocked off the West Bank from Jerusalem from the north, south and west by creating a ring of settlements around the city. Now, the Palestinians only have one gate to Jerusalem, and that is the east – where we are situated. The occupation intends to close off the final gate to Palestinians.
Residents of a small Palestinian village have been fighting for their existence since 1951, seeking nothing more than basic human rights. The villagers, who have lived in the area for untold generations, are about to have their homes and lives destroyed, once again, by Israeli authorities.
By Eid Khamis: My name is Eid Khamis, and Israel wants to destroy Khan al-Ahmar, the village I have lived in my entire life.
I was born in this village; I got married in this village; had my children and married them off in this village. All of my memories are here, both the good and bad. I have been here for 52 years.
We were forcefully evicted from our original lands as Bedouins in the Naqab desert by Israeli forces in 1951, and today we are forced to live in steel huts and struggle for the most basic of human rights.
Traditional lifestyle
Our grandfathers lived in Tal Arad, overlooking the Dead Sea. The lands were for our tribe – the Jahalin – and each family had their own plot of land, which they farmed and used for herding livestock. They grew wheat, barley and lentils.
When we were displaced into the West Bank, we travelled as nomads until we settled in Khan al-Ahmar, to the east of Jerusalem. There were two water sources, space for herding and the market in the Old City of Jerusalem to sell produce such as yoghurt, milk and butter.
We leased our lands from private Palestinian landowners in the city of Anata nearby. We developed close, beneficial relationships between the villagers and the Bedouins. The landowner would take 50 percent of our proceeds. Matters were peaceful until 1967, when Israel occupied the West Bank and East Jerusalem.In 1975, the Israeli army expropriated the area and declared it a closed military zone for the establishment of illegal settlements nearby.
The army has demolished many structures, including homes, over the years and made our lives increasingly difficult, in hopes of coercing us to flee.
Today, after more than eight years of a legal battle – with lawyers, court sessions and submissions of master zoning plans – the Israeli High Court of Justice decided on 5 September that the village must be demolished and rejected all of our suggestions.
Road to Jerusalem
The problem of Khan al-Ahmar is bigger than the village itself. It is not a construction problem or the problem of a school. It is about the establishment of a Palestinian state; the so-called peace efforts depend on this village. If this village is demolished, then the Palestinian dream crumbles.Israel wants our land for two reasons. Firstly, Israel has already blocked off the West Bank from Jerusalem from the north, south and west by creating a ring of settlements around the city. Now, the Palestinians only have one gate to Jerusalem, and that is the east – where we are situated. The occupation intends to close off the final gate to Palestinians.
No comments:
Post a Comment