Demolishing Hope for Peace
Naim Awisat, an East Jerusalem Palestinian community leader and entrepreneur, drove quickly down America Way (the winding old valley road that links the city' southern neighbourhoods of the Holy Basin with the walled Old City and its holy sites) to Sala'a, a rundown quarter at the heart of the wadi.
The tok-tok-tok of the heavy machinery could be heard "even before I'd rounded the last corner into the dusty square. A ring of troops in full anti- riot gear were in position. I have to admit it was something of a relief when I saw that what they were destroying was only that old derelict building with a corrugated iron roof where our kids used to gather to play pool, and who knows what else - drugs, what have you."
His friend Mohammed Nakhal, an urban planner, was already there. Before they could exchange thoughts about the latest Israeli action, Mohammed's cell phone was ringing non-stop - a string of calls from Dahiyat a-Salaam in the northern part of the city, and from Sur Baher just over the hill on the way to Bethlehem.
More demolitions were under way.
No more sighs of relief, though.
"Heart wrenching - that's what it is when you see 15 people, seven of them children, left homeless out of the blue," says Naim when he reaches Sur Baher.
He watches from a distance: the three giant Israeli bulldozers, replete with cranes, hammer away relentlessly at what a half-hour ago had been the Nimr family home.
Barely holding back her tears, the matriarch, Umm Muhammed, brushes off the grey dust that has gathered on her brown headscarf. Her husband, Nimr Ali Nimr, sits incongruously in a large armchair, one of the few sticks of furniture which the family had managed to salvage during the few minutes they'd been given to evacuate before the bulldozers were sent into action.
He tells Naim and Mohammed that here too the demolition squad had been escorted in by a phalanx of heavily-equipped border police.
Still in something of a daze, Nimr says that when the machines began tearing into the concrete two-storey building, there'd been a brief protest by the teenagers of the neighbourhood. "They threw stones; fortunately, the troops held their fire."
Two hours later, the troops are gone. All that remains of what had once been the extended family home is a pile of rubble - useless concrete and twisted iron girders. Overriding previous U.S. and international protest, Jerusalem's Israeli municipality had nonetheless gone ahead with a spate of new house demolitions in the occupied eastern part of the city.
Altogether on Tuesday, six buildings were knocked down, leaving 26 people homeless.
The latest round brings the number of East Jerusalem Palestinians displaced since the beginning of the year by forced evictions or house demolitions to over 600, according to figures released by UNWRA, the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees.
Israeli authorities say the demolitions are carried out because the Palestinians owners do not have the requisite building permits, rendering them "illegal".
According to the UN, lack of adequate urban planning in the Palestinian areas of Jerusalem, combined with strict administrative requirements and high fees makes it extremely difficult for Palestinian residents to obtain such permits, leaving them no choice but to build "illegally" for their growing families.
"We should hoist them on the petard of their own building policy," says Naim. "If they say we can't build without permits, we say, fine, but then you have to give us permits to develop new residential areas in our neighborhoods. The overcrowding has been unbearable for years."
In addition to the building squeeze, Palestinian families who move outside the city's municipal boundaries risk losing their Jerusalem identity cards, and with that, the right to live in the city, and keep their access to it.
UNWRA officials estimate that "as many as 60,000 of the city's quarter million Palestinians are at risk from forced eviction, demolitions and displacement." Many others face mounting pressure to leave the city due to extensive legal and administrative restrictions that affect many aspects of their daily lives.
"If it goes on like this, over and above the current tension over Israeli intentions to erode our links to our own holy sites, they're simply laying the cornerstone for a new Intifadah (uprising)," warns Mohammad.
Still, he refuses to see the future as entirely bleak.
The U.S. Secretary of State is due in the city on Saturday in an attempt to revive flagging Palestinian-Israeli peace prospects. When Hillary Clinton visited the city in March, she delivered a strongly-worded rebuke against the house demolition policy, triggering a set-to with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The Israeli leader insists that outsiders have "no right" to tell Israel what it can and cannot do "in our capital city."
Because of Israel's determination to go on knocking down Palestinian homes, a shadow again looms over renewed U.S. peacemaking efforts.
Says Mohammed: "What we really need to do is to beat the Israelis on their own ground, work from within to make sure we get what is rightly ours.
"There are also thousands of existing demolition orders against illegal construction in the western (Jewish) part of town. We need to work from inside the municipality if we want to change the situation and to stop the demolitions altogether.
"Sure, we have to protest. But protest is not enough; neither is hand-wringing and just bemoaning our fate. It's just as important for Washington to press Israel to issue us more building permits. That should be part of the 'America way'."

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15 Comments so far
Show AllHere's a bit of good news for you all to digest; Hugo Chavez had just Issued a de-facto ban of Israeli Tourists entering Venezuela. Yep, no israhell war criminals or zionist allowed into Venezuela. I hope this catches on. It may save your country.
Turkey is maintaining close ties with Israel, but at the same time it is pressuring Israel to comply with international law. It can afford to do so because Israel needs it as an ally in the Middle East. Venezuela's actions commendable too.
The notion of driving israel into the sea is offensive to me - it would result in the foulest pollution of the Mediterranean.
These kinds of sentiments and statements do no good and are inappropriate.
American Jews give Israel big bucks through AIPAC and others. Why won't filthy oil rich Saudis and other oily Arab countries give big bucks to Palestine to level the playing field?
1. Many Arab states actually do. Some aid comes from a few European countries.
2. When the Arab League convened for an emergency meeting in early 2009 to discuss the 22 day intensive Israeli shelling of Gaza and the subsequent ground invasion, they pledged 2 BILLION dollars for reconstruction in Gaza. But, since Israel and the US are imposing a siege on Gaza, non of that money is allowed into Gaza. Even if Gazans had money, they have no construction materials which Israel does not allow into Gaza. It's a siege.
3. Due to the pressure the US can and usually does exert on Arab client states, and due to the pressure Israel - through The Lobby - is able to exert on the US, Arab states prefer to stay out of the United States' way.
4. The collective that is often referred to as "Arab countries" is not as "filthy rich" as you think.
Jordan gets most of its aid from the US, ditto Egypt. Syria's economy is on the brink. Lebanon is allocating investments to rebuilding Southern Lebanon after the 2006 destruction. The only remaining states are the Persian Gulf states. The majority, especially Qatar, do donate and invest. Incidentally, Qatar has invested millions in a cell phone network for Palestinians to be built in the West Bank.
But, Israel refuses to allow this to happen. It refuses to release the frequencies the Palestinians need for the network, seeing as cell phone towers built by Israeli companies for the colonies in the West Bank already occupy that radio spectrum.
Cause class trumps nationality, ethnicity and religion.
"The Israeli leader insists that outsiders have "no right" to tell Israel what it can and cannot do "in our capital city."
Maybe so, but we do have the right to stop giving Israel more than $6 million a day in foreign aid and prohibit US arms makers from selling to them.
Like that will ever happen.
Lovers don’t rape
Jerusalem
Sweet Jerusalem
What did they do to you!
Claiming your love
But cause you none
But sorrow and pain
Sweet Jerusalem
I heard you crying that night
Your frail beautiful frame
Trembling… aching… diminishing…
Your sad eyes avoiding mine
Sweet Jerusalem
I want to crawl towards you…
To kiss the aromatic scent
Of your ancient alleyways
Fall on my knees… repenting…
At Damascus gate
Howling
I failed you… I let you down
Sweet Jerusalem
I want to embrace
That blue stripy dress of yours
Burry my face… burry my shame
Weeping
Asking your forgiveness
I’ve witnessed the crime
Sweet Jerusalem
I want to kneel down
Put my arms around you
Caress your weary brow
And murmur
Pardon me my dearest
I am sorry sweetheart
Sweet Jerusalem
I want to untangle your jet-black hair
Comb your gorgeous curls
Adorn your plaits with rainbow ribbons
And whisper… habibti
You look stunning today
Habibti… now show me
Your most charming… much missed smile
.
Fortunately, the late Imam Ayatollah Khomeini was certainly correct when he observed that "the regime occupying Qods will inevitably disappear from the page of time."
It cannot happen a day too soon.
I wonder if the Zionists have Building Permits for their West Bank Squattlements?
This is the definition of Ethnic Cleansing
"The only means of strengthening one's intellect is to make up one's mind about nothing, to let the mind be a thoroughfare for all thoughts." - John Keats
Here's an idea for an investigative journalist.
Quietly start reviewing permits for key buildings in Jerusalem..along with legal permits for 'additions' on key gov't officials residences. I'm sure theres a slew of 'illegal' buildings/additions constructed without permits...
Good Luck...report findings to the world...and Hillary
Very good suggestion -- investigative journalism, sustained focus: kind of mind bend from what passes for journalism!
This is all part and parcel of the shameful ethnic cleansing of East Jerusalem in which the Israeli government persists.
Imagine someone showing up at your door telling you that you had five minutes to clear out of your home before the bulldozers began to demolish the place. Oh, if only you had the proper permits (which in this twisted Kafkaesque universe are impossible to obtain) you could stay.
The Israelis can have two out of three (call it their trilemma):A Jewish state, a democratic state, continued colonization of the occupied West Bank. To have all three is impossible.
I'm with you, but the reply of a Zionist apologist would be: we have democracy for those that count: Jewish Zionists. The rest can....whatever Final Solution we can get away with.
So I wonder if Hillary might pay a visit to the destroyed buildings? I guess a bland "talking to" will be just as effective. (yeah right)