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Written by Jeff Halper, ICAHD Jeff Halper, ICAHD
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Category: News News
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Published: 16 April 2008 16 April 2008
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Last Updated: 21 April 2008 21 April 2008
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Created: 18 April 2008 18 April 2008
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Hits: 4726 4726
In fact, we had been present at the original demolition two and a half
years before, a report of which, entitled “The Miserable Occupation on
a Miserable Morning,” appeared on our website. At that time, 6:30 on a
very cold and rainy morning in late November, 2005, ICAHD staff,
volunteers and activists had rushed to Anata to witness, document and
resist the demolition of the Hamdan family home – and subsequently of
their next door neighbor. By the time we arrived the area had already
been blocked off by the Israeli Border Police, so we had been unable to
approach the houses. We watched from afar as a bulldozer systematically
demolished the homes, leaving a pile of rubble and the shattered
families standing amidst their belongings in the freezing rain,
wondering where to go, where they would sleep that night, how to
survive without a home and any financial resources. Later that day we
learned that another five Palestinian homes had been demolished: three
in Beit Hanina, one in Isawia and another one in A-Tur. The home of yet
another family suffered an even more grotesque fate. In a "compromise"
with the court, the family is to demolish half its house with its own
hands, while the other half will be sealed while the family attempts to
obtain a building permit.
Only one small but devastating incident distinguished the Hamdan
demolition this past week from the normal routine. As Shaadi Hamdan and
I were standing in front of the home, we were accosted by a slim, blond
Border Policeman, probably of Russian origin. “I was born to demolish
Palestinian homes,” he informed us mockingly, a big smile on his face,
a swagger in his movements. “I love demolishing homes. I wake up in the
morning hungry to demolish homes.” With that he walked away. I can’t
convey the mixture of anguish, anger, bewilderment and resignation that
crossed Shaadi’s face at that moment. He simply stood aside as his home
was demolished for the second time.
I could not stand aside. Sensing that the forcible removal of the
family’s possessions (or most of them) was about to cease and the
demolition begin, I seized the moment and rushed into the home,
planting myself in a corner of what had been the kitchen before the
surprised Border Police could react. The head of the police unit rushed
up to me sitting on the floor and ordered me to leave. My conscience as
an Israeli, a Jew and a human being forbids me to permit this illegal
and immoral act of demolition from taking place, I told him. In fact, I
informed him, I am placing you under citizen’s arrest for violating the
Fourth Geneva Convention (Article 53), which prohibits the demolishing
of homes in occupied territories. I thereby asked the accompanying
policemen to arrest him. Sputtering, furious, he placed plastic
handcuffs on me and had me forcibly thrown out of the house.
Lying on the ground as the bulldozer commenced its evil work, I noted
what I often see at demolitions: police and soldiers standing around
laughing among themselves, eating sandwiches, swapping the latest
sports news. Taking advantage of their being distracted from the
demolition itself, I suddenly sprang up and made a run for the
bulldozer. The police chased me and wrestled me to the ground. Furious
at this additional challenge to his authority, the policeman in charge
had me put in tight metal handcuffs and, since I refused to walk,
dragged down the mountainside to an awaiting paddy wagon.
Nothing, of course, happened to me, besides a few bruises. The Border
Policeman “born to demolish” paraded around me repeating his delight at
the day’s events, all of which ICAHD activists recorded on film. But we
Israeli Jews enjoy a privileged position. We know the police or
soldiers will not shoot us, will not beat us, will not detain us for
long, and so we exploit that privilege in ways that Palestinians can’t.
Shaadi would have been shot for doing what I did. We also know another
sad fact: that unless an Israeli like me performs such a dramatic act,
no one will notice the demolitions that take place almost daily in
Jerusalem, the West Bank and, yes, Gaza. The news spread quickly
throughout the world. I was interviewed that day, my hands still in
handcuffs, by radio stations from South Africa to Norway. I tried, of
course, to put my action in context, to stress that my experience paled
next to the crime that had been perpetrated upon the Hamdan family by
the Israeli authorities. But I knew the truth: only the arrest of an
Israeli makes the news; Palestinian suffering, as their very claim for
justice, is ignored. Still, resistance is necessary.
The Hamdan family is now in serious debt and without a home of their
own. The three family units have been scattered amongst their
relatives. We have offered to rebuild the home, but Shaadi says he has
no more stomach for the unending cycle of building and demolishing. He
doesn’t see the point of it, neither as an act of political resistance
about which no one seems to care nor as a solution to his personal
problems. Unable or unwilling to leave the country, which is what
Israel’s policy of house demolitions is all about, he will sink into
the woodwork, managing to survive out of sight as do millions of other
Palestinians. Overwhelmed by the scope of demolitions, it is unlikely
we will stay in close touch with him as well. With 18,000 homes
demolished in the Occupied Territories since 1967 and thousands more
targeted, we will do our best to resist those demolitions we can reach.
We have rebuilt about 150 homes in the past eleven years, a drop in the
bucket in terms of those needing to be rebuilt but significant in terms
of acts of political resistance. Shaadi might not see it, and the
Palestinian Authority does not pursue it, but ICAHD has succeeded in
raising the issue of house demolitions among both governments and civil
society in countries around the world. Ending house demolitions is in
the first phase of the all-but-defunct Road Map.
Still, the demolition of the Hamdan home reminds us that Israel
continues to strengthen and expand its Occupation daily, through the
demolition of Palestinian homes, the expropriation of their land,
massive settlement construction, the building of a massive highway
system that separates Israeli from Palestinian traffic, the continued
construction of the Wall and in a hundred other ways that escape public
attention – all in violation of the so-called Road Map to which the US
and Europe claim to be so committed. Our struggles against the
Occupation must continue, of course, even if no solution is apparent.
Many of us in the critical Israeli peace movement believe that the
two-state solution has been eliminated by Israel’s settlement policies
(unless we accept the notion of a Palestinian Bantustan, which we do
not), but we doubt that a one-state solution will garner the support
needed to become a practical program. Many Palestinians like Shaadi
feel isolated and even defeated; they persevere, but are in desperate
need of international support and protection until a solution – or the
will to impose a solution – emerges. We must redouble our opposition to
the Occupation in order to show Shaadi that, in fact, rebuilding his
home is part of an effective political movement that will achieve
Palestinian national rights and a just peace. We can begin with a
minimalist demand that Rice, Blair, Ban and the other international
decision-makers should have insisted upon years ago: that Israel end
the demolishing of Palestinian homes NOW.
(Jeff Halper is the Coordinator of the Israeli Committee Against House
Demolitions (ICAHD). He can be reached at <
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.>).