I am always
learning from the landscape and I am familiar with the renaming of everything
Palestinian (that has happened since 1948), but today I learn a new twist to
this linguistic erasure. Along the highway, we see signs in Hebrew,
English, and Arabic. It turns out that the Arabic names are actually
transliterated from the Hebrew, thus engineering a process to create a
different word in Arabic, deArabizing the names of historic places. Thus Jerusalem
in Hebrew is Yerushalayim and in Arabic a transliteration of Yerushalayim,
rather than Al Quds which is the Arabic name for Jerusalem. If you
think about this, the messaging is that not only are Palestinians invisible,
but they are actually immigrants and were not really here before the State of Israel
got around to naming everything.
We meet up
with Thabet, a political geologist and director for the southern office of
Adalah, waiting along the highway with two interns. The land is fairly
flat, bone dry, and clearly desert. We turn off the modern highway to the
unmarked, unrecognized village of Araqib, bumping over an unpaved road of
rocks, packed sand and deep potholes, past rows of recently planted Eucalyptus
trees on one side and a cemetery and cluster of Bedouin tents and shanties on
the other. We stop at a large, flat topped tent made of wide sheets of
plastic and wooden supporting planks and sit down on the ground on the oblong
created by long rugs and pillows. We are introduced to the Sheikh and to
the Haia Noach, the executive director of the Negev Coexistence Forum for Civil
Equality (www.dukium.org)
. The Sheikh is wearing a long black robe, Arab headdress and when his
cellphone rings, it is a familiar tango jingle.
As we are
served bitter coffee prepared in a pit in the center of the floor, the Sheikh
explains to us in vivid detail, the many “crimes against humanity” that have
been committed against his village which has been demolished 52 times and
rebuilt 52 times. In 1999, the Israelis started crop dusting his fields with
poisonous chemicals, and repeated the process five times. The chemicals
affected the fields, animals died and there was an increase in miscarriages.
“Where was the UN protecting human rights?” he asks. We are invited to download
a video of the village before and after the crop dusting from a computer that
is plugged into an electrical socket tacked to a supporting beam. He
suggests that it is the racism in the Israeli medical system that has hindered
any research into this medical catastrophe.
On 6/2/10,
Israeli forces arrived assisted by helicopters, dogs, and horses, and leveled
the village. He calls this, “A Nazi crime.” His thick brown hands gesture
as he speaks. He describes the demolition where houses were leveled, and
food, milk, medicine destroyed, 4,500 fruit and olive trees and grape vines
were uprooted. “We are people. We have zero unemployment. We live from
the fields.” He says it is amazing that the Israelis want to change them
from independent farmers living in the desert to poverty stricken factory
workers controlled by Jewish bosses in reservation towns. Another round
of coffee and tea. Six months after the village was demolished, 40 trucks
arrived and removed all the rubble and the court ordered the Bedouins to move
into their cemetery. The Israelis killed 100 sheep and 16 Arabic
horses. Currently the only secure place for the families to live is the
cemetery we passed on arriving, and they live there without water or
electricity. “The dead protects the living.” The Israelis then planted
the Bedouin land with rows of Eucalyptus trees, the Ambassador Forest, and
foreign ambassadors are encouraged to plant trees here in the name of their
countries. The sheikh was visited by the South African ambassador who condemned
these policies and refused to plant a tree. With bitter irony, a large water
tanker arrives and starts watering these fledgling trees, but there is no water
for the people, in fact, Jew and Arabs are forbidden to provide water to the
Bedouin; the Bedouins were fined by the courts for police costs involved in the
attack. Another water tanker arrives.
The sheikh
states he has documentation to prove the Jewish National Fund is responsible
for this tree planting on their historic lands. Having lost their lands,
he asks, “Where do we live? How do we eat?” They also have no roads or
schools. The children have to travel to a distant town of Rahat, “a failed
refugee city” and the families continue to dig wells in search of water.
He questions, “Would Israel do this to a Jewish citizen?” In fact,
individual religious Jews have been acquiring farms in the area and the
government provides them with full support. “Israel treats us like we are a
security threat like Iran.”The sheikh states there are currently 58 cases in
the Israeli courts against him, all for the crime of sitting on his own land.
He urges, “We want to live with Jews, the criminals are the government and the
police.” Many Israeli NGOs support the struggles of the Bedouin. For instance,
Adalah petitioned the Israeli supreme court to stop the crop dusting, the
material used was Round Up, made in the US
The
sheikh’s son, Azziz, explains that the village of Araqib was first demolished
in 1948, but the people stayed and asked for recognition. They were
mostly ignored until 2010 when efforts to totally demolish the village got
serious. He describes the soldiers arriving at 4 am, demolishing 65 homes, 4500
olive trees, leveling the village. Before that there were 573 persons, “Before
we were employed, working cultivating the land, wheat in the winter, olive oil,
cheese, milk, all organic. “ Every family had small side jobs; he and his
wife had 400 chickens and sold eggs, bringing in 600-700 shekels per week. Now
the Bedouins have been changed to slaves, working 12 hour days, missing their
wives and children. The Prawer Plan which was designed to regulate the
settlement of the Bedouins in the Negev and ignores concepts in International
Law such as transitional justice, semi-nomadic property rights, and native
rights, “Means to kill us. We shall not be moved. There is no
option. If we leave, we will die.” The police are threatening to destroy
the cemetery which was built in 1914.
No comments:
Post a Comment