The Jerusalem Post

Ofra families fear homes will be razed today

Settlers leaders, rabbis calls for activists to protest against demolition of nine houses

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF

Nine families in Ofra fear security forces could demolish their single-family stone homes as early as Tuesday, after the High Court of Justice issued its final ruling supporting the razing.

“This is a pointless act of injustice and we are obligated to protest it,” settler leader Avi Ro’eh wrote on Facebook.

Ro’eh is both the head of the Council of Jewish Communitie­s of Judea and Samaria as well as the Binyamin Regional Council under whose auspices Ofra is located.

“I call on everyone to come to Ofra tomorrow to join the protest,” he said.

He was joined in the call by leading national-religious rabbis who also plan to head to the settlement 5 km. northeast of Ramallah. This includes: Rabbis Haim Druckman, Yaakov Medan, Shmuel Eliyahu and Yehoshua Shapira, along with Ofra Rabbi Avi Gisser.

According to a spokesman for the families, all but one have already moved their possession­s out of the homes. But they plan to be in the structures to protest their destructio­n.

The families have hung large signs with photos of themselves in front of the homes, along with other placards that state “Ofra demands law and justice.”

On Monday night, some of the families planed to hold religious classes in their homes and another organized a sing-along. Teenagers have already began to gather outside the homes.

The High Court of Justice had ruled that the homes must be removed by March 5 because they were constructe­d without permits on private Palestinia­n property.

The homes are located on a street within the settlement and look like any other homes in the community.

Israeli NGO Yesh Din had petitioned against them in 2008, when they were just under constructi­on.

Although the families had agreed in principle to move, they had asked the court to allow them to seal the homes, rather then destroy them.

In a petition to the court they had argued that the newly approved “Settlement­s Bill,” would allow for the legalizati­on of the homes.

The bill retroactiv­ely authorizes settler homes built on private Palestinia­n property and mandates the compensati­on of the Palestinia­n land owners.

But the legislatio­n excludes homes like the ones in Ofra, against which the High Court had ruled prior to the bill’s passage.

The families had asked the court to allow the law to apply to the homes, explaining that with the new legislatio­n a master plan would be created for the community that would enable the legalizati­on of their homes.

Chief Justice Miriam Naor rejected the request, explaining that the families petition was a “back-door” attempt to eliminate the legislatio­n’s exemption clause.

She added that it was also not clear that the homes could be legalized at the end of what would surely be a protracted bureaucrat­ic process. Supreme Court Vice President Elyakim Rubinstein said he agreed with Naor even though he had second thoughts and speculated as to whether there was a way to legalize the structures.

 ?? (Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) ?? BANNERS IN Ofra read: ‘Stop the demolition. Ofra demands law and justice,’ while the poster on the house reads: ‘The Perry Family. A right-wing government?’
(Ronen Zvulun/Reuters) BANNERS IN Ofra read: ‘Stop the demolition. Ofra demands law and justice,’ while the poster on the house reads: ‘The Perry Family. A right-wing government?’

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