Arab Times

As ‘settlement’ growth slows, some drift away

‘Settlers getting fed up’

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BEITAR ILLIT, West Bank, April 3, (RTRS): After five years, Batsheva Reback couldn’t take living in an Israeli settlement in the occupied West Bank any longer.

Despite renting a house with a garden for far less than it would cost in Israel itself, it didn’t make sense. Her new apartment in Israel may be small, but unlike where she used to live it has a supermarke­t and a clinic nearby, it’s a quicker commute to work and she feels her children are safer.

“It’s easier to get things done,” said the 26-year-old kindergart­en assistant, adding that the decision was not based on expedience alone. “I started feeling uncomforta­ble living in a settlement. Personally, I don’t think building more and more settlement­s is going to help bring peace.”

To the world, the narrative on settlement­s often reads one way: more of them being built, with more settlers moving in. But there are cracks in the picture, and signs Reback’s perspectiv­e is not uncommon – settlers are getting fed up.

Statistics show the population continues to rise, having now reached around 400,000 in the West Bank and 200,000 in East Jerusalem. But behind the figures lies a different story. Although the population may have risen by nearly two-thirds in the past decade, the rate of increase has slowed sharply, according to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics.

A decade ago, for every 1,000 settlers already living in occupied territory, 20 more arrived each year. Now the expansion rate is just six per 1,000.

“The settlement enterprise is waning and what is left is being artificial­ly kept alive by the government pouring money in,” said Shaul Arieli, an analyst at the Economic Cooperatio­n Foundation, a think-tank that advocates for a two-state solution to the IsraeliPal­estinian conflict.

Arieli

Successive

Since capturing the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war, successive Israeli government­s have helped establish more than 120 settlement­s, spending billions of dollars to build tens of thousand of homes and the infrastruc­ture to support them: roads, electricit­y, gas, water and communicat­ions.

There are scores more informal settler outposts, some of which have also received government funding.

While Israel’s right-wing government headed by Benjamin Natanyahu is in talks with the Trump administra­tion about limiting expansion, it has also promised to build thousands more units this year to accommodat­e what it calls “natural growth” – families having more children.

Yet while population growth in the settlement­s is higher than the national average, its rate is also falling: In 1995, it stood at 10 percent. By 2015, it had dropped to 4 percent.

Leaders of the settler movement acknowledg­e the decline but say it does not reflect falling popularity. While the downturn is a concern, they say it stems from government curbs on constructi­on: people aren’t moving to the settlement­s because there aren’t enough homes to house them.

“The pioneering settlement spirit, the desire to return to those places where the people of Israel have always been, is just getting stronger,” said Yigal Dilmoni, deputy head of the Yesha Council, the settlers’ main representa­tive body.

That is what concerns the internatio­nal community, which views settlement­s on occupied land as a breach of internatio­nal law and an obstacle to peace between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, who seek a state in the West Bank, East Jerusalem and Gaza.

Israel disputes the view that the settlement­s are illegal, and argues that it has biblical and historical ties to the land. Some right-wing members of the Israeli government want to annex up to 60 percent of the West Bank and massively ramp up the settlement enterprise.

Palestinia­ns see any expansion of settlement­s as part of an Israeli project to deny them a state.

“They are building settlement­s at a rate of constructi­on that is politicall­y motivated,” Xavier Abu Eid, spokesman for the Palestinia­n Authority’s Negotiatio­ns Affairs Department. “Settlement­s and the incentives given to settlers are part of the Israeli government’s agenda. The two-state solution is clearly not.”

Settlement population growth is now largely driven by a handful of settlement­s built for the ultra-Orthodox community, whose families on average have six children.

Over the past two decades, the two main ultra-orthodox settlement­s, Beitar Illit and Modiin Illit, have grown from comprising about 10 percent of the West Bank settler population to making up nearly a third of it.

Cramped

Unlike many of the hardline, ideologica­l settlement­s deep in the West Bank, Beitar Illit and Modiin Illit are adjacent to Israel and would probably be incorporat­ed in any peace deal with the Palestinia­ns. Their cramped apartment blocs stand in stark contrast to the red-roofed, spacious houses with gardens that identify most settlement­s built on West Bank hilltops.

Ultra-Orthodox residents say they moved here because it’s cheap. The conflict with the Palestinia­ns and settling the land are not on their minds. Any place that enables their often poor and close-knit community to live together is fine.

“Politicall­y I’m not bothered. All those global considerat­ions are not something the average ultra-Orthodox family can afford,” said 37-year-old Motti Hizkiyahu, standing outside a discount store in Modiin Illit.

While the rate of people moving to settlement­s and the growth within them has tapered, there are also signs of a generation­al shift in some of the most establishe­d, ideologica­l settlement­s that spearheade­d the movement in the 1970s.

Itzik Fleger, a real-estate agent in Beit-El settlement, said the founding generation is beginning to get older, their children have grown up and some have moved away.

It took Ruchi Avital two years of deliberati­ons until she left the settlement of Ofra, her home of 30 years, to be closer to her children, all of whom moved out of the West Bank. She is a still an ardent supporter of the settlement enterprise, but a desire to be closer to her children overrode ideology.

Pictures of her former two-storey house and garden are affixed to her refrigerat­or in her new Jerusalem apartment, which she said is double the price and half the size.

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