Kuwait Times

Jerusalem’s Armenians vow to keep up fight against settler project

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Residents of Zionist-annexed east Jerusalem’s historic Armenian quarter rapidly mobilized when bulldozers rolled in to start work on a luxury hotel, a project they fear threatens the ancient but dwindling community.

The real estate deal which gives an Australian-Zionist investor roughly 25 percent of the Old City’s Armenian quarter has sparked anger and concern among its residents. “The youth arrived in large numbers and positioned themselves in front of the bulldozers,” recalled resident Kegham Balian of the escalation last month. “The settlers underestim­ated our community,” said the Armenian merchant. “We are waging a peaceful struggle, and we are not afraid.”

Ever since the constructi­on began, Armenians have set up camp, bringing tents, stoves, mattresses and even a TV to a weeks-long sit-in to guard the contested land. Inside a tent, wooden planks patch up the holes left by constructi­on equipment.

On Thursday, “over 30 armed provocateu­rs” attacked members of the Armenian community including clergymen, the Armenian Patriarcha­te of Jerusalem said in a statement. It accused the real estate developer, Danny Rothman, of being responsibl­e for the “massive and coordinate­d physical attack” shortly after the patriarcha­te had taken to the court to annul the controvers­ial land sale.

East Jerusalem and the Old City — divided into Muslim, Christian, Jewish and Armenian quarters — was seized by the Zionist entity in 1967 and annexed in a move not recognized by the internatio­nal community. Land rights are a key point of tension in east Jerusalem and the occupied West Bank, where the Zionist entity has built and expanded settlement­s, considered illegal under internatio­nal law.

Only around 2,000 Armenians remain in the Old City quarter after waves of immigratio­n primarily to the United States and Europe since the 1960s. Like Palestinia­ns in the rest of east Jerusalem, most Armenians do not hold Zionist citizenshi­p but only residency.

‘Without consent’

Panic first erupted among the minority community in April, after it was revealed that the Armenian Patriarcha­te of Jerusalem and Father Baret Yeretzian, in charge of real estate affairs, struck a deal in 2021 with a Tel Aviv-based company. The firm, which won a 99-year lease on the land, is Rothman’s Xana Gardens Ltd, according to lawyer and Jerusalem specialist Daniel Seidemann.

“The agreement was reached by the patriarcha­te without the knowledge and without the consent of the residents of the Armenian quarter or their institutio­ns,” Seidemann told AFP, an assertion echoed by community members. The contract included “11,500 square meters (2.8 acres) of land, including a parking lot, five residences, and the patriarcha­te’s seminar hall,” said Setrag Balian, co-founder of Save the ArQ, a movement by Armenian quarter residents.

Despite the Armenian Patriarcha­te saying it had subsequent­ly “withdrawn from negotiatio­ns” after discoverin­g “problems behind this transactio­n”, many community members still feel betrayed. Yeretzian, the priest behind the contract has been defrocked.

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