Cape Times

Palestinia­ns denied land, dignity, life

- Nwabisa Sigaba

IMAGINE living your life as though you were in a cage in your own home, and having to constantly prove your humanity and existence at every checkpoint and having your religious beliefs questioned at every holy site?

This is the daily reality of Palestinia­ns living in Israeli Occupied Palestine, where the daily movements and activities of Palestinia­ns are under constant surveillan­ce and scrutiny.

From the airport, I took a taxi driven by a middle-aged Palestinia­n. He has witnessed some of the worst brutalitie­s of the Israeli Defence Force in Palestine. He narrated the inhumane treatment that Palestinia­ns had endured under the Occupation.

“They steal land, they steal dignity and they steal life. And they do it with pride and arrogance,” the Palestinia­n taxi driver said.

It was not until we arrived at the first checkpoint and saw the high walls dividing Palestine from the illegal Zionist entity called Israel that the reality of apartheid Israeli began to materialis­e; the separation of population­s of people, of Muslim, Jewish and Christian holy sites as though these religions had nothing in common.

The systemic apartheid is visible in the infrastruc­ture; the narrow roads, demolished houses and buildings that Palestinia­ns have to live in, the abandoned cities, homes and markets, particular­ly in the city of Hebron.

The Palestinia­ns are not permitted to build, renovate or even provide basic municipal services in their own territorie­s without the written permission of the Israeli government.

The streets are filled with Israeli soldiers, surveying the daily activities of young Palestinia­ns who are usually suspected of malicious activities and prone to unwarrante­d arrests for voicing their anger at the ongoing occupation.

It is evident that many Palestinia­ns are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorders, and in my observatio­ns this is evident in their excessive smoking habits.

There are barely any recreation­al centres and young children find pleasure in aggressive activities of showing scorn and hatred at the occupation, either by agitating Israeli soldiers through fireworks, stone-throwing and loud noises in places where there is a heavy military presence.

The bravery and fearlessne­ss of these young Palestinia­ns is scary but commendabl­e at the same time and it reminded me of the June 16 uprising in Soweto where young black South Africans took to the streets to display their outrage against apartheid.

The reality that Palestinia­ns are living through in their own land is similar to, and maybe even worse than, apartheid, where the walls are visibly symbolic of the divide.

The religious beliefs that are meant to unite Palestinia­ns and Jews, for example, the grave site of Prophet Abraham (Ibrahim AS), at the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron, is a source of great tumultuous conflict among Jews and Muslims.

The partition wall built inside the mosque demonstrat­es this. The wall was built because of a massacre that took place inside the mosque, prior to the wall being built, where a Jewish illegal settler shot dead about 30 Palestinia­n Muslims at early morning prayers.

The Israeli occupation of Palestine has resulted in more cultural, social, political and economic divisions mostly based on racism that is centred on religious identity.

The fact that Muslims, be they Palestinia­n or just mere tourists visiting holy sites in Jerusalem and other cities, have to prove their Islamic identity is a dehumanisi­ng and humiliatin­g act enforced by Israeli soldiers.

I felt like a criminal in most parts of Palestine, and even more so in Israel at the airport, where I was strip-searched after a Kifaya (Palestinia­n scarf) was found in my hand luggage.

I was interrogat­ed for about 30 minutes on the purpose of my visit and why I had the scarf.

I quickly concluded that Israelis do not want us to visit Palestinia­n territorie­s; they do not want us to witness the brutal, inhumane and savage conditions under which Palestinia­ns are forced to live under in their own land.

There are many internatio­nal observer groups that have been deployed to Palestine to make reports and findings about the conditions under which Palestinia­ns are forced to live.

One such group that we found in Hebron was the TIPH (Temporary Internatio­nal Presence in Hebron) which has been there for more than 10 years. These observer groups have done little in condemning Israel for its military occupation in Hebron and the destructio­n of life in that part of Palestine.

These observer groups hardly publish any of their findings in public platforms that are accessible to the internatio­nal community. Hence some of the atrocities and Human Rights violations committed by Israel go unnoticed and unpunished by the UN.

It is important that when we say we pledge solidarity with Palestinia­ns, we understand the depth of that pledge.

The apartheid here is real. Christian and Muslim Palestinia­ns alike are barricaded in walls meant to keep them out of their heritage, their land, their dignity, a feeling we know all too well as black South Africans.

Sigaba is a postgradua­te student assistant in the College of Human Sciences at Unisa and a Master’s candidate in Developmen­t Studies at Unisa.

 ?? Picture: Reuters/African News Agency (ANA) ?? WHEN THE HURT OVERFLOWS: Palestinia­n protesters run from Israeli fire and tear gas during a protest at the Israel-Gaza border in the southern Gaza Strip against the US embassy move to Jerusalem before the 70th anniversar­y of Nakba.
Picture: Reuters/African News Agency (ANA) WHEN THE HURT OVERFLOWS: Palestinia­n protesters run from Israeli fire and tear gas during a protest at the Israel-Gaza border in the southern Gaza Strip against the US embassy move to Jerusalem before the 70th anniversar­y of Nakba.
 ??  ?? NWABISA SIGABA
NWABISA SIGABA

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