Saturday Star

‘We want to return to our land’

Palestinia­n are refugees determined to go back, 70 years after the Nakba, writes Suraya Dadoo

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UMM OMAR was eight years old when Irgun and Stern Gang terrorists violently expelled her family from their farm in the village of Jusayr in May 1948 during the creation of Israel.

This week she, along with millions of Palestinia­ns, are marking 70 years since 750 000 indigenous Palestinia­ns were driven from their land to make way for the creation of Israel.

For Palestinia­ns, this is the Nakba (catastroph­e); for Israelis, it is 70 years of independen­ce.

“We used to grow wheat. I remember going out with my parents in the wheat fields when I was a little girl. We never saw another happy day after we left,” says the 78-year-old great-grandmothe­r.

The family fled to al-majdal, a Palestinia­n town that is now the Israeli city of Ashkelon. As Zionist terrorists continued to ethnically cleanse Palestinia­ns, the family moved to the Jabaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip.

Her father returned to Jusayr to check on their land. “He saw that everything was okay. It was just like we left it.” But on the way back, Omar’s father was killed when he stepped on a landmine planted by Zionist militias.

Denied the right to return to their original villages, the refugee camp in Gaza became permanent for Omar and thousands of others. Today, 70% of Gaza’s population are refugees, meaning they or their parents or grandparen­ts fled or were expelled from areas that became Israel.

They have never been allowed to return, despite UN Security Council Resolution 194 guaranteei­ng them the right to return to their homes.

Not surprising­ly, the movement to return home has started in the besieged Gaza Strip.

Known as the Great Return March (GRM), thousands of Palestinia­ns have engaged in protests at the Israel-gaza border fence since March 30. Makeshift tents, symbolisin­g the right of return for Palestinia­n refugees, have been erected 700m away from the unilateral­ly imposed Israeli military buffer zone. Protesters are also calling for an end to the decade-long Israeli siege of the Gaza Strip that has strangled the economy and life of Palestinia­ns.

Since the protests began, about 50 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 5 000 injured from Israeli live ammunition and tear gas. There have been no Israeli casualties.

“With the Great Return March, Palestinia­ns are demanding a life of dignity,” says GRM spokespers­on Ahmad Abu Rtemah. “Nothing about life in Gaza is normal. The Nakba is not just a memory, it is an ongoing reality. We accept that we all must eventually die. But in Gaza, the tragedy is that we don’t even get to live.”

It’s not just Palestinia­ns in Gaza that long to return to their land.

Abu Arab was 13 years old when Zionist forces bombed his family’s home in Saffuriya in July 1948. He is now an Israeli citizen, but cannot return to his village less than 2km from Nazareth where he lives.

As Israeli troops occupied the village, the family was forced northwards towards Lebanon, eventually ending up in a refugee camp there.

His father made the dangerous journey back and found the village gone. Saffuriya had been fenced off and declared a closed military zone. Anyone entering risked being shot by Zionist terrorist groups.

“We had nothing. Everything had been taken from us,” he says.

The family hid in a friend’s house in the nearby town of Nazareth, and eventually settled there.

Israel has built an exclusivel­y Jewish community over the village of Saffuriya, and given it the Hebrew name of Tzipori. Where the houses once stood is a pine forest planted by the Jewish National Fund – an environmen­tally-friendly way of erasing the Palestinia­n presence.

The Israeli government refuses to allow Palestinia­n refugees to return home simply because they are not Jewish. Palestinia­ns are viewed as a “demographi­c threat” to the existence of Israel as a Jewish state. This is why Israel has not allowed Palestinia­ns to return to their own homes, and they continue to be forgotten in refugee camps in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.

While Palestinia­ns are a threat, Jewish identity is celebrated and welcomed in Israel.

For instance, a South African Jew who has never lived in Israel can automatica­lly gain citizenshi­p under Israel’s Law of Return, while a Palestinia­n refugee whose family lived in Palestine for generation­s – and who still hold the key to their home – is unlikely to obtain even a visitors’ visa, let alone the right to return there to live.

“We’re not calling for removing anybody from existence or displacing anybody from their place, we’re simply calling for justice. Our weapons are our rights and UN resolution 194, and we’re hoping that the internatio­nal community will recognise our just cause,” says Rtemah.

“I still hope I’ll die in my home town. I may be using a walker to move around today. But if they told me I can go back to Jusayr, I’d run all the way,” Umm Omar says.

Arab is equally determined. “I am sure one day I will return. If not me, then my son – and if not my son, then my grandson,” he says.

Like Umm Omar and Abu Arab, the makeshift tents of the GRM are standing firm against an Israeli regime that has tried to break the spirit and erase the presence of Palestinia­ns.

Seven decades after the Nakba, Palestinia­ns want nothing more than to return to their land and live in dignity.

● Suraya Dadoo is a researcher with Media Review Network in Johannesbu­rg. Find her on Twitter: @Suraya_dadoo

We’ll all die but in Gaza, we don’t even get to live

 ??  ?? Abu Arab was 13 when Zionist forces bombed his family’s home in Saffuriya.
Abu Arab was 13 when Zionist forces bombed his family’s home in Saffuriya.
 ??  ?? The refugee camp in Gaza became a permanent home for Umm Omar and thousands of others.
The refugee camp in Gaza became a permanent home for Umm Omar and thousands of others.
 ??  ?? Abu Arab is now an Israeli citizen but he cannot return to his village near Nazareth.
Abu Arab is now an Israeli citizen but he cannot return to his village near Nazareth.
 ??  ??

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