The National - News

Palestinia­ns defy Israel’s revenge

Israel’s internatio­nally condemned method of retributio­n – destroying the family homes of those it claims have carried out attacks – is creating more hatred against the country, foreign correspond­ent Ben Lynfield reports

- Ben Lynfield Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

RAMALLAH // Impoverish­ed Palestinia­ns are donating their last few shekels to rebuild West Bank homes bulldozed by Israel in punishment demolition­s.

The donors include a cancer patient struggling to pay for his treatment, day labourers who can barely feed their families, and a student with no money who gave her jewellery instead. The demolished buildings were the homes of men Israel accused of having killed Israelis. The alleged killers were shot dead – then their homes were reduced to rubble, leaving their families, who are accused of no crime, without a roof over their heads.

Now the community is rally- ing round, and collectors raised nearly 650,000 shekels, more than Dh600,000, in three days.

“We are telling the occupation, you can destroy but we will continue to build,” said Ahmad Al Ouri, a former prisoner of an Israeli jail who is on the organising committee of the fund-raising drive.

RAMALLAH // A student from Bethlehem removed her gold crucifix necklace and donated it to the cause. A man of modest means with cancer who needed every penny for treatment came up with 50 shekels. Day labourers hard- pressed to feed their families dug into their pockets.

These are just a few of the enthusiast­ic responses of the public in Ramallah to a new kind of charity drive.

Organisers were collecting funds for the rebuilding of the family home of Mohanad Halabi, a 19- year old who was shot dead on October 3 after he stabbed to death two Israeli men in the Muslim quarter of occupied East Jerusalem. Halabi also stabbed and wounded an Israeli woman and injured her two-year-old son in the attack, which happened at the start of the current wave of unrest. The collection effort was launched on January 10, a day after Israeli army bulldozers demolished the Halabi family home in a collective punishment that Israel said was a measure to deter further attacks. By the time the drive ended on Saturday it had raised 648,987 Shekels (Dh601,459) from passers-by in central Ramallah and on the campus of nearby Birzeit University.

A parallel drive to rebuild the destroyed family homes of four dead alleged assailants – regarded as martyrs to Palestinia­ns – is under way in the northern West Bank city of Nablus.

“We are telling the occupation, you can destroy but we will continue to build,” said Ahmad Al Ouri, a former prisoner who is on the organising committee of the drive, which is an independen­t initiative led in part by employ- ees of the Palestinia­n Authority though not formally linked to it. In Ramallah’s main Manara Square yesterday, people alighted from cars and pedestrian­s stopped to slip coins and bills into a box decorated with a poster of Halabi and a picture of his parents standing in the rubble of their home in Surda village, just outside Ramallah. Writing on the box described Halabi as “the detonator of the Jerusalem uprising”. More than 150 Palestinia­ns have been killed in the latest wave of violence, most shot dead by Israeli security forces who claimed they carried out, or attempted to carry out, knife attacks. Twenty-five Israelis have been killed.

While Halabi is seen in Israel as a terrorist, those contributi­ng money view him as a hero who died defending Islam’s third holiest site, the Al Aqsa mosque, which Palestinia­ns say is under threat from Israel – something Israel denies. They feel that his parents and siblings are innocent victims of Israel’s home demolition policy.

“We feel for the family and thank God we have enough so that we can give,” said Maria Mohammed, from the nearby town of Turmus Aya, after her three-year old daughter Rasan dropped a coin in the box.

“It’s so sad to see them with their home destroyed while we have a home and our kids can live in comfort.”

Thaer Abu Baker, an employee at the Jawal telecommun­ications company, passed on a donation of 12,500 shekels from 50 employees. “We are one people and we help each other in times of stress,” he said. While the wave of violence against security forces and civilians has been the work of individual­s and has thus far not drawn wide participat­ion, a poll last month by the Palestinia­n Centre for Policy and Survey Research showed that two thirds of the public in the West Bank and Gaza support knife attacks.

Mr Al Ouri said the donations reflected support for the uprising.

Jamal Zakout, head of Al Ard think tank in Ramallah and a member of the Palestine National Council, said one of the reasons the fund-raising campaign has struck a chord was because the authority was seen as not acting to alleviate the plight of people whose homes were demolished.

“If people would see the government declare a solution or provide an alternativ­e home and make a political campaign internatio­nally maybe they wouldn’t feel as strongly that they have to do this,” he said.

Bassem Zakarneh, head of the 30,000 strong union of Palestinia­n Authority civil servants, proposed the government deducted one per cent from their monthly salaries to go to families whose homes were demolished.

The office of the spokesman of the Palestinia­n Authority cabinet did not respond to a request for comment.

In Surda, Mohanad Halabi’s father, Shafiq, a plumber, said his son was “martyred for the sake of Al Aqsa”.

Standing near the rubble from his two- storey villa, Mr Halabi noted that Israel had also confiscate­d the land on which the house was built and that he would need a large amount of money to buy alternativ­e land.

He said the demolition would only increase hatred of Israel among Palestinia­ns.

“All my life I worked to build this house for me and the children. How do you expect me to feel? They do not scare us or deter us.”

Of the campaign, he said: “I feel the people are behind me and that Mohanad will be in the mind, hearts and memories of the Palestinia­ns forever.”

‘ I feel the people are behind me and that Mohanad will be in the mind, hearts and memories of the Palestinia­ns forever

Shafiq Halabi Father of Mohanad Halabi

 ?? Photos: Heidi Levine For The National. ?? Mohanad Halabi’s father, Shafiq stands by the rubble of his family home that was destroyed by Israel, as his sons Mustafa, 10, left, and Mohammed 21, secure a giant poster to the twisted metal showing a portrait of his late son.
Photos: Heidi Levine For The National. Mohanad Halabi’s father, Shafiq stands by the rubble of his family home that was destroyed by Israel, as his sons Mustafa, 10, left, and Mohammed 21, secure a giant poster to the twisted metal showing a portrait of his late son.
 ??  ?? Thaer Abu Baker drops a donation of 12,500 shekels into a collection box for the rebuilding of Mohanad Halabi’s family home.
Thaer Abu Baker drops a donation of 12,500 shekels into a collection box for the rebuilding of Mohanad Halabi’s family home.

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