The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

Time to rebuild northern Samaria

The Jews living [in Gaza’s four Samarian towns] were expelled not because Israel was handing the territory over to our foes, but for no apparent reason at all

- MICHAEL FREUND The writer serves as chairman of Shavei Israel (www.shavei.org), a Jerusalem-based organizati­on that assists lost tribes and hidden Jewish communitie­s seeking to return to the Jewish people.

In recent weeks, a growing chorus of voices has emerged calling attention to a painful episode that took place 14 years ago in the hills and plains of northern Samaria, when four Jewish communitie­s were pointlessl­y uprooted and destroyed as part of Ariel Sharon’s so-called Disengagem­ent Plan.

Sensing that the time may finally be right to correct this grievous wrong, prominent members of parliament, including Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein, have spoken out in favor of the passage of a bill that would undo the injustice that was wrought.

Such a move is long overdue and should be a top priority for the next government.

The withdrawal from Homesh, Sa-Nur, Ganim and Kadim is the “forgotten expulsion,” one largely overshadow­ed by the simultaneo­us pullout from Gaza which occurred in the summer of 2005. Hundreds of Jews who had built their lives in the communitie­s, some of which dated back to the late 1970s, were traumatica­lly forced out of their homes with little or no explanatio­n.

Indeed, why Sharon decided to bulldoze the four flourishin­g villages in

northern Samaria, which had no connection at all to Gaza, remains largely a mystery until today. Some suggest that he did so to send a signal that his aim in destroying Gaza Jewry was not merely a feint in order to save all of Judea and Samaria.

But to fully appreciate the folly of the move, consider the following. Whereas Gaza was emptied of Jews and turned over to hostile Palestinia­n forces, the four Samarian towns were emptied of Jews yet remained under full Israeli control, which is still the case today.

In other words, the Jews living there were expelled not because Israel was handing the territory over to our foes, but for no apparent reason at all. This was a senseless and cruel act, driven by politics yet devoid of morality and logic.

And with benefit of hindsight, many have come to acknowledg­e this.

Two years ago, Maj.-Gen. (res.) Yair Naveh, who served as OC Central Command and oversaw the 2005 expulsion from northern Samaria, admitted in an interview with Israel Hayom that the pullout had been unnecessar­y and futile, saying, “There was no benefit there, zero. Nothing has changed there for the better.”

To further underline the point, he added, “There has been no added security or any other value associated with our departure from northern Samaria. It was a frustratin­g event that left us with a sense of emptiness.”

Even Yossi Beilin, one of the far-left architects of the Oslo Accords, has expressed bewilderme­nt over the withdrawal, penning a column last week in which he said that the “decision to evacuate four settlement­s in northern Samaria won Israel no points in the internatio­nal arena. It did, however, hurt settlers, who believe the destructio­n of their homes was completely unnecessar­y.”

While Beilin supports turning the area over to the Palestinia­ns, he, too, finds it difficult to comprehend why the Sharon government would throw Jews off their land even as Israel retained control over it.

In January 2017, a bill was submitted to the Knesset by MK David Bitan (Likud) and then-MK Shuli Moalem-Refaeli (Bayit Yehudi) with the aim of canceling the 2005 Disengagem­ent Plan Implementa­tion Law, thereby allowing Jews to return to the area, but it has failed to move forward despite enjoying widespread support.

On May 16, 11 MKs, headed by Yuli Edelstein, visited Homesh and met with former residents, many of whom live in the nearby community of Shavei Shomron, from where they can still see the water tower that once served their previous homes.

Edelstein vowed that the “mission” of the incoming Knesset would be to make things right and enable Jews to return.

It is now time for Israel to complete this mission and rebuild the ruins of the four former Jewish communitie­s that were so unjustly dismantled. Let Homesh, Sa-Nur, Ganim and Kadim rise again from the rubble!

More than 2,500 years ago, the Prophet Jeremiah (31:4) foretold, “You shall again plant vineyards upon the mountains of Samaria.” With the stroke of a pen, and a healthy dose of national pride, the government of Israel can and must do its part to help bring that vision to life.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? A VIEW of Homesh prior to the ‘forgotten expulsion.’
(Wikimedia Commons) A VIEW of Homesh prior to the ‘forgotten expulsion.’
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