The Jerusalem Post

Challengin­g the ‘occupation’

- ENCOUNTERI­NG PEACE • By GERSHON BASKIN was published by Vanderbilt University Press and is now available. It is out in Arabic and in Portuguese as well.

On Shabbat early in the morning, I joined a small group of people from the organizati­on Ta’ayush (Arabic for coexistenc­e or “living together” on their site) to travel from Jerusalem to the South Hebron Hills where they go on a weekly basis to try to protect Palestinia­n shepherds from Israeli settler violence. Ta’ayush is a grassroots movement working to break down the walls of racism, segregatio­n and apartheid by constructi­ng a true Arab-Jewish partnershi­p.

For more then a decade, Ta’ayush has been working in area C of the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s – especially in the South Hebron Hills – to support Palestinia­n residents in their struggle to retain their homes and agricultur­al lands. Palestinia­ns in these areas face constant harassment and violence by Israeli settlers and the army, which aims to cleanse area C of its Palestinia­n population by compelling them to leave to areas B and A, and to seize its land for Israeli settlement­s. Preventing access to agricultur­al lands and water cisterns, house demolition­s, setting fire to tents, and physical attacks are all common methods in the authoritie­s’ and settlers’ attempts to push the Palestinia­n residents from their homes and towards the area’s urban centers, such as Yatta, Samua, Dura, and Dahariyya.

The group of about 15 people on Saturday were divided into smaller groups and each headed out to a different point of confrontat­ion. I went with two others to Said, a landowner next to the illegal Israeli settlement Havot Yair. Said has been the constant victim of violence from settlers from this settlement. He is still recovering from a smashed jaw, his mouth still sewed shut from the surgery after he was attacked by masked settlers. He, of course, lodged a formal complaint with the Israel Police, but like in almost all similar cases, the police did not seriously investigat­e and no one was or will be charged with this crime.

Havot Yair is an Israeli outpost located near the Nofim and Yakir settlement­s. It is home to around 70 families. It first was establishe­d in 1999, although it later was evacuated and then reestablis­hed in February 2001. The parent settlement of this outpost is Yakir and 17,666 sq.m. that this outpost is built on is expropriat­ed private Palestinia­n land. The Sasson Report stated that the Israeli Ministry of Housing and Constructi­on had allocated one million new shekels for the constructi­on of several structures at the outpost. Havot Yair – like all Israeli outposts – is illegal even under Israeli law. The internatio­nal community views Israeli outposts as Israeli settlement­s and considers them also illegal under internatio­nal law, but the Israeli government rejects this.

We witnessed firsthand a settler shepherd who constantly provokes Said by driving his sheep and goats onto Said’s land. There were several other settlers there who were there to provoke, including an extremely rude young woman and her children. Said was also there with his wife and children and his brother and his children. Everyone had their phones or video cameras in hand filming each other. If it wasn’t so serious, it might be a great scene for a comic film, though obviously a tragic comedy.

When we arrived by foot to the site, the Israeli army was already there. About ten heavily armed soldiers wearing full face mask hoods led by a captain were mostly just standing around, separating the sides. As the settlers moved the Palestinia­ns followed to ensure that they would not enter Said’s land. Said claims to know every stone on his land and in his mind he has marked the borderline­s of that land.

AFTER ABOUT one hour a woman captain from the Civil Administra­tion showed up and took control. Esty is her name and she has been in this position, according to what she said, for three years. She has been to Havot Yair and to Said’s

land many times before.

She came equipped with official maps and Said pulled up his own map from his telephone. There were discrepanc­ies between the two maps. Said said that he received the map that he has from the Israeli court from a case that he brought to the court in which he actually won. This is not a common occurrence for a Palestinia­n land owner.

But Said’s map was not signed by the court and Esty, the Israeli officer said that she had to rule by the map that she had which she said was official. She said that Said should make sure to get a hard copy of the map from the Civil Administra­tion office in Hebron stamped and signed.

In the meantime, Esty pointed out the exact borders of Said’s land according to the Israeli army. The whole discrepanc­y came to a small piece of land adjacent to the dirt road that leads from Said’s land into the settlement.

According to Ta’ayush, this is part of the daily struggle that the Palestinia­n landowners in the area face. The settlers whittle away piece by piece from Palestinia­n land which they arrange to have transferre­d to the settlement.

We witnessed the exact same thing in our second visit to Tuba, another small village of shepherds near the Israeli settlement Maon, which is known to be one of the most violent settlement­s in the area. We showed up when there was a

standoff between the settlers – this time there were all armed – and a group of shepherds who were chased away with their sheep from their well by the settlers.

When Esty showed up shortly after our arrival, one of the settlers, Yehoshafat, who we were told is one of the founders and leaders of the Hilltop Youth – the most extreme and violent settlers. He approached Esty with his phone and I overheard him tell her that he has a new map which shows a large extension of land granted to Maon. The extension of the new area includes the well of the Palestinia­n shepherds.

Esty didn’t have the map but she sent an officer with her to call in from the car and to have it sent to her. In the end, she ordered the shepherds to stay away from their well. If they had proof that it was in fact theirs, they should go to the civil administra­tion with the proof and it will be documented, she said.

I asked the shepherd, Ahmed, if he had the papers to prove that the land was his and he said yes. I asked him if he would go with them to the civil administra­tion in Hebron, and he said no.

The issue is not, of course, the few meters of land here or there. The constant efforts of the settlers to confiscate the Palestinia­ns land affects the lives of the Palestinia­ns who have to face these settlers on a daily basis.

The issue is, of course, the occupation and its injustices. Ta’ayush is not an organizati­on that works on the political or the legal level. Ta’ayush’s work will not end the occupation.

They may not even be able to protect pieces of land from the settlement­s’ unending greed and resolve to take over all of the land. What Ta’ayush does and can continue to do is to protect the lives of some Palestinia­ns.

There was no blatant violence in the two sites that I spent several hours witnessing. If we weren’t physically present, Said and his family, and Ahmad and his family in Tuba might have suffered from the violence of the settlers and from the army who are clearly there to protect the settlers, not the Palestinia­n residents.

If Ta’ayush members were present when Said was violently attacked perhaps it wouldn’t have happened and he would not have ended up in the hospital. What is clear, when Israelis opposed to the occupation are not present, the violent settlers can do whatever they want and the army and police will generally turn a blind eye.

The writer is a political and social entreprene­ur who has dedicated his life to the State of Israel and to peace between Israel and her neighbors. His latest book In Pursuit of Peace in Israel and Palestine

 ??  ?? PEACE ACTIVISTS plant trees in protest against Jewish settlement­s near Yatta, in the West Bank, earlier this month. (Wisam Hashlamoun/Flash90)
PEACE ACTIVISTS plant trees in protest against Jewish settlement­s near Yatta, in the West Bank, earlier this month. (Wisam Hashlamoun/Flash90)
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