Cape Times

Jerusalem street becomes emblem of the Palestinia­n struggle

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A PUTRID stench hangs over Sheikh Jarrah, a tiny neighbourh­ood of East Jerusalem where protesters are trying to prevent Israel evicting eight Palestinia­n families and letting Jews move in.

Over the past week, Israeli police have repeatedly fired a foul-smelling liquid known as skunk water that lingers through the night to try to disperse the demonstrat­ors.

The stand-off has seen violent clashes around the walled Old City and yesterday led to rocket fire by Gaza militants, drawing Israeli air strikes on Gaza that health officials there said killed nine Palestinia­ns.

It has also made Sheikh Jarrah an emblem of what Palestinia­ns see as an Israeli campaign to force them out of East Jerusalem.

A tree-lined area of sandstone homes, foreign consulates and luxury hotels, Sheikh Jarrah lies about 500 metres from the Old City's Damascus Gate.

It is named after a personal physician to Saladin, the Muslim conqueror who seized Jerusalem from the Crusaders in 1187.

Israel seized the Old City, and the rest of East Jerusalem and the adjacent West Bank in the 1967 war. It sees all Jerusalem as its capital, including Sheikh Jarrah, which contains a site revered by tje religious Jews as the tomb of an ancient high priest. Palestinia­ns live in most of Sheikh Jarrah's homes, but Israeli

settlers have moved in to some of its properties, saying they were owned by Jews before the 1948 Israeli-Arab war that followed the end of the British Mandate for Palestine.

Nabil al-Kurd, 77, is among the Palestinia­ns facing eviction from the neighbourh­ood’s Othman Ibn Affan Street after a long legal battle.

“Israel will not be satisfied until it kicks me out of the house I’ve lived in almost my entire life,” he said.

Half of his house was taken over by Israeli settlers after a legal battle in 2009.

A wall now divides him and his family from the settlers, and his hopes of staying are pinned on Israel’s Supreme Court.

Israel’s government has played down any state involvemen­t, portraying it as a real-estate dispute between private parties.

On Monday, Arab Israeli lawmakers were among protesters, some of them chanting “Settlers out!”, who faced off with several ultra-nationalis­t Israeli politician­s along Othman Ibn Affan Street. Police kept them apart.

The Palestinia­ns have lived in Sheikh Jarrah since they were rehoused there in the 1950s by Jordan after fleeing or being forced to abandon their homes in West Jerusalem and Haifa during the fighting around Israel’s creation in 1948.

The settlers who filed the lawsuit over Othman Ibn Affan Street said they bought the land from two Jewish associatio­ns that purchased it at the end of the 19th century.

A lower Israeli court found in favour of the settlers under an Israeli law that allows Jews to reclaim ownership of property lost in 1948.

No such law entitles Palestinia­ns to do the same in West Jerusalem or other parts of Israel.

“Our families came here as refugees. It’s happening all over again,” said Sheikh Jarrah resident Khaled Hamad, 30.

At a settler’s house across the street, an Israeli said the Supreme Court had rewarded Palestinia­ns by delaying a hearing on the case as tensions rose.

“If anything they should have moved the ruling up,” said the settler, who gave his name only as Yaakov.

The US is among critics of the evictions, raising the prospect of them becoming a diplomatic liability for Israel.

Anti-eviction protests have been held in Palestinia­n cities across the West Bank and by Arab Israelis in Haifa and Nazareth.

Arab lawmaker Ahmad Tibi showed his support by coming to Othman Ibn Affan Street.

Support has poured out on social media.

Salem Barahmeh, a member of the Palestinia­n youth movement Generation for Democratic Renewal, said Sheikh Jarrah was “mobilising young Palestinia­ns in Palestine and all over the world”.

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