------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
$9.95 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/J8kdrA/y20IAA/yQLSAA/jyXolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

Cave Dwellers Defy Israeli Eviction Bid
By Conal Urquhart in the South Hebron Hills, West
Bank
The Observer - UK
9-26-4
 
They are direct descendants of the people of the
Bible. They collect rainwater, husband livestock
and grow crops in much the same way as was done
in the time of the Old Testament. 
  
The Palestinian cave dwellers of the Judaean
desert have deeds to their land that date from
the 19th century, yet they are engaged in a
growing battle with Jewish settlers who have come
from Europe, the US and modern Israel to claim
the mantle as direct descendants of this dusty,
stony ground. 
  
According to an Israeli lawyer and human rights
groups, the cave-dwellers are the subject of a
campaign of ethnic cleansing. The Israeli
government wants them to leave the sparsely
populated area of the southern West Bank to
facilitate its annexation to Israel. 
  
Schlomo Lecker, a Jerusalem-based lawyer who has
represented the cave dwellers for four years,
said: 'There are no villages or towns, so if the
cave-dwellers are cleared out there is nothing in
the way to prevent them drawing a new border.
There are very few people here, but it is a large
area and the Palestinian Authority has shown very
little interest in the issue.' 
  
But the cave dwellers are determined to stay on
the land they have farmed for generations and
have resisted a series of evictions. Censuses
have largely overlooked them, but the latest
figures compiled by aid workers suggest there are
more than 1,000 living in about 15 communities. 
  
The typical entrance is a stone doorway leading
to a cave which extends about 16ft into the soft,
clay-like rock. The caves are divided into three
areas; one for livestock in winter, a living area
and a storage and cooking area. Clothes hang from
the walls and possessions are stored in alcoves
carved into the rock. The air is damp and moss on
the ceiling is black from the fumes of the
paraffin lamps. 
  
The only modern structures are concrete bathrooms
provided by British government aid, which the
army insists must be pulled down because they
have no planning permission. The family of
Mahmoud Hamash, 39, are extending their cave with
hammers and hands. The excavation is carried out
by his teenage daughters while the younger
children carry out the rubble with buckets. 
  
'We live as we did in the time of David,' said
Hamash, referring to the Old Testament king. 'We
have no electricity, radio or television. We are
happy to retain our dignity by living without
politics.' 
  
The cave dwellers have been ignored by the
Palestinian Authority and claim they do not care
who rules the land so long as they are left in
peace. Ironically, their most consistent friend
has been the Israeli supreme court, which has
overturned repeated Israeli army attempts to
evict them. 
  
Earlier this month the court allowed Palestinians
living around the settlement of Suseya to remain
for six months in tents after the settlers and
soldiers destroyed some caves three years ago. 
  
Lecker argued that there was no mechanism to
grant the Palestinians planning permission for
their tents, and the court said it would see how
their planning applications were dealt with over
the next six months. 
  
  
Jaber Nawajah is one of the Palestinians granted
a reprieve. He said he is around 70 and head of a
family of 38. 'If we left for one week, they
would bulldoze everything that is still here,' he
said. He shows a police notice, dated 19 August,
requesting his wife, Sarah, to go to Hebron
police station. Sarah explained: 'The settlers
tried to take our water pump and I wouldn't let
them. My husband has asthma and is very weak, so
I had to do it. The settlers accused me of
attacking them.' 
  
Abdul Hadi Hamtash, a surveyor for Hebron
municipal council who was born in a cave but now
lives in the city, said all the harassment comes
from the settlers of Maon and Suseya. 'The whole
government apparatus is in the service of the
settlers. If a settler attacks a soldier, the
soldier cannot defend himself.' 
  
Lecker agrees. 'They are harassed by the
settlers, and the army and police give them no
protection. While the policy is driven by the
settlers, in 1999, when Ehud Barak was Prime
Minister, it became government policy to evict
them.' 
  
The fenced settlement of Maon is home to 50
families and has never suffered an attack by
militants. Rivka Kaem, from Marseilles, has lived
here for 18 years. She said the cave dwellers are
not a security threat but accused them of grazing
their animals on the settlement's land. 
  
The cave dwellers claim their children are stoned
by the settlers as they walk on the roads. There
are other confrontations over grazing. Several
cave dwellers have been beaten and even shot. 
  
Across the valley from Hamash's home is the
deserted hamlet of Rakiz. He said: 'They left two
years ago. They couldn't take the harassment. No
matter what they do, we will not leave. The more
difficult they make our life, the more determined
I am to stay.' 
  
Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited
2004
http://WWW.GUARDIAN.CO.UK/israel/Story/0,2763,1312879,00.html
 

http://www.rense.com/general57/israel.htm




                
_______________________________
Do you Yahoo!?
Express yourself with Y! Messenger! Free. Download now. 
http://messenger.yahoo.com

 

Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/E-MAIL_TRIVIA/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 




Reply via email to