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“Go
to the West Bank!”
Israeli Demolition of Bedouin Homes in the Negev
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The
Israeli citizenship of the Negev Bedouin makes no
difference to the bulldozers. |
The
Israeli citizenship of the Negev Bedouin makes no difference to
the bulldozers. As part of the one million Palestinians inside
the Jewish state, the Bedouin risk the same home demolition
policy that is devastating the lives of West Bankers and Gazans.
While the situation for Palestinians gets increasingly worse in
the 1967 occupied Palestinian territories, so does the situation
for lesser-known sectors of the Arab population suffering from
Israeli discrimination.
Former
British businessman Nick Pretzlik made four visits to Palestine
in the past year, and he doesn’t fit into your “student on
year out” stereotype of an activist. According to his wife,
Ursula, he describes himself as “a semi-retired business man [sic]
and freelance journalist and [sic] who is so dismayed at
the poor coverage of Palestine in the mainstream media that he
has made several visits to the country to send back reports of
what he finds.” Ursula, a child psychologist and university
lecturer, is right behind her husband’s decision to travel,
despite the dangers. She feverishly distributes his writing from
her computer in the UK.
So
how can it be that Israeli citizens can have their homes
demolished by the authorities? |
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At
the end of September, the Israeli newspaper Ma’ariv
reported that a recent government plan has been made to increase
demolition of homes of Palestinian citizens in Israel.
In
a meeting of the Ministerial Committee for the Non-Jewish
Sector which convened two weeks ago, the Prime Minister said
that: ‘we are losing the land that we are not settling.’
Sharon even hit his hand on the desk and demanded that the
ministers increase the momentum [to halt] the illegal
building in the Arab sector.
Following
this, two cabinet ministers decided to establish a bureau that
is to implement home demolitions of so-called “illegal”
buildings in the Arab sector.
...major
sources in the government also mentioned that ‘every new
building which will be built in the Arab sector will
immediately be demolished, and then hundreds of buildings
will also be demolished which were built on state land
illegally [sic]. - Ma’ariv,
September 29, 2003
The
Bedouin of the Negev will be in the frontline to suffer from
this increase. In previous visits, Nick had been in the West
Bank and Gaza, but this time he also traveled to witness the
brutal discrimination against the Bedouin of the Negev. Here
follows his account of the destruction of homes and lives under
the Naqab sun:
Nick
Pretzlik, Wadi al Naim, Negev/Naqab
October
22, 2003
Fares
stood with his family looking at the rubble of their
home. |
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The
first hint Fares Abu Mohamed and his wife had of the catastrophe
about to befall them was the sudden roar of the massive
bulldozer. That was at 9 o’clock this morning and their baby
was still asleep in his cot. They were given 10 minutes to
collect a few items and told to vacate the black tent and
corrugated zinc shack that served as their makeshift home.
Fifteen
minutes later Fares stood with his pregnant wife, his young son,
his two sisters and his mother looking at the rubble of their
home. Many of the family’s possessions were destroyed. There
was no time to save the baby food, and the police and soldiers
even refused Fares a few extra minutes to salvage his wife’s
jewellery - her only personal possession. Instead, the soldiers
yelled at him “Go to the West Bank!”
Of
course the irony is that had Fares and his family already been
in the West Bank, there would have been nothing unusual about
the dawn demolition of their house. It happens there all the
time. But Fares does not live in the West Bank. He lives in Wadi
Al-Naim in Israel’s northern Negev and, like all Negev
Bedouins, Fares and his family are Israeli citizens. They pay
taxes and vote in national elections. Many Bedouins even serve
in the Israeli Army.
So
how can it be that Israeli citizens can have their home
demolished by the authorities? Is such a thing possible?
Unfortunately, the answer is yes. What makes it worse is that
house demolitions are a regular occurrence. The explanation for
them is simple: Fares and his fellow Bedouins are not Jews. They
are Arabs, and thus, as Shmuel Rifman, chairperson of the Ramat
HaNegev Regional Council, said on the occasion of Israel’s
55th Independence Day, “[The Israelis] came to this country to establish a
Jewish state in the land of Israel. Ben Gurion did not intend to
establish a Bedouin state.” He was echoing Moshe Dayan’s
well-known statement of July 1963 that “[Israelis] must turn
Bedouin into urban laborers. The Bedouin will no longer live on
a land with his flocks, but will become an urbanite who comes
home in the evening and puts on his slippers. The reality that
is known as the Bedouin will disappear.” Dayan’s intention
was to hand over Bedouin lands to Jewish settlers.
For
the Bedouin of Israel, democracy is a myth, as it is for
the rest of Israel’s non-Jewish population. |
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In
1965, two years after Moshe Dayan’s comments, the Building and
Planning Law was passed in the Israeli Knesset, rendering
Bedouin villages in the Negev, extant since Ottoman times,
suddenly nonexistent, or - to use the official jargon -
“unrecognized.” As a result, the 70,000 Bedouins like Fares
and his family living on their traditional lands around Beer
Sheva - and not yet herded into custom-built ghettos - are today
seen as “illegal.” And they are likely to remain illegal. In
spite of the brutal tactics employed by the police, the army and
the so-called Green Patrol, which now include spraying crops
with toxic chemicals - often dangerously close to schools and
villages - the Bedouins remain steadfast. Fares’ house will be
rebuilt by the community. He will not be becoming an
“urbanite.” Not yet, anyway.
What
does this say about Israeli democracy? Democracy is more than
simply paying taxes and having the vote. It requires the state
to ensure that every citizen enjoys equal rights and access to
justice - something Arab citizens of Israel clearly do not
enjoy. Until early 2002, out of 3,000 Bedouin cases brought
before Israeli courts, not one had been decided in favor of the
Bedouins. Not one! For the Bedouin of Israel, democracy is a
myth, as it is for the rest of the 20+ percent of Israel’s
population that is not Jewish.
Nick
Pretzlik is a
British freelance writer and semi-retired businessman who
frequently travels to the Middle East and other Muslim
countries. Pretzlik has been a strong supporter of Palestinian
rights since the beginning of the first Intifada in 1987. You
can reach him at upretzlik@yahoo.co.uk
Isabelle
Humphries is
conducting PhD research at St. Mary’s College, University of
Surrey, on the situation for Palestinian refugees living inside
the 1948 borders. She has worked for three years with
Palestinian NGOs, and as a freelance writer, on both sides of
the 1967 border. You can reach her at innazareth@yahoo.co.uk
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