May 18, 2010

Sheikh Jarrah

To those of you with whom I've shared my experiences, you already understand my connection and eternal love for Sheikh Jarrah! For those of you who don't, this is for you. Although you might find some new thoughts because I'm sure this will not be my last post about SJ.

First, here is some contextual background on Sheikh Jarrah:

Approximately 475 Palestinian residents living in the Karm Al-Ja’ouni neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, located directly north of the Old City, face imminent eviction from their homes. All 28 families are refugees from 1948, primarily from West Jerusalem and Haifa, whose houses in Sheikh Jarrah were built and given to them through a joint project between the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and the Jordanian government in 1956.

Facing systematic ethnic cleansing through the Israeli judicial system, all 28 families of the neighborhood ultimately await eviction. The violent eviction of the Kamel al-Kurd family, by Israeli police and settlers in November of 2008, resulted in the death of ailing Abu Kamel (Mohammad) al Kurd, 61. The August 2009 evictions of the Gawi and Hannoun extended families and December 2009 occupation of Rifqa al Kurd’s front addition followed, beginning a visible trend of ethnic cleansing in Sheikh Jarrah. Over 60 residents, including 20 children, have now been displaced.

The evicted families established protest tents near their homes, many of which were repeatedly demolished by the Jerusalem Municipality. As a result, only the Rifqa al Kurd tent remains standing. Members of the Gawi, Hannoun and Kamel al Kurd families continue a daily presence outside of the occupied Gawi home. The Palestinians and their international and Israeli supporters face continual harassment from Israeli settlers. Police presence in the community is almost entirely directed at prosecuting Palestinians, and not in neutrally protecting residents from harassment and violence.

Constructing new Jewish settlements and/or occupying Palestinian homes in East Jerusalem and the West Bank is illegal under many international laws, including Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. The plight of the Gawi, al-Kurd and Hannoun families is just a small part of Israel’s ongoing campaign of the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from East Jerusalem, the capital of a hypothetical independent state.

Legal Background

The eviction orders, issued by Israeli courts, are a result of claims made in 1967 by the Sephardic Community Committee and the Knesseth Yisrael Association (who since sold their claim to the area to Nahalat Shimon) – settler organizations whose aim is to take over the whole area using falsified deeds for the land dating back to 1875. In 1972, these two settler organizations applied to have the land registered in their names with the Israel Lands Administration (ILA). Their claim to ownership was noted in the Land Registry; however, it was never made into an official registry of title. The first Palestinian property in the area was taken over at this time.

The case continued in the courts for another 37 years. Amongst other developments, the first lawyer of the Palestinian residents reached an agreement with the settler organizations in 1982 (without the knowledge or consent of the Palestinian families) in which he recognized the settlers’ ownership in return for granting the families the legal status of protected tenants. This affected 23 families and served as a basis for future court and eviction orders (including theal -Kurd family house take-over in December 2009), despite the immediate appeal filed by the families’ new lawyer. Furthermore, a Palestinian landowner, Suleiman Darwish Hijazi , has legally challenged the settlers’ claims. In 1994 he presented documents certifying his ownership of the land to the courts, including tax receipts from 1927. In addition, the new lawyer of the Palestinian residents located a document, proving the land in Sheikh Jarrah had never been under Jewish ownership. The Israeli courts rejected these documents.

The first eviction orders were issued in 1999 based on the (still disputed) agreement from 1982 and, as a result, two Palestinian families (Hannoun and Gawi) were evicted in February 2002. After the 2006 Israeli Supreme Court finding that the settler committees’ ownership of the lands was uncertain, and the Lands Settlement officer of the court requesting that the ILA remove their names from the Lands Registrar, the Palestinian families returned back to their homes. The courts, however, failed to recognize new evidence presented to them and continued to issue eviction orders based on decisions from 1982 and 1999 respectively. Further evictions followed in November 2008 (Kamel al-Kurd family) and August 2009 (Hannoun and Gawi families for the second time). An uninhabited section of a house belonging to the al-Kurd family was taken over by settlers on 1 December 2009.

The ultimate aim of the Zionist organizations is to convert Sheikh Jarrah into a new Jewish settlement and to create a Jewish continuum that will effectively cut off the Old City from the northern Palestinian neighborhoods. On 28 August 2008, Nahalat Shimon International filed a plan to build a series of five and six-story apartment blocks – Town Plan Scheme (TPS) 12705 – in the Jerusalem Local Planning Commission. If TPS 12705 comes to pass, the existing Palestinian houses in this key area would be demolished, about 500 Palestinians would be evicted, and 200 new settler units would be built for a new settlement: Shimon HaTzadik


To put this into perspective, what is happening in SJ is very basic. The Israeli government organizes and pays for ideological settlers to do their dirty work in the name of Religion.

Imagine one night at 2am, you and your entire family are sleeping, BANG BANG, loud knocks on your door, the person on the other side screaming for you to exit the house or your door will come down, waking everyone in the household up. You're so scared and want to protect your family, so you wait...hoping it will stop and the person on the other side will go away. BAM!! In comes your door, followed by AK-47's and army in full gear. "Get out this is no longer your property"...what would you do!? To top the whole night off, your entire family is physically removed from your home and are forced to watch everything inside be destroyed.

This is what happened to the al-Kurd, Hannoun, and Gawi families in SJ, not once but TWICE and they are just 3 of the families in Palestine. I speak of them because I know them personally. I slept outside in tents to protest the taking of their homes and the horrendous occupation. I played with their children in hopes of bringing a moment of happiness and normalcy.


This is Sara Gawi. She is the youngest child of Nasser Gawi. She was present the night they were evicted from their home. Do you know what she said to the army as they raided her house? "Get out...This is MY house!! MY house...Get out!!" Sara is 4 years old.

May 15, 2010

Four Months and counting...

Today marks the 62nd anniversary of Nabka (catastrophe) where many Palestinians became refugees and were displaced from their homes, still without the right to return.

Today I realized it has been four months since I returned from Palestine. While I think of Palestine everyday and dream of Palestine every night, I still feel I am not doing my short time spent there justice. I feel more at home sleeping on the floor then in a bed, taking cold showers, and drinking as much tea as possible. Yet I know it is not enough.

How do you explain that a few months can change your life!?

How do you explain the will of Palestinian's in the face of events you know everyday American's can't imagine!?

My only excuse, for not writing about my everyday experiences in Palestine, is that I feel my words will not adequately explain the truth. From here on out I refuse to let my shortcomings be an excuse. I will do my best to explain how, four months later, I can still remember every single day spent in Palestine.