A woman lights a candle at the Church of the Nativity, in the West
Bank town of Bethlehem as preparations for Christmas celebrations get
underway.
(Photograph : Musa Al Shaer/AFP/Getty Images)
**
Amid plastic bags snagged on gorse bushes, rusting hulks of cars in a
breakers yard and a few shabby trailers, traces of a biblical landscape
are still to be found on a hillside between the ancient cities of
Jerusalem and Bethlehem. A couple of donkeys are tethered to a gnarled
olive tree ; nearby, sheep and goats bleat as they huddle against the
chill December air.
But this terrain will soon be covered in concrete after the
authorisation last week of the construction of more than 2,600 homes in
Givat Hamatos, the first new Israeli settlement to be built since 1997.
It lies between two existing settlements : Gilo, home to 40,000
people, sits atop one hill ; to its east, on another hill, stands Har
Homa, whose population is around 20,000, with further expansion in the
pipeline. Both are largely built on Bethlehem land.
Givat Hamatos will form a strategic link between these twin towns,
further impeding access between Bethlehem and the intended capital of
Palestine, East Jerusalem, just six miles away.
Israel considers these and other settlements across the Green Line to
be legitimate suburbs of Jerusalem, which it claims as the unified,
indivisible capital of the Jewish state. Prime minister Binyamin
Netanyahu and official bodies have announced a spate of expansion plans
in recent weeks.
In the birthplace of Jesus, the impact of Israeli settlements and
their growth has been devastating. In a Christmas message, the
Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas said Bethlehem was enduring a
"choking reality".
He added : "For the first time in 2,000 years of Christianity in our
homeland, the Holy Cities of Bethlehem and Jerusalem have been
completely separated by Israeli settlements, racist walls and
checkpoints."
Bethlehem is now surrounded by 22 settlements, including Nokdim,
where the hardline former Israeli foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman
lives, and Neve Daniel, home to public diplomacy minister Yuli
Edelstein.
The city is further hemmed in by the vast concrete and steel
separation barrier, bypasses connecting settlements with Jerusalem and
Tel Aviv, and Israeli military zones. With little room to expand, it is
now more densely populated than Gaza, according to one Palestinian
official.
In Beit Sahour – the site on the eastern edge of Bethlehem where,
according to Christian tradition, angels announced the birth of Jesus to
shepherds in a field – William Sahouri is feeling the squeeze. Ten
years ago, he moved into a housing project designated for young
Christian families, which overlooks fields and hills where sheep once
grazed.
Now most of that land is on the other side of the separation barrier,
inaccessible to Palestinians. Har Homa – which, like all settlements in
East Jerusalem and the West Bank, is illegal under international law –
is rapidly spreading down the hill. Cranes are at work on new apartment
blocks ; bulldozers are flattening land for new roads and buildings.
In contrast, Sahouri’s home, along with others in the neighbourhood,
is under an Israeli demolition order. It was issued in 2002 soon after
the apartments were built without a permit, which is almost impossible
to get in areas of the West Bank under full Israeli military control.
After protests, the order was frozen but not lifted.
"It’s like sitting on a bomb," says Sahouri, who estimates his
family’s presence in the area stretches back more than 300 years. "We
don’t know when it will be blown. At any moment they could come with
bulldozers and heavy machinery and everything will be gone."
But, he adds, gesturing across to Har Homa, "the Israelis can build
1,000 homes in three months. In 10 years, they build a city, while we
have to build stone by stone."
Residents of Beit Sahour – whose 15,000 population is 80% Christian –
say settlers have targeted another nearby spot. A former Israeli
military base at Ush Ghurab is visited almost weekly by hardliners from
settlements deep in the West Bank, who have repainted the abandoned
buildings, planted trees and raised Israeli flags. The site is now known
as Shdema to the settlers, who hold regular meetings and activities on
the hilltop.
Local Palestinians fear that the visitors will begin to sleep at the
former base, then expand the site with additional caravans, followed by
the provision of services – electricity, water, roads – and eventually
permanent homes. This is a familiar pattern of how radical settlements,
unauthorised by the Israeli state, take shape.
"This area is being highly targeted," says local Palestinian activist
George Rishmawi. "Experience tells us this is how settlements start –
with the actions of fanatics."
On the other side of Bethlehem, another mainly Christian community is
also facing a battle, this one against the planned route of the
separation barrier. Under present proposals it will cut off 58 families,
plus a monastery and convent, from their land. The monks and nuns of
Cremisan have joined forces with residents to fight a legal battle over
the route, which will be decided in the Israeli courts early next year.
"The wall will confiscate nearly all our land," says Samira Qaisieh,
whose house on the edge of Beit Jala was built by her husband’s family
almost a century ago. Its vine-covered terrace looks across the valley
to Gilo, the Israeli settlement, built on land she says was owned by her
grandfather. "Israel says it is doing all this in the name of security.
But really they just want a land without [Palestinian] people."
Qaisieh is thinking of leaving unless the barrier is re-routed.
"There is no work here. If we lose our land, what is there to stay for ?
What is the future for my children ?"
About two-thirds of the 400-mile West Bank barrier is complete ; 85%
of its route runs inside the West Bank, swallowing almost 8.5% of
Palestinian land. In 2004, the International Court of Justice ruled it
was illegal and that construction must stop.
The wall already snakes around most of Bethlehem, its 8m-high
concrete slabs casting a deep shadow, both literally and metaphorically.
At the Christmas Tree restaurant, where there are almost no takers for
the "Quick Lunches" on offer, business has slowed to a standstill since
the wall blocked what was once the main Jerusalem-Bethlehem road. Scores
of shops along the closed-off artery have shut down altogether.
A few hundred metres along from the empty restaurant, a long
steel-caged corridor leading through multiple turnstiles to a checkpoint
is the main exit from the city for Palestinians wishing to go to
Jerusalem. The Israel Defence Forces issues thousands of extra permits
to Christian Palestinians to allow them to visit holy sites in Jerusalem
over Christmas, but the lack of routine access has had a dire impact on
businesses and employment rates.
Bethlehem has one of the highest rates of unemployment of all West
Bank cities, at 18%, says Vera Baboun, who was elected as its first
female mayor in October. "We are a strangulated city, with no room for
expansion due to the settlements and the wall."
In a booklet to mark Christmas 2012, Kairos Palestine, a Christian
alliance, says : "Land confiscation, as well as the influx of Israeli
settlers, suggest that there will be no future for Palestinians
(Christian or Muslim) in [this] area. In this sense, the prospect of a
clear ’solution’ grows darker every day."
Over recent decades Christians have left Bethlehem in their
thousands, and now are a minority in a city they once dominated. In 2008
Christians accounted for 28% of Bethlehem city’s population of about
25,000. The daily grind of living under occupation, with few
opportunities, little hope and the violence of the Palestinian uprising
10 years ago are cited as the chief reasons for departure. But in the
past few years the flood of emigrants has slowed. "We are here, and we
will remain here, to help our new state become a reality," says Nora
Carmi of Kairos.
In Beit Jala, parish priest Father Ibrahim Shomali, who leads
open-air prayers under olive trees at sunset every Friday to protest at
the planned route of the barrier around the Cremisan monastery, fears
its construction could lead to a fresh wave of Christian departures.
"People are leaving," he says wearily. "But some of us will stay, to
pray and resist."
(Harriet Sherwood, The Observer, Sunday 23 December 2012)
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
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