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Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses. |
Israelis Hold Protests in 15 Cities Against
Demolition of Palestinian Homes
Saturday August 07, 2010 20:19 by Alternative Information Center
More than 1,000 demonstrators gathered in cities across occupied
Palestine (Israel) on Friday (6 August) for a day of solidarity marking
the one-year anniversary of the eviction and illegal settler take over
of the Ghawi and Hanoun family homes in the East Jerusalem neighborhood
of Shaikh Jarrah.
Around 700 demonstrators gathered in Tel Aviv,
100 in Haifa, 60 in Beer Al-Saba'a (Beersheva_, 100 in Wadi 'Ara, 100 in
Taiba, 100 in Kfar Yassif and around two-dozen in Ra’anana. Another 50
gathered in the unrecognized Arab village of Dahmash on the outskirts of
Ramle, where at least 13 homes are slated for demolition, according to
the Jerusalem Post. Demonstrators from around the country then boarded
buses for Jerusalem and attended the weekly protest in Shaikh Jarrah.
A 2008 Jerusalem District Court ruling paved the way for the August
2009 evictions by stating that the Palestinian neighborhood is in fact
part of the former Jewish neighborhood “Shimon Hatzadik” and belonged to
the Sephardi Community Committee.
Since the home evictions of the
Ghawi and Hanoun families, Sheikh Jarrah has become home to protests
every Friday, attended by Palestinian, Israeli and international
supporters and activists, calling for the return of the families to
their homes.
The neighborhood has also come to symbolize the
battle over the future status of East Jerusalem, as Palestinian
communities fight discriminatory policies and decisions from the
Jerusalem municipality.
Knesset Member Dov Khenin from the Hadash
party attended the anniversary demonstration, noting that "struggle is
intensifying, because people understand we are fighting here not just
against the injustice suffered by the Palestinians in the neighborhood,
but also for ourselves, for our future in this country. Because with a
settlement in the heart of Arab east Jerusalem, we won't be able to
reach an arrangement of two states for two people. It's a critical
battle and more and more people are realizing that."
Protestors
marched through Sheikh Jarrah on Friday carrying signs reading,
"Democracy stops in Sheik Jarrah.”
"The problem is not just
Sheikh Jarrah," said Sara Benninga, one of the demonstration’s
organizers. "It repeats itself in other places across the country and
stems from discrimination, inequality and racism, which are the
foundation of these moves. I feel that compared to last year, we have
made a great leap in the awareness of the injustice taking place here,
and we have a lot of PR work to do in order to reach people. It's a
feeling of a beginning of something wonderful and brave."
David
Grossman, an award winning Israeli author, was one of the many known
faces present at Friday’s protest. He described Israeli society as
“stuck in a situation it created on its own, and is the victim of
anxieties and lack of faith in change. It's insulting to see how little
we are capable of doing to help ourselves.”
"The people, assuming
there is such a thing, are apathetic and looking for an excuse not to do
something,” he told the Israeli news daily Ynet. “In the face of this
complete indifference, it's refreshing and encouraging to see the amount
of people willing to come here every Friday afternoon to protest,
whether in the heat or in the rain."
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