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Info 25 from Jonatan Peled
- Subject: Info 25 from Jonatan Peled
- From: "Jonatan Peled" <peled_j at maabarot.org.il>
- Date: Mon, 18 Jun 2001 17:26:21 +0200
Info 25 From the burning Middle East.... Dear Friends ! The intensive diplomatic activity around cease fire is is whirling all around. They speak above all to stop every violence. This is O.K. but the other side of this equation, the demand to stop building in the Israeli settlements spread all over the Palestinian territories is heard much less. The sad point is, that in the present situation even Israeli acception to "freeze" building in these settlements has very little influence on the poisoned Palestinian Israei relationships. The problem of the Jewish settlements in Palestinian territories is not in Jewish presence there. The problem is the ideology, the concept - and the personality of great part of the settlers. These settlements, that are spread all over the West Bank and in some strategic locations in the Gaza Strip are the realization of a belief, that all the territory between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean see belongs to the Jewish people, and they are the only and exclusive possessors of it. The land for building the settlements was expropriated from Palestinian inhabitants, or accomplished on "State Property", that means every peace of land that is not a proven private property of any Palestinian. These lands of "State property" are used exclusively to build Israeli Jewish settlements and paved roads that connect them to Israel . The behaviour of the settlers can be characterised by incredible arrogance and mastership excercising over the Palestinians. They don't conceive themselves as inhabitants, but rather as masters of these territories. Many times, when I hear or read about they behaviour, when I see what has been done by these people all over the West Bank, I feel that when talking about the "Land" in almost erotic terms, they don't even distinguish between love and rape... The way that these settlers look at the Palestinians, reminds me how American white settlers in the "wild west" looked at the Indians. But we are not America and the Palestinians are not Indians. Unfortunately the arrogance, the racism, the mastership and above all denial of the local peoples elementary rights are the same. This "Info" discusses about the issue of settlers and settlements. You can find here two short articles and link to a collection of more articles, published in Israeli newspapers. More Israeli articles about this subject on the website: http://friendvill2.homestead.com/ArchiveSettlements.html Important announce: if anybody gets this mail by mistake and wants to be removed from the list of addressees, his or her request will be responded immediately. As in some cases people get the mail indirectly, through transfering from another mail box, addressee can be removed from the list only if I get the original e-mail address. Jonatan Peled Friendship Village Israel's march of the folly By Doron Rosenblummailto:rosenblum at haaretz.co.ilHaaretz 10 June 2001 Curators who, in years to come, want to illustrate Israel's march of folly since the Six Day War will surely put together a collection of pictures of settlers waving menacing fingers at Israel's prime ministers and army soldiers over the last 30 years. This extensive exhibition, which may well be dubbed "the finger of God", will start with the black-and-white photos of settlers threatening the young Shimon Peres in the early days of Sebastia, and go all the way through to the foreboding fingers lashed at Ariel Sharon in Karnei Shomron, 2001. The overwhelmed visitor will follow the gradual process in which Israel's agenda was hijacked, coerced and forced, albeit willingly at times, by an overbearing fanatic minority. The settlers have come a long way since their humble request to hold the Passover dinner in Hebron. Today they are demanding in no uncertain terms that Israel go to war. All the masks have been dropped: The settlers' arrogance and their aspirations to set the national agenda reflect an unabashed air of superiority. First they established "irreversible facts" on the ground, then they fought tooth and nail (if not with more ballistic measures) against the peace efforts, and now they are blatantly inciting for war, and even purport to dictate its timing and scope. "Fight!" they unequivocally order the defense minister. "Fools, how long will it take before you go to war?!" a raving settler says, waving a finger at Sharon, with her friends giving orders to "every commander around". We have already gotten used to hearing on TV that "the settlers have given the military an ultimatum to start uprooting trees by nightfall." The army obeys - but it's never enough for the insatiable appetite of the settlers. "Go, Bentzur, go!", one of the settlers' leaders said last week, quoting the famous order given by Defense Minister Motta Gur to his driver during the takeover of Jerusalem in 1967. It is good to know that the anachronism of the settlers has moved on a few years: After years of being stuck in pre-state folklore, they have finally progressed to only 30 years ago. But where is it exactly that they want Bentzur to go? Oh, what difference does it make, as long as there is some kind of motion. What should the goals of the war be? The momentum people couldn't care less, as long as there is a war. Anything goes, as long as momentum is maintained: of the settlement process, of the occupation, of war, of time going round and round in circles. "The settlers' patience is coming to an end," we are told time and time again, followed by the ultimate threat of militia action. But even now these people treat the Israel Defense Forces and the Israeli government as nothing but a subordinate militia, so why not make official once and for all the dissonance between the settlers and any concept of law and order? That may not be such a bad idea. Rioting settlers rampage in Arab villages Ha'aretz Correspondents By Amos Harel and Nadav Shragai 7n June 2001 Dozens of angry settlers rioted through two Palestinian villages yesterday, setting fire to businesses and fields, breaking windows and throwing stones at the residents. Nine Palestinians and a border policeman were injured. The rampage through the West Bank towns of Luban a-Sharkiya and A-Sawiya were in response to a terror attack that seriously injured a five-month-old baby Tuesday night. Yehuda Shoham's skull was fractured when Palestinians pelted his parents' car with rocks near Luban, and he is currently in critical condition at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem. The riot began as a protest march by some 200 residents of Shiloh, where the Shoham family lives, along the main Ramallah-Nablus road yesterday morning. The IDF had approved the march. Then, however, a few dozen settlers broke off from the main body and entered the villages, where they torched property ranging from greenhouses to schoolrooms. Palestinians gathered to confront the rioters and the two groups began throwing rocks. A large force of soldiers and border policemen arrived to quell the riots, but IDF officers said they did not use force against the settlers, and Palestinians said nine villagers were injured before order was restored. A border policeman was also injured. The B'tselem organization charged that soldiers and police kept Palestinian ambulances from entering the villages and even shot at the villagers. It said at least one Palestinian was wounded by a blow to the head from a soldier's rifle. Police arrested three settlers on the spot, including one who fired in the air, and police sources said additional arrests will follow. Policemen captured the entire riot on video, the sources said, and the footage will be used to identify the perpetrators and prepare indictments against them. Residents of Shiloh afterward defined rioting as a necessary act of protest. "People live here, and it is inconceivable that we should be left defenseless," said Rabbi Michael Brom. "The government and the army are responsible for providing us with minimal, basic protection." Rioting, added another resident, who asked to remain anonymous, is not the norm in Shiloh, "so if we've reached this point, we've apparently reached the end of our rope, and the one who should draw conclusions from what happened is the government, which... has turned restraint into an ideology. The ones who are paying the price for the Sharon-Peres government's public relations victory are the children in the discotheques and the babies on the roads." In another incident, some 20 settlers from Hebron clashed with Palestinians while trying to stop Palestinian construction in the marketplace. Police and soldiers separated the sides, and no one was injured. On the Palestinian side yesterday was the quietest day since Yasser Arafat announced a cease-fire on Saturday, with only two shooting incidents and one grenade attack by evening.
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