The World Water Day Art Exhibit Photos

Nick Marouf, RamallahOnline, 23 March 2011

On March 22, Palestine celebrated World Water Day.  A full day programs on water use, availability, occupational constraints was enjoyed with Dabkeh folk music and dance between the lectures.

A variety of booths were setup to highlight the importance of water,along with details on various project achievements and accomplishments. A series of photos by local artists and school children were displayed to raise awareness of water issues.

Palestinians are utilizing 11%  of the available water resources, while the rest 89% is utilized by the Israelis. Generally, more than 95% from the available water supply comes from groundwater.

 

A Special screening of the film “Our Water – Their Water” was held after the official Water Day Ceremony. “Our Water – Their Water” is a 50 minute film that was produced by Imageo, a French film company, in conjunction with the Agence Francaise de Developpement (AFD). Prime Minister Salam Fayyad joined Minister Shaddad Attili of the Palestinian Water Authority (PWA)  in the special screening of the movie.

 

 

Silwan: The Untold Story

Palestine Monitor, 3 July 2010

Silwan is home to 50,000 Palestinian residents in East Jerusalem, just south of the old city. Since 1967, no building permits have been approved in the neighbourhood. As families expanded over the years, residents were forced to build without permits making their homes illegal and vulnerable to demolition.

Complicating the situation, the ancient remains of the City of David lie below the heart of the neighbourhood. In the 1990’s ELAD, a private settler organisation, took over management and promotion of the site. Since then, they have closed off public areas and been accused of invasive archaeology. Recently the Planning and Building Committee of Jerusalem approved a plan to demolish 22 Palestinian homes to make way for Israeli settlement growth as well as the construction of a tourist centre, the King’s Garden which will include restaurant and boutiques.

Rebecca Fudala visited the neighbourhood.

Fighting Guns With Humor

On Friday about 15 women young and old rushed after soldiers taking 28-year-old Khaled Tamimi from his home near the entrance to Nabi Saleh.(photos by Kara Newhouse)

Palestine Monitor, 19 June 2010
Stones are not the only strength Palestinians of the popular resistance use against the Israeli army. In places like Nabi Saleh where soldiers respond to weekly demonstrations with tear gas, physical assaults, and rubber-coated steel bullets, villagers face the repression with a sense of humor to balance their unrelenting demands for justice. Article and photos by Kara Newhouse

On Friday about 15 women young and old rushed after soldiers taking 28-year-old Khaled Tamimi from his home near the entrance to Nabi Saleh. “I will work with Ahmadinejad if you don’t give him back!” Khaled’s mother, Kheetam, shouted amidst the horde of family members demanding his release.

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Khaled, a security officer for the Palestinian Authority, had been watching Germany play Serbia in a World Cup match on television when nine soldiers entered his house to use the balcony as a launch pad for tear gas at villagers demonstrating against impending home demolitions. “They said to me “come here,” and they took my identity card, and then said to go with them,” Khaled reported. The soldiers took him inside one of their jeeps and fended off the shouting women by shoving them and detonating sound grenades.

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Israeli soldiers force villagers away from the jeep where they took Khaled
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Zeinab Tamimi (middle) cries after soldiers took her husband

Soldiers drove down the road to their guard tower, and according to Khaled, “The captain said to me that I must stop the guys who throw the stones.” Cheers erupted from the village women only ten minutes later when the soldiers released Khaled without arrest.

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Khaled’s cousin, Waala, celebrates after soldiers release him from their custody

Three weeks earlier, Israeli soldiers entered the Tamimi house and removed Khaled’s 21-year-old brother, Mohammed. That time Kheetam shouted at the soldiers that she would join Hezbollah if they did not release him. They took Mohammed to a station at a nearby settlement before releasing him without charge after four hours.

While Kheetam defends her sons and worries for their safety, her husband, Attallah, is officially banned from his home village on Fridays, after being arrested three months ago. He visits relatives in other parts of the West Bank while demonstrators and soldiers engage in a back-and-forth game of taunts and tear gas around Nabi Saleh.

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An Israeli soldier fires tear gas into the village

Using humor to combat Israel’s guns, Kheetam declared that next time the soldiers try to take her family members, she will pledge allegiance to Al-Qaeda.

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Kheetam Tamimi

“Bin Laden!” Kheetam cried with laughter. Her daughter-in-law, Zeinab, joined the joke, and said, “She’s a dangerous woman.”

Masked Attack

A well that was poisoned, with the Rabai home (left) and the woods of the illegal settlement (right).     Photo: Michael Carpenter.

Palestine Monitor, 17 June 2010
On Saturday morning, 30 to 35 masked Israeli settlers stormed the village of At-Tuwani in the South Hebron Hills. Armed with metal clubs, slingshots, knives, and stones, the attackers targeted the house closest to the edge of the woods. International observers stationed in the village arrived in time to witness and document the final phases of the assault. Michael Carpenter investigated for Palestine Monitor.

The rolling hills south of Hebron are home to some of the poorest Palestinian communities in the West Bank, and in recent years, some of the most radical Israeli settlers have come here. At-Tuwani is a small traditional village of about 250 residents and a focal point of the region’s tensions. At the south tip of the village, near the edge of a densely wooded hill, is Beit Juma, the large home of the Rabai extended family. At 10:45 AM, not long after Juma and one of his brothers had gone to a neighbouring village, the attack came from the trees without warning.

There were problems before,” explains one of the younger brothers, present at the time of the attack. “But nothing like this. This is something new. First came stones, hitting the wall and flying over the house into the yard where the children were playing. Then came the settlers, 30 or 35, with faces covered, with iron sticks, smashing windows and fence. Some came this way around the house, and the others came that way. They tried to come inside, to force their way, but we pushed them back.” The brothers admit they wounded two of the settlers, knocking them to the ground and kicking them. “At that time, it’s impossible to think. Of course we fight. They are coming into our home.”

The Rabais say that up to ten people from their family and village suffered minor injuries from stones or beating. One woman, four months pregnant, was hurt in a fall as she fled the violence. She was taken to the hospital and returned in good condition.

The initial onslaught lasted only a couple minutes before the international observers and many others from the village were on the scene. “We saw the last part of the fighting around the house,” says Sirio, a member of the Italian non-violent peace corps Operation Dove. “Then the settlers—I counted at least 26—ran back to the woods. But that was not the end. They continued to throw stones from the trees for the next 20 minutes or so before disappearing deeper in the woods.”

Shortly after, by about 11:30, police, army, and border patrol arrived, taking statements, photos, and collecting evidence, including multiple large knives. Later in the afternoon, some of the Rabai family, accompanied by members of Operation Dove, filed an official complaint at the police station in Kiryat Arba (the Israeli settlement in Hebron). “The first thing they asked my brother,” says Musab Rabai incredulously, “was ‘Who beat the settlers?’” He laughs. “Not, ‘Why were settlers in the home?’” The residents of At-Tuwani are not confident the attackers will be prosecuted.

Although the weekend marked a dramatic escalation of Israeli settler hostility, the events were just the latest in the troubled history of the besieged village. Every year, the growing settlement of Ma’on (established 1981 on a neighbouring hill) de facto annexes more and more of the village’s pastureland. In the last several years, shepherds, school children, and international observers have been beaten, the drinking well and grazing land have been poisoned, animals have been killed, and property has been vandalised. Scores of incidents have been documented in photos and videos by international monitors such as Operation Dove.

The Italian peace corps, along with Christian Peacemaker Team (CPT), have maintained a constant presence in the village since they were invited by the Palestinians in 2004. The local community had already committed to peaceful resistance in co-operation Hafez Huraini and the South Hebron Hills Committee for popular non-violent resistance.

Concealed in the trees, about a hundred meters from the south edge of the village, is the settler outpost known as Hill 833, or Havat Ma’on. Under international law, all Israeli settlements in the West Bank are illegal, but this outpost is also illegal under Israeli law. First established in 1999, just south-west of the woods, the outpost was quickly dismantled by Israeli authorities, but by the end of the year, the renegade settlers had relocated inside the woods. Since then, they have entrenched themselves, continued building within the trees, and continued to harass the local population, all with apparent impunity from the Israeli authorities. Equally disturbing, settlers from this outpost, including Yosef Ben Barach and its founder Yehoshefat Tor, have ties to the radical group Kach, which is a designated terrorist organisation by both the United States and Israel for inciting violence and attempting to bomb Palestinian schools in Jerusalem.

Paranoid or prescient, the Rabai brothers believe the settlers intended far worse. “They came here to kill. They tried to kill with knives, some guys, and they tried to move into the home. I’m sure they saw us when we left here, and they thought no men were here, just the women and the kids. They thought if they threw stones first, all of them will run, but when they threw stones, three brothers came out. They tried to do like they do in other villages, to take the homes.”

Whatever the settlers’ intentions, the Rabai family is deeply concerned and expects more attacks soon. They spend many nights on their rooftops, peering vigilantly into the dark woods. This is the effect of daily terror. “We try to continue the non-violent resistance with these guys,” says Juma Rabai. “But I don’t know about the future. The future is dark for a long time, so black. But now, maybe more dark.”

Written by Michael Carpenter for Palestine Monitor

Adventures In Wild Palestine

Palestine

Palestine Monitor, 14 June 2010

“To go on a sarha was to roam freely, at will, without restraint. The verb form of the word means to let the cattle out to pasture early in the morning, leaving them to wander and graze in liberty. The commonly used noun sarha is a colloquial corruption of the classical word. A man going on a sarha wanders aimlessly, not restricted by time and place, going where his spirit takes him to nourish his soul and rejuvenate himself. But not any excursion would qualify as a sarha. Going on a sarha implies letting go. It is a drug-free high, Palestinian-style.” Raja Shehadeh ’Palestinian Walk – Notes on a Vanishing Landscape’

Julien S. got his feet dirty.

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Early this February, having lived in the Holy Land for nearly a year I saw a photo-reportage from 1999 showing the wonderful winter landscapes of the northern West Bank. I was transfixed, having never associated the troubled region with these wild, romantic scenes. The most striking were from Jenin, a city I had never entered. As soon as I heard that a guesthouse had opened there I embarked on a series of lonely walking voyages into the open country, cutting through the hills, mountains and fields. Travelling at random I found tiny paradises where I could rest and enjoy their beauty and serenity, places to stop and admire the perfectly preserved secrets of the north. My first walk from Jenin to Nazlat ‘Isa during the first day of heavy rains last winter made me an addict of this natural pleasure, of this “Drug-free high, Palestinian Style”.

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Of course not everything is as beautiful here as these pictures let us think, but despite the ongoing turmoil and suffering of this country, the unique energy of the sarha is here to be discovered.

The pictures were mostly taken in the Northern West Bank (Ramallah, Salfit, Jenin, Tubas, Nablus) and in the districts of Bethlehem during my trips in February. I would like to thank all the Palestinians whose spontaneous help, hospitality and enthusiasm made exploring their country such a pleasure.

Read a synopsis or buy Shehadeh’s book here http://books.google.com/books?id=jc…