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120
Christian Homes In Jerusalem Area To Be Demolished By Israeli Soldiers
Israeli Committee AgainstHouse
Demolitions
Tuesday
May 06, 2003 at 01:18 AM
info@icahd.org 972-2-624-5560
PO Box 2030 Jerusalem 91020,
Israel Beit Sahour, West Bank
October 6, 2002
Israeli
courts have upheld an Israeli Army order to demolish 120 newly built
Palestinian homes in Beit Sahour, a Palestinian town adjacent to
Bethlehem. Residents today demonstrated against the order and launched
an international campaign to save their homes.
The
new homes were built by a group of limited income Palestinian Christian
families who banded together as the Arab Orthodox Housing Project
to build a new life. They obtained a 99-year lease from their Church,
the Greek Orthodox Church, 22 years ago and then began the agonizing
process of organizing and saving enough money to start construction.
"We were renters for 40 years," Dalal Awad, a mother of
five told me. "We saved for 22 years and built this home with
our neighbors. It cost $42,000. We built it with our hearts, our
own labor. Now the Israelis want to kill our dream."
A year
ago the first families moved in, even though Israel refused to provide
electricity and the road to the homes was not completed. More than
40 families now live there. The entire project will house 850 people.
Hanan
Bannourah, her father, 82, and her mother, 78, settled in March
2002, as did her brother's family of seven in a neighboring unit.
"The Israelis bulldozed our first home in 1991. We saved and
saved to build our new home." Then, at the end of May, Israeli
police and soldiers told them they planned to destroy it.
Israeli
courts recently rejected the residents' appeal. Now they will take
the case before the Israeli Supreme Court.
"Israel
wants to protect their settlers just over the hill [in Har Homa]
says Ms. Bannourah. "They are trying to surround Bethlehem
with their new settlements, and to cut it off from Jerusalem. They
are trying to take over all of Palestine."
A new
Israeli bypass road is being built to Har Homa that will surround
and then cut right through Beit Sahour. Har Homa will house 30,000
Israeli Jewish settlers. Beit Sahour consists of Christians and
Moslems living side by side, resisting the Israeli military occupation.
According
to the Oslo Agreement, Beit Sahour is part of Area B, which means
it is supposed to be under joint control of Israel and the Palestinian
Authority. The municipality is supposed to have control over land
use.
The
Arab Orthodox Housing Project received permits from Beit Sahour
to build, and was on the verge of completing the entire project
when Israel sent its demolition order. Suddenly Israel claimed the
land is in Area C and therefore completely under its control.
No
one knows when the Israeli Army plans to destroy the homes. But
the residents are not waiting.
"We
know that when Israel decrees an order they do not care whether
families will be made homeless." To fight, the families have
launched an international information campaign to save their homes.
They plan to march and organize a hunger strike. "If necessary,
I will build a tent here. Our dream will not die. I am not leaving,"
says Ms. Bannourah.
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