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  • More Time To Discuss, Transform Jerusalem

    MORE TIME TO DISCUSS, TRANSFORM JERUSALEM

    Institute for Middle East Understanding
    http://imeu.net/news/article008009.s html
    Feb 28 2008
    CA

    Hasan Afif El-Hasan, The Palestine Chronicle, Feb 28, 2008 This
    article was originally published by The Palestine Chronicle and is
    republished with permission.

    Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert stated recently that the status
    of Jerusalem will not be negotiated with the Palestinians at this time.

    Right wing Israelis are against conceding any part of the Old City
    or any suburb of Jerusalem municipality to the Palestinians. The
    ultra-orthodox right wing party in Olmert's government threatens
    to leave the governing coalition if the question of Jerusalem comes
    up for discussion with the Palestinians and that is why Olmert will
    not discuss it now. This has been the same rationale that successive
    Israeli governments have always cited whenever they were pressed to
    stop settlement expansion. And if Israel says no negotiations on the
    future of Jerusalem, the Palestinians cannot do anything about it.

    The Palestinians' concession to keep Jerusalem out of the Oslo
    interim agreement in 1993 gave Israel the time to alter its status
    quo prior to any possible permanent status talks. Israel since Oslo
    has expanded the boundaries of the City, confiscated more Arab lands
    and constructed new settlements. Schemes have been devised to take
    over private Arab and Church properties inside and outside the Old
    City, and large settlements have been built on its outskirts. Some of
    these are Har Homa (Jabal Ghaneim), Gilo, Piscat Ze'ev, Atarot, Ramot
    settlement. Jewish settlers evicted Palestinian residents from their
    quarters in the Old City and took over St. John's Hospice and other
    church and Islamic endowment (wakf) properties. The Israeli government
    dug Hasmonean Tunnel under al-Aqsa Mosque compound endangering the
    structure of the Islamic shrine.

    The area of East Jerusalem has been isolated by Jewish only settlements
    from Ramallah in the north by Givat Ze'ev, from Bethlehem in the
    south by Gush Etzion and from the east to the Dead Sea by Ma'ale
    Adumim. Jewish settlements have been established in the Old City
    and in the surrounding Arab neighborhoods of Silwan, Ras el-Amoud,
    Wadi el-Joz and Sheikh Jarrah. Palestinian enclaves are divided so
    that people traveling from one to the other have to go through areas
    controlled by Israel.

    When the subject of Jerusalem came up during the 2000 Camp David
    summit, Mayor Ehud Olmert led a mass march of some 350,000 protesters
    against the plan to divide the city. Today, a group of Kadima
    members, headed by Otniel Schneller, is demanding adhering to the
    party's agenda, which calls for Jerusalem's unity under Israel. US
    neoconservatives and the Israeli right are partners in the Greater
    Israel project which calls among other things for the absorption of
    East Jerusalem and the rest of occupied territories, excluding the
    Arab population centers, into a Jewish state.

    Zalman Shoval, head of the foreign affairs department of Likud party,
    said before the Annapolis conference was convened, that the issue of
    Jerusalem should "not be on the table in any way". Sixty-one members
    of the Israeli parliament signed a petition against a proposal to
    give the Palestinians sovereignty over Shoufat refugee camp out
    side the Old City. The Prime Minister floated the idea of giving
    back the overcrowded Shoufat refugee camp to be the capital of
    the future Palestinian state. Two months after the conclusion of
    Annapolis conference, Ehud Olmert backed away from this position
    and told his coalition partners that the issue of Jerusalem would
    not even be discussed in the foreseeable future. According to the
    news media, Olmert told the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud
    Abbas that Israel would continue to expand the settlements throughout
    the expanded East Jerusalem municipality. Palestinians' aspirations
    to have Jerusalem as their future capital are being undermined by
    Israel's deliberate attempts to alter the status quo in the occupied
    land including the Old City.

    The Old City constitutes only a small geographic area of the expanded
    municipality of East Jerusalem, but its holiness distinguishes it
    from the rest of Jerusalem. The 420-acre of walled real estate that
    is the City has been playing a distinctive role in the beliefs of the
    world-wide adherents to the three monolithic religions. It is where
    three world religions meet and compete over the interpretation of
    the divine. The City is home of the Dome of the Rock, al-Aqsa Mosque,
    Mosque of the Ascension, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the Convent
    of Deir al-Sultan, Church of St. Anne, Church of St. James, Church
    of St. Mark and the Western (or Wailing) Wall. The Palestinians want
    Jerusalem to be their capital, and since Israel occupied East Jerusalem
    40 years ago, all Israeli governments maintained that Jerusalem
    must be "the eternal indivisible" capital of Israel. To this effect,
    Israel exercised its power as an occupying force in control of the
    city to create facts on the ground by expanding the Jewish quarter
    and planting settlers in the other sectors of the Old City.

    Since 1967, changes taking place in the Old City spearheaded by
    organizations acting as settlers' front with authority from the Israeli
    governments. In the face of the Israeli colonization and absorption
    since then, the City has been transformed from a Palestinian city to
    Palestinian enclaves within a Jewish city. The Palestinian enclaves
    are continuously shrinking and they are increasingly cut off from
    other Palestinian areas outside the wall.

    Michael Dumper, a specialist on the Palestinian issue identified three
    major categories of settler groups operating in Jerusalem, that have
    been supported by the government financially and logistically.

    The first category is "active in attempts to settle Jews in Muslim
    quarters". The second category includes groups that locate, acquire
    and renovate Palestinians' real estate. The third category known as
    "the Temple Mount group, is active in supporting the messianic vision
    of reconstructing the Jewish temple on al-Aqsa site". The groups
    receive money from the ministry of housing, expressly given to buy
    properties in the Palestinian Muslim and Christian quarters and the
    surrounding parts of East Jerusalem. They also receive large funds
    from American millionaires such as Irving Moscowitz.

    The settler groups are the proxies of the State of Israel in a policy
    to acquire property and extend the Jewish character in the Old City.

    The Jewish quarter has been enlarged by administration fiat to include
    Harat el-Magharbi and Armenian properties. Existing structures were
    erased gradually and the area has been overtaken by settlers. Settler
    movements such as Gush Emunim and Tehiya, that have been given free
    hand to encircle Hebron, Nablus and Jerusalem with settlements,
    have been active in asserting Israel's control over the Old City by
    building a strong Jewish presence in the Palestinian quarters. In 1968,
    the Ministry of Finance ordered the expropriation of the whole area
    that extends between the walls in the southeast to the Tareeq Bab
    al-Silsileh in the west, and from the Western Wall in the north to
    the Armenian Quarter in the south. The confiscated property included
    more than 600 Palestinian buildings, according to Dumper.

    Settler supporters have been appointed in key state ministries and
    agencies, and settler groups sat on inter-ministerial committees
    that set policies and plan strategies for implementing them. They
    carried out overt and covert operations that made serious inroads
    which impacted the lives of the Palestinians living in the Muslim
    and Christian quarters including some dramatic events such as the
    massacre in Haram ash-Sharif in 1990 and the opening of the Hasmonean
    Tunnel in 1996. The Israeli-Lands Administration and the Custodian's
    Office helped many settler organizations, home grown and foreign,
    to locate and acquire non-Jewish properties, evict the Palestinian
    tenants, renovate the properties and settle only Jewish families in
    the reconstructed units.

    Acquiring and leasing Islamic endowment and church-owned land in
    the Old City and in its suburbs has been a major part of the Israeli
    agenda to Judaize the holy City and its surroundings. As the mayor
    of Jerusalem from 1993 to 2003, Ehud Olmert was very aggressive in
    implementing plans to strengthen Jewish domination over the whole
    city. He appointed the leader from the Ateret militant settler group,
    Shmuel Evyatar, as his advisor on issues related to the Christian
    communities in Jerusalem. The appointment was perceived as part of
    a campaign to acquire Church properties because Evayatar had been
    active in taking over such Church owned properties. Two years before
    this appointment and on the eve of 1990 Good Friday, Evyatar and 150
    members of his militant group occupied a Jerusalem property known as
    St. John's Hospice that belonged to the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate
    which is located in the Christian Quarter, very close to the Holy
    Sepulcher Church. The take over was condemned by the Christian Churches
    but it was defended and encouraged by the Israeli government.

    The present fundamentalist Jewish mayor of Jerusalem Uri Lupliansky
    declared recently that he was going to Judaize East Jerusalem even
    more by confiscating land and expanding the Jewish only settlements.

    Lupliansky was referring to the expanded Jerusalem municipality that
    includes 5% of the West Bank as well as the Old City. According
    to Haaretz, Lupliansky vowed that he would turn Jerusalem into an
    "illegal outpost". Israel has succeeded in creating the concept of
    legal and illegal settlements just to circumvent the international
    law that considers all settlements illegal. Israel uses what it calls
    the illegal outposts for bargaining purposes. Even President Bush
    bought into this scheme and called for dismantling the so called
    "illegal settlements". According to the Israeli news media, Housing
    Minister Zeev Boim declared in February that, "bids will go out soon
    to build 1,100 apartments for Jews in East Jerusalem.", 350 settler
    units would be built in the Har Homa settlement and 750 in Pisgat Zeev,
    north of Jerusalem.

    For the Palestinians, Jerusalem especially the Old City is the center
    of the Arab-Israeli conflict. The fate of the peace negotiations for
    them and the destiny of Jerusalem is the same. While Israel calls for
    postponing the subject of East Jerusalem, actions to Judaize it never
    stopped. The Israeli operatives have been working hard to colonize
    the City as well as the rest of the occupied lands. If Israel is not
    ready to discuss Jerusalem after forty years of occupation, it will
    never be ready in the future. More time before discussing Jerusalem
    is more time to transform the City's character and with that, the
    hope for withdrawal to the 1967 borders becomes increasingly unlikely.

    -Born in Nablus, Palestine, Hasan Afif El-Hasan,Ph.D, is a political
    analyst. He contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.
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