Beit Hanina disappearing

By Skip Schiel

Beit Hanina is in Jerusalem Municipality , over the 1967 Armistice/Green Line (Occupied East Jerusalem), relentlessly being choked by Israeli developments: the Western bypass road (45) on its west, Wall at its north, which is now erasing the main road to Ramallah plus Road 60, Pisgat Zeev and Neve Yaakov settlements to its east. The choking and transfer of the largest middleclass Palestinian group between Jerusalem / Ramallah is part of Israeli policy to fight demography and grab land, as elsewhere in Jerusalem .

--Palestine Monitor , November 2004

You could call Beit Hanina a northern suburb of Jerusalem , as Everett is a northern suburb of Boston , but describing it for people in the US presents a daunting challenge. Beit Hanina, a Palestinian community of some 20,000 people, does not exist on some maps, notably those produced in Israel . Why is this? Because it is being swamped by Israeli settlements. The corollary truth is that the settlements do not appear on some maps produced in Palestine .

I had the good fortune last week to reside for four days with a family in Beit Hanina, father Palestinian, mother Jewish from the US , 3 girls of mixed heritage. While with them, I learned at first hand some of the travails of such a community.

One instance: while driving with Hilda, she pointed out the intersection at French Hill, which was the site of a suicide bombing last September by an 18 year old Palestinian woman. Two dead, and this would have been an enormously larger number had soldiers not spotted her crossing from the Palestinian side to the Israeli side. At that same intersection--and this is so hard to show I don’t even try--the stop lights are timed to force the Palestinians coming into central Jerusalem to wait much longer than their Israeli counterparts. When I inquired about road rage, Nora informed me that at rush hour this zone is full of trouble.

Another instance: the main road north to Ramallah goes thru Beit Hanina, and then thru a region thick with Israeli communities. I walked this road, observed the elegant homes, the schools, synagogues, and especially the playgrounds in the Jewish settlements. As I watched kids playing, an echo came to me from earlier: in all of East Jerusalem , for Palestinians there are only two playgrounds, and one of these adjoins the notorious Israeli colony of Ras al-Almud, whose construction tore out one wall of the playground’s basketball court.

Another: Beit Hanina is a dicey place to build a home. The town suffers many home demolitions, either because they have been built without the virtually impossible to get permits, or someone in the family is accused of threatening the security of Israel . I visited the sites of two recent demolitions, one with the belongings of the family still scattered on the earth.

A final instance (of many) of the challenges of coexistence is the beginnings of a new road cut thru the center of Beit Hanina. Israel initiated this, destroying roads and homes, to connect two main settler roads (from which Palestinians are barred). It will eventually cut thru play fields and a small forest. I discovered this cut as I wandered one morning along a small road. The road abruptly terminated in a wire fence. Then I saw it: a crude slash thru the community. Later, when I told Hilda and Osama about this, they were stunned, had not realized this fact on the ground, and would believe it only when we traveled to it.

What I don’t know how to show is the planned future: Beit Hanina swallowed in the vision of “Greater Israel.”

My reaction? Gratitude to the family for allowing me this brief entrance into their lives, outrage at the project of Greater Israel, and resolve to expose this fact on the ground as widely as possible.

Two Killed in French Hill Suicide Bombing, September 22, 2004

Family of 11 left homeless after their Home is demolished

(Ecumenical Accompaniers Hannah Rought-Brooks of the United Kingdom and Eva Halling of Sweden were part of a group of Israeli and international activists who joined with the Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD) December 1, 2004 to protest the demolition of a family home near Beit Hanina on the northern outskirts of Jerusalem. Click here for their photo series. Then on Photo Gallery and then on #58.)

Um Ramzi from Beit Hanina: "We Refuse this Division," Community Voice, PENGON/Anti-Apartheid Wall Campaign, August 8th, 2004

Why Greater Israel vision has perished, by Alex Brummer, January 11, 2004 , The Observer

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