MIFTAH
Saturday, 6 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

What's the big deal? After all, there have already been High Court of Justice orders to return Palestinian land to its legal owners that have not been honored. Recall Ikrit, and the unequivocal court order of July 31, 1951, that the residents be allowed to return to their homes (which they had been politely asked to leave "for two weeks" in November 1948 ). The Military Administration engaged in delaying tactics, and on December 24, 1951, Christmas Eve, it blew up their homes. And they are Catholics. In legal casuistry that is beyond our understanding, the High Court has several times since then received the government's explanations for failing to honor its rulings. Judging by the uproar, one might also think that until the West Bank outposts, Israel had never appropriated Palestinian land and given it to Jews.

In January of this year MK Zahava Gal-On (Meretz ) placed a draft bill on the Knesset agenda to bring back the residents of Ikrit and Biram (where residents' homes were also blown up after the High Court ruled to enable their return ). I discovered Gal-On's proposal while randomly surfing the Internet one sleepless night, in a home that was just four kilometers away from the village of Dura al-Kara (on whose land the settlement of Beit El and its Ulpana neighborhood are now built ), and one kilometer from the Palestine Liberation Organization's Department of Refugee Affairs, the official organizer of Nakba Day events.

The draft bill is based on the conclusions of a special ministerial committee in the second government of the late Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Gal-On's proposal is to allocate 1,200 dunams to each of the two villages (Biram had about 12,000 dunams, Ikrit about 16,000 ). Gal-On's bill reassures us that these are citizens of the country (not returning refugees ), and that as a law, it would not constitute the opening of a dam that will result in an influx of refugees. As the bill says, "The question on the agenda is not recognition of the right of return and an undermining of the Zionist ethos, but a correct, moral and just decision that will prove that Israel honors and keeps its promises, obeys judicial decisions."

Such an assertive explanation, that the bill has nothing to do with the refugees' right of return, tells volumes about the opposite claim. Why say yes to the descendants of Ikrit and Biram, and not to the descendants of Sumayriyya, which was captured on May 14, 1948, its homes destroyed almost immediately and its land given to Kibbutz Lohamei Hageta'ot and Kibbutz Shomrat? Who decided that the absence of a High Court ruling here erases the right of belonging.

Might decides, as 8-year-old Tamer, a boy whose grandparents had been expelled from their home when they were his age, understood. This is a Palestinian neighborhood, explained his mother, when we passed Mamilla, on our way from Ramallah to the Biblical Zoo in Jerusalem. That too, she said of Katamon. And Malkha was a village, I added. And the little one said that he didn't understand why it's called Israel if it's Palestine. And that he would buy a rifle in order to expel the occupier from the entire country.

His mother was embarrassed, because, unfashionable woman that she is, she actually believes that the realistic arrangement is two states. I said that the name "United States" doesn't erase the term "Turtle Island," which is what several indigenuos groups call the continent of North America. And while the European occupier wiped out most of the native population of the continent, it isn't required to go back from whence it came. And the mother said, "Tamer dear, people live here. We mustn't be like them."

Another parent among my friends was confused. Nael, 19, joined a Facebook group that called to boycott Qatar because it marked the West Bank and the Gaza Strip as Palestine. "We were killed in the first intifada so that a Palestinian state would arise on the West Bank and in Gaza," said his father in surprise, ignoring the difference between the "State of Palestine" and the "Land of Palestine." It turns out his son sees the straight line that stretches from 1948 to today. He sees a line that connects the family land, which was lost in 1948 and remained on the Israeli side, that that part of their land which Israel grabbed in order to hand over to some "high standard of living" settlements in the 1980s, and then with the remaining land that is now encaged beyond the separation fence.

A van waving a black flag drove around the streets of Ramallah and El Bireh last week, and two young people jumped out occasionally to hang up, between the bank advertisements, the PLO Department of Refugee Affairs' "official poster in memory of the 64th Nakba." When the wind unfurled the black fabric it revealed a picture of a key and the inscription "Return." The muscular young man on the poster, wearing a black and white checkered kaffiyeh and rolled-up sleeves, is waving a sheaf of wheat. Not a rifle. In front of him is a thorny sabra bush, behind him a map of Greater Palestine whose borders are barbed wire. And below it the inscription, in Arabic: The return is the people's right and desire. And in the English translation, it says "our fate" instead of "desire."

Some 400 meters stretch between the Department of Refugee Affairs and the Civil Administration building on the land of El Bireh and the Beit El checkpoint. In recent weeks, Palestinian security men were conspicuously deployed on the streets. Who is coming that would require such heavy security, we wondered. Gradually we understood. During the activities of the past week, in support of the hunger strike of the Palestinian prisoners in Israel, such deployment ensures that young demonstrators are channeled to the Qalandiyah and Beitunia checkpoints. If they insist on clashing with the occupation forces, let them disturb the Order in those distant areas. Now, as the Nakba Day and its events get nearer, the Palestinian uniformed forces, whose supreme commander is the PLO chairman, send a clear message that any demonstration in favor of the Right of Return should not disturb the orderly traffic movement of Beit El settlers. Neither should it, God forbid, harm the movement of the chosen people (Palestinian VIPs, diplomats, businessmen, NGOs employees and journalists ), who are the only ones allowed to pass through the eastern entrance to the city.

 
 
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