Yanun
By MIFTAH
October 22, 2002

The village of Yanun is located 3.5 km north west of Aqraba village, which is situated 17 km to the north east of Nablus city. Once home to 25 families every resident has already fled after four years of worsening attacks by Israeli settlers. The attacks have become increasingly frequent in recent months. "Our life here is more bitter than hell," Kamal Sobih said, as he packed his belongings in his little car heading to the neighboring village of Aqraba.

Groups of masked Jewish settlers have charged into the village, coming at night with dogs and horses, stealing sheep, hurling stones through windows and beating the men with fists and rifle butts. The settlers have poisoned and slaughtered over 150 cattle and uprooted many olive trees, which are the main sources for survival of the families living in the once peaceful hillside village of Yanun. Recent attacks have targeted an electricity generator scorching it with fire, completely cutting off power to the village. The generator had been recently installed; it was bought by the EU/UNDP in an effort to ease conditions for the villagers. Water sources have been contaminated and water tanks have been tipped over and emptied by the terrorizing settlers.

The Israeli army turns a blind eye to such attacks and sometimes even joins the settlers in their vandalizing and harassing campaigns. Displaced villages, homes lost, civilians forced to flee are all too familiar for the Palestinians who have learned, as a result of 1948 and 1967 attacks, which resulted in so many refugees, to stick around and endure the pain for they are alone in their plight. "I kept urging the people not to leave, but they did, one by one," the village chief, Abdelatif Sobih said, crying. "They left me without a choice. I'm blaming my people as well (as the settlers) because they left me alone." Sobih has been attacked seven times before and his wife, Raideh, threatened to leave him if they did not abandon the place.

The villagers have never been linked to any violence; they live a simple life and are too friendly and nice for their own good. Ahmad Sobih an elderly man had told his story: When he was tending sheep on the hillside when a stranger approached. Sobih, mistaking the man for someone from a neighboring Arab village, went to shake hands with him and offer him a cigarette but instead he was beaten with his own walking stick.

The settlers carry out daily attacks against the Palestinians all through out the West Bank and Gaza. It is the settlers' goal to drive them out regardless of the barbaric methods used. The Israeli government tends to overlook the settlers' actions that are in reality carrying out the government's dirty work, as they continue to build and expand what is internationally recognized as illegal settlements. The Yanun residents hope to return one day and hold the keys to their homes in the village, but will they pass the key down to the next generation as they await their return like the rest of the Palestinian refugees displaced 54 years ago?

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