Archive for December, 2009
Tonight! Demonstration in front of the Magistrate Court, Jerusalem
Dec 12th
Every Friday for the past few weeks, there has been a march to Sheikh Jarrah to protest the eviction of Palestinian residents from their homes. During the demonstration yesterday, the police stormed the crowd with unprecedented force, wounding ten demonstrators and arresting twenty-four. The detainees spent the night in the Russian Compound, and will be brought before a judge to be arraigned this evening. The harsh police response seems planned in advance in order to suppress the mounting protests and to silence the public opposition to the policy of judaizing East Jerusalem. Brutal suppression of legal and nonviolent demonstrations will not silence the opposition.
We will not be silent.
We will not stand by while the Sheikh Jarrah residents are evicted and their protest silenced.
For details- Maya 0547423044
Assaf- 0544346274
For transportation from Tel Aviv- Haggai 0523-881213
בשבועות האחרונים מתקיימת מדי יום שישי הפגנה נגד גירוש תושבי שייח ג’ראח מבתיהם. במהלך ההפגנה אתמול התפרצה המשטרה לעבר המפגינים תוך שימוש בכוח חסר תקדים, פצעה יותר מעשרה מפגינים ועצרה 24 מהם. העצורים בילו את הלילה במעצר, והערב יובאו להארכת מעצר. תגובת המשטרה נראית כמתוכננת מראש על מנת לדכא את ההפגנות ההולכות וגדלות, ולהשתיק את המחאה הציבורית סביב המדיניות המכוונת של ייהוד מזרח ירושלים. דיכוי ברוטאלי של הפגנות חוקיות ובלתי אלימות לא ישתיק את המחאה.
לא נשתוק.
לא נעמוד מנגד אל מול גירוש תושבי שייח ג’ראח ודיכוי מחאתם.
הפגנה היום בערב 19:00 מול בית משפט השלום בירושלים.
לפרטים- מאיה0547423044
אסף 0544346274
להסעות מתל אביב- חגי 0523-881213
David Shulman Reports from Yesterday’s Sheikh Jarrah Protest March in Jerusalem
Dec 5th
Ta’ayush member and prolific writer David Shulman has provided a report from yesterday’s Sheikh Jarrah protest march in Jerusalem. His words, as always, are moving and profound:
December 4, 2009 Sheikh Jarrah, East Jerusalem
Exhibit A. Kindly examine the attached photograph. Let’s make an inventory. Three stuffed animals, two face up, one face down. The yellow-and-red one, half animal half cushion, has an inscription: “I love you.” One school bag. Two unidentified red toys. Five pieces of yellow lego. One armless, legless doll. One yellow brush with blue bristles. An Arabic newspaper. A broken pole wrapped in red cloth. A broken flower, perhaps freshly cut, probably thrown out with the vase it sat in.
I don’t want to overload your inbox, so I won’t add more pictures of this patch of ground in front of the al-Kurd family’s house in Sheikh Jarrah. I can tell you what’s there. A kitchen stove, its glass top shattered, green splinters everywhere. Broken microwave lying on its face. Pieces of bicycle and a children’s tractor. Shoes, mostly children’s. Many more pieces of lego. A few pots and pans. Some sheets. Boxes of odds and ends—cellphone, cords, electric wire. Plastic shovel for playing in the sand.
Exhibit B. See attached photograph. Immediately adjacent to the above: Border Policemen outside the door of the house, now inhabited by Israeli settlers. The police are there, needless to say, to protect them. Note the Israeli flags strung over the windows, just to rub it in. The people taking photographs and milling around are Israeli peace activists who came for today’s protest march: ordinary people, shocked by what is happening in Sheikh Jarrah and angry enough to spend this Friday afternoon on the long walk through downtown Jerusalem, then along Road Number One which divides east from west—the future border between the Israeli and the Palestinian cities– past the American Colony Hotel and the neighborhood mosque to this street where, as of Sunday, a third Palestinian family has been violently expelled from its home.
We’re riding a wave of such expulsions. Last Friday we were here, Eileen and I, in this very courtyard, before the court ruling; we spoke at some length with the eloquent, moderate father of the al-Kurd family, who told us the story in gentle Arabic. He had told it many times that day. “We were refugees from Haifa in 1948. Everyone in this neighborhood is a refugee, some from Lydda and Ramla, some from Jaffa. After the 1948 war, the Jordanian government gave us these plots of land to build on, in exchange for our UNRWA cards. The cards were worth a lot of money, but we wanted to live normal lives in our own houses, so we gave up our status as refugees. We have lived in this home since the 1950′s. The Israeli settlers claim the land belongs to the Jews and they went to court, for years we were in the courts. But this is my house, it is our home, I built the annex in the front and planted the fruit trees. Now the court has ordered the annex to be sealed off and they forced us out. Settlers came with the soldiers in the night and started throwing our possessions outside, just like that, and they hit us, one of them grabbed my daughter by the throat and tried to strangle her. They are very violent. We cannot live with them. They hurt us and they insult us and they are thieves and the soldiers help them. The court has left us, for now, with the back part of the house; the front is locked and sealed. On Sunday the court will decide finally. I don’t believe they will force us to leave. I don’t believe they can be so unjust. Come meet my mother, she will tell you.” We peeked through the window: his mother was sleeping, the afternoon receding into night. We sat with him for a few moments in the tent he has put up in the courtyard across from what used to be his front door. His wife, a handsome, modern woman, rushed into the back of the house and emerged with a box of baklava to offer us; it was ‘Id al-Adha, the Feast of Sacrifice, when guests are especially welcome.
Then on Sunday the court ruled in favor of the settlers, and they moved in immediately with the soldiers to back them up, as is normal in East Jerusalem these days. That’s how the lego and the stuffed animals landed up in the courtyard.
This is the third recent eviction in Sheikh Jarrah—after the al-Hanun and al-Ghawi families lost their homes to settlers– and six more families have already received court orders preparing them for this same fate. We’ve tried our best to stop it, we’ve run an international campaign, we’ve kept volunteers in the houses and protestors outside, we’ve done what we could in the courts and the press, and we’ve failed and will no doubt fail again unless some of you who read this report find a way to bring effective pressure to bear. Let me say at once: the legal situation in Sheikh Jarrah is complicated, but it’s also largely irrelevant. The settlers, through what is called the Sephardic Community Committee, have produced documents to support their claim that these plots of land belonged to Jews during the Ottoman period, over a century ago. Ergo, they must be restored to Jewish hands (like all the rest of Palestine? And what about the hundreds of Palestinian houses in West Jerusalem now inhabited by Jews? No Israeli court is about to return them to their original owners.). All the Palestinian families who live here received the land from the Jordanian government, as Mr. al-Kurd said. They are large families; two generations have been born and grown up in these houses. The whole question has been in the courts for decades, and the rulings have sometimes favored the Palestinians, at other times the settlers. I’m not about to make any judgment relating to the legal niceties.
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Demonstration in Sheikh Jarrah This Friday
Dec 15th
Posted by Joseph Dana in Unarmed Resistance
No comments
Weekly Protest March from the Mashbir plaza to Sheikh Jarrah
Join a march from West to East Jerusalem in protest of the injustice committed against the Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem. The march will end in Sheikh Jarrah with a protest against the settler enterprise in the neighborhood and against the suppression of Palestinian opposition.
The march will start Friday at 12:30
from the Mashbir plaza, on the corner of King George and Ben Yehudah
To a demonstration in Sheikh Jarrah that will begin at 14:00
Every Friday for the past few weeks, there has been a march to Sheikh Jarrah to protest the eviction of Palestinian residents from their homes. During the demonstration last Friday, the police stormed the crowd with unprecedented force, wounding ten demonstrators and arresting twenty three. The harsh police response seems planned in advance in order to suppress the mounting protests and to silence the public opposition to the policy of judaizing East Jerusalem. Brutal suppression of legal and nonviolent demonstrations will not silence the opposition.
For further information- Maya 0547423044 or Gali 0544679756
For transportation from Tel Aviv – Yuval 0507336117
צעדת מחאה שבועית מרחבת המשביר לשייח ג’ראח
הצעדה ממערב למזרח ירושלים, במחאה על העוולות הנעשות לציבור הפלסטיני במזרח העיר.
הצעדה תסתיים בשייח ג’ראח בהפגנה נגד מפעל ההתנחלות בשכונה, ונגד דיכוי המחאה הפלסטינית.
נתחיל לצעוד ביום שישי בשעה 12:30
מרחבת המשביר ברחוב קינג ג’ורג’ פינת בן יהודה
להפגנה בשכונת שייח ג’ראח שתתחיל ב – 14:00
בשבועות האחרונים מתקיימת מדי יום שישי הפגנה נגד גירוש תושבי שייח ג’ראח מבתיהם. במהלך ההפגנה ביום שישי האחרון התפרצה המשטרה לעבר המפגינים תוך שימוש בכוח חסר תקדים, פצעה יותר מעשרה מפגינים ועצרה 23 מהם. תגובת המשטרה נראית כמתוכננת מראש על מנת לדכא את ההפגנות ההולכות וגדלות, ולהשתיק את המחאה הציבורית סביב המדיניות המכוונת של ייהוד מזרח ירושלים. דיכוי ברוטאלי של הפגנות חוקיות ובלתי אלימות לא ישתיק את המחאה.
לפרטים- מאיה 0547423044 או גלי 0544679756
להרשמה להסעות מתל אביב- יובל 0507336117