Posts tagged taayush
Under cover of darkness, Ta’ayush activists expose the stealing of Palestinian land (UPDATE)
Aug 25th
Ta’ayush activists have uncovered information that the Southern West Bank settlement of Susya is illegal stealing Palestinian land to increase the production of their Carmel Wine. Last week, under cover of darkness, a group of Jerusalem activists went to explore the vineyards. What they found was that many settlers are in fact stealing land in order to produce wine. This is nothing new however it is important to keep pressure on the settler groups through the dissemination of video and press about their illegal actions. Below is a video of their journey from Jerusalem. While the video is not full of the same type of action as the Friday demonstration videos, it is amazing to see how much work Israel in the middle of the night. Most of the illegal settlement construction, the stealing of land and the creation of the Separation Wall happens in the darkness. What does this country have to hid?
Carmel Wines has responded in an email to Ta’ayush activists:
Thank you for seeking clarification.
1. It is and was our policy that no grapes from over the green line/ West Bank, are used in Yatir or Carmel wines.
2. No grapes from over the green line will appear in Yatir or Carmel wines, now or in the future.
3. There is an internal investigation concerning this particular issue, but even before any conclusions, I can confirm the above two points still apply, now more than ever.
On a point of correction: Harvesting of grapes for wine often takes place at night. Also, Carmel produces 15 million bottles a year and does not seek to increase production.
Regards,
Adam Montefiore
אדם ס. מונטיפיורי
מנהל המחלקה המקצועית ליין
Adam S. Montefiore
Wine Development Director
Tel +972 3–9488806 טל
Mobile +972 54–6458851 נייד
Fax +972 3–9663129 פקס
adam@carmelwines.co.i
Settlers Attack as a Palestinian Villagers try to Secure Water in the South Hebron Hills
Aug 19th
Israel and the West Bank are experiencing record temperature this week. The heat always brings the issue of water access to the forefront of Palestinian minds in the South West Bank. The issue of water in Area C of the South Hebron Hills in the West Bank is a major one. Because the area is under full Israeli military and civil control, the Israeli government at the request of the Israeli army often denies water infrastructure for Palestinians villages. The idea is slowly starve the villages in order to pressure the residents into moving to major city centers such as Yatta and Hebron. Dramatic images of a Palestinian child holding on to his father as he is arrested by Israeli soldiers for ‘stealing water’ surfaced some weeks ago made international news.
Ta’ayush activists were on the ground in the South Hebron Hills last Saturday helping Palestinians create a water station for the village of Bir al Eid. What was captured on tape (below) are settlers verbally and physically attacking the activists and the Israeli soldiers that almost always accompany Ta’ayush activists in order to harass them. After the settlers rampage of destruction, the army turned to the Ta’ayush members with a closed military zone order. The struggle for water continues in the South Hebron Hills as settler violence shows no sign of slowing.
A Blast from the Past: Clip about Ta’ayush and Ezra Nawi from 2004
Jul 19th
The Land of the Settlers is a five part documentary series created by Chaim Yavin, who was described by the Arab News as “the Israeli version of America’s Walter Cronkite”. With a handheld camera, Yavin traveled throughout his homeland of Israel and interviewed a range of Palestinians and Israelis in order to document the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Released in 2005, his series was too controversial to air on Israel’s public TV station, Channel 1, despite the fact that he had helped to create the station and served as its lead anchorman. It ran instead on Channel 2, creating a stir for its sympathy towards Palestinians.
The below segment chronicles the early years of actions by Ta’ayush and Ezra Nawi in the South Hebron Hills. One can see that the more things change, the more they stay the same. The beginning of the clip shows life in the contested city of Hebron in 2004-2005.
“we want to be”…settlers, activists and soldiers do a dance in the south Hebron hills
Jun 16th
Video from a last Saturday’s action in the South Hebron Hills. There are no English subtitles but the situation is quite clear. Soldiers remove shepherds from their farmlands, activists try to stop them and settlers attack Palestinians. The dance continues every day, every week.
Is the Direct Action Left in Israel Growing?
Apr 20th
Middle of April 2010
Ta’ayush is getting bigger. This time last year, we would meet at our regular place early on Saturday morning. It felt more like a group of friends going out for a day of hiking in the hills then an established political organization. We barely fit in one transit at this time. Now we need almost three transits to fit all the new participants. Ta’ayush is growing New faces were seen, many young and some even yuppie. Of the new faces, many are wearing Sheikh Jarrah shirts complete with the slogan “nothing holy in the occupied city”. I am surprised that Shekih Jarrah has had such a strong impact on the direct action left. This time last year, the families were still living in their homes and staging last ditch efforts to stay there. A handful of Israelis were visiting and writing about the situation on the ground. Now, weekly protests of four hundred, sometimes five hundred people take place in Sheikh Jarrah. The Zionist left has started to make a serious effort to be included in the protests and the so called radical left is beginning to move on to different protests such as the one taking place in An Nabi Salih.
The new generations of Ta’ayush activists are motivated and ready to use their privilege as Israelis in order to change the facts on the ground in the South West Bank. Their experiences in Shiekh Jarrah have had the positive effect of showing them how much can be done as an Israeli. How easy it is too make a real difference on the ground and not just vote for Hadash or Meretz. I worry about the longevity of these new activists but I tend to view the left in Israel with strongly pessimistic eyes. Perhaps I will be proven wrong this time.
These days our focus in Ta’ayush has been the farm lands of Um Zetuyan which sit uncomfortably close to the settlement of Maon and its illegal sister outpost of Havat Maon. Below is a video of settler children of Havat Maon attacking us last summer with stones as their parents watch adoringly.
Um Zatuyan has always been an important place for Ta’ayush. Throughout the past year, we have paid a regular weekly visit to the farmers in the area in order to ensure that they had access to their farmlands. The Supreme Court of the State of Israel ruled in 2006 that the farmers of this area were to be given full access to their farmlands without threat or intimidation by the Israeli armed forces. In reality, the IDF operates at the request of the settlers and right elements in the government with little regard for Supreme Court rulings. The Anat Kam documents are ready proof of this reality.
It is the intention of the settlers (and their workers, the IDF) that the farmers will give up their farmlands and then their modest homes because of the intimidation. This will provide the settlement the opportunity to take over the land and grow. As sad as it sounds, this model has been very successful in the South West Bank and many farmers have given up their lands and moved to the major Palestinian city of Yatta .
Our response to this model of colonization is clear: as Israelis we refuse to let this happen. We respect the decision of the Supreme Court and because no one else is willing to protect/enforce it, we intervene directly as citizens and exercise our democratic rights. Thus, the situation in Um Zetuyan is straightforward. The Palestinian farmers invite us to join them while they farm. Within fifteen minutes, two or three army jeeps show up. The soldiers emerge and proclaim the army a closed military zone. We respond by showing the soldiers a copy of the 2006 Supreme Court ruling stating that they do not have the authority to use a closed military order in order to intimidate farmers from carrying out their work. The soldiers refuse to listen and call civilian police to arrest us for violating a military order (closed military zone). It is not that sexy but incredibly important that these actions continue if people are interested in continuing at least a semblance of democracy in this country.
This week, I am a not allowed to join the others at Um Zetuyan because I was arrested along with four other Ta’ayush members on the pervious Saturday. After six hours of detainment at the Kiryat Arba police station we were allowed to leave. The IDF was not interested in having us see a judge as the judge would have exposed the IDF’s violation of the Supreme Court ruling.The IDF did have us sign a document barring us from entering the area of Um Zeytuan for eight days. This is standard procedure. We are dealing with a truly Kafkaesque occupation.
Amiel, a Ta’ayush veteran, was arrested along with me. We plan to join farmers as they plant olive trees near the settlement of Susya. The settlers are attempting to take over their groves and so it is important that they, on a daily basis, document themselves farming the land. If they are not able to do this, then through the bureaucracy of Israeli occupation law, the settlers might be able to take over the land “legally”. Again, the work is not flashy but important as the success of the occupation lies in its straggling bureaucracy.
We were able to plant about ten olive trees near Susya. On this day, the army was slow to show up at the olive grove but they did arrive accompanied by a handful of settlers. One can cleary see the master/slave relationship when the settlers are dealing with the IDF. It always takes my breath away. The army did not force us off the land because the rest of our group was in Um Zetuyan, creating problems for the army there. We finished our work; the Palestinians were picked up by Ezra Nawi for a ride to their village. Amiel and I began to walk to the Palestinian Susya which serves as an unofficial meeting place for Ta’ayush activists in the South Hebron Hills. Within in five minutes, an army jeep showed up behind us, slowly following us on our walk to Susya.
On the walk, I asked Amiel how he felt about the protests in Nil’in and An Nabi Salih. I have been thinking about whether they can be called violent or not because of the rock throwing that the Palestinians engage in with the army. I believe that nonviolence is the only model of resistence that will bring about real change and so my relationship with the protests is complex. Amiel’s answer was clear. He recognized their legitimate right to protest even with rock throwing but he was unwilling to join them because his definition of non violence did not include rock throwing. Non violence is one of the only principles that the members can seem to agree on. Non violence and being against the occupation.
He told me that the uprising in Prague in 1968 was a perfect example of the limits of non violence for his generation. He felt solidarity with the protestors in Prague but had to deal with the issue of Molotov cocktails that were throw into Soviet tanks which literally burned Soviet troops to death. Definitions of non violent resistance tent to be somewhat fluid and placing the protests in Nil’in and An Nabi Salih into a category is proving to be a difficult task.
It is hard to think about Prague 68 in relationship to Nil’in. I want to make the connections and see the similarities with other résistance models but I find it difficult. To my knowledge, there were few Russians documenting the struggle of the Czechs in this episode of uprising. Because of the intimate connections that certain Israelis are making with Palestinians, I have a hard time making comparisons between the nonviolent resistance in Palestine and other movements. I am sure that there are some comparisons to be made. Sitting in the villages of the West Bank while having tea among a group of Israelis and Palestinians thinking of creative ways to resist the occupation together is truly unique in my eyes.
Eventually the army jeep leaves us and we arrive in Susya. It turns out that ten Ta’ayush activists were arrested for violating an (illegal) closed military zone order. Daniel, another veteran of Ta’ayush, was injured during all of the commotion. A soldier threw him to the ground and began to beat him. Later in the day, we find out that he will not be able to walk for one week and will have to receive medical treatment for his injury
Eventually, we receive calls from Sheikh Jarrah. Settlers are attacking some of the Palestinians in the neighborhood and our presence is needed. Our weekly visit to Um Zetuyan has gone as planned. Another direct action non violent day against the occupation complete with arrests and injuries.
Ta’ayush Activists Arrested in South Hebron Hills 10 April 2010
Apr 13th
10.4.10
South Hebron Hills
Report from a Ta’ayush Activist
As in every week of the year, we woke up at 07:00 on a Saturday morning to oppose injustice. We is a group of about 15 Israeli Ta’ayush activists.
The South of Hebron Hills is one of the most difficult regions in the West Bank. Much of the native population of this area is Bedouin, a minority in Palestinian society to begin with, and generally invisible to the Israeli occupation authorities.
We first arrived to a location which became a focus of attention in recent weeks – the lands of Umm Zaytouna, near the village of Tuba (not that you could know, since the road signs only name the Jewish settlements in this area – did we say invisible?). Tuba’s misfortune is its neighbours. About 1km the east and north lie two Israeli settlements – Ma’on and Carmel. We will talk about Carmel later on.
The story here is quite simple. The whole land area around Ma’on is either private Palestinian land or “state lands”. This means of the settlers have no ownership rights over them. But, of course this doesn’t concern those whose land ownership is god-given. They don’t want Palestinians damaging the view. But Tuba’s residents need to make a living, and their Sheppards want to feed their herds on the land. When they do, they are expelled by the army – normally by shouting, threatening and sometimes even by taking a goat hostage (yes, that’s right). If the sheppards demand their rights on their own, they would be imprisoned and harassed in the better scenario, or physically hurt in worse scenario. Needless to say that all of this is illegal, either by international law (the mere existence of Ma’on) or by the occupation laws (forbidding the sheppards). The Israeli supreme court and legal advisor ordered the army that an area can be closed for Palestinians only if one of two conditions applies: an immediate security threat or immediate negative interaction with settlers. None of these exist here.
That’s where the activists come into the picture. We accompany the sheppards, demand their rights be realized and confront the army and police if they are not. The goal is to allow the herds to feed.
More >
New Laws Show that Israel Prefers Occupation to Democracy
Apr 11th
Israel is about to implement a new set of laws of deportation for Palestinians and foreign nationals in the West Bank. This ruling has major implication for the popular protest movement and the work of groups like Ta’ayush. For more details on the ruling please see Amira Hass’s article in today’s Haaretz as well as Noam Shezief’s comments at Promised Land.
In terms of the work by groups like Ta’ayush, the new military order in Israel reflects the fact that the “closed military order” is not working for the IDF’s purposes.Yesterday, myself and four other Ta’ayush activists were arrested near the settlement of Maon for violating a “closed military zone” order. This order was not allowed to be used in this specific area as ruled by the Israeli High Court in 2006. Basically, the High Court ruled that the IDF was using the order to prohibit Palestinians from farming their land which would lead to the Palestinians abandoning their farmlands thus giving the settlers the ability to expand the settlement. The IDF detained us for several hours in jail but ultimately let us go with no charge because they were not allowed to use the order in the first place as specified by the Israeli High Court. This story is a weekly one for Ta’ayush and over the past years we have been able to make significant gains in fighting these “closed military zone” orders and showing that the intentions of the IDF are in contrast to that of the High Court.
With the new laws that are set to go into place, effectively the entire West Bank with be a closed military zone and Israeli civilian courts will not be able rule on decisions about the illegal use of the “closed military zone” by the IDF to harass Palestinians. This new ruling reflects the relative sucuess of groups like Ta’ayush and the Anarchists Against the Wall to prove that that the “closed military zone” order is illegal and used incorrectly by the IDF in many cases. The order will state that the IDF has the right to deport or remove anyone classified as an “infiltrator”. An “infiltrator” is defined as: “a person who entered the Area unlawfully following the effective date, or a person who is present in the Area and does not lawfully hold a permit.” This can easily be applied to any left wing activist engaged in activity with Palestinians either in protest or helping with agricultural work. We are now dealing with an entire new set of laws that are only subject to military courts. We can be arrested (foreign nationals deported) with no chance to visit a civilian court or appeal to the rulings of the Israeli High Court.
The future of the direct action Left in Israel is now in question. The decision to implement these laws shows that the state of Israel is interested in giving up on the rule of law in order to maintain its occupation of the West Bank.
Below is video from the arrest of Ta’ayush activists yesterday near Maon. The video is in Hebrew and the activists are explaining that the “closed military zone” order is illegal. With the new laws, this conversation will not be able to take place and these activists will simply be arrested on the spot. In a word, Scary.
Al-Tal’a, Um Zaituna
Jan 31st
A report from David Shulman about the South Hebron Hills:
January 30, 2010 Al-Tal’a, Um Zaituna
“The most desperate fights are often the most hopeful,” Istvan says to me as we stand on the hill looking down at the shepherds and their sheep. You can always rely on Istvan for the surprising Hungarian perspective on things—not usually an optimistic one, but humane and morally acute in a dark, perhaps ironic way. This is his fourth trip with us to South Hebron. He likes the Ta’ayush mode, which he thinks exemplifies the central Gandhian principle: what is inside shapes what is outside; if you can overcome your own weaknesses and fear, you will have an incalculable effect on the most recalcitrant situation. Besides, there’s another consideration of a totally non-instrumental nature. He cites an extreme example. Those Germans and Poles and others who saved the lives of Jews during the Nazi period didn’t do it to defeat Nazism; they did it because it was right, a moral act in need of no justification or corroboration outside itself.
This comes as a timely reminder, because yesterday afternoon I was harangued at some length by a former colleague, a Russian humanist of the old school, by now thoroughly disillusioned: in a struggle, he said, between those with principles, driven by moral concerns, and what he calls the “Hottentot” rule—”If I take your wife, that is good; if you take my wife, that is bad”—in such a struggle, the Hottentots will always win. [I hope my Hottentot readers will forgive him, and me.] Moral scruples, in short, always weaken you; it’s the thugs who come out on top. So here we are in the living laboratory of South Hebron, where we can perform an experiment, in real time, to test these two opposed hypotheses.
We’ve come to accompany the Palestinian shepherds, who have been harassed in recent days even more than usual by Israeli settlers. The settlers, backed up by the army and the police, are constantly driving the shepherds at gunpoint off their historic grazing grounds; sometimes they beat them or throw rocks at them or even shoot at them for good measure. We divide up into three groups, each one responsible for one large herd; I am entrusted with the Al-Tal’a/ Um Zaituna contingent. I find Jamil, together with some 80 or 90 sheep and four of his young sons and other boys, on the rocky slope just under the cow-barn of the Maon settlement. He gives me a radiant welcome, his face alight with pleasure; Jamil is a true bon vivant, odd as the term might sound in the harsh desert setting of South Hebron. (You can see him in the attached picture.) He’s also monolingual in Arabic, a great advantage for me. He tells me that this morning settlers have already pointed their guns at him and his sons and told him to go away—or they would shoot. I think the sheep and the children are still a little too close to the settlement, and together we decide they’ll move some ways down the hill.
So far so good. The sheep are also happy—these slopes, normally inaccessible to Palestinian shepherds, are thick with fresh green undergrowth and the delicious thorny leaves the sheep adore. It’s rained a bit this winter; the soil is reviving under wind and winter cloud, a ravishing pastiche of green and grey. Here the name of the game, as we know well, is somehow to gain time—an hour, two, three, long enough for the herd to graze to its fill before the soldiers and the settlers turn up, as they always do. I have instructions from Amiel to avoid confrontation this time: if we see them approaching, we are to get the shepherds out of danger as quickly as we can. No arrests, if possible, today.
We talk, we laugh, we play. Jamil wants me to mount his donkey, Humara. How is it? he asks after I’ve clambered up on top. Much better than driving a car, I say. The children, as always, want their picture taken; they solemnly introduce themselves and, one by one, come to shake our hands. “Are you afraid of the soldiers?” little Ibrahim asks me, and I say, “No, not afraid, but I don’t want any trouble for you.” An hour goes by, wind whipping at our faces. I dismount from Humara. There is dust in the air, a sign of coming storm.
First we see the police cars driving up to Maon, blue lights flashing. They sit there, waiting. I’m hoping they just came by to have a look and won’t come at us, especially since we’ve now opened up a substantial gap between the herd and the outer perimeter of the settlement. But of course the hope is quickly dashed. A large posse of soldiers and cops is soon marching toward us over the rocks [see attached photo]. They reach Zvi and the other Um Zaituna flock first. Even at a distance, I can see them performing the remorseless stages of their beloved ritual: there is a piece of paper being waved at Zvi and the shepherds, clearly the signed order declaring this little patch of desert a Closed Military Zone; the order is examined, photographed, there are the always Quixotic protests, followed by threats from the soldiers and, after a few minutes, a gradual withdrawal of our people eastwards, deeper into the desert. Maybe, I say to myself, the soldiers won’t bother Jamil and his Ta’ayush protectors. No such luck. Having heroically driven the Um Zaituna flock down toward the wadi, the soldiers and policemen pick their way over the rocks toward us.
Ta’ayush Report-Shabbat 3 October 2009
Oct 9th
The following is a report on a Ta’ayush action from 3 October 2009:
שבת 03.10.09
בבוקר יום שבת יצאנו לפעילות יחד עם תושבי טוואה שבדרום הר-חברון. מתנחלי מעון פלשו לתוך שטח הואדי המפריד בין טוואנה למעון ושתלו שם גפנים, למרות שזוהי אדמת העיר טוואנה. המנהל האזרחי קבע (לאחר שתילת הגפנים), שהשטח של מעון הוא עד סוף הגפנים, ושאר השטח הוא של טוואנה (זאת למרות שלפני כן ובעצם מאז ומתמיד כל השטח הוא של טוואנה), אבל למרות טענה זו המנהל קיבע גדר כמה מאות מטרים אחרי הגפנים, באופן שגזל עוד שטח מתושבי טוואנה.
לפיכך, יצאנו עם תושבי טוואנה לשתול סברסים ליד הגדר שקבע המנהל ופנימה לתוך השטח שלהם, על מנת לקבוע עובדות בשטח ולסמן את הגבול. תושבי טוואנה חוששים שהגדר פשוט תלך ותתרחק כל פעם עוד קצת אל תוך שטחם, דבר שייגמר בהפקעה גמורה של כל השטח. לאחר כשעה של חפירת בורות לשתילים והתחלת השתילה הגיעו הצבא והמשטרה. למרות נוכחותם, הם לא מנעו מאיתנו לעבוד, והעבודה הסתיימה כעבור שעתיים. כל השתילים שהיו במריצות נשתלו וסומנו במעגל אבנים סביבם, ואף הושקו.
מטוואנה המשכנו לסוסיא הפלשתינית, שם אורגן יום בניית והעפת עפיפונים לילדי האזור ולילדי פעילים. גם לשם לווינו על ידי הצבא, אך הוא לא מנע מבעדנו את הפעילות. הפעילות התנהלה על מי מנוחות ועפיפונים חגו בשמי סוסיא. מפתיע וגם משמח היה (למרות שלא אמור להיות שום דבר מפתיע בהעפת עפיפונים שאינה נחשבת מעשה פלילי, אבל במציאות שלנו כנראה לכל פעולה יש פוטנציאל כזה ) לראות את הילדים נהנים, למרות שנוכחות הצבא הרתיעה אחדים.
Saturday 03.10.09
On Saturday morning we went to work with the residents of Twane in south Mount Hebron. The settlers from neighboring Ma’on invaded the valley which lies between them and Twane and planted grape vines in the land owned by the Palestinians. After the settlers took over the land de facto, the military Civil Administration declared all the land which they planted as belonging to them and the remaining land as belonging to Twane (even though all of the land in the area is owned by Twane). However, when the Civil Administration erected a fence between the two areas it was put up, not immediately after the vines but several hundred meters inside the Palestinian land, in such a way as to take over a larger part of their land.
We went with the residents of Twane to plant sabra cactuses near the new fence on the Palestinian side in order to mark the border and show the Palestinian ownership of the area. The Palestinians are worried that the fence will be inched forward as time goes on, slowly taking over the whole of their land in the area. After working the land for about an hour, and just as we were beginning to place the plants in the ground the police and army arrived. However there was no attempt to stop us from working and after two hours the work was done. All the seedlings in the wheelbarrows were planted, marked with a circle of stones and watered.
From Twane we continued to Chirbet Susya, where there was a kite building and flying day for the children of the area and the children of the activists. We were followed by the army but they did not interfere with the activity which took place without any problems. It was nice and surprising to see the children having fun despite military presence which frightened some of them (there of course should be nothing surprising in the success of the activity, as kite flying is in no way illegal and yet it seems that in our reality even this is not to be taken for granted).









