NOVANEWS |
||||
Nazi forces have repeatedly demolished homes in Al-Araqib in a bid to get the community to move into townships.Jillian Kestler-D’Amours |
||||
Nazi troops stand guard and prevent residents from interfering in the destruction of their homes during a previous demolition of the Bedouin village of Al-Araqib [Getty Images]
|
||||
Al-Araqib,- Hakmeh Abu Mdeighem sat quietly on a cement cinderblock last Wednesday, looking out across a small valley at where, moments earlier, Israeli police bulldozers had turned a handful of tents and shacks into piles of sandy rubble. The 49th demolition of the Bedouin village of Al-Araqib had just ended, and Abu Mdeighe, a mother of nine, spoke unflinchingly. “One feels that one doesn’t live in one’s own country anymore. One feels that a continuous war is going on between him and Israel. This is a war that Israel wages against us everything month,” she said. “What can we do when the state comes and fights you inside your own house, on your own ground, when it destroys your house on the heads of your sons?” Abu Mdeighem, her husband and her children, live inside the village’s century-old Islamic cemetery. The burial ground is the only place in Al-Araqib that has never been demolished. It is here that the handful of families who remain now call home. “They threatened to destroy the cemetery before this,” Abu Mdeighem said. “It is really painful… what they are doing. Painful, very painful. When a person does not scream, and just lets others see his tears, it is painful.” ‘Unrecognised’ villages Originally home to about 300 residents, all Israeli citizens, Al-Araqib is located just north of Be’er Sheva in Israel’s Negev desert. The village is one of dozens that has never been recognised by the state, and doesn’t feature on any official maps. Its residents are denied access to water, electricity, paved roads, hospitals, schools and other basic services. Hundreds of Israeli police officers and soldiers first demolished dozens of homes and animal pens and uprooted thousands of olive trees in Al-Araqib in July 2010. The Israeli authorities have regularly returned to demolish tents and basic structures that residents have erected there ever since.
In place of Al-Araqib, the Israeli government aims tobuild a forest – under the direction of the Jewish National Fund (JNF) and the Israel Land Authority (ILA), two bodies that oversee public land use in Israel and control some 93 percent of the nation’s land.
Founded as a charity in 1901, the Jewish National Fund (JNF) is responsible for forests and national parks in Israel. The JNF currently owns approximately 13 percent of the land in Israel – which, according to its mandate, it reserves exclusively for Jews. It also has significant influence over the ILA, which in turn owns about 80 percent of the land. |