Israeli Jews join 'daily intifada' in Jerusalem


therealnews
Historic Protest in Ras al-Amud, Jerusalem
Abe Hayeem
Just Peace, 31.5.06

For the first time in decades, Palestinian activists in Ras al-Amud, a
neighborhood of Jerusalem south-east of the Old City, invited Jewish Israeli
activists to join them in their protest against a fortress settlement in
their area. The neighborhood is the site of nearly daily confrontations
between Palestinian youth and Israeli forces, and is sometimes referred to
as the “daily intifada”. It is located in an area known as E1, or the
“linchpin settlement” which if won over by settlers, would officially divide
the West Bank into a south and a north half. The Real News’ Lia Tarachansky
spoke to Michel Warschawski, the author of On the Border, and Sarah Beninga,
a central activist in the Jerusalem Solidarity movement about the
demonstration where for the first time Israeli police used tasers, about the
strategic importance of Ras al-Amud, and about the behind-the-scenes of
building solidarity.

Transcript of the Video

LIA TARACHANSKY, TRNN: Ras al-Amud is a Jerusalem neighborhood southeast of
the Old City, sometimes referred to as the daily intifada. For years,
Palestinian youth have thrown stones at the police and were met with tear
gas, rubber bullets, and more often than elsewhere, live ammunition.

~~~

UNIDENTIFIED: In the midnight, the soldiers come to their houses and took
them to the prison. Every day, we have two people: soldiers and the young
Palestinian. They–.

UNIDENTIFIED: Every day.

UNIDENTIFIED: Huh?

UNIDENTIFIED: Every day.

UNIDENTIFIED: Every day. Soldier give gas against our young people. Young
people give stones. And the result, they took them in the midnight to the
prison.

~~~

TARACHANSKY: On Friday, for the first time in decades, Jewish-Israeli
solidarity activists were invited to demonstrate against the fortress
settlement established in the neighborhood. The Real News spoke to Sarah
Beninga, one of the leading activists who was injured and arrested on
Friday.

~~~

SARAH BENINGA, JERUSALEM SOLIDARITY MOVEMENT: So we’ve been demonstrating
for a year and a half or over a year and a half in Sheikh Jarrah. It’s
another neighborhood in East Jerusalem. In Silwan, also, before we had
demonstrations there, we had connections there, and it took a long time for
things to come to the point where we were able to do joint demonstrations
[incompr.] because it’s also another area which is very violent because of
the huge settler existence there and the police supporting the settlers
there. And the police were very violent as well.

TARACHANSKY: It took you a while to go from Sheikh Jarrah to Silwan and from
Silwan to Ras al-Amud and what it takes to be finally trusted and invited by
the Palestinians.

BENINGA: The Palestinians, rightfully so, are very suspicious of Israelis
coming into their neighborhoods, because they don’t [incompr.] their
experience throughout the past 40-something years. They’ve been betrayed
many times and used and so on [incompr.] the settlers use all kinds of
horrible methods to get people out of their houses. So I’m saying there’s a
basic suspicion. And we’re talking undercover police. We’re talking what’s
called /mIs.taU.”vi/ , which are people who supposedly look Palestinian, and
they come into a demonstration, and then they start throwing stones and
make–and then it gives the military or the police an excuse to come in and
start raiding the demonstration or gas or bullets or whatever.

~~~

TARACHANSKY: The protesters were demonstrating against the addition of 25
families to the fortress settlements of Maale HaZeitim. Carved out of the
center of the neighborhood, it’s heavily guarded by private security guards
24 hours a day. Until recently, the struggle here has been going on in the
background and it’s been led by youth. Defense for Children International
reports that children are often arrested in the middle of the night in Ras
al-Amud, beaten, and interrogated by Israeli forces. But the fight here is
only part of the larger battle for Jerusalem. Last week, Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke at the US Congress, reiterating the
longtime Israeli position towards the city.

BENJAMIN NETANYAHU, ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER: Jerusalem must never again be
divided. Jerusalem must remain the united capital of Israel.

TARACHANSKY: The Real News spoke to Michel Warschawski, the cofounder of the
Alternative Information Center, a longtime Israeli activist, and the author
of On the Border. At the end of the ’80s, Warschawski was a political
prisoner sentenced to jail time for his work on the issue of borders and
Jerusalem.

~~~

MICHEL WARSCHAWSKI, AUTHOR AND ACTIVIST: In 1967, the annexation of East
Jerusalem was done under the pretext of reunifying Jerusalem. Reunifying is
something very sexy, very positive, like Berlin, like other artificially
divided cities. The problem is that what was annexed had nothing to do with
Jerusalem ever. It is ten time bigger than what was Jerusalem. In fact, what
was annexed was all the territory that could be described as Jerusalem. This
is why it stopped in Bethlehem–no one would have bought the idea that
annexing Bethlehem would have been reunifying Jerusalem in the south. So we
went to–until Bethlehem, and it was annexed. Until Ramallah, but without
Ramallah. It was annexed. And until the eastern neighborhood of East
Jerusalem, the very populated neighborhood of Abu Dis. And the principle was
maximum lands, minimum Palestinian population. Where there were Palestinian
population, it was outside the annexation. The empty lands or the mostly
empty land of these small towns or villages or neighborhoods outside
Jerusalem were taken. The villages and the cities were kept outside. At the
heart of this project is what is known as E1 area. E1 is a big space between
the Old City in East Jerusalem and Maale Adumim. And the priority since more
than ten years is to create a continuity of Israeli existence between Maale
Adumim and East Jerusalem in E1. It’s mathematically impossible to find the
number of people able to settle it. So you have a plan for a cemetery, for a
park, for a hotel complex, and several neighborhoods or several settlements.
E1, in my opinion, is top priority to fight against. Confrontation with the
local population in Silwan, as well as in Sheikh Jarrah or in Ras al-Amud,
is now part of the policy of the government, which implies, of course,
physical confrontation, repression, and then, at a certain stage, the
expulsion.

TARACHANSKY: So it sounds like a vicious sort of race to get as much as
possible of East Jerusalem Judaized in the case that there’s ever a division
or if any–let’s say the United States imposes giving back the territory
that was occupied in ’67.

WARSCHAWSKI: Absolutely.

~~~

TARACHANSKY: On Wednesday, tens of thousands of settlers are going to ascend
on Jerusalem for an annual march celebrating what is known as Jerusalem Day.
This march often ends in violence for the local Palestinians living east of
the Green Line in the city.

BENINGA: Jerusalem Day is a day that celebrates the unification of Jerusalem
that happened in the ’67 war. Although Jerusalem has been declared unified,
it’s really a separated city. It’s actually a kind of small apartheid city.
And you see this [incompr.] like Arab neighborhoods don’t have basic things.
They don’t have a city plan. Some of them don’t have sewage and electricity
done by the municipality [incompr.] because they don’t have a city plan,
there are no permits given out, or there are very little–I think 100 given
out in the last year. And social service is very different, like much more
in the Jewish–in the West Jerusalem. And on Jerusalem Day, what they do is
at night they have what’s called [incompr.] it’s like a parade of flags.
It’s basically a day that celebrates the occupation.

TARACHANSKY: Six protesters were arrested and released later in the day.
Several were injured lightly, and one demonstrator was Tasered. This was the
first time police used Tasers in such protests, according to the activists.
They are now preparing to demonstrate against the tens of thousands of
settlers who will ascend on the city on Wednesday for Jerusalem Day.

End of Transcript
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