Occupation Forces entered the Palestinian village of Al Farisiya and demolished 23 houses, leaving over 100 people homeless. When the villagers rebuild some of the destroyed structures the army returned to the area and yet again razed it to the ground
44% of the land in the Jordan Valley is controlled by closed military
zones and 50% by the 37 illegal settlements -leaving the indigenous
Palestinian population in control of a mere 6% of their land. Around
7000 illegal Israeli settlers and 50.000 Palestinians live in the
parts of the valley which are on the Palestinian side of the Green
Line. An uninformed visitor could be forgiven for thinking that the
numbers were reversed; It is entirely possible to take a bus straight
from inside Israel and along the Israeli controlled Road 90 through
the valley, seeing only settler greenhouses with their lush, irrigated
crops. This is a façade that Israel work cold-heartedly to promote.
Visiting the Jordan Valley Meeting Point – an Israeli run rest stop
and tourist centre along Road 90- is a disturbing and slightly surreal
experience for anybody who knows what the real Jordan Valley, and life
for its Palestinian communities, is like. Entering the meeting point
area feels like joining some ethnically cleansed zone in a Zionist
alternative universe, as everything Palestinian has been removed from
view. Any tourist, or conscripted Israeli teenage soldier, stopping
off there for a Coke and falafel will be presented with a version of
the truth designed to brainwash them and airbrush anything Palestinian
from the valley. The information points provided describe historical
and archaeological sites, attractions and tour routes, state of the
art agricultural technologies and Israel’s “battle legacies” in the
area. Inviting tourists to join settler organised Jeep trips and
walking tours, they highlight the possibilities to follow migrating
birds and appreciate blossoming wild flowers in a stunning landscape.
What they fail to mention, however, is that no Palestinian has the
freedom to enjoy any of these things as all their villages are
surrounded by closed military zones and they are prevented from taking
a step out of line.
In the centre of the meeting point stands the most shameless example
of Israel’s pride in its apartheid system: a sculpture of the Jordan
Valley. It is the Jordan Valley of the Zionist dream -and the
Palestinians’ nightmares- with all the illegal settlements
represented, but no sign of any Palestinian village at all. To the
visitors of the Jordan Valley Meeting Point Palestine has, literally,
been wiped off the map. At the time that we visited the area, this
sculpture was in the process of being repaired. The work was done by a
sixteen year old Palestinian boy, who for 100NIS a day (about 66% of
the minimum wage) was being asked to completely deny his people’s
existence.
Palestinian man working on the Jordan Valley settlement sculpture
The Jordan Valley Meeting Point project is proudly sponsored by the
Jewish National Fund (JNF) whose sign at the entrance openly states
that the site is a part of their “Land Reclamation” project. The JNF
(or KKL Keren Keyemet LeYisrael) are at the very centre of Israel’s
openly racist policies. When the JNF were established in 1901, its aim
was to appropriate land in Ottoman Palestine specifically for Jewish
settlement. After the creation of Israel in 1948, the JNF took control
over a lot of properties belonging to Palestinians who had been forced
to flee during the Nakba. The organisation states that their purpose
is to reclaim land for the settlement of Jews only. Throughout the
years they have planted millions of pine trees across Israel and
Palestine -mainly funded through international “charity collections”-
as a strategy to lay claim to land and prevent it from being used by
Palestinians. This tree planting was also used as a way of burying the
evidence of destroyed Palestinian villages after the Nakba, as many
ruins are now hidden beneath Israel’s artificial forests. Their
involvement in the occupied Jordan Valley is clear evidence of the
attempted ethnic cleansing of the area. The JNF work closely with the
Israeli Land Administration and its work in the West Bank is often
carried out by subsidiaries such as their sister company Hemnutah.
The JNF states that today ‘…the long term vision for Israel’s future
is being realised through “Blueprint Negev”, JNF’s 10 year, $600
million initiative to revitalize, develop and preserve the Negev
desert’. Incidentally, house demolitions of “unrecognised” Bedouin
villages in the area have massively intensified. At the end of last
month, the whole village of Al-Araqib in the Negev was demolished in
an attempt by the Israeli’s to drive the inhabitants out of the area
and into established reservations – leaving the land free for future
JNF funded apartheid projects. There are around 36 unrecognised
Bedouin villages in the Negev which are under constant threat from
these plans.
JNF has been registered in Britain since 1907 and is a registered
charity (Registered Charity Number 225910). There are various groups
working in campaigns against the JNF and their charity status, see
http://stopthejnf.bdsmovement.net/
JNF UK
JNF House, Spring Villa Park, Edgware, Middlesex HA8 7ED
Phone: 02087326100 Fax: 02087326111
www.jnf.co.uk info@jnf.co.uk
The JNF have offices across the world – see, for example,
http://www.jnf.org/about-jnf/in-your-area/
For a good article about the JNF, the ILA and their connection to
Israeli Apartheid, see
http://www.uridavis.info/jewish_national_fund_apartheid_israel.htm
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