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Sonja Karkar: The Weeping Olive Trees of Palestine 09 September, 2007
And that is precisely what Israel has been
doing -- through brute force and far more insidious ways. Under
an old law from the Ottoman era, Israel claims as state
property, land that has been "abandoned" and left uncultivated
for a period of four years and this land is then usually
allocated to Israeli settlers. Of course, the land has not been
voluntarily abandoned. Because of Israel's closure policy, which
imposes the most draconian restrictions on movement, Palestinian
farmers cannot reach their agricultural lands to tend and
harvest their crops. Not only are permits required to move about
in their own homeland, but farmers are forced to use alternative
routes which must be negotiated on foot or by donkey because
about 70 percent of these alternative routes -- those connected
to main or bypass roads -- have been closed by the Israeli army
with concrete blocks and ditches. And now a wall is being built
for "security reasons" which will permanently separate
Palestinian families from their farmlands, except for the gates
that allow access at certain times, but more often than not, at
the whim of Israeli soldiers who may not even turn up to open
them. [4] This makes year-round maintenance of farmers' crops
extremely difficult if not impossible. Hence, the "abandonment"
of land that Israel uses to justify its land theft. Since 1967, the Israeli military and illegal
settlers have destroyed more than one million olive trees
claiming that stone throwers and gunmen hide behind them to
attack the settlers. [5] This is a specious argument because
these trees grow deep inside Palestinian territory where no
Israeli settler or soldier should be in any case. But, Israel is
intent on appropriating even the last vestiges of land left to
the Palestinians and so turns a blind eye to any methods used by
settlers and soldiers alike to terrorize the farmers away from
their farms and crops, even if that means razing their land.
Farmers are constantly under threat of being beaten and shot at,
having their water supplies contaminated (already scarce because
85 percent of renewable water resources go to the settlers and
Israel), their olive groves torched and their olive trees
uprooted. [6] On a larger scale, the Israeli military
brings in the bulldozers to uproot trees in the way of the
"security" wall's route and where they impede the development of
infrastructure necessary to service the illegal settlements.
Some of these threatened trees are 700 to 1,000 years old and
are still producing olives. [7] These precious trees are being
replaced by roads, sewerage, electricity, running water and
telecommunications networks, Israeli military barracks, training
areas, industrial estates and factories leading to massive
despoliation of the environment. If Israel has its way, neither
the trees nor the Palestinians who have cared for them will
survive the barbaric ethnic and environmental cleansing of
Palestine. The irony of it all is that Israel's
uprooting of olive trees is contrary to the Jewish halakhic
principle whose origin is found in the Torah: "Even if you are
at war with a city ... you must not destroy its trees" (Deut
20:19). Under the pretext of "redeeming" the land the Jews claim
God gave them and the trees they are supposed to preserve,
Israel continues to violently expropriate Palestinian land. With
each uprooted tree, another slab of concrete is put in place for
the wall and the illegal Jewish settlements -- the landscape
sculpted and changed beyond all recognition and no longer the
sacrosanct place that has long given Israel its spurious
Biblical justification for dispossessing the Palestinians of the
land they have nurtured since time immemorial. The agonizing pain of loss felt by
Palestinians for their ravaged land is not expressed in the
statistics. Only those who have suffered the same cruel
violations or those who seek to protect and preserve the
delicate balance of the world's environment can understand what
it means for people of the land. International law, although on
their side, remains ineffective as no world government, not even
the United Nations, is prepared to pressure Israel to stop its
illegal collective punishment of the entire Palestinian
population. Today, there are campaigns all around the
world to end the uprooting of trees in Palestine and to replant
those which have already been uprooted. And each year, when the
Palestinian olive harvest approaches, international volunteers
join Palestinians to provide some human protection from the acts
of violence visited on Palestinian farmers by Israeli settlers
and soldiers who want to stop the harvesting of crops. These
wonderful acts of solidarity help to heal the land, but they
cannot heal the pain of those who have to watch the uprooting of
age-old olive trees, the desecration of their land and their
millennia-old heritage. Such heartbreaking reality has led the
Palestinian poet, Mahmoud Darwish, to say, "If the olive trees
knew the hands that planted them, their oil would have become
tears ..." -Sonja Karkar is the founder and
president of Women for Palestine in Melbourne, Australia. See
www.womenforpalestine.com Notes [1] UN Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affiars, "The Olive Harvest in the West Bank and
Gaza," October 2006.[2] Applied Research Institute of Jerusalem
(ARIJ), "Olive Harvest in Palestine. Another Season, Another
Anguish," November 2004.[3] Canaan Fair Trade,
www.olivecoop.com/Canaan.html.[4] OXFAM, "Forgotten
Villages: Struggling to survive under closure in the West Bank,"
September 2002, p. 21.[5] ARIJ, "Olive Harvest in Palestine.
Another Season, Another Anguish," November 2004.[6] UN Report of
the Special Committee to investigate Israeli Practices affecting
the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and other Arabs of
the Occupied Territories, No. 40, September 2005.[7] Atyaf
Alwazir, "Uprooting Olive trees in Palestine," Inventory of
Conflict and Environment (ICE), Case Number: 110, American
University, November 2002. |