Eviction of Jahalin Bedouin Continues
The Case of the Jahalin as-Sara’ia
A Report Compiled by the
Lobby for Palestinian Women’s Rights in Jerusalem
on the Occasion of
the International Day
of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
29 November 1997
The approximately 65 families
of the Sara’ia Bedouin are part of the Jahalin Bedouin tribe. The tribe
originates fro the Tel as-Sab’a area, located on territory declared Israeli
state territory in 1948. In 1950, the tribe was evicted across the border
with Jordan to the West Bank, then under Jordanian rule. The evicted members
of the tribe were issued refugee status and registered with UNRWA. In the
1950s and 1960s, the Jahalin tribe settled in the arid Judean desert east
of Jerusalem and west of the Dead Sea.
The Sara’ia Bedouin families
have lived for years in Vad Abu Hindi, a desert valley located in the vicinity
of the two Israeli settlements of Ma’aleh Adumim and Qedar. Due to their
remoteness, they were spared by the Israeli authorities during the first
infamous eviction campaign which had targeted Jahalin as-Salamat Bedouin
living further up the mountains, at the entrance to the Ma’aleh Adumim
settlement. In the meantime, irrespective to local and international protest
and the continued legal efforts, the latter have been evicted and concentrated
in shacks and containers next to Jerusalem’s municipal garbage dump. Now,
the Sara’ia Bedouin are the new target of the Israeli policy aimed at cleansing
the West Bank from its Bedouin population and at pushing them into "reservations"
in the areas controlled by the Palestinian Authority:
On 28 September 1997, armed
Israeli forces raided the Bedouin encampment and destroyed the new elementary
school constructed by the Palestinian Authority for the school year of
1997-1998. The school had been a significant improvement for the 39 school
children enrolled in grade 1-6; they were saved the 10 km desert hike to
their previous school in the Palestinian village of as-Sawahre. The Israeli
ride turned their new school into rubble. Also, the permanent wooden homes
of the families and the encampment’s water supply system were destroyed.
Two school tents provided by UNRWA and several tiny tents provided by the
IDRC to replace the destroyed family homes do not repair the damage done,
especially not now, during the winter season.
The Sara’ia Bedouin are
pessimistic. Their ability to resist the Israeli pressure is undermined
by remoteness and neglect. They have no access to even basic medical services,
and their traditional means of subsistence are being destroyed by new Israeli
orders which restrict the grazing grounds of their animals. No longer able
to feed their livestock, they have been forced to purchase animal feed
at the expensive price of US $ 200/ton. They worry that their days at the
site are running out. An agreement with the Israeli authorities permitting
their temporary presence in Vad Abu Hindi cannot calm the fear that the
Sara’ia Bedouin will soon join the Salamat Bedouin on the stinking garbage
dump.
Stop the Eviction of Palestine’s
Bedouin Population! Support the Sara’ia Jahalin! |