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"Home is Where the Heart Is" Also Applies to Palestinians�

by Sherri Muzher

It's been said that the "home is where the heart is." Try telling this to
Israeli demolition teams, who come protected by hundreds of troops, to
destroy Palestinian homes.� The US has been critical.� Yet, the Israeli
government -- enjoying impunity since the Palestinian uprising against
Israeli Occupation began on September 28, 2000 -- continues.� Perhaps, the
only upside to the latest acts of destruction is that the recent campaign
doesn't have a barbaric theme to it.� Consider that the last campaign of
demolishing homes was called, "Operation Enjoyable Song."

During "Operation Enjoyable Song,"� more than 32 shelters were demolished -
housing some 400 people. At the time, it was the worst single act of
destruction on Palestinians since the uprising began.. That the civilized
world remains silent as Palestinian civilians go homeless is difficult enough
to comprehend, though nothing new.�� That the Israeli government seems to
think that making more Palestinians homeless builds trust and enhances an
imaginary "cease-fire" is astonishing.

Sadly, home demolitions have been used as a form of collective punishment and
ethnic cleansing for many years.� Even the Oslo Accords represented no
reprieve for the destruction of Palestinian homes.� In many cases, the
demolitions accelerated.

The pretext has generally been that the homes are built without permits.�
Thus, the Israeli Army could work within some sort of "legal context."�
Forget the fact that Palestinians trying to obtain permits is like pulling
teeth.�� Forget the fact that the price of a building permit could cost as
much as $20,000 and take five years to obtain.� Forget the fact that
Palestinians are often living in severely-cramped spaces.� Palestinians are
not given permits because they "violate existing zoning laws."� Such
adherence to laws by Israel is admirable, except for the fact that there have
always been political motivations behind the policy.

Almost all the homes that have been demolished, or have received demolition
orders, are situated near existing illegal Jewish settlements or by-pass
roads. The demolitions result in areas that prevent territorial contiguity
between Palestinian population centers or neighboring Israeli military
installations. The logic can be quite astonishing, at times. Consider that in
many cases,� Palestinian homes have been demolished for being built too close
to a Jewish edifice -- a structure which did not even exist when the
Palestinian home was first constructed.

While Israel has targeted Palestinian homes for destruction, Israel has
authorized massive housing construction, tax incentives, and roads and
related infrastructure for illegal Jewish settlements in the West Bank,
including East Jerusalem.� Even as thousands of completed units have stood
empty, the Israeli Housing Ministry has authorized the building of more
illegal settlements.� Note that the Ministry admitted that almost a quarter
of all units built by the government in the West Bank between 1989 and 1992
had never been occupied.

Like the seizure of Palestinian ID cards in Jerusalem, house demolitions have
served as another form of ethnic cleansing.� The Israeli rationale is:� Lay
as many facts on the ground before any potential final status negotiations,
and it is believed that the Palestinians will get much less than what they
are expecting as a matter of right and law.

Homes have also been demolished as punishment, as "Operation Enjoyable Song"
demonstrated a few months ago.�� It was certainly a measure widely used
during the First Intifada [1988-1993].�� In fact, during its first four
years, 786 homes were destroyed as reprisals against those who took part in
the uprising. It is also standard for the homes of the families of
Palestinian suicide bombers to be destroyed, though they had nothing to do
with their sons' decisions. One can only imagine the outrage that we, as
Americans, would have felt, if bulldozers went to the home of Oklahoma City
terrorist Timothy McVeigh, and demolished the home of his parents and
siblings.�� Why make the whole family pay for the actions of an adult child?

With regard to Palestinians from the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem,
Article 33 of the Fourth Geneva Convention clearly states that no resident of
an occupied territory "may be punished for an offence he or she has not
personally committed."� It explicitly forbids collective punishment.

Unfortunately, the Fourth Geneva Convention has never mattered to Israel.� UN
resolutions have never mattered to Israel.� Condemnations by human rights
organizations have never mattered to Israel.

Many Israelis have repeated the tiring propaganda that Palestinians teach
hate to their children.� But I wonder if hate really needs to be taught to a
child who is forced to become homeless?






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