-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.guardian.co.uk/israel/comment/0,10551,762659,00.html

Inside story



Lines in the sand

Israeli architect Eyal Weizman won a competition to represent his country at an 
international conference. But
the invitation was abruptly cancelled when it was discovered that his work criticised 
Israel's illegal settlements
in the West Bank. He talks to Esther Addley about the politically loaded nature of 
planning in the region

Esther Addley
Thursday July 25, 2002
The Guardian

Eyal Weizman smooths out his map across his enormous desk and turns expectantly for a 
response. He
knows it's impressive, just as he knows it's bewildering. The product of 11 months' 
labour in collaboration with
the human rights organisation B'tselem, the Israeli architect has produced his own 
cartographic
representation of the West Bank, with every settlement and every settler road, each 
expropriated field and
each Palestinian village to which it once belonged, all marked in different shades of 
blue, brown and green.
The midnight blue smudges, the settlement areas, he calls "the stains". The occupied 
Palestinian area
resembles nothing so much as a sickly pockmarked kidney.

It is extraordinarily detailed, almost unfathomably so, and that is partly Weizman's 
point. If you thought the
Israeli/Palestinian conflict was fiendishly complicated, he is saying, you are wrong: 
it is much more complex
than that. And intentionally so. "Complexity was always a propaganda technique of 
Israel. Whenever you
speak to an Israeli politician and you say, 'Well, why don't you retreat', they say, 
'Oh, it's far too complex'.
So the territorial aspect of the conflict has become very much the domain of experts, 
and that was what
Israel wanted. If you are not an expert, everything you argue they can tell you, 'Oh, 
it's unfeasible.'
Whereas we want people to understand, we want to make it as clear as possible."

Unashamedly of the Israeli left, the 31-year-old, who also lectures at the Bartlett 
School of Architecture in
London, says he set out to critique the policy of illegal settlements not primarily 
with moral or legalistic
arguments, but having reached his conclusions from architectural examination. "If you 
are an architect and
you understand that the main manifestation of this conflict is through the landscape 
and the built
environment, it is almost your responsibility to act vis a vis that. It would be 
bizarre now for me to engage
just within a normal architectural practice in Israel, building houses and so on."

That reluctance, however, is where the trouble began. Earlier this year, along with 
his partner in his Tel Aviv
practice, Rafi Segal, Weizman won a national competition to curate the Israeli stand 
at the World Congress of
Architecture, a biannual event taking place in Berlin this week. Their exhibition, The 
Politics of Israeli
Architecture, undertook the first detailed examination of the spatial form of Israeli 
settlements in the West
Bank, examining how their physical layout is informed by the politics behind them. The 
catalogue to the
exhibition is illustrated with scores of unsettling, but quite beautiful, photographs 
of settlements taken by the
architects themselves while overflying the whole region. It also contains detailed 
blueprints for the layout of
settlements, documents explicitly called "masterplans" by their creators and 
supposedly in the public domain,
but which the pair had to threaten going to the Israeli courts in order to be able to 
see.

No one at the Congress will see them, however. Earlier this month, Weizman and Segal's 
stand at the WCA
was abruptly cancelled by the Israeli Association of United Architects. Uri Zerubavel, 
the association's head,
told the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz last week, "The association thinks that the ideas 
in the catalogue are not
architecture. Heaven help us if this is what Israel has to show. As though only 
settlements... were built
here... My natural instincts tell me to destroy the catalogues, but I won't do that. I 
won't burn books."

The association has insisted, however, that Weizman and Segal stop distributing the 
catalogues immediately.
(They have refused and it will be published by Babel in Tel Aviv next month.)

The architects insist that the IAUA knew the content of the exhibition, but concede 
that the material it
contains is potentially controversial. "We realised that we could understand the 
processes of human rights
violations not only in quantified space that has been taken, in statistical terms, but 
that it is the very form
and layout of settlements on the urban level, and their positioning within the terrain 
on a territorial level, that
is in breach of basic human rights."

But how can a small town full of civilians infringe people's human rights? "If you 
look at the layout of
settlements, they are always built on hilltops. People know that, but they may not 
realise that they also are
built in rings, over the summit, in a way that generates territorial surveillance in 
all directions. I began to
understand that these are urban-scale optical devices, and every design move in them 
is calculated to
enhance vision." Only by looking at the original architectural plans, he argues, would 
one register something
so simple as the fact that each house is built with its bedrooms innermost, its living 
quarters facing the vista.

"The planners always speak about the view as pastoral and biblical, almost in a 
romantic sense. They speak
about the terraces and olive groves and stone houses, which are obviously created for 
them by the
Palestinians. The Palestinians are almost like the stage workers who create a set, but 
they then have to
disappear when the lights come on." But it is not only the Palestinians' rights who 
are infringed, he argues.
"The army also uses the eyes of the civilian settlers, almost hijacks them, to 
generate territorial surveillance.
There is almost an illegal use of civilians to generate supervision of another part of 
the civilian population."

The more Weizman tries to elucidate his understanding of the way the space of the 
occupied territories has
been partitioned during the conflict, the more difficult he is to follow. In a series 
of articles entitled The
Politics of Verticality, the architect has argued that the division of territory along 
vertical as well as horizontal
planes - the only way the two communities can put into practice their demands for 
entirely separate
sovereignty over the same space - makes the West Bank and Gaza, crucially, a disputed 
three-dimensional
volume rather than two- dimensional area. Even where the Palestinian Authority was 
nominally given
sovereignty of the surface of a section of the territories under the Oslo Accords, he 
points out, Israel
retained sovereignty of the airspace and the subterrain. "So they had to come up with 
bizarre and insane
projects like tunnels and bridges, so an Israeli road would go under a town that the 
Palestinians have
sovereignty over, meaning that the international border is in section. 
Architecturally, planning-wise, it's
entirely unfeasible, and it makes no sense. "

But such a definition, surely, makes all planner maps obsolete, even his own? Weizman 
agrees, describing the
current situation as "Escher-like, a territorial hologram". There are six dimensions 
at play in the West Bank, he
says, three for the Israeli space and three for the Palestinian. "It creates a totally 
dystopian and weird
space. It becomes so intense, it just collapses."

Weizman's conclusion gainsays most diplomatic thinking: he argues that the dream of 
two discrete states
carved side by side is now unworkable. "It makes no sense to have an iron curtain or a 
concrete curtain
between Israel and Palestine and have two nation-states. Even if you build tunnels and 
bridges, and partition
the airways and the subterrain, what do you do with Jerusalem? Somebody calculated 
that you need 64km of
wall in Jerusalem alone to partition Israelis from Palestinians, and 40 tunnels and 
bridges to join the different
areas. This is an ecological and planning nightmare, and it is a nightmare for the 
economy of Jerusalem. It is
nonsense. It is the ideas of politicians who don't understand territory or 
architecture or planning."

So what possible resolution can there be? Weizman's solution, fittingly, is a 
planners' one. New maps need to
be drawn, he argues, which illustrate the two parties' geographical, ecological and 
infrastructure
interdependence, emphasising the importance of such factors over political outlines. 
His hope is that this
would eventually create a "functional integration" which would, in time, come to 
supersede political myth-
making. "Obviously it sounds like a totally wacko idea now, but I am a real believer 
in this kind of
bureaucracy. There needs to be a process set in motion for an incremental functional 
union.

He knows that such a plan requires the complete abandonment of the Zionist project on 
the Israeli side, and
of Palestinian national aspirations? It is far away but I think it's not that weird."

"People in Israel don't really understand the political use of space [in the West 
Bank], they don't really
understand where things are." That was one of the reasons behind his determination to 
create a more
accurate map, he says, and to present the full detail of the settlement layouts, 
before he was silenced.
"They want to say that architecture is nothing to do with politics, but architects and 
planners have always
been the executive arms of the Israeli state, erasing the old cartography and trying 
to create their own on
top of it."

� The politics of verticality is published on www.opendemocracy.net

Guardian Unlimited � Guardian Newspapers Limited 2002
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