Tuesday, 1 June 2010

NOT IN NEED OF HUMANITARIAN AID? NEGLECT AND POVERTY: LIFE AS A PALESTINIAN

A woman holds a child in Palestine. The poverty in such areas often makes you feel as if you have taken a step back in time.

THE LIFE OF PALESTINIANS

NOT IN NEED

OF THE HUMANITARIAN AID

CARRIED ON THE FLOTILLA

ATTACKED BY ISRAELI THUGS

Here is the life of a Palestinian whom the Israeli government claims is not in need of a thing and dines at the luxurious Roots on delicacies frequently. They claim such as she are nurtured by the nanny state as reported by The American Task Force in Palestine. Photographs courtesy of the brilliant Photojournalist ZORIAH.

Omar Karmi
The National
May 13, 2010

Reposted June 1, 2010

Deep inside the Muslim Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City, Adla Jabber shares three rooms with 12 relatives.

The 59-year-old widow needs a car, she jokes, to get to her kitchen, a sparse stonewalled room that doubles as a bathroom. It is outside, 20 metres down a narrow alley. The stove, a rusty two-ring gas heater, hides under a stone arch in the alley, barely sheltered from the elements.

Not that much cooking takes place: Mrs Jabber and her family take meals daily from a charity. “For every day of work, there are 10 without,” she said. Mrs Jabber and her family fall well below the poverty line, which in Israel is calculated as under half the median household income, or, for a family of five, a bit less than Dh5,100 a month.

According to a report on Monday by the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI), nearly 65 per cent of Palestinian families in Jerusalem share Mrs Jabber’s fate.

Life for Palestinians in Jerusalem is “a continuing cycle of neglect, discrimination, poverty and shortages”, said the report, one of the most comprehensive studies of the socio-economic situation in East Jerusalem released in recent years.

The numbers are dramatic: just under 75 per cent of Palestinian children live in poverty; 160,000 people, over half of Jerusalem’s Palestinian population, have no suitable connection to clean running water, while East Jerusalem currently lacks 50km of sewage lines; school dropout rates stand at 50 per cent, as young Palestinians flee overcrowded schools to seek menial work to support unemployed parents.

A Palestinian girl passes time on the streets of a refugee camp in Gaza City. Children in Gaza spend a great deal of their time on the streets because they usually are unable to afford to go to school and there are few playgrounds or parks in the Palestinian territories.

But in order to be employed, Palestinians often need to present a clean criminal record. In East Jerusalem, where children as young as 12 are detained and simply participating in demonstrations can lead to arrest, a clean record is a rare thing. Furthermore, according to ACRI, police in East Jerusalem “give themselves the leeway to behave with brutality … in ways that would be unconscionable anywhere else in the country”.

During the short time daily that water runs in public places, all members of the family gather with containers to take home the precious fluid.

This dire situation can largely be laid at the door of official Israeli neglect, charges ACRI, particularly in terms of infrastructure development. Since Israel annexed East Jerusalem in 1967 – an annexation not recognised internationally – authorities have simply not budgeted for planning for the city’s Palestinian residents.

Homeless in Palestine.

Palestinians find it almost impossible to obtain municipal licences to expand houses or build new ones. With an annual population growth of four per cent, this has created enormous pressure on the population.

Average occupancy is 1.9 persons per room, as compared with West Jerusalem’s one per room. As a consequence, many structures have been erected without permit, subsequently to be torn down. In 2009 alone, the Jerusalem municipality demolished 80 houses, demolitions that families are often billed for themselves.

Cave dwellers, so well cared for by the Zionist oppressors who claim otherwise ~ of course. Has there ever been a Zionist leader who spoke with condor and honesty to the public either in or out of Palestine?

The Jerusalem municipality rejects such charges, saying there is no difference between the number of permits issued in East and West Jerusalem. But the municipality includes Jewish settlement in East Jerusalem where there is little restriction on building.

“There is no difference between Jewish neighbourhoods in East and West Jerusalem. The difference is between Jewish and Arab neighbourhoods,” said Ronit Sela one of the authors of the ACRI report. “There are no zoning plans for [Palestinian] East Jerusalem and without such plans you can’t build.”

A young child pulls his brother, who is minus his left leg, around the city.

But drawing up zoning plans is the responsibility of the municipality and the relevant ministries. The fact that since 1967 such plans have not been drawn up, said Ms Sela, had to be seen as an “effort on the part of the authorities to ensure that Palestinians have a hard time and will choose eventually to leave.”

None of this comes as a surprise to Palestinians in Jerusalem.

“Israel is working hard to ensure that by 2020, there will be a 75 per cent Jewish majority,” said Mahmoud Jiddah, who, until it was shut down last year by the Israeli authorities “for security reasons”, worked as a councillor with the Nidal Centre for Community Development. Palestinians currently constitute 36 per cent of Jerusalem’s population.

A class of traumatized students who need counseling just as much as educating.

Mr Jiddah, married 24 years to a woman from the West Bank, has yet to obtain permission for her to live legally with him in Jerusalem. The effort to keep Jerusalemite Palestinians from obtaining residency for their West Bank spouses became official in 2003 with the Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law. It is a law that shows, said Hiyyam Elayyan, head of the Al Sarraya Centre for Community Services in the Old City, that “even in the most intimate matter of marriage, Israel interferes.”

“They are pressing Palestinians from every possible angle,” said Ms Elayyan.

Men, unemployed, their masculinity stripped from them by the Zionists, helpless to support and protect their families, are extremely prone to depression.

Like all Palestinians in Jerusalem, Mrs Jabber vowed never to leave, even if “there is no future for us”. She receives welfare, US$800 a month, but with taxes and bills, “I give it straight back,” she said.

But without a political solution to Jerusalem, said Ms Elayyan, a “huge problem will only keep growing”.

“I see no sign of change,” said Ms Sela. “The current government is definitely not interested in investing in the rights of Palestinian citizens.”

3 comments:

  1. Hey Noor,...Excellent Photo-essay, I have not seen(and you will not see these days)a finer collaborative Photo-essay than 'Not In Need of Humanitarian Aid? Neglect and Poverty: Life As A Palestinian.'. In a long time: Bravure! Bravure!

    Nameste,

    PG.

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  2. US + all pro-Israel governments must make Israel realise that the perpetual unjust and cruel oppression of Palestine is evil + unacceptable. All countries that remain complacent to the plight of the Palestinians are culpable of human rights violations.
    Israel is not content with the 72% of Palestine it was given. As an Australian, it is horrific to me that USA finances the Israeli military to invade and conquer the remaining 28% of Palestine.
    Everyday we are reminded of the hollocaust - yet Israel is allowed to commit atrocities against the Palestinians, subjecting them to a more prolonged and abject misery.
    It's time for the world community to help Palestinians and speak against Israel's tyranny.

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  3. Veritas, thank you so very much. Smiles, your words made me cry. Nice tears. So long as one who is not yet in the choir is moved by what I do, it is worth it.

    Words like yours are icing on the cake.

    Kitty, you are so right. We are not allowed to forget, but then we are supposed to not see anything. Well the world just got bitch slapped and see Israel for what it is. This cannot be glossed over.

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