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Why Did the Palestinian Nimr Al-Jamal Shoot 3
Security Guards in the Illegal Israeli Settlement of Har Adar?
By Uri Avnery
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
October 2, 2017
Editor's Note:
All Israeli settlement built on the
Palestinian lands in the West Bank, after the Israeli war of
aggression in 1967, are illegal, according to the international
law, which is recognized by all nations, including the United
States.
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Nimr Al-Jamal, who was killed in har adar settlement, September
26, 2017 |
Israeli settlement of Har Adar, built on confiscated Palestinian
lands in teh west bank, file, September 2017 |
A Tale of Two Stories THIS IS the
story: at 7 o'clock in the morning, an Arab approaches the gate of Har
Adar, a settlement close to the Green Line near the Israeli-Arab village
of Abu Ghosh. The man is a "good Arab" (according to Israelis).
A good Arab with a work permit in the settlement. He lives in the nearby
West Bank Arab village of Beit Surik. He received a work permit there
because he fits all the criteria he is 37 years old, married and
father of four children. The inhabitants of Har Adar know him well,
because he has been cleaning their homes for years. This Tuesday
morning he arrived at the gate as usual. But something aroused suspicion
among the guards. He was wearing a jacket, though the weather was quite
hot on this early autumn day. The guards asked him to remove his jacket.
Instead, the man took out a loaded pistol and shot three of the
guards in the head at close range two civilian guards and a member of
the semi-military Border Guards. Two of the victims were Arabs (one of
them a Druze) and one was a Jew. Another Jew, the local commander of the
guards, was severely wounded. Since the assailant had never received
military training, the precision of his shots was astounding. The pistol
had been stolen 15 years ago. All Israel was shocked. How could
this happen? A good Arab like this? An Arab with permits? Why would he
do such a thing in a place where he was well liked and well treated?
Where he played with the children? And that after he was thoroughly
vetted by the Security Service, which has innumerable Arab spies and is
considered well-nigh infallible? Something extraordinary must
have happened. Someone must have incited him against the Jews and the
nice people of Har Adar, who had treated him so well. Perhaps the UN
speech by Mahmoud Abbas. Or perhaps some secret contacts with Hamas.
"Incitement!" cried Binyamin Netanyahu. But then another fact
emerged, which explained everything. The man had quarreled with his
wife. He had beaten her up, and she had escaped to her family in Jordan,
leaving the four children behind. So, obviously, he had become
temporarily unhinged. In a state of mental derangement he had forgotten
the kindness of the Har Adar people. Just a unique case, that need not
trouble us further. But (Israelis concluded) it all shows that
you can't trust the Arabs. You cannot make peace with them until they
change completely. So we must keep the (Palestinian) occupied
territories. THAT IS the story (that Israelis prefer).
But there is another story, too. The story as seen by the man himself.
From his home in neighboring Beit Surik, the man whose name was,
by the way, Nimr ("Tiger") Mahmoud Ahmed al-Jamal could see Har Adar
from his home every day when he woke up. For him, as for every Arab, it
was a flourishing Jewish settlement, built on expropriated Arab land.
Like his own village, it belonged to the Palestinian West Bank which is
occupied territory. He had to get up in the darkness of the
night in order to get to Har Adar on time 7.00 o'clock in the morning
and work hard until late in the night, arriving home at about 10
o'clock. This is the lot of tens of thousands of Arab laborers. They may
look friendly, especially when their livelihood depends on it. They may
even be really friendly to benevolent masters. But deep in their hearts
they cannot forget for a moment that they are cleaning the toilets of
the Jews who came to Arab Palestine and occupied their homeland.
Since most of the agricultural land of their villages has been
expropriated for Jewish settlements, they have no choice but to work in
these low-status jobs. There is no industry to speak of in the West
Bank. Wages are minimal, often below the legal minimum wage in Israel
proper (some 1500 dollars per month). Since they have no choice, they
are not far from being slaves. Like the nice slaves in "Gone with the
Wind". Such a man may be at peace with this reality, but if
something bad happens, he may suddenly become upset with his status and
decide to become a martyr. Nimr left behind a letter in which he
defended his wife and absolved her from any responsibility for the deed
he had planned for the next day. SO THESE are the two
stories, which have very little in common. The people
of Har Adar are completely shocked. Since they live 20 minutes drive
from Jerusalem, they do not consider themselves settlers at all, but
Israelis like any other. They don't really see the Arabs all around them
as people like themselves, but as primitive natives. The Har
Adar people are not like the fanatical, religious and nearly fascist
people in some settlements. Far from it. Har Adar people vote for all
parties, including Meretz, the left-wing Zionist party which advocates
the return of the occupied territories to the Palestinians. This is not
seen as including Har Adar, of course, since there is a consensus among
Zionists, right and left, that the settlements close to the Green Line
should be annexed to Israel. Har Adar people can rightly be
proud of their achievements. From the air, the place looks very orderly.
It has 3858 inhabitants. Their average income is about 5000 dollars a
month, well over the national Israeli average (some 3000 dollars). Their
local council is the third most efficient in the entire country.
Located in the mountainous area around Jerusalem, it has a beautiful
landscape. It also has man-made amenities: a library, a youth club, a
skate-park and an amphitheater that seats 720 people. Even for an
average Israeli, this is paradise. For the Arabs around, who cannot
enter without a special permit, it is a perpetual reminder of their
national disaster. Of course, like other settlements, Har Adar
is not located on land that was empty. It occupies the location on which
stood a village called Hirbat Nijam, a village which already stood there
in Persian-Hellenistic times, some 2500 years ago. Like most Palestinian
villages, they were Canaanite, then Judean, then Hellenist, then
Byzantine, then Muslim, then crusader, then Mameluk, then Ottoman, then
Palestinian without the population ever changing. Until 1967.
WHEN NIMR was born, all this long history was long forgotten. What
remained was the reality of the Israeli occupation.
This now looks like the normal state of things. The members of Har Adar
are happy, feeling secure and well guarded by the efficient Security
Service, the Border Guard and local mercenaries, mostly Arab citizens of
Israel. Neighbors like Nimr seem content, and probably are, if they are
lucky enough to have a job and a work permit, even with pitiful wages.
The historical grudge lies deeply buried within their consciousness.
And then something happens, something that may be quite irrelevant
like the escape of his wife to Jordan to bring it all up. Nimr the
lowly laborer suddenly becomes Nimr the freedom-fighter, Nimr the martyr
on his way to paradise. All his village respects his sacrifice and his
family. Israelis are furious that the families of "martyrs" are
paid an allowance by the Palestinian Authority. Binyamin Netanyahu
accuses Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) of incitement to murder with these
payments. But it is quite impossible for Abbas to annul them the
outrage reaction of his people would be tremendous. Martyrs are holy,
their families respected. THE DAY after Nimr's dastardly
terrorist act and/or heroic martyrdom, a grandiose national ceremony
took place in another settlement. All the countrys major
dignitaries, led by the President and the Prime Minister, assembled to
commemorate the 50tth anniversary of "our return to our homeland, Judea
and Samaria, the Jordan Valley and the Golan Heights". Missing
in the list is the Gaza Strip, which Israel has evacuated, leaving
behind a tight land and sea blockade aided by Egypt. In the Strip there
are about two million Palestinians. Who the hell wants them? All
hell broke loose when the President of the Supreme Court, who was
supposed to send a judge to represent the court at this ceremony,
canceled his attendance because of the highly propagandist style of the
event. She decided that this is party propaganda, in which her court
would not take part. ALTOGETHER, NOT a day of quiet in this
country, a state without borders and without a constitution, where every
story has two totally different sides, where nice and quiet people
suddenly become raging martyrs. There will be no quiet
until there is peace, with each of the two peoples living in their own
state, a situation where real friendship has a chance of blooming.
***
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