“We
want to farm our land in peace,” Ahmed Kayed, a resident of Sebastiya
and the organizer of today’s protest, told me. “But the settlers are
cutting our olive trees, keeping us from our land. Now their sewage is
flowing through our land, poisoning it.”
Kayed hopes that today will be Sebastiya’s first of many weekly popular
demonstrations like those in Bil’in, Ni’lin and Nabi Saleh. In
preparation, he proudly unfurled a sign that read, “This is our land.
Get the shit out of here!”
As a village, Sebastiya is known
for its picturesque Roman ruins dating back to 800 BCE, making Sebastiya
one of the oldest and most historic villages in the West Bank. Before
1967, these ruins were a major tourist attraction of the Middle East.
However, since the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) occupied the land,
tourism has plummeted with several shops being forced to close, draining
the small town’s economy. Once the first Israeli settlement was built
in 1975—the second Israeli settlement in the West Bank ever, preceded
only by Hebron—the village became characterized by settler violence.
Now it is known for their sewage.
At
the demonstration, 150 activists—including Israelis, internationals and
Palestinians from Sebastiya and surrounding villages—marched en masse
from the village to the valley. On one side of the valley is a grove of
olive trees, each of them tagged with a note in Arabic notifying the
farmer that it will be cleared. Above the olive grove, the American
suburb-like perfectly painted white houses and red roofs of the Shavei
Shomron settlement are perched on the highest hill, overlooking the
entire valley. IDF soldiers stood guard next to two tanks, midway down
the mountain between the Palestinian protesters and the Israeli
settlement.
A trickle of sewage flowed like a small creek through the valley’s clearing.
“It
is quite obvious that Palestinians in the West Bank are oppressed, and
important that conscientious people support them in their struggle,”
Kobi Snitz, an Israeli activist from Tel Aviv, told me when I asked him
what brought him here. “Especially Israelis, since this violence clearly
takes place in our name.”
Despite
the stench of sewage, Palestinian Muslim protestors carried their rugs
and performed Friday noon prayers on the land in the valley—bowing and
murmuring “Allahu Akhbar” while surrounded on one side by olive trees
marked for destruction, and on the other by the Israeli settlement
responsible for the trickle of sewage and eight IDF soldiers in plain
sight with their fingers on the trigger, ready to shoot high-velocity
teargas canisters into the crowd.
Once
Friday prayers had ended, the protestors—waving Palestinian and Popular
Front for the Liberation of Palestine flags—advanced up the side of the
mountain, drawing kuffiyehs over their mouths and noses in anticipation
of the onslaught of suffocating teargas from the IDF soldiers. True to
form, the IDF soldiers responded by firing teargas canisters—routine for
a West Bank demonstration—sending protesters running back down the
mountain and away from the clearing, crying, coughing and spluttering
the suffocating gas out of their eyes and mouths, leaving their land
filled with the clouds of noxious teargas and the ever-present stink of
sewage.
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/03/08/settlers-dump-their-sewage-on-palestinian-land.html
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