jerusalem | Deep in a valley below Jerusalem’s Old City, a narrow alleyway leads to the remains of three bulldozed Arab homes in an area slated to become an archeological park.
The homes, now just slabs of collapsed concrete, are in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan. Despite international protests — including from Secretary of State Hillary Clinton — the remaining 85 or so houses there, which were built without permits, are to be demolished to make room for a park the city hopes will be a major draw for tourists.
The dispute over the area, together with recent evictions in the Arab neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, are the most recent markers in the battle over Jerusalem. Israel seeks to cement its control over the city in part by altering the demographic character of its eastern, Arab neighborhoods.
“Our sovereignty over it cannot be challenged,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told his Cabinet last month in comments aimed at rebuffing U.S. criticism over plans for turning a hotel in Sheikh Jarrah into a Jewish housing project. “This means, inter alia, that residents of Jerusalem may purchase apartments in all parts of the city.”
Former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, who recently toured east Jerusalem on a three-day visit to Israel, said the United States should not tell Jewish people in Israel where they are allowed to live.
“It’s like telling people they can’t live in Queens or Brooklyn or the Bronx,” said the former Arkansas governor, a Republican who is likely to make another White House bid in 2012. “New Yorkers would never stand for being told where they can and cannot live. Why should we be trying to do the same to Israel?”
Critics, however, claim the government is purposefully boosting the Jewish presence in traditionally Arab eastern Jerusalem, creating “facts on the ground” in order to make it difficult to divide Jerusalem as part of a two-state solution to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Palestinians demand eastern Jerusalem as part of a future Palestinian state.
But the Israeli government insists that a series of development plans for the city’s eastern part are not driven by a political agenda. The plans call for more green space, better parking and repaved roads.
“Government policy is governed by one overriding principle: that it is important to continue developing the city for benefit of all inhabitants of Jerusalem,” said Net-anyahu spokesman Mark Regev. “The position is that Jerusalem will remain a united capital and the government wants to see all its communities flourish.”
Maher Hanoun sees things differently. He was evicted from his home in early August after the Israeli Supreme Court ruled that the land on which it was built belonged to Jews, according to documentation dating back to the Ottoman era.
Hanoun’s family, refugees from the fighting in Israel’s War of Independence in 1948, lived in a house built there by the United Nations in the 1950s, when the land was under Jordanian rule. Now homeless, Hanoun and his family have opted to stay on the sidewalk across from their old house, sleeping on mattresses and passing their days under the shade of a small olive tree.
“They want to destroy our homes and build apartments for settlers,” Hanoun said.
Israel captured Eastern Jerusalem, along with the entire area known as the West Bank, in 1967 during the Six-Day War. When Israel later annexed eastern Jerusalem, the state offered Israeli citizenship to Arabs living there. Most refused, instead becoming permanent residents of the city with some of the same rights as Israelis, including social security payments.
The Jerusalem municipality says all eviction orders in Jerusalem are lawful, and that the law is applied to both Arab and Jew. But critics say evictions and demolitions are pursued aggressively in Arab parts of the city and only rarely in Jewish parts of the city, and that Arab Jerusalemites are forced to build illegally because their requests for building permits are regularly rejected.
“This is a proxy war carried out by the government of Israel by means of agents: the extreme right-wing groups active in east Jerusalem,” said Daniel Seidemann, founder of Ir Amim, an Israeli organization that advocates the equitable sharing of Jerusalem between Jews and Arabs. “This is a conscious effort to ring the historic basin with messianic settlements.”
The city rejects such charges.
“The mayor and the municipality apply the law equally,” Stephen Miller, a spokesman for Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat, said of demolition orders. “Anyone is free to build, expand and live as they desire as long as they follow the law.”
American Jews are among the main supporters of increasing the Jewish presence in eastern Jerusalem, donating
$25.4 million over the past five years to purchase and build homes there, according to IRS filings reported by Bloomberg News.