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Deir Ballut, Haris, Kufr alDik

Observers: Natalie Cohen, Rachel Alon, Naomi Bentsur (reporting), Nadim (driving) Translator: Charles K.
Dec-31-2013
| Morning

 

 

09:00  We left from the Rosh Ha’Ayin train station.

09:30  Hars.  It’s again gratifying to see the women are waiting for us.  Twelve are already seated at the tables in the club, ready for the lesson to begin.  Four more arrive later.  There’s a wide range of ages – very young women alongside the elderly, and all ages in between.  But they’re all enthusiastic and willing to work learning a new language.  It’s wonderful.

Today’s topic is male/female – persons (first, second, third), then numbers from 1 to 10, then some nouns.  The women are glad to be asked questions; most reply accurately and fluently.  We’ve prepared a text for them.

Something unusual occurred in the midst of the lesson: a man entered, made signs indicating he’s a deaf mute and asked for money.  We made a donation; he gave us a religious card in return.  Just like in a Tel Aviv café…

 

The tour:  Natalie and Rachel, a new colleague, left from Hars with Nadim at 09:30 for Brukin.  Many boys were in the streets, apparently because of school vacation.

10:15  Kufr a-Dik.  A Palestinian Authority police station has opened in the village.  A police car drives around, keeping the traffic moving.  We tried, unsuccessfully, to speak with a young man delivering merchandise to a grocery store.  He’s wary, doesn’t want to talk to us.  An army vehicle comes through the western exit from the village; two soldiers get out, one of them with binoculars.

10:30  A familiar sign at the entrance to Deir Balut warning Israelis not to enter Area A.  Nadim starts talking to a resident of the village who happens by and declares, “What peace?  There won’t be peace as long as the settlements are there.”  As if to confirm his words, we see to the east a new road to the settlements of Padu’el and Alei Zahav.  A sign on the outskirts of Alei Zahav reads “That way,” four structures under construction behind it.  Is that a new settlement or the old trick known as “expansion?”

The army jeep is still there on our way back.  One of the soldiers looks through the binoculars toward Kufr a-Dik.  Traffic flows past them unimpeded.

11:00  Back to Hars.  The lesson ends with greetings for the new year.  Will it be a year of peace?  The women of Hars are skeptical, like the man from Deir Balut.  And so are we.

11:30  Back to Rosh Ha’Ayin.

  • Deir Ballut

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    •   An internal checkpoint on Road 446 at the entrance to the village of Deir Ballut and near the settlements there, Alei Zahav and Peduel. Partially staffed, vehicles are inspected at random.  
  • Haris

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    • Haris

      The village has 4,500 people and they have 5,000 dunams of land. The entrance to the village is blocked and opened arbitrarily, without informing the residents.The village has a seasonal checkpoint that blocks the road to the agricultural land and this checkpoint opens once a year! 2,500-3,000 dunams were stolen from the village in order to build the settlements of Revava and Netafim, which are located west of Haris.

      The center of the village is Area B and around Area C. The population grows but the occupation does not permit new construction in Area C.

  • Kufr a-Dik

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    • Kufr a-Dik This is a Palestinian village in the Salfit district of the West Bank, located 8 kilometers east of the Green Line. The village population numbers 4,494 (as of 2007). 14.5% of the village were included in Area B (supposedly under Palestinian civil control) and 86% categorized as Area C – meaning both civil and military Israeli control, which severely affects the state of the village and its inhabitants. Over the years Israel has robbed 1,448 dunams from the village’s farmlands for the sake of building the settler-colonies of Penuel, Alei Zahav, Yoezer, Har Alei Zahav, and the industrial zone next to Penuel. Lands were also sequestered for the paving of Road 446 whose length stretches over 4 kilometers and includes a buffer zone 75-meters wide on both its sides. Following the paving of the road, the village has suffered not only landgrab but home demolitions and the destruction of water wells as well. Rates of unemployment in both the private and the public sectors reach 60%. In the years 2010-2013 creative activity was held by members of MachsomWatch and women of the village. For further information: http://vprofile.arij.org/salfit/pdfs/vprofile/Kafr%20ad%20Dik_tp_en.pdf
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