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Hebron

Place: Hebron
Observers: Hagit Back, Yael Agmon (reporting), M. (driving); Translator: Charles K.
Feb-25-2015
| Morning

Today we’d arranged to meet with the participants in the Kramim military preparatory program, a tour and a half-hour conversation, a route from the Cave of the Patriarchs to the Cordova girls’ school.

 

At about 11:30 we’d received via Raya Ye’or a phone call that settlers are rioting at ‘Abed’s souvenir shop opposite the Cave of the Patriarchs.

Hagit Back’s report describes the incident and includes photographs.

To our great sorrow, ‘Abed’s suffering and the destruction at his shop allowed us to display the full ugliness of the occupation and its damage.

And the tour in fact began opposite the Cave of the Patriarchs with a short presentation by Hagit.  The 45 participants and the soldiers serving as escort know quite a lot about the conflict, the Oslo agreements, Areas A, B, and C.  They received a map of Hebron from a female settler which is, of course, completely different from the one we provide.

We walked from there to ‘Abed’s shop.  We weren’t able to spend enough time there because the governor of Hebron was on his way and Border Police soldiers providing security made us leave.

The questions we’re always asked by each group are always the same questions:

1.      Our right to the land

2.      Our holy sites, our existential cradle

3.      Who has the rights to this site, we or they

4.      In fact, we captured the area from the Jordanians.

5.      And then, of course, about the organization, who we are, whom will we vote for.

6.      Why don’t you care about your own people.

And on and on, and also spiteful questions, do you also worry about water and electricity for the settlements.

And so we walked to the school while some agreed with us, some disagreed, and only at the end did they manage to make me lose control when one young woman said she’d seen one of our films in which we sat a Palestinian woman down and demanded she say that soldiers had harassed her.  Such lies really drive me mad.  I told her to view our website and find that film, and that she shouldn’t worry – it isn’t there.

 

Lessons for the future:  For a similar tour on Shuhada Street we need more women because small groups form and they have loads of questions and it’s important to respond and to talk.

We’re to go to the preparatory program for an additional meeting.

And we’ve already begun to talk about next year’s program.

  • Hebron

    See all reports for this place
    • According to Wye Plantation Accords (1997), Hebron is divided in two: H1 is under Palestinian Authority control, H2 is under Israeli control. In Hebron there are 170,000 Palestinian citizens, 60,000 of them in H2. Between the two areas are permanent checkpoints, manned at all hours, preventing Palestinian movement between them and controlling passage of permit holders such as teachers and schoolchildren. Some 800 Jews live in Avraham Avinu Quarter and Tel Rumeida, on Givat HaAvot and in the wholesale market.

       

      Checkpoints observed in H2:

       

      1. Bet Hameriva CP- manned with a pillbox
      2. Kapisha quarter CP (the northern side of Zion axis) - manned with a pillbox
      3. The 160 turn CP (the southern side of Zion axis) - manned with a pillbox
      4. Avraham Avinu quarter - watch station
      5. The pharmacy CP - checking inside a caravan with a magnometer
      6. Tarpat (1929) CP - checking inside a caravan with a magnometer
      7. Tel Rumeida CP - guarding station
      8. Beit Hadassah CP - guarding station

      Three checkpoints around the Tomb of the Patriarchs

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      Hebron - Yusri Jaber and part of his family
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