Uri Avnery
12.6.04
The Nightmare Comes True
I thought it was terrible. I was wrong. It is far, far worse! -
These words sum
up my feelings at that moment.
I was standing on a hill overlooking the infamous Kalandia
checkpoint.
Below me was a narrow road, packed with Palestinians in the blazing
sun, 30 degrees centigrade in the shade
(but there was no shade) trudging
towards the checkpoint. Very soon this road
will be transformed. It will
be widened to three lanes and be reserved
for Israelis: on both sides of
it, 8-meter high walls will spring up. It
will allow the settlers of the
on either side will be cut off from each
other.
This is a small part of the new reality that is rapidly being
created on the West Bank and that is changing
the country we knew and
loved beyond recognition.
I was standing near the edge of a-Ram. Once this was a small village
on the outskirts of
successive Israeli governments have prevented the
Palestinians in East
mass exodus to a-Ram, which has grown into a
town of 60 thousand
inhabitants. Most of them are officially still
carrying the blue identity cards of inhabitants
of
them to come to
their businesses, go to the hospitals and the
universities there.
This is about to stop. Along the age-old road from
Ramallah (leading on to
8-meter wall is
due to start any minute now - not across the road, but
along the middle of the road, the full length
of it. The inhabitants of a-
Ram, east of the wall, will not only be
completely cut off from
their relatives, the schools which thousands
of their children attend,
their cemetery and their places of work. A
small part of a-Ram remains
outside the wall and will be cut off from the
main part of the town in
which they live.
But this is only part of the story. Because the wall (or in some
places a barrier, consisting of a fence,
trenches and roads) will
completely surround a-Ram from all sides. The sole
exit from this walled-
in area will be a narrow bridge connecting
it with the adjacent area to
its east, consisting of several Palestinian
villages, which will be
surrounded by another barrier. This enclave will
have a narrow exit to
the Ramallah
enclave. Through this it will be possible for a person from
a-Ram to reach Ramallah,
God willing, by a roundabout route of some 30
kilometers, instead of the ten minutes or so it
took before the
occupation.
A few kilometers to the west of a-Ram lies a group of
villages
centered around Bidou
(where five Palestinians have been killed so far in
protests against the wall). This area is rapidly
becoming another
enclave, completely surrounded by a separate
barrier. The only way out
will be a tunnel to be built under road No.
443 - the settlers' road of
which the section I mentioned before will
become part. All existing roads
to Bidou have
long since been cut off by trenches or piles of dirt, one
can enter only at one spot controlled by a
checkpoint. This will cease to
exist.
If a villager from Bidou has some business in a-Ram,
he will have to
go through the tunnel to Ramallah, turn to the enclave east of a-Ram and
enter a-Ram by the narrow bridge, a
semicircle of about 40 kilometers
instead of a drive of a few minutes.
A-Ram will be especially hard hit. Because of its location, it has
developed in the last few years into a kind of
transshipment point for
goods travelling
from
and Palestinians do business there. All
this will end with the wall. The
means of livelihood for many of its 60
thousand inhabitants will
disappear.
This is only one example of what is happening now all over the West
Bank, turning
it into a crazy quilt of walled-in enclaves, "connected" by
bridges, tunnels or special roads, which can be
cut off at any moment at
the whim of the Israeli government or of a
local army officer - and, all
around them, roads-for-Israelis-only,
expanding settlements and military
installations. Every Palestinian town - Jenin,
enclave, cut off from all the others, from
their "hinterland" and
villages, except by tortuous roundabout routes.
Fifty-five percent of the
(about 10% of historical
This is no longer just a nightmarish future prospect - it is
happening now, visible to the naked eye, while
"disengagement" to happen sometime in the future in one
small part of the
occupied territories.
Practically no Israeli has any idea about all this. It may be
happening one kilometer from his home (in
might as well be on far side of the moon. The media are not
interested,
nor is the world.
This is the peace
"
new democratic
It will lead, of course, to bloodshed on an unbelievable scale. No
people on earth will submit to such a life. For thousands and
thousands
of
young Palestinians, a martyr's death will be preferable.
And sometime in the future this awful structure will be torn down,
like the
always, after much suffering, the human spirit will prevail.