Blogging from the West Bank: Rebuilding Demolished Houses in the West Bank
July 20, 2010 | Posted in Ellen Davidson , IndyBlog , Palestine , Uncategorized | Email this articleBy Ellen Davidson
This year’s house belongs to the Hamdan family. The structure was demolished in 2005. In 2007, ICAHD activists first began rebuilding the house, which was located near construction on a section of Israel’s apartheid wall, which snakes through Jerusalem and the whole of the West Bank, sometimes cutting through communities or separating farmers from their lands. When local children began throwing stones at the soldiers guarding the building crews, the soldiers fired back with tear gas, and feeling endangered, the ICAHD volunteers suspended the effort for an alternative site. In 2008 the ICAHD camp came back to the Hamdan home and completed reconstruction, but the house was demolished again within a few months.
As we cleared the rubble from the foundation this morning, I noticed the tile floor that remained underneath. I was struck by the fact that the tiles were the same pattern as those we used last summer, when I participated in the ICAHD effort to rebuild a house a short distance away. I thought about the volunteers in 2007 and 2008, who had worked in the summer heat to build this home, only to have their work destroyed shortly after the family moved in.
In the afternoon, the whole crew of volunteers went to the building site and got down to work, forming human chains to pass along a seemingly endless stream of buckets of concrete to be poured into molds that a smaller group had built in the morning to create pillars that will support the roof. At the end of the day we were treated to a sumptuous tray of baba ganoush, hummus, pickles, and fresh-baked bread sent out to us by the mother of two teenaged girls who had been watching our efforts
We dragged our sweaty bodies home for dinner and a presentation from Jeff and Salim about the Israeli occupation and the history of Beit Arabeia, the house where we are staying. Our host Salim Shawamra explained the nightmarish and expensive process he repeatedly undertook in unsuccessfully trying to get a permit to construct the house, named after our hostess, Arabeia Shawamra. This house has been demolished and reconstructed four times, the last time 2003, and there is currently a demolition order pending against it. Now it is used as a peace center, and the Shawamra family only stays here during the ICAHD summer camp, because they fear that if they lived here fulltime, they would lose their Jerusalem residency permits, and if the place is demolished again, they would be left with no place to live.
For Palestinians to own land that they are not allowed to live on, he said, is like “someone giving you a Big Mac and then telling you you can’t eat it. What is it good for? The smell?” His family’s situation is farm from unique. The process to obtain a building permit on Israeli-administered land is Kafkaesque, and it is almost impossible for Palestinians to get permission to construct anything. Structures built without permits are routinely demolished by the Israeli military. More than 25,000 homes have been destroyed since the Israeli occupation began in 1967.
Most camp participants are already involved in this work, but they come home from their experiences here energized and more determined to carry on their efforts. As Alaina Melville, a volunteer from Portland, Ore., put it, “As Americans, there’s only so much we can do here, but there’s a lot we can do back there, because our tax dollars funding this whole thing.”



































July 30th, 2010 at 1:25 am
Hi to our Oregon campers, Jessica and Alaina. Thanks to you all for being there. Esther