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October 12, 2002
Israeli Settlers Continually
Harass Palestinian Christian Family
[Bethlehem, West Bank]
Yesterday I got a call from my friend Alison who works at the
Bethlehem Bible College. She told me that her husband George's
family farm had been damaged by a group of Israeli settlers. Settlers
came in the dead of night and bulldozed a road to and through
the family property uprooting small trees, snapping fences, and
destroying rock walls.
The family owns about
100 acres on the top of a mountain between the Israeli settlements
of Neve Daniel, Efrat, Betar Illit, and Eli'ezer. It's in a prime
location and much valued by the settler neighbors. Unlike most
Palestinian farmers, George's family holds proper private ownership
papers recognized by the Israeli government on the two tracts
of land. The family has owned the property since 1924 -- or for
about 50 years before the first settlers moved into illegally
acquired land next door.

On the way to the
village, George stands on the Palestinian road. The Israeli settler
road is on the right.

George
has a new road bulldozed on his farming property, thanks to Israeli
settlers.
Today I went with George
to the property near Bethlehem to see what had happened and take
a few photos. I saw the newly bulldozed road, the uprooted trees,
the crumbled walls. George went to meet another friend, and I
sat for a while under an olive tree. I stared down into the valley
at two groups of homes. The first was a small Palestinian village,
Nahaleen, sitting there for perhaps hundreds of years. Aggressively
butting beside it was the huge and modern Israeli settlement of
Betar Illit. The placement of the settlement was so threatening
and forceful. Sitting there I wondered what God would say about
the placement of the colony. Would God be pleased? Or would he
be saddened? It sure saddened me. I wondered who would live in
a settlement like that? What's the mentality of a man who would
live there, obviously trying to push the neighboring community
away? I would soon find out.

Palestinian
village of Nahaleen on the far left. Israeli Betar Illit
settlement
on the right.
George came back with
a friend, Vernon. Vernon has an interesting story. He is a former
American evangelical Protestant turned Jewish convert. He moved
to Israel from Oklahoma almost thirty years ago. Vernon is not
an Israeli citizen, but has resident status. He told me he has
the same rights as Israelis except voting. George's farmer brother
Daher was there then too, and he fixed us a cup of tea while we
ate fresh figs from their trees.
Daher complained that
he couldn't do any work on the farm because Israeli settlers kept
coming onto the property with guns to stop him. (I took this complaint
with a grain of salt. Certainly neighbors did not suddenly show
up with guns drawn to stop a man from working his land.) Daher
asked us to stay a few minutes longer. He wanted to plow a section
of land, and he claimed he had been prevented from doing it earlier.
Vernon and I were glad to hang around. We worked on closing a
section of the rock wall that the settlers had destroyed. We finished
and walked away.
Daher quickly plows.
Israeli settlement of Neve Daniel is in the background.
And then the armed Israeli
settlers arrived.

Two Israeli
settlers with rifles arrived to put a stop to the farming.
Two Israeli settler men
with rifles tried to put a stop to any further activity. These
were not men from the army or the police. They were ordinary men
who lived in the communities next door. And they were there to
harass and intimidate the Christian family who rightfully owned
the land. I was shocked and surprised at their brazenness. They
just came onto the land with guns drawn to stop any legitimate
work!

Interfering
with farmwork.

This settler
has made many armed visits to the farm, continually harassing
the family.
Vernon asked them in Hebrew
how they could leave their community on the Sabbath. George started
calling the police. Daher argued with them. I took a few photos.
Eventually they walked away, but not before they had threatened
Daher to stop all farming. It's this blatant disregard for the
law and the shameless lack of human respect for Palestinians that
continues to astonish me. You wouldn't believe the things I see.

George
and Vernon choose a different route home, but each always includes
navigating an Israeli-created roadblock.
For
more information on Israeli settlements, check out
Oct 10, 2002 Christian Homes
Ordered Demolished by Israeli Army
Jun 07, 2002 Settlements
Feb 23, 2002 West Bank Maps
Jan 23, 2002 Hebron (Settlements)
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