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We must not commit this crime

If Israel destroys the Palestinian village of Susya as planned, we will have committed a terrible crime.

Susya. Photo by Guy Butiva,   Rabbis for Human Ri_Susya’s-women-document-daily-life-under-threat-of-demolition-A Palestinian family outside their tent home in the south Hebron Hills village of Susya (Photo Activestills.org) (2)

Susya. Photo by Guy Butiva, Rabbis for Human Rights

 

If Israel destroys the Palestinian village of Susya as planned, we will have committed a terrible crime.

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About 300 people live in the village, which is located in the South Hebron hills. The State of Israel intends to literally destroy the village in the next few weeks by demolishing most of the homes and other buildings. Such demolitions have already taken place. Often family members, including children, will stand on the edges of their property, restrained by IDF soldiers, and watch as Israel’s bulldozers demolish their lives — their homes and livelihood.

When is it justified for the state to destroy a small village? I imagine that there are probably circumstances when such a policy could be justified. But let’s imagine for a minute what we think about a case where it was not justified: A situation where a state destroyed such a village for illegitimate reasons. How would we judge such an act?

Think about how much suffering and loss and brutal violence is involved in such an action. Imagine the impact on children who watch their homes demolished as their parents stand by powerless. They will carry such a wound to the end of their lives. I expect that everyone reading these words will agree: to destroy a whole village like this, if unjustified, is a truly terrible crime.

And there can be little doubt that Israel’s plan is unjustified. First of all, Israel has already destroyed Susya. In 1986, Israel expropriated the villagers’ land for “public use, ” fenced it off, drove them off it, and established an archaeological site in their stead. The present plan is to destroy the village in the place where the residents rebuilt after we destroyed their village the first time. What justifies the destruction this time?

Even though the residents had no choice but to rebuild after their expulsion in 1986, Israel has refused to grant them building permits. So their homes are “illegal” and must be destroyed. The official line is that the population is too small and isolated for a separate village and so they are refused building permits for their own good; they should move elsewhere. But just a few hundred meters away, Israel has developed a small Jewish settlement called…Susya!

Our hypocrisy could not be more obvious: With one hand we destroy Palestinian Susya because the place is not fit for a village, and with our other hand we build a new Susya right next to it, but for Jews. And what will we do with the land if we manage to get these Palestinians off it? You can be sure it, too, will be used “for the public good.”

Our discriminatory practices towards the Palestinians in Susya are not the exception, they are the rule. If you invest even a small effort in learning about Israel’s policies in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, you will discover that we systematically use the power of the state to severely discriminate against Palestinians in regard to public land, urban planning, use of resources and in many other areas. We’re not talking about the compromises necessary to survive in a rough neighborhood. We’re talking about deeply illegitimate policies that cannot be reasonably construed as self-defense, like the destruction of Palestinian Susya.

According to reports, Israel plans to destroy Susya before August 3rd, when the Supreme Court is scheduled to review the Civil Administration’s planning policy in the area. But it is not too late to prevent the destruction. Now is the time to raise your voice against this injustice. Write a blog. Talk to your congregation. Post something on your timeline. Support one of the organizations fighting to save Susya. Visit the village and express your solidarity. We Jews must wake up and take responsibility for our collective power: We must not commit this crime.

This article was first published in Times Of Israel

For more information, and ways to get involved, see Rabbis for Human Rights’ campaign to Save Susya.

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