Water Fact May 1, 2023

Water Fact:  May 1, 2023

Israel’s greenwashing cannot be allowed to cover up its shameful environmental record

Earth Day (April 22) gave Israeli embassies around the world the opportunity to tout their country’s prowess in the environmental field and promote what it says are 1,300 companies and start-ups active in ‘climate innovation.’ 

Here, for instance, is what H.E. Ran Yaakoby, the Israeli ambassador to New Zealand,  stated about water and trees in an Earth Day press release:

 

“Israel purifies 94% of wastewater, of which close to 90% is used for agriculture. Moreover, water loss in urban systems in Israel is minimal, standing at only a few percent. The above practices are thanks to the groundbreaking technologies developed in Israel and the knowledge accumulated over the years, which can be applied in large parts of the world….Despite its young age and relatively small area, Israel has accumulated vast experience in planting forests in semi-arid regions and preserving them in dry and extreme conditions. This knowhow and experience are priceless for a world where forests that are so necessary to deal with the climate crisis are dying from heat, drought and diseases and are burning.”

 

A considerably less rosy picture is given by scientific reports indicating, according to a detailed Haaretz investigation, “that in the foreseeable future, the climate crisis will reap dire consequences for Israel.” 

 

And meanwhile, Palestinians continue to experience the dire consequences of Israel’s environmental apartheid policies, foremost among them the ongoing theft of water and land, and mass destruction of trees and agriculture.

 

On Earth Day, Israeli settlers grazed their livestock on fields of wheat, barley, alfalfa and crocuses belonging to Palestinian farmers south of Hebron.  A few days later, on April 27, settlers destroyed an irrigation networkand ripped up crops belonging to Palestinian residents of Husan village west of Bethlehem.  On the same day, settlers - who had recently set up an illegal outpost in the northern Jordan Valley -  attacked shepherdsand their flocks in the effort to drive them off their land.  As Amira Hass describes in Haaretz (April 28), herds of Israeli cows are now crushing young olive trees as they graze over a thousand acres of Palestinian-owned land near the Separation Wall.

 

We should not let Arbor Day (April 28) pass without acknowledging Israel’s ‘vast experience’ destroying Palestinian trees.  According to a piece in The Yale Review of International Studies, more than 800,000 Palestinian olive trees have been uprooted by Israel since 1967.  In one small village (Qarawat Bani Hassan) 2,000 olive trees were destroyed in November 2022.   That’s just olive trees:  according to the media outlet Jerusalem24, the number of Palestinian olive, fruit and other trees destroyed by Israel over just the past 30 years could exceed 2.5 million.  

 

Clearing the land of Palestinians is the primary goal of Israel’s colonizing project, no matter what the environmental cost. 

Photo caption: On April 28,  youth groups from Nazareth and Bethlehem traveled to the Jordan Valley to assist farmers in clearing land and harvesting.  When a group of soldiers and settlers tried to force them to leave,  they resisted with songs and dancing.
 

Share

An Alliance Member Protests in Jerusalem...

One of our members was in Jerusalem on April 22 and joined a large crowd protesting the current Israeli government’s attempts to diminish the independence of the judiciary. Demonstrators with signs about Palestinian rights peacefully intermingled with those who were just waving the Israeli flag.

She wrote, “When we marched from near the president’s house to near Netanyahu’s house, the procession was many, many blocks long. There was a big white sign that said ‘Democracy for All’ and another which proclaimed ‘Democracy for One Nation = Apartheid’. There was spirited drumming and chanting; we ended with beautiful peaceful song. It one of the best evenings I’ve ever spent in Jerusalem.”

Here are some photos of the event:

Share

Bi-weekly Water Fact: April 17

Water Fact:  April 17, 2023

 

Israeli Supreme Court and deprivation of water advance ethnic cleansing

 

Following Netanyahu’s March 27th ‘pause’ in plans to restrict the powers of the Supreme Court,  hundreds of thousands of Israelis have continued to take to the streets to denounce his proposed  ‘judicial coup.’   

 

While demonstrators see the Supreme Court as critical to ‘Israeli democracy,’ Palestinians regard it as a component in the machinery of ethnic cleansing. 

 

A current example in the 75-year-long ‘ongoing Nakba’ is the steady expulsions of residents taking place in a dozen villages in the area of Masafer Yatta south of Hebron. Back in the late 1960s, Ariel Sharon first proposed that the area should be declared a closed military zone in order to clear it for Jewish settlements.  In 1980 the military designated 7,500 acres of privately owned Palestinian land  to be  ‘Firing Zone 918’ from which Masafer Yatta’s residents – then living in 18 communities – should be excluded.  While Palestinians spent decades in court insisting that they were ‘permanent residents’ who could not be permanently expelled, a ring of Jewish settlements was built around their villages and supplied with water, electricity, paved roads, schools and health centers.  

 

As their case made its slow way to the Supreme Court, villagers were repeatedly harassed by settlers and the army.  They were arrested and had their houses, buildings and livestock destroyed.  Israel’s use of water as ‘a tool for forcible transfer’  in the area took an especially heavy toll.  Rainwater met 30 percent of their water needs.  The rest had to come from the purchase of expensive trucked water.   Since 2011, the military has issued demolition orders on more than 60 shallow wells semi-nomadic farmers in the area had used to store rainwater.

 

In desperation, in 2019 Masafer Yatta’s residents used shovels at night to dig a channel 25 kilometers long in which they installed underground water pipes paid for by the UN and EU.  It took two months of stealth labor to complete the installation which, for 40 days, supplied a thousand people in 16 communities with water.  Then, on December 2, 2019, the army brought in bulldozes to destroy it.  Water pipes were confiscated and many residents were arrested.

 

On May 4, 2022, the Supreme Court  finally issued its decision.  In defiance of international law, it ruled against the inhabitants of Masafer Yatta, declaring that 1,200 Palestinians were not ‘permanent residents’ and could be forcibly expelled. 

 

Since then life in Masafer Yatta has been an ongoing nightmare.  Their homes are being destroyed and animals killed.  Many residents have moved into caves in the effort to resist expulsion.  But it is unclear how long they will be able to hold out since, as reported on April 6 by Doctors Without Borders, “water pipes are regularly cut off, water tanks are destroyed and trucks delivering water tanks are stopped and confiscated. The challenges of getting hold of sufficient water are further compounded by a lack of rain.” 

 

For more on the steadfastness of Masafer Yatta’s cave dwellers see here.  

Share

Rally in Boston on Easter Sunday

On Easter Sunday several Alliance members participated in a student-organized rally in Copley Square to denounce the recent Israeli attacks on Al Aqsa mosque and the Gaza Strip. Debke dancing brought the spirited rally to a close.

Here are more photos from the Boston rally.

Share