On
May 4, 2022, the eve of Israel’s Independence Day, the Israeli Supreme Court,
in session as the High Court of Justice, issued a ruling allowing the State to
destroy eight Palestinian villages in the area of Masafer Yatta in the South
Hebron hills, and to expel their inhabitants permanently. This ruling is a
travesty of justice, an act of extreme judicial cruelty, and a severe blow to
basic, universal human values and human rights. It also contravenes
international law, including the laws of belligerent occupation as enshrined in
the Geneva Convention of 1949 and the Rome Statue of 1998 defining crimes
against humanity and war crimes. Israel is a signatory to both these treaties.
Some
1500 Palestinians (and possibly many more) in Masafer Yatta are now in imminent
danger of dispossession. The ruling also has severe implications for the
survival of another five villages situated in military training zone 918. Here are the names of the villages: Jinbah, Markaz, Fakhit,, Sfayi, Halawah, Khalat
al-Dab’a, Taban, Majaz, Rakiz, Simri, Magha’ir al-‘Abid, Tuba, Mufagara-Sarura.
These are real places where real families live, as their ancestors did in these
same villages, for centuries. To eradicate them is to efface an entire traditional
culture and a unique, historic way of life.
The
training zone was arbitrarily established by the army in 1981, and the present
High Court ruling reconfirms its legality. For over 20 years the Palestinian
residents of this area have been struggling against eviction. The ruling of May
4th may mark the end of this legal process and thus the end of hope
for these people. For the last many decades, the Israeli authorities have been
systematically demolishing their homes, destroying the roads and wells, and
confiscating their meager agricultural implements. During this same period,
Israeli settlers were building and expanding illegal outposts within the same
training zone, usually with the open support of the army; such settlements
enjoy immunity from any threat of destruction, while the settlers engage in
daily harassment and violence against their Palestinian neighbors.
We
know them well, from years of human rights activism in the South Hebron hills.
Many of them are close friends. These are peace-loving people who wish only to
live on their own lands, to graze their flocks, to plant and harvest wheat and
barley, to celebrate their festivals, weddings, the birth of children and
grandchildren, to educate these children—all this in the face of continuous
encroachment on their lands by Israeli settlers and constant harassment by the
army and police. In simple words, they have been living for the last several
decades in a regime of ever more intense state terror. Not only their homes and
way of life but their very lives are threatened by daily violent attacks by
Israeli settlers, usually backed up by the army.
The
judges, dismissing hard evidence submitted by the Palestinian plaintiffs, ruled
that there were no permanent residences in these villages before 1981, when the
firing zone was declared. There is ample evidence going back at least to the
first half of the nineteenth century that the Palestinians were in residence in
the villages of Masafer Yatta for at least eight to ten months each year (some
families throughout the entire year). In the hot summer months, they would
sometimes move with their herds to the cooler highlands, returning before the
autumn rains. Most of the families lived in caves—a unique population in the
Middle East—which explains the absence of stone houses or other homes in the
aerial photographs of the area from the mid-twentieth century. Many of the
caves have been destroyed, over the years, by the government; today, the
families mainly live in simple stand-alone buildings. It is clear that the
judges failed to take seriously the documented proof that these villages were
long-standing sites of continuous residence, as is also confirmed beyond doubt
by reliable oral histories from older members of the communities of Masafer Yatta.
All
this may seem to outsiders to be a relatively minor, local problem. It is not.
What is at stake is not only the survival of the Palestinians of Masafer Yatta.
Humanity stands today at a historic point of crisis, in which the relatively
few humane restrictions on brute military force—that is, the international laws
of war anchored in the Geneva Convention and its more recent supplements—are in
acute danger of being cast aside and forgotten, as we see at the present moment
in Ukraine, among other places. The forcible expulsion of the Palestinian
communities of Masafer Yatta will have implications for the whole of humanity. Israel’s
Supreme Court has now brazenly claimed, in its ruling, that international laws
of war and, specifically, the laws of belligerent occupation, are not binding
on the State of Israel and can be overruled by legislation and the orders of
senior military officers. This ruling is shameful and cannot be defended. Reputed
experts on international law say that the court’s ruling on Masafer Yatta may
well expose the State of Israel, and all those connected to implementing this
decision, to investigation and possible prosecution in the International
Criminal Court in the Hague.
But
there is worse to come. The court’s ruling is another milestone in the process
of remorseless annexation—that is, outright robbery—of Palestinian lands and
the expulsion of the rightful owners of those lands. As Haaretz,
Israel’s premier newspaper, has said in its editorial of May 8th, the court’s
decision effectively confirms the charge that Israel’s rule in the occupied
territories is a version of apartheid, based on domination by one privileged
ethnic group over another population that is deprived of all elementary human
rights. We are facing an ethnocratic hyper-nationalism that seeks to achieve
its messianic goals (or profitable expansion) at the cost of Palestinian lives,
language, culture, and history.
We
are doing whatever we can to stop this inhuman crime, but the support of the
international community is crucial to our struggle. You can help. You can make
a real difference. Please make your voices heard, call your representatives and
elected officials, spread the word, urgently--for the sake of the innocent
people of Masafer Yatta.
David Shulman