Activism

Major olive producing village ordered to uproot 1,400 trees by May 1

Deir Istiya
Villagers relaxing in Deir Istiya, 2009. (Photo: Genevieve Long)

Earlier this week, Israel ordered Palestinian farmers in Deir Istiya, a major West Bank olive producing village, to uproot 1,400 trees by the end of this month. By comparison, this order is 400 more trees than the total number uprooted in all of 2011.

“This is the largest order for uprooting trees that the farmers of Wadi Qana have ever been given,” said the International Women’s Peace Service (IWPS). And Amal Salem, 63, from Deir Istiya, but now living in St. Louis says unearthing olive trees effects everyone in the village, “When I visited last year, every house I went to has had uprooted trees.”

Amal’s family has farmed olive for five generations.  It was their livelihood, and afforded her to attend school in Cairo. “I went to school because of the olive trees. I went to school because in Cairo because of the trees. My father had no other income but the olive trees.” In Amal’s family, Israeli authorities uprooted 300 trees of her 83-year old uncle’s land. Amal described them as ancient growth, “1,000 years old,” stemming from the Roman period. The day the bulldozers arrived, her cousins protested, clinging to the trees, although they were uprooted regardless. But within a day or two, her family proudly re-planted what was unearthed. Yet Amal’s uncle has night terrors from this incident, stirring over the sight of seeing his child nearly smashed by a bulldozer.

Since the Mamluk period, Deir Istiya has been one of the largest olive producing regions in the West Bank. But, even with 10,000 dunums of agricultural land, the village’s full farming capacity is weakened by Israel’s military and civilian occupation. Nearby, eight settlements are built on, or adjacent to, a total of 15,000 dunums of Palestinian land. “From my parents’ house we can see were they built a settlement on our land,” says Amal. And from the outposts, wastewater seeps into and is illegally dumped into a natural spring used by Palestinians producing olives.  Amal says the wastewater flows down from the settlements like a river, “but it isn’t a river.” At times, the wastewater overflows from the dumping site to onto Palestinian orchards. Last fall, over 100 trees in Deir Istiya were destroyed by flooded wastewater.

Additionally, the settlers themselves cause problems to Deir Istiya’s farmers through acts of harassment and violence, including arson to agricultural lands and “price tag” attacks. Amal has seen them holding guns a schoolchildren and earlier this year, settlers desecrated a mosque during a wave of price tag actions sparked by the demolition of an illegal Israeli outpost.  And devastatingly, Amal says a few years ago a settler ran over one villager with a car.

Today IWPS held an action in support of the farmers and released the following statement:

On April 25, 2012 nine farmers of Deir Istiya, Salfit were given orders to uproot 1400 olive trees in the Wadi Qana agricultural area by May 1, 2012. This is the largest order for uprooting trees that the farmers of Wadi Qana have ever been given. Most of the trees were planted approximately 5 years ago on privately owned Palestinian property. The orders, placed on retaining terraces, rocks and fences in the vicinity of the trees, state that if the farmers do not uproot their trees they will face punishment which could, according to Deir Istiya mayor Nazmi Salman include large fines and imprisonment.

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not to worry. zionists make the desert bloom….

One wonders, what justification, what authority other than the usual “barrel of a gun”, Israel can have for thus interfering with the economic and traditional lives of these people. How can this be a step necessary for assuring the safety of the people of Israel living in pre-1967 Israeli territory? How otherwise can it be justified?

How can any ethical person be justified to purchase any goods manufactured in Israel, or to hire any services from any Israeli company, when Israel is thus deliberately making it impossible for that ethical person to buy olive oil from these farmers?

How can Beinart and MJRosenberg justify their refusal to join ranks with the total-Israel BDS effort in the face of such atrocities?

Of course, one is glad that Beinart and MJR approve the partial or OPT-BDS effort, even though that effort seems rather pointless, but one asks them to please reconsider! Perhaps Phil can ask them to make personal responses to THIS POSTING including their thoughts on the efficacy against this sort of thing of the partial-BDS which they espouse.

It is not the Israeli industries on the West Bank which are uprooting these trees, but the IOF, a branch of the government of (whole, entire) Israel. If there is a crime here — as I perceive that there is — it is a crime of the entire Israeli people, for it is their government that acts here, not (mere ?) settlers (who are, of course, settlers at all only by the help and permission of that same government of all the Israelis).

The purpose is ethnic cleansing though slow economic strangulation which is less noticeable in MSM than outright expulsion/genocide.

My heart BREAKS!!!!!!!!!!!

This isn’t savagery,barbarism?

Uprooting the symbol of peace is not a surprise but always a heartbreaker.

Are the israelis gonna line up Palestinian doves against the wall and shoot them in the back too?

Well that wouldn’t surprise me either.

And then they tell us that they’re hated cuz they’re jewish and only cuz they’re jewish – yeah right.

Where’s the outrage of the global Green Parties?! This isn’t just a Palestine/israel issue you know!