The wall around al-Walaja, which will extend to cut off Cremisan. |
The wall is ever-expanding around the village of al-Walaja, discreetly built behind trees, so that the residents in the neighborhood in Gilo cannot see what is happening on the other side. Between the Cremisan monastery and the Salesian Sisters of Cremisan school, barbed wire is being set up, marking the line of the wall, that will soon cut off the Salesian Sisters from the monks at Cremisan winery.
(See this post for more pictures).
Map c/o BBC |
On April 3, the first signs of al-Makrours fate were seen. The Israeli military came into Makhrour and quickly demolished a residential structure as well as the electricity grid erected by the Bethlehem municipality. (A video and article about the incident).
Today, the al-Makhrour restaurant, built by a family whose home had been demolished by the Israeli military in this area, was completely demolished.
The Israeli military claims that these structures were built without permits. But in Area C, the area under full Israeli control, permits are nearly impossible to get.
Demolition of al-Makhrour restaurant. Photo c/o http://yfrog.com/ob9a4uhtj. |
He noted the violence occurring between Beit Jala and Gilo 10 years ago, during the 2nd Intifada. With no acts of violence occurring, however, in the past 10 years, and with the separation barriers deep cutting into the West Bank behind the green line, security concerns are highly questionable.
I, myself, spend my weekends walking and picnicking in Cremisan and Makhrour, and ask the question: Is security a justifiable reason to cut people off from their agricultural lands, schools, monasteries, and a place of respite?
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