Tony Greenstein | 25 August 2017 | Post Views:

Israel’s ‘Logic’: Arab
labourers don’t need to read and write in order to obey orders

There is a
certain logic in Israel’s actions.  A
population under military occupation does not need anything except the most
rudimentary education.  All it needs
to do from the Occupier’s perspective is to learn to obey.  The purpose
of Palestinians in Area C, which Israel retains full control over, is to provide cheap labour for Israel’s agri business.  You don’t need to read to pick dates or
olives or to plant seed.  Indeed
education can be dangerous because it helps people think about their own
situation.
When Nazi Germany
invaded Poland for the first two years it exterminated the Polish
intelligentsia – priests, teachers, academics, civil servants etc.  More Jews died in this time because they were
Polish intellectuals than because they were Jews.
The Nazis held that the Poles
were a slave nation.  Independence or self-rule was out of the question.  Their only role was to work for their Nazi overlords.  There was no need for education or learning
or for that dangerous species – the intellectual or member of the
intelligentsia.
after demolition this is all that remained of the school
Even in
Victorian England working class children were taught to read only, in order
that they could read instructions. 
Writing was unnecessary.
Israel operates
according to the same ‘logic’ as the Nazi overlords of Poland.  Hence the quite genuine anger in Tel Aviv that
the European Union continues to fund ‘illegal’ Palestinian schools. In Area C, the 60% of the West Bank that Israel
fully controls, it is illegal to erect a building or solar panels or sink a
well or indeed do anything that constitutes economic activity by the Palestinians
unless you have a permit.  Permits are rarely granted.  
Of course the Jewish settlers do not need a
permit.  They operate under an entirely
different legal system.  ‘Apartheid’ I
hear you cry?  Nonsense.  It’s Separate Development except that the Jewish
part develops at a greater rate than the non-Jewish.   They used to call it Separate but Equal
until the US Supreme Court in Brown v
Board of Education
decided that if it was separate it was unlikely to be equal.  Israeli society and the occupation is still at a stage somewhere before 1954 when Brown was decided.
Israel, it has to be said, is very angry at the Dutch government and the EU generally for funding things like schools and homes when such things are quite contrary to Israel’s occupation policy.  Indeed some souls have suggested that this policy is ‘anti-Semitic’.  It is something that I shall not comment on!
August 23, 2017 22:19
B’Tselem said that Civil
Administration’s actions left 80 elementary school pupils in Jub a-Dib without
any place to study near their homes.
On the eve of the new school year the IDF this week
destroyed two illegally built modular Palestinian and Beduin schools funded by
the European Union.
On Tuesday evening, the Civil Administration of
Judea and Samaria took down a building made up in six caravans in the village
of Jub al-Dib near Bethlehem. On Sunday demolished a one-room modular
kindergarten in the Beduin herding village of Badu al-Baba near the town of
Eizariya just outside of Jerusalem. In both cases the Civil Administration said
the structures lacked permits.
 “The
building in Jub al-Dib was built illegally last weekend, a blunt violation of
stop work orders and without receiving the required permits. Therefore, the
confiscation was carried out in accordance to the Civil Administration’s authorities,”

it said.
Of the kindergarten Eizariya it said “an illegal
tin and wood shed was found in Eizariya, that was established over the past two
weeks without receiving the required permits
.
 “The shed
was confiscated by virtue of the procedure to confiscate caravans and in
accordance to the law. We would like to emphasize that the construction was not
in use,”
the Civil Administration said.
Israeli information center for human rights,
B’Tselem, said that Civil Administration’s actions left 80 elementary school
pupils in Jub al-Dib without any place to study near their homes.
In past years they had gone to the nearby village
sou Dar Salah and Beit Ta’mir.
 “The
demolition of a school building the night before the start of the year
epitomizes the administrative cruelty and systematic harassment by authorities
designed to drive Palestinians from their land,”
B’Tselem said.
It noted that in June the Civil Administration had
confiscated solar panels from Jub al-Dib funded by the Dutch government.  Palestinians and Beduin in Area C receive very few
construction permits from the Civil Administration. As a result the EU has said
helping them with housing is a humanitarian gesture allowed under international
law.
Israel demolishes school serving 80 children
in Jub a-Dib on eve of new school year
 

Demolition follows on heels
of destruction of two other educational facilities
in Area C 

On the
evening of Tuesday,
22 August 2017, at around 7:00 P.M. Israeli Civil
Administration officials and security forces arrived at the village
of Jub a-Dib, southeast of Bethlehem. The forces demolished the
community’s recently constructed school building. The
demolition, which ended around midnight, took place the night before
the start of the Palestinian school year, and left eighty pupils
without an educational facility. In previous years, the children of Jub a-Dib
had to walk to school in the Dar Salah and Beit Ta’mir areas, outside the
village.   
The
demolition of a school building the night before the start of
the year epitomizes the administrative cruelty and systematic harassment by authorities designed to drive Palestinians from their land. In late June, the Civil Administration confiscated solar panels installed
in Jub a-Dib by Israeli-Palestinian nonprofit
Comet-ME and financed by the Dutch government, after Israel
consistently shirked its obligation to connect the village to the electric
grid. 
The school
consisted of six pre-fabs donated by the European
Union, that the security forces dismantled and confiscated. The
area was declared a closed military zone, and security forces used stun
grenades to keep residents away.  
Recently,
Israeli authorities damaged two other educational facilities in
Palestinian communities: in Abu a-Nuwar, on 9 August 2017, the Civil
Administration confiscated solar panels donated by the international community,
that provided electricity to the school and kindergarten.  
On 21 August
2017, at around 5:00 A.M., Civil Administration
personnel accompanied by around fifty soldiers, Police
and Border Police officers arrived at the Badu al-Baba community
which is located near al-‘Eizariyah, northeast of Jerusalem. They dismantled
and confiscated a pre-fab that had been placed
there around three weeks prior, to serve as a kindergarten
for 25 local children aged 4-6, who do not have an
alternative educational facility. The forces confiscated the
equipment in the kindergarten: 10 desks, 30 chairs, two cabinets and
a blackboard. The caravan and equipment were funded by the community
and valued at approximately NIS 10,000. 

Jub a-Dib and the previous confiscation of solar panels

Hanin al-Wahsh, 20, an art, photography and film editing student, explained how the confiscation of the solar panels has disrupted her life:
Hanin al-Wahsh. Photo: Manal a-Ja’bri, B'Tselem, 29 June 2017
Seven months ago, our village was connected to a regular power supply through solar panels. That helped me because I really need electricity for my studies, for example in order to use a computer. Until then I had to stay at college until late, and sometimes at night, in order to use the computer. So I was really glad when they connected our home to the electric supply.
After the connection I could work on the computer at home, and when it was hot I could put a fan on. I spent hours working at home, downloading projects and uploading photos and video clips.
The general quality of life at home improved. We bought a fridge and a washing machine. Until then my mother had worked very hard to wash all our clothes and suffered from that. We also began to watch television together as a family and to surf the internet.
We were very happy – until yesterday, 28 June 2017. The Civil Administration and the army arrived, dismantled the solar panels, and left the village without electricity. I saw it happening and tried to document what they were doing, but one of the soldiers got in my way, so I only managed to document part of the incident.
After they dismantled the solar panels I was in a state of shock. I was so disappointed. I thought about how much my family has suffered over the years because of the lack of electricity – how we spent the nights in darkness and suffered in the heat without fans. Worst of all, I thought about how I’d have to stay late at college again to study and work on my projects, and find a way to get back to my remote village that doesn’t have any public transportation.
Now things will be hard for me again. I don’t know what I’ll do until I finish my studies next year.
I saw how angry, helpless and despairing the villagers were. In just a few hours they pushed us back to the past. I don’t understand why this is happening to us – we deserve to get electricity just like other people. I don’t understand why a regular electricity supply threatens the security of the State of Israel.One of the hardest things for me is that I can’t regularly use my smartphone, because I don’t have any way to charge it. I don’t even know how I’ll manage to get to sleep without a fan in this heat, which is getting worse every year. We don’t even have cold water to drink when it’s hot. I feel frustrated, helpless and sad about what’s happening. I hope our village will get its electricity back as soon as possible. For additional information: Roy Yellin, +972-54-4654431[email protected]
Our mailing address is
B’Tselem, The
Israeli Information Center for Human Rights in the Occupied Territories
P.O. Box 53132, Jerusalem
9153002 

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Tony Greenstein

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