ICAHD

Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions
House Demolitions

Home demolitions are a constant form of violence against Palestinians. The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD) works to stop these demolitions. Here’s what you need to know about demolitions and what you can do so that together we can rise up and prevent another family from losing their home.

 

Organization

The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (ICAHD) is a non-violent, direct-action group dedicated to ending the Israeli military occupation and achieving a just peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Over the past two decades they have focused their activism on Israel’s policy of demolishing Palestinian homes (more than 54,000 in the occupied Palestinian territory between 1967-2018). This policy of home demolitions is key issue itself but also a vehicle to show how the occupation works. ICAHD highlights the pro-active character of Israel’s occupation policies and thus the need to hold Israel accountable. The focus on demolitions also emphasizes the human cost of occupation.

ICAHD is located in Jerusalem but there are groups supporting ICAHD’s vision in the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, Finland, and Australia. These groups all work to insert a critical Israeli voice into the public debate abroad. They also mobilize support for a just peace, which in ICHAD’s view means the establishment of a single democratic state throughout the entire country. All of ICAHD’s work in the occupied territory is closely coordinated with local Palestinian organizations.


Since its founding, ICAHD’s activities have extended to four interrelated spheres:

  • Resisting the demolition of Palestinian homes
  • Strategizing over a just political settlement and how to achieve it
  • Disseminating information and networking, especially internationally
  • Providing oral and written reports to the United Nations (U.N.) based on gaining U.N. Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) status and the invitation to engage with U.N. activities.

 

As Israelis, ICAHD believes that the only chance for a political settlement that can work is to advocate for full equality of Palestinians and Israelis in Palestine/Israel. This would include constitutionally guaranteeing their collective and individual rights. Indeed, a workable peace must also address the needs of all the peoples of the conflict-ridden region.

 

ICAHD resists demolitions of all kinds. As Israelis, ICAHD blocks bulldozers, chains themselves in houses, and conducts campaigns to raise opposition to the policy in Israel and abroad. ICAHD turns to the courts and, when demolitions finally occur, rebuilds demolished homes with the Palestinians as political acts of solidarity and resistance. ICAHD has come to see house demolitions as the very essence of the conflict. The Israeli government claims to speak for all Jewish people. However, through its resistance, ICAHD  are acknowledging that Palestinian claims carry equal authority to our Israeli claims. And ICAHD proclaims loudly: “We refuse to be enemies!”

ICAHD calls on all good people to appeal to their governments to end Israel’s policy of home demolitions – indeed, to end Israel’s occupation altogether. Here is how you can help:

 

  • Follow the ICAHD website and when something happens that you think your community or political representative should know, forward the piece to him/her with a short letter of concern.
  • Contact an ICAHD group and let them know that you are interested in the issue. ICAHD speakers are often traveling abroad and might be able to visit your community or area. The addresses are found on their website.
  • Prepare a presentation on house demolitions for your church, synagogue or mosque, or for a civic organization in your community or your school. ICAHD is happy to help you with pictures, information, powerpoint presentations and films.
  • Join an ICAHD study tour – 11 days throughout the country meeting activists and residents, with an emphasis on the plight of the Palestinians under occupation but in Israel as well. For more information contact Linda Ramsden at founder@icahduk.org.

You can find ICAHD on their website at https://icahd.org/. Or find it on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/ICAHDUK/ and Twitter at https://twitter.com/icahduk or https://twitter.com/ICAHDRebuilding.

Topic

The demolition of Palestinian homes represents a primary expression of displacement. In the Nakba of 1948, over 750,000 Palestinians (64% of the entire population) were made homeless. Israel systematically demolished more than 530 entire Palestinian villages, towns, and urban neighborhoods (around 60,000 homes). Since then it has continued to demolish Palestinian homes within Israel. For example, the entire Bedouin community of al-Araqeeb in the Naqab has been demolished 143 times and counting [https://imemc.org/article/al-araqib-refuses-to-surrender/]). Israel has also demolished almost 50,000 homes in the occupied Palestinian territory since 1967.   

The motivation for demolishing Palestinian homes is purely political, although the Israeli authorities employ an elaborate system of laws and administrative procedures to lend it a proper facade. Here are some of the reasons given by the Israeli authorities for demolition:

 

  • the land they own has been declared by Israel “agricultural land” or “open green space;”
  • they have no building permit (which the Israeli authorities largely refuse to grant Palestinians);
  • the slope of their land is adjudged as “too steep;”
  • their houses are too near illegal Israeli settlements or Israeli-only highways (although the houses were there first);
  • out of collective punishment for some action the punished people had nothing to do with;
  • the “clearing” of vast tracts of land for military/security purposes;
  • destruction for the sake of expanding roads, settlements and the “Separation Barrier;”
  • houses “cleared” to make passage safe for settlers or for other security purposes;
  • homes representing “collateral damage;” and more.

 

Most people think that Palestinian houses are demolished because their inhabitants performed some terrorist acts. This is not the case. In fully 99% of the cases, demolitions had absolutely nothing to do with security; they are done almost exclusively as forms of displacement.

The actual demolition of homes is only part of the story, of course. Tens of thousands of Palestinian families own land and possess the financial resources to build modest homes but do not do so because they cannot obtain permits and do not want to risk demolition. In the Palestinian sector of East Jerusalem alone there are 25,000 “missing” housing units. This completely artificial and induced housing shortage condemns thousands of families to crowded and inadequate living conditions. Again, this is part of what Israel calls “the quiet transfer,” making life so difficult for the Palestinians that they will leave the country altogether.

House demolitions take two major forms. Tens of thousands of Palestinian homes have been destroyed as collateral damage in military incursions. In the carpet bombing of Gaza in 2014, some 18,000 homes were demolished – and never rebuilt. Additional thousands have been demolished because Israel refuses to grant building permits to Palestinians, even if they plan to build on their own land. Since having a home is a fundamental human right and people have children and grandchildren, Palestinians are forced to build “illegally,” and are promptly served with demolition orders. The Israeli authorities can demolish your home tomorrow morning, next week, next year or in 20 years. And if you rebuild, your home will be demolished again. Demolition orders, like diamonds, are forever.
 
When the bulldozer finally begins its systematic work of demolition, the whole process takes between five minutes (for a small home of concrete blocks) to six hours (for a five-story apartment building). At times demolition is resisted amidst violence; people are beaten, jailed, sometimes killed – and always humiliated. At other times the family and their neighbors watch sullenly as their home is reduced to rubble.

For children, the act of demolition – and the months and years leading up to it – is a time of trauma. Children are marked for life when they have to witness the fear and powerlessness of your parents; feel constantly afraid and insecure; see loved ones being beaten and losing their homes; experience the harassment of the Israeli Civil Administration field supervisors speeding around their village; and endure the noise, violence, displacement and destruction of their toys, home, and world. Psychological services are largely absent in the Palestinian community and there are many signs of trauma and stress among children: bedwetting, nightmares, fear to leave home lest one “abandon” parents and siblings to the army, and dramatic drops in grades and school-leaving. The effects of exposure to domestic violence that occasionally follow impoverishment, displacement and humiliation are also observed. In the words of Salim Shawamreh, a resident of the village of Anata whose home has been demolished four times: “The demolition of a home is the demolition of a family.” According to the research of Eyad Serraj, the late Palestinian psychologist who headed the Gaza Community Mental Health Program, a strong correlation exists between young people who become suicide bombers and those who have had their homes demolished.

Story

As’ad Mu’yin

When the dreaded day finally arrives, it does so almost without warning. Though families know their homes are targeted, actual demolitions are carried out at random, without pattern, and can strike anywhere at any time. (Normally demolitions do not occur on Fridays or Saturdays due to the Jewish Sabbath, or on Jewish holidays. These are the only times Palestinians can truly relax – an ironic twist on the idea of the “Day of Rest.”). Randomization is part of the generalized fear that underlies the policy of “deterrence.” The wrecking crews, accompanied by tens of soldiers, police and Civil Administration officials, usually come in the early morning hours just after the men have left for work. The family is sometimes given a few minutes to remove their belongings before the bulldozers move in. However, because family members and neighbors usually put up some kind of resistance – or at least protest – they are often removed forcibly from the house. Their possessions are then thrown out by the wrecking crews (often foreign guest workers). Amnesty’s report Under the Rubble (2004:4) relates the story of As’ad Mu’yin and his cousin Ziad:

On 21 August 2003, on the morning of his wedding, As’ad Mu’yin had his house demolished; the house of his cousin Ziad As’ad, who had married a week earlier, was demolished at the same time. The two adjacent houses were in the West Bank town of Nazla ‘Issa. As’ad Mu’yin had been living on the ground floor of the house with his parents and three brothers and had furnished and prepared the second floor to move in with his wife. The house was demolished before he could do so. The new furniture and the wedding gifts disappeared under the rubble, along with the content of the family home on the ground floor. He told Amnesty International: “The army came early in the morning, at about 7am. I was getting ready for the wedding, for a very happy day. They had bulldozers … they gave us 15 minutes to leave the house. We had no time to salvage anything. They said that we did not have building permits. … But everyone knows that Israel does not give building permits to Palestinians in Area C.”

Action

Is your local community supporting the occupation with your tax money? The Israeli government makes use of equipment from Caterpillar (American), Volvo (Swedish), Hyundai (Korean), and JCB (English) to carry out home demolitions in the occupied Palestinian territory. You can find evidence of this using a Google image search.

 

Send a letter to your mayor and city council. Use language similar to the following: “Caterpillar, Volvo, Hyundai, and JCB all supply the Israeli government with equipment that is used for the demolition of Palestinian homes. These are demolitions that have been ruled illegal under international law. Does your department purchase equipment from any of these companies that profit from the Israeli occupation? Please cancel any contracts with these companies and refuse to do business with them until they stop supplying the Israeli government. We should not support companies that knowingly profit off of illegal activity.”

 

While it is good to send these messages directly to your government offices and officials, we can amplify the scrutiny of these agencies by also making these messages public, tweeting your questions to them and posting your questions to their Facebook pages. Remember to tag your local official or agencies and Include a link to this page of the Kumi Now website along with the hashtags #KumiNow and #Kumi35.

 

Literature

“The House as Tragedy” by Mahmoud Darwish


In one minute the entire life of a house is ended. The house as casualty is also mass murder, even if it is empty of its inhabitants. A mass grave of raw materials intended to build a structure with meaning, or a poem with no importance in time of war. The house as casualty is the severance of things from their relationships and from the names of feelings, and from the need of tragedy to direct its eloquence at seeing into the life of the object. In every object there is a being in pain – a memory of fingers, of a smell, an image. And houses are killed just like their inhabitants. And the memory of objects is killed: stone, wood, glass, iron, cement are scattered in broken fragments like living beings. And cotton, silk, linen, papers, books are torn to pieces like proscribed words. Plates, spoons, toys, records, taps, pipes, door handles, fridges, washing machines, flower vases, jars of olives and pickles, tinned food all break just like their owners. Salt, sugar, spices, boxes of matches, pills, contraceptives, antidepressants, strings of garlic, onions, tomatoes, dried okra, rice and lentils are crushed to pieces just like their owners. Rent agreements, marriage documents, birth certificates, water and electricity bills, identity cards, passports, love letters are torn to shreds like their owners’ hearts. Photographs, toothbrushes, combs, cosmetics, shoes, underwear, sheets, towels fly in every direction like family secrets broadcast aloud in the devastation. All these things are a memory of the people who no longer have them and of the objects that no longer have the people – destroyed in a minute. Our things die like us, but they aren’t buried with us.

 

From A River Dies of Thirst by Mahmoud Darwish, who is regarded as the Palestinian national poet.

Resources

“Sumoud” (video): https://youtu.be/g3R9E6T-rRU

 

“Resisting Occupation, Constructing Peace” (video) https://vimeo.com/68226996

 

“Empire Files: Home Demolitions for Illegal Settlements Surging” (video) https://youtu.be/-sGSRLrE-is

 

Jeff Halper, Obstacles to Peace: A Reframing of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (book) https://icahd.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/1/2017/07/Obstacles-to-Peace-May-2016.pdf

 

Jeff Halper, An Israeli in Palestine (London: Pluto Press, 2011).

 

Here are two other organizations are focused on the issue of demolitions:

 

The Mennonite Palestine Israel Network (MennoPIN) exists to seek justice and peace for the people of Palestine and Israel from a Mennonite perspective. https://www.mennopin.org

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) has a “Demolition Watch” which tracks the demolition of Palestinian homes and structures and measures the impact upon the Palestinian people. https://www.unrwa.org/demolition-watch

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