NABLUS,
February 11 (IslamOnline.net) – “I was born here in 1924 and my
father was buried in the village’s cemetery only 6 months before people
were forced out back in 1948. The few signs remaining of the
village’s Arab and Islamic identity are under attack, who would
help?”
The
speaker is 81-year old Mohamed Sulaiman Abu Leil and the village is
Lifta, located at the northern and western entrances of Al-Quds
(occupied East Jerusalem).
Lifta,
from where
most Palestinian residents had been forced out after the creation
of Israel in 1948, is the second largest village in Al-Quds,
according to 1945 statistics.
Abu
Leil was speaking, through his tears, to IslamOnline.net about Israeli
plans to wipe out the few remaining Arab marks of the village.
He
was speaking just after spotting two Israeli youths stepping out of a
house, with a girl holding a video camera hot on their heels.
The
girl has just ended shooting a pornographic film inside the house.
The
scene was part of what local inhabitants describe as “an Israeli attempt
to reverse its true Arab Islamic identity”.
For
its part, Al-Aqsa Society of the Reconstruction of Islamic Shrines
said Israelis had turned the old houses of the village into nightclubs
and private property for Jews only.
Every
house has a “Private Property. No Entry” sign emblazoned in Hebrew on its façade, according the Society, based in Umm Al-Fahm,
part of Arab lands seized by Israel in 1948.
Even
Lifta mosque was not spared. It is daubed with graffiti on love
affairs and has empty bottles of wine inside.
Construction
Plot
Israeli
Al-Quds Municipality, for its part, has declared a plan to build a new
Jewish district at the village, which is feared to lead to the
destruction of many old buildings that still defy Israeli plans, in
order for the new constructions to take place.
The
decision raised fury among the inhabitants of the village.
“The
plotted constructions in the village (on the debris of the cemetery)
is no less than an extreme degree of oppression,” Abu Leil said
tearfully.
Complaints
were lodged against the Israeli construction plans, Al-Aqsa Society
said in a statement, a copy of which was obtained by IOL Thursday,
February 10.
Israeli
authorities responded to the protest, considering the village mosque
and cemetery as holy sites – which means they could not be
demolished for the new plan.
The
Society refused a compromise for turning the two sites into public
places for fear they would be turned into restaurants, museums or
exhibitions - as was the case in other 400 villages forcibly evacuated
after the creation of Israel.
Luckier
The
Israeli plan would also ban the return of local inhabitants massively
expelled from the village despite winning court rulings in favor of
their comeback.
Still,
most inhabitants of Lifta are luckier, since they took refuge in
nearby areas in Al-Quds -– unlike over a million other Palestinians
forced from all of the Palestinian territories in 1948 to neighboring
countries.