Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, November
2006, pages 26-27
Special Report
Creative Resistance: The Nassar Family’s “Tent of
Nations”
By Ben White
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With the illegal Neve Daniel settlement
looming in the background, “Juliet” lies on her
tomb (Photo Ben White). |
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AMID THE OLIVE trees and rocks, in the stone amphitheaters and
shaded groves, young residents of Bethlehem’s refugee camps
working alongside European volunteers presented “Romeo and
Juliet,” Shakespeare’s immortal drama of the warring
Capulet and Montague families. Families and friends followed the
cast around, enjoying the fruits of the children’s summer
camp project. As the play came to a close, “Juliet” lay
motionless on the sarcophagus; on the hillside behind her could
be seen the red roofs of the Neve Daniel settlement.
In this small corner of Palestine, on land that is under direct
threat of confiscation, the Tent of Nations project was doing what
it does best: “connecting people to their land,” in
the words of co-founder Daoud Nassar. Indeed, both project
and play embody the decades-long conflict in all its injustice,
frustration, and hope.
The Nassars’ land, on which the Tent of Nations is based,
has been in the family’s possession since 1916, a time span
that encompasses Ottoman rule, the British Mandate, Jordanian administration
and Israeli occupation. The story of this family land, neighboring
the village of Nahalin in the Bethlehem district, is intertwined
with the tumultuous history of Palestine.
The most recent chapter began in 1991, when the Israeli military
initiated proceedings to confiscate the Nassars’ land. Unlike
so many unfortunate Palestinian landowners, however, the Nassar
family still had its ownership documents from all the regimes that
had come and gone in the region.
But while the court battle stagnated, and with the second intifada
underway, Jewish settlers from the illegal Neve Daniel colony often
took matters into their own hands, coming down into the valley
with machine guns, vandalizing the infrastructure, and threatening
to seize the property themselves. Nevertheless, it is in the courts
that the land’s fate ultimately looks set to be decided.
The Israeli military currently is “studying” the findings
of a comprehensive report produced by an Israeli land expert hired
by the Nassar family. His mission took him to the imperial archives
of London and Istanbul to seek confirmation of the land’s
registration papers. These extraordinary measures—all undertaken
so the Nassars can retain what is rightfully theirs—have
made it unlikely that the Israel military committee can cite a
plausible loophole, despite its time-wasting prevarications.
The legal battle is being waged not only for the sake of his own
family’s property, explained Nassar. Due to quirks of Ottoman
land registration procedures, the struggle also has encompassed
the land of several villagers from nearby Nahalin and Artas. This
is a “very important” aspect for the family, Daoud
said, for it will be “a big achievement”—perhaps
symbolically more than anything—to succeed in retaining all
the land.
The cost to the Nassars has been high, with legal expenses to
date estimated at nearly $130,000, much of it still due. Indeed,
the legal challenge was possible only as a result of the support
the family has received from its fledgling international contacts,
primarily in Germany and Switzerland, although reaching the UK
and U.S. as well. “People have sent faxes to their governments,” Nassar
noted, “as well as making donations through our associations
in Europe.”
Most individual contributions have been small, he added, highlighting
the fact that donors are usually “ideologically motivated” to
see the land remain in the hands of its Palestinian owners. The
annual olive tree planting campaign has helped forge further links
abroad, he said, citing the participation in 2003 of Jews for Justice
for Palestinians and European Jews for a Just Peace. There is also
the ongoing presence of international volunteers, who live on the
land for as long as a year, assisting in the upkeep of the property
and various other activities.
Despite the violence of both the settlers and the occupation bureaucracy,
the Nassars’ land has lay fallow—hence the development
of the Tent of Nations project. Its focus is, simply, the land
and the youth. With perhaps intentional irony, Nassar describes
it as “building facts on the ground,” on land that
is particularly vulnerable to confiscation; providing educational
and cultural resources for local youth; and bringing together people
of different backgrounds for the cause of peace and understanding.
During the course of the past summer, the land hosted camps that
brought together Muslim and Christian Palestinians from Bethlehem
and the refugee camps for games, activities, and—not least—Shakespeare.
Nassar described the program’s intent “to bring people
outside their prison, to move people outside the city,” as
a way to counter the danger of a growing disconnection between
urban Palestinians and their land—the result of the ongoing
Zionist-driven fragmentation between “Palestinians from Palestinians,
cities from cities, people from their land.” It is this people-land
relationship that Nassar is most keen to strengthen.
In the fall, the Tent of Nations will be celebrating olive harvest
season, and is considering hosting a local farmers’ market.
The Nassars also have set up a computer literacy class for women
in Nahalin village, led by Daoud’s wife, Jihan—a new
undertaking that signals the family’s desire ultimately to
move toward providing vocational training for Palestinian youth.
The creativity and resourcefulness of the Tent of Nations and
the Nassar family is in stark contrast to Israel’s rapacious
settlement expansion and the strangulation of Palestinian villages
the area has witnessed in recent years. For decades, the Gush Etzion
settlement bloc has spearheaded Jewish colonization south of Bethlehem,
and with the construction of Israel’s annexation wall, villages
such as Nahalin, Husan, Wadi Fukin and Battir are set to become
a cluster of self-enclosed ghettoes sandwiched between the Green
Line and annexed Israeli colonies.
The long-term sustainability of life in the villages already appears
to be disappearing behind loops of bared wire and fences, rendering
expansion impossible and cutting off vital agricultural land.
During the course of the intifada the “boundaries” of
the settlements in the area have been regularly expanded, and in
2003 the Betar Illit colony (which can be clearly seen from the
Tent of Nations) received a fifth of all new settlers to arrive
in the occupied territories during the first six months of the
year.
All of which makes decisions made by Palestinians like Daoud Nassar
about how best to resist Zionist colonization and occupation most
pressingly pertinent. “Resistance” commonly is understood
to refer to the violence of groups such as Hamas or the al-Aqsa
Martyrs Brigades—or, less frequently, to the civil disobedience
engaged in by the likes of the local anti-annexation wall committees
and the International Solidarity Movement. But it is another kind
of “resistance” that most animates Nassar.
“Frustration has the potential to be translated into huge
creative power,” he maintains. This kind of “positive
building,” he believes, can “produce results that encourage
me, as a Palestinian, to remain, and acts as a positive sign to
others—it is resistance.”
Citing the Palestinian economy’s dependence on Israeli goods,
he insisted, “This is unnecessary—we should focus more
on developing our own industries and economy, and educating our
children to look after their streets, their neighbourhood, their
cities. This is also muqawama [resistance].”
As lawyers ruminate and Israeli bulldozers prepare the path for
the latest section of the wall, the Tent of Nations holds fast
to this vision of resistance—planting olive trees, connecting
children to the land, bringing international witnesses and, perhaps
most important of all, steadfastly remaining on the land.
The Nassars can be contacted via e-mail at <tnations@p-ol.com>.
Ben White is a free-lance journalist based in Palestine. His
Web site is <http://www.benwhite.org.uk/>. |