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To Whom it May Concern,
I want to thank you for your informative and otherwise unavailable
coverage and views on your site and in your articles and
photos.
I have read your recent article on the Israeli plans to renovate
Lifta into an "high end" real estate development and am deeply disturbed by it's
content.
What can I do, if anything, to protest this proposed
development? I am the daughter of a man who in 1948,
I have not been back to visit the village since 1990. I've
enjoyed your recent articles and pictures of the region as it has been my only
outlet for viewing and hearing of the area.
I feel violated and at the same time "shackled" not knowing what I
can do to preserve my family's heritage in our beloved
Please let me know if you have any information that would be
helpful in stopping the destruction of what we now call and always will call our
Lifta.
Sincerely,
Nabeha Bages-Zegar
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Dear Malkit,
I admit that I found your piece with Eytan Bronstein about
Reinventing Lifta on our website was too painful and unbearable for me to read
fully, although
I got through most of the first part. Lifta is the village where my mother was
born. She left it wit
She now lives in
I wrote a little bit about my own first visit to Lifta here:
http:// www.ameu.org/uploads/vol31_issue5_1998.pdf
With best regards,
co-founder, The Electronic Intifada
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Hussien
from Lifta
By
Mike Odetalla
My name is Hussein R. I was born in 1917 in the
The
village houses were built mainly of stone,
My family, like most families in our village, was farmers. My
father died when I was 3 years old. My mother raised my sisters and me
wit
In
1947, I got engaged to a local girl from our village. I was only 20 years old at
the time, but at that age, most of the young men were already married and had
children. I delayed getting married in order to work and help support my
sisters. My fiancé, Adiba and I were supposed to be married
later on in the year. Our life was tense that year because of the fighting,
violence, and the feeling of uncertainty all around us. The local villages were
being attacked and raided on a nightly basis by the Haganah, Stern, and Irgun
gangs. These gangs were ruthless and well armed. We were extremely frightened
for our safety because our village was located on the strategic main road to
The people of Dayr Yasin had even signed a non-aggression pact
with the Zionists of the Haganah. This did not stop the Stern Gang, Irgun, and
the Haganah from attacking them. When the attack was finally over, one of the
worst massacres in the history of the war had taken place. The History of the
Haganah mentions that they carried out a massacre "without discriminating among
men and women, children or old people. They finished their work by loading some
of the 'prisoners' who had fallen into their hands onto cars and trucks and
parading them in the streets of
During these dangerous and uncertain times, we decided to try to
at least protect ourselves and property from the Zionist terrorists that were
causing much death and destruction all around
On the morning of December 28, 1947 I had a light breakfast of
tea, cheese, and olives. I then washed, shaved, and went to the local
coffeehouse which was situated on the main road. The men in our village decided
that we should sit outside so that the Zionists would see us as they passed by
and not attempt anything. A group of about 20 men, mostly old, sat outside on
little chairs and drank coffee and played cards.
Later
on that day, we noticed a bus stop in front of the coffeehouse. Some men got out
of the bus, but we didn’t
think much of it, many times people would stop and ask for directions, we
thought that these people were also lost and going to ask us for directions.
This has had happened frequently.
As it turned out, these were no ordinary men; they were members of
the Zionists terrorists groups. They pulled out German made Sten guns from
underneath their coats and began spraying the coffeehouse and patrons. This
continued until their guns were empty, they then threw hand grenades at us,
jumped back on the bus, and left. I had hit the ground as soon as they began
firing and stayed still. I remember seeing my cousin get hit in the chest, stand
up and stumble. He fell directly on top of me. He was dead as soon as he fell.
After the terrorists left, I pushed him off of me and got up. I
was covered in blood, but not injured. I had lost relatives and friends to this
awful terrorist attack. The dead and injured were everywhere. This had been a
message to us from "the peace loving" Zionists who wanted to live with us side
by side. The Zionists had long coveted our village because of its proximity to
the Jerusalem-Jaffa highway and this was a warning to get us to
leave.
Soon
after the terror act on Lifta's coffee house, we were then terrorized repeatedly
into leaving by Menachem Begin's IZL and Yitzhak Shamir's Stern terror gangs. We
had no way of effectively defending ourselves. Many people started fleeing their
homes en masse. We took what we could carry and moved to the Arab controlled
areas of
Soon after our village was emptied of its inhabitant, Ben Gurion
decided that all of the homes that were anywhere near the road should be
demolished.
They demolished our homes, businesses, and farms. Most of us had
nothing to go back to. I went to
In
1953, I returned to the West Bank city of
I am now 87 years old. I have been living as a refugee since we were forced from our homes 56 long years ago! My family home in Lifta still stands today, although I am not allowed to even visit it. There are plans in the works to destroy the ancient houses that still stand in Lifta and build “Luxury homes” for wealthy Jewish immigrants, while the rightful owners are still living in teeming, overcrowded refugee camps. The Right of Return is an individual right. It is up to each individual refugee as to whether he or she chooses to return or be compensated!
http://www.poica.org/casestudies/lifta/
PS...The
historical facts about Lifta came from the book “All
That Remains" by Walid Khalidi...all others were recollections as told to me by
my father in-law. Today he resides in a refugee camp in Ramallah,
Recently,
the Israeli government has issued “land
confiscation”
orders to the dozen or so families who live the vicinity of