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The Syrian Golan Heights Under The Israeli Occupation
Visitors to the Golan Heights will see mostly empty area, an expanse
of rolling grassland interlaced- if one looks closely- by crumbled
stone fences. Occasionally, an Israeli settlement, new and
well-tended, will appear at a crossroad.
But a visitor who looks more carefully will see other signs. A line
of stone structures on a hilltop, without roofs or windows, a small
cluster of stone walls in a grove of trees, or simply an area where
the grass is suddenly, rhythmically hummocked.
These are destroyed Syrian Arab villages, where once nearly 130,000
people lived and farmed. They were blown up or razed by Israeli
forces, after Israel took over the heights in the war of 1967. Their
Arab inhabitants were forced out by the fighting or by orders from
the Israeli army. Those who remained were forced by the occupational
authorities to leave within the first week after the occupation.
Most now live in Syria, separated from their homes and land by the
fences and no-man’s-land of the Syrian-Israeli cease -fire line, and
by the enduring conflict.
Israel’s invasion. Of these, 134 were systematically destroyed. The
vast network of stone fences, which still carves the grassy
landscape, marked their pastures, orchards and wheat fields.
Inside Israel, during the1948 war, hundreds of Palestinian villages
were similarly demolished, but most are now difficult or impossible
to see. In the Golan, far from Israel’s urban centers along the
coast, most of the old villages are still visible, in varying
degrees of destruction and decay. They stand as monuments to history
and to a society erased One hundred and thirty-nine Arab villages
flourished in the Golan Heights before by invasion.
The Golan Heights are located in the southwestern part of the Syrian
Arab Republic. The region is 1,850 Square kilometers, and includes
mountains reaching an altitude of 2,880 meters above sea level. The
heights dominate the plains below. The Jordan River, Lake Tiberias
and the Hula Valley border the region on the west. To the east is
the Raqqad Valley and the south is Yarmok River and valley. The
northern boundary of the region is the mountain Jabal al- asaheikh
(Mount Hermon), one of the highest in the Middle East. It is a rich
agricultural area, traditionally farmed by an Arab society
encompassing 108 private farms and 163 villages and towns.
The 1967 War
and the Israeli Occupation of the Golan
In six days of war, Israel
accomplished the expansionist aims that pre-state diplomatic efforts
and previous wars had failed to achieve. The war was a devastating
blow to the Arab regimes. In its conquest of the West Bank from
Jordan and the Gaza Strip from Egypt, the remainder of historic
Palestine came under Israeli control. Sinai Peninsula was occupied
from Eygept. Syria suffered the loss of 1,250 square kilometers of
the Golan Heights, including the provincial capital city of
Quainter.
Israel could not effect a mass expulsion of the Palestinian
population of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1967, but it repeated
expulsion tactics ,it had used against Palestinians in 1948, against
inhabitants of the Golan. Israeli minister of Defense Moshe Dayan
ordered his troops to expel the population of the Golan. As of June
10, 1967, only 6,396 of the pre-war population of 130,000 remained.
After the war all that remained of the two cities, 139 villages and
61 farms were six villages (Majdal Shams, Masadah, Buqatha, Ain
Qinya, Ghajar and S’heita). All of the others had been destroyed. On
1970 S’heita was also destroyed and its population were transferred
to Masadah.
Israeli
Ambition
Israeli interest in the Golan Heights
dates to diligent Zionist efforts, in the 1910s, to have the rich
agricultural area included in the new state of Palestine, where the
Zionist movement hoped to establish the Jewish state. But Europe’s
division of the region in 1919 included the Golan as apart of Syria.
It was not until the Six-Day War in 1967 that Israel succeeded in
seizing the Golan, and promptly began a settlement program to affirm
its control, establishing the Marom Golan settlement one month after
the war’s end. By December1967, the World Zionist Organization had
designed a plan to establish 17-22 settlements, with 45,000-50,000
Jewish settlers, within ten years. Due to a lack of settlers, the
plan fell short: by 1991, the settlers population was only 11,000 in
30 settlements.
Under the Shamir government, Housing Minister Ariel Sharon announced
plans to increase the population to 22,000 by the end of 1992,
mostly by settling Jewish immigrants from the former Soviet Union
and Ethiopia. By spring 1992, the population had topped 13,000.
Nowadays the total number of settlers is estimated to be 18000 in 34
settlements.
Jewish
Settlement: The Annexation Strategy
As in the West Blank and Gaza Strip,
Israel’s settlement program is an elaborate and effective strategy
to annex land through social engineering. Israeli settlements in the
Golan are designed to secure Israel’s claim to the land both by
boosting the Jewish civilian population and by erasing the indicting
evidence of prior Arab habitation.
The Tactic
Erasure
Israel’s settlement strategy employs
several techniques to veil its nature. The most effective is the
placement of Jewish settlements directly over the site of the
destroyed Arab villages, often using the stones of Arab homes to
construct the new Jewish residences and physically overwhelming the
foundation of the original village. The Arab village is erased to
all but the best- trained eye, and a visitor would never know it
existed.
A second technique is to name such settlements with the Hebrew
version of the Arab name, which comes over time to suggest a
continuity of the site and to obscure the destruction and
displacement of the original Arab community. Many Israeli
maps show only the Hebrew names of such sites, although for the
previous thousand or more years they held Arab towns.
A third device is to landscape new
settlement construction with shrubbery and trees imported
fully-grown from the Jordan Valley, to convey a sense both to
residents and visitors that the settlement has been in place for a
far longer period. Settlements can be visually transformed from raw
construction sites to comfortable, verdant communities within a
year.
Expulsion of a People Before the 1967 war, the Golan Heights was
administered as the Syrian province of Quneitra, which embraced 1750
square kilometer. In 1966, the Arab population of the province was
147613.
Israel occupied 70 percent (1250 square kilometer) of the Golan
Heights in the 1967 war. The area, which Israel seized, contained 61
Arab farms and 139 villages and towns, which had held a population
of 130000 Arabs (including 9000 Palestinians who had fled from
northern Palestine in the war 1948). Many of these residents were
evacuated by the Syrian army or fled during the fighting, but Arab
accounts and UN reports also document an Israeli program to expel
those who remained, one similar to that conducted in the West Blank:
terror attacks, threats of death, and forced signatures of documents
agreeing to the residents’ own expulsion. The program was
successful: an Israeli census after the war found only 6296 Arabs,
indicating that approximately 124000 Syrian civilians were expelled.
Within three months, the Israeli army, including the city of
Quneitra, the provincial seat that had held a population of some
25000, had bulldozed 131 of their villages.
Only five Arab villages in the northern highlands by Mount Hermon
remained. With a population of 6392 immediately after the 1967 war,
the Arab villages today hold around 18000. The Arabs maintain
control over only about 6 percent of the original territory: the
rest has been confiscated by Israel for military use or settlement.
Israel extended its civil law and administration to the Golan
Heights in 1981. However, the Syrian residents of the Golan have
refused annexation, and insist on reunification with Syria. Their
resistance has included extensive agricultural projects to secure
their land from Israeli confiscation, and they continue to strive to
develop their own basic services to compensate for Israeli neglect,
like sufficient health care.
Water: The Key to Israel’s Hold?
With Israel’s annual water
consumption of nearly two billion cubic meters already depleting
local resources, water is one of Israel’s principal interests in the
Golan Heights.
The Golan’s territory itself provides one o the water source for
Israel; before the war, the total output of Syrian groundwater wells
in the Golan was only about 12.5 millions cubic meters (mcm). These
days the settler output from the underground water is more than 30
mcm, in addition to more than 45 mcm that they get from artificial
water reservoirs. However, the Golan’s relatively high rainfall
(averaging 1000 mcm annually) supplies two aquifers, one draining
into Lake Tiberius, Israel’s principal reservoir, and the other
rising to form the headwaters of the vital Jordan’s headwaters
(about 500mcm) from Lake Tiberius south to irrigate settlements in
the Negev desert, through a pipeline system known as the National
Water Carrier.
This diversion has resulted in both the depletion and the
salinization of the Jordan River below Lake Tiberius, with
devastating effects on Jordanian agriculture in the Jordan Valley.
Jordan has only partly compensated for this loss by diverting part
of the Yarmuk River southward via a canal. Other Arab engineering
efforts have been forestalled by Israel’s strategic dominance over
the Yarmuk, from the proximate bluffs of the Golan Heights.
Israel’s occupation of the Golan also eliminated all Syrian access
to Lake Tiberius. Prior to 1967, Israel asserted complete control
over the lake, where Syrian Arabs had traditionally fished, by
patrolling the northeastern shore of the lake with armored boats and
launching occasional raids on nearby Syrian villages.
Israeli control of the Golan Heights therefore gives Israel
strategic control over major water sources. Israel is unlikely to
relinquish such control; peace negotiations may find the issue is
one critical stumbling block.
Discriminatory Policies
Israel has taken several
measures to limit the remaining Arabs use of the Golan’s water
supply. The Water Law of 1959 made all water resources the property
of the state, and all water use subject to government approval. The
drilling of pools or artesian wells is forbidden. Rainwater
collection tanks, built by the Syrian Arabs in the northern villages
for irrigation, were metered and taxed, and further construction
forbidden in 1986. Ram Pool, lying in the heart of Arab agricultural
land near the village of Mas’ada and holding between two and three
mcm annually, is closed to Arab use; its water is piped to Jewish
settlements as much as 70 km away.
Israel cannot justify such policies on grounds of general
conservation; as in the West Blank and Gaza Strip, Jewish settler
water consumption in the Golan Heights has been greatly higher than
that allowed to the Golani Arab villagers: as much as 17 times
higher per capita.
The Political Power of
Suffering
Israeli guides to the Golan Heights will say that the stone ruins
which litter the countryside are old Syrian army emplacements,
dating from the inter war period between 1948 and 1967. If they
admit to the existence of the former Syrian residents, they will say
they fled on orders from the Syrian army. They will not admit to
knowing the numbers.
Israeli settlers will even claim that, prior to Israel’s invasion in
1967, very few people lived in the Golan Heights. They will say that
the land was basically empty and unused, and that the Jewish
settlements are filling a void. Syria’s interest in the region, they
claim, is purely hostile, a launching point for an attack on Israel,
from the Height’s higher elevations overlooking the Galilee.
But the ruined villages bear mute testimony to Israel’s interest in
obscuring the truth. They are ruined because they were deliberately
destroyed; they are empty because their residents are not allowed to
return. The sprinkling of new Jewish settlements have no relation to
the stone fences, the organic division of the land effected by
centuries of Arab cultivation.
Syria’s interest in the Golan Heights is complex: military strategic
concern is a factor, as is the political legitimacy of President
Asad in resisting a permanent loss of Syrian territory. But that
legitimacy rests not on pride, but on a fundamental issue: popular
Syrian concern for the loss of a rich land, which sustained a
thriving society. If the inter national community, absorbed by the
complexities of the Palestinian problem, tends to forget the Golan
Heights, or to imagine it an empty area or a purely strategic issue,
this does not erase the memories of the 130000 who lost their homes,
their farms and their livelihoods to Israeli bulldozers.
On what basis can they be asked to forget?
Too often, the forces of
international diplomacy look over the heads of the people to
solutions made of maps and missile agreements. If we have learned
any lesson in the last half-century, it is that such oblivion has
its bitter costs. Care must be taken with people whose pain and
resentment form a smoldering political force in itself, simple
compassion aside. Someday, even the political elites must come to
redefine real-politic to include the experience of the people on the
ground, whose needs have been defined as rights party because of the
political power of their suffering.
source :http://www.jawlan.org/english/golanheights.htm
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