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Moriel Rothman

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The JNF: Planting Trees or Uprooting Families?

Posted: 11/23/11 03:42 PM ET

Remember dropping pennies into those blue JNF boxes in your synagogue and JCC growing up?

In a few days from now, on November 28th, the JNF, under the guise of "Himnuta," will use the pennies dropped into those blue boxes towards the expulsion of a Palestinian family, the Sumarin family, from their home in the occupied East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan.

The Jewish National Fund was set up in 1901 to purchase land in the Land of Israel on behalf of the Jewish People. The JNF also has become Israel's forestry service, and is known for its ecological work. However, in addition to all of the important environmental work the JNF does, there is sadly a dark side.

Himnuta, JNF's shadowy subsidary company, is part of that dark side. Established in the 1930s "mainly to circumvent legal restrictions" on the JNF's land dealings, Himnuta has been active over the past few decades in obtaining Palestinian land over the green line, and transferring the land to the hands of Jewish settlers.

The JNF, a United Nations NGO that has a "4-star rating from Charity Navigator" and "earned the Better Business Bureau seal of approval," does not want to be perceived as an extremist, right wing organization responsible for the expulsion of Palestinian families in the some of the most sensitive areas of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Thus, they carry out their more shady dealings through Himnuta.

Search the word "Himnuta" on the JNF's website and you will find zero results. Search the word Himnuta on Israel's Company Registrar, and you will find a company whose offices are located in the JNF's Jerusalem headquarters. You will see that out of Himnuta's 30,000,000 company shares, 30,000,000 of them are owned by the JNF. You will see that the head of Himnuta, David Lazarus, also serves as JNF-KKL's CFO.

Himnuta is part of the JNF.

And on November 28th, unless there is enough of an international outcry to convince the JNF to change its plans, the JNF/Himnuta will expel the Sumarin family from their house in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan.

Twelve members of the family currently live in the house, which was built by a member of their family prior to Israeli occupation of East Jerusalem in 1967. The Sumarin family includes five children, a pregnant mother, and a grandfather on dialysis. The house is directly inside the City of David National Park, next to the visitor center run by ELAD, a powerful settler organization (with a budget larger than the seven largest Left Wing NGOs in Israel combined) whose purpose, according to their articles of incorporation, is Judaizing (ie. de-Arabizing) Silwan.

In the mid-1980s, the Israeli government took legal possession of the Sumarin home under what is known as the Absentee Property Law. In short, this law is used by Israel to take over land belonging to Israeli Arabs or Palestinians. If an owner is not physically present, the land can be given to the Custodian of Absentee Properties. The Custodian almost always either transfers the property to Jewish ownership or allows the State to use it for Jewish needs.

More specifically: The law includes a stipulation that if the owner of a house in East Jerusalem is residing in "an enemy country," the house may be transferred to the Custodian. The enactment of the law was possible in the case of the Sumarin family because the original owner of the house, Musa Sumarin, passed away in 1983. At the time of his death, all three of his sons- unilaterally declared as "heirs" of the house by the Israeli government- were out of the country (one in Jordan, two in Saudi Arabia). As such, the State declared that the property should be considered Absentee Property, and the Sumarin property was subsequently transferred to the Custodian for Absentee Properties.

Then, in 1991, the Custodian then transferred the Sumarin property directly to JNF-subsidiary Himnuta, along with seven other properties in Silwan.

As attorney and expert on Jerusalem Danny Seidemann wrote to in an email:

"Virtually all of the JNF/Himnuta lands in the Wadi Hilweh section of Silwan -- almost 1/3 of the total area -- have been handed over covertly to the settler organization ELAD. On May 5, 1998, senior JNF/Himnuta official Avraham Halleli testified before the Jerusalem District Court: "To the best of my knowledge, all of the JNF areas [in Silwan] were leased by the ILA to the ELAD Association...it is the lands policies of JNF... that [its lands] be leased to Jews for the purposes of Jewish settlement in the Land of Israel."
So will the Sumarin house be transferred to ELAD? There seems to be an extremely good chance. But you can make your own assumptions.

The Sumarin family has been living in their house for decades and they have nowhere else to go. If they are expelled from their house, and ELAD takes over, that will set the tone for all of the houses in Silwan, which are in the scopes of the settlers. This is the first time in five years that there will be an expulsion in Silwan, which is a point of extreme tension, is close to the Old City and Al-Aqsa, and has been the site of violence and clashes in the past.

This expulsion could ignite dormant tensions in Silwan.

But more certainly that igniting violence, if this expulsion is carried out, it will be a sign to the settlers, to ELAD, to the government and, in this case, to the JNF/Himnuta, that they can expel Palestinian families from their houses in Silwan, near the City of David, without too much international outcry/pressure/opposition. And if they can, they will.

How can this expulsion be stopped?

By public outcry. Rabbis for Human Rights and Rabbis for Human Rights-North America have both issued parallel public letter campaigns calling on the JNF not to expel the Sumarins.

Take action:

Support the campaign through Rabbis for Human Rights in Israel (in English).

And through Rabbis for Human Rights-North America.

Donations to both organizations are needed and welcomed.

Moreover, the Solidarity Movement, an Israeli group of activists that originally formed in response to similar injustices in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah a few years ago, is taking action on the ground. There will be a 24-hour vigil of Israeli and international activists present with the Sumarin family and Palestinian activists, starting the day before the potential eviction. To support the Solidarity Movement, click here.

Will this work?

It is impossible to say for sure, but if we make this loud enough, there is a good chance we could at least get the JNF to delay the expulsion, which would give all of us more time to figure out how to expand and strengthen our campaigns and efforts. Combined with the other channels running (potential direct action, legal efforts, Israeli media and awareness campaigns by Israeli and Palestinian partners), this could actually make an impact.

According to Hagit Ofran, "the eviction can be stopped: Himnuta can decide, instead of giving the property to settlers, to give it to the Palestinian family that has lived in it for years."

And according to Danny Seidemann, "In the 1990's Himnuta tried to evict the Gozlan family - which saved Jews in Silwan during the 1929 Palestinian uprising from their home in Silwan. On the other side of town, at Yad vaShem, families like this were being honored as righteous gentiles - here in Silwan they were evicted. A public campaign caused them to desist, and even Ariel Sharon (then Infrastructures Minister) instructed them not to evict the family. Ultimately they gave up - the exposure of the JNF/Himnuta scheme to displace the Gozlan family so sullied their public image that they turned the property to the government of Israel (the family was eventually forced out by the Israeli government in 2005). So there is a precedent allowing public opinion to compel them to act wisely and responsibly."

Influencing the JNF/Himunta is our best shot at stopping the expulsion.

There is a chance. We must act, for the sake of Jewish and humanistic values, and for the sake of peace and justice in Israel and Palestine and Jerusalem.

We have a few days.


A longer version of this post was originally published on the English language website of Rabbis for Human Rights.

 

Follow Moriel Rothman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/MorielRothman

 
 
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05:07 PM on 11/25/2011
I don't believe this nonsense. It sounds like a conspiracy theory. I'm going to donate to the JNF now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Relpo Miraculous
Psychobiological Anthropology
01:57 AM on 11/25/2011
Every day in the Middle East, terrible things take place.

The worst are the material acts of violence and oppression. The second-worst are the lies and distortions of truth that help ensure things don’t get better.

Every day in the West, the lies are echoed, amplified, and invented. This also helps ensure things don’t get better in the Middle East and that they do get worse in the West.

Now I’ve found, from the most unexpected place, a single sentence, an ancient proverb, that explains it all. It comes from the Navahos and it goes like this:

You cannot awaken someone who pretends to be sleeping.

In other words, you cannot convince someone who is not merely mistaken but is deliberately lying. They have abandoned professional ethics, democratic and intellectual norms. They have embraced being propagandists and supporters of authoritarian and bloody regimes.
06:09 PM on 11/24/2011
The owner died, while residing in another country.Those who now want to calim ownership resided in another country. Was there a will, or died the owner intestate? Was the property kept up to code? Where taxes paid? What is the law? Apparently all the procedures were legal and ample time has been given for rebuttanl, etc. Without pertinent details this is just another political incitement story. This impression is further supported by the absense in the lineup of comments which do not belong to an amen-chorus.Politics, unfortunately.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Moriel Rothman
07:03 PM on 11/24/2011
The owner of the house died while residing in his house, not in another country. More importantly, though, you are obscuring the most disturbing element of the Absentee Property Law-- that it is a law that is only applied to Arab houses. Why should the law be applied at all (indeed, many mainstream Israeli political figures spoke strongly against the application of the Absentee Property Law in East Jerusalem. For more information, please research the Klugman Report (1992))?

There was and is an entire family living in the house, which was built by their family members. Why should they have to leave, and why should their property be transferred, in all likelihood, to a Jewish family with no connection to the house or property?

This is not "political incitement," this is an effort to address political injustice.
01:47 PM on 11/25/2011
ok. I stand corrected, if you are right. As I read it, the owner was abroad, died there, and after that familymembers, also abroad, moved in. The law is the Absentee Property Law. That would imply that the owner is absent, eslewhere, usually that means abroad. Is it only applied to Arab houses? Are/were these Arabs citizens of Israel? I looked at the blog, compared the issues with what I was familar with, and it appeared that the Israeli Courts have taken ample time to adjudicate and investigate the matter. Property transfer usually takes place as a rental, or ownership. Transfer implies going from one to another, and thuse there is, of course, no previous connection to the property. If you buy a house, or rent a house, do/did you have previous connection to the property? That is a silly statement. If there is a law, it can be applied, but it should be properly applies. Again, emigrants, who go elsewhere, and foreigners, who do not have resident alien status, may encounter problems everywhere, not only in Israel.
02:15 PM on 11/25/2011
Mr. Rothman, read your own article, specifically paragraphs 3 and 4. It appears from your own text, that Israel was fully in its right to apply the Absentee Property Law. That a family member built a house, does not mean that that same family member, or any member of his family owns that house in perpetuity. Hagit Ofran has written articles which appeared on Huffingtonpost several times, and each time she comes up with a sob story, ignoring WHY evictions occur. One time the statement was, a person was upset, did not go to work, and did not pay the rent, after which that person was evicted. Sob! Sob! If I do not pay the rent in Europe, or in the U.S. I will be evicdted, and so will everyone else. If one does not paya the mortgage, or pays real extate taxes, or has other debts, one is evicted. If one is illegally in a country, and one does not pay rent/mortgage, one is evicted. To have rights, and not be robbed of those rights, one must obey the law of the land, and other laws. Why in the world should Palestinian Arabs, or anyone else for that matter, be judged by other, special standards? The population mix of Jerusalem is about one third (1/3) Arab, the rest is made up of Israelis and others, not Arab. Jerusalem is not occupied territory. The Palestinian city is Al Quds!.
06:04 PM on 11/24/2011
The comment lineup has been parsed to support only one side of the argument. Apparently, that is necessary to make the *argument* of the article stick. Suspect! Other writers have written columns in the past, which did not hold up. This article, obviously, does not hold up either, otherwise there would be no need to eliminate all comment which does not agree with it, or brings up another side. for consideration.

Now, something about absentee ownership from another perspective. I owned real estate in Amsterdam, The Netherlands, and leased it out when I emigrated to the U.S (1967). I had the full intent to return to it later. And, in 1972I was completely ready to move back. I had divorced my husband, and it was for his benefit that we had moved to the U.S. - he did his neursurgery residency in the U.S. I was not able to do so, because just a month earlier, it had been decided in The Netherlands, that the property had to be sold. I had leased the property out, fully furnished, and that included everything. I lost my home - I had bought it and paid for it - and my almost ex husband cashed in the money. I had bought all the furnishings also, which also were lost to me. In the U.S. people have lost their homes the last few years, because others defaulter, not they. Eviction occur internationally Vital.details go missing in the story.
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lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
03:18 AM on 11/24/2011
Thank you for an excellent article exposing some terrible practices.
11:01 PM on 11/23/2011
See http://stopthejnf.org/ for info about the Stop the JNF Campaign. UK readers can support EDM (Early Day Motion) 1677 which has been signed so far by 50 MPs - see http://coordin8.org.uk/app/index.php.

The text reads:
"That this House welcomes the Stop the Jewish National Fund (JNF) Campaign launched on 30 March 2011 by the Palestinian Boycott National Committee, the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network, Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign and others to inform the public about the JNF - Karen Kayemet L'Yisrael, its ongoing illegal expropriation of Palestinian land, concealing of destroyed Palestinian villages beneath parks and forests, and prevention of refugees from returning to their homes; notes that the JNF's constitution is explicitly discriminatory by stating that land and property will never be rented, leased or sold to non-Jews; further notes that the UN rejected the JNF USA's application for consultative status with the Economic and Social Council on the ground that it violates the principles of the UN Charter on Human Rights; regrets that the Prime Minister is a JNF honorary patron; and believes that there is just cause to consider revocation of the JNF's charitable status in the UK."
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lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
10:13 AM on 11/24/2011
Excellent information F&F
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Cynthia Rays
peace in the valley seeker
05:19 PM on 11/23/2011
The property of many Palestinians was taken away when they were out of the country going to college or working. Many Palestinians have to leave temporarily as many higher paying jobs are not available to them.
Some of the people being displaced by the Judaizing of East Jerusalem are the family members of displaced Palestinians from 1948.
The JNF over the years has removed native trees and shrubs including ancient olive trees to plant very combustible pine trees.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
10:14 AM on 11/24/2011
There seems to be no end to the occupation at times or the depths to which Israel will shrink. But thanks for doing a great job of getting as many facts available as possible. The plight of the Palestinians is truly awful.
02:29 PM on 11/25/2011
Salty, you really need to do much better to defend your special charges, the Arabs. All these emotion words do nothing to make a case on their behalf, or against the Absentee Property Law. The writer also must make a case. He is not making any case at all! Is there injustice? Make a case that sticks and has feet.