Areej Ja’fari writing from Deheisheh refugee camp, occupied West Bank
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| Deir Rafat (Areej Ja’fari) |
From that day I started my new life. I was very scared at the beginning as I approached the Israeli soldiers at the checkpoints even though I had a permit to enter Jerusalem. These feelings of fear vanished the moment I reached some of the destroyed villages of my friends’ families and neighbors. Driving from the Dheisheh refugee camp, crossing the checkpoint and entering the land we were dispossessed of 1948, is like I am in a different country. The green trees, fresh air, no houses, and beautiful landscape that I have not seen in many countries I have visited around the world.
I felt a change inside me when my companions and I saw the Deir Rafat sign on the left side of the road. I could feel my heart racing. I could not wait anymore, I wanted to jump from the car and stand on the land. I wanted to scream so that everyone on this earth could hear me, “This is my village. I am from here!”
Now, I see everything like a movie playing repeatedly in my head over and over again. It is like a painted mural in front of me. I could not believe that this was my village. The pictures that I have drawn in my head from my grandfather stories are nothing compared to the beautiful scenes I was observing with my own eyes.
When I left the car and walked inside the monastery, I got a feeling I never had before, a feeling when your heart is empty and something is filling it. I did not know exactly what this feeling was until now! I didn’t feel that two eyes were enough for me at that moment. I needed and wanted more so I can see the whole village at once. We went down the valley behind the monastery. We saw a destroyed well; the village had nine wells as my grandfather told me. It was heartbreaking when I saw the well was a garbage dump — it should be beautiful and clean with water for drinking.
We continued by car to see olive groves and cacti on both sides of the small roads. Cacti and olives trees are signs of life and inhabitants in that area. We proceeded a bit further, walking and saw some Bedouin tents and their livestock. We climbed a little bit of the hill and some ruins of the village emerged. We saw part of a destroyed house. My heart was filled with strange feelings and my mind was going back and forth between Deir Rafat and Dheisheh. Why can’t my family and I live here in Deir Rafat peacefully? Why can’t my grandfather come back to his land to planet his olive trees as he used to do with his father before 18 July 1948?
I laid down on one of the ruined walls of a house and kept watching the clear blue sky. At that moment I felt the sky was very close and I wanted to hide in it to stay in Deir Rafat. As the clouds passed over, I kept breathing the air again and again as if I could not have enough of it.
I collected some flowers and za’atar baladi. We drove past the well to the other side of the village, with more of the olive trees on both sides of the road and saw a Bedouin tent. A woman there invited us to enter, she knew some of my relatives, and she also told us that they pay 2,000 shekels (about 6,000 USD) every 20 days to the Beit Shemesh Municipality for the tent they live in. I would pay anything and everything to live there, where I should be living. Instead, I am living in a zoo and struggling for my basic rights.
I planted three flowers that I brought with me from Bethlehem near the well. One was for my great-grandfather, the other for my grandfather, and the last one for my family. My village is already beautiful and my flowers will not add to it. Nor did plant them because I will return after 20 years to claim ownership of the land where I planted the flowers. I own the land now and I owned it then, I do not need any evidence. I planted them as a gift to the land I loved even before we met and as my guide to the light at the end of the tunnel. I hope my land liked the gift.
It is time to wake up from this dream, time to return to the Dheisheh refugee camp, which I like, but to which I don’t feel a sense of belonging. It is time to face my family, they were all anxious to know how home looked like, where exactly did I go. I couldn’t reply more than that it’s the most beautiful place I have ever seen.
But I got frustrated after all that joy, my mother wanted so much to also go and see the village. I still cannot go see my grandfather, who has a lot of memories in Deir Rafat: of his childhood, his house, his mother’s grave and his youth. Yet, he cannot go there to visit and I can. It is an unfair world.
Areej Jafari is origionally from the village of Deir Rafat and was born and raised in Dheisheh refugee camp. She holds a BS in Computers and Information Systems from Bethlehem University and currently works at the Ibdaa Cultural Center in Dheisheh refugee camp.
phishy said,
July 8, 2008 at 6:42 pm
Just know that not all westerners support Israel. Those who do have been brainwashed with years of propaganda and simply don’t know or understand the situation. This story really pulls at my heart as the more I learn the angrier I get. I hope someday you can return to that land in peace, without papers, without IDF soldiers, without checkpoints. No one can understand what it’s like over there unless they’ve seen it and smelt it with their own eyes. Just imagine tomorrow your home is taken from you, and if you attempt to return, you can and will be killed. Would you just up and leave and be ok with it? I’d fight back however I could, and when you are trapped in refugee camps surrounded by the enemy, your options are limited.
Every single American should be forced to read stuff like this, with a footnote about the 30$ billion a year the US gives Israel in “aid packages”
Your tax dollars at work, keeping this poor woman from enjoying a Peaceful life in the home she rightfully deserves.
Put yourself in their shoes then tell me if you could support this occupation. I’ve come to the conclusion that the long sordid history of the Jews being kicked out of just about every country on earth have merit. I believe there was a reason, and we’re witnessing it.
Any group that teaches outsiders are not human and should be killed, should NOT be getting tax dollar support. Why isn’t NATO and the UN invading Israel?
for a better understanding of what is happening there, if you can find it, watch :
“From Beirut to Bosnia” a banned discovery channel special. If you ever wondered what could lead these people into fighting back with suicide bombers, you’ll find the answers there, right smack in the middle of part1of3.
THIRD GENERATION REFUGEE IN HER OWN LAND « Muslim in Suffer said,
July 9, 2008 at 2:17 am
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