PalestineRemembered.com  The Home of Ethnically Cleansed & Occupied Palestinians Satellite View Search Donate Contact Us النسخة العربية
 Home    Pictures     Maps   Oral History   Zionist FAQ  Zionist Quotes    The Conflict 101   R.O.R. 101    Site Members   About Us
About Us
Maps
Refugee Camps
Acre
Baysan
Bethlehem
Beersheba
Gaza
Haifa
Hebron
Jaffa
Jericho
Jerusalem
Jinin
Nablus
Nazareth
al-Ramla
Ramallah
Safad
Tiberias
Tulkarm
Guest Book
Satellite View
Videos
Register
     Donate       
Contact Us
Useful Links
Grass stains on Canada's hands: Why are feds subsidizing the refurbishment of a park built on razed Palestinian towns?
Post Your Comment
eMail to a friend  
Return to 'Imwas

Posted on December 21, 2007

Jesse Rosenfeld

Ramallah, Palestine ¿ It¿s easy to forget, while soaking up the tranquillity along with happy picnickers under the pine trees, that Canada Park is steeped in a disturbing controversy.

The fact is, the Park in the Latrun Valley sits on the occupied West Bank on the site of two Palestinian villages, Imwas and Yalu, destroyed by Israel in the 1967 war. The two were located just off the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway.

The green space also known as Ayalon and established in 1973 through donations to the Jewish National Fund of Canada, is currently the focus of a renewed JNF fund drive.

It¿s also at the centre of activist efforts by both Palestinian and Jewish human rights groups eager to share this terrain¿s obscured history with the Israeli public.

Next month the independent Palestinian rights organization Al-Haq officially releases a report on Canada Park placing the onus for violating international law on Israel, JNF Canada and the Canadian government.

The document, which was shown to former villagers on December 3, combines their affidavits as well as the recorded depositions and writings of Israeli soldiers serving during the displacement with maps, photos and legal analyses.

One of those giving testimony was Al-Haq activist Ahmad Abu Gaush, a refugee from Imwas and a participant in the Imwas Village Committee, which presses for the right of villagers to return.

Sitting in a Ramallah coffee shop, he describes the terror and confusion of the early hours of June 5, 1967.

"My family left an hour before the soldiers reached us," he says. "We walked through the mountains for 32 kilometres with no food or water until we reached Ramallah." As we look at photos of Imwas before its destruction, he reminisces about the calm beauty of the village and his feeling that his childhood was stolen.

West Bank Palestinians, he says, were able to visit the area until 1991, but after the first Gulf War the Israeli military erected a checkpoint, barring displaced villagers.

Now, with the construction of the wall, which encompasses the park, access is even more impaired.

"When returning to the park, I had mixed feelings. It¿s very hard standing on the ruins of where you used to live while seeing people enjoying themselves," he says.

John Reynolds, a legal researcher with Al-Haq, says, "The forcible transfer of people from their villages and the destruction of those villages are defined as a grave breach of the Geneva Convention in the category of war crimes.¿¿

The state of Israel, he says, bears the primary responsibility, but as a charitable organization the onus is also on the JNF. But Reynolds fingers the Canadian government as well, because the money to build Canada Park was subsidized by tax exemptions.

While the maps of pre- and post-1967 Israel indicate otherwise, the JNF has argued that the park is in 1948 Israel. Joe Rabinovitch, the organization¿s national director, speaking from Montreal, says Al-Haq¿s claims about rights violations "are ludicrous and have no foundational basis in law."

The villages were destroyed, he says, for security reasons. "There were Palestinians lobbing shells onto the Jerusalem-Tel Aviv highway."

Walking around the park, the only visible signs of previous inhabitants are a crumbling cemetery with stones engraved in Arabic and a series of old village walls.

Some of these near the park entrance bear rows of plaques to Canadian donors ¿ the city of Ottawa, the Metropolitan Toronto Police Department, former Ontario premier Bill Davis and Toronto city councillor Joe Pantalone.

(Pantalone, speaking from Toronto, says he wasn¿t aware when the donation was made that the park might have crossed Israel¿s borders. "Issues of property compensation will eventually have to be addressed in this situation," he says, "but we need parkland everywhere.")

That the green space has no visible signage about the forgotten earlier inhabitants doesn¿t surprise Eitan Bronstein of Zochrot, a primarily Jewish-Israeli group that educates the public about Israel¿s creation of Palestinian refugees.

"For Israel, it¿s better not to show the history, because if you know the history, you have to take responsibility," he says. In 2005, Zochrot petitioned the High Court of Justice to force the JNF to install signs acknowledging the existence of the villages.

The JNF had posted descriptions of previous eras but failed to mention the Palestinian presence. The High Court ruled in favour of Zochrot, and the JNF was made to install two signs. Both of these have since been vandalized or taken down.

Wandering along the rocky paths, I discover many people have no idea what existed here before ¿ though one resident of a nearby kibbutz acknowledges that some in her community boycott the park because of the location and the evictions. Soon, however, she cuts the conversation short to return to her picnic.

Jesse Rosenfeld is a Canadian freelance journalist based in Ramallah. With files from Dina Awad.

Click here to view this article at Now Toronto

Disclaimer

The above documents, article, interviews, movies, podcasts, or stories reflects solely the research and opinions of its authors. PalestineRemembered.com makes its best effort to validate its contents.

   

Post Your Comment
Please be respectful, humble and considerate; any abusive or disrespectful comments will be deleted promptly.

Name/User Id
eMail Address*
Language
Comments with URL links will be rejected

*It should be NOTED that your email address won't be shared, and all communications between members will be routed via the website's mail server.

 

 
Return to 'Imwas

What is new?

-Gaza Jail Break
-Arabic version now available - النسخة العربية للموقع الان متوفرة
-Nakba Oral History Video Podcast: Over 370 Oral History interviews (including 1,350 hours of recording) can be viewed now online.
-Videos:Documenting the destroyed villages in video: Tracing all that remains since Nakba.
-Videos: Responding to Zionist Propaganda
-Satellite View & Google Earth: Over 6,000 placemarks identifying all destroyed towns, W. Bank & Gaza Strip Towns, & refugee camps.
-Interview:The ethnic cleansing of Palestine: George Galloway interviews Israeli Historian Ilan Pappe.
-For Palestinians, memory matters. It provides a blueprint for their future By George Bisharat.
-Zionist FAQ now available in Hebrew שאלות שציונים שואלים, עכשיו בעברית
-Video: The Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer report on the influence of the Israel Lobby on U.S. Foreign Policy
-The Nakba - an event that did not occur (although it had to occur) By Eitan Bronstein
-The Palestinian-Israeli conflict for beginners

Home | Mission Statement | Zionist FAQ | Maps | Refugees 101 | Zionism 101
Zionist Quotes | R.O.R. 101 | Pictures | Towns Listing | Ethnic Cleansing 101 | Search
Chronology | Site Tour | Profile | Guest Book | What's New? | FAQ | Links | Looting 101 | Contact
Oral History | DONATE

? 1999-2006 PalestineRemembered.com all rights reserved. All Pictures are copyright of their respective owners.