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Avi -- Levy -- Only the knafeh is still sweet -- 04.14.04

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Ed. Note:
these two articles were submitted by Avi in late January, but they have no expiration date.

1. Only the knafeh is still sweet
By Gideon Levy

NABLUS, West Bank - The knafeh here is still the best in the world,
living up to its reputation. In the early evening, Abu Salha's pastry
shop, by the side of the road that climbs to the Refidiya neighborhood,
is deserted, the shelves almost empty. A salesperson wearing transparent
gloves slices the traditional sweet oriental hot cheese delicacy, the
taste of which is the only thing that remains unchanged in this beaten
and battered city.




From one visit to the next, one sees Nablus declining relentlessly into
its death throes. This is not a village that's dying behind the concrete
obstacles and earth ramparts that cut it off from the world; this is a
city with an ancient history, which until just recently was a vibrant,
bustling metropolis that boasted an intense commercial life, a large
major university, hospitals, a captivating urban landscape and age-old
objects of beauty.

An hour's drive from Tel Aviv, a great Palestinian city is dying, and
another of the occupation's goals is being realized. It's not only that
the splendid ancient homes have been laid waste, not only that such a
large number of the city's residents, many of them innocent, have been
killed; the entire society is flickering and will soon be extinguished.
A similar fate has visited Jenin, Qalqilyah, Tul Karm and Bethlehem, but
in Nablus the impact of the death throes is more powerful because of the
city's importance as a district capital and because of its beauty. A
cloud of dust and sand envelops the city, which gives the impression of
being a combat zone during a cease-fire; its roads are scarred, its
electricity poles and telephone booths are shattered, government
buildings have been reduced to heaps of rubble. But the true wound lies
far deeper than the physical destruction: an economic, cultural and
social fabric that is disintegrating and a generation that has known
only a life of emptiness and despair. More than any other place in the
territories, a state of anarchy is palpably close here.

There is no city as blocked and sealed as Nablus. For the past three and
a half years it has been impossible to maintain even a semblance of
ordinary day-to-day life here. It is impossible to leave or enter. Some
200,000 people are prisoners in their city. The checkpoints at Beit Iba,
Azmurt and Hawara, which cut off the city from all directions, are the
strictest roadblocks in the West Bank. Even women in labor and elderly
people have a hard time crossing, and most of the city's residents no
longer even try.

Nablus also suffers from a very large number of casualties. In the
latest Israel Defense Forces operation in the city, which was given the
devilish name of "Still Waters," no fewer than 19 civilians were killed,
six of them children, and 200 were wounded, according to a report of the
Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group. These are the dimensions of a
large-scale terrorist attack, only without the public attention, and
it's all happening in a period of significant respite in Palestinian
terrorism. Who is going to investigate this wholesale killing and the
killing of children, including Mohammed Aarj, 6, who was shot while
standing in his yard, eating a sandwich? Afterward, the IDF refused to
allow an ambulance to evacuate him, according to the Palestinians.

Atrocities have been perpetrated here under cover of the total media
disregard of the events, residents of Nablus claim. Neighbors saw Abud
Kassim being held by soldiers, and then a gunshot was suddenly heard: he
was killed in his yard; Ala Dawiya was found dead with nine bullets in
his chest; Fadi Hanani, Jibril Awad and Majdi al-Bash were shot to death
at short range, according to the testimonies; the civilian Muain al-Hadi
and his cousin Basel were ordered to escort Israeli soldiers as a "human
shield," contrary to the explicit ban on the use of this procedure. No
one in Israel heard about any of these events and no one will
investigate them.

Within this reality live tens of thousands of people who have done no
wrong. What's being inflicted on them is known as collective punishment
and it is considered a war crime. They get up in the morning without
knowing what the IDF has wrought in their city during the night and what
it will do during the day. Most residents have long since lost their
livelihood. Of course, it's possible to argue that they brought it all
on themselves because of the terrorist attacks that originated in the
city, but that argument cannot justify all the killing and wrongdoing.
In the meantime, despite everything, some people are still buying
delightful knafeh from Abu Salha.






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