View from Damascus:
Internal Refugees from Golan's 244 Destroyed Syrian Villages
By JoMarie Fecci *
Washington Report on Middle Eastern Affairs
June 2000
The heart of the matter is the Golan. There can be no peace in the region
without the return of the Heights to Syria.
For Syria the occupied Golan is more than simply 1,250 square kilometers of
land. Before 1967, according to Madhat Saleh Al-Saleh, member of parliament,
there were 249 Arab villages there. After the Israelis occupied the area, 244 of
those villages were destroyed and the 147,000 inhabitants forced to leave. Only
five Syrian villages still remain in the part of Golan that Israel occupies.
These villages, in the mountainous north of Golan, were spared because U.N.
forces arrived before they could be destroyed.
The displaced Golanis and their families now number about 500,000, most still
living together in the places where their Internally Displaced Persons (IDP)
camps were set up around Syria. The Israelis built 42 Jewish settlements in the
area they occupied.
“The problem as portrayed by the Western media is ‘what will happen to these
settlers?’” says Al-Saleh. “What is never mentioned are the people who
were
kicked out in the first place. Now there are 500,000 people from the occupied
Golan who are forcibly prevented from going home.”
The Golan Displaced
Three men excitedly hunch over a map of the Golan in Sati al-Ahmad’s office.
They are marking the place where their village used to be—just near the
eastern
bank of Lake Tiberius.
For over 30 years these men have been “temporary” residents of what started
out
as an IDP camp near Damascus. They gave their camp the name Bteha, which was the
name of their village. The streets, too, are named after those of Bteha. The
village itself was destroyed in 1967.
As a young man, Suleim al-Ali used to swim and fish in Lake Tiberius. “I
remember my land. I had olives, wheat and chickpeas. I inherited the land from
my grandfather. I wasn’t ‘rich,’ but I was able to live normally with my
family
there. I was a farmer, but now I am in a city. Life is stressful—I have no
land
to work—there is just poverty and boredom,” says Al-Ali.
The government has tried to ameliorate the conditions of the Golan refugees.
They were given priority for public service jobs and places in universities.
While their children were able to adapt, the older generation has remained set in the traditional ways of the fellah.
When they were first displaced, the “new” Bteha was a refugee camp. Over the
years the government built permanent dwellings for the residents. However,
according to Antoine Chamoun, “The people refused to live in apartments. They
wanted to reconstruct and live as they had been, in small villages of 10
families. But building a village costs more than building an apartment block.”
The original simple single-family houses the government eventually built have
been expanded by residents as their family size grew. Now there are 22,000
people living in “new” Bteha. Al-Ahmad, as the president of the Municipal
Council, represents them. He was 17 years old when he left the village he still
remembers in his dreams.
“I remember very well what the Israelis did with us,” he says. “When it
began,
we fled the house to avoid the bombing. We were hiding in the fields near the
village and they found us and made us get down on our knees in a semi-circle
with our hands behind our heads and they emptied our pockets and took our
stuff—even watches and identity cards.”
Mohieddine al-Omar had just harvested his wheat. He left it behind along with
all his possessions when he fled. He thought he was leaving his house for only a
few days. “Now there’s nothing left—no artifacts, no photos, nothing. But
I
never stop speaking to my children of the beauty and richness of our region. I
remember every tree,” says Al-Omar.
The land is even important to those who have built successful new lives for
themselves in Damascus or elsewhere. Mohammad Ali Bouri speaks several languages
and has an excellent situation in Damascus. He fled on foot, with his mother and
siblings, when the bombing started around his village back in 1967. But his
success in Damascus hasn’t lessened his desire to return to the place where he
was born.
“Every villager who was made to leave still has land in his name,” Bouri
explains. “We would like to go back to our lands. Every one of us wants to
live
with our grandsons on our own land.”
The people of Bteha will not forget what the Israelis did to them. But they are
willing to live side-by-side in peace after the Israelis withdraw from Golan.
“We go toward peace sincerely. If the Israelis want peace, let them make it
with
us,” says Al-Ali. “Inshallah, sooner or later there will be peace and we
will
see the east bank of Tiberius. Then maybe we can swim in the lake again.”
On The Syrian Side of the Cease-Fire Line
The rich soil and availability of water combined with the varied geography make
this area an agricultural paradise—with the fruits of all seasons available at
the same time. The Jabal al Shaikh, or old man mountain (Mount Hermon), so named
because it remains snow-capped all year round, provided the region with a
plentiful source of pure mountain water. Now the the highest peaks on Jabal al
Shaikh are crowned by two Israeli radar surveillance installations.
In Haddar, close to the cease-fire line, villagers are pruning the dead wood
from apple trees, preparing for spring. Naif Rikab, 57, looks up to the mountain
that dominates the landscape, then says simply, “We want peace and our land
back. Who doesn’t want peace? But it doesn’t mean we don’t go on with our
normal
lives.”
He cuts a few more branches from the apple trees before speaking lovingly about
the sweetness of his figs. Land for Rikab is not “real estate,” it is part
of
his identity.
His village has been separated from its sister village, Madjal Shams, on the
Israeli side of the cease-fire line, ever since 1967, when the Israelis erected
a “technical fence.” To communicate with relatives in Madjal Shams, Rikab
must
stand on one side of the “shouting valley” at Wadi Sulah, and speak to them
via
megaphone while they stand on the other side.
Remembering Quneitra
Merkava tanks firing can also be heard across the “shouting valley.” The
Israelis are training, as they do almost every day, on their side of the
cease-fire line, and the sound seems an echo of the past in the ghost city of
Quneitra.
“Neat and orderly” rows of collapsed concrete houses are a surreal and
silent
witness to the methodical destruction the Israeli forces intentionally wrought
upon the entire city as they pulled back from Quneitra in 1973, leaving it on
the Syrian side of the line.
Some 53,000 people lived here before 1967. Now sheep wander through the rubble
of their homes. The government has left the ghost town as it was found in 1973.
“It was a beautiful city—active and central,” says Suleman Taweed,
remembering
Quneitra. “Now it’s ruins. When [the Israelis] were there we didn’t know
what
they were doing. When we saw it destroyed, we were shocked. What happened to the
city was uncivilized.”
* JoMarie Fecci is a photojournalist based in the New York City area.
Source: http://www.washington-report.org/backissues/062000/0006010.html