Hebron and Jerusalem: The Impact of Loss of Control

Washington Watch

January 16, 2023

Dr. James J. Zogby © 

President 

Arab American Institute

At its core, the struggle over the future of Jerusalem isn’t only about religion. Though it may sound sacrilegious to some, the core issue extends beyond historical claims to holy sites or who gets to pray where and when. It’s also about power. Specifically, it’s about Israel’s continuing penchant for flaunting their power, while Palestinians make a last-ditch effort to salvage some shred of control over their lives.  

This power struggle can be viewed through many lenses, but nowhere is it more clearly visible than in the tale of two Palestinian cities—East Jerusalem and Hebron—and the connections that bind their fate.  

In 1994, after an extremist Israeli settler, Baruch Goldstein, massacred 29 Palestinian worshipers in Hebron’s Al Ibrahimi Mosque, the Israelis imposed several repressive measures that particularly impacted Hebron and Jerusalem. The Israelis claimed that they implemented these measures in order to preempt any Palestinian retaliation for the massacre. And so, while an Israeli committed the crime, it was the Palestinians who paid the price.  

In Hebron, Palestinians living in close proximity to the few hundred Israeli settlers who had illegally occupied buildings on Hebron’s Shuhada Street were evicted from their homes. Additionally, the Israeli military deployed over 1,000 well-armed soldiers and closed off major streets effectively shutting down the souq.  

Where thousands of Hebronites once strolled and shopped, now there were empty streets and closed shops with graffiti covering the walls of Arab shops: stars of David, and Hebrew slogans reading "Death to the Arabs” and “Goldstein is our hero.”  

The stress and hardship this placed on Hebron was obvious as was the disruption to the economic and professional well-being of the Palestinians who lived in the neighboring towns and villages of the Hebron district. To protect the settlers traveling from the nearby settlement of Kiryat Arba, the Israeli military established numerous checkpoints and closed side roads.  The situation borders on the absurd. Residents from two Palestinian villages could no longer drive the short distance to Hebron to shop and visit with relatives and friends.  The route was cut by military blockades at two points, roughly 50 meters apart.  Arabs driving from the villages were forced to park on one side and then walk to the next barricade to secure a taxi into Hebron. 

Settler rioting, empty Arab shops, police beatings of Palestinians, the closure of the old city and the destruction of its economy, the daily harassment and pressure—this became daily life of Hebron. 

Equally distressing were the measures the Israelis implemented at the Al Ibrahimi Mosque, the scene of the massacre. They took complete control of the building and physically divided it into Jewish and Muslim sections, with almost two-thirds reserved for a Jewish synagogue. While Jews have relatively free access to the building, Palestinians are forced to wait in humiliating lines and pass through numerous Israeli controlled checkpoints to enter. To add insult to injury, on dates of religious importance to Judaism, Israelis routinely close the entire Mosque and its surroundings to Palestinians. And recently, Israel announced plans to seize land around the Mosque to build an elevator to provide access for Jewish worshippers.   

I say that the fate of Jerusalem and Hebron are connected for two reasons. First, as part of the “protective” measures taken post-Goldstein, Israel instituted the complete closure of East Jerusalem from the rest of the West Bank. This closure was even more complete than the one instituted in Hebron, with profound economic, social, cultural, political, and even psychological consequences for the Palestinian population of East Jerusalem.  

In reality, what Israel calls East Jerusalem encompasses a large swath of the West Bank including 28 Palestinian villages. For decades this metropolitan area served as the hub for the region. It’s where Palestinians shopped, worked, went to the theater, got medical attention and social services. It was the center—and now it was closed. Jerusalemites who economically benefited from employment servicing their compatriots lost their jobs, as did those who lived beyond the boundaries of the now closed city who were unable to navigate the checkpoints to go to work in Jerusalem.  

The absence of jobs and opportunities for the young Palestinians in Jerusalem has produced both cynicism and despair, as has the closure, which, for all intents and purposes, cut the heart of Palestine away from the rest of its body. 

Like their kinfolk in Hebron, as they lost control over their lives and futures, Palestinians in Jerusalem lost hope. And as they witness increasing settlement construction, land confiscations, and home demolitions as part of Israel’s effort to Judaize the city, that loss of hope has turned to resentment and resistance.   

The one place, indeed the only place, where Palestinians feel any semblance of control is at the Haram al Sharif and the al Aqsa Mosque. And this brings me to the second reason why the fate of the two cities is inextricably linked.  

When Palestinians see the increased numbers of heavily guarded Israelis invading the Haram area, the acts of incitement that accompany these “visits,” and the declared intent of Israeli extremists to seize control of the area, they feel profoundly threatened. Their reaction is not as Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, a senior member of the current Israeli government, claims born of racism or antisemitism. Rather, it’s because they fear that what happened to the al Ibrahimi Mosque is what the future holds for al Aqsa. And this they can’t abide. It is a religious issue to be sure, but, at its core, it’s about their need to protect the last semblance of control they feel they have. 

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