17-11-2008 Feature Life in Hebron: harassment and increasing poverty A Palestinian mother of six talks about her daily life in Hebron as she struggles to make ends meet in the midst of road closures and settler violence. She is one of thousands of vulnerable people receiving monthly food supplies from the ICRC. There are cracks in the wall, the paint is coming off in large chunks and no furniture in the house seems to be in one piece. However, for Baheja Sharabati, who is bringing up her six children in this house, it is not the state of the decor that worries her. It is how to pay for food for her children, how to pay for their education and how to ensure that they are safe and sound.
©ICRC/A. Meier/il-e-00353
Old town, Hebron. This was once a vibrant commercial centre.
The family house lies smack in the middle of the most troubled area of Hebron, called H2. It is the centre of the city – an area where approximately 400 Jewish settlers have also chosen to live. Thus, H2 is controlled by the Israeli military, with frequent checkpoints on some roads. Other roads in the area are off-limits to Palestinians.
Many shopkeepers have been forced to shut down their business by an Israeli army security order. Other small businesses are losing customers because of frequent attacks by settlers with flying shards of glass, urine and metal objects.
©ICRC/C. von Toggenburg/il-e-00730
Roadblock separating the old town from the rest of Hebron.
To ensure that their children had clean drinking water, the Sharabatis were obliged to pay 223 USD for a pump that could bring water into their faucets from an underground well. That was money they simply did not have – like the money used to replace window glass, broken on numerous occasions by settlers, or for the protective wire mesh they eventually had to install.
For now, though, the family will be living from one day to the next. Baheja Sharabati hopes that the security situation will remain relatively calm so that her husband is not be prevented from going to work by soldiers at the Israeli military checkpoints. She also prays that the settlers, whose homes sandwich her own, stop making her family’s life difficult. |