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'Come to the wilderness': Zochrot campaign highlights JNF's role in 'ongoing Nakba'

A banner by NGO Zochrot, reading: "You can't see the Nakba for the trees."
7 min read
13 October, 2021

With the turning 120 this year, an NGO working in Israeli society launched awareness campaign on 20 September to bring attention to theÌýland development group'sÌýroleÌýin Israel's of Palestinians.

Tel Aviv-based educational effort recently ended, having runÌýfor three weeks in total and having soughtÌýto enlighten principally but also international audiences about the JNF's allegedÌýhistoric and continued role in the organised dispossession of Palestinians.

The campaignÌýlargely operated on social media, where Zochrot sharedÌýposts, graphics, and videos about the Israeli organisation – often called – as well as other similar but separate international groups, like JNF UK, under the #ExposeJNF hashtag.

"For [us], it's very important to highlight the ongoing Nakba and ongoing displacement of Palestinians… and the JNF has been taking a leading role in that," Zochrot advocacy and media coordinator Najwan Berekdar, 39, toldÌý°®Âþµº.

°Õ³ó±ðÌý, or "catastrophe", refers to the establishment of the Israeli state in 1948, when hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced or fled their homes.Ìý

While the term "Nakba" itself references this period specifically, someÌýactivists and scholars ÌýitÌýor actions leading up to it commencedÌýdecades earlier and are still occurring in 2021. Education about the NakbaÌýisÌý, and the first week of its campaign focused on its history.

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Berekdar, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, claimed the JNF's establishment as the Nakba's beginning. In the , the fund started acquiring land for Jewish settlement, often causing serious damage to the Palestinians living there, basedÌýon aÌý.

Despite it not being the beginning, 1948 was a significant escalation in this activity, with of the land currently in the JNF's possession having been seized during the conflict that broke out between nascent Israel and several Arab states, ex-Palestine-Israel Journal co-managing editor Dan Leon said in 2005.

Of what Israel considers land, 13 percent was held by the Israeli JNF in 2003, the government's Israel Land Administration, not to be confused with its Israel Land Authority (ILA), . According to the fund's website, it "owns over 10% of Israel's land", however, no date was given for this figure.

Though there is a legal distinction between the JNF and the Israeli state, Berekdar sees them as being effectively the same.

"I don’t think I myself differentiate between JNF and the state, because they're doing the same job together, and they're doing it in coordination," she alleged.

"For [us], it's very important to highlight the ongoing Nakba and ongoing displacement of Palestinians… and the JNF has been taking a leading role in that"

The ILA is with administering the JNF's lands, for example, while 10 of the 22 seats on the leadership body of the ILA, which also oversees all other public domain land, fall to the fund.

What's more, while Israel's government is deeply involved in illegal West Bank settlement efforts, in early September, the fund gave the go-ahead to an effort to of lands in occupied Jerusalem and the West Bank,Ìý±á²¹²¹°ù±ð³Ù³úÌýreported.

This may lead to Palestinians being forced out, according to the Israeli outlet, and comes as the group has become "more out in the open", Berekdar asserted.

However, the JNF's status as a private group is key for Berekdar, since she considers thisÌýallows it to get away with far more than the state itself could.

"They can do a lot… under the cover of being private," she said.

In most parts of the world, bodies soÌýprofoundly entangled in "public domain" land do notÌýclaim theirÌýholdings to belong to just one ethnic group.

Nevertheless, the Israeli JNF's website its "land… is the property of the Jewish people" and it has previously submittedÌýa legal document explaining "loyalty is reserved for the Jewish people alone", according to the Association for Civil Rights in Israel (ACRI) and four other groups.

Zochrot's tour of the ruined Palestinian village of Dayr Aban
Zochrot led a tour of the depopulated Palestinian village of Dayr Aban. [Zochrot]

On 2 October, Zochrot of Dayr Aban as part of the second week of its campaign, which soughtÌýto make "the invisible visible",ÌýBerekdar said.

Dayr Aban is a depopulated Palestinian village not far from Jerusalem which was taken over byÌýIsrael in 1948. NowÌýpart of the Jewish state, it is located in the American Independence Park, which the Israeli JNF first started . The historical residents of thisÌýand other Palestinian areas now subsumed byÌýthe park were refugees, "the remains of [their] villages" beingÌý"cover[ed]Ìýup" by it, Zochrot said.

The tour was held both in-person and streamed to Facebook.

"This is about the right to see… we want to see what's between the forests, what's between these parks that, you know, they're trying to hide," Berekdar said.

This goal is what prompted Zochrot to commence its campaign on 20 September, the first day of Judaism's Sukkot festival, since many Israelis head to JNF parks on this day.

Palestine Land Society (PLS) research group founder and president Dr Salman Abu Sitta, 84, addressed the history of several JNF parks – not just the one which has subsumed Dayr Aban – claiming the JNF was at the core of severe abuses.

"This is about the right to see… we want to see what's between the forests, what's between these parks that, you know, they're trying to hide"

A Palestinian refugee living in Kuwait, he asserted toÌý°®Âþµº: "JNF is an instrument of ethnic cleansing… this is not a slogan. In 1948 and before, they directed the Haganah [Zionist militia group's] operations… to destroy these villages and to take their land...

"They destroyed the homes of the people, their machines destroyed [them], and then, to hide the debris of the houses, they planted trees on them."

He notedÌýforeign, European trees not well suited to the local climate were used, highlighting the that swept through forest areas near Jerusalem.

These exposed once-hidden proof that, for hundreds of years, Palestinians had lived on and made agricultural use of these lands.

Keen also to look at more contemporary crises, the third week of Zochrot's campaign focused on the here and now. This centres particularly on the battles being fought in the Naqab (Negev) and Jerusalem.

In recent years, then-Israeli JNF World Chairman Daniel Atar Ìýthat the fund aims to "help the state of Israel move a million new residents to the Negev". While he did not explicitly say these will be Israeli Jews, and though there's now a new JNF chief, the organisation has its "main objective… is Jewish settlement – on [fund] land".

Regardless, this one million figure is around four times the living in the region, who routinely face andÌý»å¾±²õ±è´Ç²õ²õ±ð²õ²õ¾±´Ç²Ô.

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One village there, called , has been destroyed on over 190 occasions. The Israeli JNF is seeking to grow a forest there and, in at least the vast majority of cases, the village's destruction was to allow the forest to go ahead, according to .

Zochrot's work against the JNF won't stop now theseÌýthree weeks are up, however, with Berekdar revealing her organisation will seek to hold at minimum one action each month opposing it going forward.

Regarding its recentÌý"120 years of dispossession and displacement" campaign, however, despite many positive responses, some Israelis didÌýlashÌýout.

Nevertheless, PLS' Abu Sitta praised the non-profit for the work it does. "Zochrot is a wonderful organisation with whom I have cooperated since its inception," he told °®Âþµº.

He said it is vital the message it stands for comes from an Israeli group.

"They destroyed the homes of the people, their machines destroyed [them], and then, to hide the debris of the houses, they planted trees on them"

"It shows that some people refuse to be blinded by the hasbara, or the propaganda – they want to know the truth.

"This call for… knowledge – not for justice – just [a] call for knowledge, is important in a society which claims to be very well advanced."

However, those who engage with are few in number, he said.Ìý"So their work is… a cry in the wilderness. We need to have people… come to the wilderness to listen."

°®Âþµº has requested commentÌýfrom JNF UK, andÌýIsrael's Negev and Galilee development, and housing and construction ministries, but received no reply at the pointÌýof publication. It was not possible to reach the ILA.

KKL-JNF commented in response: "Allowing for hateful rhetoric such as 'ethnic-cleansing' in journalism is in direct opposition to objective reporting standards. We reject such phrases and consider them to be incitement and anti-Semitism, with zero basis in fact or substantiated evidence. KKL-JNF actively works to promote collaboration and various other initiatives with the goal of supporting the diverse population of Israel. This article clearly lacks any understanding of KKL-JNF's values as an organization and instead uses politically charged statements that do not serve the common good, disregard historical Jewish trauma, and demonizes Israel and Zionism".

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