by Hillel Fendel
Arutz-7's daily Hebrew newsmagazine was broadcast on Monday from the
Gush Katif farmers' protest tent outside the Prime Minister's Office.
The farmers are demanding that the government merely give back the
thriving farming businesses it took from them.
First to be interviewed was Eliezer Yaakov, formerly of the
now-destroyed Gush Katif community Gan-Or. "I was a farmer in Gush
Katif for 22 years," he said, "with 17 dunams (4.2 acres) of
greenhouses, growing tomatoes for both domestic use and export, as well
as organic Chilean peppers - the only one of its type in Israel."
Yaakov explained the purpose of the demonstration, which began on
Sunday: "We were promised that there was a 'solution for every settler'
and that by the end of 2005, we would have plots and farms... Today,
two years later, 80% of the farmers aren't working; they have received
no land and are sitting at home eating up their compensation money."
Yaakov said that an outside consultant, "someone who has been employed
in the past by the government, proved to the highest government
officials that the farmers of Gush Katif actually received only a small
percentage of what they should have received."
Interviewer Uzi Baruch noted that according to a government official
who appeared at a recent Knesset committee session on the topic, the
residents are themselves responsible for the delay because they haven't
yet decided what they wanted, etc. Yaakov responded, "The only thing
the government is very good at is making media spins. It's very easy to
blame the victim... Do you realize that because of totally irrelevant
considerations, more than 50% of the farmers are not eligible to
receive land, according to government standards? So of course the
people have nothing to do. Without land, they can't build hothouses,
which might help them return some of what is called the value of the
hothouses. But without being able to build, we're left with what
they're giving us - only 39% of the value of the hothouses."
"In addition, only two out of 26 communities have been able to sign
agreements with the government - this means that they simply have no
idea where they will be living; this is a very grave situation."
Yaakov, who lives in Nitzan, north of Ashkelon, where the largest
gathering of expelled families reside in temporary housing, said that
he personally is able to work, "because I once had experience working
in something else, and so I can do that. But it pains me to see my
friends, who know only agriculture and who are now simply unable to get
back to work. And the government is not doing a thing to solve this
problem."
Welcomes the Visitors
Yaakov said he was glad that Cabinet Ministers Eli Yishai and Tzipi
Livni had come to visit: "In my opinion, the ministers were a bit
naive, as they thought that the government clerks were solving the
problems - but this was not the case. I hope that those MKs and
ministers who sincerely care will now be able to hear us, learn the
problems from up close, and do what has to be done in order to solve
them."
Other government visitors to the protest tent have included MKs Ruby
Rivlin (Likud), Zevulun Orlev (NRP), Nissan Slomiansky (NRP), and
others. The chairman of the Mateh Binyamin Regional Council, Pinchas
Wallerstein, and his top staff were also on hand.
20% are Working - on Borrowed Money
The Chairman of the Task Force of Gush Katif Farmers - Aharon Hazut,
also formerly of Gan-Or - explained that the 20% of the farmers who are
now working are those who took money from elsewhere to build
businesses: "I am very concerned for them, for if the compensation
system does not improve, they might also collapse."
Hazut explained the farmers' basic demand of the government: "You took
away our hothouses, give them back. If you think that the money you're
giving us is enough to rebuild our farms, then go ahead - keep the
money and build the farms yourselves, with all the infrastructures,
etc., and we’ll take over from there. But the fact is that the
compensation they're giving is simply not enough to rebuild a business
- and a Finance Ministry clerk even said that we should borrow the rest
from the banks... They take from us, and then they throw us to the
dogs, telling us to get along on our own... They are simply stealing
from us! As much as we objected to the expulsion, we were at least
confident that since this is a country founded upon values and ethics,
they would return to us whatever they took. But this has not been
true."
"In addition," Hazut said, "whatever they give us, they take back 5% in
taxes, and then we also pay 3% for the lawyers and 1.5% for adjustors.
So even the little they're giving us, only 90% of it reaches us..."
Aliyah Dreams Realized - and Shattered
Another disappointed Gush Katif farmer, Mrs. Laurence Bazize, made
Aliyah from France; she and her husband built a successful farming
enterprise in Gadid, where for 19 years they grew tomatoes and peppers
for export and domestic consumption. "In addition to being a
successful business," she said, "it allowed us to fulfill the
ideological dreams we had when we made Aliyah, to build the Land and
the like. In the past two years, however, we have been sent from one
committee to another, told to bring all sorts of documentation and
proof - and now, two years later, we still have not received an
invitation for a hearing from the Disengagement Authority."
"In the meantime," she said, "we have received an advance payment,
which was enough to buy a piece of land near Zikim, south of Ashkelon -
but we don't have the money to start preparing the area with hothouses,
infrastructures, and the like. Not only that, but we have heard from
others who have started there that there are many problems, in terms of
topography, frost, drainage, and infrastructures, etc."
MK Elkin Gives the Gov't One Year
MK Ze'ev Elkin (Kadima) has proposed legislation that will require the
government to speed up the process and complete all preparations for
permanent housing within a year. He proposed the bill, Elkin
explained, "in light of the government forecast that at this rate, 75%
of the expellees will move into their new homes within 2.5 years from
now, or 4.5 years from the expulsion. This is of course
unacceptable."
Elkin's bill was jointly sponsored with MKs Yuli Edelstein, Zevulun
Orlev, Amira Dotan and others, and is supported by no fewer than 65
Knesset Members.
"The bill states that all development and infrastructures work must be
completed within a year," Elkin explained, "leaving only the
construction of the actual house... We want to repeat what happened
here during the great Aliyah from Russia in the 90's, when the
government cut housing time in half by removing much of the bureaucracy
and need for permits, etc. ... I hope the government will understand
the significance of the fact that 65 MKs support this bill,
representing the majority of the Zionist parties, and will realize that
it should not impede the passage of this bill."
Remembering the Expulsion on its Second Anniversary
Official Gush Katif expulsion commemorations will be held this coming
July 25, the day after the Fast of Tisha B'Av. The day will begin at
Kisufim, the nearest Jewish town to the former entrance to Gush Katif,
and will continue in Netivot with Torah classes, panel discussions,
personal memories of the Gush, an exhibit, plays and films. A prayer
service will be held at the gravesite compound of the Baba Sali, from
where the participants will set out for Sderot, where they will deposit
a new Torah Scroll for "safekeeping" until the ultimate anticipated
return to Gush Katif.
Original
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Gush Katif: "Just Give Back What You Took From Us!"
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