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"Few
are the landscapes that arouse sadness and compassion like those
from which the human component has been uprooted, and where only
the physical framework created by the absentees in their own form
and image remains. The world is full of these landscapes; Algeria,
Asia Minor, Israel/Palestine, India/ Pakistan, Indochina, Kenya,
Eastern Prussia, Silesia, the Sudetan Region as well as the former
Yugoslavia - places abandoned following wars, riots and collapsed
colonial regimes. People either escaped or were banished, carrying
with them only their personal belongings. They left behind their
homes, places of worship, ancestors' graves and their unique material
culture: from agrarian cultivation to settlement patterns, from
church belfries to inscriptions carved in stone immortalizing forgotten
events in foreign tongues
sometimes the landscape is abandoned
and becomes desolate, but more often than not the deserted landscape
rapidly fills with another people who look upon the relics of the
past as a mere nuisance and whose lives amidst the ruins compel
'adjustments' of eradication and new construction
"
The
concept of building the state of Israel was long central to the
Zionist dream. But after Israel's independence in 1948, the phrase
took on a more literal meaning. A Civilian Occupation, in studying
the politics of Israeli architecture, undertook the first detailed
examination of the spatial form of Israeli settlements in the West
Bank, examining how their physical layout is informed by the politics
behind them. It is an incriminating piece of work that shows how
deeply implicated Israeli architects have been in the state's expansionism.
Bringing together essays and photographs by leading Israeli practitioners,
and complemented by maps, plans and statistical data, A Civilian
Occupation explores the processes and repercussions of Israeli planning
and its underlying ideology. It demonstrates how, over the last
century, planning and architecture have been transformed from everyday
professional practices into strategic weapons in the service of
the state, which has sought to secure national and geopolitical
objectives through the organisation of space and in the redistribution
of its population. Through strong arguments, detailed maps and dramatic
aerial photographs, it shows how 800-plus Israeli settlements -
architect-designed, strategically perched on hilltops and sealed
to Palestinians - are the key to government control of the territories.
The
perception on which the Jewish Settlement Project in the Occupied
Territories was founded was that of the eternal weakness and inferiority
of the Palestinians. Those who built the settlements presumed that
the Palestinians would remain forever submissive and obsequious.
How else does one explain the reasoning behind the establishment
of Jewish islands in the heart of the Arab population? The victors'
vanity, self-righteousness and the feeling of superiority - bordering
on racism - that was at the source of its aggressive incursions
into the homogenous Palestinian fabric. The assumption was that
millions of people would forever agree to the existence of a domineering
minority amongst them. And when the error became apparent, and the
Palestinians began to rebel, the inevitable countdown towards eviction
of the "arrogant" settlements commenced.
The book shows how Israeli architecture has consistently provided
concrete means for the pursuit of the Zionist project of building
a national home for the Jewish people in Israel. As such, it is
the first study to supplement the more familiar political, military
and historical analysis of the Israel-Palestine conflict, with a
detailed description of the physical environments in which it is
played out. The banning of the first edition of this book by its
original publisher was proof, if any were needed, that architecture
in Israel, indeed architecture anywhere, can no longer be considered
a politically naïve activity.
The
editors, Rafi Segal and Eyal Weizman, are Israeli architects based
in Tel Aviv. Their remarkable collection illustrates, with remarkable
clarity, the role played by architecture in the politics and practices
of occupation. In sadness and anger, it points to the ultimate irony,
the way in which those white colonies, so arrogant on their hilltops,
simultaneously promote the ghettoisation of both Israelis and Palestinians.
It is a disheartening destiny that, unlike the agricultural settlements
of left-wing Zionism, these latter-day Israeli encampments have
settled nothing, least of all the dispute over the land itself.
In a score of aerial photographs one can observe the paradox of
suburban, hill-top fortresses, totally and utterly inimical to the
culture of an ancient landscape. Indeed, no future resolution of
the conflict will ever be able to heal the scar inflicted by this
tragic combination of political and topographical violence.
Ancient techniques (seizing the nearest strategic hilltop)
and modern ones (print advertising to entice settlers) have been
combined to accomplish what is, euphemism notwithstanding, an imperialistic
campaign. The mundane elements of planning and architecture have
been conscripted as tactical tools in Israel's state strategy, with
the landscape becoming a battlefield on which power and state control
confront both subversive and direct resistance. Architecture and
planning are systematically instrumentalised as the executive arms
of the Israeli state, and thus planning decisions do not follow
criteria of economic sustainability, ecology or efficiency of services,
but are employed to serve strategic and political agendas. Space
becomes the material embodiment of a matrix of forces, manifested
across the landscape in the construction of roads, hilltop settlements,
development towns and garden suburbs. Many photographs shot in 1993
are chilling testimony to the fact that so much of the construction
on the West Bank is not market-based but state -directed, hence
so many homes there remain empty. This is true today. There are
thousands of uninhabited dwellings in the West Bank.
Settlements
constructed beyond the international border established in 1967
violate Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention that states:
" The occupying power shall not deport or transfer parts of
its own civilian population into the territory it occupies."
Settling Israeli citizens in the occupied territories thus contravenes
international law. By taking up projects in the West Bank, Israeli
architects cross another red line. Their planning conforms to a
mode of design that serves to oppress and disrupt local populations.
Thus, beyond the mere presence of Israeli settlements on occupied
land, it is the way they were designed - their size, form and distribution
across the terrain - that directly and negatively affects the lives
and livelihoods of Palestinians. According to the regional plans
of politicians, suburban homes , industrial zones, infrastructure
and roads are designed and built with the self-proclaimed aim of
bisecting, disturbing and squeezing out Palestinian communities.
Israeli civilians are placed in positions where they can supervise
vital national interests just like plain-clothes security personnel.
In both its overall logic and the repetition of its micro-conditions,
architecture and planning are used as territorial weapons.
Planning and architecture must be carried out to the benefit
of society. If the architect draws a particular angle, line or arc,
or makes any other design decision that is explicitly and practically
aimed at disturbance, suppression, aggression or racism, and when
these stand, clearly and brutally, in breach of basic human rights,
a crime has been committed.
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