"They will use tourists to strengthen the settlers and to change the Palestinian identity of the city."
Biblical paintings are seen on the outside of buildings of the Beit Romano Jewish settlement in Hebron. A new Israeli archaeological site is tightening the noose around suffering Hebron Palestinians. All Photos by Heidi Levine for The National
In the West Bank city of Hebron two excavated ditches set amid uneven and ungravelled walking spaces are cordoned off by flimsy fences.
A Palestinian woman with children pass by the fence of the new archeological park that the Israeli government and army Palestinian neighbourhood of Tel Rumeida in Hebron .
Palestinians say Israel is trying to use tourism to push out the local population.
One of the signs at the new archaeological park the Israeli government and army recently opened in the Palestinian Tel Rumeida neighborhood of Hebron .
A Palestinian family crosses an Israeli checkpoint in the Palestinian Tel Rumeida neighbourhood. Indications of encroaching Israeli occupation are everywhere in Hebron.
"No, no, no, this is not a Jewish place," said Raed Abu Salih, 48. "It's Canaanite, not Jewish but they falsify history for their interests. They are using archaeology as an excuse for settlement."
An overview from a Palestinian home that overlooks the new archaeological park. "If this stone could talk, it would say 'I am Palestinian'. We're the original inhabitants," says Salih.
Israeli Jewish settler Haim Blycher walks along the site. "The site tells the real story by which the Jewish people were born and lived thousands of years until it was expelled," says Blycher, a lawye.
An Israeli soldier stands watch as Palestinian women and school children return home.
A Palestinian school girl walks along a Hebron street where Palestinian shops have long since been welded shut by the Israeli military .
A Palestinian woman on the balcony of her home that overlooks the site.
A police vehicle with iron meshing.
Arab historians argue that it is preposterous to label the multi-layered site as purely Jewish. "They are just selecting pieces. To select just a certain period that could be one or two centuries out of 3,000 years and to call the site a Jewish site is really a joke," says Nazmi Jubeh.
Issa Amro, a non-violent activist against the occupation in Hebron, predicted that the new tourist site will make daily life for Palestinians even more difficult. "People in the area are severely restricted. With this touristic site, it means you will have more closures, more restrictions and more security measures against Palestinians."
"They will use tourists to strengthen the settlers and to change the Palestinian identity of the city."
Biblical paintings are seen on the outside of buildings of the Beit Romano Jewish settlement in Hebron. A new Israeli archaeological site is tightening the noose around suffering Hebron Palestinians. All Photos by Heidi Levine for The National
In the West Bank city of Hebron two excavated ditches set amid uneven and ungravelled walking spaces are cordoned off by flimsy fences.
A Palestinian woman with children pass by the fence of the new archeological park that the Israeli government and army Palestinian neighbourhood of Tel Rumeida in Hebron .
Palestinians say Israel is trying to use tourism to push out the local population.
One of the signs at the new archaeological park the Israeli government and army recently opened in the Palestinian Tel Rumeida neighborhood of Hebron .
A Palestinian family crosses an Israeli checkpoint in the Palestinian Tel Rumeida neighbourhood. Indications of encroaching Israeli occupation are everywhere in Hebron.
"No, no, no, this is not a Jewish place," said Raed Abu Salih, 48. "It's Canaanite, not Jewish but they falsify history for their interests. They are using archaeology as an excuse for settlement."
An overview from a Palestinian home that overlooks the new archaeological park. "If this stone could talk, it would say 'I am Palestinian'. We're the original inhabitants," says Salih.
Israeli Jewish settler Haim Blycher walks along the site. "The site tells the real story by which the Jewish people were born and lived thousands of years until it was expelled," says Blycher, a lawye.
An Israeli soldier stands watch as Palestinian women and school children return home.
A Palestinian school girl walks along a Hebron street where Palestinian shops have long since been welded shut by the Israeli military .
A Palestinian woman on the balcony of her home that overlooks the site.
A police vehicle with iron meshing.
Arab historians argue that it is preposterous to label the multi-layered site as purely Jewish. "They are just selecting pieces. To select just a certain period that could be one or two centuries out of 3,000 years and to call the site a Jewish site is really a joke," says Nazmi Jubeh.
Issa Amro, a non-violent activist against the occupation in Hebron, predicted that the new tourist site will make daily life for Palestinians even more difficult. "People in the area are severely restricted. With this touristic site, it means you will have more closures, more restrictions and more security measures against Palestinians."
"They will use tourists to strengthen the settlers and to change the Palestinian identity of the city."
New Israeli archaeological site tightens noose around suffering Hebron Palestinians
Palestinians wary of site, saying Israel uses tourism to push out local population