Baruch Marzel challenges foreign tourists in Hebron (JERUSALEM POST) By TOVAH LAZAROFF 04/03/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=264628
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"Why are you anti-Semitic?” Hebron activist Baruch Marzel asked a
group of foreign tourists led by a Palestinian guide from Beit Sahour
around noon on Tuesday.
They had come on an eventful day to see the West Bank city of Hebron,
and stopped by a three-story apartment building, which the IDF has
ordered its Jewish residents to evacuate by 3 p.m.
The residents moved in on Thursday without the proper permits. The
foreign tourists in this group, along with their guide, did not think
the Jews should be there, even with the proper government permits.
Marzel himself did not move into the apartment, but was among those
Hebron residents who stood outside in support of their neighbors.
“Why can’t I buy here, but I can buy a house in London?” Marzel asked.
When British tourist Jeff Rodin tried to explain to him that the
structure did not belong to Jews, Marzel corrected him.
“We bought the house. We have all the papers. Why do you attack the
Jews immediately?” asked Marzel, who is a mid-size man with glasses,
brown hair and a beard.
He wore a short sleeve button-down shirt, and an orange plastic band
on his wrist, a symbol of the settler fight against the 2005 Gaza
pullout. Marzel waved his arms and hands for emphasize as he spoke
with Rodin.
“Are you an anti-Semite? Are you against Jews?” he asked, raising his
voice. “Can a Jew buy a house here or not?” he asked again.
“No,” said Rodin whose voice was much lower and harder to hear.
The gray haired tall man wore a white baseball cap, a checkered blue
short sleeve shirt and a black knapsack.
“So you are an anti-Semite. You are a racist,” said Marzel. “We are
not in Germany,” he added, making a reference to the Holocaust during
World War II.
The Palestinian tour guide, Muhammed Bannoura, tried to intervene by
calmly explaining that an agreement prevented such a purchase. But
Marzel said that no such deal existed. Bannoura tried again to tell
Marzel that this area was part of a Palestinian state. Marzel
rejected that idea as well.
“Then where is a Palestinian state?” Bannoura wanted to know.
“Who said there are Palestinians? Who said they have a nation?”
Marzel answered with his own question.
“Who said there are Israeli Jews?” Bannoura shot back. Touching
Marzel lightly on the shoulder he said, "You are occupying our land."
After Marzel left, Bannoura told The Jerusalem Post that he believed
in a two-state solution, but that did not include Israelis living in
Hebron.
Bannoura said it was important to him to bring internationals to the
area so they could learn about the situation.
“We believe that we can all live together, Palestinians and
Israelis,” he said. “But the Israeli settlers should not be here.
They have to move out of here, this is Palestinian land,” he said. (©
1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 04/03/12)
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