VIDEO: Exclusive visit to Beit Yehonatan (”Pollard’s House”)
by Hillel Fendel - IsraelNationalNews - February 2, 2010
An Arutz-7 correspondent was taken on an exclusive guided tour on Monday of
the Silwan (Shiloah) neighborhood in eastern Jerusalem, and particularly the
now-famous Beit Yehonatan building there.
Arutz-7’s Hizky Ezra filmed dozens of illegal Arab structures in the
neighborhood, among them two massive apartment buildings, against which many
demolition orders have been issued - but not carried out. Beit Yehonatan, on
the other hand, has been the subject of irate letters from the State
Prosecutor and outgoing Attorney-General, who demand that the municipality
seal or destroy it at once. The eight families living there are far from
giving up.
J4JP Note: The video is 6 minutes 29 seconds long. Narration is in Hebrew.
For English speakers an explanation of the video (courtesty of Arutz7)
follows below.
CLICK HERE TO SEE THE VIDEO >>>
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/135821
Arutz7 English overview:
The video begins with a drive to Beit Yehonatan (named for Jonathan Pollard)
in a reinforced security force vehicle, with the guide pointing out the glut
of illegal Arab structures along the way. The guide, who insisted on
remaining unidentified and unphotographed, is a member of one of the eight
families living in the building.
He noted that the Jewish presence in the neighborhood was vibrant and
dynamic beginning in 1882, when Yemenite families began arriving in what
became known as the Yemenite Village. Jewish life there was cut off,
however, in 1938, when the British evicted the families to protect them from
murderous Arab mobs. “We returned in 2004,” the man said, “and Jewish life
here has become vibrant and joyous once again.”
Though signs of firebomb attacks on Beit Yehonatan can be seen (0:50 on the
video), “the police have begun operating more actively here, and we thank
them.”
Eight families live there, and another one in nearby Beit Dvash, and 15
students study in a kollel (1:35) in Beit Yehonatan.
See below for a 2004 video of a “return” of descendants of the original
Yemenite settlers.
At 1:50, the guide relates that family names are not posted on the doors,
“because the city’s legal counsel, Yossi Havilio, is pursuing us - even
though we are not the owners of the building, as he knows, but he can’t find
the owner, so he tries to take action against us. One apartment has already
been sealed up - after dozens of special Yassam unit police officers arrived
and closed off the road for this special operation to seal up one Jewish
apartment! And now we hear that the city doesn’t have enough manpower to
enforce laws against all the illegal Arab construction around here for fear
of Arab violence!”
At 2:50, the video shows the children’s “playground” inside Beit Yehonatan,
as it is not easy for the children to go outside and play, and at 3:18, the
camera focuses on the extraordinary view of the Temple Mount from the roof
of Beit Yehonatan.
“You can see the Shiloah pool below, and the City of David, and above them
the Temple Mount, and Mt. Zion to the left,” the guide says. “We are
actually the human buffer between the Temple Mount and the PA-controlled Abu
Dis neighborhood, making sure that Jerusalem does not fall into foreign
hands.”
At 4:10, the proliferation of illegal Arab construction is seen,
particularly two giant Arab apartment buildings: “The builder, Ahmed Sheikh,
fled because of his heavy debts, but not before he managed to keep adding on
floors to these buildings by asking for delays on the stop-work orders
against him. And now no action has been taken against these monstrosities.”
At 5:10, the camera shows some of the original Yemenite Village buildings,
and at 5:36, the sound of Torah study is heard on the backdrop of the nearby
muezzin’s call.
“I can’t understand why people sometimes ask me why we insist on living
here,” the man says. “This is Jerusalem, a neighborhood full of Jewish and
Zionist history, and with G-d’s help we will remain here, grow stronger and
expand further.”
This entry was posted
on Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010 and is filed under news.
You can leave a response.