Monday, July 27, 2009

So, Where is the Shepherd Hotel in Sheikh Jarrah?



From: The U.S.-Israeli Dispute over Building in Jerusalem: The Sheikh Jarrah-Shimon HaTzadik Neighborhood by Nadav Shragai

From the Executive Summary:

  • Many observers incorrectly assume that Jerusalem is comprised of two ethnically homogenous halves: Jewish western Jerusalem and Arab eastern Jerusalem. Yet in some areas such as Sheikh Jarrah-Shimon HaTzadik, Jerusalem is a mosaic of peoples who are mixed and cannot be separated or divided according to the old 1949 armistice line.
  • In the eastern part of Jerusalem, i.e., north, south and east of the city's 1967 borders, there are today some 200,000 Jews and 270,000 Arabs living in intertwined neighborhoods. In short, as certain parts of eastern Jerusalem have become ethnically diverse, it has become impossible to characterize it as a wholly Palestinian area that can easily be split off from the rest of Jerusalem.
  • Private Jewish groups are operating in Sheikh Jarrah seeking to regain possession of property once held by Jews, and to purchase new property. Their objective is to facilitate private Jewish residence in the area in addition to the presence of Israeli governmental institutions. The main points of such activity include the Shepherd Hotel compound, the Mufti's Vineyard, the building of the el-Ma'amuniya school, the Shimon HaTzadik compound, and the Nahlat Shimon neighborhood. In the meantime, foreign investors from Arab states, particularly in the Persian Gulf, are actively seeking to purchase Jerusalem properties on behalf of Palestinian interests.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Something to refute/have corrected: The British consulate has referred to Sheikh Jarrah as an "ancient Arab neighborhood" http://ukinjerusalem.fco.gov.uk/en/newsroom/. Since we know that NONE started living outside the city walls until the Jews did in the mid to late 1800s, SJ can not be ancient. Can you determine when it was started to be built and refute the British Counsulate? Here is a picture of Sj around 1917 and it is pretty undeveloped. http://www.palestineremembered.com/GeoPoints/Jerusalem_528/Picture_17829.html

YMedad said...

Until 1948 Sheikh Jarrah was an aristocratic neighborhood for Jerusalem Arabs and members of the two most important Palestinian families: Nashashibi and Husseini. Among its most famous residents before 1948 was the Grand Mufti, Sheikh Haj Amin al-Husseini, and his family, who lived in the eastern part of Sheikh Jarrah, called the Mufti's Vineyard.

Since both those families have been resident in Jerusalem for centuries, it is quite possible that the "neighborhood" was simply a suburb or more properly a few houses, less than 10.