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Παρασκευή 7 Φεβρουαρίου 2014

Israeli soldiers attack Deir Hejleh village built by Palestinians near St. Gerasimos Monastery




Please pray for the Christians in Israel and Palestine: "...Deir Hejleh village was a home for monks and nuns who were serving the St. Gerasimos Monastery of the Orthodox Church before being deported to the West Bank in 1967 at security pretexts. Dozens of Palestinian activists planted 150 trees in Ein Hejleh village and gave each one of them names of Palestinian villages destroyed by Israeli forces in 1948 as part of Palestinian youths' campaign launched to revive Palestinian villages evicted by the Israeli occupation forces. Palestinian activists have continued to re-build and restore the deserted Palestinian village of Ein Hejleh in Jordan Valley as part of a campaign to resist Israeli Judaization plans. The Palestinian activists called on international human rights institutions and foreign activists to visit the village and support their steadfastness."





(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Israeli Occupation Forces (IOF) fired tear gas bombs and live bullets at hundreds of Palestinian activists who have set up Ein Hejleh village in the Jordan Valley.

Many activists fell unconscious after suffering breathing difficulty as a result of inhaling teargas fired extensively by Israeli soldiers on Tuesday evening, eyewitnesses told the PIC reporter.

Youths of Deir Hejleh village, occupied and evicted in 1967, trekked sand roads to reach the village due to the Israeli security restrictions.

The activists staged a sit-in for the fifth consecutive day aiming to re-build the village owned by Hejleh church. The Israeli occupation authorities had established a military camp on church land.

IOF soldiers prevented journalists from covering the sit-in and forced them to trek sand roads to reach the village after threatening to confiscate their equipment.

It is expected that IOF will evict the village by force soon especially after the increasing presence of Israeli police and soldiers.

Deir Hejleh village was a home for monks and nuns who were serving the St. Gerasimos Monastery of the Orthodox Church before being deported to the West Bank in 1967 at security pretexts.

Dozens of Palestinian activists planted 150 trees in Ein Hejleh village and gave each one of them names of Palestinian villages destroyed by Israeli forces in 1948 as part of Palestinian youths' campaign launched to revive Palestinian villages evicted by the Israeli occupation forces.

Palestinian activists have continued to re-build and restore the deserted Palestinian village of Ein Hejleh in Jordan Valley as part of a campaign to resist Israeli Judaization plans.


The Palestinian activists called on international human rights institutions and foreign activists to visit the village and support their steadfastness.

http://abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&Id=503377

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