The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 231)
غرض
- عنوان
- The Proletarianization of Palestinians in Israel (ص 231)
- المحتوى
- 
                        231
 the fields from the Rosh-Pina Metula Road up to the Jordan
 area, which was formerly Lake Khula. The tents are made
 of unstitched sacks sewn together to form large sheets,
 pieces of material from blankets or bed covers, and long
 strips of coarse black material made of goat's wool and
 reed mats. In the tents live the tillers, most of them
 inhabitants of Zakhnin* village -- halfway between Safed
 and Acne. In each tent lives an Arab family -- seven,
 ten and even up to twelve members. . .The Shakur family,
 one of these squatters from Zakhnin village, spends about
 three months a year in the field of a farmer from Ysud-
 HaMaalee. The farmer gives them land, water, and tobacco
 and sows watermelons, and the harvest is divided between
 Shakur and the farmer. (They play, indeed, the traditional
 role of share-croppers or tenant farmers.)
 At the end of the tobacco and watermelon season, the tents
 are taken down and the people of Zakhnin take on other
 trades. The shakur family returns home, north of the Beit-
 Netaja Valley in central Galilee. There in the fertile
 valley, the family has fifteen dumams on which it grows
 vegetables. The children attend school, Atalla and the
 girls work in the field and earn their living well out of
 the good soil. . .In the fields of the Settlement about
 forty families from Zakhnin and a few families from other
 villages are scattered. Most of the land in Ysud-HaMaalee
 is tilled by Arabs, and even the work of thinning and
 picking in the plantations, which are mechanically culti-
 vated by the farmers, is almost totally done by Arabs.
 . - eWhen a tractor passes outside, Atalla says: "Those
 are Jews.'' Arabs have no tractors here. They are the
 manual workers, backs bent holding tools. . .
 Binjamin (the employer):. . .Today we water the soil auto-
 matically, and only the thinning and picking requires many
 hands. There are only Arabs for such work. Once we had
 Jewish workers from Hazur (probably inhabited by Oriental
 Jews). So many workers came from Hazur that not everyone
 got work.
 David (the son):. . .Today people from Hazur do not want
 to work in agriculture.
 Binjamin:. . .Unfortunately, today there are only Arab
 workers. In neighboring kibbutzim, too, everything is
 done by Arab labor.
 *Zakhnin -- one of the Arab villages of Galilee that suffered most from
 land expropriation and was most active in, and later most injured by, the
 aftermath of the internationally publicized Land-Day General-Strike on
 March 30, 1976.
- تاريخ
- ١٩٧٨
- المنشئ
- Najwa Hanna Makhoul
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