Guardian: West Bank Olive Groves Become Battleground
Eighty-year-old Rasmia Awase had left the best olive trees until last.
She and her family had already harvested most of their crop when they
went to a small plot near their home in Luban a-Sharqiya on Saturday
morning.
Here were 40 trees that Awase had planted and tended herself, and they were now, two decades later, at their peak - the most productive of all the trees, which support 37 members of the extended family.
But Awase found that someone had got there before them and had chopped down the trees, leaving stumps in the ground and branches scattered about the plot. The family blame hardline Jewish settlers from the nearby Eli settlement.
Read the entire article here.
Here were 40 trees that Awase had planted and tended herself, and they were now, two decades later, at their peak - the most productive of all the trees, which support 37 members of the extended family.
But Awase found that someone had got there before them and had chopped down the trees, leaving stumps in the ground and branches scattered about the plot. The family blame hardline Jewish settlers from the nearby Eli settlement.
Read the entire article here.


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