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After 35 Years, Palestinians Return To Evacuated Samaria Settlement

The Palestinian landowners of the Jewish settlement of Homesh have returned to the land expropriated from them in 1978 under a seizure order.
Settlers try to prevent Israeli border police officers from reaching roof during evacuation of northern West Bank settlement of Homesh.  Settlers try to prevent Israeli border police officers from reaching the roof of a Yeshiva religious school during the evacuation of the northern West Bank settlement of Homesh, August 23, 2005. Israeli riot police scrambled up ladders and cut their way through barbed wire on Tuesday to get to ultranationalists holed up at a synagogue in the West Bank settlement of Homesh
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The Palestinian owners of the land on which the settlement of Homesh was built waited 35 years to return to their property in Samaria. The settlement was vacated eight years ago as part of the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and northern Samaria known as the disengagement plan. But it was only two weeks ago, on the Sept. 16 conclusion of a lengthy legal battle conducted with the help of the “Yesh Din” human rights organization, that the legal owners were allowed to go back.

On arrival at the site this week, a few started tilling the land in a symbolic move. Others planted trees. Three generations of Palestinians — for the young ones, it was their first time there — broke out in dancing and singing on the land expropriated from them in 1978 under a seizure order issued by the civil administration. The order was explained as a defensive necessity, but instead of a military base or outpost, a settlement was built on the site.

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