International Solidarity Movement (Scotland)
Residents of the camp recall a raid by Israeli soldiers in the camp when a soldier tried to chase a Palestinian man through the alleyways and actually became lodged in between the walls and unable to move. The Palestinian man was able to escape, and in order to protect the soldier who was stuck the rest of the raiding soldiers had to take positions in the surrounding houses and cover the soldier on the ground. In order to understand why the Balata camp is so overcrowded, it is necessary to learn the history of the camp._JPG_jpg.jpg)
In 1948, there was a mass exodus of Palestinians because of massacres and the destruction caused by the Israeli military. According to Mahmoud Subuh, the director of International Relations for the Yafa Cultural Center in Balata, “500,000 people became instantly refugees.” The refugees fled wherever they could. Some went to Lebanon, Syria, and the West Bank. Others lived in caves, mountains, and in fields until the violence decreased.
From “Temporary” refugee shelters to permanent camps
Most of the residents of Balata camp were originally from Yafa and surrounding villages. In 1948, the villages were attacked by Israelis and many of the men were murdered. These villages are now ruins, and have been replaced by Israeli settlements.
During the 1950’s, the refugees were still scattered and had been left with nothing but the clothes on their backs. UNRWA was created in this period to gather the refugees and establish what they thought would be temporary refugee camps. The original state of the Balata camp was simply rows and rows of tents with one public bathroom per row of tents. At this time, there were approximately 5-6,000 people living in the one square kilometer camp. And of course, this number was increasing all the time as children grew up, got married, and had their own families.
In the 1960’s, the tent camp began to evolve as it became clear that this was not going to be a temporary situation. The population of the camp had risen to almost 9,000 people by this time. The tents were replaced by a 3 by 3 cement block room for each family. The bathrooms were doubled to allow men and women to have their own, separate facilities. The UN had been providing food, blankets and other basic supplies because the refugees had nothing. Gradually, families began building onto the 3 by 3 rooms and creating houses for their families.
Finally, in the 1970’s a sewage system was put into the camp and each family finally got their own bathrooms. Water and electricity were introduced, which meant the people did not have to walk to a nearby spring and carry all of their water back and forth anymore. The population was still increasing, but because the camp could never be expanded horizontally, people built their homes extremely close together. And when all of the ground space was used they built upwards—creating 3 and 4 storey houses.
Throughout the years, the refugees in Balata have hoped that one day they would be allowed the ‘right of return’ afforded to them by the UN Security Council Resolution 194. According to Subuh, this means the “right to get compensation for the time and suffering and loss, and the reclaiming property, the lost property; or stolen or taken—whatever you want to name it.”
“The night belongs to the Israelis”
Now, there are between 20 and 25,000 people living in the Balata Refugee Camp. The camp area includes all of the houses, activity centers, mosques, three schools, cemetery, and markets. The camp is extremely overcrowded and the houses are built almost on top of each other—there is no such thing as privacy in Balata. In each house, there can be as many as 8 families. One of the most crowded houses has 85 people in a 4 storey house. Each floor is divided into two ‘apartments’ each housing a large family. “Its crowded inside the house, it’s crowded on the streets, it’s crowded inside the schools in the classrooms—any place they go it’s overcrowded.”
The extreme over crowdedness of the camp causes many health problems. First of all, because there is very little sunlight in the camp because of how close together and how tall the buildings are, many residents have vitamin D deficiency and resulting depression. The noise, crowdedness and lack of privacy cause many different psychological problems.
Another big problem in the camp that also results in psychological problems is the fact that the “night belongs to the Israelis” in Balata. Almost every night, the camp is raided by the Israeli military. They break into houses and destroy things, beat people, arrest people suspected of being ‘militants’ and basically just terrify the people at night—which is especially hard on the children which make up 70% of the population of the camp.
The kids in Balata have no place to play. The houses are too crowded and the parents need quiet time, so they send the kids out into the streets and alleyways to play. There are no parks or playgrounds. The three schools in Balata are also overcrowded. There is a minimum of 50 students per class, and many times the number is much higher. Most of the children in Balata are not motivated to study; they see their situation as hopeless and do not see a future for themselves. Most of the boys believe that they will be arrested or killed by Israelis, and that even if they do well in school and finish university they will be unemployed because of the economy. With these realities in mind, it is easy to see why there is little motivation for school._JPG_jpg.jpg)
The economic situation in the Balata camp is dismal. Before the Intifadas, about 60% of the camp worked in Israel providing cheap labor—but now the permits to work in Israel are rarely given out and only about 5% of the residents are still allowed to work in Israel. The closures and checkpoints around Nablus and Balata have also had a devastating effect on the economy. Because of the difficulty in getting through the checkpoints for work, there is 70% unemployment in Balata camp and 50% unemployment in Nablus.
The intensity of the raids in Balata and the closures and checkpoints on the area around Nablus is caused by the fact that it is the center of the resistance and very political. Subuh recalls that “the first Intifada was initiated in Balata camp. The first people killed, the first martyrs, the first people whose houses were destroyed for ‘security reasons’ and punishment was in Balata. The second Intifada also was huge and began in Balata. The military wing of the Al-Aqsa brigades was established in Balata.”
Since then there has been a big Israeli military presence in Balata. Imposed curfews, assassinations, and arrests have become almost routine. For the residents of Balata, violence and death are every day events. All of the kids have seen “people killed in front of them, people explode in front of them…body parts scattered all over the place, they were collecting pieces of the flesh…that is something normal.” Between this violence and the night raids that occur every night, life is a living hell for the people of Balata. There is no sleep and no rest.

