The new neighborhood in the western section of Shavei
Shomron had been deserted for over three years. Thirty
spacious residential units waited in vain for buyers, and since
none were to be found, construction in many cases was halted, roofs
began to fall apart, and the abandoned lots became overgrown with
weeds. What prompted the sudden change in attitude that has brought
about the sale of 18 homes in the settlement during the past three
months, of all times, after they had been written off as a lost
cause?
Even Aryeh Ofri, chairman of the settlement's secretariat, has no
explanation. "It's beyond me," he says. "In my sweetest dreams, I
expected to sell a maximum of six or eight homes. After years of
continuous growth, last year we hit a slump that was not caused by
the intifada, and didn't begin with it, but which was definitely
affected by the security situation."
For the first time in its history, Shavei Shomron ("Returnees to
Samaria"), established north of Nablus by the Gush Emunim settler
movement in 1978, found that more people were leaving than joining,
the community structure was unraveling, and its younger residents,
who were the first to react to the crisis, were only trying to find
a way to bail out.
Shavei Shomron now has 110 families, and is defined by its veterans
- who today are 55 years old - as a religious-traditional community
settlement in the spirit of Bnei Akiva [the religious Zionist youth
movement].
"We had got into a kind of rut," says Ofri, who served in the past
as the head of the Samaria Regional Council. "We, the founders,
were quite depressed. We heard from more and more people that
buying a house in Shavei Shomron, no matter what the price, meant
throwing away money, because it's outside the map of settlement
blocs that will remain in the area of Israel in the event of a
final settlement."
Since the outbreak of the Al-Aqsa Intifada, the eastern gate of the
Shavei Shomron, which is only a few meters from the settlement's
kindergarten, has become a busy terminal from which convoys go up
to Mount Eval; tanks and armored personnel carriers are stationed
literally at the fence. Ofri longingly recalls the period, when the
Palestinians from the village of Nakura still accepted their new
Jewish neighbors as Divine fate.
"More Jews than Arabs attended the funeral of their mukhtar
[village head], who was killed in a traffic accident. His wife, who
was pregnant with her sixth child, fell onto hard times, and we
gave her food and supplies," he recalls.
After the outbreak of the uprising, the unsupervised hike to Mount
Eval during which Benyamin Herling, rabbi of the settlement of
Kedumim, was killed, started out from here. Last November, two
residents of Shavei Shomron were shot from a passing car: Teenager
Shimrit Hibi was severely injured, and her father, Yair, was
slightly hurt. While she is convalescing, the family is living in
Netanya.
But at this time of crisis, when the danger of terrorist attacks is
mounting, the atmosphere here has suddenly changed. Lights which
were extinguished have been turned on again. At the recent Purim
party, the community's reception hall was full - clear evidence of
a reawakening. Many families who haven't participated in the
settlement's social events for a long time were in evidence.
Data of the Central Bureau of Statistics reveal that despite
Palestinian fighting and terrorism, the settlement movement on the
other side of the Green Line did not cease in 2001. There has been
a sharp decline in the rate of growth, when compared to the period
before the intifada, but there are still more people moving in than
leaving. On second thought, it's not really surprising: As the
country has become increasingly threatened by terror, with nowhere
to which to escape, potential settlers who are in any case
believers in the idea of a Greater Israel, see the settlements as
being no more dangerous than Netanya and Afula, Jerusalem and Tel
Aviv.
A shot in the arm
The founding group of Shavei Shomron included 17 families, who came
from Netanya and settled at first in an army camp that then served
new recruits in the Artillery Corps. Over time, the settlement
grew, the army base moved to Shivta in the Negev, and three years
ago, in the few buildings that remained, Rabbi Yehoshua Schmidt
established the Birkhat Hatorah yeshiva, to which Ofri attributes
the change in the settlement.
"The moment the yeshiva became established, it had the effect of a
shot in the arm for the settlement, like a sonic boom," he says.
"It created faith in the future of the settlement, it aroused us to
return to the basic values which brought us here in the first
place. I think that in terms of ideology and faith, these young
people are much stronger and more dedicated than we were when we
came to live in Shavei Shomron, and before that in Sebastia. They
are our opportunity."
In addition to those who welcome the
yeshiva, there are also those residents who, in private, are less
enthusiastic and say they fear that the group will become too
dominant. They feel that if that happens, the openness that
characterizes Shavei Shomron will disappear, and the tendency
toward ultra-Orthodoxy, of which there are already signs, will
further increase.
Inspired by the rabbi, a native of Kiryat Arba, the yeshiva
students have bought eight residential units in the new
neighborhood, but it is obvious that their effect on the community
goes beyond their contribution to the revival of the real-estate
market. Schmidt and his students are the revitalizing element in
Shavei Shomron, aside from the fact that the yeshiva is a reservoir
of potential husbands, a fact that should not be taken lightly.
"We came not only to study Torah, but to give support to the
generation of parents, to propel the settlement forward and to
influence it," says Haim Eyal, who, with his wife Havi, a native of
Shavei Shomron, was the first to come to live in the empty row of
houses. They married exactly a month ago. At first they wanted the
wedding to take place in the settlement, but they were immediately
convinced to drop that idea.
"Forget about it," they were told, "if you want a wedding that
nobody will attend, make it here." The ceremony took place in Nes
Tziona. Three months earlier, on the day of the Eyals' engagement
party in Petah Tikva, Shimrit and Yair Hibi were injured.
The present mission of the yeshiva is to double the number of young
students in Shavei Shomron within a year. "When we go out to
recruit new students, and suggest that they come for a Shabbat in
order to see what it's like," says Eyal, "the response, especially
in the settlements, is good. But when parents in Kfar Sava, for
example, hear `Shavei Shomron,' even though they know it's a big
mitzvah [good deed] to be here, they forbid their righteous
children to come."
Fear keeps people away; they are unwilling to come even in an
armored bus. If a refrigerator breaks down in Shavei Shomron, the
only solution is to take it down to the coast; technicians long ago
stopped coming here to service appliances. "You should try not to
have problems with the appliance," they advised the newly married
Eyals when they bought a washing machine in Petah Tikva.
Haim Eyal is 20, a third-year student at the yeshiva; the Israel
Defense Forces has already postponed his draft date several times.
He grew up in Mitzpeh Yeriho, studied at the Yad Benyamin yeshiva
high school near Kibbutz Hafetz Haim, and his father participated
in the historic takeover of the Sebastia railroad station - a key
event in the history of Gush Emunim. The son's window now overlooks
the forest that surrounds the nearby site, but that is not his only
connection to the place. "My father also served here as a new
recruit, so he feels that I am following in his footsteps."
Eyal's beliefs are clear and unequivocal; the fire of redemption
burns within him: "We are the first sign of the future. We are here
because of the difficulties, because northern Samaria is the
weakest area in Judea, Samaria and Gaza, because we are a bone in
the Arabs' throat, because it's ours. I believe that the present
war for the Land of Israel is God's test for the Jewish people. He
created this situation so that we would search our souls."
Safer than Moscow
Hundreds of new immigrants have undergone absorption and conversion
in the ulpan (Hebrew-language program) in Shavei Shomron, but when
they complete their studies, they prefer to disperse all over the
country rather than remain in the settlement. The four houses
purchased recently in the new neighborhood by immigrants from the
former Soviet Union are, therefore, a first sign that is creating
great satisfaction among the leadership of the settlement.
According to Ofri, it's not only the grants, the huge reductions
and the "Sharansky Project" [Minister of Housing and Construction
Natan Sharansky devised a plan to promote construction of 700
housing units in the West Bank] that have led to this development:
He is convinced that the positive change in the community
atmosphere has also made an important contribution.
"As soon as one person buys, that creates a wave. Children who were
thinking of leaving have chosen to stay, and temporary residents
have also made a final decision to settle here," he explains.
Valentina ("Avital") and Alexander Vasilenko are, for the time
being, renting a home in Shavei Shomron directly opposite the house
they are building, and hope to receive the key in another six
months. They came from Novosibirsk with their daughter, Lila.
Alexander, a graduate of an arts academy, ran a ceramics studio;
Valentina taught Russian language and literature in an institute
for training students from abroad. At present, with no demand for
his artistic creations or for her knowledge of Dostoevsky, they are
living on unemployment benefits. Since that is not sufficient,
twice a week Valentina travels to Kedumim to clean houses, and
Alexander cares for a disabled man who lives in Shavei Shomron.
Both of them know that there is not much chance of starting a
career in a new country at the age of 50. "We are like birds,
finding sustenance wherever it is to be had," she laughs, in spite
of everything. On the other hand, he is quiet and painfully gloomy,
nor is his Hebrew as good as hers. He is Jewish; she is a convert.
"People here are nice, one can leave the door open, life is
cheaper, the air is clean. Near the sea, it's impossible to
breathe, the city is a jungle," says Valentina, explaining why
Shavei Shomron, now of all times. Their reasons are entirely
different from those of Haim Eyal from the yeshiva.
"Dangerous? We don't understand what's dangerous here," she claims.
"Our oldest son, Mikhail, who stayed in Russia in order to complete
his degree in management at the university in Omsk, came for a
visit in the summer; his stories about the crime in Russia scare me
much more. Robbers, mafia, drugs, murder. A person who comes home
from work, gets into the elevator and gets out safely, has to thank
God."
In Moscow, she reassures herself and us, the despair is far more
profound.
A good life in a mobile home
As opposed to the relatively isolated Shavei Shomron, the
settlement of Revava is in a central
location, near Ariel and the Barkan industrial area, and a half-
hour's drive east of Petah Tikva - if there is no traffic. The
settlement was established on the eve of Independence Day in 1991.
"In terms of security, they have an excellent location; we should
be so lucky," they say in Shavei Shomron about Revava, which enjoys
a reputation of quality and solidarity that translate into a demand
that is far greater than the supply.
Revava's population, which also numbers 110 families, is composed
of young people up to the age of 40. The men are graduates of
hesder yeshivas [which combine Torah study with military service]
and the women all did National Service [an option for religious
girls instead of regular army service].
"The group that has formed here has close ties with the center of
the country. Most of us are from the coastal area," is how attorney
Na'ama Vahnish, who serves as the spokeswoman for Revava,
characterizes the settlement, defined as "communal-Torah
observant."
Since July 2001, the community has absorbed 11 families and the
forecast for next year is similar. The growth has never stopped
here. On the debit side, three families have left, but because they
headed for Yitzhar [south of Nablus] and Kfar Darom [in the Gaza
Strip], the "deserters" are considered to be more committed to the
settlement enterprise rather than less so, since they chose places
that are more isolated and more dangerous. "We contributed them to
the national effort," says Vahnish.
In Revava, there is almost no chance of meeting the men during
daylight hours on a weekday. Only women, children, and soldiers
from the security forces are seen on the paths of the settlement.
In order to reinforce its firepower, the IDF gave all the women an
accelerated course in the use of weapons. The men, in order to
avoid the traffic jams that choke the Dan region, hurriedly leave
every morning by 5:30 A.M. At 6:00, they say their morning prayers
in synagogues in the Tel Aviv area, and from there they go to work
until evening.
Toby and Meshulam Kiselnik came to Revava a year after they were
married, "in spite of a four-room apartment in Petah Tikva, and in
spite of the fact that our parents pressured us to stay near them,"
says Toby.
"We had a desire to observe the mitzvah of settling the Land of
Israel. What we really wanted, of course, was to live in Jerusalem,
but in order to be near the family, we went instead to Samaria, in
order to be an obstacle in the path of the terrorists," she
explains.
Toby was greeted by a rock thrown at her car on the road going up
to Revava. "Everything is for the good, thank God it was only
that," she says. "It's a small price compared to the opportunity."
Her husband works in an architectural firm in Tel Aviv; she works
for an accountant in Ariel. For the time being, they are living in
a mobile home and she obviously is enjoying the experience, and
even regards it with humor: "It's quite nice. We don't have to keep
the house spanking clean, as I did all the time when we lived in
Petah Tikva."
When Ziv Attias finished his studies in the department of
construction engineering at the Technion - Israel Institute of
Technology in Haifa, he and his wife, Tzurit, looked for a
community that would combine the Land of Israel, Torah and
proximity to his job at Ben-Gurion Airport Project 2000. In Revava,
they found the ideal combination for themselves and their three
young children: "At first we considered Rehelim, but it's far, and
we wanted a more established settlement."
Tzurit, who is involved in a national volunteer organization,
explains the family's considerations in choosing Revava: "The
security situation did not play a role. We trust in God to watch
over us. I would be lying if I said that I travel on the roads
calmly. I am not afraid, but I am alert. When I visited my parents
in Nahariya this week and walked around the mall a little, I felt
much more insecure than here. Compared to my sister, who lives in
Kfar Darom," she emphasizes, "my dedication to the cause is very
minor."
Redemption without suffering
Everything is relative. According to the settlers' "sacrifice
index," as one goes further east on the West Bank, people are
considered more idealistic. In the Gaza Strip, the determining
factor is the degree of isolation. In a sense, those who didn't go
all the way are even jealous of those who dared to do so. Revava,
according to these strict criteria, is considered a paradise for
spoiled idealists - like getting the best of both worlds.
"It is redeeming Samaria, but not through suffering," suggests
Yaron Yehoshua, whose home is in the final stages of construction.
He came to Revava from Kiryat Araba. "If I were a fiery idealist, I
would go to live in Elon Moreh, but I'm not."
Oren and Na'ama Abrishami got married in February, on Tu Bishvat
(Jewish Arbor Day) in Jerusalem, and they are the newest residents
of Revava. Just two days after the wedding, they moved with their
few belongings into the mobile home allotted to them. Oren is
studying construction engineering in Ariel; Na'ama is a
receptionist at the Supreme Court in Jerusalem. They wanted a
settlement with a Torah orientation, "to raise children in the
atmosphere of the Land of Israel."
"If we don't settle the West Bank and Gaza, we are wasting our time
as a state," says Oren. "Despite the problems, we won't give up.
After all, there isn't any place that can be considered safe; they
are out to get us everywhere. Take my mother, a few hours before
the wedding, she went to take care of some minor errands in the
pedestrian mall in Jerusalem, and was caught in the attack by the
woman suicide bomber. She was in shock, we were sure we would have
to cancel the wedding, but fortunately, she recovered."
If Oren has to choose between the pedestrian mall and Revava, he
prefers the second option. He says the couple's original
destination was the settlement of Har Bracha on the outskirts of
Nablus. "It's a great privilege to live there, but I haven't
succeeded in attaining that level. I admire those guys for their
courage, I wanted to live there too, but the moment Na'ama
disagreed, I gave up the idea," he says apologetically, as though
he had betrayed the cause.
"It's all my fault," admits his wife. "At this point, it sounds
scary to me. It means giving up a great deal of convenience - one
can't drop in on the family whenever one feels like it, or go on a
trip. Har Bracha is too much; it means living the tension of the
war at every moment. We have it in Revava, too, but certainly not
at the same intensity."
Oren, for his part, is looking ahead: "I very much hope that at the
end we'll get to Har Bracha, which for me is the summit of the
mountain."
Until then, even without the Abrishamis, Har Bracha is flourishing.
Spokesman Yaakov Idel reports that 11 houses have been purchased
recently. In spite of everything, the area is waking up, assert
contractors who do business there. At the Yesha Council of Jewish
Settlements in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza District, they are
smiling with satisfaction.