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The Michigan Jewish Sports . Hall of Fame
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A full day of athletic events for individuals with special needs.
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Sunday, August 20, 1995
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A special thanks to: 'Jenard L. ,11ass Foundation. B
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Jerusalem (JTA) — The hilltops
surrounding the West Bank Jew-
ish settlement of Efrat have once
again become the center of a land
dispute.
Israeli police and army troops
forcibly removed several hundred
Jewish settlers from Givat Hada-
gan, a rocky hilltop near Efrat
where the settlers dug in two
weeks ago to protest the govern-
ment's peace policy with the
Palestinians.
In what has been described as
the most serious instance of mass
civil disobedience since Israel and
the Palestine liberation Organi-
zation embarked on a path to-
ward Palestinian self-rule, the
settlers employed a strategy of
passive resistance as security
forces began carrying them off
the hill.
Several settlers, in an effort to
prevent themselves from being
carried away, handcuffed them-
selves to each other and to rocks
on the hilltop. About 30 people
were arrested.
The issue of Israeli settlement
expansion catapulted to the fore-
front of Israeli-Palestinian rela-
tions in December and January,
when Palestinians protested set-
tler plans to construct new apart-
ments on hillsides near Efrat.
At that time, the Israeli gov-
ernment halted the settlers' con-
struction plans when the
Palestinians threatened to bring
the peace process to a halt.
This time around, residents of
Efrat and other Etzion bloc set-
tlements in the West Bank erect-
ed a tent encampment on Givat
Hadagan two weeks ago, staking
claim to land that they assert is
within Efrat's municipal borders
and that they refuse to hand over
to the Palestinians in any future
peace agreement.
An order issued by the civil ad-
ministration for the settlers to
evacuate the site went into effect
last Friday, but went unheeded.
In anticipation of an army evic-
tion, about 1,000 settlers gath-
ered at Givat Hadagan.
The eviction began when po-
lice started dismantling tents and
other makeshift structures.
In response, organizers began
calling on Efrat settlers and their
supporters to come to the site.
Maj. Gen. Ilan Biran, com-
mander of the Israeli army's cen-
tral command, was among
several senior Israel Defense
Force officers who were on hand
to oversee the evacuation of the
settlers.
As security forces began evac-
uating the settlers, commanders
warned troops against using ex-
cessive force.
With their arms linked, set-
tiers responded by singing na-
tionalist songs.
During the day, some of the
people removed from the site
managed to return.
"I've never been prouder of res-
idents of Efrat than in these two
weeks," said Rabbi Shlomo
Riskin, a former New Yorker who
serves as the chief rabbi of Efrat.
"We're not violent at all," Rab-
bi Riskin said. "We're merely in-
sisting that this is our land, that
we have a right to land."
As the evictions continued, a
dozen settlers set up temporary
structures on another hill near-
by.
Settler leaders vowed the ef-
fort would continue.
Court Acquits
Security Guard
Jerusalem (JTA) — A Jerusalem
court has acquitted a security
guard who fatally shot an Arab
vegetable vendor earlier this year
outside a Jewish seminary.
Dmitri Burman, 31, shot and
killed Julani Abed, 25, as he and
a second Palestinian drove into
the Jerusalem seminary, where
they worked.
They were planning to drop off
a load of potatoes. A kitchen em-
ployee let them in the gate with
a remote control switch, accord-
ing to news reports.
But the guard, unaware that
the truck had been given clear-
ance, opened fire. The shooting
came as the country was on alert
for possible suicide bombing at-
tacks.
The judges ruled that Mr.
Abed's death was a tragic mis-
take, triggered by recent warn-
ings about car bombs.
Yugoslavia
Seeks Aid
Jerusalem (JTA) — Yugoslavia
has appealed to Israel for hu-
manitarian aid for the thousands
of Serb refugees who fled the
Croatian onslaught on the Kra-
mina region.
The region previously was held
by rebel Serbs.
The request comes only weeks
after Israel sent aid to Bosnian
Muslims in a joint airlift with Jor-
dan.
Ori Orr, head of the Knesset
Foreign Affairs and Defense
Committee, said he supported the
effort.
"I think we should give them
the same attention we gave the
Bosnian refugees," he told Israel
Radio.