Close Up Cr) LU z C/1 LU CC LL, CI LL, 50 Everyone from former Presi- dent George Bush to the United Nations and the Arab League have called the Jewish settle- ments "an obstacle to peace." Po- litical activists on Israel's left agree. Opponents of the move- ment say that the expansion of Jewish settlements in the West Bank jeopardizes the peace process. Peace Now says that every house built over the green line is a step backwards for the peace process and a move for- ward to conflict. The movement's official statement reads, "the building of settlements on Pales- tinian lands is another example of the injustice of occupation and hinders the possibility of co-exis- tence." Ms. Tayar says, "Everything changed with the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993. Sudden- ly, Rabin divided our communi- ties into those he regarded as important for security and those that were not. He regarded the settlements along the eastern border with Jordan as vital to Is- rael's security and those in Judea and Samaria as a political liabil- ity." (In November 1993, Mr. Ra- bin told an audience of Jewish leaders in New York that settle- ments such as Ariel and Em- manuel were not necessary in the new Middle East equation.) In pre-State Israel, a string of kibbutzim popularly known as "the Gush" was founded 15 miles south of Jerusalem, in a heavily Arab-populated area. The group of pioneering immigrants that settled there in the mid-1940s was cut off from any major cen- ter of Jewish population. During the 1948 War of Independence, a group of 35 Haganah soldiers set out from Jerusalem with the in- tention of assisting in the defense of the Gush. They were am- bushed on the way by Arab ma- rauders, and the kibbutzim were destroyed. After Israel captured the West Bank in 1967, the adult orphans of the massacre returned to the area and founded, for the second time, Kibbutz Nir Etzion, along with many other rural and urban communities. The history of the modern set- tlement movement began in 1967 as a national consensus, while their future has grown into one of the country's most divisive and hotly contested issues. After the Six-Day War the La- bor government, under Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, developed a policy of encouraging the reestablishment of a Jewish pres- ence in the Etzion block. Settlements were developed and expanded under subsequent Labor and Likud governments. During the intifada uprising in the late 1980s, Israel built roads to bypass Arab villages, mini- mizing the dangers of traveling. Today, the geopolitical lines sep- arating Gush Etzion from areas where consensus does not exist is less clear. Detroit-born Josh Kamins, an observant 30-something com- puter analyst, and his Montreal- born wife, Tamar, have just moved into their new house on the Gush Etzion settlement of Elazar, across the road from Efrat. Mr. Kamins, who grew up in Southfield, says initially it wasn't religious ideology but eco- nomics that drew him out of Jerusalem and over the green line: He and his wife were looking for an af- fordable religious com- munity where they could raise their two small children. "We were renting in Efrat but couldn't find anything to buy in our price range," he says. "Then we heard about this project in Elazar, and it was important to us to buy out here before the 1996 Israeli election. We were afraid how the out- come of the national elections would affect our ability to purchase a home." Elazar offers private or semi-detached homes with a front and backyard on paved streets — at a cost of about one- third their market value in Jerusalem or Tel Aviv. In a normal situation, this region would be considered suburbia. Real-estate agent Shelly Levine works largely with properties in areas considered over the green line. "Today, a three-bedroom home with a yard in a place like Nazar will cost somewhere in the $150,000 range, com- pared to twice that in Efrat, just across the road," she said. The cost of housing in Efrat is considerably higher because the town of 25,000 offers a va- riety of amenities and services. Elazar has no post office, bank, supermarket or schools. A comparable property in Jerusalem would list for some- where in the half-million dollar range. A recently published survey of prices of homes in the Jewish set- tlements indicates a correlation between place and price. But here, location means more than how far one has to commute to work. It means the distance from medical facilities, schools, cul- tural activities and shopping. It also could mean daily travel ad- jacent to Palestinian villages. "You ask me about our securi- ty?" Mr. Kamins says. "You can't let terrorism rule your life. To tell you the truth, what concerns me more is the way Israelis drive on the roads." Although Josh and Tamar Kamins did not come to Elazar for ideological reasons, he says, "I wanted a place where I could make a contribution. The ideo- logical stuff sort of grows on you. Today, I take part in nonviolent, peaceful demonstrations protest- ing certain government policies which could jeopardize the future of the settlements." North Americans such as the Kamins take seriously their po- ish character to be maintained. The newcomers are not looking for a mimicry of McDonalds or Toys R Us. "Our reason for coming here is our history. It did not begin in Tel Aviv or Ashkelon but in Hebron with Avraham Avinu at the Cave of the Patriarchs, in Nablus- Schem, the sit of the Tomb of Yosef." (According to rabbinic sources, Joseph died in Egypt at the time of the enslavement. He asked his survivors to rebury his remains in Eretz Yisrael One set- tler quipped that Judea and Samaria read like a AAA guide . litical and social involvement. to the Torah.) Even though official figures have For British-born Marc and the number of North American Michelle Kam, coming to live in settlers as between 5 and 10 per- Israel means pioneering and ful- cent of the total pop- filling a dream. ulation, Yehudit They started their Top and right: Tayar said their rep- Residents of life in Israel in the resentation is dis- the territories continue to northern development proportionate to build, despite their town of Karmiel. uncertain Tutu re. their numbers. Michelle recalled that "The Western im- Above: Peace migrant understands the settlemen Now labels "Marc got a job in Tel "an Aviv, so we ended up involvement, every- obstacle to pe is ace." on a very small settle- thing from the PTA ment called Nachliel. to politics," she says. The mother of three `They've been educated to speak teen agers noted that only 10 up for what they believe in." "They have an idea of what families were there when they this country should be," she con- moved to Nachliel in 1987. "A few tinues. 'There is a specific Jew- houses on a mountainside and that was it."