Kfar Shalem

Kfar Shalem

Kfar Shalem ( _he. כפר שלם, lit: Shalem Village) is a neighbourhood in south-eastern Tel Aviv, Israel.

History

Until 1948, the Arab village of Salama stood where Kfar Shalem is now located. In 1931, there were 800 houses and 3,691 residents in the village. On the eve of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the village had 7,600 residents, most of whom were refugees from the surrounding area, who had moved to Salama. The residents also included some wealthy people from Jaffa, who built country homes there.

The village of Salama was captured on 25 April 1948, as part of Operation Hametz. This removed the threat of sniper fire to the Jewish neighbourhoods of Hatikvah, Ezra and Yad Eliyahu. Following the battle, the village was depopulated. Immediately after the village was abandoned, new Jewish immigrants were settled there, particularly Yemeni families who arrived as part of Operation Magic Carpet, and also some who had been made homeless during the war. The name of the village was subsequently changed from ‘Salama’ to ‘Kfar Shalem’, and became a very densely populated neighbourhood of Tel-Aviv, with some 20,000 residents. As well as the reoccupied houses of the Arab village, the neighbourhoods of Ramat Hen, Ramat HaShikmah, the Bulgarian Quarter, Hefetz Haim, and the Ramat Gan National Park.

The government decided to destroy the village houses and put up new buildings. In 1965, an eviction and rebuilding act was passed, and a process began of removing residents from the neighbourhood. This process saw ups and downs in respect to relations between the residents and the establishment; one of the most serious incidents was in December 1982, when one resident, Shimon Yehoshua, who tried to prevent the demolition of his home, was shot dead by a policeman. [ [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,923270,00.html Ugly Outbreak ] Time Magazine, 10 January 1983]

At the beginning of the 1990s, hundreds of families were evacuated, receiving generous compensation. Many of them were rehoused in tower blocks in the area, which because of the population density quickly became known as “slums on pillars”. The municipality allowed some of the families to continue living at ground level. Each family received a half-dunam, and permission to build a semi detached home.

Current Status

As of 2007, as a result of the scarcity of ground floor accommodation, and the Tel-Aviv population exchange policy, the municipality has decided that all ground floor homes in Tel-Aviv should pay a uniform rate. So the inhabitants of these buildings are paying the same rate as residents in the well-off neighbourhoods of Tzahala and Afeka, without receiving the social and community services, such as schools, clinics, regular public transport and community institutions, which the residents of ground floor homes in north Tel-Aviv receive. Those families – some 400 in number – who were not included in the 1990s schemes, currently live in localities scheduled for demolition.

Evacuation orders with no compensation have been issued against 30 of the 400 families who live in these localities, since it is alleged that the land on which their homes stand is not state land (under the auspices of the Custodian of Absentee Property, but private land. It is argued that, since the lands belonged in 1948 to a British investor who is not considered an absentee, the lands had not been expropriated by the state, they were not in its possession, and it had no obligation to compensate the residents. The Supreme Court accepted this argument, and the forced evacuation is due to take place in mid-July 2007. Activists and community groups have criticised this ruling, describing it as “ethnic-class injustice”. Dr Sandy Kedar of Haifa University, a member of the Israel Association for Distributive Justice, states that although from a narrow legalistic view the Supreme Court’s decision could possibly be justified, “If you look at what is happening in Kfar Shalem and compare it to, for example, Kibbutz Glil Yam, then it is possible to argue that this is a discriminatory policy that verges on illegality." [ [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/881760.html Suddenly they are called 'squatters'] Haaretz, 15 July 2007]

port

The neighbourhood has a football team, Hapoel Kfar Shalem, which plays in Liga Alef.

References


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