Many East Jerusalem residents have for decades lived on anonymous streets where home delivery is almost impossible — but that is about to change thanks to a long-awaited plan to name the roads.
The program should end years of confusion and, crucially, give Palestinians in the annexed eastern sector access to services, including home mail delivery, a tall order in the absence of street names or house numbers.
“We have been demanding that our streets be named for years,” said Hossam Watad, head of the community center in Beit Hanina neighborhood. “If you need an ambulance or any emergency service, you should be able to tell them exactly where you live.”
Photo: AFP
For residents living in homes without numbers and streets without names, jobs as simple as calling a plumber was a matter of finding local landmarks to direct the technician.
And getting post delivered to a home address was simply impossible, with residents relying on post boxes at the nearest post office to receive letters and bills, which often ended up being paid late because of the difficulties.
Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, which Israel captured in the 1967 Six-Day War and later annexed in a move never recognized by the international community, often complain of discrimination by the municipality.
Though they are not Israeli citizens, they pay the same municipal taxes as the city’s Jewish residents.
However, they say the city provides fewer services in Arab neighborhoods, makes it almost impossible to build and only agreed to allow street names and house numbers after years of requests.
“This is happening after years of petitioning the municipality, the post office and the [Israeli] Ministry of Communications,” Watad said.
Residents have even petitioned Israel’s high court on the issue of mail delivery, with the court accepting a communications ministry pledge to work with the municipality and postal authority to find a solution.
The Jerusalem municipality has promised that all the unnamed streets in the eastern part of the city would be given names by the end of next year, with house numbers to follow.
“Residents can give us names and then a committee will examine them, then another committee headed by a Supreme Court judge will examine them,” a municipality official said on condition of anonymity.
“It is the same process in west Jerusalem and all of Israel,” he added.
He said the program was part of a push by Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat to “improve a lot of issues in East Jerusalem,” though he did not say why it had taken the municipality so long to implement the project.
“Residents will be able to get mail correctly and call service people — it will help improve all aspects of life,” he said.
Jerusalem City Councilor Meir Margalit, who belongs to the left-wing Meretz party, was the main person pushing the program from inside the municipality.
“We will start with Beit Hanina and Shuafat,” he said, referring to neighborhoods in the northeast of the city. “We asked communities in Sur Baher and Jabal al-Mukabber [southeast] to suggest their names and they sent us a list.”
Margalit said the municipality had asked residents to avoid “provocative names,” though he said he had no personal objection to any name that locals might choose.
However, the municipal source said that none of the names which had been submitted were controversial.
Watad said he had worked with local residents to come up with names.
“We presented a list of Arab names for streets in Shuafat and Beit Hanina and we chose acceptable names,” he said.
Among the street names suggested were those of Lebanese poet Khalil Gibran and Egyptian writer Taha Hussein, as well as simpler choices such as “al-Nakheel,” meaning palm tree, and “al-Sadaqa” — Arabic for friendship.
Alaa Bassem, a 24-year-old resident of Beit Hanina, said he was pleased the project was finally under way, but questioned why it had taken so long.
“There isn’t any excuse for it. Jerusalem is relatively small and this project should have been done many years ago,” he said. “It just proves that the Palestinian residents of Jerusalem are on the bottom rung of the ladder in the minds of the municipality.”
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