
Jerusalem this year celebrated 40 years as a "united city", while the international community continues to refuse to recognize it as the capital of Israel. In 1967, Israel annexed East Jerusalem, thus breaching international law. For this reason, East Jerusalem remains occupied territory.

The Arab architectural features absorbed into the gentrification become major selling points for new buildings in the west of the city.

Palestinian workers hoping for work in Jerusalem, at 6.00 a.m. in a-Ram, which is now completely surrounded by the Wall. Tens of thousands have had to move as homes, hospitals, schools, clients, friends and family are now cut off; the Wall has created a massive population transfer. A-Ram had been a major Palestinian commercial centre.

South-east Jerusalem, the Riot Police and Border Police leave after policing a home demolition.

After 30 years of work at Hadassah Hospital, savings for a dream home vanished in a two-day demolition. Home to an extended family of sons and daughters.

Three generations of the Siam family become homeless in Silwan. Between 1994-2006, 678 houses were demolished in East Jerusalem alone.

Demolition order. Home demolitions in Jerusalem are conducted for 'administrative' reasons, generally because the house was built without a permit. Permits from the Jerusalem Municipality are almost impossible to obtain by East Jerusalem Palestinians living under Occupation.

Home demolitions are also family demolitions.

3,000 Bedouin Jahalin refugees (evicted from their lands in the Negev in the 50’s), are now living under eviction orders because of the construction of the Wall around Ma’ale Adumim settlement.

Israel conquers the desert with concrete. Ma’ale Adumim settlement (34,000 people – as opposed to 15,000 in 1991) is the settlement which most threatens the viability of a future Palestinian state, as it divides the West Bank into cantons, prevents Palestinians from having access to East Jerusalem, and pre-empts natural expansion of East Jerusalem.

Settler take-over in Silwan, near al-Aqsa mosque; the “Holy Basin” is the most concentrated focus of population transfer, especially using archaeology, home demolitions and settler take-overs.

Al Quds university students look towards the future that Israel is building for them. After completion of the Wall, many students cannot reach their studies.

School’s out in Anata. In the shadow of the Wall, what are the lessons?

Israeli soldiers often harass Palestinian kids: in January ’07, border police shot to death Abir Aramin, a 10 year-old girl on her way home from Anata school, with a rubber bullet; no stones were thrown by any kids that day. Her father is active in Combatants for Peace. The file investigating her death was closed for insufficient evidence.

Although entitled to free public education, the Arab education system in East Jerusalem has been severely neglected, resulting in a shortage of over 1,300 classrooms.

Demolition of Jahalin Bedouin refugee shacks in mid-winter.























During our documentary work in and around Jerusalem, we have been increasingly exposed to the dark side of the “City of Light”. There, hundreds of thousands of people are living in shadow, with identity defined by forces they cannot control, unwanted in their own homes, afraid of being expelled while they are just asking to live peacefully in their city.
Above all we want to discuss humanity, but the sad thing is that in Jerusalem one’s value as a human being is determined by ethnic group and religion. Together with its bulldozers, Israel is trying to smash the Palestinian community in East Jerusalem to dust. Divide and rule. Conquer and annex.
If Jerusalem is to remain the symbol of peace and tole-rance it cannot be a ghetto for anyone or owned by any particular group. In the same year that Israel celebrates 40 years of the so-called “unity” of Jerusalem, the city has been divided by force, discrimination and injustice. In the “holy city” of 2007, it seems that the only god is “security” and real estate. Israeli policy is drawing a twisting path of a wall that more than anything ensures more conflict, suffering and despair.
The future of Israel cannot be built by blocking the potential of the other. Any negotiation taking place while facts and borders are aggressively being determined according to one side’s interests, is just an illusion. Without real freedom and respect of the other’s right to live in dignity, there is no basis for political negotiation. October 2007