At West Bank outpost, settlement building feted as ‘true Zionist response to terror’ – The Times of Israel

Posted By on July 10, 2017

Speaking in unison at a Sunday ceremony marking three years since the establishment of a Gush Etzion outpost built in response to the June 2014 kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teens, settler leaders said the advancement of the settlement enterprise is the most appropriate response to Palestinian terror.

Some 500 people gathered at the illegal outpost for the event organized by the World Zionist Organization, the Gush Etzion Regional Council, the Jewish National Fund, and Yehudit Katzover and Nadia Matar, two founders of the outpost, a nature reserve.

Today, our hearts are full of strength and pride, said WZOs Deputy Chair Yaakov Haguel, using the two Hebrew words chosen for the name of the site, Oz Vegaon. Our enemies will destroy and we will build. Our enemies will incite and we will establish.

Oz Vegaon was founded weeks after the June 12, 2014 disappearance of Eyal Yifrach, Naftali Fraenkel and Gilad Shaer. The three teens had inadvertently hitched a ride from a bus stop at the Alon Shvut Junction in Gush Etzion with terrorists from a Hamas cell. Their fate was unknown for almost three weeks, but they were killed mere hours after the kidnapping.

The three kidnapped and murdered teens, from left to right: Naftali Fraenkel, 16, Gilad Shaer, 16, and Eyal Yifrach, 19. (photo credit: Courtesy)

Following the kidnapping, Israel launched Operation Brothers Keeper in the West Bank in an attempt to crack down on Hamas and to track down the three yeshiva students only to find their bodies in a field north of Hebron 18 days later.

Israel then embarked on Operation Protective Edge in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip in an effort to stem rocket fire and later to also destroy the terror groups subterranean military infrastructure. Over 70 Israelis were killed in the war, most of them soldiers, and over 2,000 were killed on the Palestinian side at least half of them combatants, according to Israel in an intense bombing campaign and ground invasion in Gaza.

Just hours after the bodies of the three teens were laid to rest on June 30, 2014, Katzover and Matar led members of the Women in Green pro-settlement group along with a collective of youth from Gush Etzion to begin staking out the Oz Vegaon site a hill adjacent to Gush Etzion Junction and Kibbutz Migdal Oz that is designated as state land.

A widespread renovation of the area commenced with the help of groups of new immigrants from Russia and Ukraine. By the end of the summer of 2014, Oz Vegaon was opened to tourists as a campsite and hosting grounds for cultural events in memory of Shaer, Fraenkel, and Yifrach who were said to have been deeply connected to the area.

The second word in the nature reserve name, Vegaon, was chosen using the first-name initials of Gilad, Eyal and Naftali in Hebrew.

A walkway at the entrance to the Oz VeGaon outpost in Gush Etzion seen on June 28, 2016 (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)

Representatives from each of their families were present at Sundays commemoration.

Eyal Yifrachs father Uri addressed the crowd briefly, telling attendees: In the place of death and destruction there is flowering and building here. This is the true Zionist response to the terrible event that took place not far from here.

While some of the speakers took the opportunity to discuss what they viewed as the modern-day challenges to Zionism, the overarching theme was how West Bank settlement activity helped preserve the memory of the three slain teens.

About three years ago we accompanied the three boys to their final resting place. Three boys, students and children of Gush Etzion, who symbolize unity and connection to the land, said Gush Etzion Regional Council Chairman Shlomo Neeman. Who would have believed that from this place, which was once so neglected and rampant, such a magnificent project would be able to thrive and flourish.

Also during the ceremony, organizers inaugurated the Zionism Boulevard at the heart of the reserve, commemorating the 120th anniversary of the Zionist Congress.

Gush Etzion Regional Council spokesman Eliya Mor Yosef referred to the establishment of the outpost as price-tag building, employing the phrase used to characterize vandalism and other hate crimes usually carried out by Jewish ultra-nationalists in retaliation for government policies perceived as hostile to the settler movement.

Mor Yosef told The Times of Israel that contrary to the lawless attacks against Palestinians, the construction of the campsite was a more positive response to Palestinian terror.

The Oz Vegaon outpost consists of three families living in separate caravans at the site, previously a neglected forest filled with garbage before being converted into a nature reserve by the Women in Green group.

It is one of roughly 100 outposts built without the authorization of the government and against Israeli law.

Israeli children take part in activities during an event opening the new Zionism Boulevard at the Oz Vegaon outpost in Gush Etzion, on July 9, 2017. (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)

Read more:
At West Bank outpost, settlement building feted as 'true Zionist response to terror' - The Times of Israel

Related Posts

Comments

Comments are closed.

matomo tracker