Talk:Negev Bedouin

Latest comment: 2 months ago by Zero0000 in topic Edit request: Delete sentence


POV

edit

Am I the only one who sees the severe imbalance in this article? It basically says that Israel discriminates against the Bedouins and destroys their homes etc. etc. and only mentions in passing that the government provides education. However, the following points are either not clarified or not mentioned at all:

  • Israel provides free housing to many Bedouins, many of whom refuse, but this isn't even a choice for most Jews who have to pay huge amounts for small bits of land/small apartments (except a minority eligible for shikunim - Amidar and such - also is underprivileged areas which are almost comparable to the poor conditions in Rahat etc.)
  • Bedouin towns have very high crime rates, blood revenge is very popular there so there are a lot of murders, and the police is often afraid to enter these places. The Bedouin towns are generally anti-establishment, anti-law enforcement, etc. and this harms Israel's ability to help them.
  • Because of the extreme high birthrate of the Bedouins, the government may have trouble providing many of them with basic services - this isn't just a result of discrimination (although I will admit that a certain degree of discrimination takes place)
  • Most of the Bedouins who don't live in the permanent settlements (Rahat, Tel Sheva, etc.) and are not connected to electricty and water, do so out of choice, because they supposedly want to preserve their dignity. Some make temporary villages which are against the law (so they knowingly break the law), even though the government is actually interested in settling the Bedouins permanently, so it shouldn't be that difficult to acquire a permit to start construction.
  • Some Arab MKs actively help Bedouins break construction laws and undermine the legal system in Israel, especially considering this is less of an issue of discrimination because neither Jews nor Arabs are allowed to just take a piece of land (in the Negev or elsewhere), settle on it and start building. This also severely harms the ability of the Israeli authorities to help the Bedouins.

-- Ynhockey (Talk) 07:23, 29 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

I agree that this is problematic. TewfikTalk 09:37, 2 July 2007 (UTC)Reply
I agree with a couple of your points. Why don't you add your points to the article?Vice regent 21:06, 6 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

--I agree too: this article is worse than just a POV violation, it amounts to outright libel. I would like to invite anyone to come to the Negev and see what it going on: Bedouin live as they wish-- lawlessly, they take over territories with impunity, the have among the highest birthrates in the world-- meaning, no reasonable amount of social service provision by Israel will ever significantly break the cycle of poverty and raise their standard of living, they act in a parasitic fashion-- with very very high theft rates, services providers are afraid to enter their communities as they are very violent and often shoot outsiders, they engage in polygamy (they often have so many children that they do not know their own children's names), they steal steal steal: recently, in a shopping mall near Be'ersheva, they tied a truck to a metal electric pole, and dragged it away, to smelt it to sell the metal for profit (in one of many illegal such operations that the government is afraid to bust) they steal metal of memorials, they steal manhole covers, leaving them exposed, they desecrate, they destroy, they steal. Open any history book-- look at their history-- they sacked Jerusalem so many times as to render it uninhabitable and caused its population to empty. This is an important part of the truth that is just ignored in the article. They refuse to join Israeli society-- but they are only guests in Israel (nomadic squatters of lands that never belonged to them.) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 89.1.192.98 (talk) 16:09, 9 October 2007 (UTC)Reply

- If anything, the article is biased in favour of Israel! Primarily because it omits any reference to the ongoing destruction of Bedouin villages and property. The above contributor makes the quite bizarre claim that "THEY take over territories with impunity" - but that is exactly what the Israeli government is doing! And phrases like "the have among the highest birthrates", "THEY are very violent and often shoot outsiders, THEY engage in polygamy", "THEY steal steal steal" and "they are only guests in Israel (nomadic squatters of lands that never belonged to them" are clearly full of hate and normally the sort of language associated with racists. Pretzelberg (talk) 12:55, 14 December 2007 (UTC)Reply

AGREE with your assessment 68.192.86.80 (talk) 17:05, 27 September 2022 (UTC)Reply

-- From what I see here, one could hardly argue that any of this is libel. Thank you, Pretzelberg, for taking the time to dispute the above overtly racist comments, point by point -such language should not get by without comment (the comments in October 2007). YHockney - true, the Bedouin have problems, internal social problems as well as externally caused ones. I think one thing that should be clear though, is that Bedouin don't need 'help' solving their problems - they need to deal with their social problems themselves. However, their civil problems, and their political problems, are another matter. First, the civil problems: providing the services accorded to every other citizen, to the Bedouin, is not 'helping' them, it is simply acknowledging their inalienable rights, their humanity. Second, the political problems: acknowledging the right of Bedouin, like other citizens of Israel in Moshavim, the right to engage in agriculture, is also not about 'humoring' their need for dignity in the sense of 'Ard (honor), it is about not transferring as many as 40,000 IDF-trained human beings against their will. Want to push Bedouin to the edge? We're getting close. The Bedouin say they will not launch an intifada - I take that to mean that they do not want to. But if plans to move the Bedouin are executed, then things could change. I just think, why not let them be, 'let' them stay in their villages, betach, lama lo? It would be a lot less bloody, a lot less expensive, a lot more humane, better for Israel's soul. So, sure, you could see the above article as biased. Or you could see it as an understatement.Whynot25 (talk) 02:54, 6 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

POV, take 2

edit

This whole article is crap, and will be deleted if no one will rewrite it. Guy0307 (talk) 12:07, 11 June 2008 (UTC)Reply

It would be helpful if you were to tell us what parts of this article you object to. I'd have thought the omissions were much more significant than anything included. There is mysteriously no reference to the fact that the Bedouin do not have "nationality" in Israel, rendering them excluded in theory (if not always in practice) from 93% of the land. PRtalk 10:02, 24 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Please clarify - what do you mean by "nationality", as distinct from "citizenship?" Thanks, LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 21:40, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Contesting proposed deletion

edit
Guy0307, on what grounds? You say this is anti-Israeli, but you do not explain how, and I fail to understand why you do not then add in the balance you seek? I see you do not argue that the concept Negev Bedouins is not worthy of an entry. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:37, 22 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I absolutely oppose deletion of this article and consider Guy0307's calling it "crap" to be an indication of bad faith. This is a fairly well-referenced article on an important subgroup of the population of historic Palestine. This article must not be deleted and suggestions that it be deleted are totally absurd and unfounded. --Tirpse77 (talk) 03:11, 23 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Well referenced? What a joke. This is practically an anti Israeli POV, and I'm not the nor last to say it. I don't have time to do major editing, but I would if I did. 124.190.26.180 (talk) 14:28, 24 July 2008 (UTC) (guy0307)Reply
Putting a proposed delete prod on this page was an abuse of that facility on so many levels. It is only meant to be used for pages which "obviously and controversially don't belong in an encyclopedia", for example non-notable people putting up vanity entries about themselves. A page about a significant national/social group obviously does belong here, and should not have been put up for deletion, especially via this method, just because you believe that - as currently put together - it is not referenced properly and/or is not written neutrally. In any event a quick scan suggests that it has a large number of references for an article of this length, most of which are academic sources or Israeli newspapers. To me that looks pretty well referenced. Whether it's then written fairly or not, I don't know - but just because it might criticise aspects of Israel's treatment of the Bedouins, that doesn't of itself mean it's biased or "anti-Israeli". Sometimes countries - Israel included, shock - do treat people living within their borders badly you know. If however there are genuine problems, these can be addressed by you or some other editor working on the content, with appropriate sources. That's how this place works. --Nickhh (talk) 17:02, 24 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
OK, maybe I shouldn't have done that. I'll quote from the article: As Jewish immigration increased, unemployment levels in the Bedouin population reached record highs. As of 1958, employment in the Bedouin male population was less than 3.5%. Bedouins were generally discriminated against in employment, as preference was given to Jews. Bias bias bias. I'm going to medcab. Guy0307 (talk) 13:15, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
As an ex-resident of the south, i unfortunately have to agree (At least to some extent) with what guy says. this article emphasizes bad aspects and systematically ignores good ones. it imposes a palestinian nationalistic view on the bedouin population and life in the negev. i haven't had the time to invest to this article, though i did add about the glaring omission of the lehavim-rahat railway station. there are various examples of NGO cooperation (negev bar-kayma et al), there's a rise of bedouin lawyers and a bedouin has been appointed as a judge. MiS-Saath (talk) 19:17, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I'd like to provide a concrete example - in the 'main' bedouin article, dealing with bedouin sedentrization throughout the middle east, the process is described as a 'natural' one. in this article, the 'natural' reasons for sedentrization are thoroughly omitted, replaced by a nationalistic narrative. not to mention that the sources heavily rely on the works of known anti-zionist academics (e.g. Yiftachel). not that they're not RS, but wikipedia should balance between views even while considering RS sources. compare with this view [1] for example (hebrew only). MiS-Saath (talk) 19:26, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Great, so put that perspective into the article. Who will fight you? Not me, also a former resident of the South. Actually, all the Bedouin are sedentarized, both in recognized and unrecognized towns and villages, and much of this was by choice. But, sedentarization was just as much a forced as a natural process; thus I will contest deletion of the facts about forcible sedentarization. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 19:31, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Re: your other points:
  • To detail the forced sedentarization process is not nationalistic in any way, as far as I can see. The article barely mentions the word "Palestinian;" although, I don't see anything wrong with using the term here.
  • As far as Negev Bar Kayma -- aside from the fact that it takes funding from corporations for environmental regulation of corporations, and its work has come under fire for this reason -- its founder is on the Goldberg Commission, which is hardly seen as Bedouin-friendly. It should be noted that the fact that a body has one or two Bedouin associated with it does not mean that it is a body that represents Bedouin interests (often, it is true, Bedouin who get involved in this way do so because it works in their own interests); The Goldberg committee, which seeks above all to deal with the problem of the unrecognized villages, does not include a single representative from an unrecognized village. (An aside: In their work on the "Bedouin problem" in the past year, Bar kayma lists as one of their objectives is to help the Bedouin "To learn how to make intelligent use of natural resources." How do they think the Bedouin survived in the desert for thousands of years, except through making "intelligent use of natural resources?")LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 19:39, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Negev bar kayma has in their stated objectives a plan to aid bedouin development. see this [2]. i'll admit to not checking on how much they fulfill their plans. but back on to the subject - almost no sedentrization comes 'naturally'. but, whereas sedentrization of bedouins in the rest of the middle east is described as a 'natural' process, the article does emphasize a narrative that the israeli administration is 'attacking' the bedouin lifestyle because it threatens it and as part of an anti-palestinian agenda. i think it's irresponsible to make such a claim without comparison to sedentrization at other countries, which will also show patterns of relocations and arguments, but these have been presented otherwise. also on the missing side is affirmative action plans in BGU and in government branches, the appointment of a bedouin consul [3] and others. like i said, i don't have much time to work on it. but i really hope that someone with more time and without a strong I/P bias will take care to fix this article. MiS-Saath (talk) 20:11, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I haven't done any original research comparing the situation of Bedouin in Israel with Bedouin elsewhere, but I have done a lot of reading about other populations, especially in Jordan, where the kingdom is Bedouin-ruled. I am also a bit familier with the situation of Bedouin under Egyptian rule, in the Sinai - the oppression there is terrible. But this is an article about Negev Bedouins, and I think the reasons for suppression of the Bedouin way of life in this case is not the same as in Egypt or elsewhere. I definitely am not enough of an expert to bring in any cross-comparisons. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:26, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Edits suggested for NPOV

edit

Let's begin a summary of requested edits below these headings:

1. More good aspects of Negev Bedouin life that should be mentioned

edit
  • Appointment of Bedouin to gvt. positions: [4];

2. Government perspective on Bedouin

edit
  • Add other sources: One example -
-Tal, Alon, 1960- Space Matters: Historic Drivers and Turning Points In Israel's Open Space Protection Policy

Israel Studies - Volume 13, Number 1, Spring 2008, pp. 119-151 Used

- Bedouin information, ILA, 2007
- "Off the Map: Land and Housing Rights Violations in Israel’s Unrecognized Bedouin Villages"; Human Rights Watch, March 2008 Volume 20, No. 5(E) (has a section on government rationale - obviously HRW is presenting a different view, but it considers the government perspective duly)
-[5]
I have decided to reduce the quotes I formerly posted here for readability. I have pasted the rest to unrecognized villages, where all this should be dealt with in more depth. I have selected a few of the most relevant quotes and inserted them below:
YNET on Edri comments - treat the Bedouin like settlers:
  • "The Knesset must legislate a compensation/eviction law for the Bedouins in the South, similar to the compensation/eviction law for settlers from Gush Katif," Minister for Development of the Negev and Galilee, Yaakov Edri told Ynet.[1]
  • Relying on recommendations from the Goldberg Commission, headed by Judge Eliezer Goldberg (currently drawing up policy concerning the settlement of Bedouins in the Negev) Edri told Ynet "a precise timetable must be determined for evacuating the lands held by Bedouins. Afterwards, if they don't leave voluntarily, Edri suggested establishing a special unit of the police and military, the task of which will be to forcibly evict the Bedouins. Edri notes that "'we must prepare the enforcement officials, the police and army for implementation of the law, as we did with Gush Katif. One who does not agree to evacuate for compensation – we will treat him as we did with the settlers."[2]
Ynet - Bedouin response - we are not settlers, we are indigenous people:
  • Chairperson of the (Regional) Council of Unrecognised Villages in the Negev, Hussein Al Rafiya, said to Ynet in response to the proposal: "Instead of trying to evict us, Minister Edri should accept the fact that these are existing settlements and residents living on their lands."[3]
  • "These have been our lands, from prior to the establishment of the state, and I don't know why he offered this proposal, before we've even received the recommendations of the Goldberg Committee," said Al Rafiya.[4]
  • The Chairperson of Balad, Member of Knesset Jamal Zahalka, said: "Edri and his kind are dreaming of completing the work begun in 1948, to continue evicting people from their lands on which they lived a long time before Edri and those like him arrived here."[5]
HAARETZ on Edri's comments - let's wait for the Goldberg Committee findings:
  • Housing and Construction Minister Ze'ev Boim reprimanded the minister for the development of the Negev and the Galilee, Jacob Edery, for calling for a law to displace the Bedouin from their lands and compensate them monetarily. In a letter to Edery, a copy of which was sent to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, Boim rebuked him for making these statement at a time when the Goldberg Committee is formulating recommendations on the future of Bedouin community life in the Negev.[6]
What the ILA calls the government's "generous offer":
  • "Although Israel owns the lands over which the Bedouins are dispersed, it is prepared to examine all Bedouin ownership claims in court. By law and according to all existing records, the State of Israel is the sole owner of the land on which the dispersed Bedouin live." "The state has filed some 170 counter-claims (regarding more than 110,000 dunams), and in every case where a ruling has been handed down by the court, it has ordered the land to be registered as state owned....Although the Israeli government insists that it owns the lands occupied by the Bedouin dispersion, the state is prepared to grant immediate financial “compensation” and sometimes even alternative land to Bedouin who withdraw their ownership claims."[7]
  • Starting ?????, and until December 2007, "A Bedouin who withdraws an ownership suit relating to 200 dunams will receive a state grant of approximately NIS 160,000. Bedouin who withdraw their ownership claims for 200 dunams of land (in the area covered by the masterplan for Bedouin villages) will receive a government grant of NIS 1,400,000. In addition to the cash grant, they also receive 40 dunams of agricultural land."p. 10[8]
  • Compensation for tribal lands includes: government services (accorded every other citizen),“Relocation Grants” of NIS 7,500 per family and NIS1,500 for each child (i.e. between approx.2,000$ and 6,000$), and an average of 800 meters of land. The government says "The compensation is many times the value of the illegal structures they leave"[9] (but says nothing of the value of the land they reside on, plus the agricultural grounds surrounding, which is incomparable to the 'compensation' offered)
  • The government's approach to investing in the Bedouin: "Israel is currently building 13 new villages or towns for the Negev Bedouin...The plans for the villages are based on statistical projections for the expansion of the Bedouin population until the year 2030."[10]
  • "Aside from building new townships for the Bedouin in the Negev, the Israeli government plans to invest more than NIS 1 billion in a multi-phased program to improve the infrastructure of existing Bedouin towns and to develop their public facilities...As part of its plan to expand the existing Bedouin towns in the Negev, the ILA will double the size of the Bedouin town of Rahat. This is the largest construction project — costing an estimated half a billion shekels — undertaken by the Israeli government in recent years"[11]
The ILA's response to critiques:
  • The government explains the lack of service in unrecog villages thus: "These services can only be provided to those living in permanent housing, and the fact that the Bedouin are dispersed over an extensive area prevents the state from offering these public services."[12]
  • The government partially faults the Bedouin for hindering the government's provision of services, etc.: “In many cases, Bedouin lawsuits hinder the construction of new neighborhoods, the upgrading of existing village infrastructures, and the advantageous use of the land for the entire Bedouin population"[13]
  • The government explains the lack of services in recognized urban townships thus:"The percentage of homeowners in Bedouin towns who pay municipal taxes is problematically low. This makes it difficult for town councils to provide a decent level of services. When a sufficient number of residents pay their municipal taxes, the municipal authorities can substantially improve their services and thus improve living conditions for the Bedouin."[14]
  • "The Israeli government continues its generous policy towards the Bedouin population by meeting their ever-increasing needs in every possible way."[15]
The ILA's view on land disputes
  • "The Bedouin's claims are detrimental to the entire Bedouin population of the Negev" [16]
  • "Some elements within the Negev Bedouin population seek to establish facts on the ground and steal agricultural land. Despite the fact that Israel leases land to the Bedouin at a symbolic cost, the past few years have witnessed an increase in illegal squatting and land appropriation."[17]
  • Regarding Bedouin land claims (the total area of the unrecognized villages): "In recent years, some of the Bedouin residing in the dispersed areas have started claiming ownership of land areas totaling some 600,000 dunams (60,000 hectares or 230 square miles) in the Negev – over 12 times the area of Tel Aviv..."[18]
  • The ILA makes clear its threat to evict what it calls "callous lawbreaker" and "squatters", citing clause 18B of the Land Law: "Israel’s duty is to protect and defend its citizens. Israel cannot tolerate callous lawbreakers whose behavior is harmful to the law-abiding community. It is the state’s duty to evict squatters and restore the land to the citizens who leased it."[19]
  • On crop destruction: "The state fights squatters by plowing up the land. The land is plowed once the seeds sown by the illegal farmers have sprouted."[20]

Issues raised by Ynhockey

edit
As far as I know, the government did nothing until a few years ago to even begin to address the polygamy issue, despite a good deal of talk.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 21:01, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
  • The refusal of some Bedouins to move to permanent settlements despite offers by the government
  • Treatment of women in the Bedouin sector

3. More info on relationship between Bedouin and government

edit

Land Disputes Between the Negev Bedouin and Israel Israel Studies - Volume 11, Number 2, Summer 2006, pp. 1-22 LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:19, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Atila Shomplavi."Minister for Development of the Negev: Compensation/Eviction for Bedouins in the South" Ynet, 27 July 2008
  2. ^ Atila Shomplavi."Minister for Development of the Negev: Compensation/Eviction for Bedouins in the South" Ynet, 27 July 2008
  3. ^ Sharon Rofeh-Ofir and Yonit Atlas. "Bedouins: "We are not Settlers, You will not Evict Us"; Ynet July 27, 008
  4. ^ Sharon Rofeh-Ofir and Yonit Atlas. "Bedouins: "We are not Settlers, You will not Evict Us"; Ynet July 27, 008
  5. ^ Sharon Rofeh-Ofir and Yonit Atlas. "Bedouins: "We are not Settlers, You will not Evict Us"; Ynet July 27, 008
  6. ^ News in Brief; Haaretz, July 29, 2008
  7. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  8. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  9. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  10. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  11. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  12. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  13. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  14. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  15. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  16. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  17. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  18. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  19. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007
  20. ^ [http://www.mmi.gov.il/Envelope/indexeng.asp?page=/static/eng/f_project.html "The Beduin of the Negev", Israel Land Administration, updated as of March 11, 2007

Citations - stats on pop., etc.

edit

Just wanted to raise the issue of statistics/numbers, briefly. The RCUV still says there are 45 such villages. HRW has started to say 39. The RCUV says half of the Bedouin live in unrecog villages while the ILA says only 40%. This is largely due to the fact that several of the villages now considered part of the recently-formed Abu Basma Regional Council are still unrecognized, in a strange yet unsurprising turn of events. Thus the RCUV has continued to include the unrecognized villagesd within the Abu Basma Regional Council in its count (until the former unrecognized villages within the council receive services and the remaining unrecognized villages receive final recognition of their village lands) and estimates the population higher due to high birth rates as well. This should somehow be included in the article, but I lack a citation at present. Also, we need stats for much of the article, especially government stats - anyone ready to get to work?LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 21:44, 25 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

So sorry, I put this citation in today to support this statement: The report described polygamy in the Bedouin sector a “security threat” and advocated means of reducing the birth rate in the Arab sector.[1] Canadian Monkey rightly removed it. The report did indeed say that, but the cited source says mnothing of the sort. Again, apologies!LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 02:39, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Cook, Jonathan:”Unwanted Citizens,” Al-Ahram, Jan 10, 2002

Sources for crime problem

edit

Note: I am adding all this hoping that editors who come to this page will respect the delicacy of this issue. I ask that people use this information in a humanistic way, keeping in mind that there is 95% unemployment in many unrecognized villages and around 30% in urban townships. It also goes without saying that this data does not apply to the majority of Negev Bedouin. Finally, it should be noted that while the Bedouin population as a whole has been severly demonized as "criminals," as is evidenced below, Bedouin lawbreakers often work in cooperation with Jewish mafia who it is clear do not experience the same demonization (I can't prove the demonization is worse towards Bedouin, but it is pretty obvious if you live in Israel):

  • Kav LaOved report, p. 33: Smuggling people into Israel across the Egyptian border: "Over 70% of migrant workers in Israel entered the country with a legal working permit.91

Others arrived as tourists or were smuggled in, having paid large sums of money to smugglers. Smuggling workers has increased in recent years following the tightening of controls on entry through Ben-Gurion Airport and Haifa Port, and the steady increase in the numbers of people refused entry to Israel.92 In most cases smuggling follows a path used until recently only by traffickers in women, drugs, and arms. The workers land in Egypt, are transported to the Sinai Desert, where they meet Bedouin guides who lead them in an arduous journey, mostly on foot, through the desert and across the border into Israel. According to data gathered by volunteers of the Hotline for Migrant Workers in the prison, the fee charged for smuggling a worker across the border into Israel ranges from $3,500 to $4,000.

IDF troops patrol the Egyptian border in an attempt to catch the migrants, but with very little success due to the length of the border. In an article published in Haíaretz, Uzi Havshush, a commander of an IDF reserve force assigned to patrol the border and prevent the entry of contraband, provided a list of products and people regularly smuggled across the border: ìJuly 22: three bags of marijuana. July 24: six bags. July 24: 25 prostitutes. July 26: ten prostitutes. July 28: ten prostitutes. July 30: two jeeps heading to meet each other changed course after being identified. July 31: four Egyptians got into a vehicle awaiting them on the Israeli side. Not far from there the crossing of four foreign workers and one woman was recorded.î93

Despite the security risks, from the Israeli point of view, the authorities are doing very little to prevent the smuggling from taking place, but instead prefer to concentrate on catching the people who have crossed the border.

A Ghanaian national who wished to give information on Israeli and foreign citizens who, he claimed, were involved in organizing illegal migration across the Egyptian border, was held in prison for over eight months after being arrested for being in Israel unlawfully. His lawyer informed the Attorney-General that his client was prepared to give evidence on this matter, and the Hotline for Migrant Workers approached the Commissioner for Foreign Nationals at the Ministry of Internal Security and the head of the Immigration Administration in this regard.94 Police officers came to take the Ghanaianís testimony several months ago, but nothing was then done about it, and he was eventually deported. This fact attests to the attitude of the authorities who prefer to ignore the organizers of the human contraband.

Footnote 93: Avihai Becker, "Chase" Haaretz Weekend Supplement, August 9, 2002."

From another report, Trafficking in women: "IX. Corruption Within the Police Force: Collaboration between traffickers and policemen exists in two manners: a passive manner where policemen visit the brothels as clients, and an active manner which involves cooperation with traffickers and tipping off of police raids." LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:02, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Some interesting info about Bedouin polygamy here. This is an official report by a government organization so it could be interpreted as representing the state (although it's an inter-office report, not a government statement to the public or anything). -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:03, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Police brutality against Bedouin

edit

Now, in conjunction with the 'criminal image' of the Bedouin also come high death rates among Bedouin engaged in theft and many times, mere traffic violations. I have data on this and will insert it as soon as I get a chance.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:35, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I think the deaths from traffic violations are in traffic accidents, but maybe that's not what you were talking about. I have a couple articles somewhere with the police claiming that Bedouins are reckless drivers and often kill themselves and other people as a result. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 17:30, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
The Mossawa Center has documented dozens of killings of Arab citizens of Israel by police, the majority of them Bedouin. Sometimes police have killed Bedouin while chasing them down for suspected criminal activity. However, in various cases, police have shot and killed Bedouin when they failed to immediately stop their cars upon request. The essential point is that the police are not so trigger-happy with Jewish citizens, and that if 38-something Jews were shot in such circumstances, there would be investigations. In the case of the killings of Bedouin, as far as I know, no action has been taken.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:18, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for clarifying. My only hope is that police statements exist for notable killings like you mention (if indeed they happenned), because I'd hate it if the Mossawa Center was our only source for these claims. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 21:39, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am sure there are police statements saying essentialli that "such-and-such Bedouin man" failed to stop at a traffic light at 3:24, July 24th and "such-and-such police officer" was forced to shoot him. But how would you get access to such records? LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 23:57, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Ber Seba

edit

It would be good to have a short section dealing with the relevance of Beer Sheva as a regional trading site throughout hundreds of years. Also should be noted that the regional mosque there has been off-limits for prayer, transformed several times into secular uses and such.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 19:39, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Women's status

edit

I added this section today - we need a bit ,more info, with more citations, dealing with polygamy and other issues. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:07, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Employment: Some 5% of Bedouin women work outside the home.[1]

I changed the wording around FGM in that it was orginaly worded "Female genital cutting" sorry to say that is not the correct word. the accepted name for it is mutilation. I am unsure whether small cut should be changed to be more specific. I think it gets the pointb across but is a little vague if FGM is unknown to you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.5.61.244 (talk) 01:02, 26 November 2013 (UTC)Reply

Polygamy

edit

It's not all on the government, but until 2005 the government had done nothing to rectify the problem (and thus how can the government complain about the polygamy problem?) Another Amnesty quote:

"Polygamy is forbidden by Article 177 of the Penal Law (1977) and is punishable by up to 5 years in prison. However, no polygamous husbands are known to have been prosecuted for the offence, and polygamy continues to occur among Israeli Bedouins. Precisely because it is a punishable offence, the extent of the phenomenon of polygamy is not known. According to survey carried out amongst Israeli Bedouin women in the Negev region in 1999 by the Nazareth-based Arab Association for Human Rights, 40% of Bedouin women were living in polygamous households.

Often Bedouin men formally marry their first wife and subsequently unofficially marry a second or a third woman. In some cases the man formally divorces from his first wife in order to formally marry a second wife; in such cases the divorce is a purely administrative procedure and the couple remains "informally" married. Situations in which the divorcees continue to live in the same household are common amongst Israeli Bedouin in the Negev region.

In the Bedouin community in the Negev region, the combination of high level of poverty, very conservative social structures, and stringent logistical constraints, which make it impossible to build additional houses, prevents women from starting new independent households away from their former spouses and families. In addition to the practical problems of lack of financial resources, and children’s custody, it is socially more acceptable for a woman to be in a polygamous marriage than to return to her family as a divorcee. Hence in most cases the only option is to remain in the house of the former spouse.

Certain government policies compound the problem of Bedouin women living in polygamous situations, rather than assisting women to get out of such situations. The authorities do not prosecute men for violating the law forbidding polygamy, but often penalize divorced women who live near their former spouse by denying them the single mother benefits, even in cases where the women are no longer living with their former spouse.

The authorities are currently in the process of amending the Penal Law. The authorities’ explanation of the proposed amendment, which passed the first reading in the Knesset in March 2005, is that the phenomenon of polygamy has increased among the Bedouin population and that "the tool in usage for circumventing the legal prohibition is ‘apparent’ divorce from the first wife, when in actual fact she continues to live in the husband’s house or in proximity and continues to take care of the children and the household while this is full polygamy".(127) The proposed amendment would extend the definition of polygamy to include divorced women who live "close to" the former spouse.

The adoption of this amendment in its current form would have widespread and detrimental financial consequences for all formally divorced women who continue to live near their former husbands’ home – which applies to many divorced Bedouin women because they want to be near their children and continue to take care of them, and/or because their parents home is in the same area (in the Bedouin society marriage between relatives is very common). The fact that the proposed amendment does not define the term "in proximity/close to" widens the scope for denying single mother benefits to divorced women on the grounds that they live "near" their former spouses."[2] LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:31, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

The facts in the first paragraph are correct, and it's all about spin. If you read the MMM report I posted earlier, it says the exact same thing, except that the lack of punishment for polygamy is presented as being considerate to the Bedouin population, which cannot be expected to change their customs overnight. So at least part of the facts are not disputed. The other paragraphs are more up for debate, I hope that other sources are provided to balance the claims, also we may want to examine Amnesty's footnotes which may provide a wealth of new information. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 21:36, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I don't know how we could get across the complexity around this issue, but, I know that many Arabs who are against polygamy do view the government as complicit in the continuation of this practice which really has no rational place outside a nomadic context. The reason many look upon the government's 'delicate', as in almost nonexistent, handling of this issue with cynicism and frustration is that somehow the government has not been too worried about upsetting the delicate balance of Bedouin life as far as self-subsistence agriculture or land rights go, and has been plenty strict about enforcing the law in such a way as to severely curtail the Bedouin way of life as desert 'wanderers'(they were never really wanderers), but has never been too keen to curtail the aspects of Bedouin tradition which harm women and thus hold back Bedouin society asd a whole. Furthermore, the end of semi-nomadism severely hurt Bedouin women's status in the family - today they have far less of an economic role, and with the lack of jobs around, obviously they are not going to enter the workforce and compete with their unemployed husbands. Clearly, outside government intervention to combat a deeply rooted cultural practice would be difficult, and Bedouin themselves are primarily responsible for this matter. However, don't you think if the government had gotten started on it in the 50's onward, there would be progress? We have seen what the government can when it wants to confiscate Bedouin lands, impose State ownership, and evict what it calls 'squatters' etc. - so we know it is capable of orchestrating huge transformations. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 19:00, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Polygamy itself is a contested issue, Islam allows for more than one wife and many Muslim nations allow it, many human rights groups also argue that multiple people should be allowed to marry, as there is no law against dating multiple people but marrying multiple people is not allowed, they argue this is influenced by certain cultures which view marriage as between man and women or even just two people, and argue that just as homosexual marriage is justified because if they love each other why should you stop them, can be applied to polygamy, there is much opposition as well like some people who fear women in such relationships however polygamy could as well encompass a women dating multiple men concurrently, since the issue is contested by two sides should both takes not be presented, after all if we treat polygamy as right or wrong we lose neutrality, and the point is to present all sides without taking any. — Preceding unsigned comment added by SandeepSinghToor (talkcontribs) 05:11, 1 June 2014 (UTC)Reply

Health

edit

Amnesty Notes:

  • Very few health care facilities are available in the unrecognised Bedouin villages in the Negev, mostly basic mobile clinics or caravans,(114) and according to the Israeli NGO Physicians for Human Rights (PHR-Israel) the number of doctors is a third of the norm.(115) Thirty-eight villages have no medical services,(116) and ambulances do not serve the unrecognized villages, denying residents ready access to emergency health care. [1]
  • The State has provided no water infrastructure for the unrecognized villages. In some villages residents have managed by buying containers of water, and, more recently, pipes have been installed to bring water into some villages. Due to the high desert temperatures, fungi, bacteria and rust develop very quickly in the plastic containers or metal tanks, leading to numerous infections and skin diseases (e.g. scabies).[2]
  • In 2003, the infant mortality rate (IMR) was 13.3 per 1,000 births in the Negev, when it was 3.9 among the Jewish population and 5 among the Israeli population at large.[3]

LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:27, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Interesting information, although I believe that 90% of it should go to the unrecognized villages article, because these statistics do not appear to apply to Bedouins in permanent towns like Rahat and Tel Sheva. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 21:33, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I added it in before I saw your comment. We'll have to figure out what will go into each article. I don;t think all data on the unrecog villages should be separated out. My view is that the unrecog article should mostly deal with the specifics of the land dispute issue, and have a section on services, with an edited down history section, and maybe edited down environment and demography sections.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 06:34, 28 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I am ambivalent on this issue, leaning more towards including info about unrecognized villages only in its main article. However, because these villages are central to the Negev Bedouin subject, most of the info (especially statistical) could be included here as well. However, it should be included in a NPOV manner, i.e. distinction should be made about recognized vs. unrecognized villages when detailing access to utilities and services, because there is usually a clear statistical difference. You can't just provide statistics for unrecognized villages and claim that they apply to all Negev Bedouins. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:53, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ "Briefing to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women"; Amnesty International, 2005 (citing J. Cwikel and N. Barak, Health and Welfare of Bedouin Women in the Negev, The Centre for Women’s Health Studies and Promotion, Ben Gurion University, 2001)
  2. ^ Without Water! Position Paper on the Right to Water in Unrecognized Villages. PHR-Israel September 2004
  3. ^ Without Water! Position Paper on the Right to Water in Unrecognized Villages. PHR-Israel September 2004

Education

edit

Amnesty Notes:

  • For example, there are very few education facilities for the population of the seven unrecognized Bedouin villages in the Abu-Tulul al-Shihabi area near Beer Sheva and Dimona, and the right to education of the population has been overlooked for years.(110) The nearest high school for a population of 12,000 is 15 kilometres away. This has had particularly negative impact on girls who account for 77% of the drop out rate.(111) Such situation is particular to the Bedouin villages; by contrast and the Israeli authorities have promptly provided much smaller Jewish villages in the Negev region and elsewhere in Israel, as well as Israeli settlements in the Occupied Territories, with road networks and education and other facilities.[1] LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 20:27, 26 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I don't really think this part is disputed, and Amnesty's report is much more neutral than the Wikipedia article, in that it provides the facts (this is suprising, coming from the anti-Israel Amnesty, but that's for another discussion). The Amnesty article doesn't claim that the Bedouins in unrecognized villages get no education, just that it's hard to get, and far away (although we should clarify that the length matters because of transportation, not actual distance, because 15 km is really not much). -- Ynhockey (Talk) 17:18, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
You're right, 15 km. not that much. FYI - I just posted all these quotes here for future reference, was not expecting a dispute:) LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:10, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ "Briefing to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women"; Amnesty International, 2005 (citing J. Cwikel and N. Barak, Health and Welfare of Bedouin Women in the Negev, The Centre for Women’s Health Studies and Promotion, Ben Gurion University, 2001)

I moved a lot from Unrecognized villages

edit

Hi there, I moved most of the Unrecognized villages article here, since it all belongs here anyway; I will be editing down the other article and adding in other info. Don't be afraid - I will be cutting out some of the SYNTH in the next day or so. I've run out of time today! Sorry. Trust me, I'll go back and edit things down somewhat. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 21:42, 26 July 2008 (UTC) Will try to get to it today...LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 17:03, 27 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

National identity/relations with Palestinians

edit

See this article: "In Israel, the Negev Bedouins are often presented and perceived both by Jews and Arabs alike as a group of “loyal and obedient” citizens of the State. Like the Druze, they are viewed as being completely different from the rest of the Palestinians of Israel.1 Their relationships to the Palestinians of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank are considered inexistent. This commonly held opinion is often buttressed by reference to their “cultural specificities” and in particular to their “nomadic culture”. Additionally, their political behavior is also cited, and is too frequently reduced to their voluntary enlistment in the Israeli army, and their low level of political militancy hostile to the State of Israel as compared to other Palestinians with Israeli citizenship or more simply, their reticence in presenting themselves as Palestinians. The idea that the Negev Bedouins are an isolated and a specific group is clearly also rooted in the words and deeds of the actors involved. This idea is further strengthened by direct or indirect support from researchers who have investigated this group. To date, the studies dealing with the Negev Bedouins have cast them solely in a binary relationship with Israeli society.2 Although some of these writers note the ties Bedouins have maintained with their relatives and neighbors in the West Bank and Gaza3 over the last fifty years, none have found it relevant to examine this issue more deeply. From January 1998 to July 2000, while I was conducting research on this group, I was struck by the recurrence and the regularity of meetings and cross border exchanges involving Negev Bedouin and their relatives or neighbors living in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip or in the Sinai. Occurring as ‘non-events’, these activities cast doubt on the accepted view of relationships between the Bedouins of the Negev and their Palestinian neighbors and call for a renewed approach to this group and its status within the Israeli-Palestinian space."[1]

Border guards, precedent ( I don't know where my citation for this is, but it is interesting): After being forced off land from the Shoval area of the Negev by the Israeli military in the early 1950s, the State settled the Abul Giyan Bedouin clan in Attir. In 1956, the government strategically placed the Abul Giyan near Israel’s border with Jordan, and these Bedouin internal refugees turned into border guards. The military provided guns to the Abul Giyan Bedouin, and instructed them to shoot Arabs sneaking across the border into Israel. In 1970, after Israel’s conquest of the West Bank erased the Jordanian border near Attir, the government confiscated the weapons previously distributed to the Abul Giyan for purposes of policing the border and preventing the movement of other Arabs. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 05:24, 28 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ Cédric Parizot. "Gaza, Beersheba, Dhahriyya: Another Approach to the Negev Bedouins in the Israeli-Palestinian Space"; Bulletin du Centre de recherche français de Jérusalem, 2001.

Demolitions/land confiscation

edit

I believe that the Unrecognized Villages article should be the center for such info, however there should be a short section included here as well.

  • Creating a timeline of demolitions over at Unrecognized villages would be fantastic (Unfortunately, I have not been charting demolitions over the years, and it would take loads and loads of work.)
  • Another thing - it needs to be clear that 85% of the Negev (which is 60% of the country) is off-limits to Bedouin, and that 90% of the former Bedouin range has been confiscated from the Bedouin. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:31, 29 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
It should also be made clear that these restrictions only apply to certain applications. For example, it is fully legal and possible for a Bedouin to acquire a home in Mitzpe Ramon, or Tel Aviv for that matter. Your statement implies otherwise. Other than that, I agree about the content being in the other article. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:42, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Guardian quote: .6% of health ministry funds for developing Arab facilities

edit

This was deleted today, citing a partisan source: "As yet the Israeli government has not seen fit to address this disparity through equitable budget allocations: in the 2002 budget, Israel's health ministry allocated Arab communities less than 0.6% of its 277 m-shekel (£35m) budget (1.6 m shekels {£200,000}) to develop healthcare facilities.[1]" Love it or hate it, the Guardian is the Guardian, the NYT of the UK, reputable and citable. You may kind of hate Chris McGreal, and hate the point he is making in this article especially, but the citation refers to the statistic he mentions, not to his larger point. I think deletion of this vital bit of info (not Mcgreal's opinion) is not going to fly. I'm not re-inserting as yet, awaiting discussion. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 23:38, 29 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I removed it because it is not about the Negev Bedouins, or even Israeli Bedouins in general, but about Arabs in Israel. As such it does not belong in this article. Please find sources that explicitly and directly discuss Negev Bedouins. When you do, please make sure their claims are inserted into the article in a neutral, encyclopedic tone, rather than McGreal's polemic one.Canadian Monkey (talk) 02:35, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
To what Canadian Monkey said, I'd also like to add that the statistic could use examination, preferrably in a document detailing the health ministry's budget. Unless I'm missing something, development of healthcare facilities doesn't comprise the bulk of the health ministry's budget (additionally, according to Yediot, about 20% of the health budget is not even allocated anywhere), so 0.6% of the total budget could be a much larger percentage of the facilities development budget. Just a thought. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:46, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Another thing is that Arab cities don't have any high-tech expensive hospitals, and most Israeli Arabs are treated in hospitals located in Jewish cities, without discrimination. As such, there isn't much reason to allocate huge funds for development of healthcare facilities in the Arab sector. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:48, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Abu Basma and unrecognized villages

edit

The Abu Basma Regional Council article very clearly says "the creation of the Abu Basma Regional Council involves the recognition of villages that were previously under threat of demolition". The list you refer to at the end of that article does not appear to be sourced - and is very dubious. For example, it lists Drijat as one of the unrecognized communities - yet we have a source in this article that documents the fact that the Israeli Ministry of the Interior has installed a world's-first solar power system for the entire village - which would indicate that this village is recognized. Please provide sources for the claim that the villages that are part of ABRC are still unrecognized.Canadian Monkey (talk) 02:35, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

You're right that the lower section is unsourced. On the other hand, saying that five of the villages are as yet unrecognized is not inconsistent with the statement: "the creation of the Abu Basma Regional Council involves the recognition of villages that were previously under threat of demolition". The rest of the villages on the list were formerly unrecognized and now have been fully recoghnized. The other five are in the process of recognition. However, the list could well be out of date, and you're of course right, needs to be sourced; for instance, I believe Abu tlul should be official by now. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:48, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Comparison to other pastoral communities

edit

It is interesting to compare the negev bedouins to other pastoral communities. you may wish to read more about Iranian Arabs in Khuzestan, another bedouin population for example. i'd be happy if you could provide more examples for comparison so we can start to make a decent comparison. —Preceding unsigned comment added by MiS-Saath (talkcontribs) 10:13, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

As interesting as it would be, I can think of nothing trickier than making comparisons of this sort, and while I have a lot of background on the Negev Bedouin in Israel today, I am less knowledgable about the mostly unwritten history of the Bedouin prior to 1948, and simply do not have the kind of expertise necessary to see where the Negev Bedouin do and don't compare with Bedouin in other regions prior to, and after, 1948. Very complicated stuff. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 15:58, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Expulsion and views of Israeli leaders

edit

In response to the complaint that there are not enough official Israeli viewpoints, I added some material on Ben-Gurion's view of the need to expel the Bedouin and take their land in the Negev. I am not fully satisfied, however, as there is a lot more material on this and I do not have time to do more now, nor do I have all my books at my current location. Also, I think there needs to be a separate section on the expulsion that lays out the bare facts and timeline. I will do this in a few weeks when I get home and have all my books at hand.--Tirpse77 (talk) 17:19, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I assume you've done so in good faith, but this version does not adhere to Neutral point of view and uses highly opinionated and emotional language. since you've replaced a well-referenced section with another one, i see no harm in reverting. in particular, this is not what i thought needed addressing, and benny morris is not a spokesmen for the israeli government or a representative of it. MiS-Saath (talk) 20:20, 30 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
The language is quoted almost exactly from the source material. Please do not simply delete sourced material just because you do not like it. First you complain that official Israeli views were not included, now you complain that they are too included. If you have specific suggestions about how to make the material more NPOV I would welcome that, but it is a total violation of WP practice to delete RS material simply because you do not like it. The source is impeccable, the material is directly relevant, hence there is no grounds for deletion. You can however make some suggestions for how to improve it. While Benny Morris is not an Israeli government spokesman, he is citing Israeli government documents and quoting Israeli officials. Are you arguing that Morris is not a reliable source? Please be clear about what your problem is with the material. --Tirpse77 (talk) 05:01, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Also, for the record MiS-Saath, I did not "replace a well-referenced section with another one." I did not remove ANY sourced material. I added additional sourced material and references and you had absolutely no grounds to remove it. If you revert again without engaging in discussion and showing why the sourced material is inappropriate I will assume that is an act of bad faith. --Tirpse77 (talk) 09:59, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, i thought you had replaced the Lustik referenced text with morris' text. i misread the diff. MiS-Saath (talk) 11:35, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

Reading through the cited reference (Morris, Benny, The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947-1949, Cambridge University Press, 1987, p.166) I can’t see anything remotely like the claim that the Bedouins were expelled “as part of a premeditated plan, in the words of David Ben-Gurion to "conquer" the Negev”. The only mention of Bedouins on the page is “Villagers were expelled and villages were blown up or burned, as happened to Al-Muharraqa on 16 August, and to the small Bedouin villages and encampments east of the line Al-Imara-Ze’elim in the last days of September and the first days of October”. Accordingly, I have removed this statement. Canadian Monkey (talk) 18:38, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

The references were accurate based on what I originally wrote and which another editor objected to. The plan in question is of course Plan Dalet, which I mentioned when I first inserted the section. In any case, I will rewrite this section comprehensively in a few days using multiple sources so there can be no doubt. Will that satisfy you? --Tirpse77 (talk) 13:41, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
If you are planning a comprehensive rewrite, I suggest you place your proposed changes here for discussion, before putting them into the article itself. This will prevent the kind of source misrepresentation that plagued the previous contribution. Canadian Monkey (talk) 17:18, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I second Canadian Monkey's suggestion/request. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 17:37, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am happy to do that as long as everyone else agrees to do the same. There was no source misrepresentation at all. If you check all the original references I used and page numbers they all referred to specific facts.--Tirpse77 (talk) 13:20, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I appreciate your willingness to cooperate on this, and will happily submit any comprehensive rewrites I might propose in the futiure to this talk page for review before making them in the article. Canadian Monkey (talk) 17:01, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Tendentious editing and edit-warring

edit

It seems that there are editors who wish this article -- by their own admission -- to reflect Israeli government viewpoints. They are engaged in tendentious editing and edit-warring, removing sourced material and refusing to engage in any discussion about that material. I urge them to stop their aggressive edit-warring and engage in peaceful discussion about the actual material, which they have refused to do.--Tirpse77 (talk) 05:08, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

A single revert per editor does not make an edit war. please keep to your cool. MiS-Saath (talk) 11:36, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
My sourced material was reverted wholesale twice without either editor engaging in substantive discussion or suggesting alternatives. I am glad that you have decided to engage in discussion and have some respect for the work of others.--Tirpse77 (talk) 12:55, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I also fail to see what's wrong with having the article also reflect the israeli government's viewpoint. MiS-Saath (talk) 11:37, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
The key word is "also." Some people -- and perhaps I do not mean anyone here -- believe "only" is the appropriate standard. Thankfully you do not agree with that. Please be advised I will be adding material from Ilan Pappe's book The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine as the forced expulsion beginning in 1948 was a major traumatic episode that shaped the life of an entire community for the past sixty years and deserves more than one or two sentences in an encyclopedia article. I really think Expulsion and Flight deserves its own section, followed by a separate section "Under Israeli Administration." I hope you are ok with that?--Tirpse77 (talk) 12:55, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Please be advised that Ilan Pappe is not a reliable source per WP:RS. About your comment about expulsion and flight, I think what you're doing here is WP:SYNTH. If Benny Morris claims that there was in the past a pattern for the expulsion of Bedouins, that can be inserted, but you can't put other cases of perceived maltreatment under the same heading without violating WP:SYNTH (unless Morris or another reliable source explicitly links the events to a central pattern).

Really??? And on what basis do you claim that an internationally-recognized, peer-reviewed historian and an Israeli scholar is not an RS? I must say I can't wait to hear this one. And you have clearly misread Wikipedia:RS. In any case, there is plenty of evidence. --Tirpse77 (talk) 13:49, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

About the government's viewpoint, I think you should go back to the reason why this whole discussion was started in the first place. I added a POV tag to the article, and it was generally agreed that in order to make the article NPOV, it required the government's side on the contentious issues. Adding more and more insinuations made by fringe 'historians' like Ilan Pappe, Noam Chomsky (a linguist), etc. doesn't help the matter in any way. Remember that the ultimate goal is to make the article NPOV, not insert as much info as you can from any source you can find. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:38, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I have not added anything by Noam Chomsky, and it is not necessary to launch ad hominem attacks on Pappe to try to discredit him by calling him "fringe." He is "fringe" in Israel, a country largely in denial about its past (for good reason), but completely mainstream in contemporary historiography of the region. We are not citing his political views here anyway, but his peer reviewed scholarship which more than meets WP:RS. I am also happy to dispense with Pappe and cite only the original documents he uses. Also we can use Benny Morris (2004), Nur Masalha, Walid Khalidi and others. I realize that for some people no level of proof is sufficient because belief in Israel's "innocence" is an article of faith not susceptible to evidence. --Tirpse77 (talk) 13:49, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Fortunately, there's a policy called WP:RS, which excludes fringe historians like Pappe or Khalidi. Morris, however criticized, has been agreed on as a reliable source on Wikipedia, however. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 17:06, 3 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

I am sorry I am not familiar with this "policy" of excluding Pappe and Khalidi (which of the many Khalidis are you talking about? Please show me where these exists.--Tirpse77 (talk) 21:36, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Pappe is not "maintream", his extreme views are a minority even within the minority which is the group of so-called "New Historians". Canadian Monkey (talk) 21:15, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

I'm afraid these sorts of ad hominem attacks might be good enough for internet forums but won't do here. Can you show me any peer-reviewed journal articles that have challenged the reliability or methodology of Ilan Pappe's work on the expulsion of the Palestinians?--Tirpse77 (talk) 21:36, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

You don't really need us for that, just read the article on Ilan Pappe and look at the references, especially for the Katz controversy and the critical assessment section. For example, Seth J. Frantzman of the reputable journal Middle Eastern Quarterly, said that Pappe's work is "a cynical exercise in manipulating evidence to fit an implausible thesis." Benny Morris, a much more reliable and well-known historian, loved and hated by both 'sides', also heavily criticizes Pappe's work. And this is just from the Wikipedia article. There are many more examples, if you look beyond Noam Chomsky, Walid Khalidi and John Pilger (after whom, by the way, a word was named (to pilger), meaning 'to tell lies'). -- Ynhockey (Talk) 15:27, 5 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Chronological error

edit

I've temporarily removed the following text from its location: "Another major source of employment were regional mines and the Ramat Hovav toxic waste facility and its factories, all very hazardous occupations. Bedouins were generally discriminated against in employment, as preference was given to Jews, and as of 1958, employment in the Bedouin male population was less than 3.5%." This cannot possibly be mentioned together with the 1950 employment problems, as ramat hovav was founded in 1975 according to its page. please help me to put it in its right location as i can't seem to access the reference it points to. MiS-Saath (talk) 12:25, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply

I do not think you should have removed the material. You could simply have added a tag so that another editor will know there is a discrepancy and look for the material. If it is removed to the talk page that is less likely. I am sure you do not want the matter ignored. Have you checked the source or otherwise determined that there were no facilities whatsoever prior to 1975? WP is not a source for WP articles so please restore this material and add the appropriate tag. --Tirpse77 (talk) 12:59, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I checked the ramat hovav municipality website. you can readd it with the tag if you like, i just hate to leave pages in process with known problems. it's not an immensely important thing so that its temporary removal makes for any significance. i'm not sure though what's the employment rate of bedouins compared with non-bedouins in the facilities. but anyway if it bothers you, feel free to re-add it. perhaps you could access the source, i can't see it for some reason. MiS-Saath (talk) 13:47, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Some disputed changes should go under the dispute resolution process, i.e. discussion before editing. However, I'm not sure how it helps to dispute a clear-cut case like this. It doesn't hurt the article to remove anachronistic info. Keep in mind that edit histories are preserved, so if we 'lost' a sourced paragraph in an edit, which was made in order to make the article more accurate, the sourced text can always be re-added in the appropriate location. As Mis-Saath says, it doesn't help to keep content tagged forever if the issue can be resolved quickly and easily. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 16:42, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Of course, thanks for catching that MiSSaath, Ramat Hovav was created later. This sentence was left over from a time when the article was organized differently. On the other hand, this sentence could easily go further down, in the "today" section; it would have been easy enough to move it down there, no? (As far as edit summaries go, although we do our best to summarize every edit, when a lot of changes are made, they cannot all fit in the edit summary.) LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 17:53, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
I just noticed that you cut both sentences, i.e. not just the hazardous occupations sentence but the one about 1950s employment discrimination. I cannot imagine why, simply because one sentence is identified as improperly placed, the one after it (which is properly placed) would have to be deleted? Thank you for bringing it to the talk page, but next tim when you do so, please don't leave behind the citations (there was a citation for the 3.5% quote earlier). Nuanced editing is a must when editing out or editing down sections.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 18:05, 31 July 2008 (UTC)Reply
Right, i stand corrected. i thought this was already mentioned earlier. But i see it's fixed now. MiS-Saath (talk) 20:54, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Drijat

edit

It appears that this article and the Drijat article contradict hebrew wikipedia. hebrew wikipedia states that 'In particular, the people of drijat are NOT bedouins, they differ from them in descent and culture, and have come to the area in the 19th century from the south hebron hills'. the drijat website itself does mention that they're fellahin, but says nothing to either assert or negate their bedouiness. i believe that the omission is more telling, coupled with the fact that they do assert that they come from south hebron hills and not desert nomads. therefore i'm removing the word 'bedouin' from both this article and the drijat article. maybe we should even remove its entire content from this page, but that's not something i'll do 'just like that' without prior talk. MiS-Saath (talk) 21:00, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

You are absolutely right - I cannot believe I did not take notice of that. I will make the edit. (Just to be clear, I was not the one who added Dreijat - I would not have).LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 22:30, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Demolitions, development and demographics

edit

I am thinking of creating several subheadings here:

  • Ownership disputes: State land or indigenous rights?
  • The State response (with two further subheadings - Eviction, demolition and uprooting, and Construction, development and concentration)
  • The Bedouin response (with two further subheadings, perhaps? - Self-subsistence on agricultural settlements, and Investment in urban development (not sure these subheadings will be necessary, we'll see)
  • The demographic issue

LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 23:45, 2 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

I have no objections, go for it. Canadian Monkey (talk) 21:13, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
actually, before you do that, can you make sure the unsourced statements in this section, which have been tagged for a while, are either sourced, or removed? Canadian Monkey (talk) 21:14, 4 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
Sounds great. Go for it. MiS-Saath (talk) 15:34, 5 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
Hello there. I haven't had time of late, and may not for a few days. When I manage to get to it I will look for citations, too. Best, LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 16:41, 5 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am, too, busy with another topic, vaguely related. but when i have time, i'll come to revisit your work here. MiS-Saath (talk) 16:44, 5 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

POV in the Exodus, population transfers and Israeli administration section

edit

This section actually has some very interesting info, some of which I didn't previously know. However, that's not the point. The section is written with a decidedly pro-Bedouin and anti-government POV, mentioning only in passing that the Bedouins didn't register their lands on purpose in order not to pay taxes, and have in essence been breaking the law and illegally settling on state land (Ottoman, British and later Israeli) since 1858. The section also makes wide use of the word 'confiscate', even though it's contradicted by other text in the section, which states that the Bedouin didn't legally own most of this land. How can you confiscate illegally-settled land? It seems that the main POV problem of this entire article is downplaying the vast lawbreaking in the Bedouin sector (otherwise it's a fine article, really), and displaying the Bedouins as supposed victims of Israeli oppression and expulsion. Further proof is that the paragraph that mentions Israeli contributions to Bedouins education and healthcare is tiny and pushed down to the bottom of this important section. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 09:21, 8 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Sigh. And thank you for bringing this to talk. For the moment, I'll start with a perspective I think you may agree with (and I'll get to your other points later): The Ottomans were foreign rulers. The Ottomans did not reside in the Negev (except for maybe a tiny tiny eency weency group of temporary administrators in Ber Seba), while the Bedouin did. The Ottomans did nothing for the Bedouin, and offered them nothing whatsoever in exchange for taxes. Thus there was no reason whatsoever for the Bedouin to pay taxes to these foreign rulers who offered nothing in return for taxation. The Ottomans knew this, and understood that coercing a land registration process in the Negev was futile; they did not really make an effort to register Bedouin lands. Indeed, because the desert region had almost no resources, charting the Negev was not really in the interest of the Ottomans. Again, while the Bedouin were the original --and sole -- inhabitants of the desert for hundreds of years prior to the period of land registration carried out by outside conquerors, neither the Turkish nor the British conquerors inhabited the desert. Thus, to call Bedouin residence on the land during the period of land registration, illegal, is beyond comprehension. And to suggest that tax evasion in the context of citizenship (i.e. full Israeli citizenship, in urban townships) is the same as tax aversion under foreign rule (i.e. under Turkish rule, in the absence of voting rights or services), is absolutely erroneous. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:00, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Now, a perspective you may not agree with -- not historically so much as ethically based -- regarding your premise, and the government's, that the Bedouin are squatters: It is because they were an oral people, like most indigenous peoples, that they never registered their lands - it was because their way of life was not one of bureaus and drawers and legalese, but instead one of customary law, and their map was not on paper, but rather consisted of the lay of the land itself, a map of pure topography - the most real and tangible map. The written word has been a curse for the Bedouin and all indigenous people, the basis of the 'confiscation' of their lands, the reason that 90%, then another 8%, and even more, of the land they once called their own, has been stripped from them. Thus, to call Bedouin residence on the land after the period of land registration, illegal, is to fail to understand that the immensity of the adjustment to the sudden imposition of the written world of law (i.e. within a span of four or five years) for a traditionally oral (i.e. non-literate) people. Sigh, and sigh again, because it really does make me sad that simply because the Bedouin were not a people of paperwork, that their land claims in this written world of today, are untraceable. They were never written, as so they are invisible, they were never written and so they are erased. At the risk of repeating myself, their 'crime' was that they were a people of the word, not the pen, a people of the land, not paper, and the idea of registering their lands made no sense for the Bedouin when the Turks and British passed idly through. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:17, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Finally, your last point: the fact that the description of Israeli contributions to Bedouin education and healthcare is so minimal is not intentional, I assure you. I simply am not as informed about the positive aspects of Israeli rule as the negative aspects. The contributions of anyone who has more positive information are welcome - I certainly will not reduce any additions of substance. Best, LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:32, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

While I am prepared to concede about the part regarding Turkish and British rule (after all, this isn't what the discussion is all about), I disagree with you about Israeli rule. There is a Hebrew legal phrase (which probably exists in other languages), saying that "Ignorance of a law does not exempt you from it". It's true that the imposition of Israeli law on the Bedouins sector was rather sudden (perhaps because of their failure/refusal to accept Turkish and British law), but the way I see it, the consideration given to the Bedouin sector by the Israeli government in this area has been enormous. For example, while polygamy has been illegal for years, no Bedouins have been put in jail for this crime. A government recommendation report linked to somewhere in this article clearly states that this is out of consideration for the Bedouin way of life. In addition, illegal Bedouin land occupation has generally been allowed, and the government turns a blind eye. This is not so for the Jewish sector, where if you build 1 sqm outside of your owned land, the new structure will be destroyed within days.
Moreover, the Bedouins by now have had about 50 years to adjust to Israeli law. At this point, I don't think that their illegal activities should be downplayed in any way. I agree that discrimination should be covered in this article, but so should the Bedouin outright refusal to accept a new way of life. Interestingly, their is no Bedouin campaign for an independent Bedouin state, nor there an all-Bedouin party in the Knesset. This further undermines the opinion that their illegal activity is the result of 'years of Israeli oppression'. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 09:56, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am going to be away for a few days and am heading out the door, so I will briefly respond to several points:
  • "Ignorance of a law does not exempt you from it": The Bedouin never had an opportunity to abide by Israeli law regarding land ownership, because they were never given the opportunity to register their lands under the new Israeli system.
  • Polygamy is one area the government has not intervened, while the government does indeed readily go about demolishing Bedouin homes - Here, what Negev Bedouin argue is that enforcing the law against polygamy would actually lead to the advancement of the status of Bedouin society, while demolishing Bedouin homes is no way forwarding the status of Bedouin society. The polygamy case, at any rate, is a completely and utterly different matter than the matter of land rights. It is very convenient to equate the two issues, but to do so is to fail to grasp that while many Bedouin oppose polygamy, all Bedouin feel that the land was stolen from beneath their feet. Those who readily concede that the polygamy tradition needs to change are often the same people that believe that, with regard to the land issue, it is not the Bedouin, but the Israeli 'tradition' of dismissing Arab land claims and casting Bedouin as trespassers, that needs to change."
  • "This is not so for the Jewish sector, where if you build 1 sqm outside of your owned land, the new structure will be destroyed within days." I beg to differ - there is much evidence that demolition policy is unevenly applied, with preference towards Jews, not Arabs by any means. I can get the stats if you would like. For illustration, consider the fact that hundreds of individuals like Shai Dromi illegally squatted on state lands (otherwise known as former Bedouin range) to build his single family ranch, and illegally engaged in animal husbandry, yet the issue never came up in the courts and hardly at all in the media during the furor around his arrest for killing a Bedouin goat thief and wounding another.
  • "the Bedouins by now have had about 50 years to adjust to Israeli law": Again, the Bedouin never had an opportunity to abide by Israeli law regarding land ownership, because they were never given the opportunity to register their lands under the new Israeli system. Thus for the Bedouin, if you look at it from their perspective for a minute, an hour, a day, a year, the 'law of the land,' i.e. land laws, have been illegitimate to begin with and continue to be to this day. There is no reason for the Bedouin to accept the premise that they are squatters, when in fact that they were native inhabitants and only retroactively termed 'trespassers'.LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 17:19, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
It appears that you are looking at the issue from a humanitarian point of view, instead of a legal point of view. It's true that most Negev Bedouins didn't legally own any land in 1948, because of the reasons discussed above (Ottoman and mandate land registration). Jews who did not have legal tapus to their land prior to the state's founding also had to rent land from the state (you can't buy land in Israel), for which they had to pay. In short, Jews didn't get the chance to register previously unowned land without paying for it either. This is one reason I oppose the wording 'reverted to state land' for any Bedouin land, because they never owned it.
The above created a tough situation for the Bedouins, who automatically lost most of the lands they grazed in, although their land claims were vast and expansive, covering a lot of land which they never owned, lived or grazed on (same as how the Palestinians are claiming vast unused land today as their own, without any legal proof of ownership). Because of these extraordinary claims having little to do with reality, the Bedouins also refused to lease state land like their Jewish counterparts, which forced the government to act against their illegal land occupation and restrict the areas where they could live. As the years passed, the Bedouins still refused to pay any money (or taxes) for land, thus refusing to acknowledge Israeli land ownership laws, again as a result of extraordinary land claims with zero legal proof. In the end the two sides reached an impasse and the government, which you blame for all the Bedouins' problems, went out of its way to help this sector for free by building a series of towns for housing the Bedouins. The towns were meant to house the majority of Negev Bedouins, but due to polygamy and an average of 6 (surviving) children per family, this didn't really help, and today these towns constructed in the 1980s aren't enough to house any more than 50% of the Bedouin population in the Negev.
Now, I never said that the humanitarian point of view and the vast Bedouin claims should not be represented, but you imply that you also oppose including the legal/government side of the issue, which created a huge slant in favor of the Bedouin claims, which many believe are largely unfounded.
As for Shai Dromi, I never heard anything about him illegally owning/building a ranch. Do you have related articles? Even if true, it wouldn't indicate a trend of illegal Jewish land squatting, but it would be interesting in any case.
Cheers, Ynhockey (Talk) 18:12, 9 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
I am on the road and do not have time to answer, but, no the above is not a humanitarian argument, but a legal one. My view rests upon the fact that under Israeli rule the Bedouin never had a chance to stake their rights to the land, on paper, by legal means, within the Israeli legal system. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 23:51, 10 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
LamaLo, there's also documented (at least according to the ILA) attempts to encroach on land where there is no record of either presence or claims, monitored by aerial photos. the bedouins (to my best of knowledge) never recorded their oral land ownership agreements for making future claims. i am not aware of any list that says "plots X,Y and Z are ours but we were never allowed to file for them". you know it, "Al Badya fok al Kanoon". we're only left to hypothesize what would have happened if such a claim was indeed made. MiS-Saath (talk) 14:21, 11 August 2008 (UTC)Reply
This article does have a POV- its pro lets be honest about this. They say the truth has a strong reality bias and this demonstrates it. Rktect (talk) 21:23, 18 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Surely Bedouin becoming Palestinianised?

edit

This Hebrew web-site was cited for the statement "Each year, between 5%-10% of the Bedouin of draft age volunteer for the Israeli army, (unlike Druze, and Circassian Israelis, they are not required by law to do so).[83]" and the latest IP edit has changed this to be "15%-20%". I can't be sure what the reference says about the other groups, but it does not does not appear to make the cited claim about the proportion of those volunteering.

And if any reference to the service of the Bedouin is needed, a better representation of the case might be this: "Service in the IDF is being denounced as collaboration with the enemy. IDF recruiting officers are being kept from appearing in Bedouin high schools by teachers and principals belonging to the Islamic Movement. Slowly but gradually, they are capturing the hearts and minds of many Bedouin. It is hard to say that Israel is losing the competition for the hearts and minds of the Bedouin, because the government is almost absent from this competition" April 2008. Even statements supposed to support the case that the Bedouin are joining the forces are quite unconvincing: "A new phenomenon among Negev Bedouin - enlistment in the Israel national service, mostly among women. Recently 25 women have volunteered. Most of them are working in Soroka hospital in Beersheva" - a translation at this blog. PRtalk 09:57, 23 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Now you're just putting an unnecessary spin on something which is neither major nor important. I think Mr. Arens makes it pretty clear that this is a new and potentially dangerous phenomenon, but still not widespread. He says 'in recent years, the Islamic movement has been able to penetrate ...' and 'slowly but gradually, they are capturing ...', which means that they haven't succeeded in their goals yet. The Knesset source does have a figure and quotes Avi Zamir, head of the Manpower Directorate, which is the body responsible for recruitment (among other things), who would obviously know about this. He says that up to 10 percent of the Bedouin enlist, and the number has slowly been rising recently, after it slumped in 2000 (Second Intifada).
There's no indication at all in reliable sources that the Bedouins now self-identify as Palestinians, and from personal experience, I can certainly say that they do not.
-- Ynhockey (Talk) 11:01, 23 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
I have wrongly lumped the Bedouin of the South with Israeli-Arabs of the North - when it's the latter who are said to be becoming "Palestinianised". However, my quick web-search suggests that the Bedouin are not adjusting to Israel either, in fact they're going the other way.
Haaretz is said to have reported as follows: "In the November 2000 draft, only 22 Bedouin joined the IDF, compared to 80 in 1999. The figures were no better in the March draft, and it seems the Al-Aqsa Intifada has all but halted the draft of Bedouin into the IDF"[6] [7]. In 2004 Haaretz says the number was increasing again, but the number, including Christian and other Israeli Arabs, is secret and "does not exceed 150".[8] PRtalk 16:47, 23 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
The matter is not simple. Some Bedouin self-define as Israelis, others as Palestinians, others as both. Ynhockey is right that if an Israeli asks a Bedouin if they are Palestinian or Israeli, 85-95% will say they are Israeli. However, if a Palestinian asks a Bedouin is they are Palestinian or Israel, it's my guess that 85-95% of them will say that they are Palestinian. This is just my impression, having approached many Bedouin as an Israeli, and then coming with Palestinians and getting a different response. I believe the article, as is, expresses this contradiction and suggests that the situation is in flux and could go either way. Both service in the Israeli army and identification with the Palestinian experience of displacement are central features of Bedouin identity. Both are represented here, and determining which tip of the scale towards Israeliness or Palestinianness should be more represented is not real;ly possible - both should be represented, and currently are. LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 03:10, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
Can I ask whether you've ever fudged your minority status in the fashion you describe? I've certainly never done so! The "5%-10%" figure is in a non-English language and script and is fundamentally unlikely - it's also a statistic kept secret by the only people who know. (In 2004, the figure would probably have been more like 1 or 2%). The information might still be true, but it shows little respect for accuracy to use it. This story, supposedly from Haaretz, demonstrates an attitude to service for Israel which is far more significant to the section and to the article. PRtalk 09:55, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
I guess I don't see it as fudging identity - I see it as a pretty legit expression of ambiguity and at times confusion, in light of the situation the Bedouin are in, and if I were Bedouin, though I'd probably identify as Palestinian overall, I think I'd have days where I'd feel pretty Israeli. As far as the accuracy of the army stat: I'm glad that you and Ynhockey caught the 15-20% 'vandal' the other day. I agree with you about the figure, that it is probably too high. I was surprised by the figure as Bedouin I'd spoken with have told me 1-2%. But I don't know where they got that number either. I just looked over the entry again, and I don't know if something was deleted or not, but it does seem that the gap between the Bedouin and fellahin may have been slightly inflated, or at least need to be balanced with a sentence or two expressing something about the relationships between Bedouin and fellahin (not just gaps). You sent me an interesting tidbit about the shift from agrarian life to semi-nomadic animal husbandry, and back - was that only in the center and north, or did it happen in the desert as well? LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 16:59, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
I can tell you where the number "1 or 2%" comes from. In a population of 160,000, heavily leaning towards the younger demographic, there will be about 3,000 coming of age every year. Even 150 of those (and it's clearly much less, the number covers Christian and non-Muslim Arabs, and people are trying to talk it up) would only come to 5%. (However, a lot do join the Border Police according to that Haaretz article above).
I found the nomad/villager thing fascinating, the book is the "The Bible Unearthed" and packed with such interesting tid-bits. But it concentrated on Jerusalem and the highlands where villagers need hide and milk, nomads need grain. The villagers have the stronger position, because they can keep animals if really necessary, and they can better protect themselves from regular small scale crime. However, in times of serious unrest, famine, drought (climate change?) and the rest of it, the nomads have the upper hand. Even quite westernised peoples in that part of the world still do their camping in large communal tents, quite unlike what we do here. Societies like the Canaanites (and presumably the Bedouin) were always ready to switch from one mode to the other.
I hate the "Bedouin/fellaheen/slave" business, which I'm pretty sure is a distorted rendition of a confused passage in an article on "Negev Bedouin and Higher Education". Who got the idea that the nomads "owned the land" and the villagers worked it? We're giving ridiculous UNDUE to a tiny passage from an irrelevant research paper that sounds like the way the South Africans spoke of their native tribes. However, I'm out of my depth, I don't know what it should say. PRtalk 18:51, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
As far as I know, Galilee Bedouins volunteer more than Negev Bedouins, and often serve in various positions, unlike Negev Bedouins who are almost always trackers in Bedouin units, so they are easier to track (no pun intended). Again, the numbers have not been officially published and there's no reliable sources (Haaretz op-eds, even by former defense ministers like Arens, don't count). The figure we have now is an estimate by the head of the Manpower Directorate, who deals with this issue, so it doesn't get any more authorative than this, but again, it should be made clear that this is an estimate. Until reliable sources with clear figures are shown, there's no reason to change the figure in the article.
On a side note, I learned from trustworthy sources that the number of Bedouins enlisting each year is close to 250, although it used to be around 400 before the year 2000, so the 5-10% makes a lot of sense. Again though, it's information that doesn't exist in reliable published sources. -- Ynhockey (Talk) 18:56, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply
Thanks to you both for your constructive comments. PR, not sure I understood what you meant by the "Bedouin/Felahin/slave business" - could you point to a specific passage? Thanks, LamaLoLeshLa (talk) 19:35, 24 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Recent addition of prehistoric context

edit

I am not disputing the edit per se, but the statements presented seem dubious. Firstly, because this article discusses Negev Bedouins, not Bedouins in general, so I'm not sure some of the references (Golan, etc.) apply. Moreover, I've never seen a connection between Arab Negev Bedouins and Amalek, let alone the Nephilim or Rephidim. The reference is not quite clear either; no details of the book are given, and neither are the pages. A clarification would be helpful, but if possible, I'd also like to see scans of the pages for personal knowledge (unrelated to Wikipedia). -- Ynhockey (Talk) 15:40, 24 January 2009 (UTC)Reply


The Bible references Rephaim in Genesis:14. It references the Amalek as part of the Rephaim in and around Exodus where they fought the people of the Exodus in the plain of Rephidim at Mount Horab at the head of thr Gulf of Aqaba between Edom and Midian.

And in the fourteenth 6240 702 year 8141 came 935 Chedorlaomer 3540, and the kings 4428 that [were] with him, and smote 5221 the Rephaims 7497 in Ashteroth Karnaim 6255, and the Zuzims 2104 in Ham 1990, and the Emims 368 in Shaveh Kiriathaim 7741

It references them in Edom and Moab in association with the Hagarenes who Strongs concordance describes as an Arab people living in the desert beyond the Seir to the east as far as Bahrain with whom the eastern tribes of Israel were at war; the bedouin arabs of the transjordan and the eastern part of the Seir; gebal and Ammon and Amalek up to Sidon and Tyre inland as far as Aram and Kadesh; Orab, Zeeb and Zebah are on the Golan heights in Aram and Bashen.

  • Psa 83:2 For, lo, thine enemies make a tumult: and they that hate thee have lifted up the head.
  • Psa 83:3 They have taken crafty counsel against thy people, and consulted against thy hidden ones.
  • Psa 83:4 They have said, Come, and let us cut them off from [being] a nation; that the name of Israel may be no more in remembrance.
  • Psa 83:5 For they have consulted together with one consent: they are confederate against thee:
  • Psa 83:6 The tabernacles of Edom, and the Ishmaelites; of Moab, and the Hagarenes;
  • Psa 83:7 Gebal, and Ammon, and Amalek; the Philistines with the inhabitants of Tyre;
  • Psa 83:8 Assur also is joined with them: they have holpen the children of Lot. Selah.
  • Psa 83:9 Do unto them as [unto] the Midianites; as [to] Sisera, as [to] Jabin, at the brook of Kison:
  • Psa 83:10 [Which] perished at Endor: they became [as] dung for the earth.
  • Psa 83:11 Make their nobles like Oreb, and like Zeeb: yea, all their princes as Zebah, and as Zalmunna:

Egyptian texts and the Book of Joshua describe them as giants (7' tall) and the ancient inhabitants of Canaan. These tribes then get mentioned elsewhere in association with the Amalek. They show up in some Egyptian texts (Papyrus Anastasi I, the inscriptians of the Battle of Karnak) as giants described as Shoshu and bedouins. "The Pre and Proto history of the Arabian Penninsula" by Mohammed Nayim gets into the original inhabitants in more detail including some articles on the independent development of their Thaumudic language, which includes glyphs of men riding camels and their archaeological sites with a nice map locating lithics, settlement, pottery, rock art, kites, cairns trasde routes etc; I can't put scans of the pages up because of Wikipedia and copyrights, (I wish I could, especially the rockart that incorporates the language anc clan markings )but I can give you page numbers and quotes.


History

edit

I deleted an alleged quote in the History section, it was conjecture and cited no source —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.136.157.116 (talk) 01:05, 25 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

It clearly did cite a source, even though the template didn't work. A few seconds work turned up the quote, I've replaced it with a working reference, page number, and link to Google Books. I don't know why you claim it didn't cite a source. dougweller (talk) 07:36, 25 March 2009 (UTC)Reply


Misrepresentation of Bedouin identity

edit

This article portrays the Bedouin in the Negev as though they are not Palestinian. This is false. They identify as Palestinian, and are intrinsic part of the Palestinian people. Attempts to split them off from Palestinian are common in Israeli Jewish discourse (per the source linked, not my soapboxing). This article needs an overhaul and the title should be changed to Palestinian Bedouins in Israel, or more broadly Palestinian Bedouins, which could be expanded in scope to discuss the same Bedouin population but those who ended up in the West Bank and Gaza. Tiamuttalk 19:19, 23 October 2009 (UTC)Reply

Al-Arakib

edit

This may find a place in the article: Israel razes Bedouin village. Respectfully, RomaC TALK 02:35, 28 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

Tribes?

edit

Where is the list of tribes?Koakhtzvigad (talk) 01:42, 14 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Please feel free to add it. —Ynhockey (Talk) 16:13, 15 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Not a Bedouin town

edit

Drijat doesn't seem to be a Bedouin town, according to the source given:

"Situated at the foothills of the Hebron Hills, Drijat is the only Palestinian Arab village in the Negev. The residents traditionally are agricultural laborers as opposed to Bedouin nomads."

Thus, I'm removing it from the article.VR talk 07:34, 29 November 2011 (UTC)Reply

File:Unrecognized villages map english-1-.JPG Nominated for speedy Deletion

edit
  An image used in this article, File:Unrecognized villages map english-1-.JPG, has been nominated for speedy deletion at Wikimedia Commons for the following reason: Copyright violations
What should I do?

Don't panic; deletions can take a little longer at Commons than they do on Wikipedia. This gives you an opportunity to contest the deletion (although please review Commons guidelines before doing so). The best way to contest this form of deletion is by posting on the image talk page.

  • If the image is non-free then you may need to upload it to Wikipedia (Commons does not allow fair use)
  • If the image isn't freely licensed and there is no fair use rationale then it cannot be uploaded or used.
  • If the image has already been deleted you may want to try Commons Undeletion Request

This notification is provided by a Bot --CommonsNotificationBot (talk) 11:41, 30 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

paper relevant to this article

edit

This might be useful. No More Mr Nice Guy (talk) 07:46, 6 July 2012 (UTC)Reply

Prawer plan

edit

The article lacks any mention of the Prawer Plan, aside from much else.

See Jillian Kestler-D'Amours, The End of the Bedouin, at Le Monde diplomatique, 2 August 2012. Nishidani (talk) 17:53, 2 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Manipulation

edit

While the situation for Bedouin is alarming due to systematic destruction of homes, eviction and deportation (see the reference: UN Human Rights Council, 25 August 2011, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, Annex VI, pp.24-31, removed on 19 August "for the sake of objectivity"), the ethnic cleansing is hidden in the article.

One simple example may be the Black Goat Law of 1950, mentioned in one single sentence. It was used to evict the Bedouin from most of the Negev and said to be adopted to prevent land erosion. Yet, the Bedouin have been there for many centuries and after 1948 there was a fraction of the people left. If the Bedouin were harming the environment, which is not obvious, it was due to the fact that they were forced to remain in restricted area's.

Another one of the many hidden POV's is denying of their status as indigenous people (see the same ref) and thus justifying deportation and ethnic cleansing.--Wickey-nl (talk) 13:10, 22 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

The whole article is an exercise in euphemism, and looks like a print-out from some official government brochure. It has no point of contact with the historic realities of Negev bedouin, or WP:NPOV. Nishidani (talk) 16:11, 22 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Raiding, denigrating Bedouin, and the source cited

edit

Regarding this edit: The source that the sentence about raiding is cited to says:

As late as the mid-eighteenth century they were fairly prosperous, engaging in some desultory agriculture and fishing but living primarily by raiding large caravans and selling the booty in Gaza or in smaller centers. Their decline began with the rise to power of the puritanical Wahhabis in Arabia in the late eighteenth century and with the French invasion of Egypt in 1798. The Bedouin were forced to reduce, though not cease, their raiding, and they acquired a monopoly on guiding, handling the camels for, and provisioning the caravans that crossed the peninsula. But the decline in pilgrimages to Mecca following the defeat of the Wahhabis and the accession to power in Egypt of Mohammed Ali curtailed even this legitimate source of income.

So the material was in there because it's in the source. Whatever the intention of whomever put it in, it is in the source.— alf laylah wa laylah (talk) 16:15, 27 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

Images of "private houses"

edit

I have come to this article for the first time out of curiosity relating to current (29 November 2013) headlines about rioting in Israel over implementation of what is called (by Haaretz) the "Begin-Prawer plan". I know nothing about the Negev, or about its Bedouin occupants, other than what I have read here in this article, or to a lesser extent in some news articles.

I am trying to understand the relevance of a number of images posted throughout the article, of "private houses" that can only be described as enormous:

  • Section Today: A private house being built in South Rahat (File:Rahat private.jpg)
  • Section Poverty: Private home in al-Sayyid (File:AlSayyid private2.jpg)
  • and in the photo gallery under the heading See also:
  • A private house in Tirabin al-Sana, a settlement of the Tarabin bedouin (File:Private house in Tirabin.jpg)
  • Private home in Segev Shalom (File:PikiWiki Israel 4555 Segev Shalom in the Negev.JPG)
  • Private house in al-Sayyid (File:AlSayyid private1.jpg)

None of these are specifically identified as being built and owned by Bedouin (nor alternately, by Jewish settlers); but to a naive reader they give an impression of fantastic wealth on display. There's definitely an unstated message intended in their incorporation in an article discussing the poverty, but also polygamy and the burgeoning birthrate, of the Bedouin. What is the message supposed to be? That the Bedouin are happily settled in cities? To contradict the idea of poverty? To illustrate the need for huge castles to quarter multiple wives and countless children?

Actually, another question arises concerning ownership of the land occupied by these "private houses", which seems to be the underlying issue in the entire Negev Bedouin problem. Surely these massive houses are not built on land that doesn't have a clear title of ownership.

I suggest that all of these images are inappropriate for the article; or at minimum, require contextual discussion if they are to be retained. Milkunderwood (talk) 08:16, 1 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

I absolutely agree with Milkunderwood's concerns regarding the use of these images. The WikiCommons information is of no help as it carries no information other than its being the photographer's own work. I take a conservative approach to the use of images in articles, full stop: if they don't relate to the material, they don't belong in the article.
In fact, I find myself wondering about quite a number of the images being used which look more like PR stock photos, i.e., PikiWiki Israel 11385 Education in Israel.jpg captioned, "Literacy classes for Bedouin women, Lehavim" whereas the information provided for the image simply states that it is 'the elderly learning to read and write' with no mention of Lehavim. What is to be made of 'Rahat Park' displayed in the 'Environmental issues' section? I would go as far as to say that the majority of the images used are gratuitous travelogue photos belying the gravity of the issues the article is be grappling with.
Unless some solid justification and contextual relevance is brought to the table, the majority of the images need to go. Wikipedia is meant to be an encyclopaedic resource and doesn't require being jollied up with pretty pictures to keep the reader interested. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 04:43, 13 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Agree: if they don't refer directly to the article text, they don't belong in the article.
The hidden message is indeed: Everything is fine. Israel excellently cares for the Bedouin. --Wickey-nl (talk) 16:00, 13 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
In fact the images violate WP rules: WP:UNDUE. There should be at least a proportional number of images reflecting the bad side, if not more, to reflect the reality. --Wickey-nl (talk) 16:07, 13 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

English source required

edit

This source needs an English version or the text will be removed. http://www.ynet.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-2810919,00.html 109.157.215.52 (talk) 20:01, 7 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

Actually, non-English sources are allowed (see WP:NONENG). If the citation is not relevant to the article (particularly when dealing with politically sensitive articles), the correct protocol is to to insert a request for translation as per this template. Once you have done so, you are welcome to point it out on the talk page. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 22:13, 7 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Also, 109.157.215.52, you don't own this article, so it is actually not you who gets to decide what will be removed and what not. That is what consensus is for. Debresser (talk) 00:54, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

Ben Gurion statement removed

edit

This edit removed a statement by Ben Gurion regarding Negev Bedouin from the "Education" section with the claim that it was "irrelevant" material. I think this statement was relevant, setting the background for the Israeli approach towards about Negev Bedouin education. Debresser (talk) 21:12, 7 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

The same IP user has also blanked other cited sections using "not in RS" as a coverall. Please be more cautious about editing politically sensitive articles. As you can see, rather than simply reverting, Debresser has brought the issue to the attention of other contributors editing this article for discussion. It is encouraged that you use the talk page constructively to discuss issues and reach consensus. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 22:38, 7 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Especially since I found at least one statement in a source that this IP editor had removed and restored the text. Debresser (talk) 00:57, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
A huuffington post blog certainly does not meet the standards for RS for historical material. I can't find any other source for the purported Ben-Gurion quote. I don't think it should be restored without RS supporting it's accuracy and significance for inclusion in an encyclopaedia article on the topic of the Negev Bedouin. Dlv999 (talk) 01:39, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
That being the case, Dlv999, neither does New Internationalist ezine, yet comprehensive figures are cited from it in the lead. Given that it's an op ed piece with no indications as to where any of the facts have been sourced, I would suggest that it, and any material taken from it, should also be removed. I haven't investigated the references from this article properly as yet. It may be useful for me to go through it thoroughly and tag anything dubious as I'm a genuinely neutral party. Would anyone have any objections? --Iryna Harpy (talk) 02:44, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
I found some more sources for the New Int. figures. I think a thorough investigation of sources in the article would be a very good idea. I don't have time to go through them all right now myself, but I will try to improve the sources if you find any problems. Dlv999 (talk) 04:03, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Cheers, Dlv999. I'll make some time to do so ASAP as I'm currently caught up in trying to mediate on new outbreaks of edit warring on few Eastern European articles. I'm not one for plaguing articles with tags where it can be avoided, so will leave any questions on the talk page (as well as look for alternative sources myself). --Iryna Harpy (talk) 05:26, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

A quote from one Israeli leader can hardly be called setting the background for the Israeli approach to education. The quote is not relevant to the situation today. An aspiration is not evidence of action. I do not think that it should be there. This article needs a lot of work, particularly as the English is so bad. Iryna whilst you are looking at the sources coudl you look at the wording as well? 109.157.215.52 (talk) 09:38, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

I would be happy to copy-edit the article. Unfortunately, high profile articles do end up attracting so many hit-and-run edits that they fall into a state of disrepair with remnants of weasel words and POV slants.
I would also have to agree that, given the amount of sourced material to be covered, quotes from individuals regarding ideals and intents are redundant.
As I noted to Div999 already, I would prefer not to litter the article with tags. Dependent on my interpretation of the reading, I would prefer to make some notes here and consult with editors actively engaged with the article as to whether my assessments are deemed fair or not. Debate is always preferable to edit warring. I've moved this article to high priority on my 'to do' list. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 22:10, 8 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

Economust is making POV edits

edit

Economust is POV pushing in this article (Negev Bedouin) and the Negev. He is removing relevant and acceptable material and inserting biased material, like removing "rather than promoting an influx of new immigrants and creating jobs for them". Here he removes criticism because "Opinion columns and Advocacy organizations cannot be used to support such claims". Here he removes the part about destruction and displacement and inserts sweet words. Regarding the demographic factors, he removes that here and here. This must be addressed. --IRISZOOM (talk) 00:26, 25 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

IRISZOOM, many of the links you were referring to were op ed pieces and Economust had full justification for removing them. They did not pass the verifiability test as reliable sources.
I do agree that there are some spurious editing practices (read as POV pushes) beleaguering this article and I've been trying to find some time to do a bit of a clean-up (including the use of an abundance of redundant images), but am stuck in a new outbreak of edit-warring in Eastern European articles.
If you have WP:V and WP:RS to counterbalance what you perceive to be POV pushes, please do so. If you wish to reintroduce verifiable cited material removed I would suggest that you do so. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 00:34, 25 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
I think the article was balanced before so much material was removed. --IRISZOOM (talk) 00:44, 25 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
This edit seems to be clearly in breach of our neutrality policy. Two reliable sources and the related sourced statement were removed ("while the majority are slated for destruction with the population facing forced displacement"). Meanwhile the first half of the sentence, which is unsourced, remains in place ("The Israeli government has gradually recognized some of them and taken measures to improve infrastructure and basic services"). The result of the edit is to skew the article away from WP:NPOV and give a misleading, biased coverage of the topic. Dlv999 (talk) 01:24, 25 December 2013 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for taking your time to restore text.
I do think reactions and statements from "Opinion columns and Advocacy organizations" such as this are acceptable, of course as long as they meet the required criteras. Critism from newspapers and organizations is relevant but should of course not be used to be presented as a fact. --IRISZOOM (talk) 13:48, 25 December 2013 (UTC)Reply

@Iryna Harpy: Actually, opinion pieces may be used in some cases. WP:NEWSORG They may contain quotations or other facts. The reliability of such sources is subject to general considerations and whether or not used as opinion. --Wickey-nl (talk) 14:58, 11 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

Correct. Thank you for qualifying my broad statement. Again, it is the context which assists in determining whether they can be deemed to be WP:V & WP:RS. More to the point, when tackling sensitive subject matter, the first port of call should be the talk page and consensus on introducing potentially contentious material. Personally, my experience of working on many controversial articles is that the Bold → Revert → Discuss cycle is one that should be 'ignored' in favour of WP:COMMON. The 'discuss' aspect is the best method of avoiding POV edit-warring which only ends up in grief, blocks and (most importantly) a messy article for the readers. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 04:28, 12 February 2014 (UTC)Reply

Planned new article

edit

I am planning on writing a new article about the status of Negev Bedouin women, which will cover these topics: access to education, employment/participation in the labor force, the changing status and roles of women (as a result of outside changes), ability to access healthcare, and the role of cultural norms in women's status. Any feedback on sources/other topics to include?NogaArdon (talk) 23:04, 24 March 2014 (UTC)Reply

Well done, NogaArdon. I've only had a cursory look at your new article, but it's certainly looking good so far! --Iryna Harpy (talk) 04:35, 29 April 2014 (UTC)Reply
edit

Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just modified 10 external links on Negev Bedouin. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:

When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.

This message was posted before February 2018. After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{source check}} (last update: 5 June 2024).

  • If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with this tool.
  • If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with this tool.

Cheers.—InternetArchiveBot (Report bug) 01:50, 20 May 2017 (UTC)Reply

edit

Hello fellow Wikipedians,

I have just modified 6 external links on Negev Bedouin. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:

When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.

This message was posted before February 2018. After February 2018, "External links modified" talk page sections are no longer generated or monitored by InternetArchiveBot. No special action is required regarding these talk page notices, other than regular verification using the archive tool instructions below. Editors have permission to delete these "External links modified" talk page sections if they want to de-clutter talk pages, but see the RfC before doing mass systematic removals. This message is updated dynamically through the template {{source check}} (last update: 5 June 2024).

  • If you have discovered URLs which were erroneously considered dead by the bot, you can report them with this tool.
  • If you found an error with any archives or the URLs themselves, you can fix them with this tool.

Cheers.—InternetArchiveBot (Report bug) 11:53, 15 February 2018 (UTC)Reply

Ahem

edit

During the war, Negev Bedouin favoured marginally both sides of the conflict;[32] most of them fled or were expelled to Jordan, Sinai Peninsula, Gaza Strip, West Bank. In March 1948 Bedouin and semi-Bedouin communities begun to leave their homes and encampments in response to Palmach retaliation raids following attacks on water-pipelines to Jewish cities.[33] On 16 August 1948 the Negev Brigade launched a full-scale clearing operation in the Kaufakha-Al Muharraqa area displacing villagers and Bedouin for military reasons.[34] At the end of September the Yiftach Brigade launched an operation west of Mishmar Hanegev expelling Arabs and confiscating their livestock.[35] In early 1949 the Israeli army moved thousands of Bedouin from south and west of Beersheba to a concentration zone east of the town. In November 1949, 500 families were expelled across the border into Jordan and on September 2, 1950 some 4,000 Bedouin were forced across the border with Egypt.,[36] Only around 11,000 of the 110,000 Bedouin population remained in the Negev.

A third possible explanation for hiding the file concerns previously unpublished historical testimony about the expulsion of Bedouin. On the eve of Israel’s establishment, nearly 100,000 Bedouin lived in the Negev. Three years later, their number was down to 13,000. In the years during and after the independence war, a number of expulsion operations were carried out in the country’s south. In one case, United Nations observers reported that Israel had expelled 400 Bedouin from the Azazma tribe and cited testimonies of tents being burned. The letter that appears in the classified file describes a similar expulsion carried out as late as 1956, as related by geologist Avraham Parnes:

"A month ago we toured Ramon [crater]. The Bedouin in the Mohila area came to us with their flocks and their families and asked us to break bread with them. I replied that we had a great deal of work to do and didn’t have time. In our visit this week, we headed toward Mohila again. Instead of the Bedouin and their flocks, there was deathly silence. Scores of camel carcasses were scattered in the area. We learned that three days earlier the IDF had ‘screwed’ the Bedouin, and their flocks were destroyed – the camels by shooting, the sheep with grenades. One of the Bedouin, who started to complain, was killed, the rest fled.”Hagar Shezaf,  Burying the Nakba: How Israel Systematically Hides Evidence of 1948 Expulsion of Arabs Haaretz 5 July, 2019 Nishidani (talk) 13:39, 6 July 2019 (UTC)

2021 Politics

edit

There are interesting developments going on in 2021 politics related to the Negev Bedouins. Israel formed a new government in June 2021 incorporating the Islamic Ra'am party into the governing coalition -- Negev Bedouins are a major voting bloc for Ra'am and Ra'am negotiated the recognition of three Bedouin villages as well as budgets for services. It's the first time that an Arab party has been officially part of an Israeli government. Ra’am’s Saeed al-Harumi, abstained from the confidence vote effectively protesting the demolition of Bedouin homes in the Negev without preventing the new government from being formed -- the approval passed by one vote. Al-Harumi was born in Shaqib al-Salam in southern Israel to a Muslim Negev Bedouin family.

Merge

edit

Palestinian Bedouin appears to be a POV fork of Negev Bedouin, to push the POV that these Bedouins are an organic part of the Palestinian people. Virtually all the contents there appears here, with less POV terminology.Inf-in MD (talk) 00:45, 10 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

I've redirected that article here. Inf-in MD (talk) 16:21, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Ive reverted, if youd like to redirect that article then feel free to take it to AFD. nableezy - 20:44, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
  • Support - this looks like a partial POV fork. Nothing there that is not already covered at Negev Bedouin. Nableezy, no need to demand AfD, this is what merge discussions are for, and Inf-in MD was justified in boldly attempting a redirect after not getting input for a week. --Elmidae (talk · contribs) 19:34, 20 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
    • Nableezy has argued that West Bank Bedouin are sufficiently different from Bedouin inside Israel to merit their own article. Its not an unreasonable argument. But even if we did decide on a merger, it has to be way more than simply blanking the content at Palestinian Bedouin. An actual effort has to be made to integrate that content here.VR talk 20:01, 20 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
What is there is not what could be there, the topic Palestinian Bedouin meets our notability requirements and as such should have its own article. I was justified in reverting that bold redirect as well. nableezy - 17:04, 22 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Yeah. Any merge would require a name change, which the promoters don't appear to grasp. Bedouin refers to a very complex set of historical groups right across the IP area, from Israel, Israel's Negev, the West Bank and Gaza. In Emmanuel Marx's terminology, Bedouins are amalgamations of individuals in a bounded territory, not some unified tribe with a distinct origin in the Negev, which the merge would imply. The co-called Ghawarna erstwhile of the Hula Valley were widely called 'Bedouins' though their origins are extremely complex - their oral histories speak of origins in Syria, Arabia, while many perhaps came from sutlers attending Ibrahim Pasha's 1830 conquest.Nishidani (talk) 14:52, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Palestinian Bedouin does not discuss any of these groups (Bedouins from the West Bank and Gaza, Ghawarna). If you want to change that article content to discuss them, do so, but right now it is a duplicate, POV fork of Negev Bedouins. Inf-in MD (talk) 15:59, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
It in fact does discuss Gazan Bedouin. nableezy - 18:30, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Transcluded discussion at Palestinian Bedouin
This article appears to be a POV fork of Negev Bedouin, to push the POV that these Bedouins are an organic part of the Palestinian people. Virtually all the contents there appears in the original article, with less POV terminology. Inf-in MD (talk) 00:25, 10 November 2021 (UTC) Reply
as no one seems to object, I'll redo the redirect. Inf-in MD (talk) 16:19, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

I dont think thats accurate, this covers more than just the Negev. nableezy - 20:45, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

I don't think so. There may be single mention of non-Negev Bedouins ("predominantly concentrated in the South (al-Naqab/Negev and Gaza), the North (al-Jalil/Galilee) and in the Jerusalem area"), but the rest is essentially a content fork. Inf-in MD (talk) 21:52, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
This page is somewhat lacking, but definitely does not only cover Negev Bedouin. There are bedouin in the West Bank (see here for example). That would very much not be covered by Negev Bedouin, but would here. nableezy - 23:27, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
This page does not discuss those West Bank Bedouins (other that in that single mention I called out above). It is simply a POV fork of Negev Bedouins if one looks at the content. If you want to create a new page about West Bank Bedouins, be my guest, but there's no reason to have another article that is 99% the same as Negev Bedouins, which is what this is. Inf-in MD (talk) 23:43, 18 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

nableezy do you think the West Bank Bedouin are similar enough to the Negev Bedouin to be covered in the same article? FYI, I'm the one who created the Negev Bedouin page.VR talk 04:16, 19 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

Also if this article is to remain, it might need a disambiguator. "Palestinian Bedouin" typically refers to the Bedouin of the Negev desert (inside the Green line)[9].VR talk 04:19, 19 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Not really honestly, the Bedouin in Israel proper face their own challenges with the unrecognized villages and being denied equal rights as Israeli citizens. nableezy - 16:39, 19 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
No, a merge would be premature in the present state of articles. The Palestinian Bedouin article is undeveloped, a stub, but explores a distinct modern historical reality which the Negev Bedouin article openly admits in the final section. The Negev Bedouin article in turn looks like an official government whitewash of the history of the Bedouin in that region. Everytime I look at it I shake my head and the amount of material about their modern history not included in the article, which is massive. Nishidani (talk) 17:42, 22 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
"a merge would be premature in the present state of articles" - this has it exactly backwards. Right now the article (which is not a stub) has more than 95% overlap with Negev Bedouin. In fact, save for the single sentence I quoted above, it doesn't even mention the West Bank Bedouins. As such, we should either delete it as a POV fork, or redirect it to Negev Bedouin, as a plausible search term. And if the Negev Bedouin article needs improvement - stop cringing and shaking your head and go fix it. If someday a meaningful article is written about the West Bank Bedouin, we can then remove the redirect, but we should not keep this POV fork in its current state in the hope that maybe, someday, someone will create that different article.Inf-in MD (talk) 00:36, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
The following is a bit tongue in cheek with overtones of seriousness so in that spirit. If "Arab citizens of Israel" is a catch all title, then we could have " X citizens of Israel" as components, where X = Palestinian, Druze, Bedouin. Do some Druze, Bedouin CoI identify as Palestinian, sure, does it matter, nope. There is some crossover but it doesn't mean the article(s) should not exist. Probably we should have an article for the Jewish citizens of Israel as well, oh wait, we do, Israeli Jews (so should be Israeli Bedouin? Shome mishtake, shorely). I realize that some would just like to have an article Non Jewish citizens of Israel, oh well. So yes, I would merge the two articles under the name Bedouin (citizens) of Israel and then identify in that article, sub categories of that. Palestinian, Negev, tribe, whatever. Then what to do with residents who are not citizens and those in East Jerusalem and the Golan, tsk. Or perhaps wait till we sort out the biggest slice first Palestinian citizens of Israel or maybe Israeli Palestinians and then sort out the rest.Selfstudier (talk) 12:34, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
The above has little to do with the merge discussion. We have an article for that sub-component- it is called Negev Bedouin, and we shouldn't have POV fork of it called Palestinian Bedouin. If you want to have the Negev Bedouin article renamed to Bedouin (citizens) of Israel - make a move request. Inf-in MD (talk) 12:38, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
It could equally go the other way around, couldn't it? There are plenty of sources for "Palestinian Bedouin". And anyway, I disagree in general, this is clearly linked with the other matters I raised, there needs to be consistency across articles.Selfstudier (talk) 12:41, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
It might, but again, that's a rename discussion, not a merge discussion. This article's content is entirely covered by Negev Bedouin one except for one sentence, with the latter one older, more developed and less POV, so it is the more natural one to be merged into. If you want to suggest a rename, post merger, you could do that Inf-in MD (talk) 12:45, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Redirect is usually result of an AfD, so what? You asked for a discussion and I have given my opinion. Atm , you don't have enough support for what you want to do unofficially, so maybe you better try something formal, don't you think? Selfstudier (talk) 12:49, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
It can be, but there's no reason it must go to AfD if editors agree to redirect. There's a formal discussion taking place here - where there are currently 3 support for the redirect.Inf-in MD (talk) 12:52, 23 November 2021 (UTC) strike sockReply
And now 4 against.Selfstudier (talk) 13:15, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
In fact, it does not. It has a single line, in the lead, that says "The Bedouin community has lived in the Bi’r as-Saba’/Naqab region, stretching from Gaza to the Dead Sea, since at least the fifth century". That's it, and even that line places Gaza in the Negev region.. Inf-in MD (talk) 20:15, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
You see the word Gaza there? nableezy - 20:29, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Yes, a single word, placing it the context of the Negev. A better case for a merge could not be made, thanks. Inf-in MD (talk) 20:33, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Again, Palestinian Bedouin clearly covers more than Negev Bedouin. As there is fairly obvious no consensus for the merge Ill be removing the tag now. nableezy - 20:37, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
The topic of Palestinian Bedouin may or may not be broader than Negev Bedouin, but this article does not show that. In its current form, it is a POV fork that should be deleted or redirected. If you want to write a new article that does covers the subject in a way not already done at Negev Bedouin, go ahead, but we should not keep a POV fork in the hope that someone, someday, might make it an acceptable article. Inf-in MD (talk) 20:42, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
And now it includes material on West Bank Bedouin. Anything else? nableezy - 20:43, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Alrighty. And once we remove the WP:COATRACK which duplicates what is in Negev Bedouin , i.e all of the "Land Struggle" section , and much of the "overview" section (which I will do), it will be ok to keep it. Inf-in MD (talk) 20:53, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
That material has consensus, given it has stood for five years, according to you. You'll need an RFC to see if there is no longer consensus, again according to you. nableezy - 20:55, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
Shocking development, does not practice what he preaches. Huh. nableezy - 21:03, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
If there's opposition to my bold changes, we'll take it through an RfC, of course. Perhaps you should read WP:AGF. Inf-in MD (talk) 21:21, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
I believe there has already been stated opposition. nableezy - 21:32, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply
to the merge, yes. To my article content changes, not that I have seen. Inf-in MD (talk) 22:24, 23 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

dismantle

edit

slated for destruction rewritten as 'subject to dismantlenment'. That is euphemization. 'dismantling' is a careful technique of taking a structure apart neatly, without damage to the parts, so that they can be used to rebuild the affected structure. They Bedouin housing units are smashed by bulldozers. The 'care' taken is evidenced in the rubbleNishidani (talk) 08:43, 20 February 2022 (UTC)Reply

Rahat as "the largest Bedouin city in the world."

edit

In the introduction, there's this sentence: "Between 1968 and 1989, Israel built seven townships in the northeast of the Negev for the Bedouin population, with about 60% of them relocating to these areas. The biggest of them, Rahat, has reached a population large enough that in 1994 it was recognized as a city, making it the largest Bedouin city in the world."

This is an objectionable sentence. What even defines a "bedouin city"? There are plenty of larger cities in the Middle East whose populations are formerly bedouin tribes: Najran, Bisha, Arar, Hafr Al-Batin, Sakakah... High surv (talk) 09:48, 1 July 2022 (UTC)Reply

Yes, it's a pretty dubious statement, for the reasons above and more. This is identity politics at work, oversimplification, and makes for unencyclopedic reading. Iskandar323 (talk) 10:36, 1 July 2022 (UTC)Reply

List of Bedouin tribes in 1942

edit

The Palestine Gazette No. 1163, Supplement 2, 15th January, 1942, pp131-132.

‘Azâzima Tribes

edit

‘Asiyât, Farâhîn, Mas‘ûdiyîn, Muhammadîyîn, Murei‘ât, Er Riyâtiya, Sarâhîn, Sawâkhina, Subeihât, Subeihîyîn, Zaraba

Hanâjira Tribes

edit

Abû Middein, Dawâhira, Nuseirât, Sumeirî

Jubârât Tribes

edit

Abû Jâbir, ‘Amârîn Ibn ‘Ajlân, Duqûs, Hasanât Ibn Sabbâh, Mashârifa (Ruteimât el Fuqarâ), Qalâzîn Thawâbita, Rawâwi‘a, Ruteimât Abû el ‘Udus, Sa‘âdinat Abû Jureibân, Sa‘âdinat en Nuweirî, Sawârikat Ibn Rafî‘, Walâyida, El, Wuheidât Jubârât

Sa‘îdîyîn Tribes

edit

Hamâyita and Sawaiyât, Madhâkîr, Ramâmina, Rawâyida and Nukûz

Tarâbîn Tribes

edit

Ghawâlî Abû ‘Amra, Ghawâlî Abû Bakra, Ghawâlî Abû el Husein, Ghawâlî Abû Khatla, Ghawâlî en Naba‘ât, Ghawâlî Abû Shalhûb, Ghawâlî Abû Suheibân, Ghawâlî Abû Sitta, Ghawâlî el ‘Umûr, Ghawâlî ez Zurei‘î, Hasanât Abû Mu‘eiliq, Jarâwîn Abû Ghalyûn, Jarâwîn Abû Su‘eilîk, Jarâwîn Abû Yahyâ, Najmât Abû ‘Âdra, Najmât el Qisâr, Najmât es Sûfâ, Najmât es Sunnâ‘, Najmât Abû Suwâsîn, En Nu‘eimât, Wuheidât

Tayâhâ Tribes

edit

‘Alâmât Abû Jaqîm, ‘Alâmât Abû Libba, ‘Alâmât Abû Shunnâr, Balî, Banî ‘Uqba, Budeinât, Dhullâm Abû Juwei‘id, Dhullâm Abû Rabî‘a, Dhullâm Abû Qureinât, Hukûk Abû ‘Abdûn, Hukûk el Asad, Hukûk el Bureiqî, Hukûk el Huzaiyil, Janâbîb, Nutûsh, Qalâzîn Tayâhâ, Qatâtiwa, Qudeirât el A‘sam, Qudeirât Abû Kaf, Qudeirât Abû Ruqaiyiq, Qudeirât es Sâni‘, Ramâdîn Musâmira, Ramâdîn Shu‘ûr, Rawâshida, Shallâlîyîn, ‘Urûr

Zerotalk 14:20, 4 October 2022 (UTC)Reply

Edit request: Delete sentence

edit

Regarding "Most of the Negev Bedouin tribes migrated to the Negev from the Arabian Desert, Transjordan, Egypt, and the Sinai from the 18th century onwards.": I think this sentence should be deleted. It is very wrong.

I am drafting an article on the history of the Negev and have taken a closer look at this thesis by Kark, Frantzman, and Yahel, which is a minority opinion. First, you need to know that Kark, a highly respected geographer, has a history of misquoting regarding Bedouins. Even before court, where she regularly testifies on behalf of the State of Israel to contest Bedouin land ownership claims.[1] Something similar goes for Frantzman. For example, his dissertation is very good; at the same time, he has a blog where he rants against 'Bedouin-lovers', among other things. One cannot write Bedouin and Negev articles without referencing Kark and Frantzman because they are too important, but at the very least, their theses should be attributed as they are clearly not neutral voices.

The thesis in question seems also to have arisen only through multiple misquotations. In the article cited on the page, it is only expressed in one sentence[2] and "substantiated" with a paper by Bailey, which is summarized as follows:

"Bailey refers to the arrival date of the Bedouin to the Sinai and the Negev, mentioning that certain nomads arrived in the tenth century, "Dating the Arrival of the Bedouin Tribes in Sinai and the Negev," Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 28 (1980): 20-49.)" (p. 104, FN 110).

In fact, Bailey writes the exact opposite of what is attributed to him - that most Bedouin tribes migrated to the Negev before the 18th century.[3] If one follows his article closely, Bailey only identifies 2 out of the 95 Bedouin tribes living in the Negev before 1948 as having arrived in the Negev after the 18th century.[4]

In two other articles, the thesis is discussed in more detail and is based solely on the claim that the Ottoman tax registers from 1596, examined by Hütteroth and Abdulfattah, indicate that the Bedouin tribes living in the Negev in 1596 were not the same as those living there later.[5][6]

But this is wrong. Again, there is misquotation; A./H. do not say on p. 3 or p. 51-53 what the three attribute to them.[7]

Here too, the tax registers and A./H. suggest the exact opposite. First, it is not possible to say anything about the history of the Bedouins in general using the tax registers and A./H. The Ottomans taxed Bedouins only up to about the southern end of the Gaza Strip; therefore, only the Jaram, Aṭiyya, 'Aṭā, Haytam, and Sawālima east of the Gaza Strip and the Yatim in the southern West Bank are documented in these tax register; most of the Negev was not recorded at all.[8]

But more importantly, second, five of these tribes still live in Palestine today; after 1948, however, not in the same area, but either in the Gaza Strip,[9] in the Hebron area, or in the Siyagh;[10] the reasons for the migration of the Aṭiyya are well known.[11] So, for 5 of the 6 mentioned tribes, what Kark/Frantzman/Havazelet write and then generalize to all Bedouin tribes is incorrect; none of them "migrated to the Negev from the Arabian Desert, Transjordan, Egypt, and the Sinai from the 18th century onwards". The Aṭiyya cannot be used to substantiate what they want to insinuate about all Bedouin tribes in the Negev either. Based solely on Abdulfattah and Hütteroth, one would instead have to conclude that, in general — in five out of six documented cases — the current Bedouin tribes were already living in the Negev in the late 16th century. Incidentally, three of these can be traced back almost another 100 years to the early 16th century: the Aṭiyya, 'Aṭā, and Sawālima revolted against the Mamluks and supported the Ottomans in the Mamluk-Ottoman War (see Etkes 2007, p. 5). DaWalda (talk) 08:03, 20 July 2024 (UTC)Reply

@DaWalda: You are well qualified to fix the article yourself and you have good command of the sources. So go for it! Zerotalk 14:20, 2 August 2024 (UTC)Reply

References

  1. ^ See the comments of Yiftachel a the end of this article, or the ones of Abu Sitta (section 1.4)
  2. ^ p. 95: "The current Negev Bedouin tribes arrived to the Negev, from their historical homeland in the Arabian Desert, Transjordan, Egypt, and the Sinai, mainly since the eighteenth century and onwards."
  3. ^ "However, the hiatus between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries, for which the historian previously found no written record, was the period when most of the present Bedouin population came to Sinai and the Negev." - Clinton Bailey: Dating the Arrival of the Bedouin Tribes in Sinai and the Negev. Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 28 (1), 1985 [sic]. p. 48.
  4. ^ Of the 95 tribes that lived in the Negev before 1948, Bailey identifies only (a) 4 as having come to the Negev since the 18th century, and (b) 3 as having come since the 19th century.
    (a) The arrival date of the said 4 tribes is derived solely from one of these tribes reporting that upon their arrival, they encountered the Wuhaydat, who were expelled from the Negev at the end of the 18th century; thus, he writes more precisely "the 18th century (at the latest)" and "while they may have been in Sinai and the Negev beforehand..." (p. 49). This is a terminus ante quem, not a terminus post quem.
    (b) The Tiyaha, the Tarabin, and the Azazima are said to have arrived in the Negev from the 19th century onwards. The source in each case is the oral history of the Bedouins themselves.
    (b1) Regarding the Azazima, Bailey also cites other oral histories, according to which they arrived earlier. Another alternative oral history can be found, for example, in this Zionist survey from 1920, according to which the Azazima competed with the Tarabin for land over centuries: במשך מאות בשנים היו להם מלחמות כבדוח עם הטרבין ויתר שכניהם על אודות רכישת אדמה; "For centuries, they had fierce battles with the Tarabin and other neighbors over land acquisition." Seetzen met Azazima in the Negev in 1807, thus, the 19th century hardly can be right.
    (b2) This leaves only the Tiyaha and the Tarabin according to Bailey. For these tribal confederations, Bailey's arrival date can refer only to the main tribes, as he simultaneously identifies much earlier arrival dates for subtribes of the Tiyaha and Tarabin. For example, the Bili ("Bali" in Zero's list above) and the Jerawin (Jarawin) reached the Negev before the early Islamic period; the Jarm (not referenced in Zero's list; see Max Freiherr von Oppenheim (1943): Die Beduinen. Band II: Die Beduinenstämme in Palästina, Transjordanien, Sinai, Ḥedjaz. Otto Harrasowitz. p. 13.) are documented at least since the Crusader period, and the Wuhaydat were the dominant tribe during the early Ottoman period. Thus, from Bailey, a late arrival of Bedouins can only be inferred for 2 out of 95 tribes. edit: I have now found that even this is not true. The oral traditions Bailey refers to are explained in more detail in his 1980 article. Regarding the Tiyaha, he only writes about their winter residences being in the Sinai (namely in Wadi Abyad, just southwest of today's border), but their summer residences were in Gaza (in the northern Negev) even before the 19th century. Therefore, their roaming areas were no different before the 19th century than they were afterward. This is not the fault of Kark & Co., but rather Bailey's own mistake, who—for whatever reason—incorrectly included this in his table. See Bailey 1980, p. 39-42.
  5. ^ Seth J. Frantzman / Ruth Kark / Havatzelet Yahel (2012b): Are the Negev Bedouin an Indigenous People? Fabricating Palestinian History. Middle East Quarterly 19 (3), 2012. p. 9: "Among the Bedouin tribes living in the Negev today, most view themselves as descendants of nomadic tribes from the Arabian Peninsula. In fact, most of them arrived fairly recently, during the late eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries, from the deserts of Arabia, Transjordan, Sinai, and Egypt. [...] Ottoman tax registers demonstrate that the tribes which lived in the Negev in 1596-97 are not those residing there today. According to historians Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth and Kamal Abdulfattah, the tax registers that reflect material collected in those years show names of forty-three Bedouin tribes living in what became Mandatory Palestine, including six in the Negev. There is not much information on what became of those tribes. However, the names of the tribes currently living in the Negev do not appear on the tax registers from 1596."
  6. ^ Havazelet Yahel / Ruth Kark / Seth Frantzman: Negev Bedouin and Indigenous People: A Comparative Review, in: Raghubir Chand / Etienne Nel / Stanko Pelc (ed.): Societies, Social Inequalities and Marginalization. Marginal Regions in the 21st Century. Springer, 2017. p. 132: "Ottoman tax registers demonstrate that the tribes which lived in the Negev in 1596-97 are not those residing there today (Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth and Abdulfattah 1977, 3). According to Hütteroth and Abdulfattah, the tax registers that reflect material collected in those years show names of forty-three Bedouin tribes living in what became Mandatory Palestine, including six in the Negev. There is not much information of what became of those tribes (Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth and Abdulfattah 1977, 51-3). However, the names of the tribes currently living in the Negev do not appear on the tax registers from 1596 (Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth and Abdulfattah 1977, 51-3)."
  7. ^ On page 3, it does not say that "the tribes which lived in the Negev in 1596-97 are not those residing there today," but rather it characterizes Ottoman documents: "The sources we have used are seven daftar-i mufaṣṣal from the last census taken in the 16th century – that is to say, from the very last census taken during the period of Ottoman rule in the Arab provinces. [...] Since the daftar-i jadīd made up the last complete census, they were the official source of information for administrative purposes right down to the Tanzīmāt period in the 19th century. A number of later additions in different scripts testify to their use throughout the centuries, although the essential information contained in them had long become out-dated. Many of the villages had disappeared, tribes had changed territory and the whole economic picture of the country had undergone a change." -- Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth / Kamal Abdulfattah: Historical Geography of Palestine, Transjordan and Southern Syria in the Late 16th Century. Selbstverlag der Fränkischen Geographischen Gesellschaft, 1977. p. 3.
    On pages 51-53, there is nothing at all corresponding to "There is not much information of what became of those tribes [...]. However, the names of the tribes currently living in the Negev do not appear on the tax registers from 1596 [...]."
  8. ^ See Wolf-Dieter Hütteroth / Kamal Abdulfattah: Historical Geography of Palestine, Transjordan and Southern Syria in the Late 16th Century. Selbstverlag der Fränkischen Geographischen Gesellschaft, 1977. p. 49.
  9. ^ D. Grossman: Oscillations in the Rural Settlement of Samaria and Judaea in the Ottoman Period, in: S. Dar / S. Safrai (ed.): Shomron Studies. Hakibbutz Hameuchad Publishing House, 1986. p. 385 f. [Heb.].
  10. ^ Alexandre Kedar / Ahmad Amara / Oren Yiftachel: Emptied Lands. A Legal Geography of Bedouin Rights in the Negev. Stanford University Press, 2018. p. 124: "In the census summaries the names of six Bedouin tribes are mentioned, five of which can be identified today in the Mount Hebron region and the Negev.
    It is important to note that the southernmost area surveyed by the census, the edge of the Ottoman-controlled area, was, according to census maps, demarcated by a line straggling between Hebron and Rafah, taht is, along the northern edge of the Bedouin region. Hence most of the Bedouin tribes who lived farther south were not surveyed or mentioned in the census."
  11. ^ Gad G. Gilbar: Ottoman Palestine, 1800–1914: studies in economic and social history. E.J. Brill, 1990. p. 326: [...T]he Arabian Banī ´Aṭiyya tribe attempted to take root in the eastern Negev, the same year [1830]. A severe drought in the 'Arava valley, where this Ḥijāzian tribe had been camping, forced them to cross over into the Negev to find pasture for their flocks. The predominant bedouin chief in the Negev at the time, Salmān ´Alī ´Azzām al-Huzayl, of the Tiyāhā, not being in alliance with them (which would have entitled them to graze there), demanded that they pay him tribute. Salmān's request, however, was not only refused, but the Banīi ´Aṭiyya even proceeded to cultivate the fertile Beersheba plain. Al-Huzayl thereupon put together a force comprising warriors of the Tiyāhā, Tarābīn, and Ḥanājra tribes, and villagers from the Hebron Hills, and hostilities ensued. [...] Hence the Banī ´Aṭiyya were expelled from the Negev [...]."