Story

Jerusalem, Divided and United

Nabil Al-Kurd holding a photo of protestors who came to support his family when settlers occupied one half of the compound where he lives. The settlers remain, and the Al-Kurd family shares the space. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Mohammad al-Kurd and his grandmother, outside their home. Jewish settlers took over the second house Nabil Al Kurd built. He built without a permit, but Palestinians are rarely granted permits. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Inside the al-Kurd famliy home. Jewish radical settlers took over the second house Nabil Al Kurd built. He built without a permit, but Palestinians are rarely granted permits. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Mohammad Shamasneh. His family faces eviction. The Shamasneh family are ten members in two rooms. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Silwan, the modern Palestinian village which sits on top of, and adjacent to, the massive archaeological site known as the City of David. Homes are at risk for demolition here, as the city wants to plant orchards to mimic the orchards King David would have walked through. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Yonatan Mizrachi, Archaeologist with Emek Shaveh who argues against a Jewish-only past in archaeology and supports an archeaological approach which celebrates a shared history. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

The road to Rachel's tomb, blocked off by concrete barriers, is for Jewish pilgrims and dips into Palestinian-controlled Bethlehem. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

The Old City of Jerusalem, seen from the Mount of Olives. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

One of the Palestinian guardians of the Mount of Olives cemetery approaches Daniel Seidemann, director of Terrestrial Jerusalem, asking for help for a Palestinian friend who would like to return from abroad. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

Daniel Seidemann, watcher of the map of Jerusalem. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

The Security Wall. Image by Sarah Wildman. Jerusalem, 2013.

For the entirety of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process, Jerusalem has been set aside for after final status negotiations. The future of the city remains one of the stickiest of negotiating issues, alongside refugees. But setting aside a decision on a divided city, or an eternally unified one, is predicated on the idea that the city will, somehow, remain static. It has not. Indeed it is constantly morphing, and there are several challenges to a shared future.

The map of Jerusalem itself has not remained constant since the city was unified in 1967. Jewish settlements at the edges of the city have metastasized, changing the map of both the city itself, and the potential outlines of a future two state solution—a Jewish state along side a Palestinian state, each with a shared half of Jerusalem as its own capitol. Twenty-three thousand new building tenders in the contested neighborhoods of Jerusalem were issued in the last year alone, more than the last three years combined. One man—Daniel Seidmann—an attorney, and the director of an NGO called Terrestrial Jerusalem monitors the map to make sure that it will still be possible to create two states with contiguous geographic elements.

In the shadow of the American Colony Hotel, in East Jerusalem, sits the tiny neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, a series of 28 homes built after 1948 by the Jordanians and UNWRA for Palestinian refugees. But those families live an uncomfortable, tenuous life: the land was Jewish-owned before the War of 1948 and Israeli law allows Jews to claim land that was once Jewish (in stark contrast to the Palestinians who claim homes in the West Jerusalem, those claims remain invalid). Over the last three years, radical Jewish settlers have used the quirk in Israeli law to uproot—or attempt to uproot—the Palestinian families, as a means to bind this area to the Western half of the city.

Ultimately, the city of Jerusalem is a city of histories. Some believe to claim the future you must own the past. In the shadow of the Old City walls, a battle is being waged between two sets of archaeologists, those who believe that the past was a direct link to King David, and those who see the many layers between the Second Temple period and the present. The contested area is known as Silwan, or the City of David. It is now one of the most popular tourist sites in Israel. It is also home to a modern, impoverished Palestinian community.