Buying Time

Has Barack Obama sparked a real estate boom in the West Bank?

Yitzchak Newman is in the market for his first house. For now, the young IT project manager lives with his wife and toddler in a rented basement apartment. Space is limited and the family yearns to attain the middle class ideal of owning their own home.

But unlike most aspiring home-owners, the Newmans are determined to enter the real estate market in what may be the world’s most politically sensitive strip of land. Whether to fulfill a religious prophecy or to live in blissful suburbia, the Newmans and thousands like them are eager to live in one of the dozens of Jewish enclaves in the West Bank. While the Israeli government has long offered subsidies to woo families to the contentious neighborhoods, demand has skyrocketed over the past few months. And realtors may have Barack Obama to thank for the recent boom. 

In September, five months after Netanyahu took office, the Israeli Defense Ministry approved 455 permits for new units in West Bank settlements, the first such permits issued under Netanyahu’s government. They may be the last if Obama succeeds in putting pressure on the Israelis to freeze construction as a way of restarting the peace process. But if Obama’s intention is to slow growth in the settlements, his tactics may be having the opposite effect. 

 

One of the 455 permits is for a 12-unit apartment building in Alon Shvut, 10 miles from Jerusalem, where Newman is looking for property. His interest in the settlement is both social ("we want a community lifestyle that doesn’t exist necessarily in Tel Aviv or Jerusalem") and religious ("we have a biblical right on this land"). The quiet neighborhood is set on a hill between two Arab villages, with grand vistas of gullies visible from most windows.

But Newman isn’t having much luck finding a house there. "There’s no new buildings," Newman tells me as he loiters in front of the neighborhood’s synagogue, lamenting his prospects for buying one of the new units. "And when there’s no new building the prices are going to go up--that’s just general economics." Newman estimates that there are as many as 100 other families subletting basement units in Alon Shvut, most of who will be vying for the 12 new apartments.

And now he has to compete with the flurry of buyers hoping to score a piece of land before a potential settlement freeze. It is difficult to gauge the exact size of the boo, since the Israeli government is reluctant to release figures. Carmit Kaufman, manager of Real Estate Kaufman who works with settlement real estate, has seen a "30 to 40 percent [rise] in demand" since Obama was elected. "Prices have rocketed sky high," says Yair Kaufman, chief analyst at A. Heifetz & Co., an Israeli consulting company. While cities all over Israel have weathered the global housing slump remarkably well, none compare to the recent boom in the settlements.

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COMMENTS (24)

11/05/2009 - 12:25am EDT |

Israeli's are finding it difficult to build apartments on occupied land in violation of international law!! My heart goes out to them. Soon they may have to move off the choice land overlooking indigent palestinian villages. Excuse me, but I am tearing up.

11/05/2009 - 12:49am EDT |

Why is it accepted nearly everywhere that Jewish settlement anywhere in the West Bank would undermine prospects for a Palestinian state? Jewish settlements in Modiin and Illit do not take land from any Palestinian-settled areas and do not block movement between any Palestinian villages (at least not the would not also be blocked by Tel Aviv-Jerusalem corridor). So, how does that diminish in any way the prospects for a Palestinian state?

There are settlements which are a hindrance to say the least to an emergent Palestinian state. For instance, the Eli-Yizhar corridor, and the roads connecting to the coast and the Jordan Valley, divide the Palestinian section of Samaria into four par ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 2:54am EDT |

That's the point we have reached now. If Israel will slow down its violation of international law [not to mention its violation of the 8th Commandment---thou shall not steal] the Palestinians should be motivated enough to pursue peace...seriously.

Imagine, however, if your community had been taken over by outsiders with the help of, say, the international community. You struggle for years to regain your land...your property. X successfully fights you off though and in the process takes even more of your land. Then with the help of that self-same international community "generous compromises" are offered that give you virtually none of the land back but with promises that less might be taken i ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 2:54am EDT |

That's the point we have reached now. If Israel will slow down its violation of international law [not to mention its violation of the 8th Commandment---thou shall not steal] the Palestinians should be motivated enough to pursue peace...seriously.

Imagine, however, if your community had been taken over by outsiders with the help of, say, the international community. You struggle for years to regain your land...your property. X successfully fights you off though and in the process takes even more of your land. Then with the help of that self-same international community "generous compromises" are offered that give you virtually none of the land back but with promises that less might be taken i ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 4:17am EDT |

Sarah A Topol =

Because for some reason it appears to have escaped your attention I will remind you that it is a war crime under Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention for any Israeli citizen to relocate to the Occupied Palestinian Territories. An Israeli moving into the Occupied Palestinian Territories is no different than a 1930s-era German moving into a once Jewish neighborhood in Germany.

It is one thing for committed bigots like Frank Foer and Martin Peretz to support Israeli war crimes - it should be quite another for Sarah A. Topol, a freelance journalist based in Cairo, to do so. So what is it Sarah? Did you forget to mention it is a war crime or were you mendacious in not mentio ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 11:47am EDT |

sighthnd, yeah I agree.

I have zero problem for any Israeli who legally purchases a plot of land from any Palestinian landowner and builds a home there. As long as they are willing to accept that their home will be part of a future Palestinian state, that is nobody's business. I have a home in Shanghai and one in Mexico. Screw anyone who thinks I am an imperialistic war criminal. My biggest concern is that the settlers won't accept this and expect that the land they are on is Israel, and then we will have a mess like we did before.

I think that Israel would cede these lands for peace under something that approaches the deal that was offered back in 2000 so I think Netanyahu is being unjust mo ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 12:01pm EDT |

ndmac, so let me get this straight, you think Palestinians have the right of return and move into any part of Israel they want, to buy land, start businesses, etc. but Israelis have zero right to live in the West Bank? Right now, Israel has a large and vibrant Arab Israeli citizenship, but Palestine should have zero Jews, right? Oh wait, you would say Zionazis. Or as Walton would say, jewey jews. (I kid you not, he castigated someone for their "jewiness.")

I am not saying Jews have the right to Palestinian citizenship, (as I am opposed to the "right of return") but good lord, if there is to ever be any hope of peace there has to be some level of free movement of goods, services, property, etc ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 1:33pm EDT |

ndmac, so let me get this straight, you think Palestinians have the right of return and move into any part of Israel they want, to buy land, start businesses, etc. but Israelis have zero right to live in the West Bank?

As long as Israel is the recognized Occupying Power of the Palestinian Territories it is a war crime for Israel to transfer any of its citizens, regardless of religion, into the Occupied Palestinian Territories. Once the occupation is over there is nothing to stop any Israeli from buying property in the Palestinian Territories and moving there. That Israeli settlement is a war crime is wholly contingent on the occupation.

This is totally different from blackton moving to ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 1:55pm EDT |

I write these words from an office building on land stolen from Native Americans in the 17th century so my standing to contribute to this discussion may legitimately be questioned. But it might interest TNR readers ( and maybe even George- ND probably not so much) that that old Zionist extremist Jimmy Carter visited in July, 2009 with some settlers in precisely the area described in this article and after an exchange of views concluded that he could not envision a future in which these settlements do not stay in Israeli hands. See the (Beirut) DailyStar from July 15,2009, or the Jerusalem Post, as you like. This happens to conform with American policy, by the way and in more rational ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 2:19pm EDT |

ljrab -

Everyone understands that the only viable solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is two states based on the 1967 borders with small mutually-agreed exchanges of land. The problem with continued expansion of the so-called settlements is that they render this solution less and less viable.

The owners and editors of this magazine have no interest in there ever being a viable solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

11/05/2009 - 2:37pm EDT |

blackton: I apparently was not clear in my original statement. The issue is what affects the viability of a Palestinian state. That effect depends not on whether the lands are possessed by Israel or just settled by Jews, but on what lands are settled. Keeping Modiin and Illit under Israeli sovereignty would not affect the viability of a Palestinian state, doing so with Eli and Yizhar will.

11/05/2009 - 2:49pm EDT |

ndmac: The first step to a viable solution is for the Palestinians to recognize that the Jews have a place in the Middle East other than as dhimmis. Once that happens the other obstacles to a Palestinian state will fade away.

Unfortunately, the powers that be among the Palestinians promote themselves by asserting more forcefully than the next that the Jews have no such right and the Streichers among them have brainwashed the population to believe that the Jews have no rightful place in the Mideast. The owners and editors of this magazine merely want to change this circumstance before creating a Palestinian state given what a state that sees Jews as deserving of dhimmitude at best is likely ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 5:15pm EDT |

Topol's piece is a masterful example of how political correctness tends to be inversely proportional to factual correctness. I would expect to see this sort of journalistic intellectual dishonesty in the NY Times, not TNR.

In the present instance, Topol's sins are mostly deliberate omissions (either that or she never visited Alon Shvut & wrote the piece from the comfort of her Cairo apartment), and a few sins of commission.

By way of example: Alon Shvut, which is part of the Gush Etzion bloc, one of the large "settlement" blocs that even the anti-Semitic Jimmy Carter (by his own criteria; see hereview full comment

11/05/2009 - 6:34pm EDT |

ijrab:

I write these words from an office building on land stolen from Native Americans in the 17th century so my standing to contribute to this discussion may legitimately be questioned.

gw:

As I noted above: "it is futile to pretend we can go back to the point before the communities were taken."

At the same time, however, I can well understand why Palestinians might not be able to go along with this. Again, human history is a veritable gusher of apalling crimes against humanity. If all we did was spend time trying to recompense for the past that would be the only thing we'd have time for in the present and the future. Wouldn't it?

But the consequences of international "realpolitik" in 1948 isn ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 7:54pm EDT |

gw: "Why the tortured logic of the psuedo-ethicists twisting the occupation into something it is not?"

So, if land is stolen an 1948 and then the heirs of those who had it taken from them retake it by force in 1967, it is pseudo-ethics to point out that what they are taking is only what had previously belonged to them. That is the only conclusion to be drawn from your disinterest in the fact that many of the settlements existed well before 1948 as Jewish habitations and only became Arab after the Jordanians expelled the Jews living there. In other words, ethnic cleansing is a crime, but once it's done and a few years have passed, it is also a crime to undo that ethnic cleansing.

"But again: ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 8:53pm EDT |

ginzy writes:

The 4th convention was written after WW2 with the events of WW2 in mind. From the legislative history of the convention it is clear that intent of the "transfer" clause in Article 49 refers to the FORCIBLE transfer of a population into a captured area, like the Germans did throughout areas they captured. It has nothing to do with people moving voluntarily to an area, especially an area to which the "occupying power" has claims that pre-existed the conflict or if the land is purchased from its legal owners, if any. Hence the term "disputed territories" is a more accurate way to describe the so-called "West Bank" (a geographically nonsensical term invented by Jo ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 9:18pm EDT |

of for heavens sake nd, give it a rest with your nonsense. I have never once seen a single post from you talking about real occupation throughout the rest of the world. Tibet? you never heard of it, Kosovo, the same, Chechnya, huh? Israel has done everything in its power to create a Palestinian state, it is because of people like you in the lunatic choir cheering on the Palestinians that it won't happen. You are responsible for every bit of misery that exists there. 1967 borders? yeesh, and then it will be 1948 borders, later it will be the Jews have a right to live in the Mediterranean sea.

You have no goddamn idea what occupation means. Why are you filled with such hatred of jewish people? ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 9:37pm EDT |

sight:

So, if land is stolen an 1948 and then the heirs of those who had it taken from them retake it by force in 1967...

gw:

First, I would point out what happened in 1967 is open to a wide assortment of interpretations, isn't it? And I do not equate the Palestinians who did in fact lose their lands and their communities in 1948 with the vast and varied motives of Arab [mostly Arab] leaders in 1967. They are connected of course, but hardly in a straight line. Morally, for example.

And to the extent that Jews back then were visited with this self-same "might makes right" curriculum, it doesn't change what hapened to the Palestinians. I'm neither "pro-Israel" nor "pro-Palestininian" here. I mere ... view full comment

11/05/2009 - 9:38pm EDT |

Tibet

One big difference between Tibet and the Palestinian Territories is that there are no high-profile, so-called liberal magazined supporting the Chinese occupation of Tibet in the way TNR does the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories it would be rightly derided.

The blind, ignorant hate is all yours, blackton. The most pernicious and pervasive form of anti-semitism in the west is that which excuses Israeli war crimes because Israel is a Jewish state because doing so seeks to share the blame for these crimes among all Jews.

11/05/2009 - 9:42pm EDT |

Hey, I like this "view full comment" device.

A suggestion please:

Why not insert it at the very begin of each talkback post? That way folks like JD, noga, blackton et al don't even have to see any of the words I write. It will be the sort of "ignore" function they have been whining about for months now.

Unless, of course, just seeing my name is enough to get them inconsolably riled.

george

11/05/2009 - 10:56pm EDT |

gw: Instead, most children are brainwashed into swallowing one or another cultural, ethnocentric narrative. And then as adults they rationalize every newspaper headline to fit into it.

Try looking in the mirror. Okay, the narrative in your case is not cultural or ethnocentric in nature, but it is a narrative that is similarly not susceptible to facts. In your case, it is the assertion that those who defend any actions that Israel does that do not meet with your approval are colonialist racists out to exterminate the Palestinian people. There are Zionists who fit that mold, but for the most part Zionists limit the extent to which they accept the narratives and outright reject parts ... view full comment

11/06/2009 - 3:58am EDT |

gw [original post]: Instead, most children are brainwashed into swallowing one or another cultural, ethnocentric narrative. And then as adults they rationalize every newspaper headline to fit into it.

sight:

Try looking in the mirror.

george:

I never exclude myself from my own existential narrative. Yes, of course: how I see the world today is going to be predicated in part on how I was taught to view the world around me growing up. And, in turn, on all the unique, personal experiences [and relationships] that nudged me one way rather than another. My point however has always been to suggest this is applicable to all of us. And if it is what can we extrapolate from it? Well, we can begin to gra ... view full comment

11/06/2009 - 12:44pm EDT |

gw: "In my opinion [and that's all it is...and subject always to change] Peretz is bigot. His hatred for Arabs and all those who refuse to toe his hardcore Zionist line ..."

Peretz does not hate people for being Arabs nor does he adhere to a "hardcore Zionist line." Peretz has made clear in several places that he does not believe that Israel should hold every square inch of Judea and Samaria because it is the Jewish people's birthright, just that for any parcel of that territory, the fact of Jordan's conquest of those territories in 1948 should not mean that they should be permanently judenrein. What does set Peretz off is the whitewashing of any malign expressions of intent by Fatah and an ... view full comment

11/06/2009 - 10:45pm EDT |

sight:

Peretz does not hate people for being Arabs nor does he adhere to a "hardcore Zionist line." Peretz has made clear in several places that he does not believe that Israel should hold every square inch of Judea and Samaria because it is the Jewish people's birthright...

gw:

Yes, I recall 6 or 7 months ago congratulating Marty for drawing the line against Israel "holding every square inch of Judea and Samaria". Have you been reading his posts since? If with a straight face you can tell us Peretz, railing over and again about the unwashed, uncivilized Arabs, does not express the taunting, denigrating perspective of a bigoted point of view how can I one take you seriously at all? Even today h ... view full comment

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