Palestinians await Israeli outpost’s evacuation
SILWAD, Palestinian Territory — Maryam Abdel-Kareem gazed longingly onto the plot of West Bank land she inherited from her father. Once planted with tomatoes, cucumbers and okra, the wind-swept hilltop now hosts the white trailer homes of an Israeli settlement outpost that took root more than 20 years ago.
Now, Abdel-Kareem and other Palestinian landowners are set to reclaim the property they watched stripped from them, hoping to finally put to rest a bitter, years-long legal saga on Feb. 8 — the latest court-ordered deadline for the evacuation of the Amona outpost.
“I’ve never lost hope,” said Abdel-Kareem, 82, peering out across a rocky valley toward Amona. “It’s as if you have this child and you hug him and love him, and you don’t want to let him go. The land is like this to me, more precious than a child.”
Amona is one of about 100 outposts across the West Bank that Israel considers illegal but tolerates and often allows to flourish. It was established in the mid-1990s, when a small group of settlers, quietly beckoned by government-funded infrastructure, erected caravans on the rugged knoll.


