I Witness Silwan
I Witness Silwan
I Witness Silwan
Keywords
Silwan; East Jerusalem; colonial gaze;
surveillance; occupied Palestine, Israeli
settlements; murals; Madaa Creative
Center; Art Forces; art activism,
international solidarity.
Figure 1. Batan al-Hawa, Silwan, East Jerusalem (2019). Photo by Kobi Wolf.
Israel and its proxy “nonprofits” aim to solidify Jewish Israeli sovereignty in
East Jerusalem by dispossessing Palestinians in the Old City basin, which includes
the Old City’s Muslim Quarter and surrounding Palestinian neighborhoods such as
If you take a look, you can see all of the cameras that are installed [by Israeli
state]. These cameras intervene in the privacy of Palestinians here. The
cameras are again and again intervening in the privacy and in every single
detail of the people’s lives here – which leads to further pressure on the people
– a pressure that is already immense because of the guards and the settlers.
“I Witness Silwan” looks the “colonial gaze” in the eye, asking: Who has the power
to look and why? Whose sight counts?
Zuhayr Rajabi was born and raised in Batan al-Hawa. He began surveilling his
neighborhood in 2004 after his brother was shot and injured by Israeli police. His
father died shortly thereafter when Israeli military forces fired tear gas into their
home. After his father’s death, Rajabi attempted to sue the police. The court said
he did not have a case as there was no evidence. This is what led Rajabi to install a
series of cameras to document assaults by the sovereign state against the Palestinian
population in Batan al-Hawa.
Rajabi currently has ten cameras, although in the past he has had up to sixteen. Over
time the occupation confiscated or damaged some of Rajabi’s equipment, sometimes
after complaints from settlers. The documentation of increasing Israeli police, army,
and settler brutality has indeed helped to win some measure of justice and has raised
awareness globally.
The existence and placement of the “colonial gaze” – surveillance cameras – in
Silwan suggests that Israel has documentation of the same incidents of violence that
Rajabi’s cameras are filming. The two realities – that of the sovereign occupier and
that of the occupied – are layered one atop the other in the same location, as settlers
and Palestinians live next door to each other, sometimes in the same building. The
meaning and value of the images depends on who is doing the looking, on whose
The images in “I Witness Silwan” are either painted directly on the wall or glued
in the form of large-scale vinyl stickers printed from digital files of photographs or
paintings. To date ten sets of eyes and scores of Palestinian “national birds” ranging
up to four meters tall have been installed. Several of the murals are not visible from
outside the neighborhood at all. Other murals are visible from both inside and outside
the neighborhood and some of the murals are only visible from a vantage point across
Wadi Hilwa. “I Witness Silwan” aims in part to bring a global witnessing gaze to
Silwan by including artist participation from around the world. (The images below
include the names of a number of participating artists and portraits.) A media program
is in development for linking oral histories to the images via AR (augmented reality)
technologies, accessible on site and remotely.
Figure 2. View of Batan al-Hawa across Wadi Hilwa (Kidron Valley), facing west. Photo by Kobi Wolf.
Figure 3. “Eyes of Nihad Siyam,” Silwan resident, acrylic on concrete. Muralists: Susan Greene and Fred
Alvarado. Photo by Kobi Wolf.
Zuhayr A-Rajabi, community leader and director of Madaa Center in Batan al-Hawa:
“I Witness Silwan” has been going for nearly a year now. First of all,
it gave us a lot of energy, and secondly, it gave the neighborhood in
Batan al-Hawa in Silwan more beauty. Most importantly, it talks about
the people’s suffering in Batan al-Hawa, about the current situation that
we are going through, expressed in the form of paintings. The project
talks about what the look in our eyes says and what is inside of us. Not
only was Silwan impacted by this project, but also all of the visitors who
come to Silwan to witness and try to understand the situation here. These
paintings leave a big mark on them, a strong vision that will stay in the
minds of everyone, old and young, and that is very important for us.
I think this project will make people understand more of what is happening –
whether people come to Silwan and see everything up close or see everything
from a distance. Hopefully, the project will lead to more people coming to
visit and meet the people of Silwan. Before COVID-19 many people were
coming to Batan al-Hawa to see the murals and hear about our situation. We
want everyone to know that we are people who love life and want to live in
peace – we want to live a flourishing life in our homes and neighborhood –
and that our only wish is not to be deported from our homes.
As for the murals project … I think it has added a lot to Silwan, and also
added a lot to the children – they are living through all of this frustration
and suffering because of the settlers presence. The project has changed
their lives and changed their way of thinking in this neighborhood. It
has given them a new level of awareness. It has changed many things
– the murals catch the eye of any visitor that comes or passes by. Susan
and her helper have done a lot to this neighborhood and everyone is
thankful to her – she also has given the hardships that the Palestinians of
Silwan experience a new form of expression. It was a transformation in
the neighborhood, and I hope we will continue this work and change the
neighborhood even more for the better in the future.
Figure 9. “Eyes of Che,” Ernesto Guevara de la Serna, who played a major role in 1959 Cuban revolution,
land reform and literacy, vinyl print. Photo by Kobi Wolf.
Figure 12. “Dove and Olive Tree,” acrylic on concrete. Muralists: Laura Rosner, Jadala Rajabi, and Batan
al-Hawa youth. Photo by Laura Rosner.
I remember when I was asked to begin a mural across the street from the
Batan al-Hawa mosque – a place where people come to gather throughout
the day, to sit in prayer, to sit with God – seeing faith central to the life
of the neighborhood. Collaborating, as for all of the paintings we create
in Silwan, Jadallah and I manifested the idea of an olive tree with arms
extended in prayer on either side of the wise, gnarled tree – a symbol of
this land. Flying above the tree are doves – beautiful winged creatures
flying for freedom, for peace. Together we painted this scene, later with
the help of the older neighborhood girls, who grinned at the opportunity
to contribute to the transformation of the streets of Silwan.
A few weeks later, after the mural across from the mosque was
completed, I understood its importance on a deeper level. One morning
after arriving in Batan al-Hawa, Jadallah and Zuhayr called me to their
rooftop. They greeted me with the hospitality I’m consistently humbled
by and motioned to the bird coops, where beautiful “hamam” of all
colors emerged from the shadows. Jadallah had raised all of them, taking
great care to ensure they would be healthy and sustained. The sun shined
brightly above us and Zuhayr slowly placed a white dove into the hands
of little Jude, his son. I was immediately overcome with gratitude to
share this moment with the Rajabi family. That so much “amal” – hope
– is nurtured on that rooftop felt emblematic for how much our world
needs it, especially somewhere as politically charged as Jerusalem – a
complicated but beautiful city.
Figure 14. “Eyes of Sigmund Freud,” Austrian Jewish founder of psychoanalysis, vinyl print. Photo by
Kobi Wolf. Freud’s last work Moses and Monotheism (1939) grapples with origins of Jewish identity in part
by claiming Moses was Egyptian. Edward Said, in his last work Freud and the Non-European (London:
Verso, 2003), elaborates a vision of identity that is never whole or fixed but necessarily contains foreign
elements at its core. Said finds that, “The complex layers of the past…have been eliminated by Israel.”
Susan Greene is an artist, clinical psychologist, and founding director of Art Forces,
based in California, U.S. The “I Witness Silwan” project is partially funded by
generous contributions from the Sam Mazza Foundation, Left Tilt Foundation, the
Middle East Children’s Alliance, and A. Greenberg Foundation.
Endnotes
1 Achille Mbembé, trans. Libby Meintjes, Visual Culture, Embodied Spectacle,
“Necropolitics,” Public Culture 15, no. 1 and Abu Ghraib,” Radical History
(2003): 11, online at http://www.muse.jhu. Review 95 (April 2006): 40, online at
edu/article/39984 (accessed 6 June 2020). www.researchgate.net/publication/249880269
2 Nicholas Mirzoeff, “Invisible Empire: (accessed 6 June 2020).