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East Jerusalem streets get names, easing confusion
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 02 - 11 - 2012

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — When he drives around East Jerusalem, taxi driver Samer Al-Risheq doesn't use GPS and tucks away his maps. In many parts on this side of the city, those tools are useless: The streets have no names.
It's a sign of overall neglect. Now occupied Jerusalem's municipality is trying to at least solve the part that involves signs.
In contrast to the orderly western half of the city, where Jews live, the often rundown, predominantly Arab neighborhoods of East Jerusalem have for decades existed without street names or house numbers, causing confusion.
“Many times I get a call to pick someone up and I just can't find him,” said Al-Risheq, who lives in the Shuafat neighborhood of of the city. His own street, like so many others, has no name.
Without names for the labyrinthine streets in the area, residents have had to improvise, using landmarks as reference points. An ambulance driver who isn't familiar with the neighborhood would be hard pressed to find an ailing patient.
With no street addresses to guide them, letters are often sent to a central place, like a store or mosque, and don't always reach their intended recipient. Official letters and bills remain uncollected, sometimes causing mounting debts completely unknown to the individual.
“It's like uncharted territory,” said Nisreen Alyan, a lawyer for the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which lobbied to address the confusion. In a symbol of the disorder, even the number of streets that remain to be named is disputed and may be anywhere from 150 to several hundred.
Recognizing the problem, Jerusalem's municipality has named 145 streets since last year, and the rest are expected to be identified by next year.
House numbers are set to come later.
East Jerusalem is not alone in having unnamed streets. In fast-growing places in the Gulf like Dubai or Doha, streets in newer areas do not have names, while Afghanistan's capital, Kabul, has many roads that are not even paved, much less named.
In Israel's neighbor Jordan, while streets have long had names, only recently have houses been given numbers. The kingdom caused confusion by changing many street names to make them more compatible with the new numbering system.
Even so, the situation in Jerusalem stands out because of the contrasts between the two sides of the city.
The predominantly Jewish west has gleaming malls and leafy residential neighborhoods. Residents can be seen sipping cappuccinos on quaint cafe patios, and flowers line the streets. All streets and even the smallest of public squares have names on signs written in Hebrew, English and Arabic.
In East Jerusalem, many roads are narrow and potholed, there are few sidewalks and garbage is piled up on street corners. Residents have for years complained of neglect, saying they lack public services such as clinics and schools, even while paying local taxes.
Jerusalem's current mayor, Nir Barkat, is staging street naming ceremonies with much fanfare. Earlier this month, he dedicated Umm Kulthum Street, named after the famous Egyptian singer, and a performer warbled love songs as residents clapped their hands.
Barkat has said the aim is to “improve the quality of life” for the residents of East Jerusalem. But some residents have responded by vandalizing the new street signs, an indication of the mistrust that many feel toward the city's Jewish politicians.
The names are proposed by the communities and then must be approved by a municipal committee. The choices include the ordinary like “Orchard Street,” along with famed Arab historical figures and the names of clans settled in the neighborhoods.
Larger problems remain.
“The municipality doesn't provide us with services,” complained Hamoudeh Siam, who owns a shop in the Silwan neighborhood. “Instead of naming the streets, let them come clean them.” — AP


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