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Orient House
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{{Short description|Building in East Jerusalem}} [[Image:Orient House.jpg|thumb|400px|Orient House (former PLO headquarters in Jerusalem)]] '''Orient House''' ({{langx|ar|ุจูุช ุงูุดุฑู}} ''bayt สพal-ลกarq'', {{langx|he|ืืืืจืืื ื ืืืืก}}) is a building located in [[Jerusalem]] that served as the headquarters of the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]] (PLO) in the 1980s and 1990s. Built in 1897 by [[Ismail Musa Al-Husseini]], it has been owned by the [[Al-Husseini]] family since. Originally intended to serve as a family residence, it was at times vacated to host important guests, such as Kaiser [[Wilhelm II of Germany]] in 1898 and Emperor [[Haile Selassie]] of Ethiopia in 1936. ==History== ===1948 War and Jordanian rule=== During the [[1948 ArabโIsraeli War]], Orient House remained east of the ceasefire line, in the area controlled by [[Jordan]]. Between 1948โ1950, the headquarters of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East ([[UNRWA]]) was located there and two years later, its owner turned it into a luxury hotel called "The New Orient House". ===Israeli occupation=== Following the 1967 [[Six-Day War]] and the capture of [[East Jerusalem]] by [[Israel]], the hotel was closed and the building was mostly neglected. Many of the first residents of the northern Jerusalem neighborhood of [[Kiryat Itri]], who arrived from the United States in 1968 before their flats were ready, were temporarily lodged in the Orient House.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jpress.org.il/Olive/APA/NLI_Heb/SharedView.Article.aspx?parm=0NU%2B7uZuH8FdCe0I52mYWYpcmmXq0mUg0295lRn47GiqGepBk%2BFY9HSkpFX50Hp3Yw%3D%3D&mode=image&href=MAR%2f1968%2f08%2f30&page=15&rtl=true|title='ืืจื ืืืคื ื ื'ืืขืืืื ืฉืื|language=he|trans-title=Rabbi Elefant and 'His Immigrants'|first=Dov|last=Goldstein|work=[[Maariv (newspaper)|Maariv]]|date=30 August 1968|access-date=23 June 2015|archive-date=24 June 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150624021252/http://jpress.org.il/Olive/APA/NLI_Heb/SharedView.Article.aspx?parm=0NU%2B7uZuH8FdCe0I52mYWYpcmmXq0mUg0295lRn47GiqGepBk%2BFY9HSkpFX50Hp3Yw%3D%3D&mode=image&href=MAR%2f1968%2f08%2f30&page=15&rtl=true|url-status=dead}}</ref> In 1983, the Arab Scientific Association, a PLO-affiliated organization led by [[Faisal Husseini]], rented a part of the house. In 1988, Israel closed the House and banned PLO activity in it. It was renewed four years later in 1992. It was then rented and renovated by Husseini. In an exchange of letters preceding the 1993 [[Oslo Accords]], Israel promised that it would not violate the right of the House to continue to operate freely. During his first tenure as [[Prime Minister of Israel]], [[Benjamin Netanyahu]] "tried and failed to have Orient House shut down, amid warning from the [[international community]] that such a step would be regarded very negatively."<ref name=Eurp48>Eur, 2003, p. 48.</ref> When [[Ehud Olmert]] was serving in his post as [[Mayor of Jerusalem]], he led efforts to protest against the way Orient House was functioning, refusing to meet with Husseini and demanding that Orient House pay US$300,000 in municipal taxes. Husseini refused the request, stating that Orient House, as a [[Diplomatic immunity|diplomatic institution]], was exempt.<ref name=Friedlandp451>Friendland and Hecht, 1996, pp. 450-451.</ref> Husseini died a few years later in May 2001. During the [[Second Intifada]] in August 2001, the then Israeli prime minister [[Ariel Sharon]] determined that with the expectation of a massive Israeli response{{dubious|Nonsensical sentence; response to what? To Sbarro attack? Then say so. Or Palestinian response NOT to be expected?|date=January 2015}}, the conditions were as favorable as they would ever be for Israel to undertake the forcible closure of Orient House.<ref name=Eurp48/> Two days after the [[Sbarro restaurant suicide bombing]], the [[Cabinet of Israel|Israeli cabinet]] voted to close the Orient House, and the building was raided by Israeli security forces. Items confiscated by Israeli authorities included personal belongings, confidential information relating to the Jerusalem issue, documents referring to the [[Madrid Conference of 1991]] and the [[Arab Studies Society]] photography collection. The personal books and documents of Faisal Husseini were summarily impounded. Other Palestinian institutions in Jerusalem, such as the Governor's House and the headquarters of [[Force 17]] were shut down and raided in the same operation.<ref>Sharon, Gilad: ''Sharon, The Life of a Leader'' (2011)</ref>{{better source|date=May 2019}} In January 2010, at a meeting of the [[Quartet on the Middle East]], representatives from the [[European Union]] and [[Russia]] suggested reopening Orient House and other Palestinian institutions in East Jerusalem as a way of bringing the Palestinian Authority back to the negotiating table. The suggestion was made after [[George J. Mitchell|George Mitchell]] told those at the meeting that Palestinian representatives had insisted that they would not return to negotiations until Israel halted all [[Israeli settlement|settlement]] activity in the eastern half of the city.<ref name=Ravid>{{Citation|url=http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/quartet-suggests-reopening-plo-institutions-in-east-jerusalem-1.261537|date=January 17, 2010|title=Quartet suggests reopening PLO institutions in East Jerusalem|author=Barak Ravid|newspaper=Haaretz }}</ref> ==Cultural references== The jazz musician [[Gilad Atzmon]] has named his band The Orient House Ensemble after this building.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/exile-mw0000029298|title=[review of] Exile by Gilad Atzmon and The Orient House Ensemble|author=Kristel, Todd|website=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=4 September 2017}}</ref> ==References== {{Reflist}} ==Bibliography== {{Refbegin}} *{{citation|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4CfBKvsiWeQC&q=%22Orient%20House%22%20Palestine&pg=PA48|title= The Middle East and North Africa 2003|author=|editor=Joanne Maher|edition=49th, illustrated|publisher= Europa Publishing/Routledge (Taylor & Francis)|year=|isbn=9781857431322}} (1st ed. 2002 by Routledge) *{{citation|title=To rule Jerusalem|first1=Roger|last1=Friedland|first2=Richard D.|last2=Hecht|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1996|isbn=9780521440462|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rtlkDdvgbsMC&q=%22Orient+House%22+Palestine&pg=PA450}}{{Dead link|date=March 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} {{Refend}} ==External links== {{Commons category|Orient House}} *[http://www.orienthouse.org/ Orient House homepage], "relaunched" but shut down right away in 2005 (?); only historical material *[http://www.jerusalemquarterly.org/ViewArticle.aspx?id=184 "The Looted Archives of the Orient House"] in [[Jerusalem Quarterly]] '''13''' (Summer 2001) *[https://www.palestine-studies.org/sites/default/files/jq-articles/The%20Orient%20House%20and%20its%20Ordeals.pdf "The Orient House and its Ordeals"], editorial, in [[Jerusalem Quarterly]] '''87''' (Autumn 2021) {{coord|31|47|20.19|N|35|13|48.31|E|display=title}} [[Category:Palestine Liberation Organization]] [[Category:Buildings and structures in Jerusalem]] [[Category:Houses completed in 1897]]
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