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<title>FAFO Report 177</title>

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<H2>Conclusion</H2>
The 1948-exodus of Palestinians from their homeland affected the traditional
social organisation of Palestinian communities found in both urban and rural
areas profoundly. The ongoing process of social organisation among the refugees,
however, re-established old social ties, and resulted in the formation of
new ties.<BR>
<BR>
In this chapter, we have focused on the process whereby communities re-emerged.
In some ways social organisation perpetuated the traditional social organisation
of Palestinians, in other ways the reconstruction of communities established
distinct forms of organisation based on new economic, political and social
ties.<BR>
<BR>
On the one hand, the pre-existing social organisation perpetuated and affected
the construction of communities in the new setting on two levels. First,
the urban-rural cleavage which existed before the exodus re-emerged clearly
in the formation of new communities: Town-dwellers, sought primarily cities.
They had either the experience of living in a town and were thereby able
to exploit the possibilities available there, or they had the means of drawing
advantage of their profession in the new setting. Dr Ja'far, for instance,
was able to exercise his profession as a doctor regardless of his place
of residence. Peasants, on the other hand, became either without land or
they lost their means of livelihood. They sought work in the only sector
they mastered, agriculture, and settled therefore in rural settings in the
host-societies.<BR>
<BR>
Second, kinship ties as well as geographical ties constituted the basis
of network formation in the early years of resettlement: Rather than being
placed randomly in different camps by external actors (such as UNRWA), many
Palestinians effected personal preferences and regrouped together with their
kin and other members of the same village as themselves. Today we still
find neighbourhoods in different refugee camps named after the original
village which Palestinians fled from. <BR>
<BR>
On the other hand, the construction of communities in the host-countries
resulted in the composition of new forms of social organisation as refugees
responded and adapted to their new environments.<BR>
<BR>
An example which illustrates the establishment of new social ties in the
host-communities is the formation of &quot;societies&quot; in Amman based
on the original villages of Palestinians. The geographical traditional Palestinian
village re-emerged thus in totally new surroundings, and a characteristic
socio-political organisation, namely the hamula-system, gained new legal
importance in the new settings as authoritative conflict-management groupings
recognised by the Jordanian judicial system.<BR>
<BR>
The establishment of economic and social relations with inhabitants of the
host-communities represent another example of formation of new forms of
social ties in the host-communities. In some cases, economic ties which
were created as a result of refugees and natives working together (as in
the case of Omar in Askar) or as a result of long-term trade (as the case
was for Sana's father in south Lebanon) were eventually bolstered through
marriage ties. Intermarriage between Palestinians and the host-community
thus introduces new forms of marriage patterns which diverge from the traditional
endogamous marriage pattern found in Palestinian families. <BR>
<BR>
Other Palestinians, however, did not integrate into their new neighbourhood.
Maher and his wife had lived long enough in the refugee camp, which, despite
being part of a Palestinian community, had become a separate refugee-neighbourhood
within the larger Palestinian community in Nablus on the West Bank.<BR>

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<a href="_._.html"><img src="../../../../../../../sys/almashriq-bottom-line.gif"alt = "----------------" border= 0></a><p><pre>
<a href="../../../../../../../base/mailpage.html">al@mashriq</a>                       960428/960613</pre>

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