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<title>FAFO Report 151</title>

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<h3>Chapter 3</h3>
<h2>Housing</h2>
<b>Marianne Heiberg</b>

<P>
<i>The author wishes to thank Rema Hammami for her many useful comments on
this chapter, particularly those which relate to kinship structure, consumption
patterns and house investments.
</i>
<P>
<H2>The Cultural Setting of and Domestic and Public Spheres inside the Housing
Unit</H2>
The house - al dar - comprises the fundamental framework which surrounds
family life and separates the private domestic realm from the public domain.
The house is a physical representation of the family which resides within
it and the importance of the house reflects the prominence of the family
within Palestinian society. It is an indicator of its status and the permanence
or transiency of its anchoring to the local community. It also signals some
of the central values and priorities within the society. The size and subdivision
of rooms and the investment made in their furnishing tend to reflect the
internal hierarchy within the domestic sphere, the relationship and ranking
between the domain of men and the domain of women. It also reflects conceptions
of privacy both between family members and between the family and the outside
world. The structure of the house often reveals not only critical features
of the family within, but just as importantly that family's anticipations.
In a sense, building a house is also a statement concerning future expectations.
Looking toward the development of the family over time, families often build
houses that are larger than they can live in and more than they can furnish
or even finish.

<P>
Traditionally Palestinian villages contained a number of residentially based
patrilineal descent groups - hamuleh - each of which in turn were subdivided
into separate extended families. Members of each hamuleh lived in a group
of adjoining houses grouped around one or more interconnected courtyards.<a href="3_notes.html#1"><sup>1</sup></a>
To a certain extent the spatial relationship between houses was an indication
of the kinship relation between households. The more distant the kinship
link, the further separated the houses.<a href="3_notes.html#2"><sup>2</sup></a>

<P>
The architectural and social unity of the traditional compact Palestinian
village has undergone major transformations. The marginalisation of agriculture
and the massive shift toward wage labour has splintered family groups and
introduced new architectural styles and spatial distributions, reflecting,
on one hand, an increase in economic prosperity and, on the other, a trend
toward a more nucleated family organisation.

<P>
Because architecture and internal environment mirror cultural preferences,
specific social structures as well as processes of economic and social transformation,
comparisons of housing standards across cultural boundaries can often be
misleading. Different concepts of privacy, for instance, imply different
thresholds concerning physical human separation and thus acceptable levels
of human density. Different and changing notions of status affect patterns
of domestic consumption since items that give prestige in one set of circumstances
may differ radically from items that mark status in others.

<P>
Nonetheless, the house, its furnishings and amenities, the nature of its
ownership and the protection and comfort it provides, is a critical dimension
of living conditions. In the occupied territories the house has gained an
uncommon importance because people tend to spend a good deal more of their
time within it. Modern public social arenas, such as cinemas, theatres,
restaurants, parks and play grounds, are either relatively undeveloped or
have in recent years become underdeveloped due to closure. For cultural
reasons, married women, in particular are often confined to the house for
large parts of the day. Moreover, many social activities traditionally enjoyed
by Palestinians have ceased with the intifada. The constant evening gatherings
of men in the main village square is a thing of the past and even men's
coffee houses, where they still exist, are usually open only during daytime
hours. Political strikes, intifada closings, protracted curfews and general
fears have further increased the amount of time Palestinians spend within
their homes.

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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>                       960715</pre>

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