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Saving the Spanish caves.


In Southern Spain, to the dismay of the three dozen people who live in the caves of San Miguel San Miguel (sän mēgĕl`), city (1993 pop. 118,214), E El Salvador, at the foot of San Miguel volcano (6,996 ft/2,132 m). It has textile, rope, and dairy-products industries. The region produces cotton, henequen, and vegetable oil. , police are conducting raids and filling in some of their homes with rocks and dirt. Officials claim the cave houses, some of which feature carpeting, solar power, windows and brick ovens, are dirty and unsafe, but the cave dwellers say the real goal is to profit off real estate or tourism, and they are organizing to save their neighborhood from destruction.

The caves of San Miguel are an integral part of the rich history of Sacromonte (Sacred Mountain), a hill overlooking the picturesque college town of Granada (population 250,000), about an hour's drive from the Mediterranean Sea Mediterranean Sea [Lat.,=in the midst of lands], the world's largest inland sea, c.965,000 sq mi (2,499,350 sq km), surrounded by Europe, Asia, and Africa. Geography


The Mediterranean is c.2,400 mi (3,900 km) long with a maximum width of c.
. The hundreds of caves carved out of the hilltop have been home to gypsies and others for more than a thousand years. Today, there are four main cave neighborhoods--but only San Miguel is in plain sight of the rest of the city.

"We don't need electricity, we've got everything we need," says Christina, a young woman in her 20s who moved to San Miguel from Northern Spain last year. She and her neighbors became activists the morning of January 19, when they were awakened by the rumbling engines of bulldozers just outside their doors. Under heavy police guard, construction workers filled in 12 caves that day. Most caves were unoccupied, but some had recently been renovated. Part of the Sacromonte culture involves working to improve not only your own, but surrounding uninhabited caves, so that the next arrival has a comfortable place to stay.

The land the caves are on is part of a UNESCO UNESCO: see United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization.
UNESCO
 in full United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
 World Heritage Area, which limits development in the area, but the extent of those limits is unclear. The city says the goal is to "recover the original image of the zone"--a phrase that Christina says is code for creating a tourist attraction Noun 1. tourist attraction - a characteristic that attracts tourists
attractive feature, magnet, attractor, attracter, attraction - a characteristic that provides pleasure and attracts; "flowers are an attractor for bees"
, bringing people to see floodlit flood·light  
n.
1. Artificial light in an intensely bright and broad beam.

2. A unit that produces a beam of intense light; a flood.

tr.v.
 and steal-reinforced caves where people "used to live." UNESCO spokesman Miguel Carrascosa avoided taking a position on whether the current residents should be allowed to stay. He does say he regrets that the city started filling caves without considering the housing needs of the would-be evictees.

The cave dwellers have challenged the eviction order eviction order evict nRäumungsbefehl m  and are attempting to form a neighborhood association A neighborhood association is a group of residents, sometimes organized as 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, who take on problems or organize activities within a neighborhood. An association may have elected leaders and voluntary or mandatory dues. . Hugo Alexander, who lived in a nearby cave for five years, says the move by the city runs counter to the heritage of the area. "The oldest houses in Granada are cave dwellings," says Alexander, pointing out that even today, further down the hill, there are bars, restaurants and even a hotel and youth hostel youth hostel

Supervised shelter providing inexpensive overnight lodging, particularly for young people. Often located in scenic or historic areas, hostels range from simple farmhouses to hotels able to house several hundred people.
 built in caves--albeit with electricity and other basic services basic services,
n.pl frequently insurance companies split dental procedures into basic and major categories. Basic services usually consist of diagnostic, preventive, and routine restorative dental services.
. "We're just living different than the normal ways," says Christina, "That's why we're having so many problems."

To try and gain public support, the cave dwellers have created a website at www.cuevasgranada.blogspot.com, where they've posted videos of bulldozers "cleaning up" the area. "But time isn't on our side, because we aren't organized, and the other side is extremely organized," says Alexander.

CONTACT: Spanish Cave Blog, www.cuevasgranada.blogspot.com.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Stelzer, Andrew
Publication:E
Date:May 1, 2007
Words:518
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