A good friend of mine recently moved back to her hometown of Rafah in the Gaza Strip, Palestine in order to implement a sustainable development project that she, along with Save Gaza, designed to assist the hardest hit of Israel's illegal military occupation. Since arriving in Gaza, she's kept her friends and family updated with candid eyewitness accounts of the region's dire situation. Below is an email I received from her this morning:
Dear All,
I hope you are all well. I'm doing very well, and still glad to be here. Unfortunately I cant say the same for the people of Gaza. We're all listening to the radio and watching the news every hour (our only way of knowing what's happening in the outside world), waiting to see what Abu Mazan, Israel and the US are planning for us, and where our fate will take us.
This has become more than a prison for the people of Gaza. Its hard not to feel like animals in a zoo, where we are caged and have enough food for two weeks at a time to keep us alive, but not well or free while someone decides what to do with us. At least in a zoo, if an animal gets sick, its taken out of the zoo and taken to a hospital. Here in Gaza, God forbid you get sick or injured, hospitals are packed and one can't go to Egypt or the West Bank for medical attention. So one is at the mercy of those few people that run this gated zoo, Mr. Abbas, Israel, and the Quartet.
Let me say a few lines about the border, just to give you an idea. It is one of the most dehumanizing and demoralizing forms of injustice that the Palestinians have to go through. There are two gates between Egypt and Gaza, one on the Egyptian side and one on the Gazan side. People wait in line to get in, some go and wait at the gate before dawn so they can be first in line. So they wait 3 or 4 AM until the EU officials decide to come. If they come, they arrive at 9, 9:15, whenever they make it. Sometimes they don't come at all.
The gate opens every few hours and whoever can make a run for it gets in and who ever cannot run waits. Some people jump over the gate in a desperate attempt to get in, but the Egyptians catch them and send them to the back of the line. The elderly and those with children wait, as they cant run for it. Some of them wait for days. The image that stuck most in my head is the opening of the gate and people fighting to get in, and I couldn't help but feel like animals running toward our freedom. Nothing was more demoralizing than that moment. Once inside the gate, we go through the Egyptian side of the border, and then we go through the same process with the Palestinians. But this time, the Egyptians (sending us off to Gaza) pack us in buses like sardines, with windows that don't open in 100 degree weather and the buses wait until the Egyptians open the second gate to get to the Palestinian side of the border. They pack as many people in the bus as they can because the border may close at any point. Our bus had people hanging from the windows, and people on top of the bus. I stood in the bus for two hours. By the time the bus starting moving my shirt was soaked from sweat.
There are currently 5,000 people waiting to get into Gaza, at the gate on the Egyptian side of the border. They are in no man's land. They cant go beyond the border further into Egypt. They are Palestinians who don't have homes in Egypt and some don't have money to stay in hotels built at the border in Arrej. And they also can't get into Gaza. So they sit in the sun all day and wait. And everyday people die while they wait, from the heat, from exhaustion or of despair at their fate.
I think a lot of us had some hope the day before the Sharm el-Sheikh Summit on Monday, ….we thought Abbas would represent us… the people of Gaza. We had faith and didn't think he would abandon us and cut us off from the rest of Palestine, or allow us to live without our freedom. We also thought he would at least negotiate the border closures, or the release of $40 million in aid from the EU that's waiting and ready (86% of Gazans now live below the poverty line, where in March, it was 80%). But to our disappointment, Abbas did not mention's Gaza economic sanctions or the occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, nor did he represent us or our needs. Haniya, who represents's Gaza's needs, who was "disposed to immediately take up this dialogue," was not welcomed. To punish us even more, Israel is releseasing all the taxes it withheld in the last 18 months to Abu Mazan's government, and Gaza will receive nothing. All the while, Israel is launching missiles at Khan Younis and Sufa, killing 13 and injuring 40.
The meeting was aimed at bolstering Abbas and isolating Hamas, and that's exactly what it did. But what the world fails to realize is that its not Hamas they are isolating, its 1.4 million men, women and children, who like the rest of the world want to live in freedom and who like the rest of us have hopes and dreams for themselves and their families. I'll end with this:
A woman whose 12 year old son was killed in Khan Younis yesterday (he was not a Hamas militant) was on the radio and the broadcaster asked her about what happened. Her response below…..
Where are you Abu Mazan?
Come see my son, he's dead, where are you?
Where are you, you forget about us?
And let Israel slaughter us?
Come Abu Mazan, come fight off the tanks and missiles…come
But we won't move, we standing still and wont move and wont leave our homes
Like Israel has planned for us
We're standing still and praise be to Allah, praise be to Allah, we're standing still
And so we wait to see what is decided for us.
If you'd like to help, please donate to Save Gaza.
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Eyewitness in Gaza: 3
By
Nadeem
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

5 comments:
But what the world fails to realize is that its not Hamas they are isolating, its 1.4 million men, women and children, who like the rest of the world want to live in freedom and who like the rest of us have hopes and dreams for themselves and their families.
The people always pay for the sins of their leaders. Think before you elect.
I wonder, how many of those freedom-loving 1.4 million people's dreams include killing Israelis? You do understand that the Palestinian proclivity toward mayhem and violence are kinda-sorta vaguely related to the restrictions that are placed on them, right?
Actions have consequences.
Weird, you would think that the Egyptians would love to accept the Palestinians into their lands with open arms. I can't imagine why they would keep the borders closed.
Hmmmm...
I have an idea! Perhaps the Palestinians should send some suicide bombers to Cairo, that will help matters.... with some rocket fire of course. Yeah, can't forget the rockets. That's the best part of being a country, you get to launch rockets at all your neighbors, and then bitch when they close the borders.
Maybe the Egyptians are concerned they may have to deal with Palestinian "non-violence", just as the Lebanese are right now?
"And so we wait to see what is decided for us."
Problem is, if its not what you want, you keep waiting. It's always been your biggest problem.
"Palestinians never miss an opportunity, to miss an opportunity."
Who is the oppressed and who is the oppressor? Don't have the oppressed people the right to resist?
Post a Comment