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03/02/08

Permalink 06:27:02 am, Categories: Voices, 2725 words    

Gaza: Where the children are forbidden happiness

eileen fleming

Gaza City– On February 23, 2008, three Palestinian men picnicking in a field in the northern Gaza Strip were killed Saturday by an Israeli tank missile. The Israeli military confirmed the cross-border attack near the city of Beit Hanoun but claimed it targeted Palestinian militants on their way to fire mortar shells at Israel. Israel frequently carries out missile strikes and raids against militants in the the Gaza Strip believing this will end the near-daily rocket fire, which has killed 12 Israelis in the last seven years. According to B'Tselem, an Israeli human rights group Israeli missiles have killed 137 Palestinians in Gaza last year, 28 were civilians and since January, 79 were killed by the Israeli military. http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/mideastemail/la-fg-gaza24feb24,0,4640755.story

John Holmes, the UN under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs wrapped up a five day trip to Israel and occupied Palestine on February 18, 2008. Holmes told reporters in Jerusalem of his shock by the "grim and miserable" situation in the Gaza Strip, and called for the opening of crossing points and condemned the rocket attacks on Sderot.

"The conditions in Gaza are grim and miserable and are not in accordance with the standards of human dignity…These victims here are innocent civilians. There is no time to lose in putting an end to this vicious circle of violence."

He expressed concern about the quality and availability of water and food, especially amongst children and disagreed with Israeli policy to cut back on power and fuel supplies to Gaza, calling Israel's measures "collectively penalize an entire population" and that the medical sector is "teetering on the edge of viability" and "private industry has more or less collapsed." http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76829

"Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert strongly defended the blockade. He told legislators from his Kadima Party he will not allow a humanitarian crisis to develop. But he said Gaza's residents won't be able to live a "pleasant and comfortable life" as long as southern Israel is under rocket attack. "As far as I'm concerned, Gaza residents will walk, without gas for their cars, because they have a murderous, terrorist regime that doesn't let people in southern Israel live in peace," Olmert said. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080121/ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_palestinians

On February 24, 2008, I phoned Guss, a civil engineer in Gaza City who informed me, "Lately we have been receiving two days of electricity for about 12 hours a day, but on the third day we are without any power. Most all the gas stations have been closed for the last three days because they are out of gas…The children go to school but they are not cheerful. You can see it in their eyes something is very wrong. When the boys play, they play war games and fight each other pretending to be Hamas or Israelis. They make weapons out of sticks of wood and are getting more aggressive. The girls spend their time helping their mothers and doing housework. They are forbidden happiness, they are afraid of the dark and parents are loosing patience and yelling instead of talking…Yesterday all over Gaza City people peacefully demonstrated against the siege but we are feeling like nobody is listening. Every action requires reaction not words and inaction."

On February 24, 2008, I received an email from Jerusalem, sent by Reverend Bob and Maurine Tobin who are leaders for SABEEL's [Arabic for THE WAY] Feb. 28-March 7th's reality tour through the West Bank and Israel to mark and commemorate:

• 90 years since the Balfour Declaration

• 60 years since the Nakba and the founding of the state of Israel

• 40 years of Occupation

• 25 years since Sabra/Shatila

• 20 years since the First Intifada

• 5 years of the Apartheid Wall

The Tobin's wrote:

[We] spent Wednesday in Gaza…Please keep the people of Gaza in your prayers as Israel is preparing to launch a wide scale ground operation there…Collective punishment on this scale is truly beyond comprehension…

…We went to visit Al Ahli Arab Hospital in Gaza City on Wednesday, 20 February, our first visit in almost a year…The first thing that struck us was the near emptiness of the huge Israeli "terminal" that one passes through – we saw no one else entering and passed only one emaciated man in a wheelchair seeking to exit. He is apparently one of the very few to obtain a permit for medical care, while more than 80 have died in the past few weeks while trying to exit for health reasons. We made our way through the endless gates and turnstiles and then waited in the cement enclosure until a huge metal door finally slid open and let us enter the long tunnel that leads to "no man's land."

There are no human beings visible anywhere, so we simply have to wait until the magic door opens! Since our previous visit, the last quarter mile of the tunnel has been destroyed (reportedly in fighting between Hamas and Fateh), so we picked our way through marshy mud until we finally reached the gate on the Palestinian side.

The hospital driver collected us after we'd been besieged by taxi drivers desperate for a fare, had drunk a cup of very sweet sage tea, and heard endless stories of deprivation. Then on to Gaza City, where the streets were eerily empty.

The one thing that has always characterized Gaza is the sheer mass of humanity. Gaza is 365 square kilometers (about 28 miles long and varying in width from 3 to 8 miles), with a population of 1.5 million, roughly 4000 people per square kilometer. The streets are usually jammed with cars, donkey carts, outdoor vendors selling everything from underwear to fruits and vegetables to auto parts.

We were shocked to see how wide the streets actually are as there were almost no vendors and very few cars. Some public taxis and cars (and one of the two hospital ambulances) that run on diesel are still moving about, along with the lucky few that have gotten gasoline, which is delivered sporadically, although no one is allowed to fill a tank, so apparently fights break out as people vie for the few liters available. Most of the shops were closed, though it was mid-morning, and only in the central market were there a number of people walking about.

Consumer goods are almost non-existent and, according to our friends, very shoddy and extremely expensive. Inflation has added to the misery of people with no resources – for example, a bag of cement used to sell for 25 shekels (about $7.00) but now sells for 120 shekels IF available. The markets that used to teem with fruits and vegetable seemed primarily to have tomatoes and oranges and potatoes, all grown in Gaza. The one thing that seemed abundant was cigarettes, piles and piles of cartons for sale. When the border to Egypt was breached, apparently black marketers brought in huge supplies, but as people have almost no money, there weren't many buyers!

We reached the hospital and had a good visit with Director Suhaila Tarazi and Medical Director Dr. Maher, along with Suhaila's assistant Samira, and a friend of Suhaila's, who until 3 months ago was the only woman and only Christian to sit as a judge on the Appeals Court. However, she has been dismissed by Hamas because she was a Fateh appointee, even though she was adamant that she was independent in her judgments. We asked if the courts are functioning but she shrugged – maybe a few criminal cases are being tried, she said, but Hamas has no one qualified to judge civil cases according to Palestinian law. We asked if Shariya law was being used instead, but she thought not – the legal system, like everything else in Gaza, has broken down.

The hospital story remains a small miracle. They have electricity perhaps 10 – 12 hours a day and depend on the generators the rest of the time, but fuel for it is hard to come by. They don't run the boiler when on the generator, so patients simply have to huddle under the covers to try to stay warm. Suhaila used to keep a reservoir of 10,000 gallons of fuel which would last 45 days, but now is lucky to get 4,000 gallons at a time and that disappears quickly with daily use. And the cost of the electricity they are furnished from IsraelGaza power plant, bombed by Israel, in 2005 operates at about 40% capacity when it can get the needed fuel. has increased dramatically in price. The

The hospital can't get light bulbs for the surgical lamps, but were excited that they'd finally been able to procure detergent for washing the bedsheets and dishes, though mops and cleaning supplies are not available. Somehow, in spite of all this they have no incidence of infection within the hospital, something our best US hospitals cannot claim. Spare parts for equipment are not available. Suhaila confessed that she had asked staff members who went into Egypt while the wall was down to bring her some cement to repair the floor outside the surgical theater and was very pleased to have gotten it! The pharmacy for the in- and out-patients is functioning and the hospital is able to get medicines delivered via UNRWA and the Red Cross, but they never know when deliveries will be allowed. Anesthesia is again available but in the past months they have had to postpone surgeries when it wasn't allowed through.

We walked about through the various departments and met post-surgical patients in the ward – many recent surgeries are to remove kidney stones as the salty, impure water has caused a huge upsurge of that problem. We saw 3 pre-school children being treated in the burn unit as the number of burns has skyrocketed while people try to cook and heat their homes over open flames. The weekly "mobile" clinic was in session so there were lots of families with children in for diagnosis and whatever treatment is available. Everyone gets a package of basic foodstuffs to take home, along with sandwiches for lunch, but they've had to quit providing milk or fruit juice for the kids.

And, of course, the staff suffers the same conditions – no one attempts to keep food in the refrigerator since power goes off so often. Dr. Maher reported that his home had lost electricity at 7 a.m. the day before our visit and it had not come back on by noon the following day. This is simply routine – when the power is on, people rush to heat water for a shower and those who have washing machines try to do a load of clothes, but sometimes laundry sits in the tub for hours or days.

In spite of these endless tales of loss, the hospital continues to be a beacon of hope. It may be the only place in all of Gaza that is totally free of violence – while it is customary for patients in the PA public hospitals (there are 2 in Gaza City) to have armed guards to "protect" them from attacks by their rival party, NO weapons enter Ahli. There are no armed guards at the gates -- if anyone arrives with weapons, they are told either to send the guns away or there will be no treatment. Thanks to the long history of Ahli's treating everyone in need of care with absolute impartiality, this policy is honored and the Ahli ambulance travels freely through the city.

We asked what they see as the future, but these very remarkable human beings say they can no longer imagine what might come next. Each time they think things have reached the worst possible situation, something worse happens. People die almost daily in Gaza from Israeli attacks. A ten year old child was killed by a bomb the day before we arrived. Israel has announced a policy of targeted assassinations for all Hamas leaders, but that simply means that the "collateral damage" costs many innocents their lives.

And what about the rockets fired at Sderot? The story we heard is that they are fired by "ignorant, immoral" people who belong to no party and cannot be controlled by Hamas or anyone else. In a place where people have no hope and no future (50% of the population is below age14), where 2/3 of the population live in squalid refugee camps, where collective punishment means that everyone who lives in Gaza is subject every day to bombing by F16's or attacks by tank shells and mortars, the only surprise is that violence is not even more widespread. We saw a six story apartment house that had been bombed a couple of weeks ago because it happens to be near the Ministry of Interior building.

Startling fact for those who hear from the US media about the rocket attacks and the suffering they cause for Israelis: in the years 2006 and 2007, 2 Israelis died in Sderot. In January 2008 alone, 96 Gazans were killed by Israeli military attacks. (If you'd like more statistics, see http:www.btselem.org. This Israeli human rights organization provides excellent data.)

What is ultimately striking about Gaza is the sheer disproportionality of the situation – the collective punishment inflicted on 1.5 million people is against every measure of international and humanitarian law, but the world thus far seems to believe that Israel is somehow justified.

Clearly these actions about not about "security." If this collection punishment were effective either in stopping the rockets or in undermining Hamas, that would have happened long before now. Israel is now seeking world approval for a full scale ground incursion, but it is clear that more military force is neither going to turn people against Hamas nor end the violence perpetrated by desperate people with nothing to lose.

How did our day end? After a nice lunch with the hospital staff, we returned to wade back through the mud of "no man's land" and into the Kafkaesque Israeli terminal. Since absolutely no one else was passing through, the bored soldiers entertained themselves by making me (Maurine) go three times through the x-ray machine (a weird glass booth with air current whooshing around and a large warning that no one on a pacemaker is to step inside!). I stood on the yellow foot prints with hands in the air, proceeded to a chamber between two electronically locked doors, then was sent back to stand on the footprints again with hands at my side. Back to the locked chamber, then back again to the glass booth where I was told to take a sort of yoga position with one hand and one foot forward and the other back. Then into the anteroom of the locked chamber where I was told there was something in my pants – having already produced my passport from my pockets, I finally turned and raised by shirt to show I wasn't hiding anything. Then the magic doors unlocked and I was allowed out to join Bob – I guess we know which of us looks like a terrorist!

Were we afraid? Not at all, but mainly because we were traveling in an Ahli Hospital vehicle. The place we ate lunch was chosen because it was secure; our friends never leave home after dark (of course, there are no street lights). And they basically move only between home and work. How do they live this way? It is a miracle of faith and commitment that is an inspiration to us. The most common expression in Arabic is "insh'allah"/God willing.

It is clear that those who work at Ahli Hospital trust in God's love and power to continue what they do each day. When we left late in the afternoon, we felt a great reluctance to leave. Those who continue to serve all of God's children who are in any kind of pain or need without question and in spite of their own suffering are living in the Gospel in a way that challenges and inspires us. Thanks be to God!

Learn More:

http://www.end-gaza-siege.ps/

http://www.sabeel.org/

-###-

March 2, 2008 © Copyright Eileen Fleming, Reporter and Editor http://www.wearewideawake.org/ Author Keep Hope Alive and Memoirs of a Nice Irish American Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory, Producer "30 Minutes With Vanunu." Permission is granted for reprint in print, email, blog, or web media if this credit is attached and the title remains unchanged. Only in Solidarity do "we have it in our power to begin the world again."-Tom Paine

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Comment from: eileen fleming [Member] · http://www.wearewideawake.org/
EXCERPTED from Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January-February 2008, pages 16-17

Gaza’s Christian Community—Serenity, Solidarity and Soulfulness
By Mohammed Omer

...Until November 1947, when the U.N. General Assembly passed Resolution 181 partitioning Palestine, Palestinian Christians lived peacefully among the Muslim and small Jewish populations of the area. With the passage of the nonbinding resolution, however, Zionist forces began their ethnic cleansing campaign in earnest. At the time Christians represented 18 percent of Palestine’s population, with many families tracing their ancestry back to the time of Christ. Today Christians comprise less than 2 percent of Palestinians, with the loss of Jerusalem’s Christian community being the most profound—plunging from a peak of 51 percent in 1922 to just 4 percent today. By the time of the Deir Yassin massacre in early April 1948, over a quarter-million Palestinians—many of them Christian—had been displaced, either killed or made refugees.

Like their Muslim neighbors, Christian Palestinians sought to find a safe refuge following the establishment of Israel. Because Gaza came under Egyptian rule in 1948, Palestinians of all faiths fled there. As the Zionist militias advanced—razing entire towns, massacring families and confiscating all property in their wake—many Christians fled to Jerusalem, a divided yet still international city. For a time, Christians and Muslims in East Jerusalem, which was under Jordanian control, remained relatively safe.

In 1967, Israel chose to further expand its borders, attacking Egypt, Syria and Jordan. Within six days all three nations had been defeated and Israel had tripled its territory, rendering millions of Palestinians homeless or living under occupation or, in Israel, under martial law. Along with its Muslim neighbors, Gaza’s small Christian community found itself imprisoned between Israel and the sea, and the land swollen with additional refugees. But Gaza’s Christians also discovered they were invisible: unacknowledged, dismissed, denounced or forgotten by fellow Christians throughout the world, especially in the United States........

Mohammed Omer, winner of New America Media’s Best Youth Voice award, reports from the Gaza Strip, where he maintains the Web site .


Permalink 03/02/08 @ 08:08
Comment from: eileen fleming [Member] · http://www.wearewideawake.org/
Washington Report Middle East Affairs ACTION ALERT March 1, 2008
Contact: communications@wrmea.com

Israel's missiles kill children

Dear Friends,

I had a long day, an awful day, taking photos and writing from on the ground in Gaza City and northern Gaza.

I met with two children who survived Wednesday's Jabalyia soccer bombing: the other four kids were, as you likely know, killed. The children I saw had no flesh on their legs�they had burns all over their bodies from the tank's shelling. Their hair was crisp singed. This was one of the scariest things I have seen yet, and I have seen a lot. Only today 35 more people have been killed, many of them women and children, and 180 injured and the attacks are still going on. Hospitals have appealed for blood donations and fuel for ambulances.

I asked one boy to give me details of what happened on Thursday afternoon (February 28). The 9-year-old boy cried while he told me that he'd seen the decapitated head of his cousin thrown far from his body, his arms and legs strewn far away from where they were all playing soccer.

His mother added that there wasn't any electricity when her severely wounded son was admitted to the hospital.

He was crying as he told the story, his tears hurting him even more than his psychological pain because he has burns in his eyes. His mother uncovered his wounded leg where I could see only bones without flesh in places. I could not understand how he managed to lie down conscious, but knew it was a consciousness full of pain and anguish. I felt this pain in my own heart and head.

As I talked to this child's mother, she said that she'd had to evacuate her children as it's no longer safe to be in that area where the children had been playing. The kids ranged from 6 to 14 years old. The two boys who survived said they had all been playing soccer in front of the door of their house in Jabalyia when the Israeli missile hit them.

I finally came back home some hours ago, after waiting a long time to find transportation. Eventually I managed to make it back to Rafah and I collapsed for a nap for an hour. My sleep was disrupted: I awoke scared by the bombing of F-16s (I learned later on). I ran from my bed through our dark house, and seeing no one from my family inside, I ran without shoes into the street. People were out in the street, young men running. I didn't understand, didn't know what I was doing other than that I was running but didn;t know to where. Most people's windows were down, shutters closed, as it is freezing cold at moment.

I was glad not to be injured by shattered glass and debris on the streets. I made it back home to write this on my laptop. But I've decided going back to sleep is not a good idea, no matter how exhausted I am. If I have to die (not my wish) I want to be awake, so I know I'm dying, and by whom.

Not asleep.

Mohammed Omer



Mohammed Omer is also International Award Winner: Best Youth Voice from New America Media 2006
http://www.wrmea.com/archives/March_2007/0703020.html

www.rafahtoday.org



WRMEA's Editor's note: At least 35 people have been killed in the past 24 hours as Israel continues its lethal assault in Gaza. Sixty-eight Gazans have been killed since this operation began four days ago following the death of one Israel civilian in a Palestinian rocket attack.

Deputy Israeli Defense Minister Matan Vilnai warned Gazans, on Feb. 29, they risked a shoah (holocaust) if rocket fire did not end.


Call or write your local editors and radio talk show hosts, and contact your elected representatives in Washington, DC. Help stop these attacks and the blockade on Gaza.

President George W. Bush
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
Washington, DC 20500
(202) 456-1414
White House Comment Line: (202) 456-1111
Fax: (202) 456-2461
E-mail:

E-mail Vice President Dick Cheney: vice.president@whitehouse.gov>

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
Department of State
Washington, DC 20520
State Department Public Information Line:
(202) 647-6575

Any Senator
U.S. Senate
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-3121

Any Representative
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-3121
E-mail Congress: visit the Web site for contact information.

The Israeli Embassy, Washington, DC
(202) 364-5500

The Israeli Embassy, Canada
(613) 567 6450

For more information about this issue or to subscribe to the WashingtonReport on Middle East Affairs visit our Web site . This26-year-old publication has the largest circulation of any magazine of its kind,and is sent to both public and university libraries and bookstores in North America,Europe, Asia and the Middle East. For a free sample copy call (202) 939-6050.


The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, PO Box 53062, Washington DC 20009. Phone: (202) 939-6050, Fax: (202) 265-4574, Toll Free: (800) 368-5788, www.wrmea.com Published by the American Educational Trust, a non-profit foundation incorporated in Washington, DC to provide the American public with balanced and accurate information concerning U.S. relations with Middle Eastern states. Material from the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs may be printed with out charge with attribution to the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.

Permalink 03/02/08 @ 08:57

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