This Could Be My Reality.
The day started with a shock, it seems that
today is day light savings time in Gaza (who knew?) and I have already lost an
hour. This doesn’t seem quite fair, but the delegates hustle into the van in a
befuddled sort-of-ready for the day. Marwan Diab, our guide and organizer
extraordinaire from Gaza Community Mental Health Program, is wearing a running
suit (it is Friday which is actually like Sunday in the US) and we are going on
a tour of the Strip with Hamada Al Bayar, a wonderfully warm, sensitive, intelligent
man from OCHA (UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs) on their day
“off”.
Hamada explains that OCHA focuses on the
humanitarian impact of the occupation, siege, and military operations with an
emphasis on civilians. They just released
a report yesterday:
Basically, last year was the worst year on every measure
of humanitarian impact on the population of the Gaza Strip ever. We are heading north toward Beit Lahiya as he
explains that there are so many sad numbers from the assault in 2014 (2,220 Palestinians, dead including 1,492 civilians, of which over 500 were children, etc, etc), but
echoing the young writers I met yesterday, “We are not numbers, behind each
number is a big sad story.” We drive through Beach Camp where Ismail Haniyeh,
the senior political leader of Hamas, lives and has been spotted jogging, which he does regularly. Apparently Beach
Camp started as a refugee camp in 1948 where refugees were pushed towards the
sea as they fled the Jewish forces, the UN set up tents, and the rest, as they
say, is history. (Ironic, given Israel’s fear of Arabs “pushing them into the
sea” when you think about this.)
As we drive along the Mediterranean I see
occasional fisherman in tiny boats with nets piled high, clusters of shacks on
the beach, children draped over the metal fencing along the road competing with
laundry and mattresses. Young men play in the water with their horses, some
riding them into the water, some splashing them or just having a good time.
Even horses need a break around here.
Across the street many buildings are
splattered with bullet holes or crumpled under the impact of heavy
bombing. Hamada reports that at this
time, 80% of Gazans are aid dependent in some way, the Israelis have succeeded
in destroying the economy, industry, farming, fishing, exports, and the list
goes on. If there were no UN agencies, the wellbeing of the population would be
even more catastrophic with starvation, no education or health care. “We should
be on a sustainable not emergency schedule.” Up ahead a mosque proudly
dominates the view, two tall minarets pierce the sky. This was reportedly financed by a Gazan
economist who built his fortune on the tunnel economy; some wonder if the
mosque is part devotion and part money laundering.
Hamada explains that the six billion dollars
of international aid pledged to Gaza has not been delivered for a host of
factors:
1. Gaza is too unstable for many host countries
1. Gaza is too unstable for many host countries
2. Host countries feel that anything that
gets rebuilt will just be destroyed by Israeli military actions, check out
history 101
3. Donor fatigue, (big problem)
4. Israel controls the entry of all
construction materials as well as everything else and they are very restrictive
5. Hamas and Fatah are in conflict and are
not able to function as a unified government; in fact they sometimes undercut
each other (big problem #2)
We ask what has happened to the hundreds of
tunnels between Gaza and Egypt, and Gaza and Israel? In 2013, there were 5,000
truckloads of merchandise from Egypt monthly and now there are none, destroyed
by Israeli military actions and Egyptian flooding, gas and bombing. The tunnels to Israel were all military and
are now gone as well. While the tunnel system created a huge corruptive black
market, it was also critical to the Gaza economy and for the fuel to run the
now crippled power plant.
Post war, 100,000 Gazans remain homeless or in shelters
or with (stressed out) host families. 30% live in their damaged homes with
makeshift arrangements using plastic, wood, and cloth often in very risky
arrangements. (That is quite obvious just gazing out the window of the van.)
Since the war, housing needs have doubled with 130,000 homes either partially
or completely destroyed. The Gaza Reconstruction Mechanism was brokered by the
UN and has given support for families with minimal damage to their homes. Hamada reflects on the difficulties of
surviving the war with an intact home versus a pile of rubble. It was all so arbitrary. The lucky ones find
it difficult to have something when their neighbors do not, yet it is also not
possible for the intact home owner to offer space and support to all the family
and friends in need. It is a strange
dynamic, a unique kind of Palestinian survivor’s guilt.
bombed out apartment complex in Beit Lahiya where people are still living |
We arrive in Beit Lahiya, three kilometers from the
Israeli border. We can see three smokestacks
from the Israeli coal burning power plant and the wall that snakes along the
border. Beit Lahiya was once a rich
agricultural area that has become too dangerous to farm due to its proximity to
Israel and vulnerability to repeated incursions. In 2000, Jewish settlers and
Israeli forces uprooted extensive citrus, guava, and mango groves for their “security
needs,” so farmers at this point plant low crops that require minimal care and
risk their lives to harvest the bounty. Israeli
forces have repeatedly bulldozed crops shortly before harvest in one of those
over the top acts of cruelty. “Life has come to death.” Three kids sit blankly
in a large tire in a field, families sit and smoke on the ground in front of
their corrugated metal shacks; the area is largely abandoned because it is too
dangerous to stay. The Israelis have extended the no go zone along the border
from 300 meters to 1.5 kilometers from the fence and they shoot to kill,
farmers often come to work their fields with their wives and children hoping to
decrease their risk of dying while harvesting their string beans, strawberries,
and potatoes. That does not always work.
Even if successful, there is minimal to no export business once again thanks to
Israeli restrictions. We hear repeated bursts of gunfire, Israeli soldiers are
making their presence known and some unfortunate farmer or young man is getting
the message. The farmers rely on a water aquifer that has been seriously
depleted and unless changes are made, Hamada states matter-of-factly, by 2016
there will be no water. (Should I put that more strongly: NO WATER.)
He also explains why there is little to no
garbage collection in these areas.
Municipalities are poor and rely on fees, collection rates are
down. The price of fuel to run the
vehicles has gone up. Often the staff goes months without their salaries. I watch a donkey root around in a mound of
garbage, children picking through trash, a little boy clambering up a pile of
rubble to play and hang off the second floor of a partially crumpled building.
Back to the critical topic of water, Hamada reviews the
stark reality. 95% of Gaza water is not
drinkable. 90 million liters of sewerage
pours into the sea daily, not only polluting the sea (which by the way folks, on your beautiful beaches in Ashkelon and
Ashdod, water knows no boundaries, just a thought) but wasting vast quantities
of grey water that could be used for irrigation. There are desalination plants
but the water infrastructure has largely been destroyed by Israeli military
action and the water filters are reportedly less than optimal, resulting in
water with high levels of chloride, which then combines with calcium and
leaches the calcium out of the bones of young children who are now at risk for
osteoporosis (along with everything else). (Ca +2 + 2Cl= CaCl 2)
The US has worked to remove the unexploded
ordinance (with their made in the USA
labels), working through a word salad of organizations: the UN, UNDP, USAID,
and PA. No one gives directly to Hamas
except Arab countries like Qatar since the blockade in 2007. This leads us into
a conversation about Hamas which catches me by surprise. Hamada says that Hamas has made it clear in
diplomatic speak that it would accept a long term hudna with Israel and recognize Israel’s existence with a return to
the borders of 1967 which is the basis for all the “peace talks” that have
dribbled along since 1993. This has fallen on deaf ears since Israeli leaders
have no intention of returning to ’67 borders, so who is obstructing who? But
more importantly, what if Hamas came out and recognized Israel (forget the
right to exist as a Jewish state stuff), denounced violence (which they have
done in their actions/ceasefires in the past with minimal international
acknowledgement), and recognized other agreements, ie.,what if they behaved
like Fatah? Really folks, what has that
gotten Fatah: a massive and growing settler movement, a heavily occupied and
militarized West Bank, minimal access to Jerusalem. So this is actually not
about Palestinian recognition of Israeli rights, but rather Israeli recognition
of Palestinian rights. Think about it.
We wander, sweating in the hot and muggy
sunshine, through fields of string beans, potatoes, corn, strawberries; there
is evidence of the war everywhere. Hamada tells a story of a family he knew who
gathered all their sons and daughters who were living in Jabalia and Rafah, the
“high risk areas” in the north and south of Gaza. They went to live in Gaza City where it was
supposedly “safer” and then almost everyone was killed in a massive bomb
explosion huddled in their safety zone. We hear these kinds of stories over and
over again.
One delegate asks why are there so many
beautiful reconstructed mosques, (along with all the ones bombed to
smithereens) when that money could have been used for the poor nearby. (The Catholic Church in Latin American comes
to my mind: think Mexico, Ecuador….) Hamada explains that building and now
restoring mosques is an important Hamas program, magnificent architectural
buildings often with air conditioning.
“The mosque a place of heaven, the surrounding areas a place of hell.”
These mosques are funded by mostly Sunnis from places like Saudi Arabia and the
Emirates. He states, “In my life, the
human is more important than anything, there are many Hadith that say this.”
We continue our tour and stop by a massive
apartment complex along the sea. How can
I possibly describe this? The buildings
are five to six stories high, partly skeletal walls and floors, partly heavily
damaged apartments, vast segments collapsed at odd angles, a wheel chair is
visible from one of the floors (how did that person get out?) and people are
living in whatever they can salvage, laundry hangs from fragmented windows,
there is a cluster of shacks in the storage facilities at the base of the
building, donkeys and goats wander in and out of the rubble. It is an
unspeakable monument to human suffering. Four young men come to talk with us
and they are smiling, warm, arms draped across each other’s shoulders, one
speaks English. One has seven children
and they are living in a storage area, they want us to know what happened to
them and to tell the world their story. And then one of them says he has a
joke: “We want to forget our pain. If we
had alcohol we could forget.” This seems uproariously funny and they all crack
up… apparently living through an unimaginable war and surviving in something
close to hell seems more likely than a bottle of forbidden booze.
Donkeys laboriously pulling carts piled high
with chucks of concrete pass us over and over again. Hamada explains that it takes 10 hours to
crack up enough of the larger fragments of cement walls and rubble to fill a
donkey cart. The men get 15 shekels for their efforts (divide by 4 for dollars)
and these are taken to a facility where the smaller chunks are crushed and used
to create (poor quality) bricks, filling the air with a fine dust that
penetrates your lungs and turns the bushes grey. This is called making a living and reconstruction
in Gaza. There has been no research on the possibility of war toxics in the
rubble, but one can only speculate. I suspect the Israelis used the same
weaponry we used in Iraq and we have worrisome data on that.
We pass the massively leveled mosque in Beit
Hanoun as Hamada explains that during the war, he moved his family to his
office at OCHA, “I made my office my home.” Later he reveals that every time he
comes back to these areas “I feel like it’s the first time. My body reacts the same, the same stress, the
same pain. It takes me four to five hours to get over it. It is really hard to be a humanitarian worker
and having family and seeing this… that could be my reality, when will it be my turn? It is really hard.” He was
having dinner with his younger son who questioned, “What do you think of buying
a new apartment? What if another war comes and our apartment is destroyed? So
we should have a new place.” What can a father say? “He is still
traumatized. If I buy a new place it
means I cannot protect him, but I am the same as him.” We drive slowly by the el-Wafa Rehabilitation Hospital. It has literally been
completely leveled to the ground. I cannot help but wonder, so when is a rehab
hospital, we are talking wheelchairs and crutches and damaged bodies, a
legitimate military target?
News flash: It is not Daylight Savings Time
until tomorrow. The gift of an extra hour today. It does not take much to
please me, but there is some metaphorical message here, even in Gaza life is so
upside down that there is a debate as to the actual time of day.
We are back in Shejaia and Banksy’s kitten, I am getting
to the point that I can recognize one tragic bombed out site from another. The challenge is of course to not lose that
primary sense of horror. As barefoot wide eyed children start gathering around
our Martian lunar landing, we are surrounded by total havoc. Neighborhoods with
no infrastructure and no services, a largely invisible crisis of epidemic
proportions. In the winter the rains came and what passes for homes were deluged,
there were problems with flooding, rats, stray dogs, and the smells of unwashed
humanity and unprocessed sewerage. We
learn there were five major foci of destruction in Shejaia during the war. This
looks more like Dresden style carpet bombing to me.
Hamada explains that there is no functional
Hamas government. I think of the bombed out Ministry of Finance for starters,
the year of no Hamas salaries, the three months of no PA salaries. It is hard
to get anything done if no one is paid and there is no concrete, yes? Officially there is a government of national
consensus in Ramallah but no working system here. The Hamas social movement
provides substantial social services and systems, medical, educational, and
humanitarian in nature and that actually is part of the shredded safety net
around these parts.
We drive through a busy market in Shejaia filled with the
pungent smells of fried food, red-yellow-blue-green umbrellas like circus tops
over rows of fruit stalls. At the barber
shop, the barber is applying his straight edge razor to a customer. The souq
is bursting with cheap clothes and products probably from China and there is a
background cacophony of loud honking from the kamikaze drivers and motor
cyclists.
To head south, we change to a greyhound style
bus, Abu Olba for Tours and Travel, an ironic name for a place where you really
cannot go anywhere. There is a feeble
air conditioner which is so appreciated; we head off to Rafah. The bus is filled with staff from GCMHP, some
of their families, and us, Marwan is playing MC. We all introduce ourselves, sing songs from
our respective traditions, (blues, protest, Farouz), munch on hummus sandwiches
and Thai spiced nuts, relax and have a good time, which is welcome after such
unrelenting sorrow.
river of sewage flows into the sea |
But we cannot exactly leave the reality. Driving along
the coast, we pass by Wadi Gaza where the river of sewerage flows into the sea
and the stench is unbearable, the crowded Nuseirat Camp on the left, and into
Khan Yunis. We pass through the site of the former Jewish settlement,
Gush Katif, which occupied 1/3 of the Gaza water front until 2005 and see the
remaining rows of orchards and palm trees.
Our driver explains that during the war, 14
buses were destroyed, seven of his family members were injured and eight of
their houses were destroyed during an attack on a Gazan militant that has never
been confirmed as successful in hitting the target.
We tour through Rafah close to the Egyptian border where
over 500 tunnels were destroyed in 2014 reportedly by Israeli F16s bunker
buster bombs and Egyptian gas, water, and explosions; we can see Egyptian
military towers and a mosque. Rachel
Corrie was crushed by a bulldozer in the area in 2003 trying to protect the
Nasrallah home from demolition. As I
have mentioned, prior to the closure of the tunnels, this area had a huge
infrastructure, industrial areas, and a spirited tunnel trade ranging from cars
and cows to weapons. A young man states:
“We are not terrorists, we are ordinary people.” 126 people were killed in the
Rafah Market on a single day during the bombing of the market in 2014. (This
is not a competition, but just for some perspective: 35 Israelis have been killed
by Qassam rockets in the past 15 years). I am beginning to understand the flags
waving here and there: Yellow: Fatah (many more than expected), Green: Hamas,
Black: Islamic Jihad or Salafist (rare).
We stop by an area in eastern Khan Yunis with
a local crisis team and like the day I toured the area with PMRS, are
confronted with just extraordinary destruction, poverty, and despair, rows of
caravan houses, an older woman gesturing: “We do not want food or houses, we
want our rights!” and another very wrinkled elderly women following us to the
bus, begging and begging, clearly beyond desperate. We are all shaken from this
confrontation and emotionally weary. As
we have nothing to offer, this is feeling like occupation tourism and a number
of us are very uncomfortable. The
challenge of course is not to glaze over but to learn to sit with that immense
discomfort and then do something about it.
Our final stop is the beach, a lovely area
next to a beach restaurant type place, clusters of plastic chairs and tables on
the sand, families enjoying their Friday off, soccer games, laughter. There is something so calming about the
smooth sand between my toes and walking along the water, (I can almost feel the
e coli migrating up to my knees) as I try to keep my long skirt from getting soaked
(it did) without breaking the modesty expected of me. Only young men are swimming. I talk to a
young Gazan woman who says she comes to swim at 5 am because she does not like
to swim with her hijab on. I walk back and forth, enjoy some actual
physical movement, climb up some concrete blocks to check out a small port
area, rows of small blue, yellow, and red motor boats, nets piled high or
drying in the sun.
There are a couple of supercilious camels on
the beach, available for photos and rides.
I love how they fold their legs under their bodies, totally awkward and
graceful at the same time.
The male species here is unclear how to
relate to a cluster of uncovered western women mingling with really gorgeous
Palestinians who have mastered that subtle technique of looking extremely
modest and extremely alluring all at once.
They do take off their heels to walk in the sand, subhanallah. But soon they are too uncomfortable with all the
stares and camel ride offers and it is really time to go home
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