Dr. T., a
medical doctor, is a Palestinian living in Gaza City . He is still reeling from
days of aerial bombardment. When I asked about the children in his community he
told me his church would soon be making Christmas preparations to lift the
children’s spirits. Looking at his kindly smile and ruddy cheeks, I
couldn’t help wondering if he’d be asked to dress up as “Baba Noel,” as Santa
Claus. I didn’t dare ask this question aloud.
“The most
recent war was more severe and vigorous than the Operation Cast Lead,” he said
slowly, leaning back in his chair and looking into the distance. “I was
more affected this time. The weapons were very strong, destroying everything.
One rocket could completely destroy a building.”
The 8-day
Israeli offensive in November lasted for fewer days and brought fewer
casualties, but it was nonstop and relentless, and everywhere.
“At 1:00 a.m. the bank was bombed, and everyone
in the area was awakened from sleep. Doors were broken and windows were
shattered. There was an agonizing sound, as if we were in a battlefield.”
“The
bombing went on every day. F16 U.S. jets were hitting hard.”
“This is
more than anyone can tolerate. We were unsafe at any place at any time.”
“Any house
can be destroyed. The airplanes filled the skies,” Dr. T.
continued. “They were hitting civilians like the one who was distributing
water.” The Palestine
Centre for Human Rights report confirms that Dr. T is discussing
Suhail Hamada Mohman and his ten year old son, who were both killed instantly
at 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, November 18, 2012 in Beit Lahiya while distributing
water to their neighbors.
Dr. T. then
mentioned the English teacher and his student killed nearby walking in the
street. The PCHR report notes that on November 16, at approximately 1:20
p.m. ,
Marwan Abu al-Qumsan, 42, a teacher at an UNRWA school, was killed when Israeli
Occupation Forces bombarded an open space area in the southeast section of Beit
Lahia town. He had been visiting the house of his brother, Radwan, 76,
who was also seriously wounded.
And Dr. T.
mentioned the Dalu family. “They were destroyed for no reason. You can go
visit there.”
The next
day, I went to the building north of Gaza City where the Dalu family had lived.
In
the afternoon on Sunday, November 18, an Israeli F-16 fighter jet fired a
missile at the 4-story house belonging to 52-year-old Jamal Mahmoud Yassin
al-Dalu. The house was completely destroyed as were all inside. Civil
Defense crews removed from the debris the bodies of 8 members of the family,
four women and four children aged one to seven. Their names were:
Samah Abdul
Hamid al-Dalu, 27;
Tahani
Hassan al-Dalu, 52;
Suhaila
Mahmoud al-Dalu, 73
Raneen
Jamal al-Dalu, 22.
Jamal
Mohammed Jamal al-Dalu, 6;
Yousef
Mohammed Jamal al-Dalu, 4;
Sarah
Mohammed Jamal al-Dalu, 7;
Ibrahim
Mohammed Jamal al-Dalu, 1;
On November
23rd, two more bodies were found under the rubble, one of them a child.
The attack
destroyed several nearby houses, including the house of the Al-Muzannar family
where two civilians, a young man and a 75year-old woman, also died. They
were: Ameena Matar al-Mauzannar, 75; and Abdullah Mohammed al-Muzannar, 19.
One banner
that hangs on a damaged wall reads, “Why were they killed?” Another shows
enlarged pictures of the Dalu children’s faces.
Atop the
rubble of the building is the burned wreckage of the family minivan, flipped
there upside down in the blast.
The Israeli
military later claimed it had collapsed the building in hope of assassinating
an unspecified visitor to the home, any massive civilian death toll justifiable
by the merest hint of a military target. Qassam rockets killing one
Israeli a year are terrorism, but deliberate attacks to collapse buildings on
whole families are not.
“All
Palestinians are targeted now,” a woman who lives across the street told us.
Every window in her home had been shattered by the blast. She had been
sure it was the end of her life when she heard the explosion. She had covered
her face, and then, opening her eyes, seen the engine from the neighbor’s car
flying past her through her home. She pointed to a spot on the floor
where a large rocket fragment had landed in her living room. Then, looking at
the ruins of the Dalu building, she shook her head. “These massacres would not
happen if the people who fund it were more aware.”
Mr. Dalu’s
nephew Mahmoud is a pharmacist, 29 years of age, who is still alive because he
had recently moved next door from his uncle’s now-vanished building to an
apartment that he built for himself, his wife and their two year-old daughter
who are also alive. With his widowed mother and several neighborhood
women, he and his wife had been preparing to celebrate his daughter’s
birthday. A garland of tinsel still festoons a partly destroyed
wall. The blast destroyed much of his home’s infrastructure, but he was
able to shepherd his family members and their guests out of the house to
safety. Several were taken to the hospital in shock.
“I don’t
know why this happened to us,” Mahmoud says. “I am a pharmacist. In
my uncle’s house lived a doctor and a computer engineer. We were just finishing
lunch. There were no terrorists here. Only family members
here. Now I don’t know what to do, where to go. I feel
despair. We are living in misery.”
“Any war is
inhuman, irreligious, and immoral,” my friend, Dr. T., had told me.
Dr. T. is
afraid that Israel is preparing a worse war, one with
ground troops deployed, for after its upcoming election. “We are hopeful
to live in peace. We don’t want to make victims. We love Israelis as we
love any human being.”
“But we are
losing the right to life in terms of movement, trade, education, and
water. The Israelis are taking these rights; they are not looking out for
the human rights of Palestinians. They only focus on their sense of
security. They want Palestine to lose all rights.”
Election
logic aside, Israel has already violated the ceasefire
– at any time the missiles and rockets could start raining down once more. Year
round, that is what it means to live in Gaza .
I decided
not to bring up the Santa Claus question and instead thanked him for his honest
reflections and bade him farewell.
> The article above was written by Kathy Kelly. Kathy co-coordinates Voices for
Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org).
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