Live from Occupied Gaza
Jew Against The Occupation | 24.11.2003 16:13 | Anti-militarism | London
A Palestinian boy sits atop the rubble of his home
A Palestinian woman confronts an Israeli Caterpillar made D-10 Bulldozer
Live From Occupied Gaza
November 2003
Precious few are allowed entry to the Gaza Strip as it is completely controlled by the Israeli Military who are trying their best to hide the crimes committed here from the rest of the world. Little information about the true situation in Gaza is available to those who seek it and even less to those who are not. I am one of the fortunate few who were able to gain entry into Gaza more through pure chance than anything else. I make my home in Rafah, a city of 150,735 inhabitants made up of several neighbourhoods and refugee camps located at the far south of the strip,
directly along the Egyptian border. My job here is to document what is happening in an attempt to open up the prison that is Gaza to the outside world, to work in solidarity with the people living here to show them that the world is not ignorant nor has forgotten their plight.
For two weeks before I arrived, Rafah was under invasion by the Israeli Army. During these two weeks tanks and armoured bulldozers went to work destroying large parts of the city. Eighteen people lost their life and hundreds of houses were destroyed by both bulldozers and explosives. The nearby hospital was overflowing with injured people. For the past week I have been visiting areas affected by the invasion. These are truly the most tragic sites I have ever seen.
As I visit Block J and Yibneh Refugee Camp twisted metal and concrete lie in heaps where once two or three storey houses stood, the strength of their building materials subdued by man and machine. Gaping holes are left in some houses, allowing a full view inside, while on others half of the house has simply been blown away. Everywhere the scattered remains of normal life remain. Shoes, cooking utensils, pieces of household items strewed through the wreckage as a reminder that not so long ago families made these heaps of rubble their homes. Children’s toys peek out from under slabs of concrete along with tattered clothing left behind as
the family fled in terror in the middle of the night. Walls riddled with bullet holes surround gaping holes where houses once stood. Families are usually given no warning as to when their houses are to be destroyed. Instead gunfire and tank shells inform them that it is time to leave. Time to leave behind what few items they posses.
Because of the destruction hundreds of families have been made homeless. One house alone may house as many as or possibly more than forty people. In many areas the people were already refugees, forced from their homes earlier this century. Now, decades later they are made homeless once again, this time with nowhere to go. They cannot leave Gaza and overcrowding is a great problem. Families have no money in order to secure a new house and must rely on the charity of family members and
neighbours who were more fortunate this time round in order to survive.
In Brazil Camp several United Nations tents have been erected. Here families huddle under bright yellow tents for shelter from the scorching heat. What few belongings they could salvage are piled inside the tent. Young and old, sick and healthy, men and women all face the humiliation of living in a tent, located in the rubble of their former homes. The future is uncertain for these people.
I attempted to visit, for the second time, a house located in Hai Salaam
neighbourhood, in front of which American peace activist, Rachel Corrie was murdered by an Israeli bulldozer operator who crushed her to death while she attempted to stop the house from demolition. On my previous attempt it had been too dangerous to access because a tank was parked in the neighbourhood. I, and a small group, returned. While we were taking pictures of the site one of the regularly patrolling tanks stopped at the house and began to fire live ammunition just above our heads, forcing us to run for cover. We have the option of visiting the house and leaving
when the situation gets dangerous, those living in the house do not have that opportunity. The family living in this house has fled because of the situation. Their house is now isolated in a churned up sea of sand that is waiting to swallow it up.
Should the world continue to turn a blind eye to the death and destruction occurring in Rafah and throughout the Gaza Strip, the entire area will become a desolated sea of sand. We must bear witness to these crimes and call for their end. The fear and terror must stop, without this there can be no hope for peace for Palestine and for Israel.
November 2003
Precious few are allowed entry to the Gaza Strip as it is completely controlled by the Israeli Military who are trying their best to hide the crimes committed here from the rest of the world. Little information about the true situation in Gaza is available to those who seek it and even less to those who are not. I am one of the fortunate few who were able to gain entry into Gaza more through pure chance than anything else. I make my home in Rafah, a city of 150,735 inhabitants made up of several neighbourhoods and refugee camps located at the far south of the strip,
directly along the Egyptian border. My job here is to document what is happening in an attempt to open up the prison that is Gaza to the outside world, to work in solidarity with the people living here to show them that the world is not ignorant nor has forgotten their plight.
For two weeks before I arrived, Rafah was under invasion by the Israeli Army. During these two weeks tanks and armoured bulldozers went to work destroying large parts of the city. Eighteen people lost their life and hundreds of houses were destroyed by both bulldozers and explosives. The nearby hospital was overflowing with injured people. For the past week I have been visiting areas affected by the invasion. These are truly the most tragic sites I have ever seen.
As I visit Block J and Yibneh Refugee Camp twisted metal and concrete lie in heaps where once two or three storey houses stood, the strength of their building materials subdued by man and machine. Gaping holes are left in some houses, allowing a full view inside, while on others half of the house has simply been blown away. Everywhere the scattered remains of normal life remain. Shoes, cooking utensils, pieces of household items strewed through the wreckage as a reminder that not so long ago families made these heaps of rubble their homes. Children’s toys peek out from under slabs of concrete along with tattered clothing left behind as
the family fled in terror in the middle of the night. Walls riddled with bullet holes surround gaping holes where houses once stood. Families are usually given no warning as to when their houses are to be destroyed. Instead gunfire and tank shells inform them that it is time to leave. Time to leave behind what few items they posses.
Because of the destruction hundreds of families have been made homeless. One house alone may house as many as or possibly more than forty people. In many areas the people were already refugees, forced from their homes earlier this century. Now, decades later they are made homeless once again, this time with nowhere to go. They cannot leave Gaza and overcrowding is a great problem. Families have no money in order to secure a new house and must rely on the charity of family members and
neighbours who were more fortunate this time round in order to survive.
In Brazil Camp several United Nations tents have been erected. Here families huddle under bright yellow tents for shelter from the scorching heat. What few belongings they could salvage are piled inside the tent. Young and old, sick and healthy, men and women all face the humiliation of living in a tent, located in the rubble of their former homes. The future is uncertain for these people.
I attempted to visit, for the second time, a house located in Hai Salaam
neighbourhood, in front of which American peace activist, Rachel Corrie was murdered by an Israeli bulldozer operator who crushed her to death while she attempted to stop the house from demolition. On my previous attempt it had been too dangerous to access because a tank was parked in the neighbourhood. I, and a small group, returned. While we were taking pictures of the site one of the regularly patrolling tanks stopped at the house and began to fire live ammunition just above our heads, forcing us to run for cover. We have the option of visiting the house and leaving
when the situation gets dangerous, those living in the house do not have that opportunity. The family living in this house has fled because of the situation. Their house is now isolated in a churned up sea of sand that is waiting to swallow it up.
Should the world continue to turn a blind eye to the death and destruction occurring in Rafah and throughout the Gaza Strip, the entire area will become a desolated sea of sand. We must bear witness to these crimes and call for their end. The fear and terror must stop, without this there can be no hope for peace for Palestine and for Israel.
Jew Against The Occupation
Comments
Hide the following 8 comments
What about all the thousands of Israelis killed and maimed by suicide bombers?
24.11.2003 17:36
Concerned
why?
24.11.2003 21:04
English article on the carbomb-attacks: http://istanbul.indymedia.org/news/2003/11/3474.php
'lo
First reply (above) is innacurate
24.11.2003 21:09
This is factually innacurate . . . around 400 Israelis have been killed since the beginning of the intifada, as well as over 2000 Palestinians. The above post is deliberately misleading, in breach of Indymedia UK editorial guidlines and should be hidden. The author is free to express support for the Israelis but should perhaps ascertain some basic facts before making such innacurate statements which may mislead less well informed readers.
T
Yes Mr. T, 'Accuracy' Is Important...
25.11.2003 06:48
Lucky for us, the ever-vigilant and virtuous Mr. T is there not only to set the factual record straight - "that around 400 Israelis have been killed since the start of the intifada" - but he's also courageous enough to point the finger of righteous condemnation at a posting that is "is in breach of Indymedia UK editorial guidelines", and should thus "be hidden". If not, some of Indymedia's "less well-informed readers" might be 'mislead by innacurate statements'.
Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, Mr. T is equally guilty of 'misleading' all of us 'uninformed readers' through 'innaccurate statements'.
He has stated, with Fiskian forcefulness, that 'around 400 Israelis have been killed since the start of the intifada'. Well, below I've listed three news sources that put the number of Israeli dead at rougly twice that number:
*Source: Agence France-Presse (AFP) - 13 Aug 2003
http://www.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/0/1aefb71ae849221249256d820011d185?OpenDocument
"According to an AFP count, a total of 3,399 people have been killed as a result of the intifada, including 2,560 Palestinians and 778 Israelis."
*Source: PalestinianJustice.com - June 2003
http://www.palestinianjustice.com/news/2003/n9700.htm
"Number of Israelis killed since the beginning of the current Intifada: 720"
*Source: www.ict.org.il - Nov. 2003
http://www.ict.org.il/casualties_project/stats_page.cfm
Breakdown of Fatalities: 27 September 2000 through 3 November 2003
Palestinians - 2473
Israelis - 869
So Mr. T...are you willing to stand by your own rigorous journalistic standards and request that you yourself be 'hidden'?
I eagerly await your response....
buzzbee
buzzbee
buzzbee, I stand corrected
25.11.2003 10:05
T
2nd & 3rd re-posts hidden
25.11.2003 11:56
imc bloke
Does anyone have reliable, unbiased information
25.11.2003 12:57
Also, what percentage of the victims were actually killed by their own side, as a result of the common practice of Palestinians using their own civilians as human shields. e.g. Jenin?
Information from a non-partisan source would be appreciated.
Q
Question for Q
26.11.2003 00:25
frill