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Alison Weir Reporting from the Occupied
Territories of
Gaza, Palestine
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 2001 08:50:52 +0200
Please read and forward to all your friends, especially Americans....
I don't want to be overly dramatic, but I was sort of
shot at yesterday. I say "sort of" because I don't think the
Israeli soldiers in their tower were trying to hit me, or the people
with me... if that had been their purpose I have no doubt that they
would have. There is massive evidence here that their aim is quite good.
I think they were simply asserting their power. And I think they were
trying to intimidate me, as a foreigner, into leaving the area. There
were no "clashes." There was no stone-throwing. Everything was
quiet. I was being shown around Khan Yonis, a bullet-riddled refugee
camp in southern Gaza filled with ragged barefoot kids and angry,
resigned, perplexed parents. "Why are they doing this to us?"
people kept saying to me... "Why they do this to Palestine people?
They say we guns. Where guns? Why America help Israel? Why America not
help Palestinians?" Houses were riddled -- and I mean riddled --
with bullets. There were 2-foot wide holes in roofs where mortars had
come through. People showed me around their homes -- for the most part
they had moved into areas away from the outside, where, they hoped, they
would be safe -- huddled on mattresses on the floor. They showed me
around one house right at the periphery of the camp. It had lovely,
bullet-riddled archways inside, the remains of a tiled kitchen. When the
children saw I was curious about the bullets, they gathered them for me
by handfuls - smashed, distorted pieces of metal that tear through walls
and people. I'll try to bring some back. I wonder if Israel will let me
bring my souvenirs of their country. They opened a door a few inches for
me -- they were afraid to do more, they know what happens if you do --
and I could see a guard tower a few hundred meters away. Even I was
afraid -- usually so easily brave, armed with my middle-class American
feeling of invulnerability -- I've read too many reports of injuries in
just such situations... seen too many pictures of people with bandages
over eyes that had been shot out. Earlier in the day I saw a picture of
four boys probably about 7-12 sitting on chairs in a waiting room
somewhere, looking at the camera with no expression on their faces, and
each with a large piece of gauze where one of their eyes should be. They
were the lucky kids -- these were only rubber bullets, and they hadn't
gone on into the brain... Did I say no expression? Perhaps the
expression is beyond describing... of being old far beyond their small
bodies. So when I looked out at the guard tower where soldiers with
sniper scopes and binoculars were no doubt watching us, I, too, was
nervous.
We continued to wander around the camp -- groups of smiling
children coming up, saying salaam, hello, giggling. The streets were
Gaza sand --- the ocean is probably only half a mile away... but these
children never get to swim in it. There are soldiers in between. Instead
they play in the dirt. I needed batteries for my camera, so we went to a
tiny store.
The owner gave us small glasses of strong coffee, and would take
no money for the batteries. Intense, frustrated, he pointed out what his
life had become. He showed the inevitable bullet holes in his store, the
larger hole where a missile had entered a store-room -- destroying what
looked like 50 five-gallon jugs of oil. He showed me his house next door
-- full of bullet holes, and told me about his children who luckily had
remained uninjured, if trauma and subjugation don't count as injuries.
He told me that all he wanted was peace, to live his life. Again, he
asked why Israel was doing this, why America was doing this. What could
I answer? All I could try to do was explain that Americans don't know
that this is going on -- that their newspapers and television don't tell
them. And so Americans think it is a complicated issue, and that it
doesn't involve them.
Amazingly, I don't find people hostile toward me, as an American,
even though they so clearly know America's role in their suffering. By
the way, "suffering" is a word they use often in trying to
tell me what their lives are like. They always smile at me, shake my
hand. When they >hear I am from America, they virtually always say,
"Welcome."
We wandered over to another house, on the other side of town. I saw a
family home no longer livable -- bullet holes everywhere, large hole in
the roof -- another once-lovely home, and probably loved home, with an
interior garden and children's toys, and bullets scattered on the floor.
It was when we went outside of this home that the gunshots occurred. We
were behind a wall, and so it didn't feel scary. Of course, feelings lie
-- I had seen numerous holes through such walls. They showed us another
way out. At the time, I didn't take the gunshots personally. Once again,
a middle-class American, I didn't think anyone was firing near me on
purpose --- I thought it was just an accident, a coincidence. But as
I've thought about it further, I think I was wrong. Why then? there? In
that particular part of town? And this would fit the pattern I've heard
about lately.
A few days ago when the UN team investigating human rights violations
was here in Gaza they were shot at. The Canadian Ambassador was shot at.
A young American documentary filmmaker I met this morning, James, had
been in Khan Yunis a few days ago, and had been shot at. He showed me
footage of the Israelis shooting at him: He is letting the camera roll
as he walks on a dirt road following 5-6 small boys. None are throwing
rocks. It is quiet. There is a tank at the end of the road
-- this is nothing unusual. They continue walking. Suddenly there are
gunshots, the camera tilts. No one is injured. But the Army has made its
point. Except it didn't work. He went back today. I asked him if he had
a time-frame for making his documentary. He said until he ran out of
money or got shot, whichever came first. It wasn't much of a joke.
Have you heard about the American stringer for AP who was shot a
few months ago? -- a young woman, her name is in another notebook (I'm
at an Internet Cafe in Gaza City with the slowest computers on earth) --
but I think she was about 26. Mark, a 30-year-old freelance English
photographer I've just met, knew her, and told me about it. The Israelis
shot her in the pelvis, destroying her spleen and uterus. They say it
was an accident. She says they knew quite clearly that she was a
journalist. Israel is apparently investigating how this could have
happened. Was this reported in the press? Will we hear the results of
the investigation? Wouldn't you think this would have been headlines?
Shouldn't it have been? If she had been shot by Palestinians don't you
think it would have been?
Another man today told me about working with a Fox film crew, when
suddenly they were being shot at by the Israelis. They finally, barely
managed to escape, and they filmed it all. But Fox never aired it. He
told me the problem with the US coverage wasn't the crews, it was
management back in the States. I believe him.
Some people in the refugee camp told me about a new gas bomb the Israelis
shot last weekend at them. They said it had black smoke, and a
good" smell. At least 40 people are still hospitalized from it --
I'm going to pin the number down tomorrow -- apparently there are people
in several hospitals, so the true number could be considerably higher.
From the refugee camp we went to Al Amal Hospital, to meet the doctor
and see the patients..
I saw a 22-year-old man in the ICU. He was moaning and had IVs in
both arms. He said it felt like knives in his intestines. Sometimes he
had trouble breathing. His mother and aunt were hovering over him. His
little sister was sitting next to him. I went to another ward, and saw
six more. I met a father who was obviously distraught -- two of his sons
were in the hospital. I saw two men have seizures while I was there --
convulsing.
They all said the same thing. They had just been going about their
lives when suddenly "bombs" came into their houses. Some had
been outside, and had gone in to rescue people because they thought the
house was on fire. But they said there was no flame, just black smoke,
and a good smell. In most cases nothing happened immediately, but after
10 to 15 minutes they collapsed... some became unconscious. Israel is,
as usual, denying that there was anything unusual about this gas. As
usual, they are lying.
Apparently, this also explains a lot of the bias in the US press. The
reporters in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv get their numbers and
"facts" from military spokesmen. Information from Israeli
sources is printed, information from Palestinian sources isn't. You see,
an Israeli "is one of us". A relative, a friend's relative, a
colleague's relative. We hear distorted versions of what is going on
from these friends, and colleagues, and we think they know what they're
talking about. And that they're not biased. Because they sound so
reasonable and confident and knowledgeable. They say just enough about
what is wrong about Israel, about the "two-sides" to seem
neutral. This is bs. The problem is when you know the truth, it is far
too much to describe, far too cruel... far too diametrically opposite to
what we used to think and what everyone still thinks to express. It is
hard not to sound fanatic, over-wrought, biased. The lie is too big, the
repression too complete, the Palestinians' lives too horrible to write
about reasonably. I find it difficult to write anything -- rare for me
-- because there is so, so, so much.
You have to retrieve and redefine the very words out of the
newspeak that Israel has created of "closures" and
"bypass roads" and "security." So I think maybe I
should try to take on just one topic at a time -- and for now, this new
gas...
Today I was going to visit the Ministry of Health for more
information, and then back to the Khan Younis hospitals with Mark to
take photos. But he didn't show up at the scheduled time. Probably
something just came up. But over here you always worry... Tomorrow I'll
go. As I said, there is so so so much to try to describe. Who will ever
believe all this? Israel couldn't possibly be this cruel, this arrogant.
Who will believe it? They must have a good reason... There are two sides
here, of course... just the way there was in South Africa's apartheid
period...
I also visited two tiny encampments of women and children living
in tents on the dirt. They were people who used to have homes in Khan
Younis, but the Israelis decided to make a road through them -- for
"security," to divide the people, to terrorize them, just
because they wanted to? who ever knows;an absolute conqueror doesn't
have to explain --so they bulldozed their homes and their date palms and
orange groves.
This is already far too long -- I won't go into the details of how
they bulldozed them, how the people fled... And the people are living in
the dirt, and show me a bent-up aluminum wash pan that they retrieved
from where their homes had been -- everything else, they said, was
"under the land" . Again, they asked me why America was
helping Israel do this to them. Why did Bill Clinton do this? Would
George Bush still do this? They're on a first-name basis with our
presidents. And we don't even know about them.
One old, newly poor woman knew all the international news -- she
had been given a radio and listens to BBC, French broadcasts, German
broadcasts, etc. She hears the Israeli statements. The US government
positions... She's living in rags in the dirt now. Four months ago she
and her husband had two homes -- they had just built another one for
their son, who had been married just two months when his new home was
bulldozed.
But you'll be glad to know the international community isn't
ignoring these people. The Palestinians have been pleading for an
international team for months to come over to protect them from the
Israelis -- but the US keeps blocking this. Why??? Why??? How could this
be even imagined to threaten Israel's "security"??? But you'll
be happy to know that the international community isn't ignoring them --
it contributed the fly-covered, floor-less tents that the people are
living in.
Meanwhile, how much aid did we give to Israel today? Eight million
was it? Sixteen million? And tomorrow we'll give it to them again, and
the next day, and the next day, and the next day...
They gave me tea, as we sat surrounded by dirt, and told me to tell
America to stop doing this to them. I'll try. Maybe you could try too.
Alison
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