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The Old Gaza Boy and the Sea
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah: CCUN, June 14, 2010
I grew up by the Gaza sea. Through my childhood, I could never
quite comprehend how such a giant a body of water, which promised such
endless freedom, could also border on such a tiny and cramped stretch of
land - a land that was perpetually held hostage, even as it remained
perpetually defiant. From a young age, I would embark with my
family on the short journey from our refugee camp to the beach. We went on a
haggard cart, laboriously pulled by an equally gaunt donkey. The moment our
feet touched the warm sand, the deafening screams would commence. Little
feet would run faster than Olympic champions and for a few hours all our
cares would dissipate. Here there was no occupation, no prison, no refugee
status. Everything smelled and tasted of salt and watermelon. My mother
would sit atop a torn, checkered blanket to secure it from the wild winds.
She would giggle at my father's frantic calls to his sons, trying to stop
them from going too deep into the water. I would duck my own head
underwater, and hear the haunting humming of the sea. Then I'd retreat,
stand back and stare at the horizon. When I was five or six, I
believed that immediately behind the horizon there was a country called
Australia. People from there were free to go and come as they pleased. There
were no soldiers, guns, or snipers. The Australians - for some unknown
reason - liked us very much, and would one day visit us. When I revealed my
beliefs to my brothers, they were not convinced. But my fantasy grew, as did
the list of all the other countries immediately behind the horizon. One of
these was America, where people spoke funny. Another was France, where
people ate nothing but cheese. I would scavenge the beach looking
for "evidence" of the existing world beyond the horizon. I looked for
bottles with strange lettering, cans and dirty plastic washed ashore from
faraway ships. My joy would be compounded when the letters were in Arabic. I
would struggle to read them myself. I also learned of such countries as
Saudi Arabia, Algeria and Morocco. People who lived there were Arabs like
us, and Muslims who prayed five times a day. I was dumbfounded. The sea was
apparently more mysterious than I'd ever imagined. Before the first
Palestinian uprising of 1987, the Gaza beach was yet to be declared
off-limits and converted into a closed military zone. The fishermen were
still allowed to fish, although only for a few nautical miles. We were
allowed to swim and picnic, although not past 6 pm. Then one day the Israeli
army jeeps came whooshing down the paved road that separated the beach from
the refugee camp. They demanded immediate evacuation at gunpoint. My parents
screamed in panic, herding us back to the camp in only our swimming shorts.
Breaking news on Israeli television declared that the Israeli navy
had intercepted Palestinian terrorists on rubber boats making their way
towards Israel. All were killed or captured, except for one that might be
heading towards the Gaza sea. Confusion was ominous, especially as I saw
images of captured Palestinian men on Israeli television. They were hauling
the dead bodies of their Palestinian comrades while being surrounded by
armed, triumphant Israeli troops. I tried to convince my father to
go and wait by the beach for the other Palestinians. He smiled pityingly and
said nothing. The news later declared the boat was perhaps lost at sea, or
had sunk. Still, I wouldn't lose hope. I begged my mother to prepare her
specialty tea with sage, and leave out some toasted bread and cheese. I
waited until dawn for the "terrorists" lost at sea to arrive at our refugee
camp. If they made it, I wanted them to have something to eat. But they
never arrived. After this incident, boats began showing up on the
horizon. They belonged to the Israeli navy. The seemingly hapless Gaza sea
was now dangerous and rife with possibilities. Thus, my trips to the beach
increased. Even as I grew older, and even during Israeli military curfews, I
would climb to the roof of our house, and stare at the horizon. Some boats,
somewhere, somehow were heading towards Gaza. The harder life became, the
greater my faith grew. Today, decades later, I stand by some alien
sea, far away from home, from Gaza. I have been denied the right to visit
Palestine for years. I stand here and I think of all those back home,
waiting for the boats to arrive. This time the possibility is real. I follow
the news, with the stifling awareness of a grown up, and also with the
giddiness and trepidation of my six year old self. I imagine Freedom
Flotilla loaded with food, medicine and toys, immediately behind the
horizon, getting close to turning the old dream into reality. The dream that
all the countries that my brothers thought were fictitious in fact existed,
embodied in five ships and 700 peace activists. They represented humanity,
they cared for us. I thought of some little kids making a feast of toasted
bread, yellow cheese and sage tea, waiting for their saviors. When
breaking news declared that the boats had been attacked just before crossing
the Gaza horizon, killing and wounding many activists, the six-year-old in
me was crushed. I wept. I lost the power to articulate. No political
analysis could suffice. No news reports could explain to all the
six-years-olds in Gaza why their heroes were murdered and kidnapped, simply
for trying to breach the horizon. But despite the pain that is now
too deep, the lives that were so unfairly taken, the tears that were shed
across the world for the Freedom Flotilla, I know now that my fantasy was
not a child's dream. That there were people from Australia, France, Turkey,
Morocco, Algeria, the US and many other countries, who were coming to us in
boats loaded with gifts from those who, for some reason, really liked us.
I cannot wait to get to Gaza, on top of a boat, so I can tell my
brothers, "I told you so." - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com.
***** Visit my website:
www.ramzybaroud.net. Also watch Aljazeera's documentary about my latest
book: My Father was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story. (Pluto
Press; Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). The subtitled program is available at
YouTube in two parts:
Part I &
Part II. Then, check out this short film (in
English and
Arabic)
about the book. The book is available from
Pluto
Press (UK),
Amazon UK and
Amazon.
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