Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
Memories on Ramadan and Socialism in a Gaza
Refugee Camp
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, July 7, 2014
When I was a child, I obsessed with socialism. It was not only
because my father was a self-proclaimed socialist who read every book that a
good socialist should read, but also because we lived in a refugee camp in
Gaza under the harshest of conditions. Tanks roamed the dusty streets and
every aspect of our lives was governed by a most intricate Israeli ‘civil
administration’ system – a less distressing phrase for describing military
occupation. Socialism was then an escape to a utopian world where
people were treated fairly; where children were not shot and killed on a
daily basis; where cheap laborers were no longer despairing men fighting for
meager daily wages at some Israeli factory or farm; and where equality was
not an abstract notion. But since Gaza had little in terms of ‘means of
production’, our socialism was tailored to accommodate every lacking aspect
of our lives. Freedom, justice and ending the occupation was our
‘revolutionary socialism’ around which we teenagers in the camp secretly
organized and declared strikes on the walls of the camp in red graffiti, and
quoted (or misquoted) Marx as we pleased, often times out of context.
And when it was time for prayer, we all went to the mosque. We simply didn’t
see a contradiction, nor did we subscribe to (or cared to understand) the
inherent conflict between socialist movements and institutionalized religion
in the West. True, we declared solidarity with factory workers in Chicago
and followed the news of union victories in Britain, but our socialism was
mostly south-oriented. It was the revolutionary struggles of Guatemala,
South Africa and Algeria that inspired our various socialist movements in
Gaza and the rest of Palestine. Socialism was a call for freedom first,
before it was a call for equitable salaries and improved work conditions.
There was little by way of western-styled ‘atheism’ in our refugee
camp. Most of us prayed five times a day, communists and all. I
went to the mosque for prayer as often as I could. I memorized chapters of
the Quran at a young age. Starting in the second grade, I joined my peers
for classes in Islamic stories taught by a kindly, semi-blind young man
named Sheik Azzam. In the stories, those with faith always triumphed in the
end. The key to their victories, well, aside from the inevitable divine
justice, was their unity and persistence. The characters were often, if not
always, poor. The poor always triumphed in Islam, or the way Islam was
taught in my refugee camp. I was a socialist and a Muslim. It was
my father, who was sometimes called a ‘communist’ as a slur by some of the
camp’s ultra conservatives, who urged me not to miss my prayers, and
rewarded me for reading the Quran. He was the same person who shared his
treasures of translated Russian and other literature with me, all promising
of a revolution, of a better world where a person was not judged based on
his or her color, race, sect, religion or nationality. If there was ever an
inherit tension in all of this, I didn’t see it. I still don’t.
Naturally, a real socialist must have a nemesis. In many parts of the world,
the archenemy is the multinational corporations and, in the US in
particular, the use of military-driven foreign policy as a tool to maintain
global hegemony; it is globalization used as a platform to enforce a new
kind of imperialism that is no longer an exclusive western attribute. For me
in the refugee camp, my nemesis was our neighbor Ghassan. He owned a car, a
beat up old fiat that was actively decomposing back into its original
elements. The color was a rainbow of old paint and rusting metal and its
seats were almost entirely bare from any evidence that leather chairs were
once attached to the unpleasant iron beneath. Nonetheless, Ghassan
represented a ‘class’ of society that was different than mine. He was a
teacher at a United Nations-funded school, who was ‘getting paid in
dollars’, and his likes received what was called a ‘pension,’ a seemingly
novel concept that Gaza cheap laborers in Israel didn’t enjoy, needless to
say comprehended. Ghassan also prayed at the same mosque as I did.
On the main Friday prayer, he wore a white Jalabiya (robe) of white silk,
manufactured abroad. He wore authentic Egyptian cologne, and along with his
UNRWA colleagues, walked to the mosque with the unabashed grandeur of a
feudalist. In the month of Ramadan, as poor refugee parents
struggled to make at least the first few days of the fasting month somewhat
special and festive for their children, Ghassan and his clique prepared
feasts, shopped for the best vegetables, and adorned their iftar tables with
meat, not once a week, but every single day of the entire month. And here is
the part that I resented the most: to show gratefulness for how ‘lucky’ and
‘blessed’ they were, the rich refugees would distribute raw meat in
carefully sealed bags to the less fortunate since Ramadan is the month of
charity. And of course, the most qualified to give charity was a UN teacher
paid in dollars and expecting a so-called pension. Today I chuckle
at the naïve notions of that Gaza child. In actuality, Ghassan was slightly
less poor than the rest of us. His home was an improved version of the UN’s
‘temporary shelters’ it provided refugees following the Palestinian exile in
1948. He was paid around 400 dollars a month, and his car eventually broke
down and was sold to a neighboring mechanic for scrap metal. Much
of this was placed in context later in life when I worked in a rich Arab
Gulf country. I spent two Ramadans there. Each year our company provided a
‘Ramadan tent’, not a metaphorical term, but an actual massive tent under
which the finest of delicacies, cooked by the best of chefs, was served by
cheap laborers who although included fasting Muslims, were not allowed to
break their fast until the rest of us did. The fasting men and women thanked
God for giving them the strength to fast before they diligently consumed
massive amounts of good food until they could hardly move. Ramadan
always takes me back to the refugee camp in Gaza, no matter where I am in
the world. And when a TV sheik preaches about what Ramadan is or is not
about, I often reflect on what Ramadan has meant to me and my peers in the
refugee camp. It was not about feeling the brunt of the poor, for we all
were, Ghassan included, poverty-stricken. It was about sharing the hardships
of life, a communal struggle against one’s own weaknesses and a month-long
introspection to uncover the collective strength of a beleaguered community.
Ramadan was an exacting platform through which poverty and deprivation were
devalued so that when Ramadan was over, we felt grateful for the little we
had, before we resumed our struggle for the rights and freedoms we truly
deserved. - Ramzy Baroud is the Managing Editor of Middle East Eye.
He is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author
and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was
a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
|
|
|