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Crushed Ice in Nuseirat: My Gaza
Refugee Camp Revisited
29 May 2011
By Ramzy Baroud
'Do you remember Mahmoud?' asked Abu Nidal, my
neighbor from nearly 20 years ago, when I lived in
Gaza.
“Yes, of course, I do,” I answered. I remembered him
as yet another troublemaking child among the Nuseirat
Refugee Camp’s numerous rabble-rousers. He was defined
by a stream of snot that never seemed to dry. Although
loud at times, he had always been helpful and
pleasant. But now, unlike so many others who emerged
from the camp’s rusty doors and narrow alleyways to
greet me after my long absence, Mahmoud was nowhere to
be seen.
“He is in heaven now,” said Abu Nidal. His voice,
which had been so cheerful about my arrival, suddenly
became muffled. The years of hurt over the loss of his
son had culminated into one moment. He paused and
wiped tears. A poster on the wall showed the face of a
handsome, bearded man. He had been killed during an
Israeli army raid into Gaza a few years ago. The
poster dubbed him, “The Great Martyr Mahmoud Fa’iq
al-Hajj.”
I placed my right hand on Abu Nidal’s shoulder and
said, as is customary in these situations: “We are all
your children.” Abu Nidal nodded gratefully, and the
neighbors began recalling the names of other Martyrs.
Soon, we began to read al-Fatiha, asking God to bless
the souls of all those who had perished in Gaza.
It has been many years since I last stood here, in the
Red Square. Named after the many people who were
killed at the hands of Israeli soldiers during the
First Uprising of 1987, the once open area has shrunk,
like many other spaces in and around the refugee camp.
The population of the Gaza Strip has grown
significantly, as has poverty. Surrounded and besieged
by Israel, 1.6 million people living in 360 square
kilometers (139 square miles) are now exploiting every
inch of this tiny and continually shrinking space.
Still, Gaza persists.
I began my journey in Nuseirat at my old aunt’s house.
She gazed at me in disbelief and cried intermittently
throughout my visit. “Oh Allah, George is back,” she
repeated, referring to me by my old name. When it was
time to go she chased after me down the street for a
last kiss, a hug and shed more tears.
The Martyrs Graveyard is now full to capacity.
Desperately lacking space, some people had to resort
to burying their loved ones on top of others, until
the practice was stopped by the government.
My father was buried in an area called Zawydeh. In
2008, I was told he was buried in a ‘small graveyard,’
which encouraged me to attempt to find the grave on my
own. However, the graveyard is no longer small and I
spent over an hour trying to locate it. In the
process, I learned that some of my friends and
relatives have also died. They include: my geography
teacher, my Arabic and religion teacher, the kindly
man with one eye who sold the strangest mix of items
on a donkey cart, and a 13-year-old girl by the name
of Fida, meaning ‘sacrifice’.
I found my father’s grave at last. My dad, Mohammed.
The wonderful, loving, resourceful, angry, thundering
and warm man. He never imagined he would one day be
buried in Gaza. He wanted to go home to Beit Daras,
his long destroyed village in Palestine. “I will see
you soon, son,” he had told me many years ago, when I
last saw him. I now wrote him a note, and buried it in
the Gaza earth by his headstone.
“O peaceful and fully satisfied soul, return to your
Lord…” read a verse of the Quran atop the white grave.
No Cast Lead, no massacre could possibly interrupt the
peaceful rest of the dead - not even in Gaza.
My mother Zarefah’s grave was in a different
graveyard. It appeared much older than I remembered
it. It lay close to my grandparents, and my
two-year-old brother Anwar’s tiny grave.
My old house, which once stood relatively tall amid
the other impoverished homes in my neighborhood, is
now almost hidden from view. Its white walls have been
dirtied by years and neglect. Abu Abdullah, the new
owner, welcomed me in. A large man with a humble
demeanor and a friendly but cheerless face, he walked
me through the house. While very little had changed
after all these years, the ‘basketball rim’ my
brothers and I concocted from rubber hose and fastened
high on the wall was gone. I could almost hear my
mother yelling as her five boys ran wild in the small
space. “May Allah help me cope with all of this,” she
would bellow, as she tried frantically to fix whatever
we ruthlessly ruined.
I didn’t check to see if the bullet holes left by the
rampages of Israeli troops remained where I last saw
them. While I had dreamed of seeing this place again
for so many years, it was now just too much to bear. I
left hurriedly, despite Abu Abdullah’s repeated pleas
to stay longer.
My English teacher, Mohammed Nofal, remained as I had
left him, funny and hospitable. A few of my friends
have been killed, but many others have remained
steadfast, building, repairing, educating and
surviving. The astonishing level of determination that
has always defined Gaza is much stronger than I
remember it. No one seeks pity in this place.
“There was a large building here,” I remarked
inquisitively to a cousin at one point in my journey.
He replied casually. “It’s been destroyed in the
latest war, but the people crushed the rubble,
processed it into concrete and the building now stands
on the other side of the street”. In Gaza, few discuss
what has been destroyed, but many speak of rebuilding.
As I waited for a taxi to take me to the town of Khan
Younis, I spotted the Akel falafel stand. Here we had
once spent my dad’s loose change on Falafel sandwiches
and Barrad-flavored crushed yellow ice.
I held onto my plastic cup of Barrad all the way to
Khan Younis in the south of Gaza, taking careful, slow
sips. It tasted exactly as I remembered it from when I
was six years old. Since then, nothing in the world
has tasted better.
“Now the Egypt border will be open for good, you
should come back to Nuseirat for more Barrad,” said a
friend.
“Inshallah,” – God willing - I said. “Inshallah.”
- 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), available on Amazon.com.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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