Refusing to Acquiesce in Gaza
by JOSHUA BROLLIER
Gaza City.
The past few days have been harrowing, yet still deeply inspiring in 
Gaza as people in the strip must carry on with their lives after the 
Israeli army’s deadly 8 day offensive operation “Pillar of Cloud” which killed 
at least 160 Palestinians and left over 1000 wounded, many of them 
severely.  To “carry on” in Gaza does not mean returning 
to predictable routines or a reasonable set of expectations of calmness 
in what amounts to everyday life in most parts of the world.  This is 
exceptionally true for Palestinian fishermen who return to the daily 
struggle with the Israeli Navy to fish in waters that are rightfully 
theirs.
There has been no ceasefire for these men who bravely attempt to 
exercise not only their legal rights, but perhaps more urgently, the 
human right to fulfil the most basic of needs, such as feeding their 
families and paying rent.  Since November 26th, 2012, 15 fishermen have been 
arrested and 6 boats destroyed. As participants in an emergency delegation to 
Gaza, we have had the opportunity to speak to several of the fishermen 
arrested, members of their families, and a Palestinian activist, Maher 
Alaa, who was documenting the situation while aboard one of the adjacent boats, 
which also received heavy gunfire.  We spoke with concerned 
relatives in the afternoon after the attacks, but we did not get the 
full story until Maher returned in the evening.
Israeli gunboat off coast of Gaza.
The scene Maher described was chaotic, but not uncommon.  Only one 
boat sailed the full length of six nautical miles, the distance 
supposedly conceded by Israel as a term of the ceasefire, before it was 
attacked. Israeli Navy and helicopters assaulted the others boats, most 
far inwards of six miles, with live fire periodically from the early 
morning until evening.  (It’s also essential to keep in mind that Gazans were 
guaranteed 20 nautical miles for fishing in the Olso Accords.) The boat of 
Jamal Baker (20) was completely destroyed. Others had 
engines destroyed from bullets. Five men from the al-Hessi family were 
ordered to take off their clothes and jump into the water, which is a 
common humiliation tactic deployed by the Israeli Navy. They were then 
forcefully arrested at gunpoint and their boat impounded for the second 
time in one year. The al-Hessi’s boat alone was the main source of 
income for the twenty-five person crew and the families depending on 
them.
Another brave Gazan fisherman, Mohammed Morad Baker (40), was fired 
upon and ordered to strip his clothes and leave his boat.  According to 
Maher, he looked directly at the Israeli gunboat captain and responded 
loudly “You can put a bullet in my head before I will jump into the 
water.” He then draped his body over the engine to protect it.  This 
brave act apparently caught the Israeli soldiers off guard as he was 
then able to navigate another course and avoid being detained.
In the aftermath of an eight day war and what Dr. Khalil Abu-Foul of 
the Palestine Red Crescent describes as a “chronic, acute and protracted state 
of emergency” in Gaza, the heroic acts of fishermen like Mohamed 
Baker are often left out of the broader mainstream media’s discussion of 
military and diplomatic victory or defeat.
It has often been said that “existence is resistance” in Palestine. 
>From what I have seen here, Gazans are doing far more than just 
existing.   They are standing up with dignity and ingenuity to a slow 
and inhuman process of destabilization and colonization that many feel 
is intended to gradually force Gaza to become uninhabitable for Palestinians. 
Mohamed Baker and the other fishermen’s refusal to 
acquiesce to the destruction of their livelihoods is a victory over the 
cowardly conscience of Israeli soldiers who make sport of shooting at 
unarmed men, most of whom are very poor and supporting families with 
over ten children.
It’s also heartening to witness that after such a traumatic eight 
days where many people did not leave their houses for fear of their 
lives, Gaza’s streets are alive.  Just across from our apartment at 
Al-Bakri Tower, families are filling a wedding hall.  Dozens of youth 
pile into the back of trucks, enthusiastically beating on drums. Adults 
and children alike laugh and hold hands as they perform Debke, a 
traditional wedding dance.  Though Khalil Shahin, director of the Palestinian 
Centre for Human Rights, has spent long nights taking only as little as two 
hours of sleep while documenting and double checking the casualties and 
injuries from the 
conflict to avoid duplication, he still smiles brightly as he tells of 
reviving plans for his daughter’s upcoming wedding, which had been 
postponed due to the fighting.
In the afternoons, children pour out of the schools, many of which were used to 
shelter thousands during the recent bombings. They kick cans and soccer balls 
while approaching 
our delegation with openness, curiosity and playfulness. The shock they 
have just endured will likely remain with them in some ways for the rest of 
their life, but the strong sense of community and family is evident. I cannot 
help but wonder how children and families from the United 
States would cope given such conditions, especially with the breakdown 
of the communal structure and obsessive focus on individualism in our 
culture.
Perhaps one of the most beautiful things i have seen throughout our 
short time here is that, despite the very legitimate anger, mourning and 
failure of the political process to provide scarcely any justice to 
Palestinians, the Gazans I have met know better than to waste their 
lives on hate.  The suffering they have seen all around them is too 
great to wish upon others.  Just today we sat with Dr. Anton Shuhaibar, a 
Palestinian physician and also one of Gaza’s 3000 Christians, who 
described at length his hope for a solution that includes psychological 
healing for all parties involved, especially the youth, so that both 
Israel and Palestine’s children can live as neighbours.  His sentiment 
was not without critique of long needed political changes that would 
have to be implemented for this vision to be a possibility. However, the 
intention I sensed from his words reminded me of what Mamie Till 
uttered so profoundly in response to the brutal and racist lynching of 
her son in Mississippi in the fall of 1955: “I have not a minute to 
hate. I’ll pursue justice for the rest of my life.”
Palestinian farmer in Johr Al-Deek.
Gaza’s farmers continue to pursue justice on the issue of land rights. 
Yesterday, November 29th at approximately 9:30 AM, members of our delegation 
accompanied other 
international solidarity activists and Palestinians from the Ministry of 
Agriculture to the farm of Ahmad Hassan Badawi  who lives and farms along the 
border with Israel in an area called Johr 
Al-Deek.  Mr. Badawi has remained on his land despite multiple 
incursions and direct attacks from the Israeli Occupation Forces, 
including attacks during the recent Israeli offensive which killed many 
of his sheep and chickens.
Much of Ahmad’s farmland has now been rendered useless by Israel’s 
arbitrarily declared buffer zone, which has confiscated around twenty 
-per cent of Gaza’s arable land.   After the November 21st ceasefire, 
negotiations were supposedly in place that Hassan would now be able to 
farm within 300 meters of the fence. The allowed distance has often 
changed and has nothing to do with international law or an 
understandable pattern.  After we heard from Hassan and other farmers 
about their situation, we approached the barb wire fence, which also 
separates residents of Johr al-Deek from their former water source. In a manner 
of minutes, multiple shots were fired in our direction by 
Israeli soldiers.  Moments later, tear gas canisters were launched 
within a few feet of where we were standing.  This treatment was mild 
compared to many other instances, including the killing of a young Palestinian 
named Anwar Abdul Hadi Musallam Qudaih (20) in Khan Yunis on November 23rd and 
the injury of 14 others.
One does not need to travel far in any direction to witness the 
destruction wreaked by the Israeli offensive.  Yesterday in Tal al-Hawa 
we met with Ahmed Suleman Ateya.  His entire house and a small olive 
grove were destroyed when Israel targeted an empty house across the 
street ostensibly used by militants.  His was not the only other house 
flattened nearby by Israel’s “precision guided” missile strikes.  A 
former farmer, Ahmed is sixty-six years old and has no money to rebuild 
and no permanent place to house his family who are staying with 
relatives in Al-Tufah while he searches for scrap metal from the rubble 
of his home to sell for a few shekels. As we talked with Ahmed, an 
Islamic relief agency arrived to provide him with a heavy blanket for 
the winter and a few other items.  Mr. Ateya received them gratefully 
and with a dignity which escapes those who have not suffered such loss.
Ahmad Hassan Badawi amid ruins in Gaza City.
The wounds from operation “Pillar of Cloud” are obvious and the 
stories we have heard are tragic, but a spirit of resilience and 
determination is equally visible in the eyes of the families we have 
visited.  Last night, Gazans were in the streets celebrating  the UN 
General Assembly’s decision to upgrade Palestine’s status to a 
non-member observer state. The United States was one of only nine UN 
countries, including Israel and Canada, to vote against the 
resolution.  Even so, Palestinians continue to extend hospitality to the 
members of our delegation as relentlessly as the fishermen who refuse 
to be pushed from their waters. It is my hope that residents of the 
United States will learn such strength based in friendship and 
resistance to inhumane policies, demanding that our government recognize the 
aspirations and political rights of Palestinians that have been 
ignored now for decades.
Joshua Brollier ([email protected]) co-coordinates Voices for Creative 
Nonviolence (vcnv.org).

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/11/30/refusing-to-acquiesce-in-gaza/  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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