No Checkpoints in Heaven
		
		By Ramzy Baroud
		ccun.org, April 6, 2008
		 
		In the memory of the author's father, who passed away 
		recently in Gaza
		 
		I still vividly remember my father’s face - wrinkled, apprehensive, warm 
		- as he last wished me farewell fourteen years ago. He stood outside the 
		rusty door of my family’s home in a Gaza refugee camp wearing old yellow 
		pyjamas and a seemingly ancient robe. As I hauled my one small suitcase 
		into a taxi that would take me to an Israeli airport an hour away, my 
		father stood still. I wished he would go back inside; it was cold and 
		the soldiers could pop up at any moment. As my car moved on, my father 
		eventually faded into the distance, along with the graveyard, the water 
		tower and the camp. It never occurred to me that I would never see him 
		again.
		 
		I think of my father now as he was that day. His tears and his frantic 
		last words: “Do you have your money? Your passport? A jacket? Call me 
		the moment you get there. Are you sure you have your passport? Just 
		check, one last time…”
		 
		My father was a man who always defied the notion that one can only be 
		the outcome of his circumstance. Expelled from his village by Israelis 
		at the age of 10, running barefoot behind his parents, he was instantly 
		transferred from the son of a landowning farmer to a penniless refugee 
		in a blue tent provided by the United Nations in Gaza. Thus, his life of 
		hunger, pain, homelessness, freedom-fighting, love, marriage and loss 
		commenced.
		 
		The fact that he was the one chosen to quit school to help his father 
		provide for his now tent-dwelling family was a huge source of stress for 
		him. In a strange, unfamiliar land, his new role was going into 
		neighbouring villages and refugee camps to sell gum, aspirin and other 
		small items. His legs were a testament to the many dog bites he obtained 
		during these daily journeys. Later scars were from the shrapnel he 
		acquired through war.
		 
		As a young man and soldier in the Palestinian unit of the Egyptian army, 
		he spent years of his life marching through the Sinai desert. When the 
		Israeli army took over Gaza following the Arab defeat in 1967, the 
		Israeli commander met with those who served as police officers under 
		Egyptian rule and offered them the chance to continue their services 
		under Israeli rule. Proudly and willingly, my young father chose abject 
		poverty over working under the occupier’s flag. And for that, 
		predictably, he paid a heavy price. His two-year-old son died soon 
		after.
		 
		My oldest brother is buried in the same graveyard that bordered my 
		father’s house in the camp. My father, who couldn’t cope with the 
		thought that his only son died because he couldn’t afford to buy 
		medicine or food, would be found asleep near the tiny grave all night, 
		or placing coins and candy in and around it.
		 
		My father’s reputation as an intellectual, his obsession with Russian 
		literature, and his endless support of fellow refugees brought him 
		untold trouble with the Israeli authorities, who retaliated by denying 
		him the right to leave Gaza. 
		 
		His severe asthma, which he developed as a teenager was compounded by 
		lack of adequate medical facilities. Yet, despite daily coughing streaks 
		and constantly gasping for breath, he relentlessly negotiated his way 
		through life for the sake of his family. On one hand, he refused to work 
		as a cheap laborer in Israel. “Life itself is not worth a shred of one’s 
		dignity,” he insisted. On the other, with all borders sealed except that 
		with Israel, he still needed a way to bring in an income. He would buy 
		cheap clothes, shoes, used TVs, and other miscellaneous goods, and find 
		a way to transport and sell them in the camp. He invested everything he 
		made to ensure that his sons and daughter could receive a good 
		education, an arduous mission in a place like Gaza.
		 
		But when the Palestinian uprising of 1987 exploded, and our camp became 
		a battleground between stone-throwers and the Israeli army, mere 
		survival became Dad’s new obsession. Our house was the closest to the 
		Red Square, arbitrarily named for the blood spilled there, and also 
		bordered the ‘Martyrs’ Graveyard’. How can a father adequately protect 
		his family in such surroundings? Israeli soldiers stormed our house 
		hundreds of times; it was always him who somehow held them back, begging 
		for his children’s safety, as we huddled in a dark room awaiting our 
		fate. “You will understand when you have your own children,” he told my 
		older brothers as they protested his allowing the soldiers to slap his 
		face. Our ‘freedom-fighting’ dad struggled to explain how love for his 
		children could surpass his own pride. He grew in my eyes that day.
		 
		It’s been fourteen years since I last saw my father. As none of his 
		children had access to isolated Gaza, he was left alone to fend for 
		himself. We tried to help as much as we could, but what use is money 
		without access to medicine? In our last talk he said he feared he would 
		die before seeing my children, but I promised that I would find a way. I 
		failed.
		 
		Since the siege on Gaza, my father’s life became impossible. His 
		ailments were not ‘serious’ enough for hospitals crowded with limbless 
		youth. During the most recent Israeli onslaught, most hospital spaces 
		were converted to surgery wards, and there was no place for an old man 
		like my dad. All attempts to transfer him to the better equipped West 
		Bank hospitals failed as Israeli authorities repeatedly denied him the 
		required permit.
		 
		“I am sick, son, I am sick,” my father cried when I spoke to him two 
		days before his death. He died alone on March 18, waiting to be reunited 
		with my brothers in the West Bank. He died a refugee, but a proud man 
		nonetheless.
		 
		My father’s struggle began 60 years ago, and it ended a few days ago. 
		Thousands of people descended to his funeral from throughout Gaza, 
		oppressed people that shared his plight, hopes and struggles, 
		accompanying him to the graveyard where he was laid to rest. Even a 
		resilient fighter deserves a moment of peace.
		 
		-Ramzy Baroud ( 
		www.ramzybaroud.net ) is an author and editor of 
		PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many newspapers 
		and journals worldwide. His latest book is The Second Palestinian 
		Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle (Pluto Press, London).