People's Power in Gaza:
They Simply Did it
By Ramzy Baroud
ccun.org, February 2, 2008
In a radio interview prior to the US invasion of Iraq, David Barsamian
asked Noam Chomsky what ordinary Americans could do to stop the war.
Chomsky answered, “In some parts of the world people never ask, ‘what
can we do?’ They simply do it.”
For someone who was born and raised in a refugee camp in Gaza, Chomsky’s
seemingly oblique response required no further elucidation.
When Gazans recently stormed the strip’s sealed border with Egypt,
Chomsky’s comment returned to mind, along with memories of the still
relevant - and haunting - past.
In 1989, the Buraij refugee camp was experiencing a strict military
curfew, as punishment for the killing of one Israeli soldier. The
soldier’s car had broken down in front of the camp while he was on his
way home to a Jewish settlement. Bureej had previously lost hundreds of
its people to the Israeli army and killing the soldier was an
unsurprising act of retaliation.
In the weeks that followed, scores of Palestinians in Buraij were
murdered and hundreds of homes were demolished. The killing spree
generated little media coverage in Israel.
I lived with my family in an adjacent refugee camp, Nussairat, at the
time. Characterised by extreme poverty, it was a natural home for much
of the Palestinian resistance movement. Our house was located a few feet
away from what was known as the ‘Graveyard of the Martyrs’. It was an
area of high elevation that the local children often used to watch the
movement of Israeli tanks as they began their daily incursion into the
camp. We whistled or yelled every time we spotted the soldiers, and used
sign language to communicate as we hid behind the simple graves.
Although watching, yelling and whistling were the only means of response
at our disposal, they were far from safe. My friends Ala, Raed, Wael and
others were all killed in these daily encounters
During Buraij’s most lethal curfew yet, the sound of explosions coming
from the doomed camp reached us at Nussairat. The people of my camp
became engulfed in endless discussions which were neither factional nor
theoretical. People were being brutally murdered, injured or
impoverished, while the Red Cross was blocked access to the camp.
Something had to be done.
And all of a sudden it was. Not as a result of any polemic endorsed by
intellectuals or ‘action calls’ initiated at conferences, but as an
unstructured, spur-of-the-moment act undertaken by a few women in my
refugee camp. They simply started a march into Buraij, and were soon
joined by other women, children and men. Within an hour, thousands of
refugees made their way into the besieged neighbouring camp. “What’s the
worst they could do?” a neighbour asked, trying to collect his courage
before joining the march. “The soldiers will not be able to kill more
than a hundred before we overpower them.”
Israeli soldiers stood dumbfounded before the chanting multitudes. While
many marchers were wounded only one was killed. The soldiers eventually
retreated to their barricades. UN vehicles and Red Cross ambulances
sheltered themselves amidst the crowd and together they broke the siege.
I still remember the scene of Buraij residents first opening the
shutters of their windows, then carefully cracking their doors, stepping
out of their homes in a state of disbelief breaking into joy. My memory
- of the chants, the tears, the dead being rushed to be buried, the
wounded hauled on the many hands that came to the rescue, the strangers
sharing food and good wishes -reaffirms the event as one of the greatest
acts of human solidarity I have witnessed.
The scene was to be repeated time and again, during the first and Second
Palestinian Uprising: ordinary people carrying out what seemed like an
ordinary act in response to extraordinary injustice.
The father who lost his son to free Buraij told the crowd: “I am happy
that my son died so that many more could live.”
Later than day, our refugee camp fell under a most strict military
curfew, to relive Buraij’s recent nightmare. We were neither surprised
nor regretful. We had known the right thing to do and “we simply did
it.”
Now Palestinian women, once more, have led Palestinian civil society in
a most meaningful and rewarding way. Just when Israeli defence minister
Ehud Barak was being congratulated for successfully starving
Palestinians in Gaza to submission, ordinary women led a march to break
the tight siege imposed on Gaza.
On Tuesday, January 22, they descended on the Gaza-Egypt border and what
followed was a moment of pride and shame: pride for those ever-dignified
people refusing to surrender, and shame that the so-called international
community allowed the humiliation of an entire people to the extent that
forced hungry mothers to brave batons, tear gas and military police in
order to perform such basic acts as buying food, medicine and milk.
The next day, the courage of these women inspired the same audacity that
the original batch of women in my refugee camp inspired nearly twenty
years ago. Nearly half of the Gaza Strip population crossed the border
in a collective push for mere survival. And when people march in unison,
there is no worldly force, however deadly, that can block their way.
This “largest jailbreak in history”, as one commentator described it,
will be carved in Palestinian and world memory for years to come. In
some circles it will be endlessly analysed, but for Palestinians in
Gaza, it is beyond rationalization: it simply had to be done.
Armies can be defeated but human spirit cannot be subdued. Gaza’s act of
collective courage is one of the greatest acts of civil disobedience of
our time, akin to civil rights marches in America during the 1960’s,
South Africa’s anti-Apartheid struggle, and more recently the protests
in Burma.
Palestinian people have succeeded where politics and thousands of
international appeals have failed. They took matters into their own
hands and they prevailed. While this is hardly the end of Gaza’s
suffering, it’s a reminder that people’s power to act is just too
significant to be overlooked.
-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).