Author Topic: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins  (Read 584 times)

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Offline zachor_ve_kavod

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this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« on: January 28, 2009, 02:03:28 AM »
It sure cheered me up. :dance:

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01/23/2009 Digg  Stumble Upon  Reddit  Facebook  Del.icio.us  Fark  Yahoo  Newsvine  Google  MySpace  Font:
 GAZA IN RUINS
'Who Has Won Here?'
By Ulrike Putz in Beit Lahia, Gaza

In the Gaza Strip people are returning home -- or to the rubble that was once their home. Many are blaming Hamas for the destruction because the militants hid among civilians and attracted Israeli fire. Yet no one dares to speak out openly.

What is left over when a person is hit by a tank shell. Blood, tissue, bone splinters, splatters on the wall.

And anger.

Mohammed Sadala's rage is aimed at the man, whose remains he found in his bedroom: a Hamas fighter. He and a comrade broke into the home which had long stood empty after the Sadala family fled. The Hamas men shot at the approaching Israelis from the balcony. The soldiers fired back, killing the militants and destroying the house of the 10-strong family in the process.


When Sadala came back to survey the scene he found his property in ruins: the younger children's bedroom was burnt out, while the living room and hallway were strewn with bullet holes and blackened by soot from the fire. In the bedroom lay the corpses: one had bled to death, the other was hit by a tank shell.

"I used to support Hamas because they fought for our country, for Palestine," says Sadala. Hamas stood for a new start, for an end of corruption, which had spread like cancer under the moderate Fatah. In the 2006 elections Hamas won the majority with their message of change, said Sadala, who earned a living in the building business. Gesticulating wildly, the 52-year-old surveyed the ruins of the bedroom: "That is the change that they brought about. We were blasted back 2,000 years."

Through the hole in the wall of his house, Sadala sees a landscape in gray and brown. This is where a neighbourhood had stood, his neighbourhood. Now there is a snake of sand around the bomb crater. It is impossible to tell where the streets once stood. Family houses have turned into piles of debris. People have built refuges using cloth and rubble. They stand alongside dead donkeys and sheep, whose stomachs swell up. No one here has time to remove rotting corpses.

The people from Beit Lahia are starting from zero again: children load wood from broken trees onto their back. Their mothers bend over fires and bake bread. Young women carry water in petrol canisters. Only the men stand around looking numb, smoking, staring blankly. Many people here, like Sandala, had placed their hopes in Hamas -- now they are gazing into nothing, ideologically as well as materially.

And it is not just buildings that lie in rubble in the Gaza strip, it is the livelihoods of many thousands of people. In Arabic societies a home is usually everything a family possesses. Often several brothers build a house for the entire family. Living at close quarters has its advantages: when the costs of building the house are paid off, there is more money left over to feed the dozens of family members.

"When Hamas came to power, they came to our aid with packages of groceries," says Abu Abed. The 60-year-old's sons, all of whom are trained hospital nurses, have been without work for years. That is true of many in the Gaza Strip. Now Abu Abed stands before the rumble of the house where he lived with four generations of his family. All that remains are the ground floor pillars. The Israeli navy had its eye on the building from the very beginning of the war. After all, its clear view of Gaza City and the sea would have provided a good base for Hamas.

"I've changed my mind about Hamas," Abu Abed says. "I can't support any party that wages a war that destroys our lives." He is particularly pained by the fact that Hamas is still selling the cease-fire as a victory.

"Who has won here?" he asks and points to the debris that was once his home.

One of his neighbors weighs in: "Many people are now against Hamas but that won't change anything," he says. "Because anyone who stands up to them is killed." Since they took power Hamas has used brutal force against any dissenters in the Gaza Strip. There were news agency reports that during the war they allegedly executed suspected collaborators with Israel. The reign of terror will go on for some time, says the neighbor who doesn't want to give his name. "There will never be a rebellion against Hamas. It would be suicide."

Others swallow their anger. Hail's house is just a few streets away and only suffered light damage. There are a few bullet holes in the living room walls and all of the window panes are broken. Hail also found out after the cease-fire that the militants had used his house as a base for their operations. The door to his house stood open and there were electric cables lying in the hallway. When Hail followed them they led to his neighbor's house which it seems Hamas had mined.

As Hail, in his mid-30s, sat on his porch and thought about what to do a man came by: He was from Hamas and had left something in Hail's home. He let him in and the man then emerged with a bullet proof vest, a rocket launcher and an ammunitions belt. An hour later a fighter with Islamic Jihad called to the door, then disappeared onto the roof and reappeared with a box of ammunition. "The abused civilians' homes for their own purposes. That is not right," Hail says with disgust while trying to remain polite.

 In contrast to many of their neighbors the Sadala family is doing comparatively well. They have all survived and the house could theoretically still be repaired. Mohammed Sadala is of another opinion: "There is no way," he says. What happened in his bedroom cannot be covered up just by cleaning. The worst is that he now knows who died in the room. It was Bilal Haj Ali. Sadala knows this because the young mans brothers came to visit a few days ago. They wanted to see the place where Bilal became a martyr. "I did let them in but I hardly spoke a word with them," he says.

The young men took photos of the remains of their brother with their mobile phones. "But they didn't want to clean it up," Sadala says. "I told them not to show their faces here ever again."

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Offline q_q_

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Re: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« Reply #1 on: January 28, 2009, 02:22:44 AM »
zachor, first of all, some here don't speak yiddish so might miss that Putz - a yiddish word or idiot (allegedly the surname of the author) is not going to be a real surname..,

the article is just silly..

you should find truly entertaining things to cheer you up.

And regarding the point that gaza is in ruins, yes, that is fantastic.. but we don't need an article to tell us..

I'm sure some people will enjoy it, there always are. I'm not reading it.

Offline zachor_ve_kavod

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Re: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« Reply #2 on: January 28, 2009, 02:31:01 AM »
zachor, first of all, some here don't speak yiddish so might miss that Putz - a yiddish word or idiot (allegedly the surname of the author) is not going to be a real surname..,

the article is just silly..

you should find truly entertaining things to cheer you up.

And regarding the point that gaza is in ruins, yes, that is fantastic.. but we don't need an article to tell us..

I'm sure some people will enjoy it, there always are. I'm not reading it.

Why doesn't the demise of your enemies cheer you up q_q_?  Justice is always good, but poetic justice is magnificent.  The arabs of gaza voted in hamas because they thought hamas would satisfy their blood lust.  Are they satisfied now?  Now they are beginning to realize the pandora's box they opened when they brought this terrorist group into power.  This article describes that dawning realization.

Entertaining things do cheer me up and so does justice.  They are not mutually exclusive.  I didn't notice the author's name, by the way.

Also, I want to take issue with something that you wrote.  For some reason, I don't see it now.  Did you modify your post?  It was something about "advanced people" not being interested in this sort of thing.  Since I don't see the comment any longer, I won't critique it, unless of course you wish to discuss the point.
« Last Edit: January 28, 2009, 02:36:08 AM by zachor_ve_kavod »

Offline q_q_

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Re: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« Reply #3 on: January 28, 2009, 02:42:35 AM »
zachor, first of all, some here don't speak yiddish so might miss that Putz - a yiddish word or idiot (allegedly the surname of the author) is not going to be a real surname..,

the article is just silly..

you should find truly entertaining things to cheer you up.

And regarding the point that gaza is in ruins, yes, that is fantastic.. but we don't need an article to tell us..

I'm sure some people will enjoy it, there always are. I'm not reading it.

Why doesn't the demise of your enemies cheer you up q_q_?  Justice is always good, but poetic justice is magnificent.  <snip>

Watching the video footage was magnificient.

The only thing one up from that would be to fire the missiles in yourself.

Offline IsraelForever

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Re: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« Reply #4 on: January 28, 2009, 03:21:20 AM »
I'm confused.  Is that article real or fake?  If it's real, than it certainly does cheer me up.  It makes what the Israeli's did very much worth it.

Offline Lewinsky Stinks, Dr. Brennan Rocks

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Re: this should cheer you up: Gaza in ruins
« Reply #5 on: January 28, 2009, 03:27:35 AM »
This is just more Israel-bashing. The truth is that only a few Gaza buildings (abandoned parliament buildings used by Hamas) were leveled, and the rebuilding, thanks to the United Nazis (i.e. the taxpayers of the First World) is already well-underway. If only Gaza really was in ruins...