My
Life In Gaza
By Mona El-Farra
12 July, 2006
Boston Globe
The irony is almost beyond belief.
Since the capture of an Israeli soldier on June 25, the Gaza Strip has
been subjected to a large-scale military operation, what Israel calls
``Summer Rain." Because Israel bombed the power plant, and the
area needs electricity to pump water, most of Gaza now has almost no
access to drinking water. In the heat of summer, rain would be a blessing
far more welcome than the ongoing bombings.
I am already starting to lose track of days and nights, of how many
bombs have dropped. Since the main power plant was destroyed, we have
had to live with no electricity. What we do get is patchy, and barely
enough to recharge our mobile phones and our laptops so that we do not
lose all touch with each other and with the outside world.
As a physician, I fear for
our patients. Twenty-two hospitals have no electricity. They have to
rely on generators, but the generators need fuel. We have enough fuel
to last a few days at most, because the borders are sealed so no fuel
can get in. The shortage of power threatens the lives of patients on
life-support machines and children in intensive care, as well as renal
dialysis patients and others. Hundreds of operations have been postponed.
The pharmacies were already nearly empty because of Israeli border closures
and the cutoff of international aid. What little supplies were left
have gone bad in the absence of refrigeration.
Food too is spoiling without
refrigeration, and food supplies are low. West Bank farmers threw away
truckloads of spoiled fruit after sitting for days and then being denied
Israeli permission to enter Gaza. Children grow hungry as we watch the
food that could nourish them thrown into the garbage instead. More than
30,000 children suffer from malnutrition, and this number will increase
as diarrhea spreads because of the limited supply of clean water and
food contamination.
As a mother, I fear for the
children. I see the effects of the relentless sonic booms and artillery
shelling on my 13-year-old daughter. She is restless, panicked, and
afraid to go out, yet frustrated because she can't see her friends.
When Israeli fighter planes fly by day and night, the sound is terrifying.
My daughter usually jumps into bed with me, shivering with fear. Then
both of us end up crouching on the floor. My heart races, yet I try
to pacify my daughter, to make her feel safe. But when the bombs sound,
I flinch and scream. My daughter feels my fear and knows that we need
to pacify each other. I am a doctor, a mature, middle-aged woman. But
with the sonic booming, I become hysterical.
This aggression will leave
psychological scars on the children for years to come. Instilling fear,
anger and loss in them will not bring peace and security to Israelis.
Ostensibly, this bombing
campaign started because of the soldier's capture. To the outside world
it might seem like an easy decision for Palestinians: Let the soldier
go, and the siege will end. Yet for Gazans, even in the face of this
brutal violence, another decision comes, not with ease, but with resolve.
He is one soldier who was captured in a military operation. Today, several
hundred Palestinian children and women are locked in Israeli prisons.
They deserve their freedom no less than he does. Their families mourn
their absence no less than his family does. So while Gazans endure Israel's
rainstorm, most want the soldier held -- not harmed -- until the women
and children are released.
Most Gazans also believe
that Israel's latest assault was pre-planned, that the soldier's capture
is merely a trigger. Israel dropped thousands of shells on Gaza, killing
women, children and old people, long before his capture. This time,
Israel attacked Gaza within hours of a national consensus accord signed
by Fatah and Hamas, which could have led to negotiations between Palestinians
and Israelis. That would have pushed Israel to give up control of Palestinian
land and resources. Gazans believe that the goal of Israel's military
campaign is the destruction of both our elected government and our infrastructure,
and with it our will to secure our national rights.
Though we do not now live
with ease, we live with resolve. Until the world pressures Israel to
recognize our rights in our land, and to pursue a peace that brings
freedom and security to Israelis and Palestinians, we both will continue
to pay the price.
Mona El-Farra is
a physician and human rights advocate in the Gaza Strip.
© 2006 The Boston Globe