Gazans
Pile Up Their Belongings
And Flee
By Amira Hass
19 May, 2004
Zmag.org
Rafah
- The streets of Rafah were filled yesterday evening with horse-drawn
carts, trucks and pick-ups, all laden to the brim with any and every
item that the town's residents could remove from their homes - mattresses,
water tanks taken down from roofs, clothes, blankets, doors and windows
removed from their hinges, dismantled beds and closets, school books,
tin and asbestos sheeting, baby carriages, refrigerators, gas canisters
and more.
Everyone living
up to 300 meters from the border with Egypt and the Israel Defense Forces
positions and machine guns; everyone who saw IDF bulldozers raze the
homes of his neighbors; everyone who could and had not yet cleared his
home of its contents; everyone living close to the site where an IDF
armored personnel carrier was blown up last Wednesday - all hastily
packed up their belongings. And when the loading was completed, the
women sat at the entrances to the homes, on concrete blocks or plastic
chairs, and watched the vehicles roll north, to neighborhoods far from
the bulldozers.
The families who
petitioned the High Court of Justice this weekend against the house
demolitions also emptied their homes yesterday. On Saturday, after the
High Court issued a "qualified temporary injunction" that
stopped the IDF "from carrying out planned demolitions of any of
the homes of the petitioners," there were those who felt a sense
of reprieve. One of the petitioners, a big man, burst into tears unashamedly
in public on hearing the High Court order. But yesterday morning, after
the High Court hastily rejected the petitions, the petitioners understood
that they had better try to at least save the contents of their homes.
Such was the understanding,
for example, of Massad and Ahlam Kishta, and Fauzi a-Sha'ar - two of
the petitioners. They live on Abu Jamal Street, between Salah a-Din
Street and Harakevet Street, under the eyes of the IDF's Termit outpost.
Yesterday at 6 P.M., their homes were practically empty.
The Kishta and a-Sha'ar
families are two of the original clans of the area, not refugee families.
Their homes were built on their privately owned land, where some 40-50
years ago they cultivated vegetables and watermelons. The Kishta family
father moved to the area in 1956; and in the 1980s, the Kishtas began
gradually building a concrete home for the expanding family.
The Kishta family
has stopped counting the number of times IDF bulldozers, supported by
tanks, APCs and helicopters, have demolished homes in the area - maybe
five, or six. On one occasion, a bulldozer destroyed their bedroom,
from where they now look out onto the steel wall the army is erecting
along the border, the Termit outpost, bare concrete houses, and piles
of rubble between the sand dunes. Last Thursday, bullets and shells
left holes in the walls of their son Abed's home.
On Thursday and
Friday, more homes belonging to members of the Kishta clan were demolished,
when APCs, tanks and helicopters raided the area. A missile was fired
at a group of women; seven people were killed. Rafah residents vehemently
deny IDF claims that the army was targeting armed Palestinians. Human
rights organizations in the town said all those killed were civilians.
"Two years
ago, they tore down my first house on top of me," says one of the
daughters of the a-Sha'ar family. "Now, the moment I heard them
approaching, I fled."
Another a-Sha'ar
family member notes, "The IDF says it only demolishes empty homes.
First they chase us out the home with heavy fire, and then they can
demolish it because it's empty. Do they want us to remain in the house
while they are shelling it so that they won't destroy it?"
According to a rumor
that began to spread last night, the IDF is planning to close off the
road between Gaza City and Rafah over the next three days. A number
of people see this a sign that the demolition work will be renewed -
under the cover of a blackout from the entire world.