MIFTAH
Sunday, 30 June. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

"Oh God, please tell Sharon to end the curfew by this Saturday so that I can go to school." This is the prayer my secular eight-year-old daughter, Areen, has recited before going to sleep for the past two weeks. Areen, like so many others here, has prayed for divine intervention to bring an end to the five-month-old Israeli military curfew that is imposed on Palestinian cities, villages and refugee camps in the West Bank.

Over the past months, Israel has been systematically destroying the Palestinian economic infrastructure and, with it, any hopes for a future reconciliation between the two peoples. There are those who will argue that the curfew is a far less brutal action than other means regularly employed by the Israeli army. I would like, therefore, to tell my Israeli neighbors a little about life under curfew.

When Israel imposes a curfew, it is absolute, comprehensive and appears without forewarning. Businesses, including pharmacies, shut down; students are sent home from school; government offices lock their doors; and medical services are, for all intents and purpose, inaccessible to the public. The announcements of the pending curfew blare out of loudspeakers borne by Israeli jeeps, tanks and armored personnel carriers, and are usually accompanied by a short burst of gunfire in the air and the firing of tear-gas and stun grenades so as to ensure that everyone gets the message.

During curfew hours, families are confined to their homes. With 50 percent of Palestinians coming from large families and living in small apartments, there is much overcrowding and, with it, stress and tension. To this, you can add the deep recession, which is preventing thousands of families from stockpiling enough basic foodstuffs to get them through until the next break in the curfew.

After a day or two - 66 in the case of Nablus - of being shut up in their homes in overcrowded conditions and without sufficient food, tension begins to run high. From a physical point of view, the lack of exercise starts to set in and muscles stiffen; but even when the curfew is lifted for a few hours, one cannot think of anything aside from stockpiling food for the next lockdown and rushing to work in an attempt to complete a week's tasks in 4-6 hours.

Personally, I have two slipped discs, a condition that requires me to walk regularly for exercise; and when I am unable to do so, I suffer spasms and cramps at nights. My two girls, Areen and Nadine, 2, are also starting to show signs of the lack of exercise in their physical builds. My wife, Abeer, is able, miraculously, to remain in shape by keeping up with the household chores and endlessly organizing games for the girls.

The economic future looks very bleak. Although we go through the motions of being employed when the curfew is lifted, deep down inside we know better than to think we can sustain this pace for much longer. Most companies have lost their commercial capabilities; an increasing number of Palestinians who have the ability to do so have chosen - or have been forced - to leave Palestine in search of employment elsewhere; and entire companies are contemplating relocating their business operations. For those of us who are staying, the natural aspiration to develop a career has been replaced by an understanding that we are rapidly falling behind in our professions and may never be able to get back on track - a daunting personal realization, especially for those who have the luxury to leave.

The students are unable to comprehend the reality that schools and universities will be disrupted for yet another year. Throughout the 36 years of Israeli occupation, Palestinians have prided themselves on having one asset that not even the harshest policies of the occupation could take away - their minds. Universities managed to hold classes and graduate students throughout many periods of crisis. Kindergartens and schools never before suffered extended closures or forced and sustained disruptions. But today, with the seemingly-calm Israeli policy of curfew, all of this has changed. As the words of my daughter show, even third-graders are feeling the structural damage that is being caused by the disruption of the educational system by the curfews.

To add to the complexities caused by the policy of destruction, the curfews are accompanied by closures, which are separating Palestinian population center from each other and placing Israeli military roadblocks and checkpoints between students and their schools or universities. Some villages have even seen Israeli bulldozers dig up their roads and replace them with mounds of dirt, turning entire communities into open-air prisons. In brief, it is clear to all in Palestine today that an entire generation has been sentenced by Ariel Sharon to illiteracy or, at best, ignorance.

Setting aside the fear instilled in every household by yet another Israeli military phenomenon of house-to-house searches, which take place day and night while the curfews are imposed, this is how we have lived for the past five months. If my youngest daughter exemplifies the effect of the curfews on Palestinian children, then her first set of words - dabbabeh (tank), naqelet jonnood (armored personnel carrier) and tayyara (fighter airplane) - depict the challenge of rehabilitating an entire generation that we now face. A ray of hope may be seen in the fact that she sometimes refers to the Israeli soldiers as ammou (uncle).

Those of us who have not lost any family members to this madness feel lucky. Those of us who still have all of our utilities intact cannot complain. Those of us who can claim to still be employed are thankful to those investors who remain engaged in Palestine. Those of us who are lucky are rapidly becoming a minority in Palestine.

Word on the street has it that we will be under a 24-hour curfew/lockdown throughout the upcoming Jewish holidays. As my Israeli neighbors prepare for their holiday season, I wonder if they would join my daughter's nightly prayer for her school to open as scheduled. In the meantime, we will continue to build our state between curfews.

The writer is the CEO of Arab Palestinian Shopping Centers Co.

 
 
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