MIFTAH
Wednesday, 24 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Much has been written about Jenin, yet never enough. Anyone walking or driving by the camp is shaken by the horror of what happened there. Ground Zero, people now call the empty space still showing scars of the bulldozers. (Far too many Ground Zeros in this world!) An amazingly composed Palestinian woman recounts the events of the Israeli incursion into the refugee camp beginning on April 2, 2002.

For a week, she remembers, there was continuous shooting both day and night. Helicopters rained death from the sky. Tanks and rifles from the ground. The wounded lay on the ground in plain sight of Palestinian doctors at a nearby hospital who were not permitted to rescue the bleeding victims. Some bodies, whether dead or moribund we cannot know, were crushed by the weight of tanks driving intentionally over them. Rachel Corry may have been the first victim knocked down and killed by a bulldozer, but she was not the first person to be crushed under monstrous weight.

"When the shooting stopped" my new friend continues, "we could not sleep. It was too quiet. Too frightening." Then the bulldozers moved in, demolishing blocks of houses, contemptuous of the lives being buried under rubble. When people were finally allowed back on the streets, the stench of decomposing bodies hit them full force. Dazed women roamed the streets looking for their husbands, fathers, sons, brothers. Children wandered around looking for their parents and their homes.

An incongruous monument stands in a little round-about near Ground Zero. It is a large multicolored horse, built by a German artist with scraps of metal from cars crushed by tanks. One piece is especially poignant: it is from an ambulance where a Palestinian doctor was shot and left screaming for twenty minutes, his body devoured by fire, until he mercifully drew his last breath. Would-be rescuers were shot at.

Why recount these terrible tales, one may ask. It is not only to remember the atrocities human beings are capable of. It is to illustrate the indistructibility and regenerative power of the human spirit.

Buildings are being repaired and rebuilt exactly as they were. Children play on the streets that were soaked with blood. Women dress up and wear make-up; they smoke argile on their verandas, tell jokes and laugh. And at night, hundreds of lights twinkle brightly from homes on the hills and in the valley, homes where families gather to talk, to listen to their children, to supervise their homework, to watch television, to tell stories with a happy ending. In Jenin, love still lives and grows under a breathtakingly starry sky.

 
 
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