Turning Weapons into Things of Beauty in Gaza (by Philip Rizk)
On March 19, Israeli forces rounded up Assad Salach and his sons, Fahmi and Salach, and Assad's brother Sa'id and his son Ghassan -- along with more than 300 men age 16 and above -- along its northern border with the Gaza Strip. It is not the first time Israel has arrested the male members of the Salach family.
These days when militants launch homemade Qassam rockets into Israel from the Gaza Strip, they are usually launched from within the cities, not these border areas. Thus, it makes little sense for these men to be arrested solely for security purposes. Rather, it seems to be a method of pushing the families inhabiting the border areas into the cities and deserting their only source of income, their land. Israel is successfully destroying the potential of the fruit basket of the densely populated Strip. The once-luscious green land is now reduced to an arid no-man's-land, easily overseeable by Israel's security towers and drones overlooking it all. The economic crisis caused by this ongoing, intentional de-development of Gaza's economy is destroying the society's makeup.
The Salach's main family home was destroyed in 2001. Eight Israeli bulldozers crossed the nearby border and flattened the fields. Shortly thereafter, they came back and flattened the home with some family members still inside. That day Abu Assad, the Salach family grandfather, had a stroke, and he and his wife, Om Assad, were taken to the hospital. By the end of the day, Om Assad had lost her husband, her home, and the trees that had adorned the family's fields. She moved half a kilometer down the road to her other son's home. Today, Israel has taken him as well.
Despite a cease-fire, five of the Salach family members remain imprisoned without even a court case. Their fields still lie in ruin as the Israeli army fires at them when they try and approach it. Their old home remains demolished while the memories of the past continue to haunt them daily.
Assad and Sa'id used to collect the tank shells, things of ugliness, which Israel fired on them as they tended to their goats and fields. They would paint them, fill them with flowers, and turn them into vases -- things of beauty. "The day they started doing that the Israelis almost completely stopped firing at us," Assad's wife told me. As soon as the media spread pictures of their act -- turning death into life, ugliness into beauty -- the shells stopped falling. When the men were detained, so were the vases.
Philip Rizk is an Egyptian-German Christian who lived and worked in Gaza from 2005-2007. He is currently working on a documentary film, which is described at thispalestinianlife.blogspot.com.






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And so the oppressed becomes the oppressor, the target of genocide becomes the perpetrator of genocide.
Satan is fiendishly crafty indeed. And radical evil can rear its head in the most unexpected places. See Albert Camus' The Plague for elaboration.
Posted by: carl copas | July 30, 2008 12:10 PM
Thanks for this area you have created of prayer.
I love praying and want to communicate to God always in any given chance, I always want to tell God what I feel. I know God knows what we want to tell . Thanks
Posted by: J Ngao(Mrs) | July 31, 2008 2:15 AM
The Palestinians have suffered greatly at the hands of Arab leaders who have failed them. The 60 years of anti-Israeli efforts have only made the Palestinians conditions worse. All sides want to live in peace. The difference for the Palestinians is the definition of peace can only be achieved with the absence of Israel. That will never happen, so there will never be peace.
Posted by: Leonard | August 1, 2008 3:53 PM
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