|

|
|

 |
Letters
from
Gaza |
|
|
|
Letters from Gaza (6)
…between Gaza and Sderot

It was such a quiet evening; my kids were sleeping
after a long day at school, I’d finished my house work and was just
thinking it was time to relax. It was almost eight o’clock when I went
into the kitchen to prepare a cup of coffee. Suddenly, I heard a huge
explosion and the sound of broken glass. I was terrified. I rushed into
the kids’ bedroom to see if they were OK. Then I checked the other
rooms, looking for the broken glass. I didn’t find any. Later, I learnt
that most of the houses near ours had had their windows shattered by the
force of the explosion. We were lucky.
After the Dimona suicide bombing, Israel said it
would increase military action in Gaza and I knew that the situation
would get worse, yet I would never have imagined it would be so close:
just a few metres away from my home. Maybe it’s a protective mechanism
when we convince ourselves that we’re safe in our homes. I was stunned.
The sound of the ambulance sirens brought me straight back to the ugly
reality that we live in Gaza, where nowhere is safe and where Israel
controls the air, sea and land.
It was such a scary moment. It made me wonder how the
Israelis in Sderot feel when a Qassam rocket hits them. Human nature is
the same everywhere, no matter who you are: all humans love life. I
know, though, that when a missile from an F-16 hits a target near you,
everything shakes with the impact and the noise, not only the buildings
and the walls, but you yourself are shaken to the core. You realize that
there is no place to hide, no place to run, no shelters, nothing.
It’s amazing how we Palestinians in Gaza are able to
cope with everything we face each day: the growing fear that we’ll
accidentally be the target of an Israeli air strike because we happen to
be in the same street as a "wanted person"; the constant electricity
cuts; the lack of essential equipment and medication; the border
closures that prevent people from leaving Gaza for urgent medical
treatment. Living in this way, I honestly wonder if we adults will be
able to raise a normal, healthy younger generation. Do we still have the
power to have a positive impact on our children, their mentality, and
their way of judging events?
 |
Najwa Sheikh (1)
Gaza, February 2008
|
[1]
Najwa Sheikh Ahmed is a Palestine refugee, who lives in Nuseirat camp
with her husband and three children. These are her personal stories.
|