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- For Palestinians, Every Martyr
is a Story
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- by Ramzy Baroud
It's unfortunate how the rise of the
Palestinian uprising's death toll slowly isolates the human face of the
catastrophe, making the number of dead, wounded and maimed mere
statistics. Yet for the families of the victims, the deepening tragedy is
felt with the fall of every child, man or woman. In truth, for the
Palestinian people, the human face of the struggle remains intact, and for
them, swelling death tolls throughout the history of their struggle
persistently fail to turn their victims into mere statistics.
Killed while breaking his fast
The story of Ahmed Jamil Awad, 48, is one
that mustn’t be forgotten. A father of 4 children from the village of
Jbarah south of the West Bank city of Tul Karim, Awad was shot in the head
and the shoulder while eating his Ramadan sunset meal. Eyewitnesses told
Palestinian news agency WAFA that an Israeli tank stationed at the
entrance of the village began firing randomly toward the peaceful area,
killing Awad and injuring others.
The news agency said that Awad was shot
while sitting with his family and four children. The ambulance that
carried him to the hospital was not permitted to reach its destination,
and Awad died while the ambulance driver waited for an entry permit from
the soldiers.
He saved his friend, but could not save
himself
Khalil Al Madhoun 24, from Gaza lies
unconscious in a Ramallah Hospital. Thanks to his friend, Nihad Abu
Hantash, Al Madhoun is still alive, despite 6 bullet wounds. Sadly, Abu
Hantash didn't live to see the friend whom he saved.
On that day of clashes, Abu Hantash
desperately reached for his friend who was left pleading as Israeli
soldiers continued to fire at protestors. Abu Hantash managed to pull the
unmoving body of Al Madhoun, yet received one Israeli bullet in the midst
of the battle. He died, also while the ambulance was stopped at an Israeli
checkpoint between Ramallah and Nablus in the West Bank.
A child departs after a long wait
Tragically, it is not as if Mohammed Al
Durra was the only Palestinian child to be killed by the Israeli army.
Many other children have been killed before and during the Intifada. Salim
Al Hamaida, a 12 year old boy from the city of Rafah, south of Gaza was a
recent addition.
Al Hamaida's mother told local reporters in
a voice echoing with devastation, "I awaited his arrival for 21
years, but I lost him in seconds." The mother was unable to give
birth for many years until Salim brightened her life and rewarded her long
wait. Again, WAFA reported that the death was caused by random Israeli
firing at a group of children playing near the Salah Al Din Gate in Rafah.
It was yet the newest addition to the Al Durra style death, but
unfortunately wasn't caught on camera, therefore went unnoticed.
A man dies, and so do his doves, all in
the same day
Naif Abu Dahoud from Hebron was killed in
clashes. He left behind a wife and several children. Before his death, to
secure some additional income to his impoverished family, he raised doves
on the top of his house. But it was most difficult to care for the doves
after a group of Israeli soldiers moved to the roof of his house to
monitor the neighborhood of Abu Snaina. Later, soldiers began shelling
Palestinian areas from the top of the house. Yet the man remained
dedicated to caring for his doves, said his wife to Al Hyat Al Jadida
newspaper, while kissing the head of her deceased husband in a Hebron
hospital.
The same day Abu Dahoud died, his doves
also died. It's unknown whether the doves died in a miraculous symbolic
gesture of solidarity with their owner as many people believe, or if they
were poisoned by Israeli soldiers positioned at the top of the house. The
second reason seems more likely, as the soldiers had earlier poisoned Abu
Dahoud's family goat.
Palestinians prefer to remember their
martyrs through recalling stories associated with their deaths. Some of
these stories retrieve sadness, innocence, faith, and heroism. The West
Bank twins who died on two consecutive days as one tried to avenge the
other, the man who died on his wedding night, and the child who wasted
away in the arms of his father are all becoming part of a memory crowded
with stories and filled with sadness. And with the continuation of the
Palestinian Intifada, more and more stories are being told.
This is how Palestinians commemorate the
legacy of their martyrs, so that the memories remain alive, rather than
becoming cold statistics, which often fail to present the human tragedy.
Source:
by courtesy & © 2000 Ramzy
Baroud
by the same author:
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