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MORE BLOOD AND MEMORIES FLOW ON "DISASTER DAY"

May 16, 2001

One family's life in exile tells the story of every dispossessed people. Traumatic memories of the 'disaster' fuel dreams of a return from exile.

MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 5/16: Yesterday was the 53rd anniversary of what the Israelis believe was the start of their independence and the Palestinians believe was the start of their ongoing and tortuous "disaster", the "nakba". Tragically it appears there are more disasters still ahead, maybe forever compounding the original mistakes now made half a century ago. Robert Fisk took the opportunity of the anniversary of the "nakba" to visit some of those most suffering from it in a refugee camp outside of Beirut.

Meanwhile the Israeli army continues to target journalists as well as Palestinian activists cooperating with Israeli protest groups. A French journalist would have been killed yesterday but for his protective bullet-proof vest. Palestinian Issa Naef Abd-ElRaheem Souf, shot in cold bood as the Israeli army does increasingly, is in critical condition.

ARAFAT DEFIANT AS WAVE OF BLOODSHED STAINS "DISASTER DAY"
By Robert Fisk in Mar Elias camp, Beirut

[The Independent - 16 May]

There was an awful irony about Ruqiya Haj Hassan's 53rd birthday yesterday. Her people's nakba had already begun on 15 May 1948 and she was to spend only two months of her life in the land she still calls Palestine. Her parents were to tell her, years later, of just how terribly the Palestinian "disaster" struck them down.

Walking day and night out of their land, Ruqiya's family lost their way in the hills of Galilee. Demented and ravenous with hunger, they left her behind in a cave, only finding her again ­ three days later ­ almost dead of thirst. Two of her small sisters, Arabia and Zakia, died on the road.

"Even my brother died later, killed in an Israeli air raid here in Lebanon in 1982," Ruqiya says. "My father went back to the West Bank and visited our village of Shaab again when another sister of mine ­ who had stayed behind ­ was married.

"At the marriage he had a heart attack and died and so, in the end, he was buried in his home village in Palestine."

The old are dying out, of course, and the memories with them. It took all of 15 minutes in the little refugee camp of Mar Elias in the centre of Beirut to find a man who remembered the nakba. Hussein Abdul Razek was 11 when his family fled Palestine. His story is that of every dispossessed people.

"Our village was called Amca but the Israelis came and we fled to Tarshiha in Acre," he remembers. "Then we set off by foot northwards with many other Palestinians, to Farsouta, the last place I remember in Palestine. I recall how thirsty I was all the time. All I wanted was water. We crossed into Lebanon, travelled through Jouaya and got to Tyre, just walking, walking."

Exhausted after their exodus, the Razek family -- Hussein had three brothers and three sisters ­ found their only shelter in a railway freight car.

"While we were sleeping in it someone attached a steam locomotive to the train and it headed north with us inside, all the way to Tripoli. When we got there, we walked to the nearest Palestinian camp at Nahr el-Bared. Years later, we moved down to Beirut and lived in the Chatila camp.

"We had all our land ownership papers then; British documents that proved the land in Amca was ours, even the key to our house in the village. In the camps war in 1987 (between Palestinians and the Lebanese Shia Muslim Amal militia), they were all lost when our house was destroyed."

Hussein's memories of "Palestine" remain vivid. "I remember a school trip to Acre and seeing the great mosque and the gate of the city," he says. "And I remember our land at the end of the village of Amca, our fig trees and the cactus in our field."

Hussein's wife, Fatmi, was only two years old in 1948 but, after Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982, she was able to return ­ for just a month ­ to visit cousins who had stayed behind after the birth of Israel. "My uncle met me on the border and he called my name at once even though he hadn't seen me for 35 years.

"I loved that village of ours. I wanted to be a bird and fly back there afterwards."

HOW THE ISRAELIS SHOT A PALESTINIAN
[Today a demonstration to protest this shooting is being held by Israel peace activists and supporters outside the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv]

This morning, May 15, 2001, Issa Naef Abd-ElRaheem Souf, 30 years of age, wasshot in the chest by Israeli army units. He is now in critical condition inRefidia hospital at Nablus. He was apparently shot intentionally in aprearranged action by the Israeli army.

Issa Souf, the brother of Nawwaf Souf, lives in the village of Hares in theSalfit region, and, like his brother, is active in Israeli and Palestiniancooperation in the struggle against the Israeli occupation of the Palestinian Territories. On Saturday he took part in a Jewish Arab non-violent act of protest at Salfit, when Jewish and Arab Israeli activists led a convoy of food and solidarity to the villages of Marda and Qiri in the Salfit region.

Below is the testimony given us orally by Nawwaf Souf, a central activist,regarding the shooting of his brother:

The brother of Nawwaf and 'Issa owns a carpentry at the entrance to Hares.He saw an army unit approaching. He phoned Issa to gather all the childrenin the neighborhood and take them home. A few minutes later he spoke to himagain on the phone, and Issa said he had been shot, and was injured. Thebrother started running toward's Issa's home, but was met by soldiers, whoshot shock-grenades at him. One soldier then aimed an M-16 at his head,while other soldiers aimed guns at passers-by, in order to stop them fromreaching Issa. Someone phoned Nawwaf, who contacted the DCO and theauthorities, begging them to allow an ambulance through to evacuate Issa.They finally allowed Issa to be taken to Refidia hospital at Nablus, incritical condition. He was shot in the chest.

Ta'ayush and other activists and human rights organizations will expresstheir shock and deep disgust, and condemn this shooting, which threatens thefragile hope for a future of true justice and peace between Israelis andPalestinians, Arabs and Jews.
Mid-East Realitieswww.middleeast.org

Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/5/206.htm