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by Rami Almeghari from Gaza
The Electronic Intifada
I am writing this piece with tears falling from my eyes. You
know I am a Palestinian, you must know my friends from the
West Bank are Palestinians as well. But you also must know,
we have never seen each other. You know we are from the same
country, but we have not met. And you know we have just
talked over the phone.
I hope you know that we have gotten to know each other and
become friends over the last couple of years, and you know
we have contributed many articles to
IMEMC.org.
You know that we have smiled, cried and sighed together.
But today I am crying alone. My friends Saed from Beit
Sahour and Jenka (a very good American woman) are leaving
for the States, where Jenka is living. The young couple have
decided to leave Palestine, seeking a new life with no
military occupation, no Apartheid Wall, no checkpoints, no
bypass routes, no restrictions on roads.
Saed, Jenka and myself have never seen or met each other in
person since we began working together for the past couple
of years, even though we all live in the same country,
Palestine. But unfortunately for our friendship, the young
couple is based in the West Bank and I am in the Gaza Strip.
You might ask us, why have you never met? Surely, you could
have traveled by car, by bus or by train or even by
airplane, so you could have met -- the distance between the
West Bank and the Gaza Strip is really not far at all. I
would answer very simply, no; neither my friends or I could
have done so. Not because we are living in a desert --
Palestine is a beautiful place, with a beautiful landscape,
a beautiful beach and beautiful mountains with snow.
It might come to your mind that perhaps we could not afford
tickets for travel, I would answer simply, no, that too is
not the case.
Then what’s the problem with you, you ask. I answer again
very simply, the problem is that the Israeli occupation that
has disengaged from the Gaza Strip unilaterally and remained
omnipresent at all border crossings, controlling the
movement of any single object, even that of a cat.
I am stuck in the world’s biggest jail, while my friends are
enclaved by an Apartheid Wall that is equipped with
surveillance cameras, so they cannot travel even to nearby
West Bank towns unless they take hours to pass through
Israeli military checkpoints.
For me as a Gazan, my movement to the other part of the
occupied territories (the West Bank) is extremely restricted
under the Israeli authorities’ military regulations and
security measures. The only outlet that I could possibly use
to travel to Beit Sahour in the West Bank would be the Erez
checkpoint, which would take me through Israel -- something
few Gazans ever get permission from Israel to do. Erez,
which used to be a busy commercial and passenger crossing,
has this year become a passage only for emergency medical
cases from the Gaza Strip into Israeli hospitals (and even
those cases are severely restricted). I am living in a big
jail – and not only myself, but the rest of the population
of Gaza as well, which numbers 1.4 million people.
Tonight, I had to use the phone to say farewell to my good
friends in the West Bank, and I don’t even know whether the
phone is also controlled by the Israeli occupation
authorities. But don't worry, please don't worry. Saed and I
imagined we were shaking hands and hugging. You can ask Saed.
Rami Almeghari is a freelance journalist and translator
in the Gaza Strip. He may be reached at
rami_almeghari@hotmail.com.
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