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Laila al-Hadad
ynetnews
My family and I are on our way back to Gaza from the US. We flew in to
Cairo last week, and from there embarked on a five hour taxi
ride to the border town of al-Arish, 50 km from the border
with Gaza.
We rest in al-Arish for the night.
We carried false hopes the night before last, hopes transmitted down the
taxi driver’s grapevine, the ones who run the Cairo-Rafah
circuit, that the border would open early that morning. So
we kept our bags packed, slept early to the crashing of the
Mediterranean - the same ones that just a few kilometers
down, crashed down on Gaza's besieged shores.
But it is 4, then 5, then 6 AM, and the border does not open.
And my heart begins to twinge, recalling the last time I tried to cross
Rafah; recalling how I could not, for 55 days; 55 days
during which my son learned to lift himself up into the
world, during which he took his first fleeting steps, in a
land which was not ours; 55 days of aloneness and
displacement.
The local convenience storeowner tells us he hears the border may open
Thursday -“but you know how it is, all rumors.” No one can
be certain. Even the Egyptian border officials admit that
ultimately, the orders come from the Israeli side.
It’s as though they take pleasure as we languish in the uncertainty. The
perpetual never- knowing. As though they intend for us to
sit and think and drive ourselves crazy with thought. I call
an Israeli military spokesperson, then the Ministry of
Defense, who direct me back to the spokesperson’s office,
and they to another two offices; I learn nothing.
As an Israeli friend put it, "uncertainty is used as part of the almost
endless repertoire of occupation.”
Even the Palestinian soccer team has been unable to leave Gaza because of
the Rafah closure, to attend the Asian games. No one is
exempt. Peasant or pro-football player, we are equally
vulnerable.
Long days
It is now our fifth day in al-Arish. Rafah Crossing has been closed more
or less for more than six months, opening only occasionally
to let through thousands of stranded Palestinians. And then
it closes again.
Every night, it’s the same ritual. We pack all our things, sleep early,
and wake up at 5 to call the border.
We’ve rented a small beachside vacation flat here. They are cheap -
cheaper than Cairo, and certainly cheaper than hotels, and
are usually rented out to Palestinians like us, waiting for
the border to open. Its low season now, and the going rate
is a mere USD 12 a night.
In the summer, when the border was closed, rates jumped to a minimum of
USD 35 a night - and that’s if you could find an available
flat. We can afford it. But for many Palestinians who come
to Egypt for medical treatment, and without large amounts of
savings, even this meager rental fee can begin to add up.
Palestinian slum
During times of extended closure, like this summer, and last year, al-Arish
becomes a Palestinian slum. Thousands of penniless
Palestinians, having finished their savings and never
anticipating the length of the closure, end up on the
streets.
In response, the Egyptian police no longer allow Palestinians driving up
from Cairo past the Egyptian port city of al-Qantara if the
border is closed and al-Arish becomes too crowded.
"They turn it into a ghetto. That and the Israelis didn't want them
blowing up holes in the border again to get through,"
explains the taxi driver nonchalantly.
Young Palestinian men on their way to Gaza have it worse off: They are
confined to the Cairo Airport or the border itself, under
military escort - and only after surrendering their
passports.
No one cares
We go “downtown” today - all of one street - to buy some more food. We
are buying in small rations, “just in the case the border
opens tomorrow.” I feel like we've repeated that refrain a
hundred times already. I go and check my email. I feel very
alone; no one cares, no one knows, no one bothers to know.
This is how Palestinian refugees must feel every day of
their lives.
I read the news, skimming every headline and searching for anything about
Rafah. Nothing. One piece about the Palestinian soccer team;
another about the European monitors renewing their posts for
another six months. We do not exist.
If you are “lucky” enough to be stuck here during times of extended
closure, when things get really bad - when enough
Palestinians die on the border waiting, or food and money
are scarce enough for the Red Cross to get involved, then
maybe, maybe you’ll get a mention.
And people will remember there are human beings waiting to return home or
get out and go about their daily lives and things we do in
our daily lives - no matter how mundane or critical those
things might be. Waiting to be possessed once again.
But now, after six months, the closure is no longer newsworthy. Such is
the state of the media - what is once abhorred becomes the
status quo and effectively accepted.
Sieged
It used to be that anyone with an Israeli-issued travel permit or visa
could cross Rafah into Gaza - but never refugees of course.
Since the Disengagement last year, all that has changed.
With few exceptions (diplomats, UN and Red Cross staff, licensed
journalists) no one besides residents of Gaza carrying
Israeli-issued IDs can enter Gaza now. No foreigners, no
Arabs, no West Bankers, not even spouses of Gaza residents,
or Palestinian refugees.
A few more days pass. They seem like years.
For Palestinians, borders are a reminder - of our vulnerability and
non-belonging, of our displacement and dispossession. It is
a reminder - a painful one - of homeland lost. And of what
could happen if what remains is lost again. When we are lost
again, the way we lose a little bit of ourselves every time
we cross and we wait to cross.
We wait our entire lives, as Palestinians. If not for a border or
checkpoint to open, for a permit to be issued, for an
incursion to end, for a time when we don’t have to wait
anymore.
So it is here, 50 kilometers from Rafah’s border, that I am reminded once
again of displacement. That I have become that "displaced
stranger" to quote Palestinian poet Mourid Barghouti.
Displacement is meant to be something that happens to
someone else, he says. How true. To refugees that the world
cares to forget. Who have no right of return. Who return to
nowhere and everywhere in their minds a million times. When
the border closes, we are one day closer to become that.
Of course, that refugee is Yassine, my husband, who cannot even get as
far as Egypt to feel alone. Who cannot join me and Yousuf as
we journey back and forth through Rafah.
But the Palestinian never forgets his aloneness. He is always, always
reminded of it on borders. That, above all, is why I hate
Rafah Crossing. That is why I hate borders. They remind me
that I, like all Palestinians, belong to everywhere and
nowhere at once. They are the Borders of Dispossession
We’ve packed and unpacked our bags a dozen times. My mother finally gave
in and opened hers up in a gesture of frustration - or
maybe, pragmatism. It seems like a bad omen, but sometimes
things work in reverse here: last time we were stuck waiting
for the border to open, when we decided to buy more than a
daily portion of food, the border opened.
Everyone is suddenly a credible source on the closure, and eager ears
will listen to whatever information they provide.
One local jeweler insisted it would open at 4 PM yesterday - a suggestion
that the taxi drivers laughed off; they placed their bets on
Thursday - but Thursday has come and gone, and the border is
still closed.
Atiya, our taxi driver, says he heard it wouldn't open until the Muslim
pilgrimage (Hajj), a few weeks from now. We’re inclined to
believe him - taxi drivers have a vested interest in
providing the most reliable information; their livelihood
depends on it.
In the end, “security” is all that matters and all that ever will. As
Palestinians, we’ve come to despise that word: Security. It
is has become a deity more sacred than life itself. In its
name, even murder can become a justifiable act.
We sleep, and wake up, and wait for the phone to ring for some news.
Every time we receive a knock on the door we rush to see if
the messenger brings good tidings. Today? Tomorrow? A week
from now?
No, it’s only the local deaf man. He remembers us from last time, offers
to take out our trash for some money and food.
We sit and watch the sunset. What does it know of waiting and
anticipation and disappointment and hope - a million times
in one day?
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