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Yassmin A. Moor
The Electronic Intifada
Recently an article was published reporting the shooting of
two children inside a United Nations Relief Works Agency
(UNRWA) school in one of Gaza's refugee camps. Ahmed, a
seven-year-old, was seated at his desk when a bullet
penetrated his head just as the school day began. Despite my
best efforts, I have been unable to determine if he
survived.
I became afraid for my little cousin, Sharif, a first grader
at one of UNRWA's schools in Rafah. While reading about
Ahmed, my mind immediately reeled to Sharif, whom I had just
spoken to on the phone a day earlier. He is always a
highlight of my day.
He told me of all the things he's learning in school and how
excited he is to finally attend the first grade after
waiting all year since his kindergarten was closed down due
to a lack of funding. He now has a new uniform, and is
finally able to use the bookbag and lunch box my mother sent
him for him last year.
"All my friends love my bag, and my lunch-box, can you bring
some more when you come?" he asked. "Bring 100 bags and some
toys too," In turn I joked with him, "OK, but you have to
give me some of the profit." He then got silent and
whispered into the phone, "I'm still afraid to sleep in the
dark because of the big tanks." That's when I choke up and
hold back my tears and tell him about all the toys I will
bring him from the U.S. when I return.
I call him and all the other children living under the
current Israeli occupation, and more recently the siege,
"Children of the Second Intifada." My generation was
referred to as the children of the first Intifada. During
the first Intifada, there were curfews and random shootings,
but Israeli snipers and artillery shelling are new to us. It
feels like the terror inflicted on us remains the same but
with each generation it becomes more intensified.
The current siege has more than 80 percent of the Gazan
population living below the poverty line, a fact that is
also new to us. When I grew up in Gaza, we always had food,
no one asked for money, and we were safe enough to go to
school. At worst, our school was raided and closed down for
the remaining year.
The Children of the Second Intifada have it worse. Never has
Gaza been described as "a massive humanitarian disaster,"
where there is a shortage of basic amenities such as sugar
and flour, and 88 percent of the population is reduced to
depending on external food aid. There are 1.4 million people
concentrated in a space a little over twice the size of
Washington D.C., closed off from the rest of the world and
at the mercy of Israel.
People are targeted from land, air and sea, crippling not
only the economy, but the hopes and dreams of Gazans. The
situation has become desperate and people have become
hopeless and feel abandoned and forgotten by the
international community.
When I left Gaza in 2000, two weeks before the second
uprising, Sharif was almost one. As I said my goodbyes, I
wanted nothing more than to place him in my little pocket
and keep him safe. Safe from the tanks, air strikes,
military raids and poverty.
My fear rests with my own helplessness should anything happen
to him. For now, all I can do is just continue to send him
toys from America, instill some sense of hope and send money
to our aunt so that she can feed him and his brothers.
Yassmin A. Moor is a MA student at the Institute for
Conflict Analysis & Resolution at George Mason University.
She has also co-founded an organization,
Save Gaza.
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