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No checkpoints in heaven
Ramzy Baroud writing from the United States, Live from Palestine, 8 April 2008

The ongoing Palestinian story of separation: An Israeli soldier looks on as a newly-released Palestinian prisoner hugs her relative at an Israeli checkpoint at the entrance of the West Bank city of Tulkarem, January 2008. (Mouid Ashqar/MaanImages)
I still
vividly
remember
my
father's
face --
wrinkled,
apprehensive,
warm --
as he
last
wished
me
farewell
14 years
ago. He
stood
outside
the
rusty
door of
my
family's
home in
a Gaza
refugee
camp
wearing
old
yellow
pajamas
and a
seemingly
ancient
robe. As
I hauled
my one
small
suitcase
into a
taxi
that
would
take me
to an
Israeli
airport
an hour
away, my
father
stood
still. I
wished
he would
go back
inside;
it was
cold and
the
soldiers
could
pop up
at any
moment.
As my
car
moved
on, my
father
eventually
faded
into the
distance,
along
with the
graveyard,
the
water
tower
and the
camp. It
never
occurred
to me
that I
would
never
see him
again.
I think
of my
father
now as
he was
that
day. His
tears
and his
frantic
last
words:
"Do you
have
your
money?
Your
passport?
A
jacket?
Call me
the
moment
you get
there.
Are you
sure you
have
your
passport?
Just
check,
one last
time
..."
My
father
was a
man who
always
defied
the
notion
that one
can only
be the
outcome
of his
circumstance.
Expelled
from his
village
at the
age of
10,
running
barefoot
behind
his
parents,
he was
instantly
transferred
from the
son of a
landowning
farmer
to a
penniless
refugee
in a
blue
tent
provided
by the
United
Nations
in Gaza.
Thus,
his life
of
hunger,
pain,
homelessness,
freedom-fighting,
love,
marriage
and loss
commenced.
The fact
that he
was the
one
chosen
to quit
school
to help
his
father
provide
for his
now
tent-dwelling
family
was a
huge
source
of
stress
for him.
In a
strange,
unfamiliar
land,
his new
role was
going
into
neighboring
villages
and
refugee
camps to
sell
gum,
aspirin
and
other
small
items.
His legs
were a
testament
to the
many dog
bites he
obtained
during
these
daily
journeys.
Later
scars
were
from the
shrapnel
he
acquired
through
war.
As a
young
man and
soldier
in the
Palestinian
unit of
the
Egyptian
army, he
spent
years of
his life
marching
through
the
Sinai
desert.
When the
Israeli
army
took
over
Gaza
following
the Arab
defeat
in 1967,
the
Israeli
commander
met with
those
who
served
as
police
officers
under
Egyptian
rule and
offered
them the
chance
to
continue
their
services
under
Israeli
rule.
Proudly
and
willingly,
my young
father
chose
abject
poverty
over
working
under
the
occupier's
flag.
And for
that,
predictably,
he paid
a heavy
price.
His
two-year-old
son died
soon
after.
My
oldest
brother
is
buried
in the
same
graveyard
that
bordered
my
father's
house in
the
camp. My
father,
who
couldn't
cope
with the
thought
that his
only son
died
because
he
couldn't
afford
to buy
medicine
or food,
would be
found
asleep
near the
tiny
grave
all
night,
or
placing
coins
and
candy in
and
around
it.
My
father's
reputation
as an
intellectual,
his
obsession
with
Russian
literature,
and his
endless
support
of
fellow
refugees
brought
him
untold
trouble
with the
Israeli
authorities,
who
retaliated
by
denying
him the
right to
leave
Gaza.
His
severe
asthma,
which he
developed
as a
teenager,
was
compounded
by lack
of
adequate
medical
facilities.
Yet,
despite
daily
coughing
streaks
and
constantly
gasping
for
breath,
he
relentlessly
negotiated
his way
through
life for
the sake
of his
family.
On one
hand, he
refused
to work
as a
cheap
laborer
in
Israel.
"Life
itself
is not
worth a
shred of
one's
dignity,"
he
insisted.
On the
other,
with all
borders
sealed
except
that
with
Israel,
he still
needed a
way to
bring in
an
income.
He would
buy
cheap
clothes,
shoes,
used
TVs, and
other
miscellaneous
goods,
and find
a way to
transport
and sell
them in
the
camp. He
invested
everything
he made
to
ensure
that his
sons and
daughter
could
receive
a good
education,
an
arduous
mission
in a
place
like
Gaza.
But when
the
Palestinian
uprising
of 1987
exploded,
and our
camp
became a
battleground
between
stone-throwers
and the
Israeli
army,
mere
survival
became
Dad's
new
obsession.
Our
house
was the
closest
to the
Red
Square,
arbitrarily
named
for the
blood
spilled
there,
and also
bordered
the
"Martyrs'
Graveyard."
How can
a father
adequately
protect
his
family
in such
surroundings?
Israeli
soldiers
stormed
our
house
hundreds
of
times;
it was
always
him who
somehow
held
them
back,
begging
for his
children's
safety,
as we
huddled
in a
dark
room
awaiting
our
fate.
"You
will
understand
when you
have
your own
children,"
he told
my older
brothers
as they
protested
his
allowing
the
soldiers
to slap
his
face.
Our
"freedom-fighting"
dad
struggled
to
explain
how love
for his
children
could
surpass
his own
pride.
He grew
in my
eyes
that
day.
It's
been
fourteen
years
since I
last saw
my
father.
As none
of his
children
had
access
to
isolated
Gaza, he
was left
alone to
fend for
himself.
We tried
to help
as much
as we
could,
but what
use is
money
without
access
to
medicine?
In our
last
talk he
said he
feared
he would
die
before
seeing
my
children,
but I
promised
that I
would
find a
way. I
failed.
Since
the
siege on
Gaza, my
father's
life
became
impossible.
His
ailments
were not
"serious"
enough
for
hospitals
crowded
with
limb-less
youth.
During
the most
recent
Israeli
onslaught,
most
hospital
spaces
were
converted
to
surgery
wards,
and
there
was no
place
for an
old man
like my
dad. All
attempts
to
transfer
him to
the
better
equipped
West
Bank
hospitals
failed
as
Israeli
authorities
repeatedly
denied
him the
required
permit.
"I am
sick,
son, I
am
sick,"
my
father
cried
when I
spoke to
him two
days
before
his
death.
He died
alone on
18
March,
waiting
to be
reunited
with my
brothers
in the
West
Bank. He
died a
refugee,
but a
proud
man
nonetheless.
My
father's
struggle
began 60
years
ago, and
it ended
a few
days
ago.
Thousands
of
people
descended
to his
funeral
from
throughout
Gaza,
oppressed
people
that
shared
his
plight,
hopes
and
struggles,
accompanying
him to
the
graveyard
where he
was laid
to rest.
Even a
resilient
fighter
deserves
a moment
of
peace.
Ramzy
Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net)
is an
author
and
editor
of
PalestineChronicle.com,
where
this
essay
was
originally
published.
His work
has been
published
in many
newspapers
and
journals
worldwide.
His
latest
book is
The
Second
Palestinian
Intifada:
A
Chronicle
of a
People's
Struggle
(Pluto
Press,
London).
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