It is winter in Gaza, in every wretched sense of the word. Six months
after the latest war, the world has moved on, but tens of thousands
remain homeless — sometimes crammed into the rubble of bombed-out
buildings. Children are dying of the cold, according to the United
Nations.
Rabah, an 8-year-old boy who dreams of being a doctor, walked
barefoot in near-freezing temperatures with his friends through the
rubble of one neighborhood. The U.N. handed out shoes, but he saves them
for school. For the first time in his life, he said, he and several
friends have no shoes for daily life. Nearly everyone I spoke to said
conditions in Gaza are more miserable than they have ever been —
exacerbated by pessimism that yet another war may be looming.
Lacking other toys, boys like Rabah sometimes play with the remains of Israeli rockets that destroyed their homes.
Gaza has been compared to an open-air prison, and, in the years I’ve
been coming here, that has never felt more true, partly because so many
Gazans are now literally left in the open air. But people joke wryly
that at least prisons have reliable electricity.
The suffering here has multiple causes. Israel sustains a siege that
amounts to economic warfare on an entire population. Hamas provokes
Israel, squanders resources and is brutal and oppressive in its own
right. Egypt has closed smuggling tunnels that used to relieve the
stranglehold, and it mostly keeps its border with Gaza closed. The 1.8
million Gazans are on their own, and one step forward should be
international pressure on Israel and Egypt to ease the blockade.
Yet I have to acknowledge that Israel’s strategy of collective
punishment may be succeeding with a sector of the population. Gazans
aren’t monolithic in their views any more than Americans, but many said
that they were sick of war and of Hamas and don’t want rockets fired at
Israel for fear of terrible retribution.
Halima Jundiya, a 65-year-old matriarch who says the children in her
family are still traumatized by war, was blunt: “We don’t want Hamas to
fire rockets. We don’t want another war.”
One bearded young man said he worked for Hamas but had turned against
it, because government salaries were no longer being paid. “I hate
Hamas,” he said.
Yet Israel should understand clearly that its bombings also put some
on the path to becoming fighters. A 14-year-old boy, Ahmed Jundiya, is
part of the same clan as Halima, but he draws the opposite conclusion:
He aspires to grow up and massacre Israelis.
“War made us feel we will die anyway, so why not die with dignity,” Ahmed told me. “I want to be a fighter.”
I asked him how he could possibly favor more warfare after all the bloodshed Gaza had endured, and he shrugged.
“Maybe we can kill all of them, and then it will get better,” he
said. I asked him if he really wanted to wipe out all of Israel, and he
nodded. “I will give my soul to kill all Israelis,” he said.
Some of that is teen bravado, and some may reflect the unfortunate
reality that, if you’re a teenage boy, one of the few career paths
available is as a fighter.
Overall, my sense is that the suffering has left some Gazans more
disenchanted with fighting, and others yearning for violent revenge.
It’s difficult to be sure how those forces balance out.
Israel and Egypt both have legitimate security concerns in Gaza, but
the Israeli human rights organization Gisha notes that it’s ridiculous
for Israel to insist that the ongoing economic stranglehold is essential
for security.
Likewise, Israel prevents some Gazan students accepted at American or
other foreign universities from leaving to study. That’s
counterproductive: More Western-educated Gazans might be a moderating
presence, but the point seems to be to make all Gazans suffer.
Senior Israeli officials understand that the economic blockade has
undermined the independent business community that could counter Hamas.
So Israeli officials have been saying the right things recently about
easing the blockade, but not much has changed.
On a visit to Gaza in 2010, I visited a cookie factory in Gaza run by
Mohammed Telbani, a prominent businessman. I returned on this visit,
and I found that Israel had bombed Telbani’s factory repeatedly during
the war.
Israel pretty much seals off Gaza — journalists are a rare exception — and isolation and despair mark Gaza today.
This blockade isn’t as dramatic as the bombings, but, in the long
run, it’s soul-destroying. Businesses can’t sell their goods; students
can’t go to West Bank universities; a wife can’t join her husband. True,
Hamas’ misrule is central to the problem, but we don’t have influence
over Hamas; we do have influence over Israel. The U.S. and other global
powers should call more forcefully on both Israel and Egypt to ease this
siege of Gaza.
Mr. Telbani is a pragmatic businessman, a fluent Hebrew speaker whose
aim is to sell cookies, hire workers and make money. He sounded far
more bitter toward Israelis on this visit than before, and I told him
so.
“They burned $22 million for no reason,” he replied indignantly.
“What I created in 45 years, they destroyed in less than two hours. What
should I tell them? ‘Thank you’?
“This is the worst time ever,” he added. “People have nothing to lose. So I expect another war.”
Nicholas Kristof is a syndicated columnist for The New York Times.
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