When the Curfew is Liftedby Tania Nasir6 July 2002
Birzeit: Today I was a witness to a harrowing experience on the Birzeit-Ramallah
road - an experience that buttressed my conviction of the immorality of
the Israeli occupation and the inhumanity of its army.
After frustratingly waiting for days on end, I set off from my home in
Birzeit heading towards Ramallah seven kilometers away. I planned to visit
my ninety year old mother and my sister, something I did almost daily
before the recent Israeli army incursions in the area. The ensuing state
of blanket curfews on Ramallah have made it impossible for me to go and
see them for the past few weeks. Today the curfew was to be lifted from 9
a.m. until 2 p.m. and this was an opportunity for me to visit them as
usual.
But it was not as simple as that! We are under siege and before heading
for Ramallah I made sure to ask about the situation on the road. I was
assured that it was safe. The soldiers manning the military check post,
usually prohibiting or supervising passage, were gone. It was a signal
that one could go without the hazards and intimidations, although cement
blocks remained in place and as usual, preventing cars from passing. The
only way to get to Ramallah was to walk part of the way through the check
post area - a distance of about one kilometer.
I joined the walking crowd. There was close to what one might call a
normal cross traffic flow on that hot summer morning from Birzeit to
Ramallah and the other way round. Birzeit is almost a suburb of Ramallah,
the big city, where most services are available and where one can resume
contact with the energy of activities and encounters. So it was with
excitement yet cautious anxiety that most of us took to the road. We were
happy at the chance of living once again, an ordinary day, taking a
familiar route. After living the stagnation and prison-like conditions of
the past few weeks, there was a sigh of relief on everyone's lips and a
reluctant hope in the heart.
Hurriedly we moved along, aware of precious time. The hours will pass
quickly and the curfew will be back in no time. Apprehensively and with a
light gait we set off to visit relatives and friends, keep appointments,
shop at favorite stores or simply enjoy a casual walk downtown. Likewise,
there was the crowd from Ramallah, mostly students, faculty and staff of
Birzeit University, heading for their campus in the town of Birzeit.
Foremost on their minds was the need for the resumption of the much
interrupted academic life, finishing the semester for some and graduation
and celebration for others. Watching the young people, I felt the vibrant
energy of youth, the determination to go on regardless of hardships, and
of a life edging on despair. Their resilience is contagious. We have a
future to live for, I remind myself. I reached Ramallah almost forgetting
the perils of our days.
I visited my mother and enjoyed the reunion with her and my sister. My
mother smiled doubtfully when I promised her a daily visit like before.
She knows how difficult it is to keep such promises under the prevalent
conditions.
Sadly the time passed quickly and it was getting close to 1 p.m. The hours
of freedom have almost come to an end. I had to hasten and leave before
the curfew is re-imposed at 2 p.m. Once more I found myself part of the
milling crowd, returning with heavy hearts. The excitement of the morning
hours was almost gone, the optimism reduced as we got closer to the check
post area - a tangible reminder that we are under occupation and that our
lives are monitored by the dictates of curfews and siege. We moved along
burdened but at least relieved that the passage seemed smooth.
How terribly mistaken we were! Suddenly from around the bend an army jeep
appeared, speeding crazily through the peaceful crowd. Instantly the quiet
road became almost like a battlefield. There were intangible ferocious
sounds coming from the chasing jeep - words and orders that no one seemed
able to understand. All I knew was that we were being chased and dispersed
and that there was panic and fear on the faces of all around me. Hundreds
like me running and scared and wondering what was happening; men carrying
goods, women with shopping bags, their children confused, traumatized,
clutching at their mothers skirts, others holding babies or trying to push
prams, students with books, old people pleading for someone to guide them
along. All were desperately trying to avoid confrontation with this
solitary army jeep, zigzagging its way in all directions, seeking innocent
victims like a demented ogre on the loose. We ran. Some took to the nearby
rocky terraced hills, others took refuge in the vineyards and fruit
orchards below and some like me opted to remain on the main road. All the
time, gas bombs hurled from the jeep were chasing us like vultures hunting
their prey. The tender loving landscape was transformed to the ugliness of
fear and rage.
Heart beating, muscles aching, I ran for dear life. Why this all of a
sudden? We had left our homes this morning without the presence of a
manned check post, and now we are faced with the threatening presence of
soldiers. Was this perhaps a trick for the army to remove check posts and
then whimsically reinstall them and thus trap us like now creating this
horrific pandemonium? May be far-fetched, but reminiscent thoughts of the
horrors of the Kufr Qassem massacre, years ago, came to my mind. I could
not help but painfully remember the bloody events of that day when farmers
of this northern Palestinian village were returning home after a long day
in the fields, not knowing that a curfew was imposed on their village by
the Israeli army. Without any warning they were shot in cold blood as they
approached their homes in the evening. Could something like this happen
again? Scared more than ever before, I keep on running.
The road is uphill. I struggled amongst the scrambling crowd, the
unbearable heat suffocating me. The contemptible military jeep, that kaki
green object of terror and intimidation, screeched to a halt next to me. I
see a soldier jumping down, nervously, threateningly waving a grenade in
his hand. I wanted to scream at him, but fear got the better of me and I
continued running. A young woman pulled me ahead, warning me that the
soldier is about to throw the grenade. I ducked as I heard the explosion
behind me and I choked on the poisonous gas.
I am coughing and running, coughing and running I desperately needed
water, my throat was on fire and dry as sun-scorched earth but I kept on
running, fleeing, until after what seemed like an eternity, I stumbled
into the safety of a passing car that took me home. Behind me the madness
continued.
I am over whelmed by this experience and I desperately seek an
explanation. More than the physical pain and terror that I have
experienced, I am angry and humiliated by the arrogance, the immorality,
the inhumanity of the insolent power of Israel. This traumatic incident
that I was a part of, happens almost everyday, everywhere in Palestine.
The injustice is unbearable. I try to recapture what really happened
today. There was no provocation. There was no threat. There was no danger
to the security of Israel. To me, the only explanation to what happened
was that we, simple and ordinary civilians, dared to go on with our lives
as ordinary human beings do everywhere else in the world. Yes, despite
thirty five years of occupation and despite attempts by Israel to crush us
as a people and as a society, our only crime was that we dared to be
ordinary citizens, living ordinary lives in our ordinary land.
Sadly, knowingly, I remember the poignant words of our renowned
Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish, "...we do not seek to be victims nor do
we seek to be heroes. All that we want is to be ORDINARY."
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