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 No longer afraid, Gazans shout back
By
Amira Hass
Last Thursday morning, some 60
Israel Defense Forces soldiers
invaded Hannan as-Siam's home in
Beit Lahia and turned it into
their base.
"I wanted to hug my youngest
son, who was afraid, but the
soldier aimed his gun at me.
'You want to use the telephone,'
he accused. I wanted to say
something to my husband, but the
soldier said 'uskut' (shut up),"
she said in a telephone
conversation.
"They kept pointing their rifles
at us, every time we moved, and
told us to shut up. They forbade
me even to take the children to
the toilet. The children at
first tried to hold it in,
afraid of the many soldiers in
the house. When the boy finally
went, the soldier accompanied
him with his gun aimed at him,"
she said.
The soldiers kept counting
as-Siam's two boys, aged 11 and
16, and daughter, 18. The eldest
daughter, 20, had an exam at the
university and left early, two
hours before dozens of tanks
smashed into the family's garden
in the township's as-Salatin
neighborhood, destroying the
fruit trees they had planted
there.
Yesterday at noon, hours after
the tanks and armored personnel
carriers (apc) rolled out,
as-Siam was still busy cleaning
and removing the dirt and
garbage left by the soldiers and
assessing the damage. Broken
furniture, cracked doors,
cigarette burns on fabric and
furniture, smashed glasses in
the kitchen, walls sprayed with
Hebrew slogans.
When they first got out of their
tanks and entered the house, the
officer told the family to
collect all their cash and
jewelry and keep it "so you
won't say afterward we stole
it." Later, before they left,
when the father asked where the
third cellphone had gone (they
had all been confiscated with
the take-over), the officer
searched until he found it on
one of the soldiers.
Apparently the IDF has not
learned the lesson from previous
invasions in Gaza and the West
Bank, about stealing from the
residents, Gaza residents say.
When Ali, as-Siam's husband,
wanted to take a shower, the
soldiers wouldn't let him, she
says. He argued with them in
Hebrew and said "when I was a
prisoner in Israel I could go to
the toilet, I could read, move
around. Here in my own home I
can't do even that,'" she
recalls.
Ali negotiated with the soldiers
in Hebrew to allow his wife and
three children to leave the
house on Friday morning. But the
24 hours had traumatized the
youngest boy, who holds his
mother's hand all the time,
asking where his father is.
Ironically, the occupation of
as-Siam's new house and
transformation into a military
base saved it from destruction.
Numerous other houses, most of
them new, in the neighborhoods
between Gaza City and Beit Lahia
have been destroyed. Some 5,000
people live in this area,
refugees who invested all their
savings in buying a plot to
build on or an apartment in a
new building. In some buildings
the upper floors have been
destroyed by shells and the
walls on others have been
riddled with bullets. Fences
have been destroyed, trees
uprooted and smashed, trenches
have been dug in gardens and
streets, water boilers
perforated by soldiers' bullets.
The army also sabotaged the
power, water and telephone
lines.
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