Kuwait Times

Losing sight of the future: Palestinia­ns blinded in one eye

-

GAZA CITY: When Jacqueline Shahada was blinded in one eye during a Palestinia­n demonstrat­ion along the Gaza border, she never thought she would lose her husband and children too. It was Nov 2018 and like every Friday for more than six months, thousands of Palestinia­ns gathered along the Gaza-Israel border demanding the right to return to lands their ancestors fled in 1948 with the creation of Israel.

Protesters burned tyres and threw stones and Molotov cocktails at Israeli soldiers on the other side of the heavily-guarded border, who responded by opening fire. Amid the thousands of onlookers was Jacqueline, a slight, veiled woman in her early 30s. Even though the protests were male-dominated, she told herself women also had a right to participat­e.

“Suddenly, I felt something burning in my eye and I lost consciousn­ess,” she said. She had been hit by a rubber bullet, and despite medical attention, doctors couldn’t save her left eye. Her injury is hardly visible now – just a slight glossiness from a tear in the iris – but her life in Hamas-controlled Gaza was destroyed. “I wish I had been killed, it would have been easier,” she told AFP.

Her experience has become all too common, and AFP met with 10 Palestinia­ns who lost an eye after being shot by the Israeli army, in Gaza, Jerusalem or the West Bank.

Some were taking part in clashes, others were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. All were left scarred and with their lives wrecked, even though in Palestinia­n society being wounded while standing up to Israeli occupation is often lionised.

Along the border of the Gaza Strip, the Israeli army uses snipers who, according to instructio­ns, open fire only when the soldiers are at risk from intensifyi­ng violence from Palestinia­n rioters. Asked about Jacqueline’s case as well as the use of live fire, the Israeli army highlighte­d the “security challenge” they faced. It said “it took every possible measure to reduce the number of injuries among Gaza residents participat­ing in these violent riots”. “There is smoke from burning tyres, gas and moving crowds. Snipers are at a distance, it’s difficult,” said a senior Israeli military official.

Jacqueline, who studied maths, found herself stigmatize­d. Her children were teased at school about their disabled mother and her husband grew colder and angry. “Society and people blame me, they say: ‘Why (as a woman) did you go to the protest?’ I expected my family and husband would be proud of me, but I paid a high price,” she told AFP in Gaza. “My husband divorced me and I lost my kids. If I lost an arm it would be OK, but without an eye, how can you continue with your life? I want to challenge the whole world, to remain strong, but inside I am broken,” she said.

In the Gaza Strip, the cramped territory of two million people controlled by the Islamist militant group Hamas and under Israeli blockade, residents have grown accustomed to traumatic wounds after three wars with Israel in 2008, 2012 and 2014. But even when there is no full-blown conflict, violence erupts. More than 8,000 Palestinia­ns were hit by Israeli fire during the often violent “March of Return” protests which began in March 2018, according to UN figures. Of those injuries, 80 percent were to the lower body, with only around 3 percent to the head.

In Jerusalem, despite there being no full-scale conflict, tensions remain in neighborho­ods like Shuafat and Issawiya, parts of the predominan­tly Palestinia­n eastern part of the city Israel captured in 1967. There residents complain of increasing violence from the Israeli police, which says it is responding to growing unrest by the population. In recent years police there have used spongy synthetic rubber bullets, deemed in theory to be less lethal. But when fired at close range, they have been known to cause deaths.

In February, Malek Issa, a nine-year old boxing enthusiast, was hit by a rubber-tipped bullet after buying a sandwich at a shop in Issawiya. He was on his way home from school and his older sister, Tala, immediatel­y rang their father, Wael, to say Malek had been shot in the forehead. “I immediatel­y thought ‘no, he must have been shot in the eye’,” Wael said. “I stayed there, paralyzed for a few minutes.”

Malek was rushed to hospital where his parents found him, head gaping and his left eye hollowed out. “My son is polite, clever and got good grades at school. But this soldier came and shot him. He didn’t shoot just my son, he shot the whole family,” said Wael. Malek, who now has a glass eye, sprawled disinteres­tedly on a sofa next to his father.

“This is not the Malek that we knew, he changed a lot,” added Wael, who works in a restaurant in Tel Aviv. “At night Malek cries out ‘I want my eye, I want my eye back’. I tried to explain to him this is the will of God,” he said, although the family struggles to understand why Malek was shot when there were no protests going on. Contacted by AFP, the Israeli justice ministry said it had opened an “internal investigat­ion” into the case.

For years freelance cameraman Muath Amarneh covered numerous protests in the occupied West Bank. On Nov 15 last year, he grabbed his video camera and, wearing his helmet and a vest inscribed with the word ‘Press’, rushed to a Palestinia­n demonstrat­ion in the southern village of Surif. “There was a sniper on the ground readying his weapon, saying something to the officer I didn’t understand, but they were laughing,” he said.

“I felt that something was going to happen to one of us. The soldiers were provoking us journalist­s. Then I felt something hit my face, I thought my head had been knocked off,” he said. “I saw there was blood on my face. I fell to my knees.” Witnesses said he was hit by a rubber bullet which had metal inside. And scans show some metal remains inside the excavated eye cavity, which now holds a glass eye.

Israeli authoritie­s say they did not target the journalist, but Muath is convinced his injury is a metaphor for a conflict others don’t want to see. “My injury sends a message that our lives depend on the pictures we take. ‘Either you will work as we like or you might die’.” The injury sparked protests, with Palestinia­n and Arab journalist­s filming themselves with a eye patch using the slogan “eye of truth”.— AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? This combinatio­n of pictures created on June 11, 2020 shows Palestinia­ns blinded in one eye - (top left to right) Mohammed Burqan, Muath Amarneh and Jacqueline Shahada; (middle left to right) Ahmed Al-Louth, Malek Issa and Nafez Al-Damiri; (bottom left to right) Rifaat Barham, Mai Abu Rawda and Sami Marsan.
— AFP This combinatio­n of pictures created on June 11, 2020 shows Palestinia­ns blinded in one eye - (top left to right) Mohammed Burqan, Muath Amarneh and Jacqueline Shahada; (middle left to right) Ahmed Al-Louth, Malek Issa and Nafez Al-Damiri; (bottom left to right) Rifaat Barham, Mai Abu Rawda and Sami Marsan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait