Oman Daily Observer

70 years after exodus, majority of Palestinia­ns dream of return

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AMARI REFUGEE CAMP: Thaer Sharkawi, 31, has never visited the place he calls home.

The Palestinia­n was born and raised in the Amari refugee camp in the occupied West Bank, but for him his house is 50 km away in the town of Kafr Ana inside what is now Israel.

Kafr Ana hasn’t actually existed for decades — demolished in the weeks after Sharkawi’s grandfathe­r fled in 1948 — yet he knows there was a boys’ and girls’ school and can vividly picture the orange groves his great-grandfathe­r tended.

“I haven’t been there but I have heard about it,” he said. “I studied about it and read about it on the Internet.”

Sharkawi is one of around five million Palestinia­n refugees spread across Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, Gaza and the West Bank.

The majority of them are descendant­s of those who left during the 1948 “Nakba” — or catastroph­e — when more than 700,000 were expelled or fled their homes in the war surroundin­g Israel’s formation.

Like Sharkawi, most have never seen their historic homes, many of which were destroyed by Israel.

Yet, as they mark seven decades since that mass displaceme­nt on May 15, Palestinia­n refugees are determined to maintain connection­s to the land they still want to return to.

Sharkawi sits with his father Nabil and grandmothe­r Khadija, who at 85 remembers fleeing her home as Israeli fighters approached.

Nabil contrasts the open fields of his father’s former home to the cramped conditions they have lived in for 70 years in the Amari camp, but said he wasn’t worried the new generation would lose the link to their historical homelands.

“There are (technologi­cal) developmen­ts now — there is Sheikh Google. They can open it and see ‘here was Kufr Ana’,” he said. “Google helps them to see the land that is theirs.”

But Ali, a 19-year-old also in Amari but whose grandparen­ts came from Al Na’ani, said he knew “nothing” about the village, also destroyed in 1948.

“My grandparen­ts died when I was young and no one really talked about it.” The so-called right of return for Palestinia­n refugees is one of the most difficult issues in the Israelpale­stinian conflict.

Israel rejects it, saying allowing even a fraction of them to return would mean the end of it as a Jewish state.

But Palestinia­ns see the issue as essential and refugees have passed on memories from generation to generation. They will rarely say they simply come from Palestine, instead naming a village, town or even street.

In a field, Bakar Fahmawi points his camera at an abandoned Ottoman building, with rows of neat Israeli houses in the background.

“Here there was a market for all kinds of trade,” he says on the video, pointing his phone at an over- grown field.

Every week for the past five years Fahmawi, an Israeli citizen whose Palestinia­n family remained inside the land that became Israel, has filmed an abandoned village or area and posted it on his Facebook page for Palestinia­ns across the world to see.

“Those that left have heard about their country, but they have never seen it,” he said by phone.

“I do it so they don’t forget their country and for them to know they have a country, the most beautiful in the world.”

In Gaza, run by Hamas and hermetical­ly sealed by Israel and Egypt for years, the Internet is often the only way for them to see the outside world.

Since protests and clashes calling for the right to return began on March 30 along Gaza’s border, more than 50 Palestinia­ns have been killed by Israeli fire, mostly by snipers. No Israelis have been injured. Israel accuses Hamas of using the protests as cover for violence, but Palestinia­ns say protesters are being shot while posing no threat.

The Nakba commemorat­ion is likely to bring fresh bloodshed in Gaza, especially if Hamas encourages protesters to approach the border fence and with Israel determined to stop infiltrati­ons.

Shayma Abeed, 16, has known nothing but Gaza, yet she holds up the key to her grandfathe­r’s house in al-jiyya, a town 19 km north of the Palestinia­n enclave and which was emptied in 1948.

 ?? — AFP ?? Palestinia­n refugee Khadija Sharkawi sits with her family members at her home in the Amari refugee camp near the West Bank city of Ramallah.
— AFP Palestinia­n refugee Khadija Sharkawi sits with her family members at her home in the Amari refugee camp near the West Bank city of Ramallah.

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