MIFTAH
Thursday, 2 May. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

My 20-year old heart is broken. Since October 7, I have been glued to the television, to my computer and my phone, watching the news, video clips and Tiktoks. To my chagrin, I happened upon a video of Bono, the lead singer of U2, my most loved rock band back in the 90s. Socially and politically conscious, hailing from Dublin, Ireland, I loved them, not only for their incredible music and lyrics, but for the fact that they come from a place that knows what longing and fighting for freedom means.

This paper-mâché image was abruptly torn to pieces, splintering into a million shards of disappointment. During a performance in Las Vegas on October 9, Bono broached the topic of the hour. ‘Our hearts and our anger, you know where that’s pointed”, he said.

But he was not talking about Gaza. He barely mentioned it actually, except in the context of ‘what is happening in Israel and Gaza.” Instead, he sang for the “beautiful kids at that music festival’, in reference to the Israelis killed in “Re’im”, adjacent to the Gaza border, on October 7

It blows my mind, really. I long stopped banking on the international community to stand up for us, but I still held out hope for people of conscience the world over, Bono included. How in good conscience, could he not first mention the ‘beautiful kids’ of Gaza who are being pulled from the debris that was once their homes? How could he not mention the ‘beautiful kids” who were born and raised under a brutal, military siege and a colonialist occupation that has cut them off from the rest of the world for their entire lives? How could he? There have been so many horrific scenes coming out of the Gaza Strip in the days since Israel began its ruthless bombardment of the small enclave and still, it is difficult to decide which one is the hardest to watch. After viewing countless images of destruction, whole neighborhoods razed to the ground and limp bodies being pulled from beneath the rubble, there is one video that has particularly haunted me. A young father, probably in his 30s, is holding his dead baby girl to his chest, an infant less than a year old. His wide and terrified eyes indicate how shell-shocked he is. He is standing in a hospital ward, the white sheet wrapped around his dead baby in stark contrast to the bright red blood on her forehead and the ashy grey soot of their demolished home.

He is crying and screaming at the same time, clutching his daughter, then lifting her up to the world to show them Israel’s target, the people who Israeli “Defense” Minister, Yoav Gallant is calling “human animals”.

“She is now a bird in heaven” he laments. “Look at her innocence, just look’,” he pleads, but then quickly adds, ‘we are all sacrificed for the homeland.”

This unfathomable sight is also the embodiment of what Palestinians are made of, Gazans especially. It is a sight we have seen all too often over the course of Israel’s brutal occupation in general and its 16-year blockade on the Gaza Strip in particular. There have been five major Israeli assaults on the Gaza Strip, today’s included, since this blockade was imposed, which have grown in intensity and brutality. Nevertheless, after each devastating assault on Gaza, the Palestinians mourn their dead, clean out the rubble of their decimated homes, schools and hospitals and rebuild so they can live again.

The desire for freedom is a powerful human instinct that can never be quelled, regardless of how crushing the boot to the neck, and Palestinians have repeatedly proven they will never surrender.

The fact is, we are not merely seeking the world’s sympathy, mostly because sympathy is transient and empty if it is not coupled with a push for justice. What we want is this: when you see a video like this father and his dead baby girl, do not look away. If you shed a tear, this means you are human and compassionate to others’ suffering. But if that tear is not turned into action and indignation at the scope and magnitude of this ongoing atrocity, then it is all for nothing.

Bono has chosen what side he is on, not because he expressed compassion for the dead, but because he did not acknowledge the context in which this violence was born or the systematic Israeli oppression and violence that begot it. Neither did he shed even one tear for the dead babies of Gaza. For that, he and everyone else who has sided so blatantly with the oppressor instead of the oppressed, will forever be on the wrong side of history.

So don’t look away. Let these images of destruction light a fire within you. It’s never too late to “rage against the machine.”

 
 
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