Further | Soul Of My Soul: How Many Dead Palestinians Are Enough | Opinion

Harrowing headlines still spew from Gaza: They have run out of body bags, 96% 
of children feel their death is imminent, it is the worst slaughter of 
civilians in history, everyone is starving. Last week, an "icon of Gazan 
suffering" was killed, like his toddler grandchildren before him, by "the most 
evil army on earth.” And a year after the murder of poet and teacher Refaat 
Alareer, his posthumous writings were released. Its searing, plaintive thesis: 
"If I must die/Let it bring hope."
Still, hope is scant. The death toll has passed 45,000, two thirds of whom are 
women and children, many (unfathomably, still) shot in the head and chest by 
Israeli snipers. Also killed are at least 1,000 health workers, 200 
journalists, many hundreds of teachers and writers, a people's torchbearers. 
Health care and homes are decimated, Israel's brutal blockade has left most 
Gazans without power or water and starving or at least hungry, nearly 107,000 
have been wounded or maimed, untold thousands of dead remain rotting under 
rubble. Almost a year after international jurists declared Israel is committing 
genocide - ungodly news an indifferent world met with thunderous silence - 
Amnesty Internationalhas just released a meticulously detailed, 300-page report 
confirming that yes, it is. They added, "Month after month, Israel has treated 
Palestinians in Gaza as a subhuman group unworthy of human rights and dignity."
Despite their ongoing, perversely preposterous claims of trying really hard not 
to kill civilians, from Oct. 8, 2023 onward Israel's war against a trapped, 
traumatized population has been "by all measures and standards a 'war' against 
civilians, a war of depopulation, with no precedents in this century," 
according to U.K-based watchdog Airwars, which tracks civilian harm from aerial 
bombardment. During its first month, an Airwars report found harm to civilians 
"incomparable with any 21st century air campaign," with the rate of killings of 
thousands of civilians, children and entire families at home three to seven 
times higher than any earlier documented war. Amidst the vast carnage, 96% of 
children reportedly feel "their death is imminent" in "one of the most 
horrifying places in the world to be a child." And from ravaged northern Gaza, 
Palestinian journalist Hossam Sabath imparted the sickening news, "We have run 
out of body bags to bury the dead."
In the face of Israel's "voluminous crimes against humanity," the Biden 
administration isobscenely still sending money and weapons to Israel - to date, 
a record $17.9 billion, with another $20 billion in killing machines approved 
in August - despite widespread outrage. More shame: Despite the international 
Doctors Without Borders regularly mourning and celebrating its lost colleagues 
- with the dark reminder that, "Nowhere in Gaza is safe" - and a handful of 
U.S. doctors volunteering in and speaking up for Gaza, America's medical 
establishment has remained largely, willfully silent about the bloodshed. The 
prestigious New England Journal of Medicine, having finally apologized for its 
longstanding silence about the Nazi holocaust in a new “Recognizing Historical 
Injustices in Medicine series, has not published a single article about the 
devastation in Gaza; nor has it mentioned the words genocide, blockade or 
Occupation.
With pro-Zionist repression sweeping even the art world - funding lost, 
exhibitions cancelled, "sensitivity reviews" of Muslim artists - a group of 
Palestinians in Palestine and the U.S. have filed the first lawsuit against 
Biden's State Department for breaking domestic human rights law. The suit 
accuses State of circumventing the decades-old Leahy Law, which bars U.S. 
military aid to forces "credibly implicated" in war crimes, to continue funding 
Israel's genocide despite its "overwhelming record of gross violations of human 
rights." Arguing the agency has adopted "arbitrary and capricious" standards - 
"The rules were different for Israel" - the suit charges State with embracing a 
"See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil" approach that ignores Israel's 
countless crimes in defiance of the Leahy Law." For final proof, the suit, 
backed by multiple former State Department officials, notes that no Israeli 
unit has ever been deemed ineligible for aid.
America's complicity, it turns out, doesn't stop there. Writing for Drop Site 
News, two journalists uncovered both a "Ghost Unit" of snipers inside Gaza 
that's allegedly killed over 100 people - and boasted they set a long-distance 
record by "neutralizing" a "terrorist" from 1.26 kilometers away - but a U.S, 
tax-exempt Friends of Paratrooper Sniper Unit 202 that has raised over $300,000 
to buy vests, silencers, stands etc "for the overall welfare of soldiers," part 
of broader Israeli fundraising that includes the $100-million-a-year Friends of 
the IDF. "Your support allowed us to get my son and his elite sniper unit the 
most advanced scopes (to) have an advantage over Hamas," wrote the mother of a 
unit member from Illinois, helping them "to go into battle (and) come home 
safely." The unit posted her thanks, also three grainy videos of civilian 
executions with, “When they meet the 202nd battalion, they are going to regret 
being born.”
Many Gazans, of course, already do. Hossam Shabat, a rare surviving journalist 
in northern Gaza, documents in grim detail a recent, hours-long "death march," 
a mass expulsion from Beit Lahia under heavy artillery shelling and gunfire. 
Shabat, displaced over 20 times while seeing countless colleagues killed before 
him, describes dust-covered, tear-streaked children running panicked as 
warplanes roar overhead. When some pleaded for water, the Israeli soldiers 
corralling them laughed, instead tauntingly pouring water on the ground. When 
soldiers detained the fathers in the crowd, their kids screamed in terror, 
clinging to Israeli tanks that could take them away. A 16-year-old girl and her 
sister, sole survivors of an earlier airstrike that killed 70, walked until the 
sister was hit and fell, blood pouring from her. When no help came, the girl 
left her there: "I was screaming, but no one heard me."
Aid workers also chronicle the anguish - many thousands of small orphans left 
to fend for themselves, children wracked by nightmares reflecting "a mental 
health catastrophe (of) multigenerational trauma that will endure for decades," 
weary, gaunt ghosts of adults numbly "waiting for what comes next." "People are 
waiting, full of agony, holding on to some small hope," says one. "We are dying 
slowly." Even amidst so much grief and horror, some losses strike especially 
deep. On Monday, an Israeli airstrike on Nuseirat refugee camp killed Khaled 
Nabhan, a "righteous" 54-year-old grandfather murdered 14 months after he 
became "an icon of Gaza's suffering" when he was filmed tearfully kissing 
goodbye his bloodied, beloved granddaughter Reem, three, calling her "soul of 
my soul." Reem died in another strike at Nuseirat that also killed her brother 
Tarek, five; all three were killed by what Omar Suleiman called "the most evil 
army on earth."
After his grandchildren died, Nabhan, known as "Abu Diaa," became "a one-man 
relief agency." Despite his pain, he spent the year "spreading hope" to others 
hungry, hurting, traumatized. He collected tents, toys, food, clothing; he 
helped rescuers and medics care for injured Gazans, particularly children; he 
fed stray cats, played with his surviving grandkids, took care of his elderly 
mother, and worked as a laborer when he could. His son Diaa: "He starved 
himself to make sure we had enough food.” His daughter Maysa, mother of Reem 
and Tarek, said it was her father who daily comforted her after their deaths: 
"He was everything to us. He held this family together...Even when the bombs 
were falling, he made us feel safe." Seeking solace, many of those bitterly 
grieving Nabhan's loss prayed that he and Reem would now be reunited "in the 
realm of souls where the wickedness of this so-called humanity will no longer 
reach them."
Last week, the anniversary of another painful death was marked with the 
posthumous release of “If I Must Die,” a collection of poetry and prose by 
esteemed teacher, writer and mentor Refaat Alareer, killed last Dec. 6 at 46 in 
a "surgical" airstrike that hit only his sister's apartment where he sheltered 
with family; the blast also killed his brother, his brother’s son, his sister 
and her three children. Proceeds from the book of reportage, essays, poems and 
interviews during the last decade of Alareer's life will go to his surviving 
family. Published by OR Books, it's "an oral history that reads like an epic 
poem," a "poetry of witness" serving as "evidence of what occurred," a grim 
chronicle of Occupation in "granular, human terms" told by "a man of his 
people" in "writing born of fire" - often in English, to reach a wider 
audience. It was compiled by student and colleague Yousef Aljamal, who calls 
Alareer "the giant of the Palestinian narrative."
Born in Shuja’iyya, a neighborhood with a history of fierce resistance to the 
occupation, Alareer grew up amidst its violence and his grandmother's stories 
of the Nakba. As a first-grader, he was struck in the head by a stone thrown by 
an Israeli soldier "smiling ear to ear"; four years later, he was shot by a 
rubber bullet for throwing stones; over time, he saw relatives killed or 
maimed. Educated at home and abroad, he taught literature at Gaza's Islamic 
University, often mentoring young writers; after Israel's brutal response to 
the peaceful Great March of Return, he became a sort of "peoples historian," 
editing and contributing to the anthologies Gaza Writes Back and Gaza 
Unsilenced. He also helped start We Are Not Numbers to chronicle Gazans' 
collective struggles against dispossession. Always, he believed in the power of 
storytelling: "As a Palestinian, I have been brought up on stories. It's both 
selfish and treacherous to keep a story to yourself."
He taught his students Edward Said, Virginia Woolf, The Merchant of Venice; 
revisiting Robinson Crusoe, he was struck by the likeness of Friday's story to 
that of Palestinians, told by "a self-appointed, colonial (master) assuming 
ownership of a land that was not his," and he fought for his people's right to 
narrate their own experiences and history. Daring to imagine a free Palestine 
but "chillingly prescient," he saw genocide unfold, his kids go hungry, Gaza 
become "an "extermination camp." His lastpoemIf I Must Die, to his daughter 
Shymaa - “If I die/ you must live/ to tell my story...Let it bring hope/ Let it 
be a tale" - went around the world, especially after Shymaa was killed along 
with her husband and baby. As "a small measure of justice," Drop Site has been 
working to publicize Refaat’s book, to "let it fly (like) a kite (and) keep 
alive hope for a better world." "When will this pass?" Alareer asked as he 
watched Gaza destroyed. "How many dead Palestinians are enough?" Still, he 
wrote, "We have no choice but to fight back and tell her stories. For 
Palestine."
Abby Zimet


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