The war on Gaza's children
Saree Makdisi, The Los Angeles Times

September 22, 2007
An entire generation of Palestinians in Gaza is
growing up stunted: physically and nutritionally
stunted because they are not getting enough to eat;
emotionally stunted because of the pressures of living
in a virtual prison and facing the constant threat of
destruction and displacement; intellectually and
academically stunted because they cannot concentrate -
or, even if they can, because they are trying to study
and learn in circumstances that no child should have
to endure.
Even before Israel this week declared Gaza "hostile
territory" - apparently in preparation for cutting off
the last remaining supplies of fuel and electricity to
1.5 million men, women and children - the situation
was dire.
As a result of Israel's blockade on most imports and
exports and other policies designed to punish the
populace, about 70% of Gaza's workforce is now
unemployed or without pay, according to the United
Nations, and about 80% of its residents live in
grinding poverty. About 1.2 million of them are now
dependent for their day-to-day survival on food
handouts from U.N. or international agencies, without
which, as the World Food Program's Kirstie Campbell
put it, "they are liable to starve."
An increasing number of Palestinian families in Gaza
are unable to offer their children more than one
meager meal a day, often little more than rice and
boiled lentils. Fresh fruit and vegetables are beyond
the reach of many families. Meat and chicken are
impossibly expensive. Gaza faces the rich waters of
the Mediterranean, but fish is unavailable in its
markets because the Israeli navy has curtailed the
movements of Gaza's fishermen.
Los Angeles parents who have spent the last few weeks
running from one back-to-school sale to another could
do worse than to spare a few minutes to think about
their counterparts in the Gaza Strip. As a result of
the siege, Gaza is not only short of raw textiles and
other key good but also paper, ink and vital school
supplies. One-third of Gaza's children started the
school year missing necessary textbooks. John Ging,
the Gaza director of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency,
whose schools take care of 200,000 children in Gaza,
has warned that children come to school "hungry and
unable to concentrate."
Israel says that its policies in Gaza are designed to
put pressure on the Palestinian population to in turn
put pressure on those who fire crude home-made rockets
from Gaza into the Israeli town of Sderot. Those
rocket attacks are wrong. But it is also wrong to
punish an entire population for the actions of a few -
actions that the schoolchildren of Gaza and their
beleaguered parents are in any case powerless to stop.
It is a violation of international law to collectively
punish more than a million people for something they
did not do. According to the Geneva Convention, to
which it is a signatory, Israel actually has the
obligation to ensure the well-being of the people on
whom it has chosen to impose a military occupation for
more than four decades.
Instead, it has shrugged off the law. It has ignored
the repeated demands of the U.N. Security Council. It
has dismissed the International Court of Justice in
the Hague. What John Dugard, the U.N.'s special
rapporteur on human rights in the occupied
territories, refers to as the "carefully managed"
strangulation of Gaza - in full view of an uncaring
world - is explicitly part of its strategy. "The
idea," said Dov Weisglass, an Israeli government
advisor, "is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but
not make them die of hunger."
Saree Makdisi is a professor of English literature
at UCLA and the author of "Palestine Inside Out: An
Everyday Occupation," forthcoming from Norton.
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Link:
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