Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, April
2002, pages 103-104
Book Review
Drinking the Sea at Gaza: Days and Nights in
a Land Under Siege
By Amira Hass, Owl Books, 1999, 379 pp. List: $16; AET: $12.
Reviewed by Jennifer Mitchell
Although Drinking the Sea at Gaza appeared six years ago,
when the Oslo peace process was still sputtering along, this comprehensive
and often heart-wrenching account of life in the Gaza Strip is no
less timely and relevant today. A balanced and thorough depiction
of Gazan society from the late 1980s through the mid-1990s, Drinking
the Sea captures the essence of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict
and its disastrous consequences for the people of Gaza.
Amira Hass began covering Gaza for Ha’aretz after the signing
of the Declaration of Principles in 1993, and soon after became
the first Israeli journalist to live there. She felt immediately
accepted by the people of Gaza and never feared for her safety as
she traveled throughout the Strip, making many friends and visiting
their homes, thus enabling her to overcome prevailing Israeli stereotypes
of Gaza as “savage, violent and hostile to Jews.” Throughout the
book, she expertly blends her encounters with Gaza residents with
a consistently astute analysis, in a style both insightful and captivating.
The book’s 14 chapters are arranged topically rather than chronologically,
allowing Hass to explore distinct aspects of Gazan society in great
depth. While a clearer delineation between the eras of Israeli occupation
and Palestinian self-rule might have been useful, her approach reinforces
the book’s major theme: that Israeli sovereignty over Gaza did not
end with the transfer of authority to the Palestinians in 1994.
Time and again, Hass demonstrates the extent to which Israel still
wields ultimate control over the inhabitants of the Gaza Strip.
Drinking the Sea includes a lucid description of Gazan
politics and the beginnings of the first intifada. While noting
the number of conflicting accounts of that “shaking off” (every
political faction has tried to claim responsibility for it), Hass
clearly leans toward the version in which Gazan union activism in
the 1980s became an increasingly important facet of Palestinian
resistance, helping foster cooperation among competing political
groups, and eventually providing a forum for coordination of activities
once the mass protests began. She provides a detailed analysis of
the struggle for power and popular loyalty by the main political
factions as well as the complex dynamics of the resistance movement.
Resident Gazans and exiled leaders, young activists and elder statesmen,
refugees and old Gazan families may have maintained a sense of unity
to the outside world but fought bitterly among themselves.
Drinking the Sea is most compelling, however, when Hass
abandons the purely political sphere and turns to the lives of “ordinary”
Gazans. A chapter on the diverse interpretations of Islam in Gazan
society and the ways in which political and economic developments
affect popular affiliation with the Islamic factions should destroy
the common assumption that Gaza is a universally fundamentalist
society. A chapter on what has become a “grueling shared rite of
passage” among Palestinian men—serving time in prison—contains almost
unbearable depictions of routine arrests, interrogations and torture;
the severe physical and psychological effects on men and their families;
and the disruptive impact on society at large.
Hass also devotes considerable space to the family sphere. Gazans
tend to marry young and produce large families; often several generations
are crowded under one roof. While this extended familial support
system is essential to survival given the extreme rate of poverty
in the Strip, it also produces a fair amount of tension, as privacy
is nearly non-existent and women in particular feel overshadowed
by their elders. In one of her most haunting chapters, Hass presents
a mosaic of female experiences while emphasizing the frustration
and depression that many women experience due to the lack of autonomy
and forced inferiority that traditional Gazan culture imposes on
them.
Some of the most evocative stories in the book are those of the
refugees of Gaza. Through them, Hass began to see an “invisible
map” of Israel, a “vanished landscape” of villages that no longer
exist. She recounts the 1948 expulsion and flight to Gaza, and the
way in which village structures and traditions were reconstructed
in the crowded camps of Gaza. A number of firsthand accounts demonstrate
that “even if most Gazan refugees are now ready to accept the political
consequences of losing their land, emotionally they will always
see the villages as home.” Throughout, she presents a vivid portrait
of the camps, where conditions are grim and oppressive yet a sense
of life endures: a family pickles olives on their roof, a young
woman writes poetry in her overcrowded house. These contradictions
obviously fascinate Hass, and it is here that her immersion in Gazan
society serves its greatest use.
In Part IV of the book, “Gaza Prison,” Hass turns her attention
to the Israeli policy of closure and its disastrous impact on Gaza.
No Gazan can leave the Strip without an exit permit issued by Israel,
under arbitrary and unclear criteria. Whole categories of people
(single men, for example) are unable to leave at all. When Israel
hermetically seals the Gaza Strip (as it did 18 times between May
1994 and October 1996), all exit permits are canceled. While many
Gazans assumed conditions would improve once self-rule began, the
situation actually grew worse. Israel tightened its borders and
left Palestinian authorities to serve as middlemen between the people
of Gaza and the Israeli civil administration, which continued to
dictate who could and could not leave the Strip.
In three horrifying chapters, Hass focuses on workers, businessmen
and those needing medical care as they try (and often fail) to overcome
the inscrutable bureaucratic obstacles to leaving Gaza. Their experiences
reveal the brute impact the restrictions have on the ability to
provide for one’s family or receive proper health care, and on Gaza’s
attempts at economic development.
More importantly, these chapters demonstrate how Israel has subsumed
the needs of the Palestinians in order to meet its own strategic
goals. In the 1970s and 1980s, Israel encouraged economic integration,
allowing open movement across the border and neglecting investment
in Gazan infrastructure, in order to make future territorial separation
more difficult. In the 1990s, its response to Palestinian resistance
was demographic separation; Palestinians were, in effect, denied
access to the resources they had been made dependent upon (although
Hass notes that this separation was in one direction only, as Israel
still considered Palestinian territory accessible for its own needs).
She dismisses the standard Israeli argument that its closure policy
is dictated solely by security concerns, noting that closure began
before the suicide bombings of 1994-95 and that many of those denied
exit permits could hardly be considered threats (children needing
medical treatment, for example). Instead, she attributes the policy
to Israel’s desire to maintain control over the territories, even
as it negotiated with the Palestinians. She offers a powerful indictment
of Israeli policies that have eliminated freedom of movement of
people and goods and effectively transformed the Gaza Strip into
an enormous prison, in which an entire society endures collective
punishment for the acts of a few.
Hass does not reserve all her condemnation for the Israelis. In
her concluding chapter, she addresses the repressive tactics of
the Palestinian Authority (including interrogation techniques learned
from the Israelis and secret midnight trials) as well as its involvement
in monopolistic deals with Israeli firms to the detriment of smaller
Gazan businesses. She relates the disappointment of many in Gaza
who had believed that the Israeli redeployment meant they no longer
had to fear arbitrary detention, torture, and restrictions on speech
and assembly. That the Palestinian security forces (the largest
employer in Gaza) would treat their own people in such a manner
created great disillusionment regarding the prospects for democratic
rule.
There are few aspects of Gaza that Hass does not explore—although
she does neglect to address how her role as a reporter may have
colored her observations and experiences. Was she accepted in Gazan
society more readily, and never threatened, because she was a journalist,
not just an average Israeli? To what extent were people’s conversations
with her (particularly those of politically minded people) honest
reflections of their feelings and experiences and not tailored for
the Israeli press? Hass may have felt that her journalist status
had negligible effects, but it is an obvious question worth consideration.
Hass notes that, in the long run, the Palestinians will judge
the Oslo accords “by measuring the breadth of their freedom as a
people and as human beings.” As another intifada rages and the Oslo
peace process is consigned to oblivion, her groundbreaking tale
of Gaza continues to inform those who seek understanding of the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict.
Jennifer Mitchell is a free-lance writer and editor based in
Washington, DC. |