“Gaza Writes Back. Short Stories from Young Writers in Gaza, Palestine” is a collection of short stories written in 2014 by fifteen young writers on the experience of being Gazan in the aftermath of the Operation Cast Lead, led by Israel in 2008-2009. Refaat Alareer, who died on the 7th of December 2003, was the book’s editor and I wondered, reading, who else of these young and talented writers also passed away in the recent months, a victim of Israel’s senseless genocidal rampage.
These stories speak of loss and death, pain and suffering, of memories about the loved ones. Some vignettes are simple descriptions of last moments in young people’s lives, some slightly longer ones, more contemplative, talk also about the attachment to land and trees, particularly olive trees.
“To Palestinians, the tree is sacred, and so is the Land bearing it.” and then “Between my father and his Land is an unbreakable bond. Between Palestinians and their Land is an unbreakable bond. By uprooting plants and cutting trees continually, Israel tried to break that bond and impose its own rules of despair on Palestinians. By replanting their trees over and over again, Palestinians are rejecting Israel’s rules. ‘My Land, my rules’, says Dad.” - we read in Sarah Ali’s “The Story of the Land”. In another story, “On a Drop of Rain” by Refaat Alareer, there is a beautiful juxtaposition of the reality of a Palestinian and an Israeli farmer.
Palestinians are a strong nation and many tales address this, like Hanan Habashi’s “L for Life”: “He is a boy who lost his whole family to death but never lost faith in life. I want you to be as strong”. Thinking about pictures and videos of countless Palestinian children traumatised after losing their family members recently, I wonder to how many of them this quote will apply.
The guilt of survivors is present in Rawan Yaghi’s “Spared”: “I started to wonder if the things I am living for are worth dying for”. I wish everyone in the world asked themselves this question more often.
Not all stories in the collection are equally strong but altogether they make a powerful and impactful anthology. These young writers’ voices reverberate to this day.