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<font size="1"><a href="https://english.palinfo.com/articles/2020/4/6/A-Palestinian-guide-to-surviving-a-quarantine">https://english.palinfo.com/articles/2020/4/6/A-Palestinian-guide-to-surviving-a-quarantine</a>
</font><h1 class="gmail-reader-title">A Palestinian guide to surviving a quarantine</h1>
<div class="gmail-credits gmail-reader-credits">By Ramzi Baroud - April 6, 2020<br></div>
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Call it a ‘quarantine’, a ‘shelter-in-place’, a ‘lockdown’ or a
‘curfew’, we Palestinians have experienced them all, though not at all
voluntarily.<p>
Personally, the first 23 years of my life were lived in virtual
‘lockdown’. My father’s ‘quarantine’ was experienced much earlier, as
did his father’s ‘shelter-in-place’ before him. They both died and were
buried in Gaza’s cemeteries without ever experiencing true freedom
outside of their refugee camp in Gaza.</p><p>
Currently in Gaza, the quarantine has a different name. We call it ‘siege’, also known as ‘blockade’.</p><p>
In fact, all of Palestine has been in a state of ‘lockdown’ since the
late 1940s when Israel became a state and the Palestinian homeland was
erased by Zionist colonialists with the support of their Western
benefactors.</p><p>
That lockdown intensified in 1967 when Israel, now a powerful state with
a large army and strong allies, occupied the remaining parts of
Palestine – East Jerusalem, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.</p><p>
Under this lockdown, the Palestinian freedom of movement was curtailed
to the extent that Palestinians required permits from the Israeli
military to leave the Occupied Territories or to return home, to move
about from one town to the other, and, at times, to cross a single
Israeli military checkpoint or a fortified wall.</p><p>
In Palestine, we don’t call our imprisonment a lockdown, but a ‘military occupation’ and ‘apartheid’.</p><p>
As for ‘shelter-in-place’, in Palestine, we have a different name for it. We call it a ‘military curfew’.</p><p>
Since I was a child, I learned to listen intently to orders barked out
by Israeli military officers as they swept through our refugee camp in
Gaza declaring or easing military curfews. This ritual often happened
late at night.</p><p>
“People of Nuseirat, per orders of the Israeli military you are now
under curfew. Anyone who violates orders will be shot immediately,” the
terrifying words, always communicated through a loudspeaker in broken
Arabic, were a staple during the First Palestinian Uprising (Intifada)
of 1987.</p><p>
The period between 1987 to 1993 was a virtual ‘lockdown’. Thousands of
people, mostly children, were killed for failing to respect the rules of
their collective imprisonment.</p><p>
In Gaza, even when a full military curfew was not in place, we rarely
left our small and crowded neighborhoods, let alone our refugee camps.
We were all haunted by the fear that we may not be able to make it home
by 8p.m., the time designated by the Israeli military for all of us to
return home.</p><p>
Every day, ten or fifteen minutes after the nightly curfew set in, we
would hear the crackling and hissing of bullets as they whistled through
the air from various distances. Automatically, we would conclude that
some poor soul – a worker, a teacher, or a rowdy teenager – missed his
chance by a few minutes, and paid a price for it.</p><p>
Now that nearly half of the population of planet Earth are experiencing
some form of ‘curfew’ or another, I would like to share a few
suggestions on how to survive the prolonged confinement, the Palestinian
way.</p><p>
<strong>Think Ahead</strong><br>
Since we knew that a complete lockdown, or a military curfew, was always
pending, we tried to anticipate the intensity and duration of it and
prepare accordingly.</p><p>
For example, when the Israeli army killed one or more refugees, we knew
in advance that mass protests would follow, thus more killings. In these
situations, a curfew was imminent.</p><p>
Number one priority was to ensure that all family members congregated at
home or stayed within close proximity so that they could rush in as
fast as possible when the caravan of Israeli military jeeps and tanks
came thundering, opening fire at anyone or anything within sight.</p><p>
Lesson number one: Always think ahead and prepare for a longer lockdown than the initial one declared by your city or state. </p><p>
<strong>Stay Calm</strong><br>
My father had a bad temper, although a very kind heart. When curfews
were about to start, he would enter into a near-panic state. A chain
smoker with obsessive, although rational fear that one of his five boys
would eventually be killed, he would walk around the house in a useless
rush, not knowing what to do next.</p><p>
Typically, my mother would come in, rational and calculating. She would
storm the kitchen to assess what basic supplies were missing, starting
with the flour, sugar and olive oil.</p><p>
Knowing that the first crackdown by the Israelis would be on water
supplies and electricity, she would fill several plastic containers of
water, designating some for tea, coffee and cooking, and others for
dishes and washing clothes.</p><p>
Per her orders, we would rush to the nearby stores to make small but
necessary purchases – batteries for the flashlight and the transistor
radio, cigarettes for my dad, and a few VHS videotapes which we would
watch over and again, whether the curfew lasted for a few days or a few
weeks.</p><p>
Lesson number two: Take control of the situation – do not panic – and
assign specific responsibilities to every family member. This
strengthens the family unit and sets the stage for collective solidarity
desperately required under these circumstances.</p><p>
<strong>Preserve Your Water</strong><br>
I cannot emphasize this enough. Even if you think that a water crisis is not impending, do not take chances.</p><p>
It is easy to feel invincible and fully prepared on the first day of
quarantine – or military curfew. Many times, we lived to regret that
false sense of readiness, as we drank too much tea or squandered our
dishwashing water supplies too quickly.</p><p>
In this case, you have a serious problem, especially during the summer
months when you cannot count on rainwater to make up for the deficit.</p><p>
Years after the end of the Intifada, my father revealed to us that many a
time, him and mom used the rainwater they collected in buckets
throughout the house, including the leaked roofs for our drinking
supplies, even when there was no electricity or gas to boil the water
beforehand.</p><p>
In retrospect, this explains the many bouts of diarrhea we experienced,
despite his assurances that they had painstakingly removed all bird
droppings from the salvaged water.</p><p>
Lesson number three: Cautiously use your water supplies during a
quarantine, and never, under any circumstance, drink rainwater or, at
least, keep diarrhea pills handy. </p><p>
<strong>Ration Your Food</strong><br>
The same logic that applies to water applies to food. It goes without
saying that any acquired food would have to cover the basics first. For
example, flour, which we used to make bread, comes before bananas, and
sugar, which we consumed abundantly with tea, comes before Dutch candy.</p><p>
I made that mistake more than once, not because of my love for the
imported Dutch candy which we purchased from Abu Sa’dad’s store, located
in the center of the camp. The truth is, my brothers and I played a
strange form of candy poker which kept us entertained for many hours. I
dreaded running out of my precious supplies before the curfew was over,
thus subjugating myself to potential humiliation of having to auction
everything else I owned – including my small radio – to stay in the
game.</p><p>
My poor mother was devastated numerous times by the horrible choices we made when we rushed to buy ‘essentials’.</p><p>
Lesson number four: Agree in advance on what classifies as ‘essential
food’, and consume your food in a rational way. Also, if you are lucky
enough to locate Dutch candy in whatever version of the Abu Sa’dad’s
store, in your town, do not gamble it all in one day. </p><p>
<strong>Find Sources of Entertainment</strong><br>
If electricity is still available, then you still have the option of
watching television. For us, Indian movies, especially those starring
Amitabh Bachchan, were the number one option. Imagine my disappointment
when our beloved movie star, who helped us through numerous military
curfews in Gaza, was photographed grinning with right-wing Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the latter’s visit to India in 2018.</p><p>
If electricity is cut off, be ready with alternative options: books,
free wrestling, living-room soccer (with the ball preferably made from
stuffed-up socks contributed by all family members), and, of course,
candy poker.</p><p>
Lesson number five: The key is to have more than one form of
entertainment and to be prepared for every eventuality, including power
outages as a form of collective punishment. </p><p>
<strong>Find the Humor in Grim Situations</strong><br>
Don’t focus on the negatives; there is no point or wisdom in that.
Emphasizing the grimness of a situation can only contribute to the
feeling of defeat and powerlessness that are already generated by the
lockdown. There will be plenty of time in which you can look back,
reflect, and even bemoan your unfortunate circumstance.</p><p>
But, during the curfew itself is when you actually need your sense of
humor most. Take things lightly – laugh at your miserable situation, if
you must. Forgive yourself for not being perfect, for panicking when you
should have been composed, or for forcing your younger brother to
gamble his underwear when he runs out of Dutch candy.</p><p>
Difficult situations can offer the kind of scenarios that can be
interpreted in two extreme ways: either extremely tragic or extremely
funny; opt for the latter whenever you can, because as long as you
laugh, as long as your spirit remains unbroken, your humanity remains
intact.</p><p>
Lesson number six: Be funny, don’t take life too seriously, share a
laugh with others, and let humor inject hope in every hour and every day
of your quarantine.</p><p>
<strong>Hold Tighter to Your Faith</strong><br>
Whether you are Muslim, Christian, Jewish, or any other faith; whether
you are an atheist, agnostic, or practice any form of spirituality,
philosophy or belief system, find comfort in your faith and beliefs.</p><p>
Since all mosques in our refugee camp were shut down, if not raided
during a military curfew, the call for prayer, which we heard five times
during each day, was permanently silenced.</p><p>
To keep the call for prayer going, we would sneak to the roof of our
houses, carefully scan the area for any Israeli soldiers, and
collectively make the call for prayer whenever it was required.
Volunteers included my English teacher, who was communist and claimed
that he did not believe in God, myself, and Nabil, the neighbor boy with
the massive head and the most unpleasant voice.</p><p>
In curfews, we developed a different relationship with God: He became a
personal and more intimate companion, as we often prayed in total
darkness, whispered our verses so very cautiously as not to be heard by
pesky soldiers. And, even those who hardly prayed before the curfew kept
up with all five prayers during the lockdown.</p><p>
Lesson number seven: Let your values guide you during your hours of
loneliness. And if you volunteer to make a call for prayer (or recite
your religious hymns) please be honest with yourself: if you have no
sense of rhythm or if your voice has the pitch of an angry alley cat,
for God’s sake, leave the job to someone else.</p><p>
<strong>In Conclusion ..</strong><br>
I hope that under no circumstances you will ever hear these ominous
words: “You are now under curfew. Anyone who violates orders will be
shot immediately.” I also hope that this COVID-19 quarantine will make
us kinder to each other and will make us emerge from our homes better
people, ready to take on global challenges while united in our common
faith, collective pain and a renewed sense of love for our environment.</p><p>
And when it’s all over, think of Palestine, for her people have been ‘quarantined’ for 71 years and counting.</p><p>
<em>- Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and editor of Palestine
Chronicle. He has authored a number of books on the Palestinian struggle
including ‘The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story’. Baroud has a Ph.D. in
Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter and is a Non-Resident
Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and International Studies,
University of California Santa Barbara.</em></p></div></div>
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