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life in Gaza
The photograph by Mustafa Hassouna that made Aed Abu Amro an instant
icon.Anadolu Agency
Huwaida Arraf
✔@huwaidaarraf
A’ed Abu Amro, of this iconic photo, was one of at least 21 reportedly shot by
Israeli snipers today in #Gaza, while participating in a demonstration in support of
a Palestinian Freedom Ship that set sail to challenge Israel’s naval blockade.
#Flotilla #Palestine
160
3:34 PM - Nov 5, 2018
Then on 23 November back at the fence east of Gaza City, Aed was shot again,
this time in his right leg, and this time more seriously.
Doctors told him he had been struck by a so-called butterfly bullet, a projectile
that opens up on impact for maximum effect.
The bullet caused severe damage to his knee and other bones in his leg, leaving
him unable to move his toes and in need of constant pain medication.
It forced him to stop going to the protests.
It also forced him to stop going to the gym.
The perfect body
The gym was Aed’s escape and his hobby. One of six siblings, five of whom still
live at home in the al-Zaytoun neighborhood of Gaza City, he has devoted many
hours to building his physique and getting away from his family’s crowded home.
Aed competed successfully in competitions in the 55 kg (121 lb) bodybuilding
weight category in local gyms, most recently in July 2018.
“I was the best bodybuilder in the East Gaza region at 55 kg. I was preparing
myself for the Gaza Strip bodybuilding championship on 26 November. But then I
was wounded.”
The injury has been extensive. The white stabilizers on his leg are due to come off
at any time now, but he still needs surgery on tendons in his toes, as well as a
knee operation.
When he is recovered, he said, he wants to return to the protests. But his father is
ambivalent.
“I can’t prevent Aed from going to the protests,” Jamal, 48, told The Electronic
Intifada. “He is badly affected by the siege and the poverty, he wants to express
his anger at the repression he has suffered since birth in our occupied society.”
The photo of Aed Abu Amro has been compared to this 1830 painting by Eugene
Delacroix, “Liberty Leading the People.”
Wikicommons
Jamal, who is unemployed and relies on the wages his five sons occasionally bring
back from jobs in factories or elsewhere, said he hoped Aed – who used to work
in a cigarette stall not far from home – would return to his sport.
“I believe sport can send a message to the world, that Aed can have an impact if
he is a distinguished athlete representing Palestine in foreign competitions.”
For now, however, the focus is on the necessities. For months, Jamal said, he has
been trying to secure painkillers, antibiotics and antibacterial soap for Aed, scarce
commodities in Gaza, where all imports are under severe Israeli restrictions.
He has had to borrow money to buy medicine, he said, and has reached out to
various charities to help him secure more.
A life under occupation
Aed has known only occupation, blockade and war. Born in 1999, he lived through
the second intifada and three all-out Israeli military assaults on Gaza, as well as
the 12-year Israeli-enforced blockade that has left Gaza on the brink of a
humanitarian catastrophe.
He was 15 during the last war on Gaza in 2014. The family had to evacuate their
home after a number of houses near them were bombed. When they returned,
he learned that his friend and contemporary Fayez Yasin had been killed.
“I used to ask my dad when I was young: ‘Why do they kill children and women?
Why do their airplanes launch rockets instead of flying as normal planes?’” Aed
told The Electronic Intifada. “I didn’t imagine that when I grew up I would still live
with occupation, blockade and the theft of Palestinian land.”
He is puzzled too by what he read in Israeli papers, especially in the comment
sections under articles, after his photo went viral.
“People called me a terrorist! I can’t remember a day when we didn’t have an
electricity blackout. I’ve watched dozens of people killed, including friends. I’ve
seen whole neighborhoods destroyed. And people called me a terrorist!”
These days, Aed spends most of his time with two close friends, Mahmoud Abu
Marsa and Ahmad Bahlool, both 20, and like Aed unemployed. All are desperate
for a better life.
“I am proud of him,” Abu Marsa told The Electronic Intifada. “He represents the
youth of Gaza, all of us who grew up with wars and a siege that has deprived us of
any decent opportunities.”
He is missed at the protests, Abu Marsa said. Bahlool said Aed was always the
strongest and boldest, willing and able to retrieve and carry the wounded to
safety.
Bahlool is convinced that Aed was deliberately targeted after the photo went
viral.
“The occupation wanted to say: ‘You aren’t a hero.’ But what people don’t see is
that behind this photo, Aed is just a 20-year-old who is fed up with waiting. We
love life. We want to live a decent life.”