As a teenager in the 1980s, I watched the construction of
the intricately designed Rashad al-Shawa Cultural Center in Gaza City, named
after one of Gaza’s greatest public figures, and its theater, grand hall,
public library, printing press and cultural salon.
اضافة اعلان
Students and researchers, scholars and artists from across
the Gaza Strip came to visit it, and so did President Bill Clinton in 1998. The
center was the gem of Gaza City. Watching it being built inspired me to become
an engineer, which led to a career as a professor and, in the footsteps of
al-Shawa, as mayor of Gaza City.
Now that gem is rubble. It was destroyed by Israeli
bombardment.
The Israeli invasion has caused the deaths of more than
20,000 people, according to the Gaza Health Ministry, and destroyed or damaged
about half the buildings in the territory. The Israelis have also pulverized
something else: Gaza City’s cultural riches and municipal institutions.
The unrelenting destruction of Gaza — its iconic symbols,
its beautiful seafront, its libraries and archives and whatever economic
prosperity it had — has broken my heart.
The Gaza Zoo has been destroyed, with many of its animals
killed or starved to death, including wolves, hyenas, birds and rare foxes.
Other casualties include the city’s main public library, the Children’s
Happiness Center, the municipal building and its archive, and the
seventh-century Great Omari Mosque. Israeli forces have also damaged or
destroyed streets, squares, mosques, churches and parks.
One of my major goals after the Hamas administration
appointed me mayor in 2019 was to improve the city’s seafront and foster the
opening of small businesses along it to create jobs. It took us four years to
finish the project, which included a promenade, recreation areas and spaces for
those businesses. It took Israel only weeks to destroy it. Niveen, a divorced
woman I know, was supposed to open a small restaurant in November but her dream
is gone. Mohammed, a disabled Palestinian, lost his small cafe.
Why did the Israeli tanks destroy so many trees, electricity
poles, cars and water mains? Why would Israel hit a U.N. school? The
obliteration of our way of life in Gaza is indescribable. I still feel I am in
a nightmare because I can’t imagine how any sane person could engage in such a
horrific campaign of destruction and death.
The modern municipality of Gaza was established in 1893 and
is one of the oldest in the Middle East. It served about 800,000 people, among
the largest congregations of Palestinians in the world. Even after Israel
forcibly displaced more than one million Palestinians from northern Gaza after
the war began, much of the population in the city remained.
When Israel began its war on Gaza in response to the deadly
attack by Hamas, I was abroad. I cut my tour short to return to help our
people. I head an emergency committee of municipal workers and volunteers, who
have been trying to fix water pipes, open roads and clear disease-causing
sewage and garbage. At least 14 members of our municipal staff have died.
Almost everyone on the committee has lost a home or relative.
I, too, have lost a loved one. Without warning, a direct hit
to my house on Oct. 22 killed my eldest son, Roshdi, a photojournalist and
filmmaker. He thought he would be safer at his parents’ home. It made me wonder
if I could have been the target. We will never know. I buried Roshdi and
quickly returned to work with the emergency committee.
Israel, which began its blockade of Gaza more than 16 years
ago and has maintained what the United Nations and human rights groups call an
ongoing occupation for far longer, is destroying life here. An unnamed Israeli
defense official promised to turn Gaza into a city of tents and Israel has
forcibly displaced its inhabitants. For once, Israel is keeping a promise its
officials made to the Palestinians.
I call on the world’s municipalities — everyone — to
pressure world leaders to stop this mindless destruction.
Why can’t Palestinians be treated equally, like Israelis and
all other peoples in the world? Why can’t we live in peace and have open
borders and free trade? Palestinians deserve to be free and have
self-determination. Gaza’s emblem is the phoenix, which rises from the ashes.
It insists on life.
Yahya R. Sarraj is the mayor of Gaza City and a former
rector of the University College of Applied Sciences there.
This article originally appeared in The
New York Times.
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