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THE STRONGEST WEAPON OF ALL

Kathy Kelly - Co-Coordinator of Voices for Creative Nonviolence

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Dr. Atallah Tarazi, a General Surgeon at Gaza City's Shifaa Hospital,  invited us to meet him in his home, in Gaza City, just a few blocks  away from the Shifaa Hospital.

Early this morning, he and his family returned to their home after  having fled five days earlier when the bombing attacks on Gaza City  had become so fierce that they feared for their lives. "Believe me,  when I would drive from the hospital to the place where my family was  staying, I prayed all the way," said Dr. Tarazi, "because the Israelis  would shoot anyone on the roads at night."

Dr. Tarzi has been practicing medicine as a General Surgeon all of his  adult life. Now, at age 61, he says he has never seen such terrible  and ugly wounds as he saw during the past three weeks when he and a  surgical team tried to help numerous patients with broken limbs,  shrapnel wounds, and severe burns. Neurosurgeons, vascular surgeons,  orthopedic and general surgeons worked together on patients, as a  team, trying to save them, but there were many whose lives they  couldn't save. He described patients with shrapnel wounds in their  eyes, faces, chests, and abdomens, patients whose legs were amputated  above the lower limbs. Most, he said, were civilians.

"These are strange ways of destroying the human body," said Dr.  Tarazi. "Please, come tomorrow to the Burn Unit, and you will see  patients suffering from the use of white phosphorous."

Dr. Tarazi said that he began to understand the extent of the trauma  and danger by listening to the stories of wounded and injured  patients.

"Some were sitting in their houses when a tank bomb hit them. They  didn't know what happened to them," said Dr. Attalah. "Survivors  would reach the hospital after many of their relatives had been  killed."

Patients from Beit Lahia told him that in one home, an extended family  of 25 people had been attacked while inside their home. When  relatives came to help them, Israeli snipers shot eight of them. Many  of the wounded were left to die. Ambulances and Red Cross relief  workers weren't allowed to enter the area.

At one point, Israel announced a lull in the fighting, but then bombed  the Palestine Square, near the municipal offices. Four people came to  the hospital, severely injured. "We couldn't save them," said Dr.  Tarazi. "Seven others were injured, and they survived."

"In Gaza City, all of the important buildings necessary for  maintaining a city have been bombed," said Dr. Tarazi. "From  ministries to civilian police stations, all have been destroyed. Some  were Hamas buildings, but not all."

We had just walked through the area where the buildings housing  ministries of justice, education, and culture were completely  destroyed. Driving into Gaza City we saw mosques, factories, houses  and schools reduced to rubble. We asked Dr. Tarazi to tell us why, in  his opinion, the Israelis had attacked Gaza so fiercely.

He believes that the attacks are essentially irrational but that a  main cause for the timing and the magnitude of these attacks is that  certain Israeli candidates for upcoming elections want to assure the  Israeli public that they are willing to use military force to insure  security for Israelis. "Palestinians all the time pay the taxes in  blood," said Dr. Tarazi.

"One of the worst aspects of this war," says Dr. Tarazi, "is the lack  of respect for the UN. Three United Nations Relief and Works Agency  (UNRWA) schools were bombed. In Jabaliyah, more than 45 people were  killed at a UN school; F16s bombed UNRWA supplies and stores."

"In Shifaa Hospital, we saw plumes of smoke for day and night. All  Gaza, every day, was covered with smoke and chemicals. We don't know  how it affects the health."

"Yes, 'rocklets' did go out," says Dr. Tarazi, referring to Hamas  rockets fired into Israeli towns, "and we felt sympathy for any  Israelis hurt by the rocklets. But, if someone hurts you with a pin,  you don't cut off his head. You ask WHY the person tried to prick you  with a pin. Consider that people here are trapped in a prison and  there is a shortage of everything. No one can repair anything.  People wanted borders opened so that goods could come and go. After  six months of closed borders, people are frustrated. Now, one side  declares a cease fire, they say nothing about opening the borders,  nothing about withdrawal, and yet they want NATO to help tighten the  siege."

"I hope President Obama will be much better than George Bush  concerning these things," said Dr. Tarazi. "Human beings that have  such a strong army should be civilized and not behave like a terrorist  group. Fanatics can be expected to use terror, but a democratic state  shouldn't use fallacious statements as an excuse for massive killing.  A state which does this should be brought before an International  Court of Justice."

"And yet," he said, "we must experiment with ways of love. We are  trying, with Jewish people…by feelings and actions. We need to  succeed. We need to live together. We are trying to be in good  relations with all the partners, all the views."

"The strongest weapon all over the world is love," says Dr. Tarazi,  adding that he has always believed this and has said this to his  colleagues, whether Muslim, Christian or Jewish, throughout his  career. He recalled declaring this same belief at the Eretz border  crossing, shortly after the Israelis launched "Operation Cast Lead."  He had been among the 200 Christians who were chosen (800 had applied)  to cross the border and celebrate the Orthodox Christmas holiday with  family members in the West Bank. When the attacks began, he ended his  holiday and hurried to the border, knowing he must return to his work  and his family. At the border crossing, he greeted soldiers, "Merry  Christmas." Soldiers answered, "Do you have weapons?" "Yes," Dr.  Tarazi replied, "I have the strongest weapon of all, the weapon of  love."

Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative  Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org) She and Audrey Stewart are writing from  Gaza.

Voices for Creative Nonviolence

1249 W Argyle Street #2, Chicago, IL 60640

Phone: (773) 878-3815

E-mail: info@vcnv.org

web: www.vcnv.org

Source: Nuclear Disarmament Party

www.nucleardisarmament.org/news.cfm