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I met Mahmoud Amer, I was on my way back to the United States, a month after Israeli border police told me that I was unwanted in my homeland, that I would not be permitted entry.
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Mahmoud is Dead - Mahmoud is Dead
2/1/2003
- Political - Article Ref: IV0302-1848 Number of comments: 4
By: Ramzy Baroud
Iviews* -
Mahmoud Amer Turkman is a friend of mine. He
never spoke a word to me. He couldn't. A bullet left a hole in his throat wide
open. He only gestured, but between his hands and eyes, he could do miracles.
I can testify to that. I wrote about it several times in the past. I wrote about
it in April of last year when I first met Mahmoud. He was jammed with several
other Palestinians in a Jordanian hospital room. He, and one other young man
were the only wounded from the Jenin refugee camp that were allowed to leave the
Occupied Territories. The distance between Jenin and Amman is a few hours drive.
But it took Mahmud 22 days to finally reach his destination. His resilient
ambulance driver carried him from a tiny Jericho clinic in the West Bank to the
West Bank's border with Jordan, now controlled by Israel, 22 times. Each time,
the Israelis would interrogate Mahmoud. He had nothing to say. Finally he was
allowed entry.
He arrived to Jordan after he had lost half of his body weight, waiting at the
border. He slept on his hospital bed, light as a feather, lost in what seemed to
be a massive hospital gown.
I also wrote about Mahmoud then, appealing to the world to help him. His doctors
said that the bullet had destroyed much of his lungs, broke its way to his back
and left him completely paralyzed. They said that advanced medical technology in
Europe would help save his life. Mahmoud and his family waited to hear from me.
They prayed for a miracle, for a living conscience. I had nothing for them, but
my own prayers.
When I met Mahmoud Amer, I was on my way back to the United States, a month
after Israeli border police told me that I was unwanted in my homeland, that I
would not be permitted entry. It had been a month of almost daily trips to the
border when I decided to go back to the States.
Only two weeks had passed since the Israeli invasion of Jenin, in early April
2002. The purpose of my West Bank trip was to conduct an eyewitness enquiry into
the atrocities reported there. I was motivated by my worries that the Jenin
story might never be told in the way it ought to, by the victims. I waited at
the border as I watched many ambulances from the West Bank, carrying wounded
Palestinians, all being ordered to return, amid screams of pain and pleas from
ambulance drivers.
Before I boarded my plane back to Seattle, I stopped for a brief visit to the
hospital ward where wounded Palestinians were kept. I waited in a long line.
There were several officials representing various Arab governments who were
ahead of me. A few journalists escorted them. Luckily, their visits to the
Palestinian wards didn't last for long. There were clearly there for the photo
opportunity. The wounded youth were little impressed.
Strangely, for me, it felt like home. A man from Balata refugee camp, with explosive
bullets in his chest bombarded me with a flood of jokes about the people of
Gaza. I am from Gaza, so I wouldn't let it slide. "Did you know about the
man from Balata who was invited to a wedding?" I rebutted. I finished my
joke and was hit by another, from a wounded boy from Hebron in the other side of
the room. This gave me even more room to fight back. I was sitting near
Mahmoud's bed. My journalistic mission was overshadowed by the laughter of the
wounded. "Mahmoud has just smiled," his brother cheered. Others felt
inspired that he might even soon eat without the help of tubes. Others went as
far as predicting that the young man would one day talk.
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Mahmoud was wounded in early March 2002, while defending his camp. He was shot
twice, once in the foot, and the second in the throat. Between both injuries
there were two days. Mahmoud snuck out of the house to fight for Jenin with a
bullet in his foot, only to be shot again with a bullet that would paralyze him.
I told Mahmoud about my Jenin book and he listened. It mattered a great deal to
him that the story of his camp would be detailed, for the world to see. He too
had a mission, "I want to get well so that I can go back and defend Jenin",
he wrote. Mahmoud had no political affiliations. He left school to help his
ailing father take care of the remaining children of the family. During the
invasion, his home was demolished.
I left the hospital wishing I possessed the courage of that young man. I too
vowed to put up a fight. I also wrote about this, just a few days ago. I wrote,
"Tomorrow, I intend to call Mahmoud. I will tell him that "Searching
Jenin", the "important book" I told him about during my visit,
was published. I will tell him that the voices of the victims have finally
escaped the Israeli censurer; that the faces, the images, the numbers and the
stories will finally be told, that thanks to his inspiration, Palestinians are
no longer standing on the periphery, praying that others will narrate their
plight. Now, they will convey the stories themselves, the way they ought
to."
I did fulfill my promise, and called the next day. I had the book on one hand,
ready to translate parts of the chapter where I detail my encounter with him in
Amman. Yet, on that same morning, Mahmoud died in a decrepit hospital in Jenin.
His family had given up on getting Mahmoud the medical attention he deserved.
All they hoped for was to get him to a Ramallah hospital. Israeli army
blockades, however, even snuffed out this simple wish.
I wish I could say that Mahmoud died with a smile on his face. He didn't. He was
in so much pain. Moments after his death, hundreds of people broke the siege and
rushed to his family's home. They cried, chanted and wrote Mahmoud's name over
the walls of the camp: "Jenin mourns its latest martyr, Mahmoud Amr Turkman."
On that same day, Jenin witnessed a battle that lasted for 12 hours, between
Palestinian fighters from the camp and a large number of Israeli troops, tanks
and Apache helicopters who attacked the camp looking for activists, listed on
their endless list of "wanted" Palestinians. The Israeli army was
forced to retreat, however. Hours later Jenin celebrated its victory and buried
its fallen hero. A mix of chants occupied the misty air of the demolished
refugee camp, chanting for 22-year-old Mahmoud, promising him to continue the
fight for his sake and for the sake of their long-awaited freedom.
*Baroud is editor of "Searching
Jenin: Eyewitness Accounts of the Israeli Invasion 2002". The book is now
available online: www.palestinebooks.com.
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