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Israel-Palestine-Jordan
No room for more graves in Gaza cemeteries
2009-01-13
Abdul Raheem Hawila's 16-year-old nephew, Ishmail, was killed by Israeli shells near his home in Jabaliya in northern Gaza. The boy should have been buried in the spacious Eastern cemetery outside Gaza City, but the presence of Israeli troops made it impossible. Instead, he had to be buried in an old cemetery that was filled and closed many years ago.

“There was no room in the old cemetery. We had to bury him on top of his grandfather who died 25 years ago,” said Mr Hawila. “Moreover we could find no cement or tiles to re-cover the grave. We didn't even open a mourning house.”

To the traumatised Palestinians of the Gaza Strip it is bad enough that their friends and relatives are being killed in such numbers - more than 900 at the last count. What is worse is that they can no longer give them proper funerals. In northern Gaza, because the Eastern cemetery is no longer accessible, the bereaved are having to search for plots between the existing graves in the older, full-up cemeteries to bury their loved ones, or to reopen and reuse the graves of their forebears.

Mr Hawila said that in Jabaliya there had been instances where several children from different families were buried in one mass grave. Islam decrees that the dead should be buried as soon as possible, but the Israeli bombardment makes delays inevitable.

Palestinian families also open their homes and erect tents for as many as three days of mourning, during which they welcome and feed hundreds, sometimes thousands, of people who come to pay their respects to the dead. Not any longer. Mourners cannot be contacted, cannot travel or simply do not dare to attend large gatherings while the bombardment continues.

Gazans say that at least one crowd of mourners was hit by an Israeli strike in the town of Beit Hanoun on the third day of the war. Several were killed or lost limbs.

“It's very hard to bury someone without people around you,” said Mohammed Rafiq, 50, whose 15-year-old nephew was killed by an Israeli shell. “They give you solidarity. It makes it easier for you to bear the death. When they're not there it's much harder to bear the pain.”
Posted by:GolfBravoUSMC

#22  Hamas digs tunnel

Bodies placed in tunnel

IDF collapses tunnel

Rinse and repeat
Posted by: Skunky Glins 5***   2009-01-13 21:57  

#21  A culture that celebrates death should be reveling at the cemetaries overflowing.
Posted by: SteveS   2009-01-13 21:26  

#20  Perhaps they could ask Hamas for some help here.
Posted by: gorb   2009-01-13 18:49  

#19  I hear the D9's are clearing land. Be patient, Gazans.
Posted by: Poison Reverse   2009-01-13 17:25  

#18  Rats and vultures gotta eat too.
Posted by: mojo   2009-01-13 15:19  

#17  Cemetaries here use the double-stack system as well, my mother owns two double plots Dad is in one, my stillborn sister in another, one is reserved for mom (94 And going strong) the other is for whatever family member dies next, (Probably me)
Posted by: Rednek Jim   2009-01-13 14:56  

#16  i'm pretty sure they where caryying AK's at the time of death, since we have alrady seen a 12 decapitate a man on video from akistan a few months ago
Posted by: rabid whitetail   2009-01-13 13:23  

#15  M. Murcek, now that's funny!
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2009-01-13 12:30  

#14  I called it first!
Nah, nah, nah, na, na, na, na!
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2009-01-13 12:19  

#13  No, No, No bigJim! That's MY side of the wager. ;^)
Posted by: AlanC   2009-01-13 11:30  

#12  I thought only cats buried their turds...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2009-01-13 11:29  

#11  This problem seems to be independent of the conflict. Just more of the pin the blame on the Israelis game.
Posted by: DoDo   2009-01-13 11:24  

#10  Feed them to the fishes.
Posted by: DarthVader   2009-01-13 10:57  

#9  For a people whose leader was bragging about creating an industry of death, they forget where to put their bodies. Pathetic.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2009-01-13 10:33  

#8  Cremation works.
Posted by: 3dc   2009-01-13 10:09  

#7  Yes, I'll bet you $10 they WERE.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2009-01-13 09:41  

#6  Any bets that the 16 yr. old and the 15 yr. old were carrying AKs at the time of their demise?
Posted by: AlanC   2009-01-13 09:25  

#5  Doh, when you worship a god of death rather than a god of life what do you expect when you reap what you sow?
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-01-13 08:58  

#4  It seems to me there is a similar problem in the cities of Europe. One remains buried so long as the rent is paid, or for a particular period, then the remains are dug up and stacked -- most respectfully, of course -- to be replaced by another. Or the thousand-year old Jewish cemetery in Prague, where the bodies where buried vertically, one atop the next. Or start a new tradition: stack the bodies, most respectfully, in a booby trapped house, and hope that when the IDF trips it, the bodies are incinerated in a semifinal act of sacrifice for jihad. The ash can be collected to make building material to shelter The People until the living jihadis trigger the next round of war. Needs must, especially when one has started a war.
Posted by: trailing wife   2009-01-13 08:54  

#3  The feel good story for the day.
Posted by: ed   2009-01-13 08:19  

#2  feed them too the pigs
Posted by: rabid whitetail   2009-01-13 07:02  

#1  Cause/effect.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2009-01-13 05:58  

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