Finding friends, and God, among bullets in Rafah
HUSEIN MASHNI
Whenever I hear the song, “Going to California,” by Led Zeppelin, I’m
transported back to my days as a teenager fishing with my stepfather
by the Truckee River in Reno, Nev.
The song “Holiness,” by Wayne Watson, takes me back to the Los
Angeles International Airport in 1989. I was on my way to Israel to
see my brothers and sisters, who I hadn’t seen in 15 years.
There are so many songs associated with so many memories and
times. But it’s a real rarity, at least in my life, that a song and
the events that are going on when I heard it strike such a note
inside of me that they are permanently entwined in my memory. But
that’s what I felt a few days ago. The song is the Arabic version of
an American worship song. I don’t know the English words but the
translated Arabic lyrics are, “Over all, we lift your name. Forever,
we will proclaim your kingdom. Always true, you are to be worshipped.
Forever ever Lord, we lift you high. Jesus, your name is great.
Jesus, your name is great.”
I woke up last Sunday and had a strong feeling that I had to go
see my friends in the southern Gaza Strip city of Rafah. I am the
choir leader at the only evangelical church in Gaza, the Gaza Baptist
Church.And that night we would sing that worship song in church.
On Sunday evening, around 7:30, I finally started heading down to
RafahI got to the main Gaza Strip checkpoint, called “Abu Holie,”
which is usually so backed up it takes hours to pass through. But on
this night, there were hardly any cars. I passed through with a few
minutes to spare before it closed at 8 p.m. I made it to Rafah, where
I met with some friends who work with the deaf. They took me to visit
a friend whose brother was killed in a missile attack two days
before. The brother was 16. He used to work as a delivery person with
a horse and wooden cart. I was told the horse hadn’t eaten in days
because the only person who ever fed him was that 16-year-old boy.
I shook hands with all the men at the wake and tried to offer what
little comfort I could to my friend, the brother of the deceased. I
think the best I could do was just be there. No words are needed
sometimes.
Then, we went to visit another friend. This one is a 16-year-old
deaf boy. He was shot in the leg a day earlier. A group of his
friends were also at the house.
A friend I didn’t get to visit was one whose home, which is right
on the border of Gaza and Egypt, was leveled a day before. I didn’t
know where he was.
I went to the deaf center that night with my friends. We had a
late dinner and slept. Early the next morning, two of my friends woke
me up. They said their father heard on television that Rafah would be
surrounded and closed off in a few hours. The closure, according to
the news, would last three days. If I didn’t leave then, I would be
stuck there for days.
I got in the car and left because I had to be to work in Gaza City
by 10 a.m. the next morning. As I was leaving, reporters gathered at
the city entrance, where the tanks would soon be stationed. When I
got to Abu Holie, there was about a 30-minute delay, but fortunately
I got through. Later, on the radio, I heard that gunfire had erupted
at Abu Holie checkpoint about 15 minutes after I passed through. The
next three days, I was constantly on my cellphone trying to reach the
friends I left behind in Rafah. Because electricity was cut off, they
were unable to recharge their cellphones. They could only speak a few
words before the phone batteries died. Water and phone services were
also cut off.
But the few words they spoke were enough, in the midst of all the
horrendous news coming out of Rafah, to know that they were still
alive and well.
One day, a few months ago, I got angry at God because of some of
the desperate poverty I see in Gaza. But when I got back to my office
that night, I saw a poster on the wall that I never noticed before.
It said, “God is greatly to be praised.” There was no explanation
with the verse. It just stated the fact that God is so good no matter
what we might see around us at any time. He is the river of grace
that is flowing endlessly, in spite of the evil in our world.
“Over all, we lift your Name. Forever, we will proclaim your
kingdom. Always true, you are to be worshipped. Forever ever Lord, we
lift you High. Jesus, your name is great. Jesus, your name is great.”
* HUSEIN MASHNI is a former Daily Pilot education reporter who
became a Christian Missionary in the Middle East. His articles appear
in Forum on occasion.
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