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Home / World

A night of rockets and airstrikes, and a morning of fear

By Iyad Abuheweila
New York Times·
13 May, 2021 02:06 AM4 mins to read

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The aftermath of Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City on Wednesday. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times

The aftermath of Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City on Wednesday. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times

Gazans say that Israeli strikes early Wednesday over the course of an hour felt like the most intense yet, after a long night interrupted by rounds of retaliation.

Gazans took to the streets on Tuesday evening, cheering the thunderous sounds of rockets being fired toward Israel just days after the Israeli police in Jerusalem raided one of the holiest sites in Islam. Some whistled and chanted.

"Go! Go! Go!" they shouted. "God is with you."

But on Wednesday morning the cheers had stopped, as Gazans emerged dazed from their homes after what some described as the most intense airstrikes since cross-border Israeli-Palestinian hostilities flared back up earlier this week. After a night of sporadic strikes, a final barrage lasted one seemingly endless hour, beginning around 6 a.m.

In one neighbourhood, near Zeitoun and Sabra, residents checked their homes and neighbourhoods for damage, and desperately sought information about where the missiles might strike next.

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"I felt that the hits were random," said Nadal Issa, 27, who owns a bridal shop.

Hamas and other militants have been exchanging fire with Israel since Monday. Dozens of Palestinians have been killed in Gaza, including at least 16 children as of Wednesday night, officials said; in Israel, at least six civilians have been killed, including one child.

In Gaza, though, some they had never felt anything as intense as the wave of Israeli strikes that came Wednesday morning.

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Some said it felt as if blast waves were hitting their face and body, as if their very neighbourhood was under attack. Disoriented, they staggered to windows to look outside.

"My two children woke up, and they asked me, 'What's going on?'" Issa said. Thinking quickly, he reminded them that the holiday marking the end of Ramadan was near. "I told them these are celebrations for Eid."

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But in a period when Muslims pray for forgiveness and a good coming year, the cycle of retaliation playing out in Israel and Gaza this week has bred bitterness. Issa recalled standing by a window of his home Tuesday evening and watching the rockets take flight.

"I was praying from my heart that the rockets reached the heart of Tel Aviv," he said.

Gaza City after Israeli airstrikes. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times
Gaza City after Israeli airstrikes. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times

Mohammed Sabtie, a 30-year-old motorcycle mechanic, was among Gazans who left their homes after the airstrikes subsided Wednesday morning to see the damage.

"The sound was very, very horrific," Sabtie said. "It was like a state of war. It was the first time I ever heard anything like this."

Was he scared? Yes, he said, but also overjoyed to see Palestinians fighting back.

"Our ambitions are not war," Sabtie said. "Our ambitions are security and peace. We have to do this. We don't want to be hit and insulted. We want to hit back."

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As Gazans try to minimize risk to their families, they are aware that there are few places in the crowded city to find shelter, so they settle on little details, and luck.

Some leave their windows open during attacks, lest a pane of glass suddenly become a rush of shards. Many try to figure which direction the most intense bombardment is coming from, and move to a room farthest away. There's a rush for ground-level apartments and rooms.

And then, mostly, they try to sleep, if they can.

The building housing the shopkeeper's currency exchange store, which was bombed overnight Wednesday. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times
The building housing the shopkeeper's currency exchange store, which was bombed overnight Wednesday. Photo / Hosam Salem, The New York Times

On Tuesday night, one shopkeeper in an office tower was among those evacuating after being told by Israel that the building would be targeted for an airstrike, he said. The shopkeeper, who runs a currency-exchange store in the building and asked not to be identified, was devastated. He said he had recently gotten engaged, and went into debt to pay for his wedding. He feared he would lose everything.

Hours later, around 3am, his fears became true: The tower was hit. The response was nearly instant — more rockets into Israel. The old cycle was repeating again: Rockets bring airstrikes, airstrikes bring rockets.

Then it fell quiet, oddly so, for almost three hours. One more chance to try to sleep.

In one home early Wednesday, that restless sleep was disturbed by a ringing phone. The caller was a Palestinian who had left for Turkey, and he remarked on the relative calm.

"Maybe this is the quiet before the storm," he said.

Not long after, the thunder from the morning airstrikes washed over their neighbourhood.


Written by: Iyad Abuheweila
Photographs by: Hosam Salem
© 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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