A 17-year-old Palestinian boy is paraded through Khan Yunis in Gaza ahead of his wedding. AFP
A 17-year-old Palestinian boy is paraded through Khan Yunis in Gaza ahead of his wedding. AFP
A 17-year-old Palestinian boy is paraded through Khan Yunis in Gaza ahead of his wedding. AFP
A 17-year-old Palestinian boy is paraded through Khan Yunis in Gaza ahead of his wedding. AFP

Book review: Donald Macintyre shares story of how life still goes on in Gaza amid the shellings


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At one point in this well-crafted study of one of the world's most densely populated places, Donald Macintyre seeks out the first man he met in the Palestinian enclave 14 years previously. 

A kind of Gazan everyman, Mahmoud Al Bahtiti is a car mechanic who has observed things change but nothing improve from the doors of his lock-up.

In 2003 he subversively told Macintyre that Yasser Arafat’s post-Oslo authority would transform Gaza into the Singapore of the Middle East. In the interim, he moved premises once, only to end up next to the Hamas-run Ministry of Interior, which was bombed in 2012. Back in the original street in 2016, his business somehow survived a lack of demand and constant power shortages.

Was he angry when the lights failed? The shortages were designed to keep Gaza in an economic netherland. “They can cut it as much as they like,” he says. “Gaza is like heaven. There is no work in heaven either.”

A former British political correspondent, Macintyre abruptly changed direction late in his career to spend more than a decade living in Jerusalem. He has now produced a loving, if at times angry, chronicle of his work in Gaza over those years. 

As the title Gaza Preparing for Dawn suggests, Macintyre finds great resilience among the besieged. A passage of the book is enlivened by the artist Maha Al Daya and her husband Ayman Eissa. She refuses to succumb to the temptation of incorporating war and conflict in her work. Instead, her land and seascapes chronicle an ever-changing city and its coast.

Then there are the teenagers who marked the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare by staging King Lear in the Nuseirat refugee camp in faultless English. 


In his interviews for the book, Macintyre secures from his old contact Tony Blair, who was an envoy of the Quartet, a concession that it was wrong to isolate Gaza after Hamas won the 2006 election. In fact, Gaza has been bombarded for 100 years. In his chat with Bahtiti, Macintyre is presented with a demand from his protagonist that Britain apologise for the Balfour Declaration, issued a century ago last week. As that fateful document emerged, Macintyre points out that the British Expeditionary Force under General Edmund Allenby took Gaza City just five days after Balfour dispatched his memo to Lord Rothschild. 

It is the inexorable events that came in the wake of the 2003 Iraq War and the democracy agenda of US president George W Bush that Macintyre is closest to. He provides perspective from the hotels where diplomacy is conducted, to the bombed-out streets where Gazans struggle in survival mode. 

The pivotal moment was Ariel Sharon's repudiation of the Quartet's "road map". Macintyre brings us inside the Rome hotel when Sharon told Elliot Abrams, US deputy national security adviser, of his unilateral evacuation of the Israeli settlements in Gaza. His argument was demographic. Israel's 5.4 million Jews were just greater in number than the 4.6 million Palestinians. To secure the homeland, Israel would retreat

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It would not stop its interference. Rocket attacks and assassinations resulted in the deaths of a succession of Hamas leaders, including Sheikh Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz Rantissi. Such incidents became the waypoints of what was to become a deepening conflict.

In Gaza Preparing for Dawn, the wars against the enclave are vividly described but its most acute moments are the personal stories that Macintyre unearths. There is the euphoria among residents of Khan Yunis in September 2005, when they were able to run along the beach that only a day earlier had been forbidden territory. Barely a year later there is panic among Fatah as Mohammed Dahlan realises the political runes are wrong and seeks in vain to postpone the vote so that the establishment can regroup. 

As the last Gazans are barred from earning a living in Israel, a practice that dated back to the 1960s, one man tearfully tells Macintyre of his anguish as his son asked for spending money

We meet Nisrin Jilo, a mother who was deported from Qalqilya in the West Bank where she had lived since she was nine. An Israeli soldier inspected her Gazan ID in 2007 and she was immediately sent back, separating her from her two children

Even the fiction that Macintyre reads captures the desolate present. He recalls a story about a girl visited in hospital by her uncle from Kuwait. The uncle says he has brought the red trousers she asked for as a present. The girl Nadia tearfully points to her amputated leg. 

At the time of writing, there is at last political movement between the Palestinian state and Hamas that has allowed the return of a unitary authority. Macintyre unearths a 2005 Rand Corporation report that paints Gaza as a modern metropolis trading with the world.

As once its seaport sent barley and wheat across the Mediterranean, so a futuristic plan could see it trading with the world. Gazans, quotes Macintyre, will always choose economic freedom over aid dependency. If they can. 

UAE v Gibraltar

What: International friendly

When: 7pm kick off

Where: Rugby Park, Dubai Sports City

Admission: Free

Online: The match will be broadcast live on Dubai Exiles’ Facebook page

UAE squad: Lucas Waddington (Dubai Exiles), Gio Fourie (Exiles), Craig Nutt (Abu Dhabi Harlequins), Phil Brady (Harlequins), Daniel Perry (Dubai Hurricanes), Esekaia Dranibota (Harlequins), Matt Mills (Exiles), Jaen Botes (Exiles), Kristian Stinson (Exiles), Murray Reason (Abu Dhabi Saracens), Dave Knight (Hurricanes), Ross Samson (Jebel Ali Dragons), DuRandt Gerber (Exiles), Saki Naisau (Dragons), Andrew Powell (Hurricanes), Emosi Vacanau (Harlequins), Niko Volavola (Dragons), Matt Richards (Dragons), Luke Stevenson (Harlequins), Josh Ives (Dubai Sports City Eagles), Sean Stevens (Saracens), Thinus Steyn (Exiles)

Results

Stage 7:

1. Caleb Ewan (AUS) Lotto Soudal - 3:18:29

2. Sam Bennett (IRL) Deceuninck-QuickStep - same time

3. Phil Bauhaus (GER) Bahrain Victorious

4. Michael Morkov (DEN) Deceuninck-QuickStep

5. Cees Bol (NED) Team DSM

General Classification:

1. Tadej Pogacar (SLO) UAE Team Emirates - 24:00:28

2. Adam Yates (GBR) Ineos Grenadiers - 0:00:35

3. Joao Almeida (POR) Deceuninck-QuickStep - 0:01:02

4. Chris Harper (AUS) Jumbo-Visma - 0:01:42

5. Neilson Powless (USA) EF Education-Nippo - 0:01:45

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
Fixtures

Tuesday - 5.15pm: Team Lebanon v Alger Corsaires; 8.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Pharaohs

Wednesday - 5.15pm: Pharaohs v Carthage Eagles; 8.30pm: Alger Corsaires v Abu Dhabi Storms

Thursday - 4.30pm: Team Lebanon v Pharaohs; 7.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Carthage Eagles

Friday - 4.30pm: Pharaohs v Alger Corsaires; 7.30pm: Carthage Eagles v Team Lebanon

Saturday - 4.30pm: Carthage Eagles v Alger Corsaires; 7.30pm: Abu Dhabi Storms v Team Lebanon

Match info

Uefa Champions League Group H

Juventus v Valencia, Tuesday, midnight (UAE)

The%20specs
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EEngine%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Dual%20synchronous%20electric%20motors%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPower%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E660hp%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETorque%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E1%2C100Nm%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETransmission%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESingle-speed%20automatic%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ETouring%20range%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E488km-560km%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EPrice%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EFrom%20Dh850%2C000%20(estimate)%0D%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EOn%20sale%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EOctober%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
The specs

Engine: 2.0-litre 4cyl turbo

Power: 261hp at 5,500rpm

Torque: 405Nm at 1,750-3,500rpm

Transmission: 9-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 6.9L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh117,059

Dhadak 2

Director: Shazia Iqbal

Starring: Siddhant Chaturvedi, Triptii Dimri 

Rating: 1/5

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets
What can victims do?

Always use only regulated platforms

Stop all transactions and communication on suspicion

Save all evidence (screenshots, chat logs, transaction IDs)

Report to local authorities

Warn others to prevent further harm

Courtesy: Crystal Intelligence

Lexus LX700h specs

Engine: 3.4-litre twin-turbo V6 plus supplementary electric motor

Power: 464hp at 5,200rpm

Torque: 790Nm from 2,000-3,600rpm

Transmission: 10-speed auto

Fuel consumption: 11.7L/100km

On sale: Now

Price: From Dh590,000

Scores

Day 2

New Zealand 153 & 56-1
Pakistan 227

New Zealand trail by 18 runs with nine wickets remaining