Lost on the way to the City of Jonah
HUSEIN MASHNI
There are some experiences you never share with anyone for fear that
your mother will find out. This is one of them.
Since Mom lives in another state and rarely gets to Southern
California, I’ll venture to share this experience, since it happened
about a month ago, and I’ve pretty much gotten over it.
It was a Sunday night. I had been in the West Bank that day to
visit my dad and relatives there. I came home to Gaza in time for the
night church service where I lead the choir. After church, I ate at
Broasted Chicken -- the closest thing to American food in Gaza -- and
started heading south toward my new home in Khan Younis. (Khan Younis
means City of Jonah, as it is believed by some that Jonah jumped on a
ship from its port when he ran from the call of God.) To get to Khan
Younis, I have to go through the Deir Al Balah -- Monastery of the
Palms -- refugee camp and the Abu Holie Israeli checkpoint, which
divides the Gaza Strip.
As usual, when I go to Deir Al Balah, I got lost, and as usual, I
stopped to asked some people for directions. This night, I asked two
young men on the side of the road. The one who spoke with me seemed
more intrigued by my accent than helping me find the way to Khan
Younis. He told me he wanted to get a friend across the street, who
also wanted to go to Khan Younis, to go with me. I said, “Fine.â€
Two more young men came and stood by my van. There were four now.
The tallest one asked me where I was from. I told him in Arabic that
I was from Gaza but that I was going to Khan Younis. He reached out
and wrapped his right hand around my left wrist. The other young men
watched. I tried to answer their questions as best I could without
sounding nervous about the tight grip on my wrist.
It appeared that they didn’t believe my answers and that they were
suspicious of my presence in their camp. The one who held my wrist
asked to see my passport. I wasn’t sure how an American passport
would be received in these parts. Up in the north, Gaza City, I never
had any problems. But I wasn’t sure about how it would be received
here.
I told them that my passport was from outside, meaning another
country. With the hatred for America, the fury over the Abu Ghraib
prison pictures and the recent beheading of an American, I wasn’t
sure I wanted to let them know I was American.
As the questioning became harder and the grip tighter, I finally
just sped away in my car. The young men followed waving their arms in
the air and yelling. At the end of the street I hit a huge sand bank.
I knew if they wanted to catch me, this would be the place to do it.
So, I turned around and went back to the downtown area. When I
reached downtown, a car pulled up to my right and young men started
jumping out and running toward me.
“Close in on him,†they yelled. “Don’t let him out.â€
When I was 100% sure that I was the “him†they were referring to,
I sped up as fast as I could through the narrow, unpaved road between
trucks, cars, donkey carts and pedestrians.
I sped as fast as I could to the Beach Road, which connects the
northern and southern Gaza Strip. I was driving more than 100 mph,
over the speed bumps, but the young men caught up to me. At one
point, they pulled up in front of me and stopped their car and
started getting out. I swerved around them. Thank God there was no
oncoming traffic.
Then I felt the bullets -- one, two, and I wasn’t sure how many
more -- hitting the van. I called a friend, who urged me to get back
to Gaza City quickly and go to his house. I was on my way.
When we neared the Israeli settlement of Netzarim, the young men
stopped chasing me. Any shooting near the heavily fortified
settlement would start an all-out firefight.
I sped back to Gaza City and met with friends from my church. They
prayed with me and comforted me. The next morning, I saw that the van
had been shot 14 times. Three times the bullets penetrated the metal,
the other bullets just chipped the van’s white paint.
With the help of some friends, we pieced together what happened.
The young men from whom I asked directions belonged to a powerful,
well-known political group that will remain unnamed. When I spoke
with broken Arabic, they were suspicious of me. When I sped away,
they were certain that I was -- are you ready? -- a stray Israeli
settler. Within minutes word had reached far and wide within the camp
that there was a stray Israeli settler in the camp. They later told
me that they felt they had a treasure in their hand. They wanted so
bad to either kill me or capture me.
All the bullet marks were by the gas tank. I’m not sure if they
were trying to blow up the van or just to get the gas to leak out to
where the van would stop and they could catch me and hold me hostage.
One bullet through the driver’s side window could have killed me, but
they seemed more interested in hitting the gas tank.
I went to the camp a few days later with some friends from my
church. We spoke with the young men who shot at me. I knew most of
them. They apologized and explained that it was just a potentially
fatal case of mistaken identity.
I’ve run through these scenes so many times in my mind trying to
understand whose fault it all was. Was I wrong to run off? Were they
wrong to suspect me? Who is to blame? There are so many questions
that will never be answered. There are so many “what-ifs.â€
But there is one thing that became blaringly clear to me a few
days afterward. In spite of all the gun shots, bullets and fury that
was aimed at me, I was completely unhurt.
The van has some bullet holes in it. But whatever their intentions
were -- to blow up the van or whatever -- nothing happened.
There’s a popular church song that I always liked to sing: “Fear
not for I am with you. When you pass through the water I’ll be there
and through the ‘flame.’ You will not, no way, be drowned. You will
not, no way, be burned. For I am with you.â€
I will never sing it the same way again.
* 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.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.