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Potemkin Villages at Erez Checkpoint
Tamar Fleishman
The Palestine Chronicle
Dec 26 2014

http://www.palestinechronicle.com/potemkin-villages-at-erez-
checkpoint/#.VJ6sDF5AGA


At 1778 governor general Grigory Potemkin, one of Catherine the Great’s
statesmen, erected painted facades of prosperous villages on the deserted
banks of the Dniester River, where the convoy of the empress passed on its way
to visit the southern parts of the country.
On the summer of 2014, during the war/operation of Protective Edge, major
general Yoav Poli Mordechai came up with the idea of building a field hospital
for the residents of the Gaza strip next to Erez checkpoint.
Over the years the term “Potemkin Villages” had come to mean hollow
initiatives that are brought into this world in order to praise and glorify
the initiator or the institution he serves.
The Russian general initiated the staging of the setting of the villages so as
to make his empress like him, while the Israeli major general did it to praise
the IDF and enhance the conception that it is a moral army.
The major general’s initiative received congratulations from the Chief of
General Staff.
In the publications made during those days it was said that there was an
internal medical clinic, clinics for women and children, an ER and a pharmacy
at the hospital. It was also said that interpreters were there to make the
medical crew’s job easier.
“We aren’t fighting the residents of Gaza” explained the Israeli UN
ambassador.
But the residents of Gaza didn’t see the reality the same way the ambassador
did or the way the office of the IDF’s spokesman did.
They, who had been attacked by IDF soldiers, injured and killed by IDF
soldiers, and lost their homes and all they had because of IDF soldier, saw
this hospital as a cynical exploitation of their situation.
“What are they thinking? They shoot and kill us and we are supposed to kiss
the hands that put bandages over the injuries they created and thank them?” a
resident of the Strip said to me. “Even if I or one of my kids or relatives
were injured during the war, we wouldn’t dare step out of the house, go out of
the neighborhood and cross the line towards the soldiers to get to the
hospital. Because if I tried getting there they would kill me while I was
still on my way”.
But the activity of the hospital wasn’t really meant for the residents of the
bombarded Gaza strip. You can’t convince them that the army killing them and
leaving thousands of them homeless and hopeless has good intentions. It was
actually meant to get the international public opinion to favor Israel. But
this was also difficult or even impossible to achieve, in light of the
pictures and sounds that came out of the strip and portrayed the hard and
bleak reality.
In addition, while combat was taking place the Israeli and Palestinian co-
ordinations continued. Patients who needed treatments or surgeries that
couldn’t be provided for them at the hospital at the Strip, made it to Erez
checkpoint on their way to the Palestinian hospitals at the West Bank and East
Jerusalem.
A friend of mine from the Strip said that once the IDF inaugurated the
military hospital by Erez checkpoint, the patients had to first be
hospitalized there and only then were they allowed to head on to East
Jerusalem.
My friend also spoke of one person, a man who was very ill, that in spite of
his illness and of the fact that he had already headed on his way, upon
learning that he must first go to the military hospital had waived the
opportunity to received treatment and maybe recover, he refused and returned
home.
It must be noted that the spokesperson for the coordinator of government
activities in the territories strongly denies that it was obligatory to pass
through the military hospital before heading on.
This was the response of the military’s spokesperson unit that followed the
request for information regarding the number of people who were hospitalized
and of the circumstances of their hospitalization:
“The hospital treated 51 people. Most of them suffered from diseases or health
issues that had no relations to the operation.”
Sincerely,
The Spokesperson for the Coordinator of Government Activities in the
Territories
It was impossible to get information regarding the total cost of the
operation, but information about the duration of the hospital’s activity was
obtainable:
“The hospital operated from the 20.7.14 until the 26.08.14. The doctors
working there were experts during the regular service.
“The total cost of the project was very high, we can’t elaborate further.”
Sincerely,
The Spokesperson for the Coordinator of Government Activities in the
Territories
Office of the Spokesman, COGAT
The thought of gathering information and writing about the military hospital
designed for the residents of the Gaza Strip, came to me after talking to a
dear friend of mine who lives in Gaza.
I was hoping for a triangle, even if not an equilateral triangle- using the
information given by the IDF spokesperson who is obligated to hand them due to
freedom of information, the testimonies of the residents of the Strip and
testimonies of soldiers.
Unfortunately, up until the publication of this article not even one testimony
had been given to the organization Breaking the Silence about this issue, and
the triangle turned out faulty. A triangle with only two edges.
Seeing as Israelis didn’t have access to the Gaza Strip, the photo of Erez
checkpoint that I enclosed is one that I took in the past, and in it is an ill
person returning home to Gaza after receiving treatment in a Palestinian
hospital in the West Bank.
(Translated by Ruth Fleishman.)
- As a member of Machsomwatch, once a week Tamar Fleishman heads out to
document the checkpoints between Jerusalem and Ramallah. This documentation
(reports, photos and videos) can be found on the organization’s site:
www.machsomwatch.org. The majority of the Spotlights (an opinion page) that
are published on the site had been written by her. She is also a member of the
Coalition of Women for Peace and volunteer in Breaking the Silence. She
contributed this article to PalestineChronicle.com.
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