GAZA CITY - The family had been mourning for 16-year-old Ahmed Abu Salamah.
What was left of what was thought to be his body had been buried. After two
weeks of mourning, they found Ahmed alive in the intensive care unit at Gaza
City's al-Shifa Hospital.
But a boy had been buried. And, a family had spent two weeks outside the intensive
care unit, believing the boy inside was theirs. It was their boy who had died.
The discovery of the mistake brought joy to the family of Ahmed Abu Salamah.
And it plunged into uncontrollable grief the family who had gathered at hospital
and prayed daily for recovery of the boy within in intensive care.
Through this misunderstanding, one thing everyone understood. The body of the
boy who was buried had been mangled beyond recognition. As was the boy still
alive in intensive care.
"Israel is using missiles and materials which rip apart and burn beyond
recognition the humans they target, so much so that a mother can't identify
the body of her own son," Dr. Raed al-Arini, head of public relations at
al-Shifa Hospital told IPS.
Israel had used banned materials such as Dense Inert Metal Explosive (DIME)
and white phosphorus, he said.
Ahmed has suffered brain hemorrhage and has serious wounds all over his body.
He had left home on Saturday Mar. 1, his mother said, and was soon hit by an
Israeli F-16 missile strike just outside his house. It was a day when more than
55 Palestinians were killed, many of them civilians and children.
For three days the family could find no trace of Ahmed. Then they were called
by the hospital to say that the remains of a body in the morgue was Ahmed.
But two weeks later, Ahmed's friends informed his mother Karima that her son
was still alive. She rushed to the hospital. "I shook his bed, and when
he opened his eyes I said to him, 'this is your mother, I'm here with you'."
The other side of this story was that of mourning after hope.
The mangled body that the Salamah family had buried was that of Mohammed Hejazi,
a 17-year-old from the same neighborhood. Mohammed's mother Aminah Hejazi and
his family had sat outside the ICU everyday for two weeks, believing that the
boy inside was their Mohammed.
Ahmed's face was covered by bandages. The boys were about the same size, and
the Hejazi family thought it was Mohammed. "At first I doubted whether
this was really my son, but I felt the need to be close to him anyway,"
Aminah said. But in a few days, she said she came to believe the boy inside
was her son. Until the other family arrived in hospital, and the doctors broke
the news to her.
Aminah sobs as she recounts that moment. The family was broken, she said. Her
husband would not believe Mohammed was dead.
Identifying Ahmed finally came down to the hair. Karima said Ahmed has brown
hair; Aminah that her son's hair was black.
As the Abu Salamah family did earlier, the Hejazi family set up a mourning
tent to receive condolences from friends and neighbors. On the other side, many
of Ahmed's friends who had thought they would never see him again, following
his "funeral," have been streaming to the hospital to look him up.
Ahmed cannot speak to his friends. He is conscious, his eyes are open, but
he is paralyzed, and his condition is critical. Doctors say they are short of
medicines to treat him.
Aminah mourns the death of her own, and prays for the boy who survived. "I
pray that God will heal him," she said, in tears.
(Inter Press Service)