
July
2004
Diary of an artist in Bethlehem |
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Israeli soldiers invade Bethlehem streets, in the
black car, a girl was shot dead by soldiers recently. |
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Leicestershire
artist Paul Gent is spending the summer in Palestine working with
families whilst creating some stunning art - read his diary. |
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Tuesday
29th June
Started
work on a mural at Ayda refugee camp. Nidal and Shara from Lagee
(refugee) centre, seemed very disappointment with my hurried design
made in felt tip pen drawn out at 1am the previous morning.
I made the design using drawings by the children of Ayda camp made
during a workshop we made last week. 'It looks like a happy tent'
Nidal finally replied in all seriousness.
I promised it would look better than that on the wall. Children
do have the habit of depicting everybody happy and smiling all the
time.
The theme along the 28-metre wall is the refugee story, covering
pre-1948 Palestine, rural life and tradition, the destruction of
Palestinian villages, exodus of the Palestinian people, refugees
in tents with UN aid, the development of Ayda camp, from concrete
boxes to the houses we see today, resistance and protest, and the
segregation wall.
The last space on the mural will ask 'what lies in the future.'
I suggested maybe someone could write a poem. They thought that
was a great idea and that I should do it - next time I will keep
my mouth shut!
I left
Ayda camp with Nimer, a 13-year-old from Aza camp. He told me about
his feelings of being cut of from the rest of the world and imprisoned.
He thanked me for coming to help and talked of other international
volunteers who have come to work at Aza camp, including the much
American creator of the iconic 'Hundala' character.
He invited me home where his mother almost expected me as if she
was used to her son bringing back strange foreign men.
It is the summer holidays and the hot and smelly litter-ridden streets
were full of noisy children. 'I don't like the holidays' Nimer's
mother complained as she served me a much needed cold fruit juice.
'The children have nowhere to play, but here on the street. There
is only one park in all Bethlehem. Inshallah! peace will come, but
we have to live in these cramped conditions while the leaders dance
on war.
They never dance on peace.
Paul Gent
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