Gangnam Style Finds a Tragic Touch in Gaza

The Gangnam Style from Gaza. Credit: Eva Bartlett/IPS.
  • by Eva Bartlett (gaza city)
  • Inter Press Service

The Gangnam Gaza Style parodies the chart-topping South Korean video 'Gangnam Style.' Gaza's version injects sordid realities of Palestinians' lives under Israeli military occupation and the years-long choking siege of the Gaza Strip.

"We wanted to tell the outside world about the impossible circumstances under which we live: that our airport has been destroyed, our fishers are prevented from accessing their sea, that half our population is out of work, that we use tunnels instead of border crossings and donkeys because fuel is scarce."

The Gazan rendition of the Korean dance video highlights some of Gaza's most urgent problems under the siege, including daily power outages, fuel shortages, lack of freedom of movement, and unemployment.

Dressed in black, heads wrapped with the traditional black and white Kuffiyehs (scarves), five men and two children dance a fusion of 'Gangnam style' and Dabke, the energetic dance found in many Arab countries.

The four-and-a-half minute video moves from Gaza's coast, polluted with the untreatable sewage pumped into the sea at the rate of 90 million litres per day, to gas-less filling stations, to the tunnels which serve as border crossings and bring Israeli-banned construction materials into Strip, long devastated by Israeli-bombing.

The theatrical bomb explosion in the original Gangnam Style video also appears more appropriately in the Gazan version: with two major Israeli offensives on the Strip in the last four years, and numerous other Israeli attacks before and in between, Gaza's Palestinians are all too familiar with bombings.

Wassim abu Shabaan, 10, one of the two children in the clip is one of thousands of Palestinians in Gaza whose homes have been destroyed by Israeli bombing and bulldozing in the last four years.

"The whole house was destroyed, everything was destroyed…our computer, my room, our clothes, everything," says the boy of the 2009 Israeli bombing of his home.

"Palestinian children can recognise the difference between an F-15 and an F-16 warplane, and the difference between drones armed with missiles and surveillance drones just by their sound," says Mohannad Barakat.

In the November 2012 Israeli attacks on Gaza, Israeli warplanes bombed Palestine stadium, one of Gaza's few venues for sports and a place where disabled athletes trained. Gangnam Gaza depicts this destruction, the five men and two children entering the stadium with soccer balls in hand to find it in ruins.

The Gaza Community Mental Health Programme found in 2009 that over 91 percent of children in Gaza suffer from moderate to severe post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Children make up roughly half the population of Gaza's 1.7 million people.

"All of us are affected by the siege and the various Israeli wars on Gaza. We all have psychological problems from living under these circumstances. We hadn't recovered from the 2009 Israeli war on Gaza when the 2012 attacks occurred."

Gaza's infrastructure had likewise not recovered from the attacks and the siege, with hospitals reporting consistent shortages of essential medicines and medical supplies, and Gaza's schools severely overcrowded, the vast majority of whom run double, even triple, shifts to accommodate all of the students.

Since 2006, when Israel bombed Gaza's sole power plant, the entire Strip has been under daily rolling power outages, ranging from 18 and 20 hour outages in the worst years to the current eight hours on, eight hours off scheduled outages.

"It's the 21st century but Gaza still has almost no electricity," says Barakat. "The use of candles and generators indoors during power outages has caused a number of fires and carbon monoxide poisoning deaths in recent years."

The Strip is currently enduring another crisis of cooking gas shortages, particularly hard during winter months when hot meals and beverages help make up for the lack of heating in the typically uninsulated homes.

The problem of sewage treatment has yet to be solved, for want of building materials to expand Gaza's outdated sanitation facilities. The combination of power outages and little clean water to begin with contributes to a general water crisis, with 95 percent of Gaza's water undrinkable by World Health Organisation (WHO) standards.

A 2012 United Nations report entitled ‘Gaza in 2020: a Liveable Place?' predicts that Gaza's sole aquifer, already over-tapped and under-replenished will fail by 2016.

The WHO reports that at least 81 patients have died due to delayed medical referrals since 2008 alone.  In 2012, Palestinian authorities reported over 400 kidney patients were at risk due to lack of essential dialysis equipment shortages.

Medical Aid for Palestinians (MAP-UK) reports that 10 percent of children under five years old suffer chronic malnutrition, while anaemia is rampant among pregnant women.

Since 2007, the Israeli army has killed 2,300 Palestinians, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs' June, 2012 report. Many of these deaths, and hundreds of the 7,700 injuries the UN reported (not including the November 2012 Israeli attacks) have occurred in Gaza's border regions and on the sea, where fishers and farmers alike are targeted by the Israeli army as they work.

The Israeli-imposed "buffer zone" cuts Gazan Palestinians off from 35 percent of their agricultural land, impacting on their economy and local food sources.

Produce once exported to the rest of Palestine and to European markets, along with textiles and furniture, have not been exported since 2006, save an insignificant amount. The same June 2012 UN report notes that Gazan exports "have dropped to less than 3 percent of 2006 levels." Some of Gaza's most desperately poor work in the hundreds of tunnels running to Egypt. As of June 2012, the UN noted that "at least 172 Palestinian civilians have been killed while working in tunnels," since 2007.

Although most of the young men in 'Gangnam Gaza Style' have studied or are currently studying in post-secondary education, nearly all are unemployed.

Filmed over a two week period, using a cell phone camera, the clip cost roughly 100 dollars to make. "For taxis and phone cards mostly," says Barakat.

© Inter Press Service (2013) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service