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'I Realized That If I Waited For Help, I Would Probably Die'
BY
ANTHONY SHADID
Writing
a story has always come easy to me. Understanding why I became
part of a story has proven far more difficult.
On March 21, I was shot in Ramallah. It was my fourth day in the
West Bank city, where columns of Israeli armor had invaded the
hub of a nascent Palestinian state and woven a net that stretched
just yards from the scarred, hilltop headquarters of Yasir Arafat
and his decapitated government.
I was working on a story for my newspaper, The Boston Globe, that
oddly foreshadowed my own circumstances: how the Israeli military
was blocking ambulances, detaining their drivers, and arresting
doctors and hospital staff. In the story, I wanted to explore
how little was off limits in a conflict that had become ever more
vengeful and spiteful on both sides.
I never wrote the story. Rather I became another boundary transgressed.
The shooting took place in an area that was under the control
of the Israeli tanks, armored personnel carriers, and soldiers
who had reoccupied the city. I was walking with a Palestinian
colleague, Said al-Ghazali, a stringer for the Globe, in the middle
of the street to avoid suspicion. Both of us wore flak jackets,
and we both had TV written prominently with red tape
on our backs, the best-known symbol for international press. There
was no crossfire, and shooting could be heard only in neighborhoods
that seemed distant. The Israeli military presence had put us
at ease.
Five minutes later, I crumbled to the ground. I began to fall
even before I heard the shot. It was deafening and disorienting.
At first, I thought it was a stun grenade. Why else couldnt
I move my arms or legs? Then, I felt a sting on my spine.
Said, I think I was shot, I said. He lay next to me,
desperately patting my body and looking for blood. I dont
see anything, he shouted.
The feeling returned to my arms first and I reached behind my
flak jacket. I felt the warm, almost soothing blood that was soaking
into my clothes.
Many journalists have probably thought about how they would react
to being shot. My first thoughts went to my wife and nine-month-old
daughter. But in the anarchy of emotions and impulses that ensued,
I could only come up with clichés for Said to pass on to
them. Then I felt sorry for myself. Why, I wondered, was I the
only journalist to be shot in a town full of them? I thought,
too, of a war that I was groping to understand.
I had first visited Ramallah in 1988, as a college student. As
an Arab-American I was always interested in the region, and curious
about the intifada. I had come again, off and on, for the next
ten years to watch a conflict changing inexorably. No longer was
it a fight that pitted stone-throwing youths in an almost cartoonish
rebellion against one of the worlds mightiest armies. At
hand was a far dirtier fight one with the same asymmetry,
the same disproportionate force, but with far fewer red lines
to mark its limits.
The lack of rules in this war struck me as I lay in the street,
and days later, it remained the one way to attach significance
to what happened. Amid the carnage of the Israeli-Palestinian
war, the shooting of a journalist remains only that. I was just
one person, and I survived. Unlike the thousands of other civilians
there, I escaped the city and received the best care both Israelis
and Palestinians could offer.
But I was another line that had been crossed a non-combatant
dragged into a conflict not of my making. Those were the thoughts
that clouded my head. I thought of the story I had reported that
afternoon wounded who were ignored, and the ambulances
that were not allowed to arrive. I thought of the nihilism the
conflict had bred.
I realized, too, that if I waited for help, I would probably die.
I tugged on my legs. Move, move, I pleaded. They did, and I rolled
over to sit up. Said, we have to go, I said, trying
to control the fear that was overwhelming me.
He helped me up, put my arm over his shoulder, and we limped twenty
yards. I fell again, dizzy and tired. We both shouted, Journalists!
Help! Bring us a car!
No one heard us in the streets. The only life in that patch of
deserted Ramallah was the Israeli soldier who, I believe, shot
me. I wondered what he might be thinking as we fumbled around,
scared and powerless.
We got up again and walked about fifty yards, for what seemed
like hours, heading for the Israeli personnel carriers parked
ahead of us. They thought we were Palestinians and trained their
guns on us. We both started shouting. Im a journalist!
I yelled. Said followed in Hebrew, Hes wounded!
One soldier shouted back, Show us! Said turned my
body, my white flak jacket soaked in red.
The soldier called an Israeli medic, who performed with precision.
He gave me morphine and tried to stop the bleeding from a bullet
that tore into my left shoulder, sheered off part of my vertebrae,
then left a gaping hole in my right shoulder as it exited. Twelve
pieces of shrapnel were left behind.
I was taken to a hospital, X-rayed, bandaged, and congratulated.
Youre lucky, I kept hearing. Youre
lucky. Far luckier, I thought, than many of those around
me.
Anthony Shadid
is a correspondent for The Boston Globe based in Washington. He
spent nine years with The Associated Press, five of them in Cairo.
He is the author of Legacy of the Prophet: Despots, Democrats, and
the New Politics of Islam, published in paperback in April.
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