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Our Gaza dialogue

Last week, JC theatre critic John Nathan called the use of Shoah imagery in a play about Gaza antisemitic. Palestinian writer Raja Shehadeh disagreed, prompting an exchange of emails.

March 6, 2009 12:17
Raja Shehadeh is a prominent Palestinian lawyer and writer who lives in Ramallah. Winner of the Orwell prize for his book Palestinian Walks, he is a founder of the human rights organisation Al-Haq, and an affiliate of the International Commission of Jurists

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

6 min read

Dear John Nathan

Death Begins with the shoes…” Primo Levi wrote in If This Is A Man. Even though he wrote this about the Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitz, this truth is not confined to Jewish death. The worn shoes of the dead anywhere always make one pause, for they were markers of life and movement. In your review of the play Go to Gaza, Drink the Sea, you write: “The reference to the Holocaust is unmistakable and the implication that Gazans are the victims of a Holocaust-like atrocity pretty obvious.” You conclude by writing: “The message is not true and is not right. And it is, I believe, antisemitic.”

There is no doubt that the striking and moving image of a mountain of shoes that constitutes the main element in the set for the play, designed by Jane Frere, is reminiscent of the concentration camp, and following its use in many Holocaust museums it has become a metaphor for the death camps themselves. But is this reason enough not to use it in a play that involves Palestinian suffering brought about by Israeli military action?

Many have made the analogy between Gaza and the Warsaw Ghetto. When asked to comment on this for Radio 4’s World At One, I was of the contrary opinion. Gaza is not a ghetto, I argued. It is a large prison. I found the insistence on resorting to terms usually associated with the Jewish experience of suffering disturbing. It sounded to me as though only by appropriating nomenclature related to the Jewish experience could we validate Palestinian suffering. As though our suffering cannot stand on its own.