In Gaza, rows of white shrouds symbolise mounting civilian deaths

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A Palestinian medic marks a shroud for human remains collected following Israeli bombardment on Oct 31.

A Palestinian medic marking a shroud for human remains collected following Israeli bombardment on Oct 31.

PHOTO: AFP

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- “My life, my eyes, my soul,” a husband writes on a white shroud wrapped around his wife after the war devastating Gaza took her life.

A bereaved son writes “my mother and everything” on the burial cloth covering his mother, another of more than 21,000 Palestinians killed in the Israel-Hamas confrontation.

Over the past 12 weeks, the piece of white cloth has become a symbol of civilian deaths wrought by Israel in retaliation for Hamas killing 1,200 people and taking 240 hostages in its Oct 7 cross-border raid, the deadliest day in Israel’s history.

While the besieged Palestinian territory faces severe shortages of food, water and medicine, the white coverings used to wrap dead Palestinians have remained in abundant supply.

Not all the shrouds bear loving words. Such is the war’s chaos – some of the dead cannot immediately be identified.

In such cases, the shrouds bear the words “unknown male” or “unknown female”, and before burial, pictures are taken and the date and place of the strike documented, so individuals can be identified by relatives later.

If the conflict escalates, the supply of the white coverings donated by Arab governments and charities is expected to keep pace with demand. But there are difficulties brought on by the sheer number of the dead, and sometimes there are gaps in the local availability of the shrouds.

“The challenges we face are too much, there is shortage in the knives and the scissors that we need to prepare the shrouds and cut them,” said Mr Mohammed Abu Mussa, a volunteer at Keratan Society, which prepares dead bodies for burial.

“As you know, there is a blockade and there are no materials in the Gaza Strip, so we find difficulties getting knives, scissors, and cotton,” he said.

So many people are dying that sometimes donated shrouds are not enough, he added, and four or five people have to be wrapped in one shroud.

Mr Marwan Al-Hams, director of Abu Yousef Al Najjar Hospital, said the prevalence of the shrouds signifies Gaza’s suffering.

“The big number of martyrs made the white shroud a symbol for this war, and it became parallel to the Palestine flag in its influence and the knowledge of the world about the significance of our cause,” he said.

The white covering goes back to a narration by the Prophet Muhammad, who encouraged his followers to wear white clothes and wrap the dead in white.

Shrouds from Arab donors come packed with a bar of soap, perfume, cotton, and eucalyptus for the preparation of bodies for burial, a doctor at a hospital in the southern town of Rafah told Reuters.

Ordinarily, the minute someone dies in Gaza, a relative goes to the market to buy a “kafan”, or shroud.

But for Mr Abdel-Hamid Abdel-Atti, a local journalist, the process in wartime Gaza began amid scenes of chaos and devastation, with the bodies of six of his loved ones, including his mother and brother, being pulled from rubble.

The six were killed in an Israeli strike on Al-Nusseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on Dec 7. The strike smashed a building on top of them as they slept.

Describing the procedure as the most painful experience of his life, he obtained shrouds from a hospital and wrapped them around his relatives’ bodies.

“The first one I did was my brother, the rest came wrapped in blankets and I asked them not to be taken off. I put the shrouds over the blankets, and tied them carefully, before bidding them farewell,” Mr Abdel-Atti told Reuters.

“As I wrapped them in shrouds, I wondered, what was their fault… Why did Israel kill them as they slept in peace?“

The only consolation, he said, was his relatives are going to heaven.

“White resembles peace, resembles calm. It is part of our tradition and belief and by white shrouds, it is as if we are asking God to remove and clear all their sins and accept them in heaven,” he said. REUTERS

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