
Shamikh Badra, a Palestinian Australian from Gaza, spoke toĀ Ā鶹“«Ć½ in February, the day after he had been told his fatherās body, which had been hastily buried last year, had finally been moved to a cemetery.
His father died from being deprived of proper food and medicine by the Israeli occupation forces. He was buried in the backyard of their destroyed family home in Gaza.
Badra is a member of the international committee of the Palestinian Peopleās Party and founder of theĀ Gaza Nippers program.
Shamikh and his brother Majed have been trying to get their elderly and ill mother out of Gaza for urgent medical attention, but she remains reluctant to move.
They also want to return to Gaza to help find missing family members, who are among the estimated 14,000 Gazans missing, presumed buried, under rubble.
āThe situation is terrible. We donāt know if [our missing family members] are really under the rubble or if the Israeli forces have arrested them,ā Badra said.
āWe are thinking [about] how we can evacuate our mother because she is sick and old, and has been without medicine for the last 15 months.
āShe has also been feeling the pressure from losing my father and my brother Ihab and his family in the bombing. But it is not easy to convince her to leave Gaza.
āThe Palestinians donāt want to leave Gaza and my mother is just one example.ā
This strong determination gives Badra confidence that US President Donald Trumpās dream of turning Gaza into a US-owned seaside resort, that has been ethnically cleansed of Palestinians, will fail.
āI am optimistic because [after] the Israeli military bombed Gaza with the equivalent of the power of several nuclear weapons, the Palestinians are still fighting despite the destruction and genocide.
āPalestinians are good at resisting colonialism. They donāt stop. [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu said he wonāt stop fighting until the Palestinians stop resisting but he failed.
āThe world should understand that the main reason for the resistance is the Israeli occupation. If they end the occupation, there will be peace.ā
The Palestiniansā experience of the firstĀ NakbaĀ (catastrophe) ā when Zionists terrorist groups that drove about half the Palestinian population from their homes later formed the Jewish colonial ethno-state of Israel on stolen land ā has shaped their resistance, Badra said.
āThe main lesson is not to leave Palestine again. We were cheated in the first Nakba when the Arab armies came to Palestine and convinced people they could leave temporarily and then return, perhaps after a week.
āPeople believed the promises by Arab governments and left. Later they realised they had been cheated by the complicity of these armies and Israel.
āSo, Palestinians have learned not to leave ā¦ Palestinians will stay in Palestine because this is the first lesson we learnt from the Nakba.ā
The second lesson from the first Nakba, explained Badra, āis that we have to depend on ourselvesā.
āWe canāt leave Palestine and hope that the Arab states and their armies will help us.
āThe third lesson is that all Palestinian factions [in the resistance] should respect and appreciate the people in Gaza who supported and protected the resistance. Without the people, the resistance would not have survived to continue the struggle.ā
Palestinians should learn from the examples in other countries, he added.
āThe Iraq regime [of Saddam Hussein] was defeated in just two weeks, because the people were not supporting that regime and the same in Syria.
āEven in Bolivia, when Ernesto Che Guevara went there to fight against United States imperialism, the people of Bolivia were not ready for revolution. It is important to understand that if the people donāt support the resistance, the resistance will not succeed.ā
Badra said Trumpās idea that only the US can turn Gaza into a beach resort is an insult to Gazans, who had been enjoying and looking after its beaches for many ages.
For Palestinians in Gaza, the beach is important and it is āthe only place for entertainmentā.
Growing up in Gaza, Badraās father took him to the beach twice a day, teaching him how to swim and, later, to become a lifeguard.
āAfter I came to Australia, I was thinking how to improve and develop the beach in Gaza. I found a good example in the Nippers program and we took it back to Gaza.
āWe will continue the Gaza Nippers program despite the fact that the Israeli army has killed some of the children we trained [to surf] and members of our team.
āIt is sad, but we will continue this project.
āThis is our land and we have the right to self-determination.
āTrump is thinking that everything can be like business. No. Gaza is not for sale!ā