Reuters photographer Mohammed Salem snapped the most dramatic moments that occured along the Israeli-Gaza border over the past year, documenting the March of Return protests, Hamas’s rocket salvoes, Israeli fields scorched by incendiary kites and balloons and buildings destroyed by IDF strikes.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is often framed in black and white, an outlook captured by this image of Palestinian youths shrouded by clouds of smoke that block out everything except an isolated moment of protest and defiance. Reuters photographer Mohammed Salem’s photograph of a handful of demonstrators in a field of dying flowers and charred grass recorded a new phenomenon in an old war at the weekly Palestinian protests that began in the spring of 2018 along the Israeli-Gaza border.
The protests pitted thousands of Palestinian demonstrators against Israeli soldiers on the other side of the border fence intent on stopping the protesters from crossing or approaching the frontier.
What became known as the “March of Return” dominated the headlines for months, evolving into a compelling but deadly form of attritional public spectacle, all covered by photojournalists risking their lives to document it.
Taking place in a handful of accessible locations at prearranged times, the protests became battlegrounds of image and spin for both sides.
The Israeli military published video footage, pictures and social media posts in Hebrew, English and Arabic to support its message that its forces were engaged in “riot dispersal.”
Hamas, the Islamist terror group that controls Gaza, televised images of the Palestinian dead and wounded, and Palestinian protesters posted images from the front lines on social media.
The primary stated purpose of the protests was to revive a demand by refugees for the right to return to lands that Palestinians were driven from or fled when Israel was founded in 1948. Israel has ruled out any such right, on the grounds that it would mean the end of the Jewish state.
But the immediate factor was Palestinian anger at US President Donald Trump’s decisions on December 6 last year to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and to begin preparations to move its embassy to the city that is sacred to three monotheistic faiths: Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
Trump’s move delighted Israel’s government, which regards Jerusalem as its eternal united capital, but infuriated Palestinians who claim East Jerusalem as the capital of a state they hope to establish in the West Bank and in Gaza Strip.
The deadliest day of the protests was May 14, when the new embassy held its opening ceremony. It fell on a symbolic date for both sides—the 70th anniversary of the creation of Israel. That is a joyous day for Israelis, but an event regarded by Palestinians as their “Nakba” or Catastrophe when they lost their homeland.
The Jerusalem-Gaza juxtaposition made headlines at home and abroad, and produced a worldwide split-screen television moment as Trump’s daughter Ivanka attended the embassy ceremony, even as Israeli troops clashed with Palestinian protesters just over 70 km (43 miles) away.
The border protests continued and morphed into other forms.
Israelis were angered by another new phenomenon first seen in 2018—the Palestinian incendiary kites and balloons loaded with petrol bombs by Gaza militants and sent flying over the border. Palestinians continued to call for an end to the blockade on Gaza.
The conflict switched to the skies in November when a bungled Israeli commando mission inside Gaza erupted into a deadly gunfight and then the fiercest Palestinian rocket salvoes and Israeli air strikes since the 2014 Operation Protective Edge.
The skies fell quiet again as the year drew to a close, giving way to ceasefires and mediation efforts, as all sides waited for the Trump administration to unveil its long-expected Middle East peace plan.
As reported by Ynetnews