By The Associated Press Last update - 08:51 11/08/2008
For video:
www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1010449.html
Youths leaped through fiery hoops as gunfire echoed in an action-packed
graduation ceremony for a Hamas summer camp aimed at preparing the
youngsters for battle against Israel.
About 200 teens dressed in the uniforms of the Hamas military wing showed
off their new skills Sunday in a sandy, ramshackle stadium in the eastern
Shejaiyeh area of Gaza City. The goal of the Hamas camp was clear - train
the youth in military tactics and impart the militant Islamic ideology that
has characterized Hamas.
A truce that began June 19, halting Palestinian rocket barrages and Israeli
reprisal raids, provided the calm for the camp to proceed unhindered.
Some of the drills in the final event were the same as those seen at
graduation ceremonies for Palestinian police and security forces.
The youths leaped through hoops set on fire and summersaulted over the backs
of others as older Hamas militants fired rifles. Random small bombs were
also detonated in the sandy field.
An older youth lay on the ground as a minivan drove over him - the tire
rolling over the youth’s body to cheers and gasps by hundreds of onlookers.
He later smashed concrete plates set on fire with a quick snap of his hand.
Other youths also smashed concrete blocks piled on the youth’s body, as
organizers set a small fire nearby, increasing the pressure.
A black-suited trio sung strident pro-Hamas music as the youths back-flipped
off scaffolding into a pool of water below, held onto a rope to glide across
a metal cable fixed above the ground, and leaped off wooden bars, a few
landing in a smoldering fire pit lit below them - all while bearded gunmen
fired their assault rifles in the air and around the youths’ feet.
They later lined up breathing heavily and standing still as khaki-clad camp
leaders walked sternly among them.
“They are tomorrow’s leaders!” thundered Khalil Hayyeh, a senior Hamas
leader.
Last summer Hamas expelled its Fatah rivals and was busy with setting up its
government in the coastal territory instead of running summer camps like
this one. Now the truce has provided quiet.
“There’s no doubt that the stability and calm has created a good atmosphere
that has allowed us to make more summer camps, and oversee the youths,” said
Ismail Ridwan in a telephone interview to The Associated Press.
The Hamas legislator said when he was a child, Hamas was not able to hold
camps because of Israel’s occupation of the Gaza Strip. Israel pulled out in
2005 but still controls Gaza’s borders and has imposed a blockade on
Hamas-ruled Gaza.
Israel has charged that the Hamas camps teach the youths to hate the Jewish
state. Hamas is committed to the destruction of the Jewish state. “That has
nothing to do with the camps, the hatred of Israel comes from (Israel’s)
occupation, which burdens our hearts,” Ridwan said.
Youths leaped through fiery hoops as gunfire echoed in an action-packed
graduation ceremony for a Hamas summer camp aimed at preparing the
youngsters for battle against Israel.
About 200 teens dressed in the uniforms of the Hamas military wing showed
off their new skills Sunday in a sandy, ramshackle stadium in the eastern
Shejaiyeh area of Gaza City. The goal of the Hamas camp was clear - train
the youth in military tactics and impart the militant Islamic ideology that
has characterized Hamas.
A truce that began June 19, halting Palestinian rocket barrages and Israeli
reprisal raids, provided the calm for the camp to proceed unhindered.
Some of the drills in the final event were the same as those seen at
graduation ceremonies for Palestinian police and security forces.
The youths leaped through hoops set on fire and summersaulted over the backs
of others as older Hamas militants fired rifles. Random small bombs were
also detonated in the sandy field.
An older youth lay on the ground as a minivan drove over him - the tire
rolling over the youth’s body to cheers and gasps by hundreds of onlookers.
He later smashed concrete plates set on fire with a quick snap of his hand.
Other youths also smashed concrete blocks piled on the youth’s body, as
organizers set a small fire nearby, increasing the pressure.
A black-suited trio sung strident pro-Hamas music as the youths back-flipped
off scaffolding into a pool of water below, held onto a rope to glide across
a metal cable fixed above the ground, and leaped off wooden bars, a few
landing in a smoldering fire pit lit below them - all while bearded gunmen
fired their assault rifles in the air and around the youths’ feet.
They later lined up breathing heavily and standing still as khaki-clad camp
leaders walked sternly among them.
“They are tomorrow’s leaders!” thundered Khalil Hayyeh, a senior Hamas
leader.
Last summer Hamas expelled its Fatah rivals and was busy with setting up its
government in the coastal territory instead of running summer camps like
this one. Now the truce has provided quiet.
“There’s no doubt that the stability and calm has created a good atmosphere
that has allowed us to make more summer camps, and oversee the youths,” said
Ismail Ridwan in a telephone interview to The Associated Press.
The Hamas legislator said when he was a child, Hamas was not able to hold
camps because of Israel’s occupation of the Gaza Strip. Israel pulled out in
2005 but still controls Gaza’s borders and has imposed a blockade on
Hamas-ruled Gaza.
Israel has charged that the Hamas camps teach the youths to hate the Jewish
state. Hamas is committed to the destruction of the Jewish state. “That has
nothing to do with the camps, the hatred of Israel comes from (Israel’s)
occupation, which burdens our hearts,” Ridwan said.
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