2 July 2010

Gaza

Tirando uma afirmação que é feita e não pensando nas consequências de se ter uma família tão numerosa, isto é, olhando para esta notícia sem "olhos de ver", é caso para dizer que há felicidade em Gaza :)
430 netos?! O mais novo dos seus filhos tem 2 anos!? Abu Talal tem 82 anos! E não descura a hipótese de ter mais umas 10 ou 15 crianças com as 4 mulheres que tem! Impressionante! E, como tradição é tradição, por cada criança que nasce na família é sacrificada uma cabra..o artigo que transcrevo vale mesmo a pena ler, no meio de um conflito que ocupa a categoria "middle east" em todos os jornais, surge esta que não deixa de ser uma "boa notícia", ou deveria dizer "430 boas notícias"?


«'Legendary' Gaza man and his ever-growing family
Driving along a dusty, potholed track in southern Gaza on the way to meet one of the territory's most prolific lovers, we were lost. We stopped to ask directions.
"Do you know Abu Talal's house?" I shouted out of the car window to a young boy by the side of the road.
"Yes, he's my grandfather," the child beamed.
Quite a coincidence you might think - until you hear that 82-year-old Abu Talal al-Najar says he has more than 430 grandchildren.
He also has some 30 children and has racked up some 11 wives over the years. Currently he only has four.
A legend
The law in Gaza, as well as Shariah religious law outlined in the Koran, says the maximum number of wives a man can have at any one time is four.
But actually it is very uncommon for Gazan men to have more than one wife.
Arriving at his house, a half-finished looking structure near the town of Khan Younis, we found Abu Talal kneeling in the corner of the yard, facing east and praying.
He bent down, placing his forehead on the ground, his arms outstretched in the familiar ritual - still flexible even at 82.
After several minutes he rose to greet us, a sturdy, bull-like figure with a wide grin and a firm handshake.
Abu Talal is something of a legend in southern Gaza. With his many children (another 11 died over the years) he has spawned one of the strip's largest families.
'A hobby'
"I was an only child myself," he tells me. "So I wanted to have a big family - plus it has just become something of a hobby," he laughs.

With the help of some of his grandchildren he is just about able to remember the names of his surviving children, 17 girls and 13 boys.The octogenarian's youngest child is only two years old.
"Every time a child is born in this family we sacrifice a goat in celebration," says Abu Talal.
Bad news if you happen to be a goat in southern Gaza, I suggest.
The population of Gaza is rising by about 5% every year. Some 1.5m people live squeezed onto a strip of land 40km (25 miles) long and 6 to 12km wide.
Many people live in poverty, with unemployment at around 40%, according to the UN.
Does Abu Talal not worry about bringing children into such a world?
"No, because if I lose 200 of my grandchildren, I will still have 200 left."
Palestinian infighting
At least five of his family were killed in last year's major conflict with Israel, in which the UN estimates about 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.
Abu Talal also lost 10 family members during the fighting between Fatah and Hamas in 2007.
The Islamist movement, Hamas, took control of the Gaza Strip after forcing their secular rivals Fatah from the territory. Hamas had earlier won parliamentary elections in 2006.
Abu Talal was born in Gaza in 1928 during the British Mandate of Palestine.
"The British were bad. The Israelis were worse, but the biggest danger for my children now is the continuing disagreement between Fatah and Hamas - Palestinians fighting amongst themselves," Abu Talal says.
He has had eleven wives during his lifetime.
Some of them have died, and some of the marriages have ended in divorce.
The youngest of his current four wives is about 50 years younger than him.
As to when the father of 30 might call it a day, he chuckles. "I still think I could manage another 10 or 15 kids."»