Reporter's blog
Nahlah Ayed
Reporter's blogDAY 4: Artifacts of exile
By Nahlah Ayed, CBC News
Posted: Nov 7, 2010 6:21 PM ET
Last Updated: May 19, 2011 8:01 PM ET
Nov. 7, 2010 — If every society has a historian, then Shatila's must be Dr. Mohammed Al-Khatib.
A medical doctor, Al-Khatib has taken it upon himself to write about the camp's violent history. But his main body of work isn't on paper: It is an airless, dark warehouse crammed with reminders of his people's past.
When we first met up with him Saturday night, the power had gone out in Shatila, as it does every few hours, every single day. Few people have generators, and when the lights go out, most of Shatila's dwellings fall into a remarkable darkness.
Mohammed Al Khatib, 63, speaks to CBC in his museum of artifacts brought to Lebanon by Palestinian refugees during a power outage Nov. 6, 2010, in Shatila refugee camp in Beirut. (Nahlah Ayed/CBC) So, it was by candle light that we started our conversation.
"I don't have children," Al-Khatib said. "So, I said 'OK, this is my child, and I have to pay for it'."
His "child" is Shatila's one and only museum: a dusty two rooms full of mostly pre-1948 Palestinian artifacts brought by their owners when they came to Lebanon. Al-Khatib started gathering them from Palestinian refugee camps all over Lebanon about seven years ago and has amassed more than 900 items since.
But with little light, we couldn't see much of them Saturday night. So, we agreed to meet in the morning — before the power went out again.
Al-Khatib and several lit incandescent bulbs were waiting for us when we arrived Sunday to resume our chat.
"It is important to remember the way of living there [pre-1948 Palestine]," he continued. "We also had a culture in Palestine like any other country."
Some of the artifacts displayed in Al Khatib's museum. He has amassed more than 900 of them since he began collecting seven years ago. (Nahlah Ayed/CBC) Each item brings on a story. A key from Al-Khatib's home village of Khalsa, in the north of what was then Palestine, once belonged to a homeowner who had assumed he'd have the chance to unlock his door again. A miniature ship had been kept and repaired by the friends of a sailor in his memory. A mirror encased in ornate wood had travelled from a Palestinian home to Gaza, to Egypt and then was given as a gift to a doctor in Beirut before ending up in Al-Khatib's museum.
His favourite item?
"The newest is always the most precious," he says with a smile.
Al-Khatib isn't bothered that few Palestinians come to explore the museum, that few organizations have offered to help him despite his repeated requests.
Like most of the camp's residents, Al-Khatib's time in Lebanon's camps, which began in 1947 when his family fled what was then Palestine when he was six months old, defined the course of his 63 years: his father was killed in a camp in the south, and, tragically, his own two children died of illness and hunger in Shatila during the so-called War of the Camps phase of the Lebanese civil war in 1985 and '86, in which the Shia Muslim Amal militia sought to gain control of the Palestinian camps in Beirut and southern Lebanon.
He narrowly escaped death during the Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982.
Despite growing up in poverty, Al-Khatib earned a medical degree in Spain before returning to Shatila to work as a physician with the United Nations. Eventually, unlike most Palestinians here, he acquired Lebanese citizenship and moved out of Shatila.
Mohammed Al Khatib, left, plays chess on Nov. 7, 2010, outside his museum of artifacts. It doesn't happen often, but he likes it when someone in the camp beats him at the game, he says, because he like to see signs that Shatila's residents are improving their fortunes - even if it's only on the chessboard.
(Nahlah Ayed/CBC) It was education, he says, that really gave him a way out.
So, he finds it hard to watch as many of today's youth drop out of school, some of them, he says, spending their days playing cards instead.
Al-Khatib prefers chess. And it is those heated matches, his family and the museum that keep him coming back to Shatila.
It doesn't happen often, but he loves it when someone in the camp beats him at chess. Because, he says, he wants better for the people of Shatila — that they're capable of doing more to improve their fortunes.
"I always stress on education and culture," he says. "Even if you are poor, you can still study."
"Yes, there is hope. In every society, there is hope."
And in every society, there are the hopeful. Al-Khatib is definitely one of them.
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