Three dresses rescued from Rafah: Palestinian culture hangs by a thread

This article was first published by Garland Magazine.

While Amer Shomali describes the dramatic rescue of three dresses from Rafah, Sunbula reports on the current state of embroiderers in Gaza and Rachel Dedman reflects on a touring exhibition of tatreez from the Palestinian Museum.

On October 28th, the museum was bombed and totally destroyed. The collection was buried under the rubble. She contacted us at the Palestinian Museum. At that moment, we didn’t know exactly how you could. There are warplanes, jets, and rockets. We felt helpless, and there seemed to be nothing we could do from a distance. At some point, we partnered with Aliph, which provided us with a grant to evacuate the collections in Gaza. We managed to rent a bulldozer and we removed the rubble from the museum site. A team of maybe ten women got quick training online and on the ground in Gaza by Dr. Suhaila, the director of the Rafah Museum. They began digging under the rubble to retrieve the dresses from under the ground.

We retrieved almost 25% of the collection. The rest were either burned, looted, or totally damaged by the bombing. Some of the dresses, especially those on display at the moment of the explosion, were blown up into the sky. One landed on an electricity pole, and it took them a few months to get someone to climb up and get it down.  The second dress was split into two pieces and blown in different directions.  The first half was found a month later, but the second part, the sleeve itself, was found six months later, almost six kilometres from the museum. They managed to put the two pieces together. And the last one was a dress for a little girl, which was blown up into the sky and landed on top of a destroyed building nearby. But no one could manage to get up to the roof to get it until almost a year later.