For many Palestinians, survival hangs by a thread. When the guillotine severs the cords tethering parachuted aid pallets, a desperate two-minute countdown begins amidst the ruins of Gaza. But the skyward vigil starts earlier, as aid lookouts hear the low-flying aircraft approach. Crews aboard humanitarian mission C-130s, including Italy’s, witness firsthand the anguish the world sees only in photos. Peering from the windows reveals no sign of life north of the Strip: after the Mediterranean, the low-altitude flight passes beaches, shattered buildings, and displaced persons’ tents – perhaps already abandoned. Further on, without warning, the descent begins into a horizontal abyss where buildings lose form, appearing saponified, dissolving into the shadows of non-existent structures now mere rubble perimeters.
Paradoxically, only the C-130s’ external monitoring cameras capture the human geography: footage documents Palestinians clinging to life, racing aircraft speeds to reach falling aid. Nothing is left to chance; they must hit the precise spot – not too far, not too close – or risk being crushed by a tonne of food, a fate that befell a 14-year-old Gazan before. Pilots know this risk well and bear the responsibility to drop aid blocks only within Jordanian-designated ‘safe areas’. “Calculations must be absolute. We cannot take risks. If safety conditions aren’t met, we drop nothing, perhaps trying another pass,” explains the commander of the Italian Defence aircraft, a large Air Force man with a Tuscan accent, who today can afford no errors. At the designated drop point, the plane banks, the ramp opens, and the guillotine activates instantly: cords snap, pallets slide off rollers in under three seconds into the void. Parachutes catch air, inflate, leaving behind the alienating roar of engines. Mission accomplished, the plane banks towards its Amman base hangar.
What follows is a 120-second race between Palestinians and the sky, decipherable only through frame-by-frame analysis. The Jordanian map – inevitably coordinated with Israel – appears clearer via the aircraft’s electronic eyes: an artery leading to the ‘safe area’ divides a more populated zone from one utterly scarred by bombardment. On this road, groups of black shadows rapidly converge on drop points as planes arrive. “They look so small in the images. Like ants approaching crumbs,” someone reflects softly, aware these are human beings.
After landing, taxiing on the runway, the pilot removes his aviation headset and reveals the emotional impact: “It’s shocking to see the yellow sand suddenly mixing with the grey concrete of all the destroyed buildings. I saw personally what I’d only heard or seen in others’ accounts: immense desolation, thinking of the grand hotels and buildings that once stood, now gone.” Often shielded from the field, the unacceptable can become more palatable for media and armies. Today, however, the crew of the Italian C-130 became witnesses.
