• We must not succumb to despair, Palestinians need our help

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 18 21:17:55 2024
    XPost: alt.food.fast-food, soc.culture.jewish, sac.politics
    XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.atheism

    by Renee Lewis

    As someone who lived in Palestine, made lifelong friends there and
    spent a decade working as a journalist, I had seen the devastation
    Israel left behind with each brutal attack on the defenceless people
    of Gaza. The impact on civilians, especially children, in the densely
    populated territory, was always disturbing for anyone who cared to
    read about IsraelÆs attacks. But I could not have ever imagined Israel
    would carry out the level of destruction and mass extermination it has
    since October 7.

    The official death toll in Gaza has come close to 40,000 by now. An
    article published by medical journal The Lancet in June estimates that
    it could reach at least 186,000 û that is 8 percent of GazaÆs
    population. In addition, more than 90,000 people have been wounded,
    many with life-altering injuries. The majority of casualties are women
    and children.

    Watching the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza has been soul-wrenching
    and I, like so many other people, have felt helpless and guilty.

    No amount of shocking images of dead Palestinian children, and no
    amount of reports about war crimes being committed by Israel have
    managed to sway world leaders to actually do something to stop Israel. Protesting and pleading have seemingly done nothing to convince
    governments to act. The complete disregard for Palestinian lives by
    our leaders has been frustrating.

    Meanwhile, I û like millions of other people in the West û have no
    worries about war or occupation in my daily life. I feel guilty I am
    safe here in the United States, while my government is funding and
    arming genocidal Israel.

    Seeing images and videos of parents picking up their dead children
    from the rubble of homes and schools has been heart-wrenching. I have
    a little daughter and I canÆt imagine the helplessness and rage I
    would feel if I were a Palestinian parent in Gaza.

    I have tried my best to fight this paralysis of helplessness and
    guilt. I have checked regularly with friends in the West Bank and
    tried to help with whatever I can. Through them, I have often heard heartbreaking stories about people they know in Gaza.

    But there has been one story that stuck with me. An old friend in
    Ramallah told me about Ahmed*, a father from Gaza, who got stuck in
    the occupied West Bank after October 7, while his whole family
    remained in the Strip. Ahmed had come to the West Bank to seek
    treatment for a medical problem he had. When the war started, he
    wanted to go back but could not find a way.

    He was living with the constant pain of separation and dread that
    something could happen to his family. The stress of not being able to
    protect his wife and kids was worsening his health condition.

    Ahmed had heard about GoFundMe campaigns that raise money to help
    evacuate Palestinian families from Gaza by paying the fees required by
    Egyptian brokers û about $5,000 per person. There were some success
    stories of fundraising that had given him hope that he could get his
    loved ones to safety, as well.

    Ahmed mentioned the idea to one of my friends in the West Bank, who
    thought I might be able to help set it up since I have a bank account
    eligible to set up a GoFundMe campaign. I was more than willing to
    help. I set up the campaign in April and have been trying to fundraise
    since then.

    I have spoken to Ahmed and reached out to his children in Gaza. Their
    harrowing story has made me that much more motivated to do everything
    I could to make this campaign successful.

    AhmedÆs 20-year-old son Karam gave me a detailed account of the
    horrors he and his siblings û Mahmoud, 18; Amneh, 15; Saja, 12; Zaina,
    9 and Mohammed, 6 û and their mother and aunt û Aman and Zaina û had
    been through. At the start of the Israeli invasion of Gaza, they had
    to flee their home in the at-Tawam district, north of Gaza City with
    almost nothing but the clothes on their back, as it was
    indiscriminately bombed. They first headed to an uncleÆs home in Tal
    al-Hawa in southern Gaza City, then to another relative in Jabalia
    refugee camp. There, in December, the house where they were staying
    got bombed while they were all inside.

    ôThe walls in the house started to fall around us, with shrapnel
    flying in all directions,ö Karam described. ôIt was a moment of sheer
    chaos and destruction.ö

    KaramÆs right leg was broken and he got third-degree burns in the
    bombing. Six-year-old Mohamad was burned on the face and hands. Other
    family members also suffered from burns. Because of IsraelÆs attacks
    on hospitals, they could not get proper medical treatment. The family
    heard that there was a functioning hospital in Deir el-Balah, so
    thatÆs when they decided to start the journey south to central Gaza to
    find medical treatment.

    Karam described the apocalyptic scenes they witnessed as they
    travelled south on the last day of IsraelÆs ôsafe passage corridorö
    for Palestinians who wanted to evacuate from GazaÆs north. It was, of
    course, not a safe passage at all.

    ôThe road was filled with burned dead bodies and burning ambulances à
    I saw entire families martyred in their cars,ö Karam said. ôAnd on our
    way, the Israeli military boats were firing at us the entire time.ö

    The family made it to Deir el-Balah in central Gaza where they set up
    a makeshift tent.

    ôThe size of the tent is five metres by four metres. The girls sleep
    next to each other and my mother and my younger brothers sleep next to
    each other. I sleep at the door due to the small area,ö Karam said.

    Karam described having nothing to sleep on or cover themselves with
    when they first got there and the weather was still cold. In the
    summer, conditions worsened, as the heat, flies and mosquitos became unbearable.

    Karam and his brother still suffer from their wounds, as they were
    unable to get the correct medicine necessary to treat their
    third-degree burns. Their youngest sister Zaina now suffers from PTSD,
    and panics to the point of having convulsions when she hears Israeli
    planes flying over û especially when they fly low and make sonic
    booms. All three of the boys have contracted hepatitis from dirty
    water and their eyes and skin have started to turn yellow. There is no treatment for this available in Gaza.

    The family relies heavily on canned food from aid organisations to
    survive. Fresh food is too expensive and firewood is increasingly
    unaffordable. Fuel for cooking has virtually disappeared.

    Karam and his siblings spend most of the day searching for water, both
    seawater and freshwater û the latter being especially difficult to
    find.

    The family lives in constant dread that their tent will be bombed.

    ôThey do not care about children or women, death is the easiest thing
    in Gaza,ö Karam said. ôWe have reached the point where at any time you
    can find any kind of body part in an apartment.ö

    The family had been through so much that when I talked to them the
    despair was palpable. With everything that has happened since October,
    it is hard to feel hopeful. But as impossible as hope feels given the
    ongoing, horrific crimes committed against innocent Palestinians, it
    is truly the only way forward.

    The Rafah border has been closed since Israeli forces attacked it in
    May. That has put a stop on Egypt-brokered evacuations for now.
    AhmedÆs family hopes to evacuate once it is reopened whether or not a
    ceasefire happens. That is because their home and everything they had
    is destroyed, and the medical problems they have cannot be reliably
    treated in Gaza. They also want to reunite with Ahmed as soon as
    possible. If they cannot evacuate, the money would be used for
    whatever medical treatment they can get and for rebuilding their life
    in Gaza.

    I have to believe that taking some action, any action, could change
    things for the better. None of us individually can put a stop to
    IsraelÆs genocide, but each of us individually can make a huge
    difference for Palestinian families like AhmadÆs. Fundraising
    campaigns û even if they take long û give these families hope. It
    proves to them that the rest of the world cares, that Palestinian
    lives matter.

    *The name of the familyÆs father has been changed to protect his
    identity, as Palestinians from Gaza have been targeted by Israeli
    forces in the occupied West Bank.

    https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2024/8/17/we-must-not-succumb-to-despair-palestinians-need-our-help

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