Women in Gaza struggling to overcome damage inflicted by Israel’s war

Women in Gaza struggling to overcome damage inflicted by Israel’s war

Rasha Abu Sbeaka, a Palestinian, managed to survive four bombings and twice having to be rescued from rubble after an attack. Rasha Abu Sbeaka, a Palestinian, managed to survive the Israeli-led genocidal war in Gaza for two years.

However, tragically, she may still be killed by the conflict and its aftermath despite the ceasefire.

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Abu Sbeaka is unable to access the care she urgently needs to survive because of the conflict and Israel’s destruction of Gaza’s medical sector, in addition to the ongoing closure of crossings out of the enclave that might allow her to receive treatment abroad.

According to Abu Sbeaka, she frequently feels like she is “going to die” due to her circumstances. Because I believed I was on my deathbed, I used to hug and kiss my kids daily.

Abu Sbeaka and another Palestinian, Mervat Sarhan, who recently emerged from an Israeli prison and claimed to have endured beatings and electric shocks, spoke to Al Jazeera about the difficulties Palestinians face in reversing the harm done by Israel’s war against Gaza even after the ceasefire.

She said, “I want everyone to know our story.”

Rasha Abu Sbeaka, a cancer patient in Palestine, claims she needs to be taken out of Gaza to get treatment.

Everything is “at a standstill.”

Abu Sbeaka, a resident of the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza, claimed that the conflict had had a significant impact on her health.

She thinks the constant bombardment and rocket fire caused her cancer.

She said, “I frequently find it difficult to breathe.”

She claimed that Gaza’s healthcare system was in ruins because of the war, making it impossible for her to get the care she so urgently needs.

Due to the war and the closed crossings, she said, “there is no medical treatment and no alternative treatments.” “Everything is at a standstill here,” the statement read.

She claimed that her mental well-being had been severely impacted by her illness as she struggled to find treatment and get over the disease.

My psychological health has been completely destroyed, he claims. This is how I used to be. She said, “I used to love life.

Under the auspices of the World Health Organization (WHO), a small number of patients have been ejected for medical care. However, the WHO reported that the number of patients requiring evacuation, including 3,800 children, is only a fraction of the 15, 000 who were being evacuated, including 41 on Thursday.

Despite the ceasefire’s promise that the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt would remain open, Israel continues to keep it closed. The WHO has demanded that all of Gaza’s border crossings be cleared for both medical evacuations and entry to aid, stating that if they continue at the current rate, they would take a decade or so.

According to Abu Sbeaka, “provided that they hurry up and open the crossings, so that we can travel abroad and get the treatment we need to recover quickly,” she and her fellow cancer patients in Gaza were determined to beat the disease.

Rasha Abu Sbeaka
Rasha Abu Sbeaka discusses her pathology report [Screenrab/Al Jazeera]

Husband was killed in front of young people.

After nearly five months in Israeli custody, Sarhan is fighting her own battle in Khan Younis.

She claimed that during interrogations, she was subjected to beatings, electric shocks, and threats to kill her children.

Sarhan, who was one of the two Palestinian women who were released in the most recent incident under the ceasefire with Israel, got into her bedroom early one morning in May when Israeli special forces dressed as women entered.

“They sacked the house and continued to inquire, “Where are you hiding them?” The captives are where? Sarhan addressed Al Jazeera.

Before the Israeli soldiers killed her husband in front of their terrified children, she claimed they had no idea about the captives.

“Then, in a hurry, they began grabbing my children.” The furniture was repeatedly smashed. They held me in handcuffs and took me.

She claimed that she was taken by Israeli forces along with her 13-year-old son, leaving the younger children and their “dead father lying on the floor” behind.

electric shocks and beatings

Sarhan claimed that she was then subjected to a military questioning that included being shocked and beaten as Israeli officers interrogated her about her husband’s contacts.

She was informed that her son would be freed, but she was instead imprisoned in an “unforgiving” cell in Israel’s Ashkelon prison for a month.

She was also subjected to daily interrogations at this time.

She said, “They even threatened to kill my children, to put me in jail for life, and to tell me I wouldn’t see my children again.”

After her release along with other Palestinian prisoners, Sarhan is now focused on rebuilding her life without her husband.

Source: Aljazeera

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