As early recovery work begins, the toll of conflict on Gaza’s children is clear
By Roshni Karwal “She was alone for three days in the street and no one passed in that neighbourhood,” Amira’s mother recalls. Amira herself remembers: “My father went outside, telling us, ‘I want to sit outside with my friends and read the Quran so that you can sleep well and not be scared.’” Shortly thereafter, she says, her father and the others died in a missile strike. The three-week conflict, which halted with a ceasefire this past weekend, has left a trail of destruction – including thousands of homes destroyed and damaged. Before the ceasefire was declared, some 50,000 people sought refuge in UN shelters. Only now are many Gazans making their way home again. Recovery begins “We are also looking to help children who could perhaps be displaced,” she adds. “We are working at setting up immediately 30 youth and protection centres for these children – community centres where they will be able to go while their families are trying to put their lives back together.” Some 1,300 people were killed and thousands more injured during the conflict. The physical and psychological toll on children has been immense. “Honestly, the situation is very bad, because it is a first time we are dealing with these types of injuries for children,” notes Dr. Imad Al Majdalawi, a surgeon at Gaza’s Shifa Hospital. “We are immediately targeting psychosocial [needs]. We have a team of counsellors that is on the ground moving around now. We are also trying to get education going,” says Ms. McPhillips. “Children are going to bear the brunt of this,” she notes, referring to the conflict’s short- and long-term effects on boys and girls like Amira. “They should not be victims of the political context in which they live.”
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