For some Gaza children, another round of violence reopens trauma
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[August 18, 2022]
By Nidal al-Mughrabi and Henriette Chacar
GAZA (Reuters) - When Israeli missiles
started landing in Gaza in early August, shattering glass and collapsing
buildings, Jouman Abdu put on headphones, covered her eyes with a
blindfold and stretched on the couch.
The 8-year-old Palestinian girl said she came up with this ritual to
escape the bang of the blasts, the second round of steady violence she
had experienced in 15 months.
"I didn't want to hear the sounds of explosions," she told Reuters as
she sat with her mother. "I was afraid they would bomb our house."
The latest outbreak of hostilities lasted only a weekend but buttressed
the trauma faced by Palestinian children growing up in the densely
populated strip in the years since 2007 when Israel and Egypt imposed a
blockade, cutting it off from outside, four people, including parents
and experts, told Reuters.
"If you are a child in or around Gaza and you are 15 years old, in your
life you have already gone through five different conflicts," said Lucia
Elmi, special representative of UNICEF, the United Nations Children's
Fund, in Palestine.
Israel this month launched a series of airstrikes against the Islamic
Jihad movement in Gaza, in response to what Israeli authorities said was
a concrete and imminent threat from the group following the arrest of
one of its senior leaders.
Islamic Jihad, a militant group committed to Israel's destruction and
the creation of an Islamic Palestinian state, fired more than 1,000
rockets towards Israel and held Israel responsible for the escalation,
saying it had informed Egyptian mediators it was about to call off a
state of high alert among its fighters when the Israeli strikes began.
The Western-backed Palestinian Authority also condemned Israel's
attacks.
Asked for comment on the mental health impact of the blockade and
repeated violence in Gaza, the Israeli military said the reality of
fighting was difficult for Palestinians in Gaza and Israelis who live
around the strip.
In a statement it said it "took every feasible effort to reduce damage
to civilians and civilian property".
Reuters was unable to independently confirm the claims made by Israel
and Islamic Jihad.
At least 49 people, including 17 children, were killed and more than 360
people, among them 151 children and teenagers, were wounded, Gaza health
officials said, before an Egyptian-brokered truce halted the fighting.
Children make up about half of Gaza's 2.3 million Palestinian
population.
There are no safe shelters in the strip, where Palestinian officials and
international humanitarian organisations have warned that the healthcare
system is on the brink of collapse.
A report in June by the aid group Save the Children found the
psychosocial wellbeing of children in Gaza was at "alarmingly low
levels" based on a survey of 488 children and 160 parents and
caregivers. One in two children in Gaza is in need of mental health and
psychosocial support, Elmi said.
This was already the case after May 2021, she added, when 11 days of
fighting between Israel and the Islamist Hamas left 250 Palestinians in
Gaza and 13 people in Israel dead, leading to "a cumulative effect of
long-lasting trauma for children."
'CONTINUOUS' TRAUMANo casualties were reported on the Israeli side this
time but children living in Israeli communities around Gaza, within
immediate range of rockets fired from the strip, also suffer from
trauma, UNICEF's Elmi said.
Israeli studies over the years have established that children under
continuous exposure to bombardment experience high levels of stress,
with particularly high levels of anxiety in areas near Gaza.
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A Palestinian girl reacts, as another
round of violence intensifies mental health crisis for Gaza
children, in Gaza City August 7, 2022. According to Geneva-based
human rights nonprofit Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor, 91% of
children in Gaza suffer from some form of conflict-related trauma.
REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
"There is endless research and work regarding the long-term effects
of exposure to traumatic situations," said psychologist Ilana
Elyassi, speaking in her office in Gevim, in southern Israel. "I
think it affects almost any area of the personality, the internal
world and people's functionality."
Sitting in a fortified room in the southern Israeli city of
Ashkelon, Ravit and Amit Shubely played with their two children to
distract them from possible sirens warning of incoming rockets.
Even inside a fortified room, "there's always a fear of death,"
Ravit, the mother, said. During the fighting, her children kept
waking up at night and repeatedly asked her what to do in case of
sirens, she added.
“We live here in a kind of pressure cooker in which you don’t know
when it can hit you. It can happen at any time, in crazy hours and
you cannot control it,” said Amit, the father.
In Gaza, aid groups say, Palestinians do not have bomb shelters or
the missile defence systems that protect Israelis. Access to health
services is limited, movement is severely restricted, and the
psychological scars run deep, they say.
A 2015 study by the non-government Physicians for Human
Rights–Israel organisation found that average life expectancy among
Palestinians in the occupied territories was 10 years less than that
of Israelis due to significant disparities in health conditions –
and the gaps were increasing. Dr. Sam Owaida, a psychiatrist with
the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme, said the effects on
children of the repeated bouts of fighting ranged from refusing to
leave the house and clinging to parents to problems with speaking,
bed wetting and sleep disturbance.
In Gaza, "there is no such thing as post-trauma, the trauma is
continuous," he said.
Parents and caretakers, many already in poverty due to Gaza's
shattered economy, have become more aware of coping techniques but
the resources available in Gaza may not be enough to fill the
growing need for trauma support, he added.
A December 2021 humanitarian needs overview by the U.N. Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs determined that existing
shortages in specialised personnel and medication in Gaza were
compounded by COVID-19 and last year’s war, with many frontline
workers either overloaded or unable to return to work.
Elmi said UNICEF is working with partners to scale up counselling
services in the strip.
For Najla Shawa, a humanitarian worker and mother of two in Gaza,
this round was difficult to experience as a parent despite a
relatively short duration. Previous traumas in her daughters, Zainab,
7, and Malak, 5, surfaced almost immediately, she said. The girls
refused to go anywhere alone – even to the bathroom – and whenever
loud explosions were heard, Zainab complained of intense physical
pain in her chest, their mother said.
"I was trying my best to really hold myself together and just be
this ideal parent," Shawa told Reuters. "How can we comfort them?
The fear is shared by everyone, adults and children alike."
"There is no such thing as 'they will get used to it,'" she added.
"It is as if you live through the war for the first time all over
again."
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza and Henriette Chacar in
Jerusalem; Additional reporting by Dedi Hayun in Ashkelon; Editing
by James Mackenzie and Howard Goller)
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