close
Palestinian refugee Fatima al-Ashwah, follows the news on television at her home.
Palestinian refugee Fatima al-Ashwah, follows the news on television at her home.

Lebanon’s Palestinian refugees fear for families in Gaza

BEIRUT: In a ramshackle Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, Hayat Shehadeh wrings her hands as she watches the Zionist assault on Gaza. Her daughter is in coastal Palestinian territory, which has been under near relentless bombardment for nearly a month and a half, and she has not spoken to her for a week.

“I can’t sleep. I get up at 3:00 am ... I go to watch the television,” said the 69-year-old from her flat in south Beirut’s Burj al-Barajneh Palestinian camp. “Sometimes she writes to me, ‘I’m fine’. She doesn’t write more than that” because she has no way to recharge her phone battery, said the elderly woman, a baby grandchild playing with a Palestinian flag on the floor nearby.

The Zionist entity has carried out a relentless air and ground offensive in Gaza in a bid to “crush” Hamas, the Palestinian militant group that launched an attack on the Zionist entity on Oct 7, which killed 1,200 people and took 240 captive, according to Zionist officials. The assault on Gaza has killed more than 12,000 people, more than one third of them children, according to Palestinian authorities.

With pain in her voice but trying to maintain her composure, Shehadeh said her daughter had separated her three children, sending them away with different relatives. “She was crying, she said ‘I split up the kids’,” her mother said, so that “if someone dies, they don’t all die.”

The Burj al-Barajneh camp is a labyrinth of alleyways, some bearing pictures of former Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, or stencils and posters in support of Hamas and other Palestinian groups. Lebanon hosts an estimated 250,000 Palestinian refugees, many living in the country’s 12 official camps, according to the United Nations agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA).

‘Dear to me’

Shehadeh said her daughter, who is in her thirties, had been living in Lebanon in recent years but a few months ago “her husband came and took her” back to Gaza. “She’s moving around ... I don’t know what area she’s in now,” Shehadeh said, requesting the young woman not be identified by name.

More than 1.5 million people have been internally displaced in Gaza, and UN agencies have warned of rapidly deteriorating conditions. UNRWA chief Philippe Lazzarini has described children sheltering at a UN school “pleading for a sip of water or for a loaf of bread”. On Friday, network provider Paltel group said communications with Gaza were severed due to a lack of fuel.

Shehadeh’s family came to Lebanon from the Acre area, now occupied by the Zionist entity, survivors of Nakba, or the “catastrophe”, when more than 760,000 Palestinians were evicted or forced to flee their homes in 1948 to make way for the creation of the Zionist entity.

She said the family had feared for their lives, including after Jewish paramilitary groups massacred more than 100 Palestinian villagers at Deir Yassin, near Jerusalem, in April that year. The elderly woman said if she could talk to her daughter, she would tell her not to cry. “I want to tell her that her tears are dear to me,” she said.

‘Nothing left’

The Burj al-Barajneh camp was partially destroyed by the Zionist entity’s 1982 invasion of Beirut and during Lebanon’s 15-year-long civil war, according to UNRWA. In her small flat in the camp, Palestinian Fatima al-Ashwah, 61, is also glued to the television, praying her family members in Gaza are not among those being pulled dead from the rubble, or hoping to get a glimpse of them in footage of displaced people.

Originally from Al-Kabri in northern Palestine, now occupied by the Zionist entity, Ashwah has some 70 extended family members in Gaza, including her cousins and their families, the eldest in their seventies, the youngest just one year old. They used to live in northern Gaza’s Beit Hanoun, near the Erez crossing with the Zionist entity, Ashwah said, but now “their houses are all gone ... because they’re on the front lines. There’s nothing left.”

The Zionist entity has for more than a month been calling on the population in northern Gaza to evacuate south as it pushes ahead with its war against Hamas. Ashwah’s relatives have fled from place to place, with some now sheltering in schools near Gaza’s southern Rafah crossing with Egypt. She said sometimes she had been able to hear bombing during short telephone calls.

Her relatives have told her: “’We’re hungry, we’re afraid, the children are afraid, they’re terrified’,” she said. “The situation breaks your heart,” she said. “I can’t stand the sound of crying and screaming anymore”. Fighting back tears, she recounted how she had visited Gaza in July, and how the family greeted her and another relative with drums and dancing in celebration at the Rafah crossing. “God willing it will be over and Gaza will go back to how it was before,” she said. – AFP

By Nermeen Al-Houti The sounds of the Saudi musical group “Choralla” illuminated the Kuwaiti sky last Thursday, as part of the “Shetaa Al-Kuwait 2024” festival held at the Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Cultural Center. Known for their mastery in com...
For years, numerous stakeholders have engaged in extensive dialogues with health service providers, all with one goal in mind: to ensure that the patient remains the focal point of healthcare. Yet, despite these ongoing efforts, patients continue to...
MORE STORIES