New Era

Post and present trauma time bomb hangs over Gaza

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GAZA CITY - Her eyes glued to a cellphone photo of her sister and four children killed in an Israeli strike on Gaza, Ola lets out the painful words: “I was hoping we’d find them alive.”

The Gaza City resident in her thirties wipes away tears as she stands before a psychologi­st from a local organisati­on.

Ola is one of many Gazans who lost family members during 11 days of Israeli bombardmen­t last month when the local health ministry says 66 Palestinia­n children and teenagers were killed.

From 10 to 21 May, the Israeli army pummelled the Gaza Strip in response to rocket fire by militants of the Islamist movement Hamas which rules the coastal enclave that is home to two million people.

One of the strikes devastated the Al-Rimal district of Gaza City and demolished the building where Abeer, Ola’s sister, lived with her family.

Ten hours after the raid, rescue teams miraculous­ly pulled Abeer’s husband, Riad, and their eightyear-old daughter, Suzy, from the rubble.

But Abeer and the couple’s four other kids did not survive.

“I can’t stop thinking about my sister and her children, who might have been alive for hours under the ruins,” said Ola Ashkantana, who turned down the offer of antianxiet­y medication.

“I’m in shock. Now I’m afraid of losing my own children.”

In the next room, Riad holds Suzy on his knees, as Hassan al-Khawaja, a Gazan doctor specialisi­ng in mental health, encourages him to try psychother­apy.

“I’m suffocatin­g. I’ve even thought of going to live alongside them in the cemetery,” said Riad, whose family says has hardly spoken since the war tore his loved ones away.

“I’m traumatise­d. How will my feelings and thoughts ever change? I will never again be who I was before.”

Ola and Riad are not alone. The latest Gaza war, the fourth since 2008 in the Israelibes­ieged territory, saw some 1 000 apartments, offices and businesses destroyed.

But the few psychiatri­sts and psychologi­sts in the enclave know that rebuilding will have to go far beyond physical reconstruc­tion.

“It’s not the first time that we have a war in Gaza,” said Khawaja, who says much of the population suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. “We have to work on multiple traumas.”

“I expect a PTSD crisis in the coming months,” he said, explaining that with each new trauma and war, many Gazans faces relapses and acute stress disorder, with symptoms including shock and denial.

If such stress is not addressed quickly, it can progress into PTSD - meaning the work of mental health care teams is vital in coming months to prevent an explosion of cases.

At Al-Awda hospital in Jabalia camp, northern Gaza, Bilal Daya has a broken arm, a hole in his calf and his left leg in a splint.

But it’s not the 24-year-old’s physical injuries that concern doctors the most.

Bilal was drinking tea outside his home in eastern Gaza when an Israeli strike injured a neighbour.

“He was screaming for help,” Bilal said. “I tried to carry him, but another missile hit. There was an enormous buzz in my ears, human body parts around me, smoke. I couldn’t stand because I was hit by shrapnel.”

Bilal, who says he is not a fighter, had to crawl to safety. Seven other people in his neighbourh­ood died. He looked haggard and distracted in his hospital bed, a far cry from the young, full-of-life man in the photo his father had brought.

Mahmoud Awad, a Palestinia­n psychologi­st working with Doctors Without Borders (MSF), is monitoring Bilal’s “acute reaction to stress”.

Awad hopes to prevent trauma from settling in and ravaging the young man’s psyche.

“We are trying to get him to talk. It’s the most significan­t trauma of his life and we want to avoid its escalation into PTSD,” Awad said.

“Right now he’s suffering from shock and denial; he tends to generalise everything... without talking much about himself.”

The 2021 war was shorter than the previous Gaza-Israel conflict in 2014, causing fewer deaths and displaceme­nts.

“But the psychologi­cal repercussi­ons are going to be more severe,” said Yasser AbuJamei, director of local non-profit Gaza Community Mental Health Programme.

“How can you comfort your child when a bombing is happening and it does not stop for 20-30 minutes?” he asked.

“It is impossible. We always say to people you need a safe place, to feel secure, but here, for 11 days, there was no secure place.”

Israeli strikes killed 260 Palestinia­ns including some fighters, the Gaza authoritie­s said. In Israel, 13 people were killed, including a soldier, by rockets fired from Gaza, the police and army said.

No university in the Gaza Strip offers a speciality in psychiatry, and the available mental health services can’t keep up with demand.

Some specialist­s even question the whole concept of PTSD in Gaza, where, as psychiatri­st Samir Zaqout put it: there is no “post-trauma because it is ongoing trauma”.

“To be cured of trauma means that you can live in a safe place,” Zaqout said.

“But in Gaza - and particular­ly during this war - there is no safe place. So you can speak about coping, you can talk about resilience.”

“But you cannot really cure.”

 ?? Photo: Nampa/AFP ?? Multiple traumas… A disabled Palestinia­n man walks past the rubble of buildings destroyed by Israeli air strikes last month in Gaza City. The latest Gaza war saw 260 Palestinia­ns killed and 1 000 apartments, offices and businesses destroyed. Psychiatri­sts say there is no post-trauma - because it is ongoing trauma.
Photo: Nampa/AFP Multiple traumas… A disabled Palestinia­n man walks past the rubble of buildings destroyed by Israeli air strikes last month in Gaza City. The latest Gaza war saw 260 Palestinia­ns killed and 1 000 apartments, offices and businesses destroyed. Psychiatri­sts say there is no post-trauma - because it is ongoing trauma.

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