Kuwait Times

Gaza children fly kites to escape horrors of war

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RAFAH: Meters away from the concrete and steel fence separating the Gaza Strip from Egypt, 11-yearold Malak Ayad flies a paper kite high in the sky—a welcome distractio­n from the horrors of war. “Every day I play with my brothers and cousins with kites next to the Egyptian border,” said the Palestinia­n girl, displaced from Gaza City with her family to the southern city of Rafah.

“When I do, I feel free and safe,” she added, gently maneuverin­g her kite, which she calls “Butterfly”, back and forth across the border with a white string. Her cousins and friends run along the fence trying, in vain, to get their kites to take flight, but a loud explosion in the distance makes them stop in their tracks.

“Quickly, the (Zionist) bombardmen­t is getting closer,” said Malak’s uncle Mohammed Ayad, 24, urging the children to leave the area. Malak quickly obeys, reeling in her kite and folding it, then rushes back to a tent where her family is taking shelter in the nearby Khir area. “Playtime is over. When air strikes begin we run back home,” Malak said, trembling with fear.

Malak Ayad and her family are among 1.5 million people, most of them displaced by the war, now living in Rafah, where Zionist entity has vowed to carry a ground offensive as it pursues its campaign against Hamas. Despite the war and the fear that grips her, Malak seems to be happy to fly her kite and dreams of life as it was before the war broke out on Oct 7.

“My kite flies to Egypt everyday while we are here trapped in Gaza,” said Malak, who wears a bracelet featuring the Palestinia­n flag. “I don’t know when we will be able to return home,” she said, adding that her mother told her that her school has been hit by the Zionist army and “destroyed”.

Haitham Abu Ajwa, 34, who is also displaced from Gaza City, said kite flying “reminds me of my childhood”. He too lives in a tent in Rafah with his wife and two boys, Mohammed, 5, and seven-months-old Adam. Flying kites helps to “free oneself of negative thoughts”, he said, and the border area with Egypt is “the ideal place to expel... the sadness and pain that we feel”. “In the camps, you cannot feel free or comfortabl­e,” said Abu Ajwa as he helped Mohammed fly a kite.

Dozens of children, some with their families, come daily to the border area in the afternoons to fly kites across the frontier. Some start up conversati­ons with Egyptian soldiers manning surveillan­ce towers. When Malak’s kite flew past the watchtower, one of the soldiers called out to her: “Well done, princess.” The little girl thanked him with a wave and said, “I love Egypt. My wish is to travel there like my kite.” –AFP

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